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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1947_Paris–Roubaix
1947 Paris–Roubaix
[ "Rank", "Cyclist", "Time" ]
[ [ "1", "Georges Claes ( BEL )", "6h 10 ' 34″" ], [ "2", "Adolf Verschueren ( BEL )", "+0 ' 00″" ], [ "3", "Louis Thiétard ( FRA )", "+0 ' 00″" ], [ "4", "Raymond Impanis ( BEL )", "+0 ' 16″" ], [ "5", "Albéric Schotte ( BEL )", "+0 ' 51″" ], [ "6", "Olimpio Bizzi ( ITA )", "+0 ' 56″" ], [ "7", "Edouard Fachleitner ( FRA )", "+0 ' 56″" ], [ "8", "Maurice De Muer ( FRA )", "+0 ' 56″" ], [ "9", "Lucien Teisseire ( FRA )", "+2 ' 42″" ], [ "10", "Lucien Vlaemynck ( BEL )", "+3 ' 43″" ] ]
Results
1947_Paris–Roubaix_0
The 1947 Paris-Roubaix was the 45th edition of the Paris-Roubaix, a classic one-day cycle race in France. The single day event was held on 6 April 1947 and stretched from Paris to the finish at Roubaix Velodrome. The winner was Georges Claes from Belgium.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/England_at_the_2014_Commonwealth_Games
England at the 2014 Commonwealth Games
[ "Athlete", "Apparatus", "Score", "Rank" ]
[ [ "Rebecca Downie", "Balance beam", "9.833", "8" ], [ "Claudia Fragapane", "Balance beam", "13.133", "5" ], [ "Kelly Simm", "Vault", "14.199", "5" ], [ "Claudia Fragapane", "Vault", "14.633", "" ], [ "Rebecca Downie", "Uneven bars", "14.666", "" ], [ "Ruby Harrold", "Uneven bars", "14.366", "" ], [ "Hannah Whelan", "Floor", "13.133", "6" ], [ "Claudia Fragapane", "Floor", "14.541", "" ] ]
Gymnastics -- Artistic
Men All-around Athlete Event Qualification Final F PH R V PB HB Total Rank F PH R V PB HB Total Rank Sam Oldham Individual 15.325 Q 12.100 14.533 Q 14.500 N/A N/A Louis Smith MBE N/A 15.700 Q N/A 14.133 N/A N/A Kristian Thomas 14.466 N/A 14.000 15.100 Q N/A 15.033 Q N/A N/A Max Whitlock 15.600 Q 15.733 Q 14.433 Q 15.333 14.500 Q 14.766 90.365 1 Q 15.466 15.866 14.733 14.500 14.966 15.100 90.631 Nile Wilson 14.458 13.633 14.383 14.500 14.833 Q 14.800 Q 86.607 2 Q 14.600 13.833 14.633 14.700 15.433 14.766 87.695 Sam OldhamLouis Smith MBEKristian ThomasMax WhitlockNile Wilson Team N/A 45.391 45.066 43.349 44.933 43.466 44.599 266.804 Individual events Athlete Apparatus Score Rank Louis Smith MBE Pommel horse 14.966 Max Whitlock 15.966 Kristian Thomas Vault 14.499 Max Whitlock Rings 14.566 5 Nile Wilson^ 14.466 7 Max Whitlock Parallel bars 15.066 Nile Wilson 15.433 Kristian Thomas Horizontal bar 14.966 Nile Wilson 14.966 Max Whitlock Floor 15.533 Kristian Thomas^ 13.366 8 ^ Sam Oldham originally qualified but pulled out due to injury . He was replaced by Nile Wilson who qualified in reserve . ^ Sam Oldham originally qualified but pulled out due to injury . He was replaced by Kristian Thomas who qualified in reserve . Women All-around Athlete Event Qualification Final F V UB BB Total Rank F V UB BB Total Rank Rebecca Downie Individual N/A 14.683 Q 13.200 Q N/A N/A Claudia Fragapane 14.733 Q 14.641 Q 13.333 14.033 Q 56.740 1 Q 14.733 14.733 13.700 12.966 56.132 Ruby Harrold 13.466 14.733 13.400 Q 12.466 54.065 3 Q 13.700 14.800 14.566 12.166 55.232 Kelly Simm 12.466 14.600 Q N/A N/A Hannah Whelan 13.700 Q 14.300 12.333 13.033 53.366 5 Q 13.500 14.066 13.100 14.033 54.699 Rebecca DownieClaudia FragapaneRuby HarroldKelly SimmHannah Whelan Team N/A 41.899 43.974 41.416 40.266 167.555 Individual events
England_at_the_2014_Commonwealth_Games_28
England competed at the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, Scotland between 23 July and 3 August 2014. Commonwealth Games England named a team of 416 athletes consisting of 216 men and 200 women across the 18 disciplines.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1963_Italian_Grand_Prix
1963 Italian Grand Prix
[ "Pos", "No", "Driver", "Constructor", "Laps", "Time/Retired", "Grid" ]
[ [ "1", "8", "Jim Clark", "Lotus - Climax", "86", "2:24:19.6", "3" ], [ "2", "10", "Richie Ginther", "BRM", "86", "+ 1:35.0", "4" ], [ "3", "18", "Bruce McLaren", "Cooper - Climax", "85", "+ 1 lap", "8" ], [ "4", "32", "Innes Ireland", "BRP - BRM", "84", "Engine", "10" ], [ "5", "22", "Jack Brabham", "Brabham - Climax", "84", "+ 2 laps", "7" ], [ "6", "20", "Tony Maggs", "Cooper - Climax", "84", "+ 2 laps", "13" ], [ "7", "58", "Jo Bonnier", "Cooper - Climax", "84", "+ 2 laps", "11" ], [ "8", "30", "Jim Hall", "Lotus - BRM", "84", "+ 2 laps", "16" ], [ "9", "66", "Maurice Trintignant", "BRM", "83", "+ 3 laps", "19" ], [ "10", "40", "Mike Hailwood", "Lola - Climax", "82", "+ 4 laps", "17" ], [ "11", "16", "Phil Hill", "ATS", "79", "+ 7 laps", "14" ], [ "12", "48", "Bob Anderson", "Lola - Climax", "79", "+ 7 laps", "18" ], [ "13", "6", "Mike Spence", "Lotus - Climax", "73", "Oil Pressure", "9" ], [ "14", "24", "Dan Gurney", "Brabham - Climax", "64", "Fuel System", "5" ], [ "15", "14", "Giancarlo Baghetti", "ATS", "63", "+ 23 laps", "20" ], [ "16", "12", "Graham Hill", "BRM", "59", "Clutch", "2" ], [ "Ret", "54", "Jo Siffert", "Lotus - BRM", "40", "Oil Pressure", "15" ], [ "Ret", "2", "Lorenzo Bandini", "Ferrari", "37", "Gearbox", "6" ], [ "Ret", "42", "Masten Gregory", "Lotus - BRM", "26", "Engine", "12" ], [ "Ret", "4", "John Surtees", "Ferrari", "16", "Engine", "1" ] ]
Classification
1963_Italian_Grand_Prix_0
The 1963 Italian Grand Prix was a Formula One motor race held at Monza on September 8, 1963. It was race 7 of 10 in both the 1963 World Championship of Drivers and the 1963 International Cup for Formula One Manufacturers. At this race, Scottish driver Jim Clark clinched the World Championship crown with three races to go, the first time anyone had done so. The organizers had planned to run on the full 10 km circuit but the very bumpy (and in some places ruined) of the banked curves caused a lot of criticism and also caused accidents. Therefore, at the drivers' request, for the next day it was decided to fall back on the 5.75 km road layout. This race was Scuderia Ferrari's 100th start in a World Championship event as a team.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curzon_Line
Curzon Line
[ "1 . Interwar Poland", "Polish mother tongue ( of whom Roman Catholics )", "Source ( census )", "Today part of :" ]
[ [ "South-Eastern Poland", "2,249,703 ( 1,765,765 )", "1931 Polish census", "Ukraine" ], [ "North-Eastern Poland", "1,663,888 ( 1,358,029 )", "1931 Polish census", "and" ], [ "2 . Interwar USSR", "Ethnic Poles according to official census", "Source ( census )", "Today part of :" ], [ "Soviet Ukraine", "476,435", "1926 Soviet census", "Ukraine" ], [ "Soviet Belarus", "97,498", "1926 Soviet census", "Belarus" ], [ "Soviet Russia", "197,827", "1926 Soviet census", "Russia" ], [ "rest of the USSR", "10,574", "1926 Soviet census", "" ], [ "3 . Interwar Baltic states", "Ethnic Poles according to official census", "Source ( census )", "Today part of :" ], [ "Lithuania", "65,599", "1923 Lithuanian census", "Lithuania" ], [ "Latvia", "59,374", "1930 Latvian census", "Latvia" ], [ "Estonia", "1,608", "1934 Estonian census", "Estonia" ], [ "TOTAL ( 1. , 2. , 3 . )", "4 to 5 million ethnic Poles", "", "" ] ]
Ethnicity east of the Curzon Line until 1939
Mother tongue in Poland in 1931 : red/green = Polish/other languages The ethnic composition of these areas proved difficult to measure , both during the interwar period and after World War II . A 1944 article in The Times estimated that in 1931 between 2.2 and 2.5 million Poles lived east of the Curzon Line . [ 25 ] According to historian Yohanan Cohen 's estimate , in 1939 the population in the territories of interwar Poland east of the Curzon Line gained via the Treaty of Riga totalled 12 million , consisting of over 5 million Ukrainians , between 3.5 and 4 million Poles , 1.5 million Belarusians , and 1.3 million Jews . [ 26 ] During World War II , politicians gave varying estimates of the Polish population east of the Curzon line that would be affected by population transfers . Winston Churchill mentioned `` 3 to 4 million Poles east of the Curzon Line '' . [ 27 ] Stanisław Mikołajczyk , then Prime Minister of the Polish government-in-exile , counted this population as 5 million . [ 28 ] Ukrainians and Belarusians if counted together composed the majority of the population of interwar Eastern Poland . [ 29 ] The area also had a significant number of Jewish inhabitants . Poles constituted majorities in the main cities ( followed by Jews ) and in some rural areas , such as Vilnius region or Wilno Voivodeship . [ 29 ] [ 30 ] [ 31 ] After the Soviet deportation of Poles and Jews in 1939–1941 ( see Polish minority in Soviet Union ) , The Holocaust and the ethnic cleansing of the Polish population of Volhynia and East Galicia by Ukrainian Nationalists , the Polish population in the territories had decreased considerably . The cities of Wilno , Lwów , Grodno and some smaller towns still had significant Polish populations . After 1945 , the Polish population of the area east of the new Soviet-Polish border was in general confronted with the alternative either to accept a different citizenship or to emigrate . According to more recent research , about 3 million Roman Catholic Poles lived east of the Curzon line within interwar Poland 's borders , of whom about 2.1 million [ 32 ] to 2.2 million [ 33 ] died , fled , emigrated or were expelled to the newly annexed German territories . [ 34 ] [ 35 ] There still exists a big Polish minority in Lithuania and a big Polish minority in Belarus today . The cities of Vilnius , Grodno and some smaller towns still have significant Polish populations . Vilnius District Municipality and Sapotskin region have a Polish majority . Ukrainian nationalists continued their partisan war and were imprisoned by the Soviets and sent to the Gulag . There they revolted , actively participating in several uprisings ( Kengir uprising , Norilsk uprising , Vorkuta uprising ) . Polish population east of the Curzon Line before World War II can be estimated by adding together figures for Former Eastern Poland and for pre-1939 Soviet Union :
Curzon_Line_0
The history of the Curzon Line, with minor variations, goes back to the period following World War I. It was drawn for the first time by the Supreme War Council as the demarcation line between the newly emerging states, the Second Polish Republic and the Soviet Union. The proposal was put forward by British Foreign Secretary George Curzon, to serve as a diplomatic basis for the future border agreement, and in that form, it never materialized because the war went on. The line became a major geopolitical factor during World War II, when Joseph Stalin invaded eastern Poland and split its territory along the Curzon Line with Adolf Hitler. The Western powers entered into negotiations with the Soviet Union following Operation Barbarossa. Throughout the war until the Tehran Conference, the Allies did not agree that Poland's future eastern border should be kept at the same Curzon Line drawn in 1939; but Churchill's position changed after the Soviet victory at the Battle of Kursk. Following a private agreement at the Tehran Conference, confirmed at the 1945 Yalta Conference, the Allied leaders Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Stalin issued a statement affirming the use of the Curzon Line, with some five-to-eight-kilometre variations, as the eastern border between Poland and the Soviet Union. When Churchill proposed to add parts of East Galicia, including the city of Lviv, to Poland's territory (following Line B), Stalin argued that the Soviet Union could not demand less territory for itself than the British Government had reconfirmed previously several times. The Allied arrangement involved compensation for this loss via the incorporation of formerly German areas (the so-called Recovered Territories) into Poland. As a result, the current border between Poland and the countries of Belarus and Ukraine is an approximation of the Curzon Line.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mazaaq_Raat
Mazaaq Raat
[ "Guest ( s )", "Telecast date", "Featured promotion" ]
[ [ "Rupinder Singh & Qurram Hussain", "4 January 2017", "Special appearance" ], [ "Sukhbir", "11 January 2017", "Special appearance" ], [ "Osman Khalid Butt & Ainy Jaffri", "23 January 2017", "Balu Mahi" ], [ "Atif Aslam", "14 February 2017", "Special appearance" ], [ "Aiman Khan and Minal Khan", "15 February 2017", "Special appearance" ], [ "Sahir Lodhi & Mathira", "20 March 2017", "Raasta" ], [ "Sadia Khan & Inamullah Niazi -", "21 March 2017", "Special appearance" ], [ "Marina Khan", "10 April 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Mansha Pasha , Zhalay Sarhadi & Syra Yousuf", "17 April 2017", "Chalay Thay Saath" ], [ "Gohar Rasheed & Rabia Butt", "21 June 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Ali Zafar & Mawra Hocane", "26 June 2017", "Eid Special" ], [ "Humayun Saeed , Adnan Siddiqui & Alizey", "27 June 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Danish Taimoor , Sana Javed , Nida Yasir & Yasir Nawaz", "28 June 2017", "Mehrunisa V Lub U" ], [ "Kashif Mahmood & Gul Panra", "5 July 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Salman Sufi & Natasha Ali", "11 July 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Mani & Hira", "17 July 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Madiha Rana & Zartaj Gul", "18 July 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Qurram Hussain & Maria Unera", "26 July 2017", "Special Appearace" ], [ "Humayun Saeed , Mehwish Hayat & Urwa Hocane", "31 July 2017", "Punjab Nahi Jaungi" ], [ "Fareeha Altaf & Sohail Warraich", "1 August 2017", "Special Appearace" ] ]
List of Episodes -- 2017
Mazaaq_Raat_3
Mazaaq Raat (Urdu/Punjabi : ) is a Pakistani television talk show hosted by Vasay Chaudhry on Dunya TV. Vasay Chaudhry hosts the show, with the Mazaaq Raati team consisting of Qaiser Pia, Akram Udaas, Iftikhar Thakur, Hiba Waqar, and Aoun Ali Khan. Veteran Actor Noman Ijaz hosted the show from 2013 to 2015
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/So_You_Think_You_Can_Dance_(Belgium_and_the_Netherlands,_season_1)
So You Think You Can Dance (Belgium and the Netherlands, season 1)
[ "Couple", "Style", "Music", "Choreographer", "Result" ]
[ [ "Annemiek Ivan", "Mambo", "Livin ' La Vida Loca - Ricky Martin", "Julie Fryer", "Safe" ], [ "Marielle Timor", "Hip-hop", "When I Grow Up - Pussycat Dolls", "Lars Schuiling", "Marielle eliminated" ], [ "Julia Giannini", "Contemporary dance", "De Mooiste Verliezers - BLØF", "Roy Julen", "Safe" ], [ "Sigourney Uri", "American Smooth", "It 's Oh So Quiet - Björk", "Roemjana de Haan Koen Brouwers", "Uri eliminated" ], [ "Anuschka Bram", "Lyrical Hip-hop", "Bleeding Love - Leona Lewis", "Sponky Love", "Safe" ] ]
Performances -- Performance show 5 ( November 20 , 2008 )
Judge panel : Jaakko Toivonen , Euvgenia Parakhina , Eszteca Noya , Albert Verlinde
So_You_Think_You_Can_Dance_(Belgium_and_the_Netherlands,_season_1)_5
The first season of So You Think You Can Dance, a Dutch adaptation of the American show by the same name, premiered on RTL4 on September 4, 2008. Unlike following seasons of the show, the first was broadcast in the Netherlands only and features only Dutch contestants. The finale aired December 11, 2008 and concluded with latin dancer Ivan Paulovich as champion. Paulovich won a choice of free dance study opportunities in the U.S., €20.000, and a role in the musical Footloose.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Sarah_Jane_Adventures
The Sarah Jane Adventures
[ "Title", "Author", "Release date" ]
[ [ "Invasion of the Bane", "Terrance Dicks", "1 November 2007" ], [ "Revenge of the Slitheen", "Rupert Laight", "1 November 2007" ], [ "Eye of the Gorgon", "Phil Ford", "1 November 2007" ], [ "Warriors of Kudlak", "Gary Russell", "1 November 2007" ], [ "Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane ?", "Rupert Laight", "6 November 2008" ], [ "The Lost Boy", "Gary Russell", "6 November 2008" ], [ "The Last Sontaran", "Phil Ford", "6 November 2008" ], [ "The Day of the Clown", "Phil Ford", "6 November 2008" ], [ "The Wedding of Sarah Jane Smith", "Gareth Roberts", "5 November 2009" ], [ "The Nightmare Man ( e-book only )", "Joseph Lidster", "25 November 2010" ], [ "Death of the Doctor ( e-book only )", "Gary Russell", "25 November 2010" ] ]
Merchandising -- Novelisations
The Sarah Jane Adventures merchandising revived the concept of the novelisation , which had been part of the Doctor Who franchise from the 1970s to the 1990s ( principally under the editorship of author and former Who script editor Terrance Dicks ) . The first series and most of the second were adapted in this way , but later series saw only a few releases and a transition from print to e-books .
