question
stringlengths
19
90
answers
sequencelengths
1
19
prop
stringclasses
15 values
s_wiki_title
stringlengths
4
68
id
int64
14k
6.51M
pop
int64
5
99
ctxs
listlengths
20
20
Who is the author of Time to Come?
[ "August Derleth", "August William Derleth", "August W. Derleth" ]
author
Time to Come
5,997,067
73
[ { "id": "25921167", "title": "Time to Come", "text": " Time to Come is an anthology of science fiction and fantasy stories edited by American writer August Derleth. It was first published by Farrar, Straus and Young in 1954. The stories are all original to this anthology.", "score": "1.7037051" }, { "id": "31228296", "title": "Shall Come a Time", "text": " Shall Come a Time is a novel by F. J. Thwaites.", "score": "1.5008881" }, { "id": "15253969", "title": "The Life of the World to Come", "text": " The Life of the World to Come (2004) is a science fiction novel by American writer Kage Baker, the fifth installment in the time travel series concerning the exploits of The Company.", "score": "1.50078" }, { "id": "25921168", "title": "Time to Come", "text": "Foreword, by August Derleth ; \"Butch\", by Poul Anderson ; \"The Pause\", by Isaac Asimov ; \"Keeper of the Dream\", by Charles Beaumont ; \"No Morning After\", by Arthur C. Clarke ; \"The Blight\", by Arthur J. Cox ; \"Hole in the Sky\", by Irving Cox, Jr. ; \"Jon’s World\", by Philip K. Dick ; \"The White Pinnacle\", by Carl Jacobi ; \"Winner Take All\", by Ross Rocklynne ; \"Paradise II\", by Robert Sheckley ; \"Phoenix\", by Clark Ashton Smith ; \"BAXBR/DAXBR\", by Evelyn E. Smith ", "score": "1.4732485" }, { "id": "7566249", "title": "The Life to Come", "text": " \"The Life to Come\" is a short story by English writer E. M. Forster, written in 1922 and published posthumously in The Life to Come (and Other Stories) in 1972. It was written into four chapters: Night, Evening, Day and Morning. In 2017 Surrey Opera gave the world premiere of The Life to Come, an opera in two acts by British composer Louis Mander, with libretto by Stephen Fry.", "score": "1.4350312" }, { "id": "13529564", "title": "Allen Appel", "text": "Time After Time (Carroll and Graf, 1985) ; Sea of Time (1987, traditionally unpublished; electronically published via Kindle, 2012) ; Twice Upon A Time (Carroll and Graf, 1988) ; Till the End of Time (Doubleday, 1990) ; In Time of War: An Alex Balfour Novel (Carroll and Graf, 2003) ; The Test of Time: An Alex Balfour Novel (Independent Publishing, 2015) ; Hellhound (with Craig Roberts) (Independent Publishing, 2014) ", "score": "1.4337106" }, { "id": "15485938", "title": "Brendan I. Koerner", "text": " Brendan Ian Koerner (born September 21, 1974) is an American author who has been a contributing editor and columnist for Wired magazine, The New York Times, Slate magazine, and others. His books include Now the Hell Will Start (2008) and The Skies Belong to Us (2013).", "score": "1.4321327" }, { "id": "26346128", "title": "Jim Levy (author)", "text": "Joy to Come. Porcupine Press. 2016. ; Chekhov's Mistress. Atalaya Press. 2020. ", "score": "1.4180715" }, { "id": "6104297", "title": "Joshua Ferris", "text": " Joshua Ferris (born 1974) is an American author best known for his debut 2007 novel Then We Came to the End. The book is a comedy about the American workplace, told in the first-person plural. It takes place in a fictitious Chicago ad agency that is experiencing a downturn at the end of the '90s Internet boom.", "score": "1.4151189" }, { "id": "15530675", "title": "Future Library project", "text": " One of the few details known about the books was revealed accidentally when David Mitchell stated that his book quotes the lyrics of \"Here Comes the Sun\", a song expected to enter the public domain in the late 21st century.", "score": "1.3908999" }, { "id": "3309874", "title": "Carol Zaleski", "text": " Lewis, Owen Barfield, Charles Williams which received laudatory reviews from The New York Times Book Review, The Washington Post, Time, and the Los Angeles Times. Zaleski is celebrated for her writings on the afterlife, which include the Encyclopædia Britannica articles on heaven, hell, and purgatory. Journalist Lisa Miller has called her \"the mother of modern heaven studies\". Her published lectures include \"In Defense of Immortality\", which was part of the Ingersoll Lectures on Human Immortality, and the Albert Cardinal Meyer Lectures at the University of University of Saint Mary of the Lake (published as \"The Life of the World to Come\"). She writes a ", "score": "1.388455" }, { "id": "6815265", "title": "Richard Wilson (author)", "text": "Those Idiots from Earth (1957) ; Time Out for Tomorrow (1962) ", "score": "1.3855214" }, { "id": "10567794", "title": "To-day and To-morrow", "text": " To-day and To-morrow (sometimes written Today and Tomorrow) was a series of over 150 speculative essays published as short books by the London publishers Kegan Paul between 1923 and 1931 (and published in the United States by E. P. Dutton, New York). As Fredric Warburg proudly recalled in 1959: \"It was a unique publishing event. Many now distinguished personages made their debut in this series or contributed an early work.\"", "score": "1.3853273" }, { "id": "15014502", "title": "Unfulfilled Christian religious predictions", "text": " The founder of the Calvary Chapel system, Chuck Smith, published the book End Times in 1979. On the jacket of his book, Smith is called a \"well known Bible scholar and prophecy teacher.\" In this book he wrote: \"As we look at the world scene today, it would appear that the coming of the Lord is very, very, close. Yet, we do not know when it will be. It could be that the Lord will wait for a time longer. If I understand Scripture correctly, Jesus taught us that the generation which sees the 'budding of the fig tree', the birth of the nation Israel, will be the generation that sees the Lord's return; I believe ", "score": "1.3845539" }, { "id": "4667564", "title": "James P. Comer", "text": " James P. Comer (born James Pierpont Comer, September 25, 1934 in East Chicago, Indiana) is currently the Maurice Falk Professor of Child Psychiatry at the Yale Child Study Center and has been since 1976. He is also an associate dean at the Yale School of Medicine. As one of the world's leading child psychiatrists, he is best known for his efforts to improve the scholastic performance of children from lower-income and minority backgrounds which led to the founding of the Comer School Development Program in 1968. His program has been used in more than 600 schools in eighty-two school districts. He is the author of ten books, including the autobiographical Maggie’s American Dream: The Life and Times of a Black Family, 1988; Leave No Child Behind: Preparing Today's Youth for Tomorrow's World, 2004; and his most recent book, What I Learned in ", "score": "1.3769436" }, { "id": "4810001", "title": "Michael Z. Williamson", "text": "A Long Time Until Now (Baen, February 2014, ISBN: 978-1-4767-8033-7) ; That Was Now, This is Then (Baen, coming Fall 2021) ; Wisdom From My Internet (Patriarchy Press, December 2014, ISBN: 978-1-943801-01-5, Hugo-Nominated) ", "score": "1.3765393" }, { "id": "30189115", "title": "Until the End of Time (book)", "text": " A reviewer of Kirkus Reviews stated, \"The author of several bestselling explorations of cutting-edge physics turns his attention to the cosmos, and readers will encounter his usual astute observations and analysis... An insightful history of everything that simplifies its complex subject as much as possible but no further.\" A reviewer of Publishers Weekly commented, \"Curious readers interested in some of the most fundamental questions of existence, and willing to invest some time and thought, will be richly rewarded by his fascinating exploration.\"", "score": "1.3714293" }, { "id": "8688027", "title": "Paul Cornell", "text": " Already known in Doctor Who fan circles, Cornell's professional writing career began in 1990 when he was a winner in a young writers' competition and his entry, Kingdom Come, was produced and screened on BBC Two. Soon after, he wrote Timewyrm: Revelation, a novel for the Virgin New Adventures series of Doctor Who novels. Timewyrm: Revelation was a reworking of a serialised fan fiction piece Cornell had penned previously for the fanzine Queen Bat. Several other Doctor Who novels followed, including the award-winning Human Nature. Cornell then began working for Granada Television, where he wrote for the popular children's medical drama Children's Ward and created his ", "score": "1.3604822" }, { "id": "29902535", "title": "David Kipen", "text": " Kipen has published early precursors to his novel-in-progress, \"The Anniversarist,\" as \"Time Turns Around at Musso & Frank\" in Alta Magazine, and across five installments in Boom Magazine as \"The Americas.\"", "score": "1.3584536" }, { "id": "29447094", "title": "Kingdom Come (Ballard novel)", "text": " Kingdom Come is a 2006 novel by the British writer J.G. Ballard. It is the last novel written by him before his 2009 death.", "score": "1.355485" } ]
In what city was John Keating born?
[ "Hobart", "Hobart Town", "Hobarton", "Hobart, Tasmania", "Hobart, Tas." ]
place of birth
John Keating (Australian politician)
251,876
87
[ { "id": "28253277", "title": "John Keating (land developer)", "text": " John Keating was born in Ireland in 1760, and raised in France. He joined the French Army, resigning in face of the Haitian and French revolutions to settle in Philadelphia. He spent the rest of his long life as a land agent and manager for the settlement of inland Pennsylvania, known for competence, honesty, and care for the settlers.", "score": "1.6906167" }, { "id": "28253278", "title": "John Keating (land developer)", "text": " John Keating was born in 1760 to Valentine Keating, a Catholic Irish gentleman educated in France. In 1766, having overcome trumped-up charges of treason, and still facing the severe disadvantages of the penal laws against Catholics, the family moved to France and settled in Poitiers. In recognition of his noble ancestry, Valentine was granted letters patent of nobility by Louis XV. John, with his twin brother William, was educated at the English College, Douai. After graduating, he and William were both granted a commission in Walsh's regiment, in which their elder brother Thomas was already serving.", "score": "1.6756625" }, { "id": "14180287", "title": "John Richard Keating", "text": " John Keating was born in Chicago, Illinois, to Robert and Gertrude Keating. He was educated at Queen of All Saints School, Archbishop Quigley Preparatory Seminary in Chicago, and St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in Mundelein, Illinois. Keating continued his studies at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, from where he obtained a Licentiate of Sacred Theology in 1959.", "score": "1.6622791" }, { "id": "12425428", "title": "Frank Keating", "text": " Keating was born on February 10, 1944, in St. Louis, Missouri, the son of Mary Ann (Martin) and Anthony Francis Keating. He was born David Rowland Keating, but his name was changed to Francis Anthony Keating II when he was two. Before he was six months old, his family moved to Oklahoma and settled in Tulsa. A practicing Catholic, Keating attended Cascia Hall Preparatory School in Tulsa, graduating in 1962. Keating attended Georgetown University in Washington, D.C. where he was president of the college student body and an editor of The Hoya, receiving his Bachelor of Arts in history, in 1966. He obtained a J.D. from the University of Oklahoma College of Law, in 1969, where he also ", "score": "1.6576633" }, { "id": "5006873", "title": "John Keating (Australian politician)", "text": " Keating was born in Hobart and educated at Officer College, Hobart, Saint Ignatius' College, Riverview, Sydney and the University of Tasmania where he received a Bachelor of Laws in 1896. He established a legal practice in Launceston and became a campaigner for federation and secretary of the Northern Tasmanian Federation League. He married Sarah Alice \"Lallie\" Monks in January 1906.", "score": "1.6400356" }, { "id": "7408025", "title": "Kenneth Keating", "text": " Keating was born in Lima, New York on May 18, 1900, the son of Louise (Barnard) Keating, a schoolteacher, and Thomas Mosgrove Keating, a grocer. He was tutored by his mother until age seven, when he began attending the Lima public schools as a sixth grader. He graduated from high school at age 13 and attended Genesee Wesleyan Seminary, from which he graduated in 1915 as the class valedictorian. He graduated from the University of Rochester in 1919, and was a member of the Delta Upsilon fraternity and Phi Beta Kappa. He taught Latin and Greek for a year at Rochester's East High School, then began attendance at Harvard Law School. He graduated in 1923, was admitted to the bar, and commenced practice in Rochester. Keating's early forays into politics and government included service as town attorney for the town of Brighton, where he resided while practicing law in Rochester.", "score": "1.63305" }, { "id": "6259505", "title": "Larry Keating", "text": " Keating was born in St. Paul, Minnesota.", "score": "1.6218467" }, { "id": "28711339", "title": "Charles Keating", "text": " Keating was born on December 4, 1923, in Cincinnati, Ohio, into a devout Roman Catholic family. He was the son of Adele (née Kipp) and Charles Humphrey Keating. He grew up in the Avondale and Clifton neighborhoods of that city. His younger brother William was born in 1927. Their father came from Kentucky and managed a dairy. Charles Keating Sr. lost a leg in a hunting accident, and then fell into a long decline from Parkinson's disease around 1931, and was nursed by his wife until his death in 1964. Keating began swimming at a Catholic summer camp and became passionately involved in the sport. He ", "score": "1.6102216" }, { "id": "30836317", "title": "Frank Keating (journalist)", "text": " Frank Keating was born to a farming family in Herefordshire, and raised in Gloucestershire. He attended Roman Catholic boarding schools at Belmont Abbey and at Douai School, before joining the Stroud News as a local reporter in 1956. He later worked on various local newspapers in Hereford, Guildford, Bristol, Southern Rhodesia, Gloucester and Slough, before working briefly as a sub-editor for The Guardian in 1963. In 1964, he joined Rediffusion TV as outside broadcasts editor, and in 1968 moved to Thames Television, as special features editor. In 1970 Keating returned to The Guardian as a sub-editor. By the late 1970s he had gained his own regular column of commentary, interviews and reminiscences, particularly covering cricket, football, rugby union and horse racing. His columns were admired for their \"fresh, inventive phraseology\", and his \"remarkable gift for phrase ", "score": "1.6038043" }, { "id": "13982058", "title": "Damon Keating", "text": " Keating was born in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.", "score": "1.5955213" }, { "id": "10475697", "title": "John Keating (Irish politician)", "text": " John Keating (2 August 1869 – 8 July 1956) was an Irish politician and farmer. Keating was first elected to Dáil Éireann as a National League Party Teachta Dála (TD) for the Wexford constituency at the June 1927 general election. He lost his seat at the September 1927 general election but was elected as a Cumann na nGaedheal TD at the 1932 general election and was re-elected at the 1933 general election. He was elected as a Fine Gael TD at the 1937 and 1938 general elections. He lost his seat at the 1943 general election but was re-elected at the 1944 general election. He stood as an Independent candidate at the 1948 general election but did not retain his seat. He was born at Sarshill, Kilmore in County Wexford, Ireland on 2 August 1869, the second son of Nicholas Keating and Maria Codd Keating. He died on 8 July 1956 and is buried in Grahormick Cemetery, County Wexford.", "score": "1.5783908" }, { "id": "5824462", "title": "Geoffrey Keating", "text": " It was generally believed until recently that Keating had been born in Burgess, County Tipperary; indeed, a monument to Keating was raised beside the bridge at Burgess, in 1990; but Diarmuid Ó Murchadha writes, \"The presumption that Geoffrey Keating attended a bardic school at Burgess, Co. Tipperary, is attributable to Thomas O'Sullevane, a shadowy character from the fringes of literary circles in London. The same unreliable source names Burgess as Keating's place of birth, whereas recent work (Cunningham 2002) indicates that Moorstown Castle in the parish of Inishlounaght [in Tipperary] was his probable birthplace.\"\" In November 1603, he was one of forty students who sailed ", "score": "1.5752556" }, { "id": "11273281", "title": "Johnny Keating", "text": " John Keating (10 September 1927 – 28 May 2015) was a Scottish musician, songwriter, arranger and trombonist.", "score": "1.5712473" }, { "id": "31869156", "title": "Justin Keating", "text": " He was born in Dublin in 1930, a son of the noted painter Seán Keating and campaigner May Keating. Keating was educated at Sandford Park School, and then at University College Dublin (UCD) and the University of London. He became a lecturer in anatomy at the UCD veterinary college from 1955 until 1960 and was senior lecturer at Trinity College, Dublin from 1960 until 1965. He was RTÉ's head of agricultural programmes for two years before returning to Trinity College in 1967. While at RTÉ, he scripted and presented Telefís Feirme, a series for the agricultural community, for which he won a Jacob's Award in 1966.", "score": "1.568282" }, { "id": "28103766", "title": "Reg Keating", "text": " Keating was born in Halton, Leeds. He began his playing career in local football in the Newcastle upon Tyne area before joining Newcastle United, his first professional club, in October 1926. He was released in 1927 without playing for the first team, and embarked on a tour of league and non-league clubs: Lincoln City, where he made his debut in the Football League, Gainsborough Trinity, Scarborough, Stockport County, Birmingham, where he scored his first Football League goal, Norwich City, where he was one of five new forwards signed in the 1932 close season to add to the six already on the club's books, North Shields, and Bath City, eventually, at the ", "score": "1.5669017" }, { "id": "12551344", "title": "Joseph C. Keating Jr.", "text": " Keating was born and raised in the Hudson River Valley, in the northeast U.S.A. He was the oldest of five children born to Joseph C. Keating Sr. and Mary A. Welsh Keating. The family resided on Enloe Street in the Lake Peekskill area near the Putnam / Westchester County, New York border.", "score": "1.5662689" }, { "id": "25693237", "title": "Roger Keating", "text": " Keating was born in New Zealand. He moved to Australia in 1978 and worked as a mathematics and physics teacher.", "score": "1.5623456" }, { "id": "4024127", "title": "Fred Keating (magician)", "text": " Keating was born in New York City, the son of Frederick Keating (Senior), a lawyer, and Camille Serrano, a singer. He was of Irish-Spanish heritage. His parents divorced when he was young. He became interested in magic from an early age. He became well known for performing a disappearing canary cage trick. Keating also performed a trick where he swallowed needles and pulled them threaded, out of his mouth.", "score": "1.5581888" }, { "id": "27044440", "title": "Jack Keating", "text": " John Thomas \"Jack, Red\" Keating (October 9, 1916 – December 19, 1951) was a professional ice hockey player who played eleven games in the National Hockey League playing left wing. Born in Kitchener, Ontario, he played with the Detroit Red Wings. He also played with the Richmond Hawks (UK), Harringay Racers (UK), Pittsburgh Hornets, Indianapolis Capitals, Hollywood Wolves and Los Angeles Monarchs. He played professional hockey from 1936-1943 and 1945-1948. From 1943-45 he served in the military during World War II. While playing for the Harringay Racers 1937-38, he was the top goal scorer in the UK with 29 goals. In 1946, he married Blanche Kernel in Indianapolis and had 3 children. He graduated from Optometry school in 1951. He died in 1951 in Indianapolis of cancer.", "score": "1.5554869" }, { "id": "25929567", "title": "Jackie Keating", "text": " John Richard \"Jackie\" Keating (February 12, 1908 – November 14, 1984) was a professional ice hockey player who played 35 games in the National Hockey League. Born in Saint John, New Brunswick, he played with the New York Americans.", "score": "1.5513825" } ]
What is Raymond S. Burton's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Raymond S. Burton
5,545,849
97
[ { "id": "9020570", "title": "Raymond S. Burton", "text": " Raymond S. \"Ray\" Burton (August 13, 1939 – November 12, 2013) was a New Hampshire politician who served from 1977–79 and 1981–2013 on the Executive Council as the representative of District 1, or \"The North Country\". Known as the \"Dean of the Council\", Burton, a Republican, was the longest-serving Executive Councilor in New Hampshire history. Burton also served for 22 years as a Grafton County Commissioner, representing District 2. Burton lived in the town of Bath, New Hampshire, where he died on November 12, 2013.", "score": "1.6213226" }, { "id": "2655262", "title": "Raymond Burton (rugby league)", "text": " Raymond Burton is a former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s. He played at club level for Castleford (Heritage № 387).", "score": "1.5837305" }, { "id": "33044325", "title": "Glenn W. Burton", "text": " Burton received his bachelor's degree from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1932. He received his master's degree in 1933 and Ph.D. in 1936 from Rutgers University.", "score": "1.4443809" }, { "id": "1584711", "title": "Dan Burton", "text": " Danny Lee Burton (born June 21, 1938) is an American politician. Burton is the former U.S. Representative for, and previously the , serving from 1983 until 2013. He is a member of the Republican Party and was part of the Tea Party Caucus.", "score": "1.4392471" }, { "id": "7599089", "title": "S. H. Burton", "text": " Burton's publications include:", "score": "1.4306201" }, { "id": "14583387", "title": "Courtney Burton", "text": " Courtney Lee Burton (born June 28, 1978, South Bend, Indiana) is an American retired professional boxer from Benton Harbor, Michigan who fought in the super lightweight, lightweight, and welterweight divisions. Throughout his career Burton was known as a switch-hitter being able to fight either orthodox or southpaw, he stood 5' 9\" though many boxing records have him listed at 5' 7\". He held the WBO NABO lightweight title.", "score": "1.4232047" }, { "id": "13878736", "title": "David H. Burton", "text": " Burton was a World War II combat veteran in the Army's 334th Infantry and was awarded both the Purple Heart & Bronze Star for his service. After the war, he earned a degree in History from University of Scranton, before earning both an MA, PhD in History from Georgetown University. He joined the faculty of St. Joseph's University in 1953 where he taught for over 50 years and chaired the History department for 24 years.", "score": "1.4071633" }, { "id": "4116744", "title": "Dennis Burton (artist)", "text": " Dennis Burton (December 6, 1933 – July 8, 2013) was a Canadian modernist painter.", "score": "1.406507" }, { "id": "3950112", "title": "Thomas G. Burton", "text": " Burton was born on 7 January 1935 in Memphis, Tennessee. His first degree was a Bachelor of Arts from David Lipscomb College in 1956. He then received a Master of Arts in 1958 and a PhD in 1966, both from Vanderbilt University. He became a member of the Department of English of East Tennessee State University in 1958. He became a full professor in 1967, holding the position until he retired in 1995. He was appointed Professor Emeritus 1996. Burton's book on snake handling, Taking up Serpents, was described as an authoritative study of the belief by National Geographic magazine.", "score": "1.3900263" }, { "id": "9859742", "title": "Woody Burton", "text": " Charles \"Woody\" Burton (born June 11, 1945) is an American politician. He is a member of the Indiana House of Representatives from the 58th District, serving since 1988. He is a member of the Republican party. Burton served on the Johnson County Council from 1980 to 1984. His brother is former Congressman Dan Burton.", "score": "1.3886122" }, { "id": "25046242", "title": "Laurence J. Burton", "text": " Laurence Junior Burton (October 30, 1926 – November 27, 2002) was a U.S. Representative from Utah. Born in Ogden, Utah, Burton graduated from Ogden High School in 1944. Enlisted in the United States Navy Air Corps and served from January 1945 to July 1946. He graduated from Weber College at Ogden, in 1948, from the University of Utah in 1951, and from Utah State University at Logan in 1956. Took postgraduate work at Georgetown and George Washington University, Washington, D.C., in 1957 and 1958. Public relations director and athletic manager at Weber College from 1948 to 1956. Regional director for American College Public Relations Association in 1954 and 1955. He was editor of National Junior College Athletic Association ", "score": "1.3883328" }, { "id": "31096759", "title": "Mark Burton", "text": " Richard Mark Burton (born 16 January 1956) is a New Zealand politician. He is a member of the Labour Party, serving as Minister of Defence, Minister of Justice, Minister of Local Government, Minister in Charge of Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations, Deputy Leader of the House, and the Minister Responsible for the Law Commission in the Fifth Labour Government of New Zealand.", "score": "1.3881159" }, { "id": "32041085", "title": "John Burton (American politician)", "text": " Burton was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Mildred (Leonard) and Thomas Burton, who was a salesman and physician. He was raised in San Francisco. Burton earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in social science in 1954 from San Francisco State University and a Juris Doctor from the University of San Francisco School of Law.", "score": "1.3856201" }, { "id": "6112686", "title": "Bruce Burton", "text": " Bruce Burton's birth was registered in Wakefield district, West Riding of Yorkshire, England.", "score": "1.3819561" }, { "id": "31933675", "title": "Burton (name)", "text": "Burton Barr (1917–1997), American politician from Arizona ; Burton Cummings (born 1947), Canadian musician ; Burton E. Green (1868–1965), American oilman and co-founder of Beverly Hills, California ; Burton Hecht (born 1927), New York politician and judge ; Burt Reynolds (1936–2018), American actor, producer and stuntman ; Burt Lancaster (1913–1994), American actor ", "score": "1.3800228" }, { "id": "29596277", "title": "William C. Burton", "text": " William C. Burton is a partner in the law firm of Sagat Burton LLP, Park Avenue, New York City. His practice is devoted primarily to lobbying for banking, financial services and insurance business interests. As an attorney, Burton has devoted a substantial part of the past twenty-two years to promoting the legal profession through his non-profit foundation. He is the author of the legal profession's first-ever legal thesaurus entitled Burton's Legal Thesaurus. Burton served as New York State Assistant Attorney General, as well as an Assistant New York State Special Prosecutor. Previously, Burton was Director of Government Affairs for one of the world's largest insurers, Continental Insurance.", "score": "1.3787763" }, { "id": "14786239", "title": "W. K. Burton", "text": " William Kinnimond Burton (11 May 1856 – 5 August 1899) was a British engineer, photographer and photography writer, born in Edinburgh, Scotland, who lived most of his career in Meiji period Japan.", "score": "1.3750918" }, { "id": "3638178", "title": "Jean-Dominique Burton", "text": " Jean-Dominique Burton, born on 13 October 1952 in Huy (Belgium), is a Belgian photographer and filmmaker, author of several books of photographs focusing on Europe, Asia and Africa. Since 1978, numerous exhibitions have been dedicated to his work, in Europe (in galleries and in the Paris metro ), Africa (notably on the occasion of the Francophonie Summit, OIF, in November 2014 ), North America (San Francisco and Stanford University ) and Asia. Many of his works have also been included in public and private collections.", "score": "1.3749945" }, { "id": "26020221", "title": "Theodore E. Burton", "text": " Theodore Elijah Burton (December 20, 1851 – October 28, 1929) was a Republican politician from Ohio. He served in the United States House of Representatives and U.S. Senate.", "score": "1.3749259" }, { "id": "25252950", "title": "Philip Burton Jr.", "text": " Philip Burton Jr. (December 9, 1934 – December 24, 2010) was a documentary filmmaker whose subjects included African-Americans and American government.", "score": "1.3735242" } ]
In what country is Gori Balmak?
[ "Iran", "Islamic Republic of Iran", "Persia", "ir", "Islamic Rep. Iran", "🇮🇷" ]
country
Gori Balmak
4,267,804
27
[ { "id": "7207873", "title": "Gori Balmak", "text": " Gori Balmak (, also Romanized as Gorī Balmak) is a village in Jayedar Rural District, in the Central District of Pol-e Dokhtar County, Lorestan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 303, in 55 families.", "score": "1.7696764" }, { "id": "9854779", "title": "Gori City Hall", "text": " Gori City Hall (გორის მერია, goris meria) is an administrative building of Gori, Georgia, a city in eastern Georgia, which serves as the regional capital of Shida Kartli.", "score": "1.4283675" }, { "id": "6609345", "title": "Occupation of Gori", "text": " Gori is a strategic city in central Georgia, about 25 km from Tskhinvali. Gori is a major military installation and transportation hub in Georgia. 75 tanks and armored personnel carriers (a third of the Georgian military's arsenal) were assembled near Gori on 7 August. Around 6:27 AM on 9 August 2008, Reuters reported that two Russian fighters had bombed a Georgian artillery position about 10 km north of Gori. On 9 August, a Russian air attack targeted military barracks in Gori. In the resulting explosion, besides the base, several apartment buildings and a school were also damaged. The Georgian government reported that 60 civilians were killed when bombs hit the apartment buildings. According to the Russian media, Russian aircraft dropped three bombs on an armament depot, and the façade of one of the adjacent 5-story apartment buildings suffered damage as a result of exploding ammunition from the depot. Russian aircraft had bombed at least five Georgian cities by 9 August.", "score": "1.4102752" }, { "id": "10998243", "title": "Gori, Georgia", "text": " In the 2008 Russo-Georgian War, the town came under aerial attack by the Russian Air Force from the outset of the conflict. Military targets and residential districts of Gori were hit by the airstrikes, resulting in civilian injuries and deaths. Human Rights Watch (HRW) claimed that Russian forces had indiscriminately deployed cluster bombs in civilian areas around Gori. According to HRW, on August 12 Russian forces dropped cluster bombs in the center of Gori, killing 11 civilians and wounding dozens more. Russian military officials deny using cluster munitions in the conflict, calling the HRW assertion \"slanderous\" and questioning the HRW's objectivity. Numerous unexploded ", "score": "1.3964628" }, { "id": "646314", "title": "Bal Gosal", "text": " =", "score": "1.3912284" }, { "id": "12233921", "title": "Gorgama, Samastipur", "text": " Gorgama is a village located in the Samastipur District of Bihar, India. The village is bordered by the Baya River on both the northern and western sides. It has approximately 1,800 residents, consisting mainly of Bhumihars. Both Scheduled Caste (SC) and Muslim residents live towards the western side of the village. Rajkiya Kanya Madhya Vidyalaya and Rajkiya Sankul Pradhmik Vidyala are primary schools located in the village. They are adjacent to one other and are located on the northern bank of the Baya River. A large open field known as Kochar also lies adjacent to the Baya River; this is Gair Majarua land owned by the Bihar Government and is commonly used by locals for activities such as festivals. The village is situated near the Shahpur Patori ", "score": "1.3867912" }, { "id": "10998239", "title": "Gori, Georgia", "text": " The territory of Gori has been populated since the early Bronze Age. According to medieval Georgian chronicles, the town of Gori was founded by King David IV (r. 1089-1125) who settled refugees from Armenia there. However, the fortress of Gori (Goris-Tsikhe) appears to have been in use already in the 7th century, and archaeological evidence indicates the existence of an urban community in Classical Antiquity. In 1299, Gori was captured by the Alan tribesmen fleeing the Mongol conquest of their original homeland in the North Caucasus. The Georgian king George V recovered the town in 1320, pushing the Alans back over the Caucasus mountains. With the downfall of the medieval Georgian ", "score": "1.3847842" }, { "id": "32937779", "title": "Bayankhongor Province", "text": " There are two protected areas in Bayankhongor. The Gobi A: Strictly Protected Areas in the south borders China and Ömnögovi aimag. In it live many endangered species such as the Gobi bear and the Zam gecko. The second area is the Gobi Gurvansaikhan National Park, which is known for its extensive fossil sites, iconic sand dunes, ice canyon, and stunning mountain scenery not to mention the over 200 bird species and 600 varieties of plants. Both of these areas are popular tourist destinations both for foreigners and Mongolians.", "score": "1.3840508" }, { "id": "15053184", "title": "Gyumri massacre", "text": " The Gyumri massacre was a mass murder of seven members of the Armenian Avetisyan family in Gyumri, Armenia, on January 12, 2015. The suspect, Valery Permyakov, a Russian serviceman from the Russian 102nd Military Base, was apprehended by the Armenia-based Russian Border Guards near the border with Turkey and brought into custody at the Gyumri base for further investigation under the Russian jurisdiction. Spontaneous demonstrations in Gyumri and Yerevan ensued, demanding that Permyakov be tried and serve his sentence in Armenia. Perceived inadequate government response further triggered public outrage in Armenia in early 2015 following the incident. In August 2016, Permyakov was sentenced to life on charges of murder by an Armenian court; the court′s ruling was upheld in December 2016 by the Appeals Court in Yerevan.", "score": "1.382766" }, { "id": "10998237", "title": "Gori, Georgia", "text": " Gori (გორი ) is a city in eastern Georgia, which serves as the regional capital of Shida Kartli and is located at the confluence of two rivers, the Mtkvari and the Liakhvi. The name comes from a Georgian word gora (გორა), meaning \"heap\", or \"hill\", or a mountain. A settlement known here from the Hellenistic period, with the Gori Fortress built at least in 7th century, it received a town status in the 12th century. Gori was an important military stronghold in the Middle Ages and maintains a strategic importance due to its location on the principal highway connecting eastern and western parts of Georgia. In the course of its history, Gori has been invaded by the armies of regional powers several times. The city was occupied by Russian troops during the 2008 Russo–Georgian War. Gori is also known as the birthplace of the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, ballistic missile designer Alexander Nadiradze and philosopher Merab Mamardashvili.", "score": "1.3811085" }, { "id": "13712407", "title": "Gori Municipality", "text": " Gori (გორის მუნიციპალიტეტი, Goris municiṗaliṫeṫi) is a district of Georgia, in the region of Shida Kartli. After abolishment of former South Ossetian Autonomous Oblast, the Gori District included the territory of former Tskhinvali District. Some northern territories of the district are part of a self-proclaimed republic of South Ossetia and have not been under control of the Georgian government since 1992. It is bordered by the municipalities of Kaspi to the east, Borjomi and Tsalka to the south, and Kareli to the west. The area of Gori municipality is 1352 km2 and the population is 125,692 people. The administrative center of the municipality is the city of Gori.", "score": "1.3801963" }, { "id": "1742161", "title": "Blue Mosque, Yerevan", "text": " Western visitors in the Russian period, such as H. F. B. Lynch and Luigi Villari, referred to the mosque as Gök Jami (Gok Djami, Gök Cami), which translates from Turkish as \"sky blue mosque\". It is known as Կապույտ մզկիթ, Kapuyt mzkit’ \"Blue Mosque\" in Armenian, although Գյոյ մզկիթ, Gyoy mzkit՛ is sometimes used as well. It is known in Persian as Masjid-i Juma or Jami-i Shahr.", "score": "1.3792274" }, { "id": "5701602", "title": "Parasyrisca", "text": "P. alai Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan ; P. alexeevi Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Russia (Caucasus) ; P. altaica Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Kazakhstan ; P. andarbag Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Tajikistan ; P. andreevae Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Tajikistan ; P. anzobica Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Tajikistan ; P. arrabonica Szinetár & Eichardt, 2009 – Hungary ; P. asiatica Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Russia (South Siberia), Mongolia ; P. balcarica Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Russia (Caucasus) ; P. belengish Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Russia (South Siberia) ; P. belukha Ovtsharenko, Platnick & Marusik, 1995 – Russia (South ", "score": "1.377316" }, { "id": "10998245", "title": "Gori, Georgia", "text": " Gori and its environs house several notable cultural and historical landmarks. Although for many foreigners Gori is principally known as the birthplace of Joseph Stalin, in Georgian historical memory the city has long been associated with its citadel, the Gori Fortress, which is built on a cliffy hill overlooking the central part of the modern city. On another hill stands the 18th century St. George's church of Gorijvari, a popular place of pilgrimage. The famous ancient rock-hewn town of Uplistsikhe and the 7th century Ateni Sioni Church are located not far from Gori. Stalin's association with the city is emphasized by the Joseph Stalin Museum in downtown Gori and, until recently, the Stalin monument in front of the Gori City Hall, one of the few such monuments to survive Nikita Khrushchev's de-Stalinization program. The monument was a source of controversy in a newly independent Georgia in the 1990s, but for several years the post-communist government acceded to the Gori citizens' request and left the statue untouched. It was ultimately removed on June 25, 2010. However, on 20 December 2012, the municipal assembly of Gori voted to reinstate the monument.", "score": "1.3735752" }, { "id": "1794555", "title": "Gokak (rural)", "text": " Gokak (Rural) is a village in Belagavi district in the southern state of Karnataka, India.", "score": "1.3717711" }, { "id": "26632644", "title": "Bal-Can-Can", "text": " The film was the highest-grossing film to date in the Republic of Macedonia. It was also released in Russia, United Kingdom, Spain, Turkey, Greece, Ukraine, Serbia, Croatia, Bulgaria, Slovenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina.", "score": "1.3717475" }, { "id": "25143091", "title": "Gori TV Broadcasting Tower", "text": " Gori TV Broadcasting Tower (გორის ტელეანძა, goris teleandza) is a free-standing tower structure used for communications purposes. The tower is located in Gori, Georgia and was built in 1972. It is operated by \"Telecenter of Georgia\", that was established 1955. Communication systems on the tower include regular broadcast, MMDS, pager and cellular, and commercial TV. The tower is 180 m.", "score": "1.3712311" }, { "id": "10998242", "title": "Gori, Georgia", "text": " years of a post-Soviet crisis of the 1990s. Gori is close to the Georgian-Ossetian conflict zone. It is connected to breakaway South Ossetia's capital Tskhinvali via a railroad spur which has been defunct since the early 1990s. Since the 2000s, Georgia has increased the military infrastructure in and around the city. Thus, the Central Military Hospital was relocated from Tbilisi to Gori and re-equipped in October 2006. On January 18, 2008, Georgia's second NATO-standard base to accommodate the 1st Infantry Brigade (Georgia) of the Georgian Ground Forces was established at Gori. The Georgian Agrarian Science Academy Branch was established in the city in 1995; this became Sukhishvili University in 2003.", "score": "1.3648727" }, { "id": "29226794", "title": "Gokak", "text": " Gokak is a taluka headquarters in the Belgaum district of Karnataka state, India. It is located around 70 km from Belgaum at the confluence of two rivers, the Ghataprabha and the Markandeya. The population of the city is according to 2011 census is approximately 150,773. Gokak city has second highest GDP in the district of Belgaum after Belgaum city. The common language is Kannada. Gokak is surrounded on one side by a range of hills, and on the other side by a vast plain of black soil. The river Ghataprabha flows from the north side of the city and cascades down through a cleft of 167 ft, to form Gokak Falls before flowing through the city. Since the colonial era, the a hydroelectric station under the waterfall has been used to power Gokak Mills, one of the largest manufacturers and exporters of yarn in India. The river Markandeya, a tributary of the Ghataprabha, dashes down through 43 ft step wise hill plates to form Godachinamalaki Falls.", "score": "1.3646383" }, { "id": "26847874", "title": "Golovari", "text": " Golovari (Головари) is a rural locality (a village) in Posyolok Mezinovsky, Gus-Khrustalny District, Vladimir Oblast, Russia. The population was 17 as of 2010.", "score": "1.3646383" } ]
In what country is Oscar?