The_Sarah_Jane_Adventures_7
The Sarah Jane Adventures is a British science fiction television programme, that was produced by BBC Cymru Wales for CBBC, created by Russell T Davies starring Elisabeth Sladen. The programme is a spin-off of the long-running BBC science fiction programme Doctor Who and is aimed at a younger audience than Doctor Who. It focuses on the adventures of Sarah Jane Smith, an investigative journalist who, as a young woman, had numerous adventures across time and space. The series debuted on BBC One with a 60-minute special, Invasion of the Bane, on 1 January 2007, and broadcast through till 2011, up until Sladens death. It was nominated for a British Academy Children's Award in 2008 in the Drama category, and for a BAFTA Cymru in 2009 in the Children's Drama category. The programme won a Royal Television Society 2010 award for Best Children's Drama.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_District_Court_for_the_Middle_District_of_North_Carolina
United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina
[ "#", "Judge", "State", "Born-died", "Active service", "Chief Judge", "Senior status", "Appointed by", "Reason for termination" ]
[ [ "1", "Johnson Jay Hayes", "NC", "1886-1970", "1927-1957", "-", "1957-1970", "Coolidge", "death" ], [ "2", "Edwin Monroe Stanley", "NC", "1909-1971", "1957-1971", "1961-1971", "-", "Eisenhower", "death" ], [ "3", "L. Richardson Preyer", "NC", "1919-2001", "1961-1963", "-", "-", "Kennedy", "resignation" ], [ "4", "Eugene Andrew Gordon", "NC", "1917-2002", "1964-1982", "1971-1982", "1982-2002", "L. Johnson", "death" ], [ "5", "Hiram Hamilton Ward", "NC", "1923-2002", "1972-1988", "1982-1988", "1988-2002", "Nixon", "death" ], [ "6", "Richard Erwin", "NC", "1923-2006", "1980-1992", "1988-1992", "1992-2006", "Carter", "death" ], [ "7", "Frank William Bullock Jr", "NC", "1938-present", "1982-2005", "1992-1999", "2005-2006", "Reagan", "retirement" ], [ "9", "William Lindsay Osteen Sr", "NC", "1930-2009", "1991-2006", "-", "2006-2007", "G.H.W . Bush", "retirement" ], [ "10", "James A. Beaty Jr", "NC", "1949-present", "1994-2014", "2006-2012", "2014-2018", "Clinton", "retirement" ] ]
Former judges
United_States_District_Court_for_the_Middle_District_of_North_Carolina_1
The United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina (in case citations, M.D.N.C.) is a United States district court with jurisdiction over 24 counties in the center of North Carolina. It consists of five divisions with a headquarters in Greensboro, North Carolina. Appeals from the Middle District of North Carolina are taken to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (except for patent claims and claims against the U.S. government under the Tucker Act, which are appealed to the Federal Circuit).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002–03_Birmingham_City_F.C._season
2002–03 Birmingham City F.C. season
[ "Date", "League position", "Opponents", "Venue", "Result", "Score F-A", "Scorers", "Attendance" ]
[ [ "18 August 2002", "18th", "Arsenal", "A", "L", "0-2", "", "38,018" ], [ "24 August 2002", "19th", "Blackburn Rovers", "H", "L", "0-1", "", "27,563" ], [ "28 August 2002", "17th", "Everton", "A", "D", "1-1", "John 50 ' pen", "37,197" ], [ "31 August 2002", "14th", "Leeds United", "H", "W", "2-1", "Devlin 32 ' , D. Johnson 58 '", "27,164" ], [ "11 September 2002", "15th", "Liverpool", "A", "D", "2-2", "Morrison ( 2 ) 61 ' , 90 '", "43,113" ], [ "16 September 2002", "9th", "Aston Villa", "H", "W", "3-0", "Morrison 31 ' , Enckelman 77 ' o.g . , Horsfield 83 '", "29,505" ], [ "21 September 2002", "10th", "Middlesbrough", "A", "L", "0-1", "", "29,869" ], [ "28 September 2002", "14th", "Newcastle United", "H", "L", "0-2", "", "29,072" ], [ "5 October 2002", "12th", "West Ham United", "A", "W", "2-1", "John ( 2 ) 4 ' , 43 '", "35,010" ], [ "19 October 2002", "12th", "West Bromwich Albion", "A", "D", "1-1", "Moore 86 ' o.g", "27,021" ], [ "26 October 2002", "13th", "Manchester City", "H", "L", "0-2", "", "28,316" ], [ "2 November 2002", "12th", "Bolton Wanderers", "H", "W", "3-1", "Purse 61 ' , Savage 72 ' , Horsfield 83 '", "27,224" ], [ "9 November 2002", "14th", "Chelsea", "A", "L", "0-3", "", "35,237" ], [ "17 November 2002", "15th", "Fulham", "H", "D", "0-0", "", "26,164" ], [ "23 November 2002", "13th", "Sunderland", "A", "W", "1-0", "Morrison 89 '", "38,803" ], [ "30 November 2002", "11th", "Tottenham Hotspur", "H", "D", "1-1", "Kenna 68 '", "29,505" ], [ "7 December 2002", "13th", "Southampton", "A", "L", "0-2", "", "31,132" ], [ "15 December 2002", "13th", "Fulham", "A", "W", "1-0", "Kirovski 7 '", "14,962" ], [ "21 December 2002", "13th", "Charlton Athletic", "H", "D", "1-1", "Devlin 67 ' pen", "29,505" ], [ "26 December 2002", "13th", "Everton", "H", "D", "1-1", "Kirovski 45 '", "29,505" ] ]
Premier League -- Match details
2002–03_Birmingham_City_F.C._season_1
The 2002-03 season was Birmingham City Football Club's 100th in the English football league system, their 51st in the top tier, and their debut season in the Premier League, having been promoted via the play-offs. Under the management of Steve Bruce, they finished in 13th position in the 20-team league. Birmingham entered the 2002-03 FA Cup at the third round and lost to Fulham in that round, and, having entered the League Cup in the second round, lost to Preston North End in the third. French manufacturers Le Coq Sportif supplied Birmingham's kit for the fifth consecutive season, and mobile phone retailer Phones4U retained the shirt sponsorship. Stern John was top scorer with nine goals in all competitions; if only league goals are considered, Clinton Morrison top-scored with six. Steve Vickers was club captain, but his long absences through injury meant that vice-captain Jeff Kenna usually captained the team.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2011–12_Leicester_City_F.C._season
2011–12 Leicester City F.C. season
[ "Date", "Position", "Name" ]
[ [ "30 June 2011", "CM", "Aman Verma" ], [ "30 June 2011", "GK", "Robert Ambrusics" ], [ "30 June 2011", "CF", "Ashley Chambers" ], [ "30 June 2011", "CM", "Nathan Hicks" ], [ "30 June 2011", "RW", "Jorrin John" ], [ "30 June 2011", "CF", "Craig King" ], [ "30 June 2011", "CM", "Ben Milnes" ], [ "30 June 2011", "RB", "Luke O'Neill" ], [ "30 June 2011", "CF", "Adi Yussuf" ], [ "30 June 2011", "GK", "Ricardo" ], [ "18 July 2011", "RB", "Robbie Neilson" ], [ "30 August 2011", "CF", "Leon Črnčič" ], [ "5 September 2011", "CF", "Yann Kermorgant" ], [ "22 December 2011", "LW", "Jason Banton" ], [ "13 January 2012", "DM", "Moreno" ], [ "23 January 2012", "DM", "Yuki Abe" ], [ "23 January 2012", "LB", "Michael Ball" ] ]
Transfers -- Released
2011–12_Leicester_City_F.C._season_8
The 2011-12 season is Leicester City F.C. 's 107th season in the English football league system and their 60th (non-consecutive) season in the second tier of English football. They are playing their third consecutive season in the Football League Championship. The summer saw Leicester spend big in an attempt to gain promotion back to the Premier League, but an inconsistent start saw manager Sven-Göran Eriksson sacked after a 3-0 defeat at home to struggling Millwall saw Leicester sitting in 13th position after 13 games. After days of negotiations, Nigel Pearson was finally re-appointed as manager on 15 November 2011, starting his second spell at the club after leaving for Hull City 17 months earlier. However, the club continued their inconsistent form under Pearson and sat mid-table for virtually the entire season before eventually finishing in 9th place.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lana_Morris
Lana Morris
[ "Year", "Title", "Role" ]
[ [ "1946", "School for Secrets", "Mrs Watlington" ], [ "1948", "Spring in Park Lane", "Rosie" ], [ "1948", "The Weaker Sex", "Lolly" ], [ "1948", "It 's Hard to Be Good", "Daphne" ], [ "1949", "Trottie True", "Bouncie Barrington" ], [ "1949", "The Chiltern Hundreds", "Bessie Sykes" ], [ "1950", "Morning Departure", "Rose Snipe" ], [ "1950", "Guilt Is My Shadow", "Betty" ], [ "1950", "The Reluctant Widow", "Becky" ], [ "1950", "Trio", "Gladys" ], [ "1950", "The Woman in Question", "Lana Clark" ], [ "1951", "A Tale of Five Cities", "Delia Morel Romanoff" ], [ "1953", "The Red Beret", "Pinky" ], [ "1953", "The Straw Man", "Ruth Hunter" ], [ "1953", "The Good Beginning", "Evie Watson" ], [ "1953", "Black 13", "Marion" ], [ "1953", "Trouble in Store", "Sally Wilson" ], [ "1954", "Radio Cab Murder", "Myra" ], [ "1954", "Thought to Kill", "Ruby" ], [ "1955", "Man of the Moment", "Penny" ] ]
Filmography
Lana_Morris_0
Lana Morris, born Averil Maureen Anita Morris (11 March 1930 - 28 May 1998) was a British film, stage and television actress during the 1950s and 1960s. She played the role of Helene in the 1967 BBC adaptation of The Forsyte Saga, and appeared in many other television programmes. She worked with Roger Moore in The Saint, appearing on the cover of an early 1960s tie-in reprinting of the novel The Saint in New York. She later became a television panellist. She was also in British films such as I Start Counting. She was married to the BBC executive Ronnie Waldman (1914-1978) (from 1953 to 1978). She died of a heart attack in Windsor, Berkshire, aged 68.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guillermo_Vilas_career_statistics
Guillermo Vilas career statistics
[ "No", "Date", "Tournament", "Surface", "Opponent", "Score" ]
[ [ "1", "12 March 1972", "Buenos Aires , River Plate Championships , Argentina", "Clay", "Héctor Romani", "6-2 , 6-4 , 6-2" ], [ "2", "10 March 1974", "Buenos Aires , River Plate Championships , Argentina", "Clay", "Julián Ganzábal", "7-6 , 4-6 , 6-3 , 6-3" ], [ "3", "20 April 1975", "Buenos Aires , River Plate Championships , Argentina", "Clay", "Clark Graebner", "6-2 , 6-1 , 6-4" ], [ "4", "28 August 1977", "Rye , Westchester Country Club , US", "Clay", "Ilie Năstase", "6-2 , 6-0" ], [ "5", "28-30 October 1977", "Caracas , The Super Tennis 77 Tournament , Venezuela", "Clay", "Ilie Năstase", "6-2 , 6-2" ], [ "6", "25-26 July 1979", "Aix-en-Provence , Invitational Tournament , France", "Hard", "Ilie Năstase", "6-4 , 6-4" ] ]
Career finals -- Runners-ups ( 42 )
Guillermo_Vilas_career_statistics_7
These are the main career statistics of former Argentine professional tennis player Guillermo Vilas whose playing career lasted from 1969 through 1992.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_FINA_World_Swimming_Championships_(25_m)_–_Women's_100_metre_freestyle
2018 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) – Women's 100 metre freestyle
[ "Rank", "Lane", "Name", "Nationality", "Time", "Notes" ]
[ [ "1", "3", "Ranomi Kromowidjojo", "Netherlands", "51.95", "Q" ], [ "2", "7", "Zhu Menghui", "China", "52.04", "Q" ], [ "3", "5", "Michelle Coleman", "Sweden", "52.18", "Q" ], [ "4", "4", "Mallory Comerford", "United States", "52.36", "Q" ], [ "5", "6", "Lia Neal", "United States", "52.69", "Q" ], [ "6", "2", "Erin Gallagher", "South Africa", "52.70", "Q , AF" ], [ "7", "1", "Tomomi Aoki", "Japan", "53.27", "" ], [ "8", "8", "Veronika Andrusenko", "Russia", "53.35", "" ] ]
Results -- Semifinals
2018_FINA_World_Swimming_Championships_(25_m)_–_Women's_100_metre_freestyle_2
The women's 100 metre freestyle competition of the 2018 FINA World Swimming Championships (25 m) was held on 12 and 13 December 2018.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museum_of_Warsaw
Museum of Warsaw
[ "No", "Name", "Address", "Website" ]
[ [ "1", "Antonina Leśniewska Museum of Pharmacy", "ul . Piwna 31/33", "http : //www.muzeumfarmacji.mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "2", "Military Ordinariate of Poland", "ul . Długa 13/15", "http : //www.ordynariat.mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "3", "Museum at the Cemetery in Palmiry", "Palmiry , Gmina Czosnów", "http : //www.palmiry.mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "4", "Museum of Praga", "ul . Targowa 50/52", "http : //www.muzeumpragi.mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "5", "Museum of Wola", "ul . Srebrna 12", "http : //muzeumwoli.muzeumwarszawy.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "6", "Janusz Korczak Research and Documentation Centre", "ul . Jaktorowska 6", "http : //www.korczakianum.mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "7", "Warsaw Museum of Printing", "ul . Trębacka 3", "http : //www.muzeumdrukarstwa.mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "8", "Warsaw 's Old Town Heritage Interpretation Center", "ul . Brzozowa 11/13", "http : //www.mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ], [ "9", "Museum of the Warsaw Barbican", "ul . Nowomiejska", "http : //mhw.pl/ ( Polish )" ] ]
Branches
The Historical Museum of Warsaw has 9 branches :
Museum_of_Warsaw_0
Museum of Warsaw () (in 1948-2014 Historical Museum of Warsaw, ) is a museum in the Old Town Market Place in Warsaw, Poland. It was established in 1936.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Japanese_films_of_2017
List of Japanese films of 2017
[ "Rank", "Title", "Gross" ]
[ [ "1", "Detective Conan : Crimson Love Letter", "¥68.9 billion ( US $ 65.45 million )" ], [ "2", "Doraemon the Movie 2017 : Great Adventure in the Antarctic Kachi Kochi", "¥44.3 billion ( US $ 65.4 million )" ], [ "3", "Gintama", "¥38.4 billion ( US $ 45.7 million )" ], [ "4", "Pokémon the Movie : I Choose You !", "¥35.5 billion ( US $ 37.6 million )" ], [ "5", "Let Me Eat Your Pancreas", "¥35.2 billion ( US $ 31.4 million )" ], [ "6", "Mary and the Witch 's Flower", "¥32.9 billion ( US $ 41 million )" ], [ "7", "Yo-kai Watch : Soratobu Kujira to Double no Sekai no Daibōken da Nyan !", "¥32.6 billion ( US $ 30 million )" ], [ "8", "Sword Art Online The Movie : Ordinal Scale", "¥25.2 billion ( US $ 38.3 million )" ], [ "9", "Mumon : The Land of Stealth", "¥25.1 billion ( US $ 22.2 million )" ], [ "10", "Memoirs of a Murderer", "¥24.1 billion ( US $ 21.2 million )" ] ]
Highest-grossing films
The following is a list of the 10 highest-grossing Japanese films at the Japanese box office during 2017 .