[ "United States of America", "the United States of America", "America", "U.S.A.", "USA", "U.S.", "US", "the US", "the USA", "US of A", "the United States", "U. S. A.", "U. S.", "the States", "the U.S.", "'Merica", "U.S", "United States", "'Murica" ]
country
Oscar, West Virginia
5,353,264
35
[ { "id": "26228670", "title": "US-Ireland Alliance", "text": " The Oscar Wilde Award is the award for cinematic contribution by Irish-Americans in the entertainment industries within the US. This award has beed awarded by the US-Ireland Alliance since 2006 before the Oscar season. The event is usually held at the beginning of the year and has a variety of celebrities in attendance. The nominees are usually Irish talents who have had an impact on the entertainment industries in the areas of music and performance. In the early years it was held at the Ebell on Wilshire Boulevard. Some Irish celebrities have become regular supporters and share their stories and experiences with others. One of the activists of this non-profit organisation, director J. J. Abrams has provided the opportunity to holding this event at Bad Robot in Santa Monica since 2012.", "score": "1.4928414" }, { "id": "31756385", "title": "Oscar and Friends", "text": " Oscar and Friends is a New Zealand children's stop motion animated television series that aired from 1995 to 1996. The series was produced in Wellington, and was aimed at children aged 3 to 6. The series was produced by Gnome Productions Ltd., distributed by Southern Star Sales, and funded by NZ On Air and Southern Star Entertainment. Oscar and Friends has been screened all around the world including the UK (ITV) (where the series rated number ten for kids in its first year of release), The United States (Fox Family), Australia (ABC), Taiwan (YoYo TV), Germany (Kabel 1 in Bim Bam Bino) and Argentina (Magic Kids)", "score": "1.4776604" }, { "id": "28667168", "title": "List of Polish submissions for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film", "text": " Poland has submitted films for the Academy Award for Best International Feature Film on a regular basis since 1963. The Oscar is handed out annually by the United States Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences to a feature-length motion picture produced outside the United States that contains primarily non-English dialogue. It was not created until the 1956 Academy Awards, in which a competitive Academy Award of Merit, known as the Best Foreign Language Film Award, was created for non-English speaking films, and has been given annually since.", "score": "1.4707398" }, { "id": "29053218", "title": "Oscaro", "text": " significant milestone: its first million euros in sales revenue. The following year, Oscaro Recambios launched in Spain. In October 2011, Pierre-Noël Luiggi, founder of Oscaro, was appointed member of the French delegation represented at G20 YES (Young Entrepreneur Summit). In 2012, Oscaro.com was reported to have 1.46 million unique monthly users according to Médiamétrie, making it the first in its category of French specialised websites. In October 2015, Oscaro became a shareholder of Temot International, an international buying group specialised in automotive customer service. In April 2016, Oscaro expanded its services to Belgium, serving primarily its Francophone community. After opening a research centre in California in 2012, Oscaro launched its website on the US market under the name Oscaroparts.com.", "score": "1.4561572" }, { "id": "14444776", "title": "List of submissions to the 82nd Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film", "text": "Thirteen other countries (Afghanistan, Azerbaijan, Egypt, Iraq, Ireland, Jordan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lebanon, Nepal, Palestinian Territories, Singapore, and Ukraine) that submitted films within the three previous years opted not to send a movie for Oscar consideration in 2009. ", "score": "1.4521418" }, { "id": "13821398", "title": "Oscar Health", "text": " In 2016, Oscar had 145,000 members in New York, New Jersey, California, and Texas. Oscar expanded its operations to Tempe, Arizona in August 2016, where it decided to locate its Concierge teams, their name for their member services model. On August 23, 2016, Oscar announced it would be exiting the New Jersey Marketplace at the end of 2016, citing uncertainties in the market that would make it challenging \"to operate effectively and continue to deliver access to quality healthcare.\" Oscar also announced that it would halve the size of its provider network in New York amidst rising premiums in order to \"gain more control over pricing and patient experience\". In November 2016, Oscar opened the Oscar Center in partnership with Mount Sinai Health System. Located in Brooklyn Heights, next to the Jay Street–MetroTech station, the Oscar Center had a primary care practice only available to Oscar policyholders, with a doctor, nurse practitioner, and a behavioral health specialist. It also hosted free classes for members, such as yoga classes or classes for expectant mothers. On March 13th, 2020, Oscar closed the Oscar Center \"until further notice.\"", "score": "1.4449255" }, { "id": "7736677", "title": "Academy Award for Best International Feature Film", "text": " artistic control over it. Several films have been declared ineligible by the Academy for the latter reason, the most recent of which is Lust, Caution (2007), Taiwan's entry for the 80th Academy Awards. The disqualifications, however, generally take place in the pre-nomination stage, with the exception of A Place in the World (1992), Uruguay's entry for the 65th Academy Awards, which was disqualified because of insufficient Uruguayan artistic control after having secured a nomination. As of the 2021 ceremony, it is the only film to have been declared ineligible and removed from the final ballot after having been nominated in this category. Since the 2006 ", "score": "1.4424648" }, { "id": "32431458", "title": "Oscar, Louisiana", "text": " Oscar is an unincorporated community located in the southeastern portion of Pointe Coupee Parish, Louisiana, United States. It is located primarily along Louisiana Highway 1 on the southern end of False River. This community was formerly home to the Oxbow restaurant and Bonaventure's Landing. Oscar's most noted resident was the novelist Ernest J. Gaines, who was the fifth generation of his family to be born on the River Lake plantation, where his ancestors had been enslaved and then sharecroppers. Gaines left Oscar for California at age 15, and went on to a storied career as a novelist, winning the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction, the National Humanities Medal, and a MacArthur \"genius grant\". In retirement, he purchased a portion of the plantation and built a house on it. Oscar was the site ", "score": "1.4413259" }, { "id": "26975535", "title": "Oscar Loya", "text": " Loya was born in 1979 in Indio, California and grew up as the youngest of five children in California. He is openly gay and lives in Munich, Germany. Loya represented Germany at the final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2009 in Moscow, Russia together with Alex Christensen as Alex swings Oscar sings, performing the song \"Miss Kiss Kiss Bang\", with special guest Dita Von Teese performing with them in the Final. The song finished 20th in a final of 25 competing countries. Loya released his debut album in 2009. His voice coach is Professor Dennis M. Heath (Munich). Heath teaches other successful professional artists in Europe, Australia, and the United States. Loya concentrates on his solo career and released his second album \"Beast\" in 2011. \"Beast\" is a collaboration between Oscar and the electropop producer Alek Sandar. The self-written and co-produced single \"Learn Something New\" with Citrusonic Records has been published in December 2012. From October 2012 to June 2013, Loya has been the principal character in the revue SHOW ME at the Friedrichstadt-Palast in Berlin.", "score": "1.4379578" }, { "id": "13752597", "title": "Oscar Parish", "text": " Oscar Parish (Oscars församling) is a parish in Östermalm's church district (kontrakt) in the Diocese of Stockholm, Sweden. The parish is located in Stockholm Municipality in Stockholm County. The parish forms its own pastorship.", "score": "1.4351374" }, { "id": "13821407", "title": "Oscar Health", "text": " Oscar's headquarters are located in Tribeca, New York City. They also have a technology outpost in Los Angeles and a member services operation in Tempe, Arizona.", "score": "1.4341795" }, { "id": "8559593", "title": "Oscar Theatre Company", "text": " The Oscar Theatre Company is a theater company operating in Brisbane, Australia. It is interested in the provision of further work opportunities for Queensland professional and emerging artists. The company seeks to introduce and engage youth with contemporary theatre, by offering live performance as an alternative in the Brisbane social scene. Oscar receives no funding and relies heavily on corporate sponsorship and patron support.", "score": "1.4241953" }, { "id": "4118153", "title": "Oscar by the Sea", "text": " Oscar by the Sea is a riverside private housing residences located at 8 Pung Loi Road, Pak Shing Kok, Clear Water Bay, New Territories, Hong Kong. The residence is jointly developed by Sun Hung Kai Properties and Hong Kong Oxygen. It was designed by MCAA Limited. The property is divided into 7 buildings with 40 to 59 floors and a total of 1959 units. The estate was opened for sale in 2001 on 27 July 2001 (Phase 1), 1 June 2002 (Phase 2). The management company is Hong Yip Service Co. Ltd. under Sun Hung Kai Properties. Oscar by the Sea is the only private housing estate in Tseung Kwan O that is not built on reclaimed land.", "score": "1.4232116" }, { "id": "447327", "title": "Oscar (1991 film)", "text": " Oscar is a 1991 American comedy film directed by John Landis. Based on the Claude Magnier stage play, it is a remake of the 1967 French film of the same name, but set in Depression-era New York City. Oscar stars Sylvester Stallone, in a rare attempt at a comedic role, as Angelo \"Snaps\" Provolone, a mob boss who promises his dying father that he will leave the world of crime and become an honest businessman. Alongside Stallone, the film's cast includes Marisa Tomei, Ornella Muti, Tim Curry and Chazz Palminteri. Its score was composed by Elmer Bernstein. According to Landis, Oscar was stylistically influenced by older Hollywood comedies, particularly those belonging to the \"screwball\" genre, that were popular during the period in which the film takes place. Oscar was released in the United States on April 26, 1991, and received mixed reviews from critics.", "score": "1.422127" }, { "id": "7471455", "title": "Out of School Care and Recreation", "text": " In the two large regions of Canterbury and Auckland, local networks of OSCAR service providers have secured an agreement to receive funding directly, thus being able to employ their own OSCAR advisers. Regional networks (OSCN in Auckland and The Christchurch OSCAR Network in Canterbury) the advisers report on service delivery to the OSCAR Foundation. The OSCAR Foundation, formally the national body went into liquidation in May 2012.", "score": "1.4216347" }, { "id": "4293021", "title": "Oscar, Oklahoma", "text": " Oscar is a small rural unincorporated community in southern Jefferson County, Oklahoma, United States, three miles north of the Red River. Named for Oscar W. Seay, rancher, the post office opened November 23, 1892. The ZIP Code is 73561. The first Postmaster was William Riley Butler, by presidential appointment.", "score": "1.4211947" }, { "id": "447337", "title": "Oscar (1991 film)", "text": " The film was released theatrically in the United States on April 26, 1991, and had nine international releases from June until September.", "score": "1.4207435" }, { "id": "30846241", "title": "Oscar Downstream", "text": " Oscar Downstream is a large oil trading company based in Bucharest, Romania which is the largest independent oil company in the country. The company is specialised in oil trading and manages over 1100 in-house filling stations and a network of 30 diesel stations. It has seven regional storage facilities located in Bucharest, Craiova, Constanţa, Oneşti, Oradea, Brasov, Arad and a fleet of 40 tank trucks.", "score": "1.4185964" }, { "id": "7926883", "title": "HTV Oscar C", "text": " HTV Oscar C is a Bosnian-Herzegovinian local commercial television channel based in Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina. The program is mainly produced in Croatian. Cable television channel HTV Oscar 2 and the local radio station Radio Oscar C are also part of this company. On 19.12.2020 at 10:50-10:53 AM, they illegally activated Windows on air, and on 20.12.2020 at 06:07 AM, TeamViewer release notes popped up, staying until 00:12 the next day.", "score": "1.4173207" }, { "id": "13821396", "title": "Oscar Health", "text": " Oscar Health, Inc. is an American health insurance company, founded in 2012 by Joshua Kushner and Mario Schlosser, and is headquartered in New York City. The company focuses on the health insurance industry through telemedicine, healthcare focused technological interfaces, and transparent claims pricing systems which would make it easier for patients to navigate.", "score": "1.4170078" } ]
In what country is Edmundston?
[ "Canada", "Dominion of Canada", "British North America", "CAN", "CA", "ca", "can", "Can." ]
country
Edmundston (electoral district)
3,990,933
69
[ { "id": "15636317", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Edmundston is a city in Madawaska County, New Brunswick, Canada.", "score": "1.7251405" }, { "id": "15636323", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Edmundston is located at the edge of the New Brunswick \"panhandle,\" nestled in the northeastern section of the Appalachian Mountains at the junction of the Saint John and Madawaska Rivers in the northwestern part of the province. Edmundston is strategically situated only a few kilometres from the border with Quebec and on the border with the United States, opposite the town of Madawaska, Maine, to which it is connected by the Edmundston–Madawaska Bridge.", "score": "1.6911981" }, { "id": "15636329", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " is shipped across the border through a mile-long high pressure pipeline running between both facilities, and is made into paper in Madawaska. The Madawaska mill specializes in fine-grade papers. The town's economy is highly dependent upon cross-border trade, to the extent that Edmundston and its smaller sister city of Madawaska are considered by residents under many aspects, a single economic entity. An illuminated sign and plastics manufacture owned by Pattison Sign is also important to the city's economy. IPL, a company that manufactures plastic eating utensils, has a facility in Edmundston. The city is the site of the regional hospital for the area. There is a campus of the French language University of Moncton in Edmundston. The New Brunswick Community college system has a campus in Edmundston.", "score": "1.6901227" }, { "id": "15636331", "title": "Edmundston", "text": "Cathedral of Immaculate Conception: Built in 1924, the cathedral's architecture is said to be a synthesis of Roman and Gothic styles. Its granite facade has been recently restored, and can accommodate more than 1,200 people. ; Fortin du Petit-Sault: Erected at the culmination of the boundary disputes between the United States of America and British North America (an international conflict known as Aroostook War) in 1841 prior to the signing of the Webster-Ashburton Treaty. This small fort was rebuilt in 2000. Edmundston hosts two provincial historical sites: Other tourist attractions include de la République Provincial Park, an 18-hole golf course, a ", "score": "1.6661227" }, { "id": "15636328", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Edmundston is a rural town whose economy centres on the Saint John River paper industry. The river historically provided water power for the mills and was the route of log drives bringing pulpwood from upstream forests. The river still provides the water supply for paper manufacture, but environmental concerns encourage pulpwood delivery by highway and rail. Forestry is one of the city's major industries, with several sawmills and paper plants in the vicinity, the largest being the Twin Rivers pulp mill, formerly owned by Fraser Papers, now owned by Norbord, by way of Noranda Forest (1998) and Nexfor (2004). The Edmundston pulp mill is paired with a Twin Rivers paper mill directly across the Saint John River in Madawaska, Maine, through which liquified pulp slurry is piped. The ", "score": "1.653604" }, { "id": "15636326", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Christianity is the dominant religion of the city's inhabitants, with most residents being Roman Catholics. Moreover, Edmundston gives its name to the episcopal see of the region. Edmundston covers four Catholic parishes. Protestant denominations established in city include the Anglican Church of Canada, the United Church of Canada, the United Pentecostal Church International and a French Christian Church called Église de l'Espoir d'Edmundston. A small number of Muslims live in Edmundston and the surrounding area, practicing in their own community centre.", "score": "1.6489017" }, { "id": "15636330", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Every June, Edmundston plays host to the Festival Jazz et Blues d'Edmundston (the Edmundston Jazz and Blues Festival). Every year in August, there is a large cultural festival in Edmundston called the Foire Brayonne. The festival is one of the biggest French themed festivals held in Canada east of the province of Quebec. The three manual Casavant neo-baroque mechanical action pipe organ of the Church of Notre-Dame-des-Sept-Douleurs, situated in a hall with a superb live acoustic, is one of the finest pipe organs in Canada.", "score": "1.6465678" }, { "id": "15333197", "title": "Edmundston Airport", "text": " Edmundston Airport is located 9 NM northwest of Edmundston, New Brunswick, Canada along the east bank of the Madawaska River. The airport is unique among Canadian airports in that its runway straddles the interprovincial border between New Brunswick and Quebec and is located in Patrieville, New Brunswick in Madawaska County and Dégelis, Quebec in the Témiscouata Regional County Municipality. The airport is classified as an airport of entry by Nav Canada and is staffed by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA). CBSA officers at this airport can handle general aviation aircraft only, with no more than 15 passengers. The airport featured a World War II-era Lancaster KB882 on display outside the terminal building since 1964. The aircraft was relocated in 2017, to the National Air Force Museum of Canada.", "score": "1.6210139" }, { "id": "15636334", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " The offices of the Member of Parliament for the federal riding of Madawaska—Restigouche René Arseneault and the Member of the Legislative Assembly for the provincial riding of Edmundston-Madawaska Centre (Jean-Claude D'Amours) are located in downtown Edmundston and for the provincial riding of Madawaska Les Lacs-Edmundston (Francine Landry) are located in Edmundston.", "score": "1.6190152" }, { "id": "15636324", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Mother tongue language (2006) Religious make-up (2001) Edmundston had a population of 16,643 people in 2006, which was a decrease of 4.2% from the 2001 census count (the first post-merger). The median household income in 2005 for Edmundston was $42,551, which is below the New Brunswick provincial average of $45,194. The city is 95 per cent francophone, the highest such proportion of all cities in the province. Edmundston is the third-largest predominantly francophone city in North America outside of Quebec and the Caribbean, behind Clarence-Rockland, Ontario, which has a population exceeding 20,000 and is 68 per cent francophone, and Dieppe, which has a population of 25,384 (2016 Census) and is roughly 80 percent francophone. Outside of Quebec, the cities of Ottawa (122,665), Sudbury (45,420), Toronto ", "score": "1.5956365" }, { "id": "30776198", "title": "Edmundston-Madawaska Centre", "text": " Edmundston-Madawaska Centre is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. It was created as Edmundston in 1967 and was unchanged in the 1973 and 1994. It was only changed slightly in 2006 but its name was changed to Edmundston-Saint Basile to reflect the fact that the district no longer included all of the City of Edmundston as the city had absorbed several outlying communities in an amalgamation in 1995. The name reflects the fact that the district includes the old city of Edmundston as well as the old town of Saint Basile, New Brunswick. In 2013, it ceded some more of Edmundston to the neighbouring Madawaska les Lacs-Edmundston, while adding rural territory to the north, east and south of Edmundston. It was accordingly renamed Edmundston-Madawaska Centre.", "score": "1.5798929" }, { "id": "11206194", "title": "Edmundston (electoral district)", "text": " Edmundston was a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. It has been superseded by the Edmundston-Saint Basile district in 2006.", "score": "1.5781198" }, { "id": "15636337", "title": "Edmundston", "text": "Notable people Edmundston is served by five newspapers: Le Madawaska, L'Étoile — Édition La République, L'Acadie Nouvelle, The Telegraph Journal and Info Weekend), two local radio stations (CJEM-FM, CFAI-FM), two television rebroadcasters (CFTF-DT-1, CIMT-DT-1) and a regional bureau of Radio-Canada. The area also receives the Quebec City-based newspapers Le Journal de Québec and Le Soleil which will cover notable events in the region. ", "score": "1.575072" }, { "id": "15636332", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " downtown with a number of retail stores, restaurants, a hotel and a convention centre. You can also visit the Antique Automobile Museum, the Madawaska Historic Museum, and many other museums. The New Brunswick Botanical Garden is in suburban Saint-Jacques, on seven hectares with more than 80,000 plants, making it the largest arboretum east of Montreal. Edmundston has a downhill skiing facility in the city at Mont Farlagne. This facility has 3 lifts, a t-bar, a double chair, and a quad chair. It has 14 trails and an elevation of 690 feet. Snowmaking is available. Five trails are lit for night skiing.", "score": "1.5698023" }, { "id": "15636327", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Edmundston experiences a humid continental climate (Köppen climate classification Dfb). The highest temperature ever recorded in Edmundston was 37.2 C on 3 June 1919. The coldest temperature ever recorded was -43.6 C on 16 January 2009.", "score": "1.5565927" }, { "id": "15636335", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Edmundston is served by New Brunswick Route 2, a four-lane all weather divided highway and, on the other side of the Saint John River, by U.S. Route 1. There is a municipal airport 17 kilometres north of Edmundston which serves general aviation traffic. The Trans Canada Trail passes through Edmundston, having been converted for pedestrian and bicycling use after abandonment of the New Brunswick Railway.", "score": "1.5356712" }, { "id": "15636336", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " The city has two francophone K-8 schools, an anglophone K-12 school, a francophone high school, a community college campus affiliated with the Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick, and a university campus affiliated with the Université de Moncton.", "score": "1.5325785" }, { "id": "15636318", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " During the early colonial period, the area was a camping and meeting place of the Maliseet (Wolastoqiyik) Nation during seasonal migrations. From the mid to late eighteenth century, one of the largest Maliseet villages had been established at Madawaska and had become a refuge site for other Wabanaki peoples. The Maliseet village was originally located near the falls at the confluence of the Madawaska and Saint John Rivers. Currently, the City of Edmundston surrounds a federal Indian Reserve (St. Basile 10/Madawaska Maliseet First Nation). Originally named Petit-Sault (Little Falls) in reference to the waterfalls located where the Madawaska River merges into the Saint John River, the settlement was renamed Edmundston in 1851 after Sir Edmund Walker Head, who was Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick from 1848 to 1854 and Governor-General of Canada from 1854 to 1861. Originally a small logging settlement, Edmundston's growth is mostly attributed to the city's strategic location.", "score": "1.4939213" }, { "id": "15636325", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Winnipeg (26,855), Moncton (20,425), Timmins (17,390) and Edmonton (15,715) have greater total numbers of francophones, but they are a minority group in those cities. Unlike most other francophones living in the Maritimes, most people living in the Edmundston area do not consider themselves Acadians other than for statistical purposes. Most of them descend from French-Canadians who originally came from Lower Canada (now Quebec) along with a few Irish immigrants to settle the area in the century between 1820 and 1920, and absorbed the small group of Acadians who had arrived earlier. Nor do they consider themselves Québécois despite their heritage, mainly due to the politicization of Quebec-specific issues they do not feel concerned with. Residents speak with a distinctive local accent, colloquially called \"l'accent brayon\".", "score": "1.4883232" }, { "id": "15636333", "title": "Edmundston", "text": " Since 2017, Edmundston has been home to the Edmundston Blizzard of the Maritime Junior A Hockey League, playing their home games at the Centre Jean Daigle.", "score": "1.4813616" } ]
In what city was George Chambers born?