List_of_Japanese_films_of_2017_0
A list of Japanese films that were first released in 2017.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/29th_New_York_State_Legislature
29th New York State Legislature
[ "District", "Assemblymen", "Party" ]
[ [ "Albany", "David Burhans *", "Federalist" ], [ "Albany", "Asa Colvard", "Federalist" ], [ "Albany", "Adam Dietz Jr. *", "Federalist" ], [ "Albany", "Stephen Lush *", "Federalist" ], [ "Albany", "Joseph Shurtleff *", "Federalist" ], [ "Albany", "Abraham Van Vechten *", "Federalist" ], [ "Cayuga", "John Grover Jr. *", "Dem.-Rep" ], [ "Cayuga", "Amos Rathbun *", "Dem.-Rep" ], [ "Chenango", "Benjamin Jones", "" ], [ "Chenango", "Jonathan Morgan", "" ], [ "Chenango", "Samuel Payne *", "" ], [ "Chenango", "Sylvanus Smalley", "Dem.-Rep" ], [ "Clinton", "William Bailey", "" ], [ "Columbia", "Moncrief Livingston *", "Federalist" ], [ "Columbia", "Peter Silvester *", "Federalist" ], [ "Columbia", "William W. Van Ness *", "Federalist" ], [ "Columbia", "Jason Warner *", "Federalist" ], [ "Delaware", "Anthony Marvine *", "Federalist" ], [ "Delaware", "Gabriel North", "Dem.-Rep" ], [ "Dutchess", "Barnabas Carver", "Dem.-Rep" ] ]
State Assembly -- Assemblymen
29th_New_York_State_Legislature_1
The 29th New York State Legislature, consisting of the New York State Senate and the New York State Assembly, met from January 28 to April 7, 1806, during the second year of Morgan Lewis's governorship, in Albany.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_WTA_Shenzhen_Open
2013 WTA Shenzhen Open
[ "Country", "Player", "Rank", "Seed" ]
[ [ "CHN", "Li Na", "7", "1" ], [ "FRA", "Marion Bartoli", "11", "2" ], [ "SRB", "Jelena Janković", "22", "3" ], [ "TPE", "Hsieh Su-wei", "25", "4" ], [ "CZE", "Klára Zakopalová", "28", "5" ], [ "CHN", "Peng Shuai", "40", "6" ], [ "GBR", "Laura Robson", "53", "7" ], [ "SRB", "Bojana Jovanovski", "56", "8" ] ]
Singles main draw entrants -- Seeds
2013_Shenzhen_Open_0
The 2013 Shenzhen Open (known as 2013 Shenzhen Gemdale Open for sponsorship reason) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the inaugural edition of the Shenzhen Open, and was part of the WTA International tournaments of the 2013 WTA Tour. It took place at the Shenzhen Longgang Sports Center in Shenzhen, China, from 31 December 2012 to 6 January 2013.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quebec
Quebec
[ "Location", "July ( °C )", "July ( °F )", "January ( °C )", "January ( °F )" ]
[ [ "Montreal", "26/16", "79/61", "−5/−14", "22/7" ], [ "Gatineau", "26/15", "79/60", "−6/−15", "21/5" ], [ "Quebec City", "25/13", "77/56", "−8/−18", "17/0" ], [ "Trois-Rivières", "25/14", "78/58", "−7/−17", "19/1" ], [ "Sherbrooke", "24/11", "76/53", "−6/−18", "21/0" ], [ "Saguenay", "24/12", "75/54", "−10/−21", "14/−6" ], [ "Matagami", "23/9", "73/48", "−13/−26", "8/−16" ], [ "Kuujjuaq", "17/6", "63/43", "−20/−29", "−4/−20" ], [ "Inukjuak", "13/5", "56/42", "−21/−28", "−6/−19" ] ]
Geography -- Climate
Köppen climate types of Quebec In general , the climate of Quebec is cold and humid . [ 41 ] The climate of the province is largely determined by its latitude , maritime and elevation influences . [ 41 ] According to the Köppen climate classification , Quebec has three main climate regions . [ 41 ] Southern and western Quebec , including most of the major population centres and areas south of 51oN , have a humid continental climate ( Köppen climate classification Dfb ) with four distinct seasons having warm to occasionally hot and humid summers and often very cold and snowy winters . [ 41 ] [ 42 ] The main climatic influences are from western and northern Canada and move eastward , and from the southern and central United States that move northward . Because of the influence of both storm systems from the core of North America and the Atlantic Ocean , precipitation is abundant throughout the year , with most areas receiving more than 1,000 millimetres ( 39 in ) of precipitation , including over 300 centimetres ( 120 in ) of snow in many areas . [ 43 ] During the summer , severe weather patterns ( such as tornadoes and severe thunderstorms ) occur occasionally . [ 44 ] Most of central Quebec , ranging from 51 to 58 degrees North has a subarctic climate ( Köppen Dfc ) . [ 41 ] Winters are long , very cold , and snowy , and among the coldest in eastern Canada , while summers are warm but very short due to the higher latitude and the greater influence of Arctic air masses . Precipitation is also somewhat less than farther south , except at some of the higher elevations . The northern regions of Quebec have an arctic climate ( Köppen ET ) , with very cold winters and short , much cooler summers . [ 41 ] The primary influences in this region are the Arctic Ocean currents ( such as the Labrador Current ) and continental air masses from the High Arctic . Baie-Saint-Paul during winter The four calendar seasons in Quebec are spring , summer , autumn and winter , with conditions differing by region . They are then differentiated according to the insolation , temperature , and precipitation of snow and rain . [ 45 ] At Quebec City , the length of the daily sunshine varies from 8:37 hrs in December to 15:50 hrs in June ; the annual variation is much greater ( from 4:54 to 19:29 hrs ) at the northern tip of the province . [ 46 ] From temperate zones to the northern territories of the Far North , the brightness varies with latitude , as well as the Northern Lights and midnight sun . Quebec is divided into four climatic zones : arctic , subarctic , humid continental and East maritime . From south to north , average temperatures range in summer between 25 and 5 °C ( 77 and 41 °F ) and , in winter , between −10 and −25 °C ( 14 and −13 °F ) . [ 47 ] [ 48 ] In periods of intense heat and cold , temperatures can reach 35 °C ( 95 °F ) in the summer [ 49 ] and −40 °C ( −40 °F ) during the Quebec winter , [ 49 ] They may vary depending on the Humidex or Wind chill . The all time record high was 40.0 °C ( 104.0 °F ) and the all time record low was −51.0 °C ( −59.8 °F ) . [ 50 ] The all-time record of the greatest precipitation in winter was established in winter 2007–2008 , with more than five metres [ 51 ] of snow in the area of Quebec City , while the average amount received per winter is around three metres . [ 52 ] March 1971 , however , saw the `` Century 's Snowstorm '' with more than 40 centimetres ( 16 in ) in Montreal to 80 centimetres ( 31 in ) in Mont Apica of snow within 24 hours in many regions of southern Quebec . Also , the winter of 2010 was the warmest and driest recorded in more than 60 years . [ 53 ]
Quebec_0
Quebec (/k(w)ɪˈbɛk/ (listen); French: Québec [kebɛk] (listen)) is one of the thirteen provinces and territories of Canada. It is bordered to the west by the province of Ontario and the bodies of water James Bay and Hudson Bay; to the north by Hudson Strait and Ungava Bay; to the east by the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and the province of Newfoundland and Labrador; and to the south by the province of New Brunswick and the U.S. states of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, and New York. It also shares maritime borders with Nunavut, Prince Edward Island, and Nova Scotia. Quebec is Canada's largest province by area and its second-largest administrative division; only the territory of Nunavut is larger. It is historically and politically considered to be part of Central Canada (with Ontario). Quebec is the second-most populous province of Canada, after Ontario. It is the only one to have a predominantly French-speaking population, with French as the sole provincial official language. Most inhabitants live in urban areas near the Saint Lawrence River between Montreal and Quebec City, the capital. Approximately half of Quebec residents live in the Greater Montreal Area, including the Island of Montreal. English-speaking communities and English-language institutions are concentrated in the west of the island of Montreal but are also significantly present in the Outaouais, Eastern Townships, and Gaspé regions. The Nord-du-Québec region, occupying the northern half of the province, is sparsely populated and inhabited primarily by Aboriginal peoples. The climate around the major cities is four-seasons continental with cold and snowy winters combined with warm to hot humid summers, but farther north long winter seasons dominate and as a result the northern areas of the province are marked by tundra conditions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018–19_Lechia_Gdańsk_season
2018–19 Lechia Gdańsk season
[ "Rank", "Player", "Goals" ]
[ [ "1", "Flávio Paixão", "15" ], [ "2", "Artur Sobiech", "10" ], [ "3", "Patryk Lipski", "6" ], [ "4", "Lukáš Haraslín", "5" ], [ "5", "Jarosław Kubicki", "4" ], [ "5", "Michał Nalepa", "4" ], [ "7", "Filip Mladenović", "3" ], [ "8", "Rafał Wolski", "2" ], [ "8", "Steven Vitória", "2" ], [ "8", "Michał Mak", "2" ], [ "8", "Tomasz Makowski", "2" ], [ "8", "Błażej Augustyn", "2" ], [ "8", "Daniel Łukasik", "2" ], [ "14", "Adam Chrzanowski", "1" ], [ "14", "Konrad Michalak", "1" ], [ "14", "Jakub Arak", "1" ], [ "14", "Karol Fila", "1" ], [ "14", "Own Goals", "1" ] ]
Statistics -- Goalscorers
2018–19_Lechia_Gdańsk_season_5
The 2018-19 Lechia Gdańsk season is the club's 75th season of existence, and their 11th continuous in the top flight of Polish football. The season covered the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1939_Chicago_Bears_season
1939 Chicago Bears season
[ "Date", "Opponent", "Location", "Result", "Score" ]
[ [ "Sep 15", "Cleveland Rams", "Soldier Field", "Win", "30-21" ], [ "Sep. 24", "Green Bay Packers", "City Stadium ( Green Bay )", "Loss", "21-16" ], [ "Oct 2", "Pittsburgh Pirates", "Forbes Field", "Win", "32-0" ], [ "Oct 8", "Cleveland Rams", "Municipal Stadium ( Cleveland )", "Win", "35-21" ], [ "Oct 15", "Chicago Cardinals", "Wrigley Field", "Win", "44-7" ], [ "Oct 22", "New York Giants", "Polo Grounds", "Loss", "16-13" ], [ "Oct 29", "Detroit Lions", "Wrigley Field", "Loss", "10-0" ], [ "Nov. 5", "Green Bay Packers", "Wrigley Field", "Win", "30-27" ], [ "Nov. 12", "Detroit Lions", "Briggs Stadium", "Win", "23-13" ], [ "Nov. 19", "Philadelphia Eagles", "Wrigley Field", "Win", "27-14" ], [ "Nov. 23", "Chicago Cardinals", "Wrigley Field", "Win", "48-7" ] ]
Schedule
1939_Chicago_Bears_season_0
The 1939 Chicago Bears season was their 20th regular season completed in the National Football League. They finished second in the Western Division with an 8-3 record. The Bears started the season well, winning 4 of their first 5 games. However, two mid-season losses to New York and Detroit cost them the Division to Green Bay. The Packers went on to win the NFL championship.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipwrecks_in_March_1851
List of shipwrecks in March 1851
[ "Ship", "Country", "Description" ]
[ [ "Aid", "United Kingdom", "The ship was driven ashore and wrecked at Port Isaac , Cornwall" ], [ "Eclair", "United Kingdom", "The ship sank in Derbyhaven Bay , Isle of Man . She was on a voyage from Genoa , Kingdom of Sardinia to Glasgow , Renfrewshire" ], [ "John and Hannah", "United Kingdom", "The ship was driven ashore and wrecked near Waterford . Her crew were rescued . She was on a voyage from South Shields , County Durham to Cork" ], [ "Mary Ann", "United Kingdom", "The smack was driven ashore and wrecked at Port Charlotte , Islay , Inner Hebrides" ], [ "Melpomene", "Greece", "The brig was driven ashore and wrecked at Dungeness , Kent , United Kingdom . with the loss of ten of the fourteen people on board . She was on a voyage from Cork to London" ], [ "Naiad", "United Kingdom", "The Yorkshire billyboy was in collision with Vesper ( United Kingdom ) and sank in the North Sea 2 nautical miles ( 3.7 km ) off Aldeburgh Suffolk . Her crew were rescued by a brig . She was on a voyage from Hartlepool , County Durham to Gravesend , Kent" ] ]
List_of_shipwrecks_in_March_1851_18
The list of shipwrecks in March 1851 includes some ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during the month of March 1851.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swimming_at_the_2019_World_Aquatics_Championships_–_Women's_200_metre_backstroke
Swimming at the 2019 World Aquatics Championships – Women's 200 metre backstroke
[ "Rank", "Lane", "Name", "Nationality", "Time" ]
[ [ "1", "4", "Regan Smith", "United States", "2:03.69" ], [ "2", "7", "Kaylee McKeown", "Australia", "2:06.26" ], [ "3", "5", "Kylie Masse", "Canada", "2:06.62" ], [ "4", "3", "Margherita Panziera", "Italy", "2:06.67" ], [ "5", "1", "Taylor Ruck", "Canada", "2:07.50" ], [ "6", "6", "Minna Atherton", "Australia", "2:08.26" ], [ "7", "8", "Katalin Burián", "Hungary", "2:08.65" ], [ "8", "2", "Katinka Hosszú", "Hungary", "2:10.08" ] ]
Results -- Final
The final was started on 27 July at 20:58 . [ 5 ]
Swimming_at_the_2019_World_Aquatics_Championships_–_Women's_200_metre_backstroke_3
The Women's 200 metre backstroke competition at the 2019 World Championships was held on 26 and 27 July 2019.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Chicago
List of tallest buildings in Chicago
[ "Rank", "Name", "Height ft ( m )", "Floors", "Year", "Notes" ]
[ [ "01.0 1", "Willis Tower", "1,451 ( 442 )", "110", "1974", "Formerly known as Sears Tower ; 3rd-tallest building in the United States , 22nd-tallest building in the world ; tallest building in the world from 1974 until 1998 ; tallest building completed in the world in the 1970s" ], [ "02.0 2", "Trump International Hotel and Tower", "1,388 ( 423 )", "98", "2009", "7th-tallest building in the United States ; tallest building completed in the United States in the first decade of the 21st century" ], [ "03.0 3", "Aon Center", "1,136 ( 346 )", "83", "1973", "12th-tallest building in the U.S. ; formerly known as the Standard Oil Building . Was the tallest building in Chicago before being surpassed by the Willis Tower" ], [ "04.0 4", "875 North Michigan Avenue", "1,127 ( 344 )", "100", "1969", "Formerly known as John Hancock Center ; 13th-tallest building in the United States ; tallest building constructed in the world in the 1960s ; first building in the world outside of New York City to rise at least 1,000 feet ( 305 m ) . Was the tallest building in Chicago before being surpassed by the Aon Center" ], [ "05.0 5", "Franklin Center", "1,007 ( 307 )", "61", "1989", "Formerly known as the AT & T Corporate Center ; 21st-tallest building in the United States ; tallest building constructed in Chicago in the 1980s" ], [ "06.0 6", "Two Prudential Plaza", "995 ( 303 )", "64", "1990", "16th-tallest building in the United States ; tallest building constructed in Chicago in the 1990s" ], [ "07.0 7", "311 South Wacker Drive", "961 ( 293 )", "65", "1990", "24th-tallest building in the United States" ], [ "08.0 8", "NEMA Chicago", "896 ( 273 )", "76", "2019", "Tallest all rental apartment building in Chicago" ], [ "09.0 9", "900 North Michigan", "871 ( 266 )", "66", "1989", "" ], [ "10.0 10=", "Water Tower Place", "860 ( 262 )", "74", "1976", "" ], [ "10.0 10=", "Aqua", "860 ( 262 )", "82", "2009", "Currently the tallest building in the world designed by a female-led architectural firm ; first skyscraper in Chicago to contain a hotel , condominiums , apartments and retail space" ], [ "12.0 12", "Chase Tower", "850 ( 259 )", "60", "1969", "Also known as First National Plaza" ], [ "13.0 13", "Park Tower", "844 ( 257 )", "67", "2000", "" ], [ "14.0 14", "One Bennett Park", "837 ( 255 )", "69", "2018", "" ], [ "15.0 15", "The Legacy at Millennium Park", "822 ( 251 )", "73", "2010", "" ], [ "17.0 16", "300 North LaSalle", "784 ( 239 )", "60", "2009", "" ], [ "18.0 17", "Three First National Plaza", "767 ( 234 )", "57", "1981", "" ], [ "19.0 18", "Grant Thornton Tower", "755 ( 230 )", "50", "1992", "" ], [ "16.0 19", "Blue Cross Blue Shield Tower", "744 ( 227 )", "57", "2010", "First phase completed in 1997 ; 24-floor vertical expansion completed in 2010" ], [ "21.0 20", "River Point", "732 ( 223 )", "52", "2017", "" ] ]
Tallest buildings
List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Chicago_0
Chicago, the third-largest city in the United States, is home to 1,366 completed high-rises, 48 of which stand taller than . The tallest building in the city is the 110-story Willis Tower (formerly the Sears Tower), which rises in the Chicago Loop and was completed in 1974. Sears Tower was the tallest building in the world upon its completion, and remained the tallest building in the United States until May 10, 2013. The second-, third- and fourth-tallest buildings in Chicago are the Trump International Hotel & Tower, the Aon Center and 875 North Michigan Avenue, respectively. Of the ten tallest buildings in the United States, four are located in Chicago. Chicago leads the nation in the twenty tallest women-designed towers in the world, thanks to contributions by Jeanne Gang and Natalie de Blois. , Chicago had 116 buildings at least tall. Chicago is the birthplace of the skyscraper. The Home Insurance Building, completed in 1885, is regarded as the world's first skyscraper. This building used the steel-frame method, innovated in Chicago. It was originally built with 10 stories, an enormous height in the 1800s, to a height of , making it the tallest building in the world at that time. It was later expanded to 12 stories with a height of .