[ "Kimberley", "Kimberley, Nottinghamshire" ]
place of birth
George Chambers (cricketer, born 1884)
4,210,200
25
[ { "id": "30120577", "title": "George Frederick Chambers", "text": " George Frederick Chambers (October 18, 1841–May 24, 1915) was an English barrister, amateur astronomer and author, who wrote a number of popular books about science. Chambers was born on 18 October 1841 at Upton-upon-Severn, Worcestershire. He was introduced to astronomy by his uncle, who owned an observatory in Eastbourne, Sussex, where Chambers stayed from time to time as a child. Chambers went on to study engineering asa student in London. George Chambers published his first book, A Handbook of Descriptive and Practical Astronomy, when he was aged only 19 years. It provided a review of astronomy across 600 pages. It was later republished in anexpanded form, and eventually appeared as three volumes. Chambers turned from engineering to study law. He became abarrister in 1868, and worked for many years as a parliamentary barrister. Chambers set up home in Eastbourne in 1873, where he and his ", "score": "1.794286" }, { "id": "30375231", "title": "George B. Chambers", "text": " George Bennet Chambers (18 January 1881 in Ealing, London – 1969 in Surrey) was an English priest, social activist and author (writing as G. B. Chambers). Following a long ministry in the Church of England, he became the vicar of Carbrooke Church in Norfolk. An expert on folk music (in particular, plainsong ), he was also well known for his left-wing social and political views, which were evident in his well publicised commission of a crucifix incorporating hammer and sickle iconography.", "score": "1.7191417" }, { "id": "6307991", "title": "George Chambers (cricketer, born 1866)", "text": " George Chambers (18 October 1866 – 15 June 1927) was an English cricketer. He was a left-arm fast bowler who played for Nottinghamshire. He was born in Ilkeston and died in New Awsworth. Chambers' debut came during the 1896 County Championship season, against Sussex. Batting in the tailend, he finished not out in the first innings in which he batted, and with a sturdy 16 runs in his second innings. Chambers had to wait nearly three seasons until he played first-class cricket again, during the 1899 season - in which his first action was to bowl out Stanley Jackson. He would play just two matches during the season - his final match coming against Derbyshire, who narrowly avoided an innings defeat following the wicket of Joe Humphries.", "score": "1.7178507" }, { "id": "2797119", "title": "Jason Chambers", "text": " Jason Chambers, of Greek, French and Irish descent, was born on March 23, 1980 in Chicago, Illinois, to Dale Chambers, a homemaker, and George West, who worked for Roadway Services. Chambers resided in Tinley Park, Illinois until the age of 12, then moved to Chicago where he resided until he was 16. At 21, Chambers moved to New York City to study acting. In 2006 he moved to Los Angeles, California. Chambers resides in Miami, Florida.", "score": "1.7083063" }, { "id": "30375232", "title": "George B. Chambers", "text": " Chambers was the seventh child of George Nicholson Chambers and Margaret Bennet. His father was related to the former Chief Justice of Bengal, Sir Robert Chambers, and the family were originally from Northumberland before settling in London. Chambers spent some time in his youth as a Benedictine monk, based at Caldey Island in Pembrokeshire. After changing denomination, he took successive roles in the East End of London and South Africa working with the Church of England. He was ordained a deacon in 1906 and a priest in 1907. He was appointed Vicar of Carbrooke Church in 1927, where he remained until 1955. Whilst at Carbrooke he also became Rector of Ovington, Norfolk in 1952.", "score": "1.7038972" }, { "id": "11150275", "title": "Amanda and Samuel Chambers", "text": " Chambers was born in Pickens County, Alabama on 21 May, 1831, to James Davidson, and his slave, Hester Gillespie. He was secretly baptized at the age of 13 by Thomas Preston, a recent convert to the church. In 1850, he married Priscilla Beasley, with whom he had one child, named Peter. After the Civil War, he began sharecropping and shoemaking for a living.", "score": "1.6808423" }, { "id": "9541365", "title": "James F. Chambers Jr.", "text": " Chambers was born May 13, 1913 to James F. and Elizabeth Troutman Chambers. While born in Houston, he was raised in Dallas. After attending public schools, he transferred to the Terrill School for Boys, where he graduated in 1931. As he later recounted, “I went there to prepare for entrance into Boston Tech (the forerunner to MIT). My father wanted me to be an engineer like he was.”", "score": "1.6659211" }, { "id": "8585758", "title": "C. Haddon Chambers", "text": " Chambers was born in Petersham, Sydney, the son of John Ritchie Chambers, who had a good position in the New South Wales civil service, came from Ulster, his mother, Frances, daughter of William Kellett, from Waterford. Charles was educated at the Petersham, Marrickville, and Fort Street High schools, but found routine study tedious and showed no special promise. He entered the lands department at 15 but did not stay long. After two years in the outback working as a boundary rider, in 1880 he was invited by cousins to return with them to Ulster, from there he visited England. On Chambers' return he was in the managerial department of the Montague-Turner opera company.", "score": "1.645573" }, { "id": "14785478", "title": "John Chambers (artist)", "text": " Chambers was born in South Shields and educated at the town's Union British School, where the pupils were particularly encouraged to draw ships and other nautical subjects. He joined the Tyne Pilot Service on leaving school, but left before reaching manhood and decided to become an artist. Chambers enrolled at the Government School of Design in Newcastle upon Tyne and later went to study in Paris in the ateliers of Professors Gustave Boulanger and Jules Joseph Lefebvre, before settling at North Shields as a professional artist. He first began exhibiting in 1877, showing several examples at the South Shields Fine Art & Industrial Exhibition. He followed this by ", "score": "1.6432185" }, { "id": "10935715", "title": "Charles Edward Chambers", "text": " Chambers was born on August 9, 1883, in Ottumwa, Iowa to Horatio Cox Chambers (1849-1914) and Rosa A. Lee Chambers (1849-1920). He had one sibling, Helen Lee Chambers (1880-1899). Chambers received his education in art from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Later, he attended the National Academy of Design, where he studied under George Bridgman. One of Chambers' teachers was Fanny Musnell (1884-1920). She was an illustrator for national magazines including, Cosmopolitan and Woman's Home Companion. Her style of illustration influenced Chambers, and the two would eventually marry. They remained together till her death in 1920. Chambers later remarried to Pauline True (1912-?), the model from his 1933 Red Cross painting. On November 4, 1941, Chambers died in New York, New York. He is buried in Ottumwa Cemetery in Iowa.", "score": "1.6404777" }, { "id": "4140861", "title": "George Chambers (cricketer, born 1884)", "text": " George Henry Chambers (24 March 1884 – 13 September 1947) was an English cricketer. He was a right-handed batsman who bowled slow left-arm orthodox. He was born at Kimberley, Nottinghamshire. Chambers made his first-class debut for Nottinghamshire against Middlesex in the 1903 County Championship. The following season he played a single first-class match for the county against the Marylebone Cricket Club at Lord's. The 1905 season was to be his last in first-class cricket, with him representing Nottinghamshire in 2 further first-class matches against Oxford University and Yorkshire. In his 4 first-class matches, he scored 58 runs at a batting average of 11.60, with a high score of 30.", "score": "1.6363103" }, { "id": "28209625", "title": "John Chambers (make-up artist)", "text": " Chambers was born in Chicago, Illinois, to an Irish-American family. His father Michael emigrated from Newport in Ireland.", "score": "1.633843" }, { "id": "30190921", "title": "Albert A. Chambers", "text": " Chambers was born in Cleveland, Ohio to Arthur Samuel Chambers and his wife, the former Eleanor Jenny Terbrack. He had a least one sister, who ultimately survived him. Educated at Hobart College, he received his B.A. in 1928, then prepared for ordination at the General Theological Seminary in New York, from which he graduated in 1932. He later received Divinity degrees from Hobart in 1957, GTS in 1961 and Nashotah House in 1963. He married the former Frances Hewette Davis, and they raised two daughters (Sally and Fran) before her death in 1976. He remarried, to Janet Snyder Wilson, who also predeceased him.", "score": "1.589813" }, { "id": "30375233", "title": "George B. Chambers", "text": " Chambers was actively involved in fundraising for institutions that included the Imperial Cancer Research fund (now part of Cancer Research UK). A friend of several prominent left-wing figures in England, he was married in 1921 to Aline Robinson (daughter of Louis Robinson) and had four children.", "score": "1.589722" }, { "id": "602188", "title": "Michael Chambers", "text": " Born in Wilmington, California, Chambers is the youngest of four. He grew up in a small town, but a community with a diverse mix of ethnic groups and cultures. In 1978, while at junior high, Chambers would see a member of the Samoan American dance group Blue City Strutters perform. The group would heavily influence Chambers' style, performing King Tut and domino routines and bringing dance styles from San Jose and San Francisco to South Bay Los Angeles. Initially, he formulated his style of dance through his interest in fantasy and sci-fi television shows, including the work of Ray Harryhausen and other stop-motion experts. He credits his older brother with introducing him to the \"moonwalk\", a move he would later perfect and share with pop superstar Michael Jackson, as well as his signature style of animated ", "score": "1.5849105" }, { "id": "3162744", "title": "Walter B. Chambers", "text": " Chambers was born in Brooklyn, New York, the son of attorney William P. Chambers and Caroline Smith Boughton, both of whom were New York natives. As a child both Walter and his brother, author, Robert William Chambers, attended Brooklyn Polytechnic School, from there he was accepted into the class of 1887 at Yale University, At Yale he served on the fifteenth editorial board of The Yale Record and was a member of the Scroll and Key Society. Following his graduation Chambers was unsure of his career path when his brother,Robert, suggested that he come to Paris to study architecture. In order to convince his parents that Walter doing so was a practical idea he noted Walter's proficiency in drawing buildings. Robert reminded his parents ", "score": "1.5794284" }, { "id": "9509113", "title": "John T. Chambers", "text": " Chambers was born on August 23, 1949 in Cleveland, Ohio to John Tuner \"Jack\" and June Chambers. His mother was a psychiatrist and his father was an obstetrician. The family resided in Kanawha City, West Virginia. When Chambers was nine years old, he was diagnosed with dyslexia. Aided by a therapist, Chambers learned to cope with his disability.", "score": "1.5775564" }, { "id": "11204568", "title": "E. K. Chambers", "text": " Chambers was born in West Ilsley, Berkshire. His father was a curate there and his mother the daughter of a Victorian theologian. He was educated at Marlborough College, before matriculating at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. He won a number of prizes, including the chancellor's prize in English for an essay on literary forgery in 1891. He took a job with the national education department, and married Eleanor Bowman in 1893. In the newly created Board of Education, Chambers worked principally to oversee adult and continuing education. He rose to be second secretary, but the work for which he is remembered took place outside the office, ", "score": "1.5736735" }, { "id": "5960792", "title": "Julius Chambers", "text": " Julius Chambers was born in Bellefontaine, Ohio in 1850, the son of Joseph and Sarabella (née Walker) Chambers. When he was only eleven years old, he began working as a printer's devil in his uncles' newspaper office the \"Bellefontaine Republican\". He first attended Ohio Wesleyan University, and later, Cornell University, from which he graduated in 1870. At Cornell, he was a co-founder in 1869 of the Irving Literary Society. Around 1880, while working as a journalist he spent some time reading law in Philadelphia with Benjamin H. Brewster, who became U.S. Attorney General in December 1881, and studying at Columbia College Law School in New York City.", "score": "1.5695148" }, { "id": "2004543", "title": "George Chambers (MP)", "text": " George Chambers (1766 – after 1826), of Hartford, near Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, was an English soldier, lawyer and Member of Parliament.", "score": "1.5641553" } ]
In what city was Tsugumi Higasayama born?
[ "Saitama Prefecture", "Saitama-ken" ]
place of birth
Tsugumi Higasayama
6,041,173
95
[ { "id": "9376994", "title": "Tsugumi Higasayama", "text": " Tsugumi Higasayama (日笠山亜美) is a Japanese voice actress from Saitama, Japan. Her name is sometimes misread as Ami Higasayama.", "score": "1.7089577" }, { "id": "27218914", "title": "Hyōgo Prefecture", "text": " born in Konohana-ku, Osaka grew up in Kawanishi ; Minako Nishiyama, contemporary artist ; Masamune Shirow, manga artist was born in Kobe ; So Taguchi, outfielder for the Chicago Cubs ; Masahiro Tanaka, pitcher for the New York Yankees ; Nagaru Tanigawa, creator of the Haruhi Suzumiya series was born in Kinki ; Tsuneko Taniuchi, contemporary performance artist ; Fumito Ueda, video game creator of Ico, Shadow of the Colossus, and The Last Guardian ; Juri Ueno, Japanese Academy Award-winning actress best known for her performances in Swing Girls and the live-action adaptation of Nodame Cantabile, is from Kakogawa ; Shota Yasuda, guitarist of Kanjani Eight is from Amagasaki ; Piko, musician, Vocaloid singer born in Kobe, Hyōgo ", "score": "1.6365578" }, { "id": "29159521", "title": "Kokugakuin University", "text": "Masumi Asano (born 1977), Japanese seiyu ; Momoko Tsugunaga (born 1992), Japanese singer ", "score": "1.6165122" }, { "id": "30895041", "title": "Tsugumi", "text": " Tsugumi (つぐみ), born Otake Tsuzumi (大竹 都々美) on 21 February 1976, is a Japanese award-winning actress, model and adult video performer.", "score": "1.5874896" }, { "id": "26670656", "title": "Takeshi Hirayama", "text": " Hirayama was born on January 1, 1923, in Kyoto, Japan. When he was three, his father, Tohshi Hirayama, became professor of surgery at Manchuria Medical College, which led to him and his family moving to the city of Harbin in China. Hirayama graduated from Manchuria Medical College in 1945, and received a degree in medical science from Kyoto University in 1951 and a Master of Public Health degree from Johns Hopkins University in 1952.", "score": "1.584034" }, { "id": "28503749", "title": "Kaii Higashiyama", "text": " Born in Yokohama to parents Kosuke and Higashiyama Kaii, he was given the first name Shinkichi but later changed this to Kaii. From age three to 18 he lived in Kobe where he attended Kobe Junior High School (presently Hyogo Prefectural High School). In 1921 he entered the Nihonga department of Tokyo School of Fine Arts (currently Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music). Higashiyama graduated with commendation in 1931 and entered the school's research department, where he spent two years training under Somei Yuki. In 1933, he boarded a cargo ship bound for Europe and began his studies in Western art history at Berlin University, where he studied from 1933 to 1935. At this time his work entered an art competition during ", "score": "1.5823014" }, { "id": "29632921", "title": "Masafumi Ōura", "text": " Born in Kamiagatagun (present-day Tsushima), Nagasaki Prefecture, he graduated from Nagasaki Prefectural Shimabara Commercial High School, where he became a coach after his retirement from active play. He died on December 20, 2013 in Tokyo from stomach cancer.", "score": "1.5729203" }, { "id": "5788105", "title": "Shigeru Tsuyuguchi", "text": " Tsuyuguchi was born in Tokyo and raised in Ehime. He attended Ehime University, but withdrew before completing his degree and joined the Haiyuza Theatre Company in 1955. His career as a screen actor started in 1959. He came to prominence playing the thief in Shohei Imamura's Unholy Desire. He became one of Imamura's favorite actors, appearing in four of Imamura's other films (he also appeared in the stage play \"Paragy Kamigami to Butabuta\" directed by Imamura in 1962), including Eijanaika in 1981. But he declined Imamura's offer for him to play the role of Taro in Warm Water Under a Red Bridge (2001). He won ", "score": "1.5631049" }, { "id": "12999178", "title": "Jun Azumi", "text": " Born on 17 January 1962 in Miyagi Prefecture, Azumi is a native of Oshika District in Miyagi Prefecture and graduate of Waseda University social science department.", "score": "1.5618045" }, { "id": "10949565", "title": "Hinako Takanaga", "text": " Hinako Takanaga was born on September 16 in Nagoya, Aichi, Japan. Her first manga story, Goukaku kigan (合格祈願), was published by Hanamaru Comics in 1995. As the story continued it was later retitled Challengers, and it spawned a spinoff series titled The Tyrant Falls in Love. She currently lives in Osaka. She was a guest at Yaoi-Con in 2007 and 2010, invited by Digital Manga Publishing, the US publishers of her popular series Little Butterfly and The Tyrant Falls in Love.", "score": "1.5441852" }, { "id": "28314730", "title": "Akifumi Shimoda", "text": " Akifumi Shimoda was born in Kure city of Hiroshima Prefecture, Japan on September 11, 1984.", "score": "1.5411233" }, { "id": "15120849", "title": "Shigeaki Hinohara", "text": " Hinohara was born in Yoshiki District, Yamaguchi Prefecture and graduated from the school of medicine at Kyoto Imperial University in 1937. During his career Hinohara was known for working during many medical emergencies such as the firebombing of Tokyo during World War II and the Tokyo subway sarin attack. He was also on Japan Airlines Flight 351 when it was hijacked by the Japanese Red Army Faction. Hinohara became an honorary member of the Japanese Cardiovascular Society and received the Second Prize and the Order of Culture. He was honored by Kyoto Imperial University, Thomas Jefferson University and by McMaster University by receiving an honorary doctorate. Hinohara died on 18 July 2017 in Tokyo at the age of 105.", "score": "1.5393376" }, { "id": "32537797", "title": "Harima, Hyōgo", "text": " Japanese people were not happy with the new outside foreign influences of the world coming into Japan. He was buried in Aoyama, Tokyo in the foreign section of the cemetery, as he was an American citizen. However, he has become quite a celebrated figure in Harima in recent years. ; Masaki Sumitani (H.G.) — Japanese Comedian, Actor, and Talent ; Masaki Sumitani was born December 18, 1975, in Harima. He was a student at Harima Junior High School, and later attended Kakogawa Higashi Senior High school. His stage name is Razor Ramon HG, but is more commonly known as H.G. (Hard Gay). He appears on a variety of Japanese television shows. ", "score": "1.5391378" }, { "id": "27652267", "title": "Koichi Tsukamoto", "text": " Koichi Tsukamoto (塚本 幸一) was a Japanese businessman, the founder of Wacoal, and the first President of Nippon Kaigi (1997–1998). He was from the former town of Gokashō, now part of Higashiōmi, in Shiga Prefecture. He enlisted in the Imperial Japanese Army in 1940 and fought in Battle of Imphal during the Burma Campaign of the Pacific War, aged only 19. He was demobilized 3 years later at age 21. In 1968, at an event held by the Japanese industrialist Kōnosuke Matsushita to celebrate the hundred years anniversary of the Meiji Restoration, he met the composer Toshiro Mayuzumi. He had a three decade friendship with him and attended his memorial on May 29, 1997.", "score": "1.5362945" }, { "id": "9867887", "title": "Kazuko Saegusa", "text": " Saegusa was born Yotsumoto Kazuko on March 31, 1929 in Kobe. She was the oldest of four children. Her father's job made him transfer locations throughout Hyogo prefecture regularly, so Saegusa moved often. Her mother was a Protestant, and took her children to church with her. Saegusa was an avid reader as a child, and began writing in middle school. In 1944, Saegusa worked at a factory in Nagasaki because of the National Mobilization Law. She returned to Hyogo in April 1945 to attend school. Saegusa studied philosophy at the Kwansei Gakuin University, graduating in 1950. She was a member of a Dostoyevsky study group. She went to graduate school at the same university, focusing her studies on Hegel. She met Koichi Saegusa (his penname was ) while studying at the university. They married in 1951 and moved to Kyoto.", "score": "1.5241606" }, { "id": "12622102", "title": "Daisuke Higuchi", "text": " Born in Gunma prefecture, she was recognized in the world of manga by being honored at the 43rd Osamu Tezuka awards in 1992 with third prize. In the same year, she became the author of a romance/action story called Itaru. In 1998, she became known in Japan for her soccer manga Whistle! and was said to be influenced after she went to France to attend the 1998 World Cup tournament. With the success of Whistle!, she went to personally direct the creation of the animated series. She currently lives in Tokyo.", "score": "1.5192854" }, { "id": "14022004", "title": "Koichi Higashi", "text": " Higashi was born in Nara on August 23, 1978. After graduating from Tenri University, he joined J2 League club Sagan Tosu in 2001. He played many matches as midfielder in first season. However he could not play at all in the match in 2002 season and resigned with the club in July 2002. In 2008, he joined his local club Nara Club in Prefectural Leagues. He played many matches and the club was promoted to Regional Leagues from 2009. He retired end of 2010 season.", "score": "1.5191092" }, { "id": "3907504", "title": "Kyoshi Takahama", "text": " Kyoshi was born in what is now the city of Matsuyama, Ehime Prefecture; his father, Ikenouchi Masatada, was a former samurai and fencing master and was also a fan of the traditional noh drama. However, with the Meiji Restoration, he lost his official posts and retired as a farmer. Kyoshi grew up in this rural environment, which influenced his affinity with nature. At age nine he inherited from his grandmother's family, and took her surname of Takahama. He became acquainted with Masaoka Shiki via a classmate, Kawahigashi Hekigoto. Ignoring Shiki's advice, Kyoshi quit school in 1894, and went to Tokyo to study Edo period Japanese literature. In 1895, he enrolled in the Tōkyō Senmon Gakkō (present-day Waseda University), but soon left the university for a job as an editor and literary criticism for the literary magazine Nihonjin. While working, he also submitted variants on haiku poetry, experimenting with irregular numbers of syllables. He married in 1897. His descendants include his son, the composer, Tomojiro Ikenouchi and great-granddaughter and cellist, Kristina Reiko Cooper.", "score": "1.5139508" }, { "id": "15946952", "title": "Naosaku Takahashi", "text": " Naosaku Takahashi was born on July 25, 1886 at 1071 Sugeya in Tsuchiura City, Ibaraki Prefecture, Japan. (Tsuchiura is now an eastern suburban city in the Greater Tokyo Area.) His father was Bunzayemon Yamanaka and mother, Kon. He completed an eight-year elementary school program and an informal 3-year preparatory study in classical Chinese for secondary school. When he was 16 years old, Takahashi journeyed to Tokyo on April 1, 1903 to continue his education. He was accepted as a “schoolboy” of the Shuyojuku, a private boarding home for self-help working students established by Professor Kazumasa Yoshimaru (吉丸一昌). Yoshimaru was a poet and instructor of Japanese literature at the Tokyo Music School (now Department of Music, Tokyo University ", "score": "1.5121357" }, { "id": "33068459", "title": "Kiyoshi Ogawa", "text": " Ogawa was born on October 23, 1922 in Usui District (modern-day Takasaki City), Gunma Prefecture, as the youngest child of the Oshia family. Kiyoshi did well in school, and entered Waseda University (Shinjuku Ward), near Kagurazaka.", "score": "1.5089809" } ]
What is the capital of Verbandsgemeinde Bad Ems?