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinema_Audio_Society_Award_for_Outstanding_Achievement_in_Sound_Mixing_for_Television_Series_–_Half_Hour
Cinema Audio Society Award for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Television Series – Half Hour
[ "Year", "Program", "Episode ( s )", "Nominees", "Network" ]
[ [ "2010 ( 18th )", "Boardwalk Empire", "A Return to Normalcy", "Frank Stettner ( production mixer ) , Tom Fleischman ( re-recording mixer )", "HBO" ], [ "2010 ( 18th )", "24", "Day 8 : 3:00 p.m. - 4:00 p.m", "William Gocke ( production mixer ) ; Mike Olman , Kenneth Kobett ( re-recording mixers )", "Fox" ], [ "2010 ( 18th )", "Dexter", "Take It !", "Greg Agalsoff ( production mixer ) ; Pete Elia , Kevin Roache ( re-recording mixers )", "Showtime" ], [ "2010 ( 18th )", "Glee", "The Power of Madonna", "Phillip W. Palmer ( production mixer ) ; Joe Earle , Doug Andham ( re-recording mixers )", "Fox" ], [ "2010 ( 18th )", "Modern Family", "Chirp", "Stephen Tibbo ( production mixer ) , Dean Okrand ( re-recording mixer )", "ABC" ], [ "2011 ( 19th )", "Boardwalk Empire", "To the Lost", "Frank Stettner ( production mixer ) , Tom Fleischman ( re-recording mixer )", "HBO" ], [ "2011 ( 19th )", "Breaking Bad", "Face Off", "Darryl L. Frank ( production mixer ) ; Jeffrey Perkins , Eric Justen ( re-recording mixers )", "AMC" ], [ "2011 ( 19th )", "Dexter", "Just Let Go", "Greg Agalsoff ( production mixer ) ; Pete Elia , Kevin Roache ( re-recording mixers )", "Showtime" ], [ "2011 ( 19th )", "Game of Thrones", "Baelor", "Ronan Hill ( production mixer ) , Mark Taylor ( re-recording mixer )", "HBO" ], [ "2011 ( 19th )", "The Walking Dead", "What Lies Ahead", "Bartek Swiatek ( production mixer ) ; Gary D. Rogers , Dan Hiland ( re-recording mixers )", "AMC" ] ]
Winners and nominees -- 2010s
Cinema_Audio_Society_Award_for_Outstanding_Achievement_in_Sound_Mixing_for_Television_Series_–_Half_Hour_3
The Cinema Audio Society Award for Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Television Series - One Hour is an annual award given by the Cinema Audio Society to live action motion picture sound mixer for their outstanding achievements in sound mixing. The award came to its current title in 2013, when one hour and half hour series were separated into two categories. Before this, the category was labeled Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Television Series, and was given annually starting in 1994, for series' episodes aired the previous year.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010–11_Honduran_Liga_Nacional
2010–11 Honduran Liga Nacional
[ "Team", "Stadium", "Capacity", "Manager", "Captain", "Shirt Manufacturer", "Main Shirt Sponsor" ]
[ [ "Marathón", "Olímpico Metropolitano", "40,000", "Edwin Pavón", "Mario Berríos", "Joma", "Banco Continental" ], [ "Motagua", "Tiburcio Carías Andino", "35,000", "Ramón Maradiaga", "Amado Guevara", "Joma", "Pepsi" ], [ "Olimpia", "Tiburcio Carías Andino", "35,000", "Carlos Restrepo", "Danilo Turcios", "Puma", "Coca-Cola" ], [ "Real España", "Francisco Morazán", "20,000", "Mario Zanabria", "Alfredo Mejía", "Lotto", "Respuestos de Atlántida" ], [ "Victoria", "Nilmo Edwards", "25,000", "Jorge Pineda", "Júnior Izaguirre", "", "Leyde" ], [ "Vida", "Nilmo Edwards", "25,000", "Carlos Martínez", "Bryan Beckeles", "Joma", "Leyde" ], [ "Hispano", "Carlos Miranda", "10,000", "Raúl Martínez Sambulá", "Pablo Genovese", "Kaiser", "Tigo" ], [ "Platense", "Excélsior", "10,000", "Héctor Vargas", "Juan Cárcamo", "Joma", "" ], [ "Necaxa", "Marcelo Tinoco", "5,000", "Jorge Jiménez", "", "Puma", "CONGOLON" ], [ "Deportes Savio", "Sergio Antonio Reyes", "5,000", "Hernán García", "", "Kaiser", "Tigo" ] ]
Team Information
2010–11_Honduran_Liga_Nacional_0
The 2010-11 season in Honduran Liga Nacional was divided into two tournaments (Apertura and Clausura) and determined the 57th and 58th champions in the history of the league. It also provided two berths for the 2011-12 CONCACAF Champions League. The league had a reserve tournament for the first time in history with players between 15 and 20 years old.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Millar
Mary Millar
[ "Year", "Play", "Role", "Theatre" ]
[ [ "1952 , 1954-55", "Babes in the Wood", "Principal character", "The Empire Theatre , Sheffield ( 1952 ) Derby Hippodrome Theatre ( 1954-55 )" ], [ "1957 , 1959", "The Desert Song", "Margot Bonvalet", "His Majesty 's Theatre , Aberdeen" ], [ "1958-59", "Old Chelsea", "Mary Fenton", "King 's Theatre , Glasgow" ], [ "1960", "Camelot", "Queen Guenevere", "Majestic Theatre , Manhattan" ], [ "1962", "Lock Up Your Daughters", "Cloris", "Mermaid Theatre Her Majesty 's Theatre" ], [ "1963", "See You Inside", "", "Duchess Theatre" ], [ "1963-64", "All in Love", "Lydia Languish", "Mayfair Theatre" ], [ "1965", "Dearest Dracula", "Lucy", "Olympia Theatre , Dublin" ], [ "1966", "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers", "Milly", "" ], [ "1967-68 , 1971", "Bless the Bride", "", "Richmond Theatre" ], [ "1967", "Love From a Stranger", "Cecily Harrington", "Queen 's Theatre , Hornchurch" ], [ "1967", "Virtue in Danger", "Berinthia", "Queen 's Theatre , Hornchurch" ], [ "1968", "The Rivals", "Lydia Languish", "Queen 's Theatre , Hornchurch" ], [ "1969", "The Real Inspector Hound", "Cynthia", "Queen 's Theatre , Hornchurch" ], [ "1969", "Black Comedy", "Clea", "Queen 's Theatre , Hornchurch" ], [ "1969", "Ann Veronica", "Ann Veronica Stanley", "Cambridge Theatre" ], [ "1970", "Spider 's Web", "Clarissa Hailsham-Brown", "Queen 's Theatre , Hornchurch" ], [ "1972", "Popkiss", "Poppy Dickie", "Globe Theatre Cambridge Arts Theatre" ], [ "1973", "The Importance of Being Earnest", "Honourable Gwendolen Fairfax", "Queen 's Theatre , Hornchurch" ], [ "1975", "Small and Brassy", "", "King 's Head Theatre Wyndham 's Theatre" ] ]
Works -- Theatre
Mary_Millar_1
Irene Mary Wetton was born in Doncaster, England, on 26 July 1936 to Horace and Irene (née Mellor) Wetton, both music hall singers. She intended to become a stable hand, but later decided to pursue a stage career. She toured the country with her parents, who had an act called Sweethearts in Harmony.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_National_Football_League_annual_receiving_yards_leaders
List of National Football League annual receiving yards leaders
[ "Season", "League", "Winner", "Team", "Yds", "Games" ]
[ [ "1960", "American Football League", "Bill Groman", "Houston Oilers", "1,473", "14" ], [ "1961", "American Football League", "Charley Hennigan", "Houston Oilers", "1,746", "14" ], [ "1962", "American Football League", "Art Powell", "New York Titans", "1,130", "14" ], [ "1963", "American Football League", "Art Powell", "Oakland Raiders", "1,304", "14" ], [ "1964", "American Football League", "Charley Hennigan", "Houston Oilers", "1,546", "14" ], [ "1965", "American Football League", "Lance Alworth", "San Diego Chargers", "1,602", "14" ], [ "1966", "American Football League", "Lance Alworth", "San Diego Chargers", "1,383", "13" ], [ "1967", "American Football League", "Don Maynard", "New York Jets", "1,434", "14" ], [ "1968", "American Football League", "Lance Alworth", "San Diego Chargers", "1,312", "14" ], [ "1969", "American Football League", "Warren Wells", "Oakland Raiders", "1,260", "14" ] ]
Other receiving yards leaders
List_of_National_Football_League_annual_receiving_yards_leaders_2
In American football, passing, along with running (also referred to as rushing), is one of the two main methods of advancing the ball down the field. Passes are typically attempted by the quarterback, but any offensive player can attempt a pass provided they are behind the line of scrimmage. To qualify as a passing play, the ball must have initially moved forward after leaving the hands of the passer; if the ball initially moved laterally or backwards, the play would instead be considered a running play. A player who catches a forward pass is a receiver, and the number of receiving yards each player has recorded in each season is a recorded stat in football games. In addition to the overall National Football League (NFL) receiving champion, league record books recognize statistics from the American Football League (AFL), which operated from 1960 to 1969 before being absorbed into the NFL in 1970, Although league record books do not recognize stats from the All-America Football Conference, another league that merged with the NFL, these statistics are recognized by the Pro Football Hall of Fame. The NFL did not begin keeping official records until the 1932 season. The average the yards the leader has gained has increased over time - since the adoption of the 14-game season in 1961, all but one season saw the receiving leader record over 1,000 yards. No player has ever finished with over 2,000 receiving yards in a season; the current record is 1,964 yards, set by Calvin Johnson during the 2012 season. Wes Chandler, who led the league with 1,032 yards in the strike-shortened 1982 season, averaged 129 yards receiving per game, an NFL record. Don Hutson led the league in receiving yards seven times, the most of any player; Jerry Rice is second with six. Hutson also recorded the most consecutive seasons leading the league in receiving, doing so for five seasons from 1941 to 1945, while Jerry Rice ranks second with three consecutive league-leading seasons from 1993 to 1995. A Green Bay Packers player has led the league in receiving yards eleven times, the most in the NFL; the Los Angeles/St.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_cavalry_in_World_War_I
German cavalry in World War I
[ "Brigade", "Peacetime Corps", "Peacetime Division", "Regiment", "Regiment" ]
[ [ "1st Guards Cavalry", "Guards Corps", "Guards Cavalry Division", "Garde du Corps", "Guards Cuirassiers" ], [ "2nd Guards Cavalry", "Guards Corps", "Guards Cavalry Division", "1st Guards Uhlans", "3rd Guards Uhlans" ], [ "3rd Guards Cavalry", "Guards Corps", "Guards Cavalry Division", "1st Guards Dragoons", "2nd Guards Dragoons" ], [ "4th Guards Cavalry", "Guards Corps", "Guards Cavalry Division", "Guards Hussars", "2nd Guards Uhlans" ], [ "1st Cavalry", "I Corps", "1st Division", "3rd Cuirassiers", "1st Dragoons" ], [ "2nd Cavalry", "I Corps", "2nd Division", "12th Uhlans", "9th Jäger zu Pferde" ], [ "3rd Cavalry", "II Corps", "3rd Division", "2nd Cuirassiers", "9th Uhlans" ], [ "4th Cavalry", "II Corps", "4th Division", "3rd Grenadiers zu Pferde", "12th Dragoons" ], [ "5th Cavalry", "III Corps", "5th Division", "2nd Dragoons", "3rd Uhlans" ], [ "6th Cavalry", "III Corps", "6th Division", "6th Cuirassiers", "3rd Hussars" ], [ "7th Cavalry", "IV Corps", "7th Division", "10th Hussars", "16th Uhlans" ], [ "8th Cavalry", "IV Corps", "8th Division", "7th Cuirassiers", "12th Hussars" ], [ "9th Cavalry", "V Corps", "9th Division", "4th Dragoons", "10th Uhlans" ], [ "10th Cavalry", "V Corps", "10th Division", "1st Uhlans", "1st Jäger zu Pferde" ], [ "11th Cavalry", "VI Corps", "11th Division", "1st Leib Cuirassiers", "8th Dragoons" ], [ "12th Cavalry", "VI Corps", "12th Division", "4th Hussars", "6th Hussars" ], [ "13th Cavalry", "VII Corps", "13th Division", "4th Cuirassiers", "8th Hussars" ], [ "14th Cavalry", "VII Corps", "14th Division", "11th Hussars", "5th Uhlans" ], [ "15th Cavalry", "VIII Corps", "15th Division", "8th Cuirassiers", "7th Hussars" ], [ "16th Cavalry", "VIII Corps", "16th Division", "7th Jäger zu Pferde", "8th Jäger zu Pferde" ] ]
Pre-war
German Army cavalry re-enactment German Army hussars on the attack during maneuvers , 1912 The peacetime Imperial German Army was organised as 25 Corps ( Guards , I - XXI and I - III Bavarian ) each of two divisions ( 1st and 2nd Guards , 1st - 42nd and 1st - 6th Bavarian ) . Each division included a cavalry brigade ( of two regiments ) numbered as their parent division with the following exceptions : The Guards Corps had four cavalry brigades organised as the Guards Cavalry Division , the only peacetime cavalry division in the Army The Leib Hussar Brigade was assigned to 36th Division and there was no 36th Cavalry Brigade Three corps had an extra cavalry brigade : 43rd Cavalry Brigade attached to 2nd Division of I Corps 44th Cavalry Brigade attached to 12th Division of VI Corps 45th Cavalry Brigade attached to 34th Division of XVI Corps This gave a total of 55 brigades and 110 regiments .