[ "Bad Ems", "Ems" ]
capital
Bad Ems (Verbandsgemeinde)
3,635,589
44
[ { "id": "28908682", "title": "Bad Ems-Nassau", "text": "1) Arzbach ; 2) Attenhausen ; 3) Bad Ems ; 4) Becheln ; 5) Dausenau ; 6) Dessighofen ; 7) Dienethal ; 8) Dornholzhausen ; 9) Fachbach ; 10) Frücht ; 11) Geisig ; 12) Hömberg ; 13) Kemmenau ; 14) Lollschied ; 15) Miellen ; 16) Misselberg ; 17) Nievern ; 18) Nassau ; 19) Obernhof ; 20) Oberwies ; 21) Pohl ; 22) Schweighausen ; 23) Seelbach ; 24) Singhofen ; 25) Sulzbach ; 26) Weinähr ; 27) Winden ; 28) Zimmerschied Bad Ems-Nassau is a Verbandsgemeinde (\"collective municipality\") in the Rhein-Lahn-Kreis, in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. The seat of the Verbandsgemeinde is in Bad Ems. It was formed on 1 January 2019 by the merger of the former Verbandsgemeinden Bad Ems and Nassau. The Verbandsgemeinde Bad Ems-Nassau consists of the following Ortsgemeinden (\"local municipalities\"): ", "score": "1.6941314" }, { "id": "1888527", "title": "Bad Ems station", "text": " Bad Ems is a station in the town of Bad Ems in the German state of Rhineland-Palatinate. It is on the Lahn Valley Railway (Koblenz–Wetzlar). The entrance building is heritage-listed.", "score": "1.6105886" }, { "id": "1582084", "title": "Lahn", "text": "Diez ; Bad Ems-Nassau ; Lahnstein (Verband-free town) ; } Verbandsgemeinden:", "score": "1.6074615" }, { "id": "27050858", "title": "Ems-Supérieur", "text": "Osnabrück, cantons: Bramsche, Dissen, Bad Essen, Bad Iburg, Lengerich, Melle, Osnabrück (3 cantons), Ostbevern, Ostercappeln, Tecklenburg and Versmold. ; Minden, cantons: Petershagen, Bünde, Enger, Levern, Lübbecke, Minden, Quernheim, Rahden, Uchte and Werther. ; Quakenbrück, cantons: Ankum, Cloppenburg, Diepholz, Dinklage, Friesoythe, Löningen, Quakenbrück, Vechta, Vörden and Wildeshausen. ; Lingen, cantons: Bevergern, Freren, Fürstenau, Haselünne, Ibbenbüren, Lingen, Meppen, Papenburg and Sögel. Ems-Supérieur (, \"Upper Ems\"; Ober-Ems) was a department of the First French Empire in present-day Germany. It was formed in 1811, when the region was annexed by France. Its territory was part of the present-day German lands Lower Saxony and North Rhine-Westphalia. Its capital was Osnabrück. The department was subdivided into the following arrondissements and cantons (situation in 1812): Its population in 1812 was 415,018. After Napoleon was defeated in 1814, most of the department became part of the Kingdom of Hanover.", "score": "1.5187442" }, { "id": "10432176", "title": "Lähden", "text": " The district is located on the Dutch border. It is named after the Ems river, which crosses the region from south to north. It is an absolutely plain countryside, which was once full of fens. The only elevations are in the Hümmling, which is a hilly forest area east of the Ems. Although the Emsland region is nowadays primarily a county among many others in Lower Saxony, its locals have what could be called a distinct sense of regional pride which will unlikely be found elsewhere in this state.", "score": "1.5178616" }, { "id": "8344568", "title": "Emsland", "text": " The district is located on the Dutch border. It is named after the Ems river, which crosses the region from south to north. It is an absolutely plain countryside, which was once full of fens. The only elevations are in the Hümmling, which is a hilly forest area east of the Ems. Although the Emsland region is nowadays primarily a county among many others in Lower Saxony, its locals have what could be called a distinct sense of regional pride which will unlikely be found elsewhere in this state.", "score": "1.5151393" }, { "id": "8344564", "title": "Emsland", "text": " Landkreis Emsland is a district in Lower Saxony, Germany named after the river Ems. It is bounded by (from the north and clockwise) the districts of Leer, Cloppenburg and Osnabrück, the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (district of Steinfurt), the district of Bentheim in Lower Saxony, and the Netherlands (provinces of Drenthe and Groningen).", "score": "1.5072563" }, { "id": "8344569", "title": "Emsland", "text": "a megalithic grave, typical for the Hümmling area ; the roses from the arms of the Duchy of Arenberg ; the anchor from the arms of the County of Lingen The coat of arms displays: The wavy line symbolises the river Ems.", "score": "1.4783474" }, { "id": "31376656", "title": "Emsland (region)", "text": " Emsland is the name of a region on the Ems River in western Lower Saxony and northern North Rhine-Westphalia. It is divided into the so-called Hanoverian and Westphalian Emsland.", "score": "1.4751966" }, { "id": "6503227", "title": "Ems (river)", "text": " The Ems (Ems; Eems) is a river in northwestern Germany. It runs through the states of North Rhine-Westphalia and Lower Saxony, and discharges into the Dollart Bay which is part of the Wadden Sea. Its total length is 362.4 km. The state border between the Lower Saxon area of East Friesland (Germany) and the province of Groningen (Netherlands), whose exact course was the subject of a border dispute between Germany and the Netherlands (settled in 2014), runs through the Ems estuary.", "score": "1.4693658" }, { "id": "1888529", "title": "Bad Ems station", "text": "track 1 (length: 277 metre; height: 34/55 cm): trains to Koblenz Hauptbahnhof ; track 2 (length: 272 metre; height: 34/55 cm): trains to Limburg (Lahn) and Gießen The station has a platform with two platform tracks: ", "score": "1.4658322" }, { "id": "836494", "title": "Alemanni", "text": " a Christian protective charm against them. A runic inscription on a fibula found at Bad Ems reflects Christian pious sentiment (and is also explicitly marked with a Christian cross), reading god fura dih deofile ᛭ (\"God for/before you, Theophilus!\", or alternatively \"God before you, Devil!\"). Dated to between AD 660 and 690, it marks the end of the native Alemannic tradition of runic literacy. Bad Ems is in Rhineland-Palatinate, on the northwestern boundary of Alemannic settlement, where Frankish influence would have been strongest. The establishment of the bishopric of Konstanz cannot be dated exactly and was possibly undertaken by Columbanus himself (before 612). In any case, it ", "score": "1.4472356" }, { "id": "31767715", "title": "Emschergenossenschaft", "text": "Holzwickede ; Dortmund ; Small parts of Witten, Waltrop and Lünen ; Castrop-Rauxel ; Recklinghausen ; Herten ; Herne ; Bochum ; Essen ; Mülheim ; Gelsenkirchen ; Gladbeck ; Bottrop ; Oberhausen ; Duisburg ; Dinslaken ; Voerde The Emschergenossenschaft is working in the 865 km2 catchment area of the Emscher with the municipalities (from east to west) The catchment is historically divided since cutting the Emscher main stream from its original estuary twice, first in 1906 from the original mouth in Duisburg and 1949 again by shifting the mouth to Dinslaken. The former parts of the catchment area in Duisburg and Oberhausen are drained artificially and the waste water is – after treatment – pumped into the river Rhine. These sub catchments are called “Alte Emscher” and “Kleine Emscher”. The third shift of the Emscher mouth (under construction 2014–2018) has been leading to the municipality of Voerde as a new member in the Emschergenossenschaft.", "score": "1.4415419" }, { "id": "1888531", "title": "Bad Ems station", "text": "456: Bad Ems–Welschneudorf–Montabaur ; 547: Bad Ems town route ; 557: Bad Ems–Arzbach–Neuhäusel(–Koblenz) The following bus routes stop at the nearest bus stop, called Bad Ems Hauptbahnhof:", "score": "1.4401214" }, { "id": "6503228", "title": "Ems (river)", "text": " The source of the river is in the southern Teutoburg Forest in North Rhine-Westphalia. In Lower Saxony, the brook becomes a comparatively large river. Here the swampy region of Emsland is named after the river. In Meppen the Ems is joined by its largest tributary, the Hase River. It then flows northwards, close to the Dutch border, into East Frisia. Near Emden, it flows into the Dollart bay (a national park) and then continues as a tidal river towards the Dutch city of Delfzijl. Between Emden and Delfzijl, the Ems forms the border between the Netherlands and Germany and was subject to a ", "score": "1.4336506" }, { "id": "26697386", "title": "Ems-Oriental", "text": "Aurich, cantons: Aurich, Berum, Norden and Timmel. ; Emden, cantons: Emden, Leer, Oldersum, Pewsum and Stickhausen. ; Jever, cantons: Esens, Hooksiel, Jever, Rüstringen and Wittmund. Ems-Oriental (, \"Eastern Ems\"; Ooster-Eems, Ost-Ems) was a department of the First French Empire in present-day Germany. It was formed in 1810, when the Kingdom of Holland was annexed by France. Its territory is part of the present-day German region of East Frisia in Lower Saxony. Its capital was Aurich. The department was subdivided into the following arrondissements and cantons (situation in 1812): Its population in 1812 was 128,200. After Napoleon was defeated in 1814, the department became part of the Kingdom of Hanover.", "score": "1.4280245" }, { "id": "26806634", "title": "Feldbahn", "text": "Bad Ems: Pit railway in the Ems Mining Museum ; Guldental ; Ramsen (Pfalz): Waldbahn stub line ; Serrig: estate ; Sondernheim: brickyard museum (Ziegeleimuseum Sondernheim) ", "score": "1.4248966" }, { "id": "8344566", "title": "Emsland", "text": " (1866), the dukes were deposed soon after (1875). The now Prussian Province of Hanover was subdivided into districts in 1885; four districts were established on the territory of what is now the Landkreis Emsland. The districts were merged in 1977 to form the present district. During the Nazi period, labour camps known as the Emslandlager (\"Emsland camps\") held thousands of political opponents of the Third Reich, located outside Börgermoor, now part of the commune Surwold, not far from Papenburg. A memorial of these camps, the Dokumentations- und Informationszentrum (DIZ) Emslandlager, is located at Papenburg. The well known resistance song \"Peat Bog Soldiers\" was composed by political prisoners at one of these ", "score": "1.4223871" }, { "id": "14652876", "title": "Hohenems", "text": " The summit of the Schlossberg rock, within 45 minutes walk from the town center, is crowned by the ruins of Alt-Ems, a castle dating back to the 9th century CE. From the 12th century it was among the largest fortifications in the south of the German kingdom. The stronghold was very extensive, with a length of up to 800 m (2,625 ft) and a width of 85 m (280 ft). It reached its peak of fame from the 13th to 16th centuries, as a residence of many lords and knights of Hohenems. As they were loyal ministeriales of the Hohenstaufen ", "score": "1.4213119" }, { "id": "13723516", "title": "Lower Saxony", "text": " Saxony, one being the city of Bremen, the other its seaport, Bremerhaven (which is a semi-enclave, as it has a coastline). Lower Saxony thus borders more neighbours than any other single Bundesland. The state's principal cities include the state capital Hanover, Braunschweig (Brunswick), Lüneburg, Osnabrück, Oldenburg, Hildesheim, Wolfenbüttel, Wolfsburg, and Göttingen. Lower Saxony is the only Bundesland that encompasses both maritime and mountainous areas. The northwestern area of the state, on the coast of the North Sea, is called East Frisia and the seven East Frisian Islands offshore are popular with tourists. In the extreme west of Lower Saxony is the Emsland, an economically emerging but rather sparsely populated area, once dominated by inaccessible swamps. The northern half of Lower ", "score": "1.4200659" } ]
What sport does Francesco Reda play?
[ "road bicycle racing", "bicycle road cycling", "bicycle road race", "road bicycle race", "road cycling race", "road cycle racing", "road bike racing", "cycle race" ]
sport
Francesco Reda
442,737
73
[ { "id": "13905777", "title": "Marco Reda", "text": " club captain. On June 13, 2002, he was named for the first time in his career to the A-League Team of the Week. Early on in the season he was invited to a trial in Norway with Sogndal Fotball. His trial was a success and was offered a contract by the First Division club. In his debut season with Sogndal he was named the club's player of the year, and played a total of 70 matches and scored six goals. In 2006. after Sogndal were relegated to Norwegian First Division he signed a contract with Aalborg BK of the ", "score": "1.7491565" }, { "id": "13905774", "title": "Marco Reda", "text": " Marco Reda (born June 22, 1977) is a Canadian former soccer player who began his professional career in the USL A-League with the Toronto Lynx where he developed his skills as a solid defender. This led to his transfer to Europe to sign with Sogndal, where he would eventually have a tenure in Scandinavia for six years. Reda would return to Toronto, this time to sign with expansion franchise Toronto FC, and would conclude his career in the USL First Division. He also played at the indoor level in the National Professional Soccer League with the Toronto ThunderHawks in 2000–2001. After his retirement from competitive soccer he briefly served as an assistant coach in the Canadian Soccer League with SC Toronto in 2012, and later became a teacher for Hudson College.", "score": "1.721164" }, { "id": "4244251", "title": "Team Idea 2010 ASD", "text": " In July 2015 Francesco Reda, tested positive for EPO in an anti-doping control that was taken at the Italian Road Championships held on June 27. In February 2016, Reda was banned for eight years.", "score": "1.7160807" }, { "id": "13905775", "title": "Marco Reda", "text": " Reda began his career at the college level with Winthrop University from 1996 to 1997. He went professional in 1998, after Peter Pinizzotto head coach of the Toronto Lynx signed him to a contract. In 1999, he was named the team captain for the club, and won the team's best defensive player award. In 2000, the captain assisted his franchise in qualifying for the postseason for the second time in the club's history. Toronto would finish third in the Northeast Division. In the playoffs the Lynx faced Richmond Kickers in the first round, and advanced to the next round by ", "score": "1.7055328" }, { "id": "13905781", "title": "Marco Reda", "text": " Reda made his debut for Canada in a February 2005 friendly match against Northern Ireland and has earned a total of 7 caps, scoring 1 goal. He has a non-playing squad member at the 2007 CONCACAF Gold Cup. His final international was a January 2008 friendly match against Martinique. He also played with the Canada men's national under-23 soccer team where he was selected for the 1999 Pan American Games.", "score": "1.6725014" }, { "id": "5426981", "title": "Francesco Pietrosanti", "text": " Francesco Pietrosanti (born 3 December 1963 in L'Aquila) is a former Italian rugby union player and a current sports director. He played as a scrum-half. Pietrosanti played his entire career at L'Aquila Rugby, at the National Championship of Excellence, from 1982/83 to 1998/99. He won the National Championship title in 1993/94. He had 25 caps for Italy, from 1987 to 1993, scoring 5 tries, 20 points on aggregate. He was called for the 1991 Rugby World Cup, without playing. He has been team manager and sports director, since his retirement.", "score": "1.6415018" }, { "id": "449428", "title": "Francis Zé", "text": " Zé started his professional career with Sampdoria. In February 2001 along with Thomas Job and Jean Ondoa were investigated by FIGC for alleged falsification of documents in order to treat as a European Union citizen. In July 2001, they were banned for 6 months. In February 2002, he was loaned to Cremonese along with Ondoa. In 2002-03 season Zé returned to Genoa and made his Serie B debut on 24 May 2003, replaced Andrea Rabito in the 80th minutes. In 2004-05 season he left for Swiss Challenge League side Chiasso (but also from Italian speaking region), played 16 times. In January 2007 he left for Red Star Waasland but his contract was not extended at the end of season. In February 2004, he scored a goal for Cameroon Olympic team at 2004 CAF Men's Pre-Olympic Tournament.", "score": "1.6362276" }, { "id": "25159520", "title": "Reda Bellahcene", "text": " Reda Bellahcene (born January 21, 1993 in Schiltigheim) is a French-Algerian football player who is currently playing for SC Schiltigheim in the Championnat National 2 Group B.", "score": "1.6355797" }, { "id": "1355535", "title": "Reda Boultam", "text": " Reda Boultam (born 3 March 1998) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for Serie B club Cosenza, on loan from Salernitana.", "score": "1.6314775" }, { "id": "32840930", "title": "Sanda (sport)", "text": "Alessandro Riguccini ", "score": "1.6251776" }, { "id": "7396297", "title": "Mohamed Reda", "text": " Mohamed Ali Anwar Reda (محمد علي أنور رضا; born April 16, 1989 in Cairo), known as Mohamed Reda, is a professional squash player who represented Egypt. He reached a career-high world ranking of World No. 23 in October 2011.", "score": "1.6247289" }, { "id": "13905779", "title": "Marco Reda", "text": " Reda was released by Toronto in November 2007. On March 4, 2008, he signed with the Charleston Battery of the USL First Division. With Charleston he was named the team captain, and helped the Battery reach the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup final, where the organization lost to a score of 2–1 to D.C. United. On February 11, 2009, he signed with the Vancouver Whitecaps, During his tenure with Vancouver he helped the Whitecaps reach the USL playoff finals, but were defeated by the Montreal Impact. He was released by the Whitecaps at the end of the 2009 season.", "score": "1.6206021" }, { "id": "9233098", "title": "Francesco Bona", "text": " After the end of his sports career, Bona worked as an engineer in his hometown of Biella.", "score": "1.617177" }, { "id": "30685675", "title": "Francesco Bordi", "text": " Bordi was first called into the Italy national setup in 2012, when he was included in coach Daniele Zoratto's under-16 squad for the international friendly against Switzerland. He played 66 minutes, and was booked. He made a further seven appearances at under-16 level, and registered an assist against Russia in a 3-1 win. He was called up to the under-17 squad but never made the field. Despite this, Bordi went on to be included in the under-18 squad for a game against Switzerland on 22 October 2014. He was substituted in to play the final 25 minutes of an eventual 0-1 loss.", "score": "1.609316" }, { "id": "31398632", "title": "Francisco Frione", "text": " Francisco Frione, also known as Francesco Frione (21 July 1912 – 17 February 1935), was an Uruguayan-Italian professional football player. He was born in Uruguay and played for the Uruguay national football team, but later was naturalized as an Italian citizen and played for the Italian national B team. Frione's family was of Ligurian descent, from the city of Finale Ligure.", "score": "1.6066806" }, { "id": "14366793", "title": "Francesco Antonucci", "text": " Antonucci played in the youth of La Louvière Centre, Charleroi, Anderlecht and Ajax. In the winter break of the 2016–17 season he moved to Monaco. At Monaco, he played for the second team, competing in the Championnat National 2, the fourth tier of the French football league system.", "score": "1.6042624" }, { "id": "25159521", "title": "Reda Bellahcene", "text": " Reda Bellahcene, a defensive midfielder of 23 years who currently plays at Saint-Louis Neuweg, French club CFA. Formed in Strasbourg He spent his first professional contract with the champions of Algeria for three years, Bellahcene, who was tenured on 26 occasions in 30 matches so far with St. Louis who finished the season in eighth place in the Group B of the CFA should be an additional asset in the midfield usmiste already expanded by experienced players.", "score": "1.5933497" }, { "id": "26962639", "title": "Francesco Flachi", "text": " In 2021, Flachi announced he had been training with Italian fifth-tier team Signa 1914, and was planning to make a comeback as a player when his ban expired in January of 2022.", "score": "1.5900629" }, { "id": "9520921", "title": "Massimo Ravazzolo", "text": " Massimo Ravazzolo (born 5 September 1972 in Calvisano) is a former Italian rugby union player and a current coach. He played as a wing and as a fullback. He played for Rugby Calvisano, from 1988/89 to 2005/06, where he had his debut at first team aged only 16 years old. He won the National Championship in 2004/05 and the Cup of Italy in 2003/04. He later would play for Gran Ducato Parma Rugby (2006/07), Rugby Brescia (2006/07-2008/09) and Rugby Calvisano (2009/10-2010/11), his last team. He had 23 caps for Italy, from 1993 to 1997, scoring 3 tries, 15 points on aggregate. He was called for the 1995 Rugby World Cup, playing a single match and remaining scoreless. Ravazzolo after finishing his player career, became a coach. He was the coach of Rugby Reggio in 2011/12.", "score": "1.5885029" }, { "id": "32266696", "title": "Francesco Postiglione", "text": " Francesco Postiglione (born 29 April 1972 in Naples) is a former swimmer and water polo player from Italy, who represented his native country at four Summer Olympics: 1992, 1996, 2000 and 2004. At his Olympic debut he competed as a breaststroke swimmer (1992). Four years later he claimed the bronze medal with the men's national team at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, USA.", "score": "1.5868144" } ]
In what city was Gloria Porras Valles born?
[ "Baja California Sur", "South Lower California", "Free and Sovereign State of Baja California Sur", "South Territory of Baja California", "MX-BCS", "BCS", "MX03", "Estado de Baja California Sur" ]
place of birth
Gloria Porras Valles
1,514,591
61
[ { "id": "9412213", "title": "Gloria Porras Valles", "text": " Gloria Porras Valles (born 16 April 1960) is a Mexican politician from the Institutional Revolutionary Party. In 2012 she served as Deputy of the LXI Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Baja California Sur.", "score": "1.912779" }, { "id": "32974060", "title": "Gloria Ortiz Delgado", "text": " Ortiz was born in Suan Juan de Pasto, Narino on 7 January 1969. She has a degree in law from the Universidad Externado de Colombia, postgraduate specialisation in Constitutional Law from the University of the Andes and a Master's in Law with an emphasis in Public Law from the Universidad Externado.", "score": "1.652924" }, { "id": "3912785", "title": "Gloria Giner de los Ríos García", "text": " Gloria Giner de los Ríos García was born in Madrid on 28 March 1886. The daughter of Laura García Hoppe and Hermenegildo Giner de los Ríos, she spent her childhood and adolescence in Madrid, Alicante, and Barcelona, cities where her father held the Chair of Philosophy. After finishing high school in 1906 and teaching in 1908, she completed her training by attending classes at the Institución Libre de Enseñanza and taking courses in art, pedagogy, and philosophy. In 1909, she was promoted to the Escuela de Estudios Superiores de Magisterio.", "score": "1.6236787" }, { "id": "28634990", "title": "Agripina Montes del Valle", "text": " Agripina Montes del Valle (1844–1912) also known as \"Azucena del Valle\", \"Porcia\" and \"La Musa del Tequendama\", was a Colombian poet, writer, and intellectual, She was recognized for her works dedicated to the beauty of her country and region, and to the women of Colombia and Latin America at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century.", "score": "1.6233786" }, { "id": "15372687", "title": "Gloria Guzmán", "text": " Gloria Guzmán was born on 15 April 1902 (or possibly 1894) in Vitoria, Alava, Spain. She arrived in Argentina in 1924 with a zarzuela company and had her debut in the play Las camisas negras. By 1926, she was dubbed as one of the three great \"Bataclanas\" (showgirls)of the Maipo Theater along with Carmen Lamas and Iris Marga. In 1931, she began making films debuting in Luces de Buenos Aires with Sofía Bozán and Pedro Quartucci. That same year, she starred in Un caballero de frac directed by Roger Capellani and Carlos San Martín with Roberto Rey and Rosita Díaz Gimeno. In 1936, she filmed Radio Bar directed by Manuel Romero with starring alongside ", "score": "1.6002007" }, { "id": "16073388", "title": "Gloria Fuertes", "text": " Gloria Fuertes was born in a modest family in Madrid in 1917. Her mother was a seamstress and maid; her father, a beadle. She attended the Institute of Vocational Education of Women, where she studied Shorthand, Typing and Childcare. Her interest in writing started at the early age of five, when she started writing and illustrating stories. However, she also declared that her family did not support her in the slightest and that her mother would reprimand her if she saw her with a book. Nevertheless she published her first poem at age fourteen: Childhood, Youth, Old Age (Niñez, Juventud, Vejez) and at seventeen shaped her first book of ", "score": "1.5996103" }, { "id": "26559310", "title": "Gloria Izaguirre", "text": " Gloria Izaguirre (born August 15, 1966 in Mexico City, Mexico) is a Mexican actress.", "score": "1.5907004" }, { "id": "13809342", "title": "Glòria Muñoz", "text": " Glòria Muñoz Pfister was born on 12 August 1949 in Barcelona, Spain. Her family was artistically inclined. She studied in Barcelona at l'Escola Superior de Belles Arts Sant Jordi, completing her art coursework in 1972. In the same year, she married Josep, whose father, painter and professor Josep Puigdengolas i Barella, helped her meet important members of Barcelona's exclusive art community. This opportunity, combined with her desire to explore new methods of artistic expression, influenced her to create paintings which can trace their origins to early twentieth-century art. In 1975, the year of her first solo exhibition, she founded an art education center, Taller de Dibuix i Pintura, in Barcelona. She has been a professor of painting in the University of Barcelona's Department of Fine Arts since 1985, and in 1990 she received a doctorate degree in fine arts from the same institution. In 2000, she was a member of the Madrid Ministry of Education's \"Contemporary Realism\" project.", "score": "1.5900836" }, { "id": "10729265", "title": "Gloria Porcella", "text": " Gloria was born and raised in Rome, and then attended San Diego State University and University of California San Diego. Following university, Gloria interned for Sotheby's on New Bond street in London from 1995 to 1997 in the Impressionist and Modern Art Department. In 1997, she returned to Rome to stage her first exhibition at Galleria Ca’ d’Oro. She quickly became a prominent figure in the Italian art world, serving as a Councilor of Cultural Commission, Head of the Cultural Center in Rome, and as an advisor to the Ministry of the Environment in Italy. Gloria has staged exhibitions at the European Parliament of Brussels for Italian artist Giorgio de Chirico and is the European curator for American artist Seward Johnson. Gloria expanded Galleria Ca’ d’Oro to Miami in 2010, where she began curating exhibitions linking Italian art with the United States. She recently opened her newest gallery in New York City in Chelsea in 2014. She works in public art projects around the world and has staged shows in Berlin, Gstaad, Hannover, Milan, Monte Carlo, Palermo, Rome, Sardinia, Siracusa, and Turin.", "score": "1.588926" }, { "id": "3548898", "title": "Gloria Dünkler", "text": " Gloria Dünkler was born into a large family of artisans, musicians, and fishermen. She studied Pedagogy in Language and Communication at the University of La Frontera in Temuco, and graduated as a Spanish teacher and a licentiate in education in 2003. Later, in 2009, she qualified as a librarian at the Metropolitan University of Technology in Santiago. The same year of her graduation as a teacher, she self-published her first book of poems, Quilaco seducido. With the second, Füchse von Llafenko (Zorros de Llafenko), which was released by Ediciones Tácitas in 2009, she won her first major award, the Academy, given by ", "score": "1.5805978" }, { "id": "1656171", "title": "Gloria Marín", "text": " Gloria Méndez Ramos was a daughter of dancer María Laura Ramos Luna and businessman Pedro Méndez Armendáriz, and a cousin of actor Pedro Armendáriz. She began her career at age six, alongside her mother who ran a theater company in Mexico City. She also worked later in the Mayab and in the carpa of Santa María la Ribera where the comedian Joaquín Pardavé offers her first opportunity in the cinema. She debuted in the film Los millones de Chaflán (1939). At age 15, she married the official Arturo Vargas (forwarding agent). She made 19 films between 1938 and 1941. She performed with Cantinflas in El gendarme desconocido and met Jorge Negrete in the filming of ¡Ay, Jalisco, no te rajes!. Marín was nominated for a Silver Ariel Award for her ", "score": "1.5773084" }, { "id": "11641578", "title": "Gloria Trevi", "text": " Born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico, Gloria Trevi left Monterrey for Mexico City to pursue her music career.", "score": "1.5756297" }, { "id": "8741180", "title": "Gloria González", "text": " In 2004, she moved to Central Florida where she currently lives. In 2007, she was honored at the \"Asociación Borinqueña\" of Central Florida, in Orlando, Florida for her career as a composer.", "score": "1.5749788" }, { "id": "275751", "title": "Claudia Fernández Valdivia", "text": " Claudia Fernández Valdivia was born in La Paz on 30 January 1988, the daughter of Óscar Fernández (from Chuquisaca) and Gloria Valdivia (from Santa Cruz). Both emigrated to the city for work reasons and stayed to start a family. During her childhood and adolescence she lived in La Paz, completing baccalaureate studies at the Loreto y Humboldt school in 2005. She graduated from Loyola University (Bolivia) with a degree in commercial engineering.", "score": "1.5738506" }, { "id": "5311994", "title": "Stella Sierra", "text": " Born in Aguadulce on 5 July 1917, she was placed in the care of her mother after her parents, Alejandro Tapia Escobar and Antonia Sierra Jaén de Tapia, divorced in 1922; she then became known as Stella Sierra. After attending primary school in her home town, she completed her secondary education in Panama City. She graduated from the Colegio Internacional de María Inmaculada in 1934. She then studied Spanish language and literature at Panama University, gaining the teaching qualification of Profesora de Segunda Enseñanza (secondary school teacher) in 1954. By this time she had already published her first book title Sinfonía jubilosa en doce sonetos (Joyful Symphony in Twelve ", "score": "1.5699716" }, { "id": "12336778", "title": "Gloria Arellanes", "text": " Arellanes was born in East Los Angeles, and a few years later her family moved to El Monte, California. Gloria's father, César Barron Arellanes, was a Mexican immigrant. Her mother, Aurora Arellanes, was of indigenous Mexican descent from present-day Azusa. Gloria as a child was never taught about her indigenous roots. Her mother found it easier for Gloria and her sibling, William (Bill) Cesar, to identify as Mexicans. Gloria attended El Monte High School from 1960 to 1964, which is where her political consciousness began to develop. Her high school had a large mix of white and Chicano population. The Chicanos, although from different barrios, often stuck together and supported each other. Fights would break out in her high school constantly until a counselor named John Bartan held a Human Relations Club where white ", "score": "1.5670738" }, { "id": "8741176", "title": "Gloria González", "text": " Gloria González, born on April 6, at Antonsanti Street, Stop 22 in Santurce, Puerto Rico. She is the only daughter of Jorge González and Blanca Pérez, both from the town of Arecibo, Puerto Rico. She studied her elementary grades at Manuel Padre Rufo School, located in Del Parque Street, Stop 23 in Santurce, Puerto Rico. Her secondary studies were done at República Del Perú Jr. High in Loiza Street, also in Santurce. In 1958, she moved with her father to New York City, where she attended P.S. 71 on Avenue B in Manhattan. Gloria returned to Puerto Rico and got married. She gave birth ", "score": "1.5656985" }, { "id": "16073387", "title": "Gloria Fuertes", "text": " Gloria Fuertes García (28 July 1917 – 27 November 1998) was a Spanish poet and author of children's literature, linked to the first Spanish literary movement after the Civil War, 50’s Generation or postism. She became particularly well-known in Spain in the 70’s, after her collaborations on children’s television shows. In her work, she defended equality between men and women, pacifism and the fight for the environment. With the centenary of her birth in 2017, the recognition of her role in Spanish poetry as a whole during the 20th century has increased greatly. She was born and died in Madrid, Spain.", "score": "1.5639675" }, { "id": "6304823", "title": "Gloria Alexandra", "text": " Gloria Alexandra was born and raised in Lima, Peru and relocated to the US, at 21. As a young child, she started taking ballet and piano. At age eight, she joined San Antonio Children's Theater and Choir. She loves all forms of art, loves performing, and also sings, dances and plays piano. She has appeared in various independent films, including action thriller Desert Saints (opposite Kiefer Sutherland) and the drama A Beautiful Life She starred in the made-for-TV movies Dog the Bounty Hunter. Her television work includes guest starring roles on Angel, Ally McBeal, The X Show, Jose Luis Sin Censura, Sin Tapujos, La Corte Familiar, as well as a series regular role on Secretos. Gloria Alexandra has also appeared in Divorcio USA as the character of Lina Gallegos. She recently completed the indy comedy Tweaksville released in 2010.", "score": "1.5615299" }, { "id": "15044642", "title": "Gloria Lasso", "text": " Rosa Vicenta Montserrat Coscolín Figueras (25 October 1922 – 4 December 2005) known professionally as Gloria Lasso was a Spanish-born canción melódica singer, long based in France. In the 1950s, she was one of the major competitors to Dalida. Born in Vilafranca del Penedès (Barcelona) in Catalonia, Spain, she achieved a degree of fame and success in the 1950s and 1960s, with songs such as Amour, castagnettes et tango (1955), Etranger au paradis (1956, a French version of Stranger in paradise by Tony Bennett), Buenas noches mi amor (1957) and Bon voyage (1958). Eventually superseded by Dalida, she moved to Mexico, but attempted a comeback to France in 1985 performing at the Paris Olympia. She was reportedly married six times. She died from a myocardial infarction, aged 83, at her Cuernavaca, Mexico home.", "score": "1.5614281" } ]
Who is the author of Western?
[ "Jean Van Hamme" ]
author
Western (comics)
2,140,148
67
[ { "id": "6360098", "title": "American frontier", "text": "Chris Enss: author of historical nonfiction that documents the forgotten women of the Old West. ; Zane Grey: author of many popular novels on the Old West ; Karl May: best selling German writer of all time, noted chiefly for wild west books set in the American West. ; Lorin Morgan-Richards: author of Old West titles and The Goodbye Family series. ; Winnetou: American-Indian hero of several novels written by Karl May. ", "score": "1.5296166" }, { "id": "26563481", "title": "S. Omar Barker", "text": " of the founding fathers and an early president. Elsa also served a term as president. In 1978 he was the first living author to be inducted into the Hall of Fame of Great Westerners in the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. He was well known as the \"Sage of Sapello\" and the \"Poet Lariat of New Mexico\". Barker used to submit stories and poems to a bi-weekly Western pulp magazine called Ranch Romances. Sometime in the 1930s, he was asked by the editor to rewrite a story submitted by an old Texas cowhand named Jack Potter about his life of driving cattle. This started a collaboration between the two that lasted for years. Potter had ", "score": "1.5173963" }, { "id": "9411035", "title": "Cleveland Publishing", "text": " published: the Enchanting series, the Diamond Library series, the Doctors and Nurses series, the Doctor Riley series, the Doctor Conway series, the Frontline series, the Raider series, the Commando series and the Patrol series. The western genre was the company's mainstay product and included the following series: American Wild West, Arizona Western, Big Horn Western, Bison Western, Bobcat Western, Chisholm Western, Classic Western, Cleveland Western, Condor Western, Coronado Western, Dollar Western, Fighting Western, Halliday Western, High Brand Western, Iron Horse Western, Legends of the West, Lobo Western, Loner Western, Peacemaker Western, Phoenix Western, Pinto Western, Rawhide Western, Santa Fe Western, Sierra Western, Sundown Western, Texas Western, The Avenger, Top Hand Western, Tumbleweed Western, and Winchester Western. Authors that contributed significantly to the western genre included Des Dunn, Roger Green, Keith Hetherington, Richard Wilkes-Hunter, Len Meares and Paul Wheelahan. Each author was published under a number of pseudonyms.", "score": "1.491047" }, { "id": "157794", "title": "John D. Nesbitt", "text": " In 1978, Nesbitt first piece, a short-story called \"West of Dancing Rock,\" was published in the commercial magazine Far West. Between 1978 and 1994, several of Nesbitt's short fiction, academic articles, nonfiction, and poetry were published in a variety of academic journals, literary magazines, and commercial magazines. Nesbitt's first book, One-Eyed Cowboy Wild, was published as a hardcover western with Walker and Company in New York City in 1994. After three novels with Walker and Company, he moved into paperback original western novels for several years, and later returned to hardcover publishing with Five Star. Since the publication of his first novel, he has published several short story collections, contemporary novels, nonfiction works, poems, and song lyrics. Nesbitt's work has been commended for its realism, descriptive settings, development of characters, and unique blend of genres, such as his works in frontier fiction and niche noir fiction.", "score": "1.488632" }, { "id": "13348171", "title": "Western Romance literature", "text": " the treachery and violence of the landscape. Wister's work was characterised by his intermeshing of romance conventions with social realism, incorporating ideas of class and heritage to reflect the concerns of his time It was within their work that the “Indian killing, heroine rescuing” cowboy came to be. Grey became known for his work in this genre (under the publisher, Harper's) and the hugely successful Western Romantic novel Riders of the Purple Sage (1912). The novel centres around a cowboy named Lassister and his relationship with his virginal heroine, Jane, set against the backdrop of the severe American frontier. According to Danney Goble, it ", "score": "1.4870033" }, { "id": "15330848", "title": "Frederick Nolan", "text": " At age 21, Nolan began the research that established him as one of England's leading authorities on the American West. In 1954, he co-founded The English Westerners' Society. At the start of his career, he became first a reader, and later an editor, for Corgi (Bantam) Books in London. Moving to London in the early 1960s made it possible for him to pursue the other consuming interest of his life: American musical theatre. During this time, he also began writing Western fiction as Frederick H. Christian, a pseudonym derived from his own, his wife Heidi's, and his oldest son's first names. Over ", "score": "1.4820731" }, { "id": "8461704", "title": "Thomas Savage (novelist)", "text": " Thomas Savage (April 25, 1915 – July 25, 2003) was an American author of novels published between 1944 and 1988. He is best known for his Western novels, which drew on early experiences in the American West.", "score": "1.48153" }, { "id": "12250794", "title": "James Hendryx", "text": " James Beardsley Hendryx, (December 9, 1880 - March 1, 1963) was an American author of western fiction.", "score": "1.4783118" }, { "id": "4360816", "title": "Western lifestyle", "text": "Andy Adams, fiction writer ; Don Bendell, author, rancher ; Eulalia Bourne ; Matt Braun, author, rancher ; Willa Cather ; Ralph Compton ; Robert J. Conley ; Walt Coburn, author and son of the founder of the noted Circle C Ranch ; Angie Debo ; Chris Enss ; Zane Grey, author and dentist ; Fred Grove ; Laura Ingalls Wilder, author ; Craig Johnson, author ; Terry C. Johnston ; Elmer Kelton ; Mike Kearby, author and inventor ; Louis L'Amour, novelist and short story writer ; Caroline Lockhart, journalist and author ; Stan Lynde, author and illustrator ; Lorin Morgan-Richards, author and illustrator ; Mari Sandoz ; Elizabeth Savage ; Thomas Savage ; Jack Schaefer ", "score": "1.476696" }, { "id": "4992501", "title": "Herbert Krause", "text": "Huseboe, Arthur R., Herbert Krause (Boise State University. Western Series No. 66, December 1985) available online via Western Writers Series Digital Editions ; Paulson, Kristoffer E., Ole Rolvaag, Herbert Krause and the Frontier Thesis of Frederick Jackson Turner ( from Where the West Begins, edited by Arthur R. Huseboe and William Geyer, pp. 22–33, Center for Western Studies Press. Sioux Falls, South Dakota. 1978) ", "score": "1.47578" }, { "id": "12051008", "title": "Peter Brandvold", "text": " Born in North Dakota, bestselling western novelist Peter Brandvold has penned over seventy fast-action westerns under his own name and his pen name, Frank Leslie. He is the author of the .45-Caliber books featuring Cuno Massey as well as the Lou Prophet and Yakima Henry novels. Recently, with his first young-adult western, LONNIE GENTRY and its successor, The Curse of Skull Canyon, he began publishing with Five Star. He is the head of \"Mean Pete Publishing\", the publisher of lightning-fast western ebooks. Brandvold also penned 29 entries in the long-running Longarm series published by Berkley Books, as well as four books in the Trailsman series published by Signet. He also wrote two \"Ralph Compton\" novels—Navarro and Bullet Creek. He has several film scripts in development in Hollywood.", "score": "1.4725091" }, { "id": "13348170", "title": "Western Romance literature", "text": " The Western Romance genre dates back to the early 1800s with the rise of the classic cowboy and the pursuit of his heroine. Authors such as Zane Grey, Bret Harte and James Fenimore Cooper dominated this period. Before the genre peaked in the early 1900s, authors such as Owen Wister and Sir Walter Scott paved the way for the rise of the Western Romance genre. Grey was influenced by the likes of Wister, specifically by Wister's most famous novel, The Virginian (1902). It celebrated romance on the American frontier and oscillated, (as is characteristic of the genre) between the beauty of a woman's love ", "score": "1.4608415" }, { "id": "26563480", "title": "S. Omar Barker", "text": " He produced five volumes of poetry, one book of short stories and one novel, Little World Apart, as well as one western cookbook with Carol Truax. He was a co-writer for one episode of Sugarfoot in 1957. The work probably best known to the general public was his poem, \"A Cowboy's Christmas Prayer,\" which has been printed more than one hundred times, recorded by Tennessee Ernie Ford and Jimmy Dean, and plagiarized more than once. He won the Western Writers of America Spur Award twice and was the 1967 recipient of the Levi Strauss Saddleman Award for bringing honor and dignity to the Western legend. In 1975 he was named an honorary president of WWA, of which he was ", "score": "1.4589097" }, { "id": "26377575", "title": "Physician writer", "text": " Don Coldsmith (born 1926) American author of primarily Western fiction; past president of Western Writers of America ; Robert Coles (born 1929) American author, child psychiatrist, and professor at Harvard University ; Alex Comfort (1920–2000) British writer and poet, author of The Joy of Sex and a science fiction novel, Tetrarch ; Robin Cook (born 1940), American author of best-selling novels, including Coma; nearly all his books deal with hot medical issues of the day, from bioterrorism to organ donation ; Michael Crichton (1942–2008) American author of Jurassic Park ; A.J. Cronin (1896–1981), Scottish novelist and essayist; creator of Dr. Finlay. Other works ", "score": "1.4577096" }, { "id": "8265589", "title": "The Mysterious West", "text": " Pennsylvania State University, who interviewed Western authors who were \"all \"postmodernist\" and \"postregionalist\" in their perspectives\", and who offer \"insights into what direction the new Western literary tradition seems to be headed.\" The other is The Mysterious West, a less weighty book, with \"20 short stories, primarily mystery and detective fiction\", each introduced by Tony Hillerman. In sum, the 20 stories had \"fictional landscapes here [that] range from the desolation, silence, and danger of Death Valley, and the small, dying towns of southern Colorado to the sophisticated originality and zaniness of Berkekey, California.\" The two books together introduce a reader to Western literature.", "score": "1.4566042" }, { "id": "7905787", "title": "Paul Dayton Bailey", "text": " to reprint classic texts on the Western United States, whose rarity prevented most interested libraries from purchasing copies. To his surprise, this venture was eased by the War Production Board's far less stringent requirements for acquiring book paper. The books published by Westernlore—on the same presses used by the Advertiser—were immediate successes and every edition sold out. During this time, Bailey also found time to write three new books. The first, a fictionalized version of his Samuel Brannan biography, and the second (also a novel) were \"enthusiastically received by the Saints.\" The third, Jacob Hamblin, Buckskin Apostle, became a source ", "score": "1.4533124" }, { "id": "1003588", "title": "Matt Braun", "text": " Matt Braun is an author specializing in novels of the American West. He has written fifty-six books, most of which are in the Western genre and has over 40 million copies in print.", "score": "1.449562" }, { "id": "13348169", "title": "Western Romance literature", "text": " Americans. The genre gained mass readership in the 1950s with the rise of Ranch Romance magazines and in modern day, the Western Romance pulp fiction novel like that published by Mills and Boon or Harlequin. These stories typically follow the romance of a cowboy, ranch hand or bull rider and his heroine, contrasting the fragility of love with the severity of the harsh landscape. They're usually set on the American frontier, rurally, in a ranch or on a farm. The genre also appears throughout original and adapted films, such as Last of the Mohicans (1992), Brokeback Mountain (2006), The Longest Ride (2015) and Shane (1953).", "score": "1.449085" }, { "id": "16368340", "title": "Eugene Manlove Rhodes", "text": " Most of Rhodes' works were published in newspapers and magazines before they were published individually, including Land of Sunshine, Out West, McClure's, Redbook, Sunset, and Cosmopolitan, and much of his fiction was serialized in The Saturday Evening Post prior to being published as a book. Rhodes published ten books between 1910 and 1935. Rhodes’ novels include Good men and true (1910), West is west (1917), Copper streak trail (1922) and Beyond the desert (1934), and of his several novelettes, Pasó Por Aquí (1926) has been singled out as his masterpiece. One western writer describing Pasó Por Aquí as \"the finest western ever written\". Respected author Jack Schaefer wrote of Rhodes’ that, “The man’s writing stimulates fanaticism, cultism. To the faithful, he could do no wrong... Certainly ", "score": "1.4483833" }, { "id": "25207142", "title": "Thomas C. Lea III", "text": "1992: Owen Wister Award – Western Writers of America ", "score": "1.4473064" } ]
Who was the screenwriter for The Last Word?