German_cavalry_in_World_War_I_0
The history of the German Cavalry in World War I is one of an arm in decline.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamburg-Harburg_station
Hamburg-Harburg station
[ "Line", "Route", "Operator", "KBS" ]
[ [ "IRE 1", "Hamburg - Hamburg-Harburg - Lüneburg - Salzwedel - Stendal - Berlin Ost", "DB Regio", "" ], [ "RE 3 / RB 31", "Hamburg - Hamburg-Harburg - Lüneburg - Uelzen ( - Celle - Hannover )", "Metronom Eisenbahngesellschaft", "110" ], [ "RE 4 / RB 41", "Hamburg - Hamburg-Harburg - Buchholz - Tostedt - Rotenburg - Bremen", "Metronom Eisenbahngesellschaft", "120" ], [ "RE 5", "Hamburg - Hamburg-Harburg - Buxtehude - Stade - Cuxhaven", "Start Unterelbe", "121" ], [ "RB 38", "Hamburg-Harburg - Buchholz - Soltau - Hanover ( only Sat/Sun )", "Erixx", "" ] ]
Train services -- Regional trains
Hamburg-Harburg_station_1
Hamburg-Harburg or Harburg () is one of four operational main-line railway stations (Fernbahnhöfe) in the city of Hamburg, Germany. Opened on 1 May 1897, it is situated on the Hannover-Hamburg, Wanne-Eickel-Hamburg and Lower Elbe lines as well as the Harburg S-Bahn line. Train services are operated by Deutsche Bahn and Metronom with the rapid transit station (named just Harburg) being served by the Hamburg S-Bahn. The station is managed by DB Station&Service.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japan_Soccer_League
Japan Soccer League
[ "Club", "Winners", "Runners-up", "Winning seasons", "Runners-up seasons" ]
[ [ "Yomiuri SC", "2", "2", "1974 , 1977", "1975 , 1976" ], [ "Sumitomo Metal Industries", "2", "2", "1984 , 1986-87", "1983 , 1991-92" ], [ "Toshiba SC", "2", "1", "1979 , 1988-89", "1982" ], [ "Honda Motors", "2", "0", "1978 , 1980", "" ], [ "NKK SC", "2", "0", "1981 , 1983", "" ], [ "Toyota Motors", "1", "2", "1972", "1986-87 , 1989-90" ], [ "Fujitsu SC", "1", "2", "1976", "1974 , 1980" ], [ "Tanabe Pharmaceuticals", "1", "1", "1975", "1972" ], [ "Yamaha Motors", "1", "1", "1982", "1979" ], [ "Matsushita Electric", "1", "1", "1985-86", "1987-88" ], [ "ANA SC", "1", "1", "1987-88", "1984" ], [ "Hitachi SC", "1", "1", "1990-91", "1988-89" ], [ "Eidai Industries", "1", "0", "1973", "" ], [ "Mitsubishi Motors", "1", "0", "1989-90", "" ], [ "Fujita SC", "1", "0", "1991-92", "" ], [ "Nissan Motors", "0", "3", "", "1977 , 1978 , 1981" ], [ "Mazda SC", "0", "2", "", "1985-86 , 1990-91" ], [ "Kofu SC", "0", "1", "", "1973" ] ]
Champions -- Second Division
Main article : List of winners of J . League Division 2 and predecessors All clubs are listed under the names they were using in 1992 , when the league ceased to exist . Clubs in italic no longer exist .
Japan_Soccer_League_1
, or JSL, was the top flight football league in Japan between 1965 and 1992, and was the precursor to the current professional league, the J. League. JSL was the second national league of a team sport in Japan after the professional Japanese Baseball League that was founded in 1936. JSL was the first-ever national league of an amateur team sport in Japan.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basketball_at_the_1978_Asian_Games
Basketball at the 1978 Asian Games
[ "Team", "Pld", "W", "L", "Pts" ]
[ [ "China", "5", "5", "0", "10" ], [ "South Korea", "5", "4", "1", "9" ], [ "North Korea", "5", "3", "2", "7" ], [ "Japan", "5", "2", "3", "7" ], [ "Philippines", "5", "1", "4", "6" ], [ "Thailand", "5", "0", "5", "5" ] ]
Results -- Men
The results and the points of the matches between the same teams that were already played during the preliminary round shall be taken into account for the final round . Classification 7th–14th [ edit ] Team Pld W L PF PA PD Pts Malaysia 7 7 0 14 Pakistan 7 6 1 13 Iraq 7 5 2 12 Kuwait 7 4 3 11 Hong Kong 7 3 4 10 Saudi Arabia 7 2 5 9 Bahrain 7 1 6 8 Qatar 7 0 7 7 14 December Kuwait 112–33 Qatar Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 14 December Pakistan 88–101 Malaysia Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 14 December Iraq vs. Hong Kong Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 15 December Iraq 140–38 Qatar Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 15 December Saudi Arabia 69–71 Hong Kong Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 15 December Pakistan 82–80 Kuwait Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 15 December Malaysia vs. Bahrain Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 16 December Hong Kong 101–64 Bahrain Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 16 December Saudi Arabia 59–61 Kuwait Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 16 December Pakistan 86–80 Iraq Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 17 December Malaysia vs. Iraq Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 17 December Kuwait vs. Bahrain Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 17 December Saudi Arabia vs. Qatar Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 18 December Kuwait 91–77 Hong Kong Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 18 December Iraq 93–52 Bahrain Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 18 December Pakistan 150–63 Qatar Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 18 December Malaysia 94–88 Saudi Arabia Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 19 December Malaysia 85–66 Kuwait Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 19 December Iraq 89–64 Saudi Arabia Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 19 December Pakistan vs. Hong Kong Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok 19 December Bahrain vs. Qatar Nimibutr Stadium , Bangkok Championship [ edit ]
Basketball_at_the_1978_Asian_Games_6
Basketball was one of the 20 sports disciplines held in the 1978 Asian Games in Bangkok, Thailand. China won their 1st title by beating last edition's finalist South Korea in the championship match. The games were held from December 9 to 20, 1978.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emerging_market
Emerging market
[ "Rank", "Country", "GDP ( PPP , Peak Year ) millions of USD", "Peak Year" ]
[ [ "1", "China", "27,804,953", "2020" ], [ "2", "India", "11,321,280", "2020" ], [ "3", "Russia", "4,389,960", "2019" ], [ "4", "Indonesia", "3,778,134", "2020" ], [ "5", "Brazil", "3,596,841", "2020" ], [ "6", "Mexico", "2,616,289", "2019" ], [ "7", "Turkey", "2,361,778", "2019" ], [ "8", "South Korea", "2,320,498", "2019" ], [ "9", "Saudi Arabia", "1,900,894", "2019" ], [ "10", "Iran", "1,637,215", "2017" ], [ "11", "Egypt", "1,427,432", "2020" ], [ "12", "Thailand", "1,377,535", "2019" ], [ "13", "Taiwan", "1,339,812", "2019" ], [ "14", "Poland", "1,287,275", "2019" ], [ "15", "Nigeria", "1,215,389", "2019" ], [ "16", "Pakistan", "1,201,629", "2019" ], [ "17", "Malaysia", "1,076,373", "2019" ], [ "18", "Philippines", "1,040,413", "2020" ], [ "19", "Vietnam", "1,035,051", "2020" ], [ "20", "Argentina", "916,719", "2017" ] ]
Economy
The following table lists the 25 largest emerging economies by GDP ( nominal ) and GDP ( PPP ) in their respective peak year . Members of the G-20 major economies are in bold . See also : List of countries by past and projected GDP ( nominal ) and List of countries by past and projected GDP ( PPP ) Rank Country GDP ( nominal , Peak Year ) millions of USD Peak Year 1 China 15,269,942 2020 2 India 3,202,183 2020 3 Brazil 2,613,979 2011 4 Russia 2,292,464 2013 5 South Korea 1,720,489 2018 6 Mexico 1,322,489 2020 7 Indonesia 1,204,830 2019 8 Turkey 950,328 2013 9 Saudi Arabia 786,522 2018 10 Argentina 642,928 2017 11 Poland 606,730 2020 12 Taiwan 603,031 2020 13 Iran 577,214 2011 14 Nigeria 568,496 2014 15 Thailand 557,309 2020 16 South Africa 416,879 2011 17 United Arab Emirates 414,179 2018 18 Israel 410,501 2020 19 Hong Kong 385,274 2020 20 Philippines 383,482 2020 21 Colombia 381,844 2013 22 Malaysia 381,523 2020 23 Singapore 369,627 2020 24 Greece 356,140 2008 25 Egypt 353,003 2020
Emerging_market_3
An emerging market is a country that has some characteristics of a developed market, but does not satisfy standards to be termed a developed market. This includes countries that may become developed markets in the future or were in the past. The term frontier market is used for developing countries with smaller, riskier, or more illiquid capital markets than emerging. The economies of China and India are considered to be the largest emerging markets. According to The Economist, many people find the term outdated, but no new term has gained traction. Emerging market hedge fund capital reached a record new level in the first quarter of 2011 of $121 billion. The four largest emerging and developing economies by either nominal or PPP-adjusted GDP are the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_East_Conference_Field_Hockey_Tournament
Big East Conference Field Hockey Tournament
[ "Year", "Champion", "Site", "Most Outstanding Player" ]
[ [ "1989", "Providence", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Chris Wajda , Connecticut" ], [ "1990", "Villanova", "J.S . Coyne Field • Syracuse , NY", "Jennifer Peacock , Villanova" ], [ "1991", "Providence", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Debbie Hagie , Providence" ], [ "1992", "Connecticut", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Yolanda Muntz , Connecticut" ], [ "1993", "Syracuse", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Julie Williamson , Syracuse" ], [ "1994", "Boston College", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Sarah Egnaczyk , Boston College" ], [ "1995", "Syracuse", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Cheri Herr , Syracuse" ], [ "1996", "Connecticut", "George J. Sherman Family-Sports Complex • Storrs , CT", "Wendy Brady , Connecticut" ], [ "1997", "Boston College", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Andrea Durko , Boston College" ], [ "1998", "Connecticut", "Villanova Stadium • Villanova , PA", "Alison Sharpe , Connecticut" ], [ "1999", "Connecticut", "J.S . Coyne Field • Syracuse , NY", "Nicole Castonguay , Connecticut" ], [ "2000", "Connecticut", "George J. Sherman Sports Complex • Storrs , CT", "Katie Stephens , Connecticut" ], [ "2001", "Syracuse", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Michelle Aronowicz , Syracuse" ], [ "2002", "Connecticut", "J.S . Coyne Field • Syracuse , NY", "Lauren Henderson , Connecticut" ], [ "2003", "Boston College", "Chestnut Hill , MA", "Bronwen Kelly , Boston College" ], [ "2004", "Connecticut", "J.S . Coyne Field • Syracuse , NY", "Lauren Henderson , Connecticut" ], [ "2005", "Connecticut", "Bauer Field • Piscataway , NJ", "Meagan Hoffman , Connecticut" ], [ "2006", "Connecticut", "Trager Stadium • Louisville , KY", "Lauren Aird , Connecticut" ], [ "2007", "Connecticut", "J.S . Coyne Field • Syracuse , NY", "Katie Semanoff , Connecticut" ], [ "2008", "Syracuse", "George J. Sherman Sports Complex • Storrs , CT", "Shannon Taylor , Syracuse" ] ]
Champions -- By year
Big_East_Conference_Field_Hockey_Tournament_0
The Big East Conference Field Hockey Tournament is the conference championship tournament in field hockey for the Big East Conference. The tournament has been held every year since 1989. It is a single-elimination tournament and seeding is based on regular season records. The winner, declared conference champion, receives the conference's automatic bid to the NCAA Division I Field Hockey Championship.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nigerian_Professional_Football_League
Nigerian Professional Football League
[ "Clubs", "Championship", "Years" ]
[ [ "Enyimba ( Aba )", "8", "2001 , 2002 , 2003 , 2005 , 2007 , 2010 , 2015 , 2019" ], [ "Rangers International ( Enugu )", "7", "1974 , 1975 , 1977 , 1981 , 1982 , 1984 , 2016" ], [ "Shooting Stars ( Ibadan )", "5", "1976 , 1980 , 1983 , 1995 , 1998" ], [ "Heartland F.C . ( Owerri )", "5", "1987 , 1988 , 1989 , 1990 , 1993" ], [ "Kano Pillars ( Kano )", "4", "2008 , 2012 , 2013 , 2014" ], [ "Dolphin ( Port Harcourt ) ( Includes Eagle Cement )", "3", "1997 , 2004 , 2011" ], [ "Bendel Insurance ( Benin City )", "2", "1973 , 1979" ], [ "Julius Berger ( Lagos )", "2", "1991 , 2000" ], [ "Lobi Stars ( Makurdi )", "1", "1999" ], [ "BCC Lions ( Gboko )", "1", "1994" ], [ "Stationery Stores ( Lagos )", "1", "1992" ], [ "Leventis United ( Ibadan )", "1", "1986" ], [ "Plateau United ( Jos )", "1", "2017" ], [ "Bayelsa United ( Yenegoa )", "1", "2009" ], [ "Ocean Boys ( Brass )", "1", "2006" ], [ "Udoji United ( Awka )", "1", "1996" ], [ "New Nigeria Bank ( Benin City )", "1", "1985" ], [ "Racca Rovers ( Kano )", "1", "1978" ], [ "Mighty Jets ( Jos )", "1", "1972" ] ]
Past champions -- Most titles won
Nigerian_Professional_Football_League_0
The Nigerian Professional Football League (NPFL) is the highest level of the Nigerian football league system, for the Nigerian Club-football Championships. But the Nigerian top-division had experienced many dwindling fortunes, since the late 2000s.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Business_School
London Business School
[ "Starting year", "Ending year", "Name" ]
[ [ "1965", "1972", "Dr. Arthur Earle" ], [ "1972", "1984", "Professor Sir James Ball" ], [ "1984", "1989", "Professor Peter Moore" ], [ "1989", "1997", "Professor Sir George Bain" ], [ "1998", "2001", "Professor John Quelch" ], [ "2002", "2006", "Professor Laura Tyson" ], [ "2007", "2008", "Robin Buchanan" ], [ "2009", "2017", "Professor Sir Andrew Likierman" ], [ "2017", "Present", "François Ortalo-Magné" ] ]
Organisation and administration -- List of the London Business School Deans
List of the Deans from 1965 to today : [ 13 ]
London_Business_School_0
London Business School (LBS) is a business school and a constituent college of the federal University of London. LBS was founded in 1964 and awards post-graduate degrees (Master's degrees in management and finance, MBA and PhD). LBS is widely considered to be one of the world's best business schools and its motto is To have a profound impact on the way the world does business. LBS was ranked 1st in Europe (2014-2019) by the Financial Times and 2nd in the world (for Business and Management Studies; 2017) by the QS ranking. LBS' post-experience Masters in Finance programme is ranked 1st in the world by the Financial Times. The main campus is located in London next to Regent's Park in Sussex Place, built by the architect John Nash. In 2015, the school acquired the Marylebone Town Hall and spent £60 million to refurbish it with the objective of expanding its teaching facilities by 70%. LBS has also acquired the site of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists, who are due to vacate the building in November 2019. LBS has a secondary campus in Dubai that is dedicated to Executive Education and the Dubai EMBA.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sierra_McCormick
Sierra McCormick
[ "Year", "Title", "Role" ]