[ "Binka Zhelyazkova" ]
screenwriter
The Last Word (1973 film)
5,937,084
86
[ { "id": "27797493", "title": "The Last Word (2008 film)", "text": " The Last Word is an offbeat romantic comedy-drama film written and directed by Geoffrey Haley. It stars Winona Ryder and Wes Bentley. It had its world premiere at the Sundance Film Festival in January, and had a wider release in 2008.", "score": "1.6407168" }, { "id": "5951660", "title": "The Last Word (1979 film)", "text": " The Last Word is a 1979 film starring Richard Harris. It was the last movie directed by Roy Boulting. It was also known as The Number.", "score": "1.6337228" }, { "id": "5951662", "title": "The Last Word (1979 film)", "text": "Richard Harris as Danny Travis ; Karen Black as Paula Herbert ; Martin Landau as Capt. Gerrity ; Dennis Christopher as Ben ; Christopher Guest as Roger ; Penelope Milford as Denise ", "score": "1.5813937" }, { "id": "3468066", "title": "Last Words (2020 film)", "text": " Last Words is a 2020 internationally co-produced drama film directed by Jonathan Nossiter. It was selected to be shown at the 2020 Cannes Film Festival. It premiered at the Deauville American Film Festival on 6 September 2020.", "score": "1.5784152" }, { "id": "27797494", "title": "The Last Word (2008 film)", "text": " An odd-but-gifted poet, Evan Merck (Wes Bentley) makes his living writing suicide notes for the soon-to-be departed. So when he meets Charlotte (Winona Ryder), the free-spirited sister of his latest client, Evan has no choice but to lie about his relationship to her late, lamented brother. Curiously attracted by his evasive charms, a smitten Charlotte begins her pursuit, forcing Evan to juggle an amorous new girlfriend, a sarcastic new client (Ray Romano) and an ever-increasing mountain of lies.", "score": "1.5421124" }, { "id": "29013322", "title": "The Last Word (Greene short story)", "text": " \"The Last Word\" is a dystopian short story by author Graham Greene, written in 1988 (see 1988 in literature). It first appeared in The Independent but can also be found in collections of his short fiction, notably the Penguin edition of The Last Word and Other Stories, for which it is the lead story. The story, written toward the end of Greene's life, reflects his frustration at the declining influence of religion, particularly Catholicism, in the modern world. The Last Word is Greene's final short story, before his death from leukemia in 1991.", "score": "1.5380204" }, { "id": "32145741", "title": "The Last Sentence (1951 film)", "text": " The Last Sentence (Italian: L' ultima sentenza) is a 1951 Italian melodrama-crime film co-written and directed by Mario Bonnard and starring Charles Vanel, Antonella Lualdi and Eleonora Rossi Drago.", "score": "1.5065088" }, { "id": "29937761", "title": "Bad Words (film)", "text": " Andrew Dodge's screenplay for Bad Words first received attention after its inclusion on the 2011 Black List, an annual survey of the best unproduced screenplays in Hollywood. The script was sent to actor Jason Bateman, who had asked his agent to pursue directorial work, explaining that being able to direct films was \"really the only reason I've been acting for the last 20 years of this career\". After Bateman signed on to direct the film, he and Dodge spent a long time revising the script, particularly adjusting parts where the dark humor \"went a little bit too far\". In the original script, the story was intended to take place at the Scripps National Spelling Bee in Washington, D.C. The setting was changed to the fictional Golden Quill Spelling Bee in Los Angeles since Bateman did not expect to receive permission from Scripps to use their name in the film.", "score": "1.5038944" }, { "id": "8036766", "title": "The Last Sentence (1917 film)", "text": " The Last Sentence is a 1917 American silent drama film directed by Ben Turbett and starring Marc McDermott, Miriam Nesbitt and Herbert Prior.", "score": "1.5031692" }, { "id": "25190725", "title": "Mark Lane (author)", "text": " Lane later wrote A Citizen's Dissent, documenting his response to the Warren Commission's governmental findings on the Kennedy assassination. He also wrote the first screenplay of the 1973 film Executive Action (starring Burt Lancaster and Robert Ryan), with Donald Freed. Lane's associate, Steve Jaffe, was supervising producer and credited with supplying much of the research material for the film. Lane asserted in his 1991 book Plausible Denial that he only worked on the first draft of the screenplay which was ultimately credited to Dalton Trumbo. He noted that he collaborated with Donald Freed on it and after seeing subsequent drafts, they complained both privately to the producer and publicly at press conferences, pointing out errors in the work. In 1991, Lane described Plausible Denial as his \"last word\" on the subject and told Patricia Holt of the San Francisco Chronicle: \"I'll never write another sentence about the (JFK) assassination\". In November 2011, Lane published a third major book on the JFK assassination titled Last Word: My Indictment of the CIA in the Murder of JFK.", "score": "1.4977465" }, { "id": "27406797", "title": "The Final Word (novel)", "text": " The Final Word (Završna riječ) is a bestseller novel by Bosnian writer Zlatko Topčić. It was published in 2011 by Europapress Holding & Novi Liber (Hanza Media in 2016).", "score": "1.4921702" }, { "id": "28529028", "title": "David Freeman (screenwriter)", "text": " David Freeman is an American novelist, screenwriter, playwright, and journalist who studied playwriting and dramatic literature at the Yale Drama School and currently teaches screenwriting seminars in Los Angeles, where he lives with his wife Judith Gingold. Freeman wrote the last draft for Alfred Hitchcock's final project, The Short Night, a projected spy thriller which was never produced due to Hitchcock's failing health. Freeman wrote about his experiences in the 1984 book The Last Days of Alfred Hitchcock, which includes his completed screenplay.", "score": "1.4879054" }, { "id": "6950285", "title": "Simon Rumley", "text": " independent horror names such as Nacho Vigalondo, Ti West, Adam Wingard, Srdjan Spasojevic and Xavier Gens, the film premiered at Toronto's International Film Festival's Midnight Madness section in 2012. In 2013 Rumley was hired to direct his first 'Hollywood' feature by Boss Media and producer Frank Mancuso, Jr (Species, Ronin, Internal Affairs). The film was co-produced by Ai7le Films, run by actor Peter Facinelli (Twilight). The Last Word is a horror/curse movie based on the true story of Johnny Frank Garrett, executed in Texas in 1992 for the rape and murder of a 76-year-old nun. Garrett maintained his innocence until the end and left behind a curse ", "score": "1.4819186" }, { "id": "28311518", "title": "David Ruiz (screenwriter)", "text": "The Last Death (2011 film) ", "score": "1.4783792" }, { "id": "15081932", "title": "The Final Programme (film)", "text": " The Final Programme is a 1973 British fantasy science fiction-thriller film directed by Robert Fuest, and starring Jon Finch and Jenny Runacre. It was based on the 1968 Jerry Cornelius novel of the same name by Michael Moorcock. It was distributed in the United States and elsewhere as The Last Days of Man on Earth. It is the only Moorcock novel to have reached the screen.", "score": "1.4729365" }, { "id": "2674000", "title": "The Last Sentence", "text": " The Last Sentence (Dom över död man; Judgement on the dead) is a Swedish film from 2012, directed by Jan Troell and starring Jesper Christensen, Pernilla August, Björn Granath and Ulla Skoog. It is set between 1933 and 1945, and focuses on the life and career of Torgny Segerstedt, a Swedish newspaper editor who was a prominent critic of Hitler and the Nazis during a period when the Swedish government and monarch were intent on maintaining Sweden's neutrality and avoiding tensions with Germany. The film also deals with Segerstedt's relations with his wife, his mistress, and his mistress's husband (who was a close friend of Segerstedt). The film's Swedish title, Dom över död man, comes from a line in the Old Norse poem Hávamál: \"Cattle die, kinsmen die, thou wilt also die; but I know one thing that never dies: the judgment on the dead\".", "score": "1.4707812" }, { "id": "25652181", "title": "Darin Morgan", "text": " On August 11, 2004, it was announced that Morgan and screenwriter Sam Hamm were writing an untitled screenplay under development by DreamWorks SKG. According to The Hollywood Reporter, the story \"concerns a marriage counselor, whose daughter is about to get married, who discovers that his future son-in-law is suffering from the delusion that he's a superhero.\" Morgan worked on the second episode of former X-Files producer Frank Spotnitz's Kolchak: The Night Stalker remake, as consulting producer, though the show was canceled before any of Morgan's scripts were produced. The only script that Morgan wrote before the show was canceled was called \"The M Word\". It concerned a serial killer and a were-lizard, who may or may not be ", "score": "1.4706097" }, { "id": "29204119", "title": "Perfect Sense", "text": " Perfect Sense, formerly known as The Last Word, is a 2011 science fiction romantic drama film directed by David Mackenzie, written by Kim Fupz Aakeson and starring Eva Green and Ewan McGregor. In the film, a chef (McGregor) and a scientist (Green) fall in love as an epidemic begins to rob people of their sensory perceptions.", "score": "1.4687413" }, { "id": "27797495", "title": "The Last Word (2008 film)", "text": "Winona Ryder as Charlotte Morris ; Wes Bentley as Evan ; Ray Romano as Abel ; Gina Hecht as Hilde Morris ; A. J. Trauth as Greg ; John Billingsley as Brady ; Kurt Caceres as Sammy ; Michael Cornacchia as Client ", "score": "1.4671255" }, { "id": "7493750", "title": "Brett Sullivan", "text": " The Last Word Musical - Sullivan wrote the book, music and lyrics for The Last Word, musical staged at the 2016 New York Musical Festival. The musical was directed by Michael Bello and Choreographed by Nick Kenkel. Additional lyrics by Ryan Cunningham. Nominated for Best Choreography, and Best Supporting Actress in the festival awards. Sullivan played in Australian indie bands Broken Words, Mockingbird and Easy Brother.", "score": "1.4667351" } ]
What is Paul Caillaud's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Paul Caillaud
2,562,576
35
[ { "id": "1437914", "title": "Christian Paul (politician)", "text": "Deputy for Nièvre in the National Assembly, 3rd constituency from 1997 until its abolition in 2012, then the 2nd, which took over most of the 3rds territory from 2012 to 2017. He was defeated in the 2nd round of the 2017 election by REM's Patrice Perrot. ; President of the Parc Régional du Morvan in Morvan, France. ", "score": "1.4979748" }, { "id": "28703019", "title": "Gilles Saint-Paul", "text": " Gilles Saint-Paul (born 8 February 1963) is a French economist at the Toulouse 1 University Social Sciences. He also is a scientific advisor to the Economic Studies Directorate at the French Ministry of the Environment. His main interests include the political economy of unemployment and how information technology affects wage inequality.", "score": "1.4883556" }, { "id": "10644653", "title": "Pierre Paul-Hus", "text": " Paul-Hus is a military officer (Reserve) and a graduate of the Canadian Army Command and Staff College in Kingston, Ontario and the Ecole Militaire in Paris, where he also taught. In 1987, when Paul-Hus graduated from high school, he enlisted and joined the Régiment de la Chaudière, reserve unit of the Canadian Armed Forces. During the 22 years of his military service, he has conducted two operational missions: one in Goose Bay, Labrador, under the aegis of NATO, and the second in Cyprus to the United Nations. He retired in 2009 at the rank of lieutenant-colonel.", "score": "1.4798856" }, { "id": "25266969", "title": "Paul P.", "text": " Paul P. (born 1977) is a Canadian artist known primarily for his work as an oil painter. He explores topics including identity, beauty, gender and history.", "score": "1.4763622" }, { "id": "7154422", "title": "Paul Molac", "text": " Paul Molac (born 21 May 1962) is a French politician who has been serving as a member of the French National Assembly since the 2012 elections, representing Morbihan's 4th constituency. In the 2017 elections, he was one of only four deputies who were elected in the first round.", "score": "1.4676204" }, { "id": "1618315", "title": "Paul Caica", "text": " Paul Caica (born 1957) is an Australian politician, representing the South Australian Branch of the Australian Labor Party. He represented the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Colton from the 2002 election until his retirement in 2018. He served in the state ministry from 2006 to 2013 under both Mike Rann and Jay Weatherill.", "score": "1.4644033" }, { "id": "31587954", "title": "Paul Meilhat", "text": " Paul Meilhat, born on 17th May 1982, is a French sailor and navigator. He was a high level 49er dinghy sailor with Olympic aspirations before moving into offshore sailing. From 2015 to the end of 2018 he was skipper of the IMOCA 60 - SMA and he competed in the Vendee Globe.", "score": "1.4633862" }, { "id": "26529514", "title": "Paul Néaoutyine", "text": " Paul Néaoutyine (born October 12, 1951 in Poindimié) is a New Caledonian politician. A Kanak of the Saint-Michel tribe, he has been president of the North Province of New Caledonia since 1999. He is a supporter of New Caledonian independence.", "score": "1.455955" }, { "id": "27286925", "title": "Michel Caillaud", "text": " Michel Caillaud (born 10 April 1957) is a French chess problemist. In 1993 Caillaud gained the title Grandmaster of the FIDE for Chess Compositions. He was with 36 years of age the youngest GM for Chess Compositions. He has 200.92 points in FIDE Albums. Caillaud twice won the World Chess Solving Championship: 1987 in Graz and 2000 in Pula. In 2002 Caillaud gained the title International Solving Grandmaster.", "score": "1.452282" }, { "id": "9544426", "title": "Romain Perraud", "text": " Romain Paul Jean-Michel Perraud (born 22 September 1997) is a French professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Premier League club Southampton. He previously played for Nice and Brest.", "score": "1.448695" }, { "id": "856437", "title": "Paul-Marie Coûteaux", "text": " Paul-Marie Coûteaux was born on 31 July 1956. He graduated from the École nationale d'administration. In a Gay nightclub, Couteaux discovered Gaullism.", "score": "1.4470627" }, { "id": "717575", "title": "Xavier Paul", "text": " Xavier Brooks Paul Jr. (born February 25, 1985) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Arizona Diamondbacks.", "score": "1.4452137" }, { "id": "1680513", "title": "Paul Robichaud", "text": " Paul Robichaud (born May 6, 1964 in Tracadie, New Brunswick) is a politician in the province of New Brunswick, Canada. He studied at the Shippagan, New Brunswick campus of the University of Moncton. A member of the Progressive Conservative Party since 1985, he first ran for office in the 1995 but was defeated. He served from then until the next election as a Francophone organizer for the PC Party and ran again in 1999 when he was successful becoming the member of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick for Lamèque-Shippagan-Miscou. He was re-elected in 2003, 2006 and 2010. He joined the cabinet first as Minister of Fisheries & Aquaculture and then became minister of the enlarged Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Aquaculture. In a cabinet shuffle in 2001 he became Minister of Tourism & Parks a post he maintained until after the 2003 election when he took over the post of transportation. He left the cabinet in 2006 as the Liberals won that year's election and formed the government.", "score": "1.4441402" }, { "id": "1437913", "title": "Christian Paul (politician)", "text": " Christian Paul (born 23 March 1960 in Clermont-Ferrand, Puy-de-Dôme) is a French Socialist politician. He was one of the founding members of the Nouveau Parti Socialiste (New Socialist Party). Along with Arnaud Montebourg, he left this party to create a new movement within the Socialist party called \"Rénover Maintenant\" (\"Renew Now\").", "score": "1.4422934" }, { "id": "6749012", "title": "Paul Cairney", "text": " Paul Cairney (born 29 August 1987) is a Scottish footballer, who plays as a midfielder for Albion Rovers. Cairney has previously played for Queen's Park, Partick Thistle, Hibernian, Kilmarnock, Stranraer, Ayr United and Peterhead.", "score": "1.4378057" }, { "id": "28780449", "title": "Paul-Jean Hérault", "text": " Paul-Jean Hérault, pseudonym of Michel Rigaud (22 September 1934 – 26 October 2020), was a French writer and journalist.", "score": "1.4340279" }, { "id": "13518726", "title": "Paul Guay", "text": " Paul Francois Guay (born September 2, 1963, in Providence, Rhode Island) is a retired American professional ice hockey player. He is now an assistant coach for his high school's hockey team and is a captain in the Pawtucket Fire Department.", "score": "1.4326563" }, { "id": "32271771", "title": "Paul Courant", "text": " Paul N. Courant (born January 5, 1948) is an American economist who is an expert in public goods. His recent research focuses on the economics of universities, the economics of libraries and archives, and the impact of new information technologies on the scholarly publishing system.", "score": "1.4240656" }, { "id": "6841842", "title": "Roland Caillaux", "text": " Roland Raymond Ferdinand Caillaud (January 5, 1905 – December 3, 1977) – known professionally as Roland Caillaux, and sometimes using the pseudonym Roland Caipland – was a French actor and artist. He is known for acting in several French films in the 1920s and 1930s, and for producing and publishing homoerotic illustrations in the mid 20th century.", "score": "1.4200356" }, { "id": "5470680", "title": "Paul Amar", "text": " Paul Amar (born 11 January 1950) is a French journalist and television presenter.", "score": "1.4195133" } ]
What is Levi P. Powers's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Levi P. Powers
1,369,273
34
[ { "id": "28660186", "title": "Levi P. Powers", "text": " Levi Parsons Powers (May 9, 1828 – September 24, 1888) was an American politician and lawyer. Born in Marshfield, Vermont, Powers moved to Grand Rapids, Wisconsin in 1853, where he worked in logging and studied law. Powers was admitted to the Wisconsin Bar in 1853. Powers became the political editor of the Grand Rapids Tribune when it was established in 1873. He served as county clerk and as county judge. Powers served in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1863. He died in Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.673528" }, { "id": "9496209", "title": "Levi Sutton", "text": " .", "score": "1.4629881" }, { "id": "2389627", "title": "James Powers (New York politician)", "text": "The New York Civil List compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (pages 58, 131f, 144, 190, 198 and 298; Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858) ", "score": "1.4342911" }, { "id": "5489663", "title": "James E. Powers", "text": " James E. Powers (born May 30, 1931) is an American politician from New York.", "score": "1.3961633" }, { "id": "9873266", "title": "John Robert Powers", "text": " Virginia Burton (1902–1972). According to this record she was the daughter of William Burton and Helen Vleit. John Robert Powers and his wife Alice are buried together in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. Discrepancies occur regarding his date of birth (1892 appears on his gravestone as well as the US Federal Census record of 1900), but in his World War I draft registration card dated 6/5/17 in New York City he self-reports his birthday as September 14, 1895. His address on that date was 250 West 43rd, New York City, and his occupation is Actor. He is employed at Fort Lee Ferry. He has brown eyes, brown hair, is 5' 11\" tall and of slender build.", "score": "1.383414" }, { "id": "9487559", "title": "Asahel Lynde Powers", "text": " Asahel Lynde Powers (February 28, 1813 – 1843) was an American painter active in New England. Powers was born in Springfield, Vermont, and began his career as an itinerant artist at an early age. At 18 years old, Powers was already well-known. The first portrait attributed to him is of Dr. Joel Green from Rutland, Vermont, dated 1831, now on display in the Springfield Art and Historical Society. Like many contemporary paintings, Powers' early works were oil on wood panel. During the 1830s, Powers traveled through Vermont, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. From 1839-1841 he worked in New York's Clinton and Franklin counties. In the early 1840s, he moved to Olney, Illinois. There are no known works from his time in Illinois, where he died in 1843.", "score": "1.3809664" }, { "id": "30371753", "title": "Millard Powers", "text": " Powers has taken a role in the following works:", "score": "1.3765216" }, { "id": "26799968", "title": "Levi Wright", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.3738782" }, { "id": "9915256", "title": "Francis Gary Powers", "text": " Powers was born August 17, 1929, in Jenkins, Kentucky, the son of Oliver Winfield Powers (1904–1970), a coal miner, and his wife Ida Melinda Powers (1905–1991). His family eventually moved to Pound, Virginia, just across the state border. He was the second born and only male of six children. His family lived in a mining town, and because of the hardships associated with living in such a town, his father wanted Powers to become a physician. He hoped his son would achieve the higher earnings of such a profession and felt that this would involve less hardships than any job in his hometown.", "score": "1.3665211" }, { "id": "1909608", "title": "Francis Powers (actor)", "text": " Francis Powers (June 4, 1865 Virginia – May 10, 1940 Santa Monica, California) was a silent film actor, screenwriter, and director from the United States.", "score": "1.3625305" }, { "id": "3673550", "title": "James T. Powers (actor)", "text": " James T. Powers (born James T. McGovern; April 26, 1862– February 10, 1943), was an American stage actor, vocalist, and lyricist.", "score": "1.3535919" }, { "id": "11960678", "title": "Joseph Withers Power", "text": " Power was a Democrat, member of the Episcopal Church, Freemason, Odd Fellow, and a Knight of Pythias. Power married Eva Truly in 1896. They had three children, Dorothy, Mary, and Joe.", "score": "1.3497051" }, { "id": "13107741", "title": "Powers (name)", "text": " 1961), American actress, amateur bodybuilder and firefighter ; Leo J. Powers (1909–1967), US Army soldier and a recipient of the Medal of Honor ; Levi P. Powers (1828-1888), Wisconsin legislator and judge ; Lewis J. Powers (1837–1915), Massachusetts businessman and politician ; Llewellyn Powers (1836–1908), Governor of Maine, US Representative from Maine ; Mala Powers (1931–2007), American film actress and television guest actress ; Mike Powers (disambiguation) ; Millard Powers (born 1965), American musician, songwriter, record producer and recording engineer ; Millard Powers Fillmore (1828–1889), son of US President Millard Fillmore ; Oswald A. Powers (1915–1942), US Navy officer and Navy Cross recipient ; PJ Powers (born 1960), a ", "score": "1.3486302" }, { "id": "3509282", "title": "Pomeroy Wills Powers", "text": " Pomeroy Wells Powers, known as P.W. Powers, (1852–1916) was an attorney and property developer in Kansas City, Kansas, and Los Angeles, California, where he was president of the City Council in 1900–02.", "score": "1.3478528" }, { "id": "8717047", "title": "Phil Powers (baseball)", "text": " Philip J. Powers (July 26, 1854 – December 22, 1914) was a major league baseball catcher from 1878 to 1885. He was used mostly as a backup for five different teams in the National League and American Association.", "score": "1.3461317" }, { "id": "30295686", "title": "Levi Coffin", "text": " Levi Coffin (October 28, 1798 – September 16, 1877) was an American Quaker, Republican, abolitionist, farmer, businessman and humanitarian. An active leader of the Underground Railroad in Indiana and Ohio, some unofficially called Coffin the \"President of the Underground Railroad,\" estimating that three thousand fugitive slaves passed through his care. The Coffin home in Fountain City, Wayne County, Indiana, is now a museum, sometimes called the Underground Railroad's \"Grand Central Station\". Born near what became Greensboro, North Carolina, Coffin was exposed to and came to oppose slavery as a child. His family immigrated to Indiana in 1826, avoiding slaveholders' increasing persecution of Quakers, whose faith did not permit them to own slaves and who assisted fugitives. In Indiana, Coffin settled near the National ", "score": "1.3383913" }, { "id": "5831566", "title": "Melvin Lane Powers", "text": " Powers was born in 1942 in Birmingham, Alabama to Garrett \"Ace\" and Elizabeth Powers. He served in the United States Navy and worked in a number of jobs before he was convicted of a con job in Pontiac, Michigan and sentenced to serve 90 days in jail. He moved to Houston in 1961 while he was on probation. His mother suggested that he make contact with her sister, Candy Mossler, who lived there with her husband, who owned a number of financial companies.", "score": "1.3361274" }, { "id": "9665671", "title": "Jim Powers (baseball)", "text": " James T. Powers (1868 – after 1890) was a 19th-century Major League Baseball player who was a pitcher for the 1890 Brooklyn Gladiators in the American Association.", "score": "1.3305261" }, { "id": "9834621", "title": "William T. Powers (industrialist)", "text": " Powers was born in Bristol, New Hampshire on July 8, 1820. His parents, Jonathan and Anna (Kendall) Powers, were natives of Groton and Hebron, New Hampshire. In 1826, the family moved to Lansingburgh, New York, where he was educated in public schools. When he was 18, learned the trade of cabinet maker. He early showed aptness and skill at machine work, a faculty which ever after proved useful and profitable to him.", "score": "1.3304638" }, { "id": "12730639", "title": "Albert Theodore Powers", "text": " Powers holds a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree from the University of Denver; a Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) degree from Imperial College London; a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School; and a Master of Laws (LL.M.) in Taxation degree from the New York University Law School.", "score": "1.3289868" } ]
In what city was Robert Crannell Minor born?