[ [ "2009", "Land of the Lost", "Tar Pits Kid" ], [ "2010", "Ramona and Beezus", "Susan Kushner" ], [ "2010", "A Nanny for Christmas", "Jackie Ryland" ], [ "2011", "Spooky Buddies", "Alice" ], [ "2015", "Some Kind of Hate", "Moira" ], [ "2018", "The Honor List", "Charlotte" ], [ "2018", "The Neighborhood Watch", "Allie" ], [ "2018", "Pretty Little Stalker", "Bridget" ], [ "2019", "The Vast of Night", "Fay Crocker" ], [ "2019", "VFW", "Lizard" ] ]
Filmography -- Film
Sierra_McCormick_0
Sierra McCormick (born October 28, 1997) is an American actress. She is known for her role as Olive Doyle on the Disney Channel series A.N.T. Farm and her participation on the game show Are You Smarter Than a 5th Grader? She also played Lilith on The CW television series Supernatural.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Vekić
Donna Vekić
[ "Result", "W-L", "Date", "Tournament", "Tier", "Surface", "Opponent", "Score" ]
[ [ "Loss", "0-1", "Sep 2012", "Tashkent Open , Uzbekistan", "International", "Hard", "Irina-Camelia Begu", "4-6 , 4-6" ], [ "Loss", "0-2", "Jun 2013", "Birmingham Classic , United Kingdom", "International", "Grass", "Daniela Hantuchová", "6-7 , 4-6" ], [ "Win", "1-2", "Apr 2014", "Malaysian Open , Malaysia", "International", "Hard", "Dominika Cibulková", "5-7 , 7-5 , 7-6" ], [ "Loss", "1-3", "Sep 2015", "Tashkent Open , Uzbekistan", "International", "Hard", "Nao Hibino", "2-6 , 2-6" ], [ "Win", "2-3", "Jun 2017", "Nottingham Open , United Kingdom", "International", "Grass", "Johanna Konta", "2-6 , 7-6 , 7-5" ], [ "Loss", "2-4", "Aug 2018", "Citi Open , United States", "International", "Hard", "Svetlana Kuznetsova", "6-4 , 6-7 , 2-6" ], [ "Loss", "2-5", "Feb 2019", "St. Petersburg Ladies ' Trophy , Russia", "Premier", "Hard ( i )", "Kiki Bertens", "6-7 , 4-6" ], [ "Loss", "2-6", "Jun 2019", "Nottingham Open , United Kingdom", "International", "Grass", "Caroline Garcia", "6-2 , 6-7 , 6-7" ] ]
WTA finals -- Singles : 8 ( 2 titles , 6 runner-ups )
Legend Grand Slam tournaments ( 0–0 ) Tour Championships ( 0–0 ) Premier Mandatory & Premier 5 ( 0–0 ) Premier ( 0–1 ) International ( 2–5 ) Finals by surface Hard ( 1–4 ) Clay ( 0–0 ) Grass ( 1–2 ) Carpet ( 0–0 )
Donna_Vekić_5
Donna Vekić (; born 28 June 1996) is a Croatian professional tennis player. She has won two singles titles on the WTA Tour: the 2014 Malaysian Open and the 2017 Nottingham Open. She has also won five singles titles and one doubles title on the ITF Women's Circuit. Her best performance in a Grand Slam singles event was reaching the quarter-finals at the 2019 US Open. On 21 October 2019, she made it to the Top 20 of WTA Ranking, at number 20.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_Canadian_Junior_Curling_Championships
2007 Canadian Junior Curling Championships
[ "Province / Territory", "Skip", "Third", "Second", "Lead" ]
[ [ "Alberta", "Charley Thomas", "Brock Virtue", "Matt Ng", "Kyle Reynolds" ], [ "British Columbia", "Bryan Kedziora", "Derek Errington", "Mike Goerz", "Tyler MacKenzie" ], [ "Manitoba", "Andrew Irving", "B.J . Neufeld", "Travis Taylor", "Marc Lacroix" ], [ "New Brunswick", "Stephen Burgess", "Chris Jeffrey", "Ronnie Burgess", "Kevin Brayshaw" ], [ "Newfoundland and Labrador", "Ryan Withycombe", "Stephen Ryan", "Mark Flynn", "Scott Eaton" ], [ "Northern Ontario", "Ryan Harnden", "Clint Cudmore", "Johnny Miners", "Steve Molodowich" ], [ "Northwest Territories", "Colin Miller", "Rob Heimbach", "John Murray", "David Aho" ], [ "Nova Scotia", "Dominic Daemen", "Ian Juurlink", "Robby McLean", "Trent Hilliard" ], [ "Ontario", "Ryan Myler", "Mick Lizmore", "Brodie Tarvit", "Jim Clayton" ], [ "Prince Edward Island", "Brett Gallant", "Adam Casey", "Anson Carmody", "Alex MacFadyen" ], [ "Quebec", "Ghyslain Richard", "William Dion", "Daniel Camber", "Miguel Bernard" ], [ "Saskatchewan", "Craig Ochitwa", "Jason Tocher", "Dustin Anderson", "Chris Rediger" ], [ "Yukon", "Thomas Scoffin", "Will Mahoney", "Nick Koltun", "Mitch Young" ] ]
Men 's -- Teams
2007_Canadian_Junior_Curling_Championships_0
The 2007 M&M Meat Shops Canadian Junior Curling Championships was held February 3-11 at the Jack Gatecliff Arena and the St. Catharines Golf and Country Club in St. Catharines, Ontario. The winning teams represented Canada at the 2007 World Junior Curling Championships.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000–01_Tranmere_Rovers_F.C._season
2000–01 Tranmere Rovers F.C. season
[ "Date", "Opponent", "Venue", "Result", "Attendance", "Scorers" ]
[ [ "12 August 2000", "Wimbledon", "A", "0-0", "8,266", "" ], [ "19 August 2000", "Gillingham", "H", "3-2", "8,355", "Gill , Flynn , Hill" ], [ "26 August 2000", "Sheffield United", "A", "0-2", "12,074", "" ], [ "28 August 2000", "Bolton Wanderers", "H", "0-1", "9,350", "" ], [ "1 September 2000", "Stockport County", "H", "2-1", "7,229", "Allison , Gill ( pen )" ], [ "9 September 2000", "Wolverhampton Wanderers", "A", "2-1", "17,252", "Allison , Barlow ( pen )" ], [ "12 September 2000", "Portsmouth", "A", "0-2", "9,235", "" ], [ "16 September 2000", "Sheffield Wednesday", "H", "2-0", "9,352", "Taylor ( 2 )" ], [ "23 September 2000", "Birmingham City", "A", "0-2", "17,640", "" ], [ "30 September 2000", "Crewe Alexandra", "H", "1-3", "8,162", "Parkinson" ], [ "6 October 2000", "Burnley", "H", "2-3", "10,153", "Koumas , Hill" ], [ "14 October 2000", "Preston North End", "A", "0-1", "14,511", "" ], [ "17 October 2000", "Barnsley", "A", "1-1", "12,412", "Allison" ], [ "21 October 2000", "West Bromwich Albion", "H", "2-2", "8,931", "Butler ( own goal ) , Barlow" ], [ "25 October 2000", "Blackburn Rovers", "A", "2-3", "17,010", "Koumas , Taylor" ], [ "28 October 2000", "Queens Park Rangers", "H", "1-1", "7,263", "Koumas" ], [ "4 November 2000", "Norwich City", "A", "0-1", "13,688", "" ], [ "11 November 2000", "Watford", "H", "2-0", "8,858", "Hill , Taylor" ], [ "18 November 2000", "Crystal Palace", "A", "2-3", "14,221", "Koumas , Hill" ], [ "25 November 2000", "Nottingham Forest", "A", "1-3", "19,678", "Hill" ] ]
Results -- Football League First Division
2000–01_Tranmere_Rovers_F.C._season_1
During the 2000-01 English football season, Tranmere Rovers F.C. competed in the Football League First Division.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gracie_Fields
Gracie Fields
[ "Year", "Title", "Role" ]
[ [ "1931", "Sally in Our Alley", "Sally Winch" ], [ "1932", "Looking on the Bright Side", "Gracie" ], [ "1933", "This Week of Grace", "Grace Milroy" ], [ "1934", "Love , Life and Laughter", "Nellie Gwynn" ], [ "1934", "Sing As We Go", "Gracie Platt" ], [ "1935", "Look Up and Laugh", "Gracie Pearson" ], [ "1936", "Queen of Hearts", "Grace Perkins" ], [ "1937", "The Show Goes On", "Sally Scowcroft" ], [ "1938", "We 're Going to Be Rich", "Kit Dobson" ], [ "1938", "Young and Beautiful ( short )", "Herself" ], [ "1938", "Keep Smiling", "Gracie Gray" ], [ "1939", "Shipyard Sally", "Sally Fitzgerald" ], [ "1943", "Stage Door Canteen", "Herself" ], [ "1943", "Holy Matrimony", "Alice Chalice" ], [ "1945", "Molly and Me", "Molly Barry" ], [ "1945", "Paris Underground", "Emmeline Quayle" ] ]
Filmography
Gracie Fields in Stage Door Canteen ( 1943 )
Gracie_Fields_0
Dame Gracie Fields, (born Grace Stansfield; 9 January 189827 September 1979) was an English actress, singer and comedienne and star of both cinema and music hall. She spent the later part of her life on the isle of Capri, Italy. Fields was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) for Services to Entertainment in 1938, and in 1979, seven months before her death, she was invested as a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire by Queen Elizabeth II.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRNSMT_Festival_line-ups
TRNSMT Festival line-ups
[ "Friday 29 June", "Saturday 30 June", "Sunday 1 July", "Friday 6 July", "Sunday 8 July" ]
[ [ "Tom Walker", "The Sherlocks", "Sigrid", "Gun", "Nina Nesbett" ], [ "Pale Waves", "IAMDDB", "Fatherson", "The Xcerts", "Walking On Cars" ], [ "Marmozets", "Kyle Falconer", "King No-One", "Hunter & The Bear", "Jane Weaver" ], [ "Anteros", "The Snuts", "Dermot Kennedy", "Mason Hill", "Gang of Youths" ], [ "Sam Fender", "Bas", "Confidence Man", "Electric Pyramid", "Juanita Stein" ], [ "The Ninth Wave", "Ramz", "The Magic Gang", "The Amorettes", "" ] ]
2018 [ 1 ] -- King Tuts Stage
TRNSMT_Festival_line-ups_4
TRNSMT festival is a large annual music festival, initially starting in 2017 which takes place in Glasgow Green in Glasgow, Scotland. The following page is a list of acts who have performed or are due to perform at the festival.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justin_Roiland
Justin Roiland
[ "Year", "Award", "Category", "Nominee ( s )", "Result" ]
[ [ "2015", "Annie Award", "Best General Audience Animated TV/Broadcast Production", "Rick and Morty", "Nominated" ], [ "2017", "Teen Choice Awards", "Choice Animated TV Show", "Rick and Morty", "Nominated" ], [ "2018", "Critics ' Choice Television Award", "Best Animated Series", "Rick and Morty", "Won" ], [ "2018", "Annie Award", "Best General Audience Animated TV/Broadcast Production", "Rick and Morty", "Won" ], [ "2018", "Saturn Award", "Best Animated Series or Film on Television", "Rick and Morty", "Nominated" ], [ "2018", "Teen Choice Awards", "Choice Animated TV Show", "Rick and Morty", "Nominated" ], [ "2018", "Primetime Emmy Award", "Outstanding Animated Program", "Rick and Morty for Pickle Rick", "Won" ] ]
Awards and nominations
Justin_Roiland_4
Justin Roiland (born February 21, 1980) is an American voice actor, animator, writer, producer, director and game developer. He is best known as the co-creator of Adult Swim's Rick and Morty, of which he voices the show's titular characters. He is also known for voicing the Earl of Lemongrab on Cartoon Network's Adventure Time and Blendin Blandin on Gravity Falls. He is the founder of the animation studio Justin Roiland's Solo Vanity Card Productions! and the video game studio Squanch Games.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Star_class_sailors_at_the_Summer_Olympics
List of Star class sailors at the Summer Olympics
[ "Boat name", "Helmsman", "Crew", "Nationality" ]
[ [ "Covunco III", "Ovidio Manuel Lagos", "Jorge Diego Brown", "Argentina" ], [ "Naiad", "Robert French", "Jack Downey", "Australia" ], [ "Gem IV", "Durward Knowles", "Sloane Farrington", "Bahamas" ], [ "Mariana", "Eugene Pennell", "George Parsons", "Canada" ], [ "Kurush IV", "Carlos de Cardenas", "Jorge de Cardenas", "Cuba" ], [ "Gam II", "Philippe Chancerel", "Michel Parent", "France" ], [ "Starlight III", "Bruce Bernard Banks", "Stanley Arthur Potter", "Great Britain" ], [ "Merope III", "Agostino Straulino", "Nicolò Rode", "Italy" ], [ "Faneca", "Duarte de Almeida Bello", "Jose Bustorff Silva", "Portugal" ], [ "Tulilind", "Timir Pinegin", "Fyodor Shutkov", "Soviet Union" ], [ "Tichiboo", "Prinz Bira Bhanubanda", "Luang Pradiyat Navayudh", "Thailand" ], [ "Kathleen", "Herbert Williams", "Lawrence Low", "United States" ] ]
1956 Melbourne
List_of_Star_class_sailors_at_the_Summer_Olympics_4
This is list of Star class sailors at the Summer Olympics.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1986–87_Yorkshire_Cup
1986–87 Yorkshire Cup
[ "Game No", "Fixture Date", "Home Team", "Score", "Away Team", "Venue", "Att" ]
[ [ "1", "Fri 12 Sep 1986", "Leeds", "40-4", "Keighley", "Headingley", "2862" ], [ "2", "Sun 14 Sep 1986", "Batley", "12-14", "Wakefield Trinity", "Mount Pleasant", "1502" ], [ "3", "Sun 14 Sep 1986", "Castleford", "16-10", "Halifax", "Wheldon Road", "7594" ], [ "4", "Sun 14 Sep 1986", "Featherstone Rovers", "40-13", "York", "Post Office Road", "1732" ], [ "5", "Sun 14 Sep 1986", "Hull F.C", "29-22", "Bramley", "Boulevard", "3580" ], [ "6", "Sun 14 Sep 1986", "Hull Kingston Rovers", "52-30", "Huddersfield Barracudas", "Craven Park ( 1 )", "3736" ], [ "7", "Sun 14 Sep 1986", "Hunslet", "12-40", "Bradford Northern", "Elland Road", "3101" ], [ "8", "Sun 14 Sep 1986", "Sheffield Eagles", "9-10", "Dewsbury", "Owlerton Stadium", "641" ] ]
Competition and Results -- Round 1
Involved 8 matches ( with no byes ) and 16 Clubs
1986–87_Yorkshire_Cup_1
The 1986-87 Yorkshire Cup was the seventy-ninth occasion on which the Yorkshire Cup competition was held. This season there were no junior/amateur clubs taking part, and no leavers, but another new entrant in the form of Mansfield Marksman and so the total of entries increases by one up to eighteen. This in turn resulted in the necessity to increase the number of matches in the preliminary round to reduce the number of clubs entering the first round to sixteen. In a repeat of the 1983-84 Yorkshire Cup's final pairing, Castleford turned the tables, reversing the result and beating Hull F.C. by the score of 31-24 to win the trophy. The match was played at Headingley, Leeds, now in West Yorkshire. The attendance was 11,132 and receipts were £31,888. This was the fourth time in the incredible eleven-year period in which Castleford. previously only once winners in 1977, will make eight appearances in the Yorkshire Cup final, winning on four and ending as runner-up on four occasions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1977_European_Athletics_Indoor_Championships_–_Men's_800_metres
1977 European Athletics Indoor Championships – Men's 800 metres
[ "Rank", "Name", "Nationality", "Time" ]
[ [ "1", "Sebastian Coe", "Great Britain", "1:46.54" ], [ "2", "Erwin Gohlke", "East Germany", "1:47.2" ], [ "3", "Rolf Gysin", "Switzerland", "1:47.6" ], [ "4", "Viktor Anokhin", "Soviet Union", "1:47.7" ], [ "5", "Günther Hasler", "Liechtenstein", "1:48.0" ], [ "6", "Antonio Páez", "Spain", "1:48.3" ] ]
Results -- Final
1977_European_Athletics_Indoor_Championships_–_Men's_800_metres_2
The men's 800 metres event at the 1977 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held on 12 and 13 March in San Sebastián.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_FIFA_Club_World_Cup
2007 FIFA Club World Cup
[ "Pos", "Team", "Confederation", "Pld", "W", "D", "L", "GF", "GA", "GD" ]
[ [ "1", "Milan", "UEFA", "2", "2", "0", "0", "5", "2", "+3" ], [ "2", "Boca Juniors", "CONMEBOL", "2", "1", "0", "1", "3", "4", "−1" ], [ "3", "Urawa Red Diamonds", "AFC", "3", "1", "1", "1", "5", "4", "+1" ], [ "4", "Étoile du Sahel", "CAF", "3", "1", "1", "1", "3", "3", "0" ], [ "5", "Sepahan", "AFC", "2", "1", "0", "1", "4", "4", "0" ], [ "5", "Pachuca", "CONCACAF", "1", "0", "0", "1", "0", "1", "−1" ], [ "7", "Waitakere United", "OFC", "1", "0", "0", "1", "1", "3", "−2" ] ]
Tournament round-up -- Final standings
2007_FIFA_Club_World_Cup_3
The 2007 FIFA Club World Cup (officially the FIFA Club World Cup Japan 2007 presented by Toyota for sponsorship reasons) was a football tournament played in Japan from 7 December to 16 December 2007. It was the fourth FIFA Club World Cup, a tournament organised by FIFA for the winners of each confederation's top continental club tournament. Seven teams from the six confederations entered the tournament with Italian side A.C. Milan defeating Boca Juniors from Argentina 4-2 in the final to become the most successful team in the world in terms of international trophies won (18) and the first European team to win the Club World Cup.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Los_Cabos_Open
2018 Los Cabos Open
[ "Country", "Player", "Rank", "Seed" ]
[ [ "ARG", "Juan Martín del Potro", "4", "1" ], [ "ITA", "Fabio Fognini", "14", "2" ], [ "BIH", "Damir Džumhur", "24", "3" ], [ "FRA", "Adrian Mannarino", "26", "4" ], [ "USA", "Sam Querrey", "29", "5" ], [ "USA", "Ryan Harrison", "53", "6" ], [ "USA", "Taylor Fritz", "65", "7" ], [ "ESP", "Feliciano López", "66", "8" ] ]
Singles main draw entrants -- Seeds
2018_Los_Cabos_Open_0
The 2018 Los Cabos Open (also known as the Abierto Mexicano de Tenis Mifel presentado por Cinemex for sponsorship reasons) was an ATP tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 3rd edition of the Los Cabos Open, and part of the ATP World Tour 250 series of the 2018 ATP World Tour. It took place in Los Cabos, Mexico from July 30 through August 5, 2018.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017_World_Youth_Championships_in_Athletics_–_Boys'_800_metres
2017 World Youth Championships in Athletics – Boys' 800 metres
[ "Heat", "Lane", "Name", "Nationality" ]
[ [ "1", "2", "Mikhail Soloshenko", "Kyrgyzstan" ], [ "1", "3", "William Devantier", "Denmark" ], [ "1", "4", "Tolesa Bodena", "Ethiopia" ], [ "1", "5", "José Guillermo Peñalver", "Venezuela" ], [ "1", "6", "Jenito Acirio Guezane", "Mozambique" ], [ "1", "7", "Cristian Gabriel Voicu", "Romania" ], [ "1", "8", "Tyrese Reid", "Jamaica" ], [ "2", "2", "Noah Kiprono", "Kenya" ], [ "2", "3", "Fredd Ponce", "Nicaragua" ], [ "2", "4", "Mihai Razvan Vasiliu", "Romania" ], [ "2", "5", "Juan Diego Castro", "Costa Rica" ], [ "2", "6", "Abdellah Mouzlib", "Morocco" ], [ "2", "7", "Kimar Farquharson", "Jamaica" ], [ "2", "8", "Erdem Öz", "Turkey" ], [ "3", "2", "Marco Vilca", "Peru" ], [ "3", "3", "Rok Markelj", "Slovenia" ], [ "3", "4", "Melese Nberet", "Ethiopia" ], [ "3", "5", "Joshua Kibet", "Uganda" ], [ "3", "6", "Eduardas Rimas Survilas", "Lithuania" ], [ "3", "7", "Alfred Chawonza", "Zimbabwe" ] ]
Heats
Qualification rule : first 3 of each heat ( Q ) and the next 4 fastest qualified . [ 1 ]
2017_World_Youth_Championships_in_Athletics_–_Boys'_800_metres_0
The Boys' 800 metres at the 2017 World Youth Championships in Athletics was held on 12-15 July.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cambridge_Modern_History
The Cambridge Modern History
[ "Chapter", "Title", "Author" ]
[ [ "", "Introductory Note", "Mandell Creighton" ], [ "1", "The Age of Discovery", "Edward John Payne" ], [ "2", "The New World", "Edward John Payne" ], [ "3", "The Ottoman Conquest", "John Bagnell Bury" ], [ "4", "Italy and her Invaders", "Stanley Mordaunt Leathes" ], [ "5", "Florence ( I ) : Savonarola", "Edward Armstrong" ], [ "6", "Florence ( II ) : Macchiavelli", "Laurence Arthur Burd" ], [ "7", "Rome and the Temporal Power", "Richard Garnett" ], [ "8", "Venice", "Horatio Robert Forbes Brown" ], [ "9", "Germany and the Empire", "Thomas Frederick Tout" ], [ "10", "Hungary and the Slavonic Kingdoms", "Emil Reich" ], [ "11", "The Catholic Kings", "Henry Butler Clarke" ], [ "12", "France", "Stanley Mordaunt Leathes" ], [ "13", "The Netherlands", "Adolphus William Ward" ], [ "14", "The Early Tudors", "James Gairdner" ], [ "15", "Economic Change", "William Cunningham" ], [ "16", "The Classical Renaissance", "Richard Claverhouse Jebb" ], [ "17", "The Christian Renaissance", "Montague Rhodes James" ], [ "18", "Catholic Europe", "William Francis Barry" ], [ "19", "The Eve of the Reformation", "Henry Charles Lea" ] ]
Planning and publishing -- Volumes published
The_Cambridge_Modern_History_0
The Cambridge Modern History is a comprehensive modern history of the world, beginning with the 15th century Age of Discovery, published by the Cambridge University Press in England and also in the United States. The first series, planned by Lord Acton and edited by him with Stanley Mordaunt Leathes, Sir Adolphus William Ward and G. W. Prothero, was launched in 1902 and totalled fourteen volumes, the last of them being an historical atlas which appeared in 1912. The period covered was from 1450 to 1910. Each volume includes an extensive bibliography. A second series, with entirely new editors and contributors, The New Cambridge Modern History, appeared in fourteen volumes between 1957 and 1979, again concluding with an atlas. It covered the world from 1450 to 1945.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ICC_World_Cricket_League_Division_Four
ICC World Cricket League Division Four
[ "Year", "Most runs", "Most wickets" ]
[ [ "2008", "Hussain Butt ( 267 )", "Hamid Hassan ( 16 )" ], [ "2010", "Peter Petricola ( 235 )", "Basanta Regmi ( 14 )" ], [ "2012", "Sushil Nadkarni ( 238 )", "Basanta Regmi ( 21 )" ], [ "2014", "Chaminda Ruwan ( 343 )", "Shahrulnizam Yusof ( 16 )" ], [ "2016", "Corey Bisson ( 242 )", "Aftab Ahmed ( 14 ) Timil Patel ( 14 )" ], [ "2018", "Ahmed Faiz ( 298 )", "Mohammed Irfan ( 15 )" ] ]
Player statistics
ICC_World_Cricket_League_Division_Four_2
ICC World Cricket League Division Four forms part of the World Cricket League (WCL) system. Like all other divisions, WCL Division Four is contested as a standalone tournament rather than as an actual league. The inaugural Division Four tournament was held in 2008, hosted by Tanzania. Subsequent tournaments have been held in 2010 (in Italy), 2012 (in Malaysia), 2014 (in Singapore), and 2016 (in the United States). Both the number of teams (six) and tournament format (round-robin followed by playoffs) have remained unchanged between editions. Because the WCL operates on a system of promotion and relegation, teams generally only participate in one or two Division Four tournaments before being either promoted to Division Three or relegated to Division Five. In total, sixteen teams have played in at least one Division Four tournament. Afghanistan and Hong Kong, the inaugural Division Four finalists, have gone on to much greater success, both currently holding One Day International (ODI) status.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KML_Finals_Most_Valuable_Player_Award
KML Finals Most Valuable Player Award
[ "Season", "Player", "Team" ]
[ [ "2005-06", "James Williams", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2006-07", "Tanel Tein", "Tartu Ülikool/Rock" ], [ "2007-08", "Brian Cusworth", "Tartu Ülikool/Rock" ], [ "2008-09", "Kristjan Kangur", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2009-10", "Janar Talts", "Tartu Ülikool/Rock" ], [ "2010-11", "Armands Šķēle", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2011-12", "Tanel Sokk", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2012-13", "Tanel Sokk", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2013-14", "Vlad Moldoveanu", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2014-15", "Tanel Kurbas", "Tartu Ülikool/Rock" ], [ "2015-16", "Rolands Freimanis", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2016-17", "Branko Mirković", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2017-18", "Kristjan Kangur", "Kalev/Cramo" ], [ "2018-19", "Branko Mirković", "Kalev/Cramo" ] ]
Winners
KML_Finals_Most_Valuable_Player_Award_0
The KML Finals Most Valuable Player Award () is an award for the top-tier professional basketball league in Estonia, the Korvpalli Meistriliiga (KML).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2006_AFL_season
2006 AFL season
[ "Home team", "Home team score", "Away team", "Away team score", "Ground", "Crowd", "Date" ]
[ [ "Collingwood", "21.13 ( 139 )", "Western Bulldogs", "16.9 ( 105 )", "MCG", "67,920", "Friday , 26 May" ], [ "Geelong", "12.18 ( 90 )", "Richmond", "17.8 ( 110 )", "Skilled Stadium", "23,386", "Saturday , 27 May" ], [ "Adelaide", "18.16 ( 124 )", "Carlton", "9.6 ( 60 )", "AAMI Stadium", "41,157", "Saturday , 27 May" ], [ "Essendon", "9.15 ( 69 )", "Port Adelaide", "20.9 ( 129 )", "Telstra Dome", "29,232", "Saturday , 27 May" ], [ "Hawthorn", "7.12 ( 54 )", "Sydney", "19.5 ( 119 )", "MCG", "28,387", "Saturday , 27 May" ], [ "Brisbane Lions", "21.15 ( 141 )", "Fremantle", "10.13 ( 73 )", "The Gabba", "27,999", "Sunday , 28 May" ], [ "St Kilda", "10.14 ( 74 )", "Kangaroos", "8.9 ( 57 )", "Telstra Dome", "30,904", "Sunday , 28 May" ], [ "West Coast", "13.19 ( 97 )", "Melbourne", "11.9 ( 75 )", "Subiaco Oval", "41,032", "Sunday , 28 May" ] ]
Premiership season -- Round 9
This round was marketed as Green Shirt Round , to acknowledge the contribution of new and inexperienced umpires in junior competitions . [ 1 ]
2006_AFL_season_8
The 2006 Australian Football League season was the 110th season of the elite Australian rules football competition and the 17th under the name 'Australian Football League', having switched from 'Victorian Football League' after 1989. West Coast defeated defending premiers Sydney in the grand final to win their third premiership, in what was the first grand final since 1966 to be decided by one point.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014_in_paleobotany
2014 in paleobotany
[ "Name", "Novelty", "Status", "Authors", "Age", "Unit", "Location", "Notes" ]
[ [ "Baikalophyton", "Gen. et sp . nov", "Valid", "Naugolnykh & Minina", "Devonian", "", "Russia", "A terrestrial plant similar to Sciadophyton . The type species is Baikalophyton ruzhentsevii" ], [ "Calymperites burmensis", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Heinrichs et al", "Cretaceous ( Albian or Cenomanian )", "Burmese amber", "Myanmar", "A moss belonging to the group Dicranales ( sensu lato )" ], [ "Ceratolejeunea antiqua", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Heinrichs & Schäfer-Verwimp in Heinrichs et al", "Early to middle Miocene", "Mexican amber", "Mexico", "A liverwort belonging to the family Lejeuneaceae , a species of Ceratolejeunea" ], [ "Changxingia", "Gen. et sp . nov", "Valid", "Wang et al", "Late Devonian", "Wutong Formation", "China", "A lycopsid . The type species is Changxingia longifolia" ], [ "Gackstroemia cretacea", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Heinrichs et al", "Early Cretaceous ( late Albian )", "", "Myanmar", "A liverwort belonging to the group Jungermanniopsida and the family Lepidolaenaceae , a species of Gackstroemia" ], [ "Lepidodendron bellii", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Álvarez-Vázquez & Wagner", "Carboniferous ( middle Pennsylvanian , i.e . early Westphalian )", "", "Canada", "A species of Lepidodendron" ], [ "Lycopodites baikalensis", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Frolov in Frolov & Mashchuk", "Middle Jurassic", "Prisayan Formation", "Russia", "A member of Lycopodiales , a species of Lycopodites" ], [ "Lycopodites subulifolius", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Frolov & Mashchuk", "Middle Jurassic", "Prisayan Formation", "Russia", "A member of Lycopodiales , a species of Lycopodites" ], [ "Marchantites huolinhensis", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Li et al", "Early Cretaceous", "Huolinhe Formation", "China", "A liverwort belonging to the group Marchantiales , a species of Marchantites" ], [ "Ningchengia", "Gen. et sp . nov", "Valid", "Heinrichs et al", "Jurassic", "Jiulongshan Formation", "China", "A moss . Genus includes new species N. jurassica" ], [ "Pantiathallites", "Gen. et sp . nov", "Valid", "Banerjee & Dutta", "Early Permian", "", "India", "A metzgeriinean bryophyte . The type species is Pantiathallites gondwanensis" ], [ "Planatophyton", "Gen. et sp . nov", "Valid", "Gerrienne et al", "Early or Middle Devonian", "Hujiersite Formation", "China", "An euphyllophyte . The type species is Planatophyton hujiersitense" ], [ "Rhizomnium dentatum", "Sp nov", "valid", "Heinrichs et al . , 2014", "Middle Eocene", "Baltic amber", "Europe", "A Mniaceae moss" ], [ "Ufadendron", "Gen. et sp . nov", "Valid", "Naugolnykh", "Permian ( Kungurian )", "Koshelevsk Formation", "Russia", "A lycopsid . The type species is Ufadendron ufaensis" ], [ "Vetiplanaxis espinosus", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Hedenäs , Heinrichs & Schmidt", "Cretaceous ( Albian or Cenomanian )", "Burmese amber", "Myanmar", "A moss belonging to the class Bryopsida and the order Hypnodendrales" ], [ "Vetiplanaxis longiacuminatus", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Hedenäs , Heinrichs & Schmidt", "Cretaceous ( Albian or Cenomanian )", "Burmese amber", "Myanmar", "A moss belonging to the class Bryopsida and the order Hypnodendrales" ], [ "Vetiplanaxis oblongus", "Sp . nov", "Valid", "Hedenäs , Heinrichs & Schmidt", "Cretaceous ( Albian or Cenomanian )", "Burmese amber", "Myanmar", "A moss belonging to the class Bryopsida and the order Hypnodendrales" ] ]
Other plants
2014_in_paleobotany_27
This article records new taxa of plants that are were described during the year 2014, as well as other significant discoveries and events related to paleobotany that occurred in the year 2014.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Dartmouth_College_alumni
List of Dartmouth College alumni
[ "Name", "Year/degree", "Notability" ]
[ [ "Joel Barlow", "1778", "United States Consul to the City of Algiers 1795-1797 , United States Ambassador to France 1811-1812" ], [ "Robert L. Barry", "1956", "United States Ambassador to Bulgaria 1981-1984 and United States Ambassador to Indonesia 1992-1995" ], [ "Stephen W. Bosworth", "1961", "United States Ambassador to Tunisia 1979-1981 , United States Ambassador to the Republic of the Philippines 1984-1987 , United States Ambassador to Korea 1997-2000" ], [ "Everett Ellis Briggs", "1956", "United States Ambassador to Panama 1982-1986 , United States Ambassador to Honduras 1986-1989 , United States Ambassador to Portugal 1990-1993" ], [ "James Cason", "1966", "United States Ambassador to Paraguay 2005-present" ], [ "Henry Lee Clarke", "1962", "United States Ambassador to Uzbekistan 1992-1995" ], [ "William Eaton", "1790", "United States Consul General to the City of Tunis 1797-1803" ], [ "Robert C. Hill", "1942", "United States Ambassador to Costa Rica 1953-1954 , United States Ambassador to El Salvador 1954-1955 , United States Ambassador to Mexico 1957-1960 , United States Ambassador to Spain 1969-1972 , United States Ambassador to Argentina 1974-1977" ], [ "James F. Moriarty", "", "United States Ambassador to Nepal 2004-2007 , United States Ambassador to Bangladesh 2008-present" ], [ "Alfred H. Moses", "1951", "United States Ambassador to Romania 1994-1997" ], [ "Francis J. Ricciardone , Jr", "1973", "United States Ambassador to the Republic of the Philippines 2002-2005 , United States Ambassador to Egypt 2005-present" ], [ "Gregory W. Slayton", "1981", "United States Consul General to Bermuda 2005-present" ], [ "Ronald I. Spiers", "1950", "United States Ambassador to the Bahamas 1973-1974 , United States Ambassador to Turkey 1977-1980 , United States Ambassador to Pakistan 1981-1983" ] ]