[ "New York City", "NYC", "New York", "the five boroughs", "Big Apple", "City of New York", "NY City", "New York, New York", "New York City, New York", "New York, NY", "New York City (NYC)" ]
place of birth
Robert Crannell Minor
564,506
95
[ { "id": "318340", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " Robert Crannell Minor (1839–1904), American artist, was born in New York City on April 30, 1839. His father, Israel Minor, was a merchant who made a large fortune in the pharmaceutical business. As a young man, Robert Minor worked as a bookkeeper in New York City but decided to study art in his early thirties. After studying in New York with painter Alfred Cornelius Howland, Minor went abroad in 1871 to continue his artistic education. He visited various galleries in England before traveling to Barbizon, France, where he studied under Diaz. He later studied in Antwerp under Joseph Van Luppen and Hippolyte Boulenger. In 1874, he was vice president of the Société artistique et ", "score": "2.1748471" }, { "id": "4493872", "title": "Robert Lee Minor", "text": " Robert Lee Minor or Bob Lee Minor (born January 1, 1944) is an American stunt performer, television and film actor, best known for doubling many African-American celebrities such as: Jim Brown, Fred Williamson, Bernie Mac, Danny Glover, Carl Weathers, Roger E. Mosley and John Amos. Minor was born in Birmingham, Alabama, and made his first television appearance in 1973 on the television program, Search, then appeared in tons of shows such as: Barnaby Jones, McCloud, The Six Million Dollar Man, Eight is Enough, Magnum, P.I. and Starsky and Hutch among other popular television programs.", "score": "1.8738544" }, { "id": "318343", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " during the last decade of his life. Despite later speculation, it did not materially impact the quantity of his output, and the suggestion that it impacted the quality of his work is a misreading of the increasing abstraction in certain of his later Tonalist paintings. He died at his home in Waterford, Connecticut, on August 4, 1904. His paintings are owned by the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Yale University Art Gallery, the Mead Art Museum, the Lyman Allyn Museum, the Florence Griswold Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Newark Museum, the Robert Hull Fleming Museum, the Haggin Museum, the Salmagundi Club, the Memorial Art Gallery, and the University of Arizona Museum of Art.", "score": "1.8210161" }, { "id": "318341", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " of Antwerp. On his return to the United States in 1874, he opened a studio in New York. He painted for many years out of his studio in the Old University Building of New York University. Painting in the Adirondack Mountains and later in Waterford, Connecticut, Minor soon became known for his landscapes resembling the Barbizon School. Under the influence of George Inness and Alexander Helwig Wyant, he also began to paint in a Tonalist style. His painting Great Silas at Night (1897) displays his adoption of the Tonalist style while his lingering Barbizon style can be seen in A Hillside Pasture. From the 1890s until his death, Minor exhibited frequently with the Tonalists ", "score": "1.8064935" }, { "id": "15940421", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " Robert Minor, best known to those who knew him by the nickname \"Bob,\" was born July 15, 1884, in San Antonio, Texas. Minor came from old and respected family lines. On his father's side, General John Minor had served as Thomas Jefferson's Presidential campaign manager; his mother was related to General Sam Houston, first President of the Republic of Texas. His father was a school teacher and lawyer, later elected as a judge, while his maternal grandfather was a doctor. Despite the notable family forefathers, Bob Minor was not brought up with a silver spoon in his mouth — rather he was the product of what one historian has called \"the hard-up, run-down middle class,\" living in an \"unpainted frontier cottage in San Antonio.\" Minor was unable to begin school until age 10 due to his family's dire financial straits before leaving school at age 14 to take a job as a Western Union messenger boy to help support his family. Minor left home two years later, going to work at a variety of different jobs, including time spent as a sign painter, a carpenter, a farm worker, and a railroad laborer.", "score": "1.7286353" }, { "id": "15940423", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " Minor moved to St. Louis to take a position as a cartoonist for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Minor's work, initially very conventional in form using pen-and-ink, was transformed by his move to the use of grease crayon on paper. Minor gained recognition as the chief cartoonist at the Post-Dispatch and was considered by many to be among the best in the country. In 1911, Robert Minor was hired by the New York World, where he became the highest paid cartoonist in the United States. His father was on a parallel path of advancement, transformed by a 1910 election \"from an unsuccessful lawyer to an influential district judge.\"", "score": "1.6968818" }, { "id": "318342", "title": "Robert Crannell Minor", "text": " New York. In 1897, he was elected a member of the National Academy of Design, New York. In 1900, Minor achieved the height of his success at the historic William T. Evans sale in 1900, where his painting The Close of Day (private collection) fetched $3,050, the highest price for a landscape by a living American painter at that auction. Over the course of his lifetime, Minor was a member of the Society of American Artists and the Salmagundi Club. He exhibited in New York, Brooklyn, Chicago, and elsewhere in the United States, as well as in the Royal Academy of London and the salons of Paris and Antwerp. Minor was plagued with bad ", "score": "1.6954236" }, { "id": "15940426", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " before Minor came to the banks of the Rubicon, when his employer demanded that the artist begin to draw pro-war panels. Minor was unalterably opposed to the World War and was faced with a choice between his paycheck and his beliefs. His convictions won and Minor was successful in having his contract with The World annulled. On June 1, 1915, Minor moved to the New York Call, a Socialist Party-affiliated daily broadsheet. Minor also began contributing aggressively anti-war cartoons to Max Eastman's radical New York monthly, The Masses. Minor's radical cartoons would later provide fodder for the United States government's prosecution of The ", "score": "1.6913573" }, { "id": "15940422", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " In 1904, at the age of twenty, Robert Minor was hired as an assistant stereotypist and handyman at the San Antonio Gazette, where he developed his artistic talent in his spare time. Minor emerged as an accomplished political cartoonist.", "score": "1.6504788" }, { "id": "431701", "title": "William J. Minor", "text": " Minor was born on January 27, 1808 in Natchez, Mississippi. His father was Stephen Minor (1760-1844), a planter and banker, and his mother, Katherine (Lintot) Minor (1770-1844). Minor was educated in Philadelphia in the 1820s. He learned Latin, French and English with a private tutor. He also \"attended lectures in chemistry and philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania.\"", "score": "1.6422344" }, { "id": "15940424", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " In 1907 Minor joined the Socialist Party of America but by the beginning of 1912 he had moved towards an anarchist orientation and support of revolutionary industrial unionism. Minor had saved several hundred dollars earned in St. Louis and decided that he wanted to go to Paris to attend art school to perfect his craft. In France he enrolled in a class at the Ecole des Beaux Arts, the French national art school, but he found the experience unsatisfying. Minor spent the rest of his time in Paris studying art on his own and taking part in the left wing labor movement through the ", "score": "1.6278535" }, { "id": "15940420", "title": "Robert Minor", "text": " Robert Berkeley \"Bob\" Minor (1884 – 1952), alternatively known as \"Fighting Bob,\" was a political cartoonist, a radical journalist, and, beginning in 1920, a leading member of the American Communist Party.", "score": "1.618207" }, { "id": "16013780", "title": "Mike Minor (actor)", "text": " Minor was born on December 7, 1940, in San Francisco to newspaper advertising man Don Fedderson, who would later become a leading television producer, and Tido Minor. He began voice lessons in 1953 at the age of 13. His first singing job was at Ye Little Club in Beverly Hills, where he was engaged for two weeks and held over for ten. He attended University High School in Los Angeles and Brown Military Academy in San Diego. After that he appeared at Bimbo's in San Francisco, the Rat Fink Room in New York City, the Elegante in Brooklyn, Izzy's Supper Club in Vancouver and the Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles.", "score": "1.610712" }, { "id": "15477828", "title": "Francis Minor", "text": " Minor was born on August 20, 1820. He graduated from Princeton University and the University of Virginia before he and his wife (a distant cousin), moved to St. Louis in 1845 from Virginia. They had only one child, a son named Francis Gilmer Minor, who was born in 1852 and died in 1866 as a result of a \"shooting accident.\"", "score": "1.5988631" }, { "id": "26417350", "title": "Lewis J. Minor", "text": " Lewis Joseph Minor was born in Harbour Beach, Michigan to Kathleen Mary Hill, who immigrated from Tipperary, Ireland and Newell Wellington Minor, an analytical chemist and combustion engineer for Ford Motor Company. Minor attended schools in nearby Highland Park. At the age 18, he graduated from St. Benedict High School and began working for the Donahue Varnish Company. Minor graduated with honors from Highland Park Junior College in 1937. He then enrolled at Michigan State College where he graduated with a bachelor's degree in Chemistry in 1939. Earlier that same year, he married Ruth Eloise Angell of Lansing, Michigan. Minor went on to receive his master's degree in Analytical Chemistry from Wayne State University in 1944, and his Ph.D. in Food Science from Michigan State University.", "score": "1.5976446" }, { "id": "734502", "title": "Robert Smalls", "text": " Robert Smalls was born in 1839 to Lydia Polite, an enslaved woman owned by Henry McKee. She gave birth to him in a cabin behind McKee's house, at 511 Prince Street in Beaufort, South Carolina. He grew up in the city under the influence of the Lowcountry Gullah culture of his mother. His mother lived as a servant in the house but grew up in the fields. Robert was favored over other enslaved people, so his mother worried that he might grow up not understanding the plight of enslaved field workers, and asked for him to be made to work in the fields ", "score": "1.579081" }, { "id": "12432243", "title": "Wesley Lyng Minor", "text": " Wesley Lyng Minor (born 1851) was an American architect in Massachusetts. Minor was born in Franklin, Louisiana in 1851, and moved north to New Bedford with his family at the age of seven. They later moved to Marion and Middleborough. He began studying architecture with a retired carpenter who taught at the Pierce Academy. Three years later he moved to Boston, where he worked for William R. Ware. After a few months he moved to Philadelphia, where he worked for John McArthur, Jr. A year later he went to New York City and worked for Richard Morris Hunt. In 1878 Minor established himself as an architect in Charleston, South Carolina. He also worked at Topeka, Denver, and Catlettsburg, never remaining long in any one place. Around ", "score": "1.5715957" }, { "id": "16310686", "title": "Bill Minor", "text": " Born in Hammond, Louisiana, Minor graduated from Tulane University. He served in the Navy in World War II as a gunnery officer aboard the USS Stephen Potter. Minor was a reporter for the New Orleans Times-Picayune. He covered the Civil Rights Movement. In 1973, he bought the Jackson Capital Reporter.", "score": "1.5694838" }, { "id": "32788600", "title": "William T. Minor", "text": " Minor was born in Stamford, Connecticut on October 3, 1815 to Simeon Hinman Minor and Catherine Lockwood Minor. He studied at Yale University and graduated in 1834. Minor taught school for five years while he studied law under his father, Simeon Minor, a former Connecticut legislator.", "score": "1.5517063" }, { "id": "28962034", "title": "George Minor", "text": " George Minor (December 7, 1845, Richmond, Virginia - January 30, 1904, Richmond, Virginia) was an American composer. Minor attended a military academy in Richmond, and served during the American Civil War as Chief of Ordnance and Hydrography of the Confederate States Navy. After the war, he went into the music field, teaching at singing schools and conducting at musical conventions. He helped found the Hume-Minor Company, which made pianos and organs. A member of the First Baptist Church of Richmond, Minor was the Sunday school superintendent there.", "score": "1.5502179" } ]
In what country is Mato Castelhano?
[ "Brazil", "Federative Republic of Brazil", "BR", "BRA", "br", "🇧🇷" ]
country
Mato Castelhano
1,292,513
78
[ { "id": "25450421", "title": "Castellers de Vilafranca", "text": " Urretxo. ; in Italy (1990), in the north: Feltre (palio), Niccia and Melere (in the municipality of Trichiana) and Venice. ; again in France (1991), with performances in Toulouse, during the Sardana International Festival, and Carcassonne. ; in Luxemburg and Germany (1991), performing in Luxemburg (capital), Moers, Wolfenbütel, Hannover, Berlin and Frankfurt. ; in the Universal Exposition Seville'92 (1992), during the Catalonia day. ; in Santiago de Compostella (1993), in the framework of the Xacobeo'93. ; in the same year, the group did a tour of five countries: France (Marseille), Italy (Lecco, Melzo and Bergamo), Slovenia (Ljubljana, Postojna, Otocêc, Novo Mesto and Crnomêlj), Austria (Klagenfurt) and ", "score": "1.4952242" }, { "id": "6140069", "title": "Castel d'Ario", "text": " Castel d'Ario (Mantovano: Castlar) is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Mantua in the Italian region Lombardy, located about 150 km east of Milan and about 15 km east of Mantua. It was the birthplace of race car driver Tazio Nuvolari. Castel d'Ario borders the following municipalities: Bigarello, Roncoferraro, Sorgà, Villimpenta.", "score": "1.4220012" }, { "id": "33138428", "title": "Castello Tesino", "text": " Castello Tesino (Castèl Tasìn or Castèlo in local dialect) is a comune (municipality) in Trentino in the northern Italian region Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol, located about 40 km east of Trento. Castello Tesino borders the following municipalities: Canal San Bovo, Pieve Tesino, Scurelle, Cinte Tesino, Lamon, Grigno, and Arsiè.", "score": "1.4020026" }, { "id": "29589160", "title": "Castenaso", "text": "Official website ", "score": "1.3931408" }, { "id": "16185130", "title": "Castelfranco Veneto", "text": "🇨🇦 Guelph, Ontario, Canada ", "score": "1.3861624" }, { "id": "1803125", "title": "Castello di Godego", "text": " Castello di Godego is a town and comune with 6,329 inhabitants in the province of Treviso, Italy, Veneto region. Romanian is spoken by a large community of immigrants from Romania.", "score": "1.3861605" }, { "id": "9320656", "title": "Castelfidardo", "text": "🇮🇹 Castelvetro di Modena, Italy ; 🇩🇪 Klingenthal, Germany ", "score": "1.385113" }, { "id": "4176266", "title": "Castelo Branco, Portugal", "text": " The city is home to Centauro, a company which produces industrial coolers, refrigerators and freezers. The Portuguese subsidiary of Danone has a factory in Castelo Branco which produces Danone's dairy products for the entire Iberian Peninsula. The district of Castelo Branco is also famed for the Castelo Branco cheese. Delphi Packard is a major factory and the principal employer, with more than 1000 workers. The Factory makes automobile component for the most important automobile constructors like Ferrari. Shopping malls in Castelo Branco (Alegro and Fórum)", "score": "1.384903" }, { "id": "13161415", "title": "Castel National Park", "text": " Castel National Park (גן לאומי קסטל) is an Israeli national park, which consists of a fortified summit in the Judean Mountains, at the site of the former Palestinian village of Al-Qastal, known to Hebrew-speakers as HaCástel, \"the Cástel\". It is located 8 km west of Jerusalem on the road linking it to Tel Aviv (Highway 1). The site is mostly known as the place of the key battles of Operation Nachshon, which were fought there in April 1948 during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War. Fierce battles that claimed many lives took place there as Arabs and Jews fought for control of ", "score": "1.3780947" }, { "id": "631084", "title": "Castello Mio Sambuca", "text": " Castello Mio is a brand of Sambuca liqueur owned and produced by Castle Brands Inc. Described as “super premium,” Castello Mio is distilled in Veneto, Italy by a family company that has been in business since the 1800s. It has an ABV of 38%.", "score": "1.3748493" }, { "id": "30021737", "title": "Castel Gandolfo", "text": " Castel Gandolfo is the most popular tourist town of Castelli Romani. Regular groups of Italian and foreign tourists utilize all of the parking built specifically for tourists. On the occasion of Angelus or the hearings on the Pope during his stay, many foreign pilgrims arrive in town, so that the streets and squares in the center are filled. However, Pope Francis gave up his papal residency not long after opening up the doors of the Apostolic Castle to the general public.", "score": "1.371134" }, { "id": "30021716", "title": "Castel Gandolfo", "text": " Castel Gandolfo (,, ; Castrum Gandulphi), colloquially just Castello in the Castelli Romani dialects, is a town located 25 km southeast of Rome in the Lazio region of Italy. Occupying a height on the Alban Hills overlooking Lake Albano, Castel Gandolfo has a population of approximately 8,900 residents and is considered one of Italy's most scenic towns. Within the town's boundaries lies the Apostolic Palace of Castel Gandolfo which served as a summer residence and vacation retreat for the pope, the leader of the Catholic Church. Although the palace is located within the borders of Castel Gandolfo, it has extraterritorial status as one of the properties of the Holy See and is not ", "score": "1.3686241" }, { "id": "5781193", "title": "Castel Maggiore", "text": " Castel Maggiore (Bolognese: Castèl Mażåur) is an Italian comune in the Metropolitan City of Bologna, Emilia-Romagna, central Italy, located 9 km north of the centre of Bologna. Though its name recalls a translation like Great Castle, the name is actually derived from the earlier name Castaniolo Maggiore, which means \"Bigger Chestnut Tree\", in relation to another nearby village still today named \"Castagnolino\", meaning \"Small Chestnut Tree\".", "score": "1.3638263" }, { "id": "9532073", "title": "Matola", "text": "🇵🇹 Loures, Portugal (since 1996) ; 🇿🇦 Johannesburg, South Africa ", "score": "1.3635862" }, { "id": "8805596", "title": "Castel Volturno", "text": " Castel Volturno is a comune (municipality) in the Province of Caserta in the Italian region Campania, located about 35 km northwest of Naples and about 35 km west of Caserta on the Volturno river. In 2010 Castel Volturno was inhabited by 25,000 locals and about 18,000 African refugees. Today (2019) there are still about 25,000 people, estimated two-thirds of them are immigrants. Due to a decision of the Regional Council (Consiglio Regionale della Campania) from 2010, the quarter Villaggio Coppola, which is also the third largest illegally built residential complex in the world, should actually be demolished. Today (2019) it is inhabited by destitute Italian and African squatters.", "score": "1.3604813" }, { "id": "27752233", "title": "Castelão (Maranhão)", "text": " The Estádio Governador João Castelo, also known as the Castelão, is a multi-purpose stadium inaugurated on March 9, 1975 in São Luís, Maranhão, Brazil, with a maximum capacity of 75,263 people in a three-tier configuration. The stadium is owned by the Maranhão state Government, and is the home ground of Sampaio Corrêa Futebol Clube, Moto Club and Maranhão. Its formal name honors João Castelo Ribeiro Gonçalves, Maranhão governor from 1979 to 1982.", "score": "1.359885" }, { "id": "14740994", "title": "Matō Station", "text": " Matō Station (間藤駅) is a railway station on the Watarase Keikoku Line in the city of Nikkō, Tochigi, Japan, operated by the third-sector railway operator Watarase Keikoku Railway.", "score": "1.3582557" }, { "id": "15478532", "title": "Mató", "text": " Mató is a whey cheese similar to non-industrial variants of the fresh cheeses known as Brull in Maestrat, Ports de Beseit and the Southern Terres de l'Ebre and as Brossat in Andorra, Pallars, Menorca, Mallorca and parts of Occitania, as well as the brocciu in Corsica and other types of curd cheese such as Italian ricotta. The Mató from the villages near the Montserrat mountain, such as Ullastrell and Marganell, is quite famous. Mató is mentioned in the Sent Soví, a 14th-century Catalan cookbook, as well as in the El Noi de la Mare local Christmas carol. It was very popular during the Middle Ages, when it was made plain or scented with orange flowers.", "score": "1.3560721" }, { "id": "6399098", "title": "Castelvetro di Modena", "text": "🇮🇹 Castelfidardo, Italy, since 1984 ; 🇫🇷 Montlouis-sur-Loire, France, since 2002 ", "score": "1.3554761" }, { "id": "32766734", "title": "Mato, Cape Verde", "text": " Mato is a settlement in the island of Brava, Cape Verde. It is situated in the mountainous interior of the island, 2 km southwest of the island capital Nova Sintra.", "score": "1.3526877" } ]
README.md exists but content is empty. Use the Edit dataset card button to edit it.
Downloads last month
0
Edit dataset card

Collection including Self-GRIT/popqa_long_tail_random_subsample_eval