Government , law , and public policy -- Ambassadors and other diplomats from the United States
List_of_Dartmouth_College_alumni_13
This list of alumni of Dartmouth College includes alumni and current students of Dartmouth College and its graduate schools. In addition to its undergraduate program, Dartmouth offers graduate degrees in nineteen departments and includes three graduate schools: the Tuck School of Business, the Thayer School of Engineering, and Dartmouth Medical School. Since its founding in 1769, Dartmouth has graduated 238 classes of students and today has approximately 66,500 living alumni. This list uses the following notation:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/What_a_Wonderful_Time
What a Wonderful Time
[ "#", "Title", "" ]
[ [ "1", "My Favorite Things", "4:35" ], [ "2", "Give Love on Christmas Day", "3:49" ], [ "3", "What a Wonderful Time", "2:38" ], [ "4", "Jingle Bells", "3:03" ], [ "5", "Do You Hear What I Hear", "5:27" ], [ "6", "A Season of Love", "4:11" ], [ "7", "Hold On", "4:45" ], [ "8", "Just Because", "3:53" ], [ "9", "Little Drummer Boy", "3:18" ], [ "10", "With God", "5:38" ] ]
Track listing
What_a_Wonderful_Time_2
What a Wonderful Time is the second holiday album by Grammy Award winning, and Platinum-selling superstar Yolanda Adams. This heart-warming project features five eclectically arranged holiday standards, and five original pieces. Highlights include her rapturous take on My Favorite Things produced by Michael J. Powell, With God, a song that Yolanda co-wrote with producer Gregory Curtis, and the acoustic guitar driven single Hold On (produced by Stan Jones) which affirms the message of strength, hope, and determination.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012_Western_&_Southern_Open
2012 Western & Southern Open
[ "Country", "Player", "Country", "Player", "Rank", "Seed" ]
[ [ "BLR", "Max Mirnyi", "CAN", "Daniel Nestor", "2", "1" ], [ "USA", "Bob Bryan", "USA", "Mike Bryan", "6", "2" ], [ "POL", "Mariusz Fyrstenberg", "POL", "Marcin Matkowski", "13", "3" ], [ "SWE", "Robert Lindstedt", "ROU", "Horia Tecău", "21", "4" ], [ "IND", "Leander Paes", "CZE", "Radek Štěpánek", "21", "5" ], [ "IND", "Mahesh Bhupathi", "IND", "Rohan Bopanna", "28", "6" ], [ "ESP", "Marcel Granollers", "ESP", "Marc López", "33", "7" ], [ "PAK", "Aisam-ul-Haq Qureshi", "NED", "Jean-Julien Rojer", "33", "8" ] ]
ATP doubles main draw entrants -- Seeds
2012_Western_&_Southern_Open_3
The 2012 Western and Southern Open (known as such for sponsorship reasons) was a tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts. It was the 111th edition (for the men) and the 84th (for the women) of the Cincinnati Masters, and was part of the ATP World Tour Masters 1000 of the 2012 ATP World Tour, and of the WTA Premier 5 tournaments of the 2012 WTA Tour. The tournament was held at the Lindner Family Tennis Center in Mason, Ohio, United States, from August 11 to August 19.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mucc
Mucc
[ "Album", "Release date", "Song ( s )" ]
[ [ "Hot Indies Best Selection Vol . 1", "August 25 , 1998", "Kranke ( クランケ )" ], [ "Non Standard File : @ 6Sight", "July 16 , 2000", "Kokonoka ~Yojōhan Ver.~ ( 九日 〜四畳半Ver.〜 ) , Kokuen ( 黒煙 )" ], [ "Shock Edge 2001", "September 1 , 2001", "Suimin ( スイミン )" ], [ "Boøwy Respect", "December 24 , 2003", "Kisetsu ga Kimi Dake wo Kaeru ( 季節が君だけを変える )" ], [ "Rock Nippon Noriko Shoji Selection", "January 24 , 2007", "Rojiura Boku to Kimi e ( 路地裏 僕と君へ )" ], [ "Luna Sea Memorial Cover Album -Re : birth-", "December 19 , 2007", "Déjàvu" ], [ "Cloverfield : Rob 's Party Mix", "January 17 , 2008", "Fuzz ( ファズ )" ], [ "Detroit Metal City Tribute Album : Ikenie Metal Mix", "March 28 , 2008", "Flight Best Hold It Ver . ( フライト Best Hold It Ver . )" ], [ "This is for You : The Yellow Monkey Tribute Album", "December 9 , 2009", "Tsuioku no Mermaid ( 追憶のマーメイド )" ], [ "Parade II -Respective Tracks of Buck-Tick-", "July 4 , 2012", "Jupiter" ], [ "Naruto Super Sounds", "November 26 , 2014", "Mother" ], [ "D'erlanger Tribute Album ~Stairway to Heaven~", "September 13 , 2017", "Crazy4You" ] ]
Discography -- V/A Compilations
Mucc_6
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2000_in_Brazilian_football
2000 in Brazilian football
[ "Date", "Opposition", "Result", "Score", "Brazil scorers", "Competition" ]
[ [ "February 23 , 2000", "Thailand", "W", "7-0", "Rivaldo ( 2 ) , Ronaldinho , Emerson ( 2 ) , Roque Júnior , Jardel", "International Friendly" ], [ "February 28 , 2000", "Colombia", "D", "0-0", "-", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "April 26 , 2000", "Ecuador", "W", "3-2", "Rivaldo ( 2 ) , Antônio Carlos", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "May 23 , 2000", "Wales", "W", "3-0", "Élber , Cafu , Rivaldo", "International Friendly" ], [ "May 27 , 2000", "England", "D", "1-1", "França", "International Friendly" ], [ "June 4 , 2000", "Peru", "W", "1-0", "Antônio Carlos", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "June 28 , 2000", "Uruguay", "D", "1-1", "Rivaldo", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "July 18 , 2000", "Paraguay", "L", "1-2", "Rivaldo", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "July 26 , 2000", "Argentina", "W", "3-1", "Alex , Vampeta ( 2 )", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "August 15 , 2000", "Chile", "L", "0-3", "-", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "September 3 , 2000", "Bolivia", "W", "5-0", "Romário ( 3 ) , Rivaldo , Sandy ( own goal )", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "October 8 , 2000", "Venezuela", "W", "6-0", "Euller , Juninho , Romário ( 4 )", "World Cup Qualifying" ], [ "November 15 , 2000", "Colombia", "W", "1-0", "Roque Júnior", "World Cup Qualifying" ] ]
Brazil national team
The following table lists all the games played by the Brazil national football team in official competitions and friendly matches during 2000 .
2000_in_Brazilian_football_7
The following article presents a summary of the 2000 football (soccer) season in Brazil, which was the 99th season of competitive football in the country.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ramechhap_District
Ramechhap District
[ "Climate Zone", "Elevation Range", "% of Area" ]
[ [ "Upper Tropical", "300 to 1,000 meters 1,000 to 3,300 ft", "18.0%" ], [ "Subtropical", "1,000 to 2,000 meters 3,300 to 6,600 ft", "42.1%" ], [ "Temperate", "2,000 to 3,000 meters 6,400 to 9,800 ft", "21.0%" ], [ "Subalpine", "3,000 to 4,000 meters 9,800 to 13,100 ft", "6.7%" ], [ "Alpine", "4,000 to 5,000 meters 13,100 to 16,400 ft", "3.6%" ], [ "Nival", "above 5,000 meters", "7.3%" ] ]
Geography and climate
Ramechhap_District_0
Ramechhap District (), a part of Province No. 3, is one of the seventy-seven districts of Nepal, a landlocked country of South Asia. The district, known as Kirat Ramechhap, with Manthali as its district headquarters, covers an area of and has a population (2011) of 202,646 and a density of 137.4 per km. According to LLRCNepal there are now eight local administrations in the district: Manthali Municipality, Ramechhap Municipality, Umakunda Rural Municipality, Khandadevi Rural Municipality, Gokulganga Rural Municipality, Doramba Rural Municipality, Likhu Rural Municipality and Sunapati Rural Municipality. The district has the highest population of the endangered native group the Kusunda and has the lowest population growth rate in Nepal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_solid-fuelled_orbital_launch_systems
Comparison of solid-fuelled orbital launch systems
[ "Vehicle", "Stage number", "Origin", "Manufacturer", "Height ( meter )", "Diameter ( meter )", "Weight ( ton )", "Mass to LEO ( kg )", "Maiden flight", "Retired", "Record", "Status" ]
[ [ "ASLV", "5", "India", "ISRO", "24", "1", "41", "150", "1987", "1994", "2/4", "Retired" ], [ "Epsilon ( without PBS )", "3", "Japan", "IHI AeroSpace", "24.4", "2.6", "90.8", "", "2016", "-", "1/1", "Active" ], [ "J-I", "2 ( +1 )", "Japan", "NASDA / ISAS", "33.1", "1.8", "88.5", "1000", "1996", "1996", "1/1*", "Retired" ], [ "Kaituozhe-1", "4", "China", "CASIC", "13.6", "1.4", "", "", "2002", "?", "0/2", "?" ], [ "Kaituozhe-2", "", "China", "CASIC", "", "", "", "", "2017", "", "1/1", "Active" ], [ "Kuaizhou-11", "4", "China", "CASIC", "?", "2.2", "78", "1500", "2017", "-", "-", "Development" ], [ "L-4S", "4", "Japan", "Tokyo univ", "16.5", "0.735", "9.4", "26", "1966", "1970", "1/5", "Retired" ], [ "Minotaur I", "4", "United States", "Orbital Sciences", "19.2", "1.67", "36.2", "580", "2000", "-", "11/11", "Active" ], [ "Minotaur IV Lite", "3", "United States", "Orbital Sciences", "23.88", "2.34", "86.3", "-", "2010", "-", "2/2*", "Active" ], [ "Minotaur IV", "4", "United States", "Orbital Sciences", "23.88", "2.34", "86.3", "1735", "2010", "-", "1/1", "Active" ], [ "Minotaur IV+", "4", "United States", "Orbital Sciences", "23.88", "2.34", "86.3", "1985", "2011", "", "1/1", "Active" ], [ "Minotaur IV /Orion 38", "4", "United States", "Orbital Sciences", "", "", "", "", "2017", "-", "1/1", "Active" ], [ "Minotaur V", "5", "United States", "Orbital Sciences", "", "1.67", "", "", "2013", "-", "1/1", "Active" ], [ "M-3C", "3", "Japan", "Tokyo univ", "20.2", "1.41", "41.8", "195", "1974", "1979", "3/4", "Retired" ], [ "M-3H", "3", "Japan", "Tokyo univ", "23.8", "1.41", "48.7", "300", "1977", "1978", "3/3", "Retired" ], [ "M-3S", "3", "Japan", "Tokyo univ", "23.8", "1.41", "48.7", "300", "1980", "1984", "4/4", "Retired" ], [ "M-3SII", "3 ( +1 )", "Japan", "ISAS", "27.8", "1.41", "61", "770", "1985", "1995", "7/8", "Retired" ], [ "M-4S", "4", "Japan", "Tokyo univ", "23.6", "1.41", "43.6", "180", "1970", "1972", "3/4", "Retired" ], [ "M-V", "3 ( +1 )", "Japan", "ISAS", "30.8", "2.5", "140", "1850", "1997", "2006", "6/7", "Retired" ], [ "Pegasus", "3", "United States", "Orbital Sciences", "16.9", "1.27", "18.5", "375", "1990", "", "10/11", "?" ] ]
All stages solid fueled
Comparison_of_solid-fuelled_orbital_launch_systems_0
This page contains the lift launch systems constructed by some solid fuel stages except final stage.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eliseo_Salazar
Eliseo Salazar
[ "Year", "Team", "Co-Drivers", "Car", "Class", "Laps", "Pos", "Class Pos" ]
[ [ "1982", "Dome Co. Ltd", "Chris Craft", "Dome RC82- Ford Cosworth", "C", "85", "DNF", "DNF" ], [ "1983", "Dome Racing", "Chris Craft Nick Mason", "Dome RC82- Ford Cosworth", "C", "75", "DNF", "DNF" ], [ "1988", "Spice Engineering", "Almo Coppelli Thorkild Thyrring", "Spice SE88C- Ford Cosworth", "C2", "281", "DNF", "DNF" ], [ "1989", "Silk Cut Jaguar Tom Walkinshaw Racing", "Alain Ferté Michel Ferté", "Jaguar XJR-9 LM", "C1", "368", "8th", "7th" ], [ "1990", "Silk Cut Jaguar Tom Walkinshaw Racing", "Davy Jones Michel Ferté", "Jaguar XJR-12", "C1", "282", "DNF", "DNF" ], [ "1997", "Pacific Racing Ltd", "Harri Toivonen Jesús Pareja", "BRM P301 - Nissan", "LMP", "6", "DNF", "DNF" ] ]
Motorsports career results -- 24 Hours of Le Mans results
Eliseo_Salazar_2
Eliseo Salazar Valenzuela (born 14 November 1954 in Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean racing driver. As of January 2020[update], he is the only Chilean to have participated in a Formula One World Championship Grand Prix. He made his Formula One debut on 15 March 1981, and ultimately contested 37 races scoring a total of three championship points. After Formula One, Salazar has participated in numerous motorsport disciplines, including the Chilean national rally championship (Champion 1984 and 1985), Formula 3000, IndyCar (including the Indianapolis 500 race seven times), and the World Sportscar Championship.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_ASB_Classic
1999 ASB Classic
[ "Country", "Player", "Rank", "Seed" ]
[ [ "BEL", "Dominique Van Roost", "12", "1" ], [ "ITA", "Silvia Farina", "19", "2" ], [ "FRA", "Julie Halard-Decugis", "22", "3" ], [ "AUT", "Barbara Schett", "23", "4" ], [ "USA", "Lisa Raymond", "27", "5" ], [ "USA", "Tara Snyder", "34", "6" ], [ "USA", "Chanda Rubin", "35", "7" ], [ "VEN", "María Vento", "43", "8" ] ]
Entrants -- Seeds
1999_ASB_Classic_1
The 1999 ASB Classic was a women's tennis tournament played on outdoor hard courts at the ASB Tennis Centre in Auckland in New Zealand that was part of Tier IVb of the 1999 WTA Tour. The tournament was held from 4 January until 9 January 1999. Third-seeded Julie Halard-Decugis won the singles title and earned $16,000 first-prize money.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018–19_ISU_Challenger_Series
2018–19 ISU Challenger Series
[ "Rank", "Name", "Nation", "Score", "Event" ]
[ [ "1", "Alina Zagitova", "Russia", "238.43", "2018 Nebelhorn Trophy" ], [ "2", "Rika Kihira", "Japan", "218.16", "2018 Ondrej Nepela Trophy" ], [ "3", "Mai Mihara", "Japan", "209.22", "2018 Nebelhorn Trophy" ], [ "4", "Bradie Tennell", "United States", "206.41", "2018 Autumn Classic" ], [ "5", "Elizaveta Tuktamysheva", "Russia", "206.07", "2018 Lombardia Trophy" ], [ "6", "Evgenia Medvedeva", "Russia", "204.89", "2018 Autumn Classic" ], [ "7", "Loena Hendrickx", "Belgium", "204.16", "2018 Nebelhorn Trophy" ], [ "8", "Serafima Sakhanovich", "Russia", "202.62", "2018 Tallinn Trophy" ], [ "9", "Satoko Miyahara", "Japan", "201.23", "2018 U.S. Classic" ], [ "10", "Elizabet Tursynbaeva", "Kazakhstan", "200.74", "2018 Finlandia Trophy" ] ]
Top scores -- Ladies
2018–19_ISU_Challenger_Series_3
The 2018-19 ISU Challenger Series was held from August to December 2018. It was the fifth season of a group of senior-level international figure skating competitions ranked below the Grand Prix series.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2016_Summer_European_League_of_Legends_Championship_Series
2016 Summer European League of Legends Championship Series
[ "Place", "Team", "Championship points" ]
[ [ "1st", "G2 Esports", "Already qualified for 2016 League of Legends World Championship" ], [ "2nd", "Splyce", "90" ], [ "3rd", "H2k-Gaming", "70" ], [ "4th", "Unicorns of Love", "40" ], [ "5th/6th", "Giants Gaming , Fnatic", "20" ], [ "7th/10th", "Team Vitality , FC Schalke 04 , Origen , ROCCAT", "0" ] ]
Playoffs -- Playoff standings
2016_Summer_European_League_of_Legends_Championship_Series_3
2016 Summer European League of Legends Championship Series split (2016 Summer EU LCS) is the fourth season and eighth split of the European League of Legends Championship Series (EU LCS), the highest level of League of Legends play in Europe. It was won by G2 Esports, with a roster of Expect, Trick, PerkZ, Zven, Mithy, Relinquished, Kikis, their first title. Most games were being played at Riot Games' studio in Adlershof, Berlin, Germany. The finals were at the TAURON Arena Kraków in Kraków, Poland.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seventh_European_Parliament
Seventh European Parliament
[ "Political group Country", "EPP", "S & D", "ALDE", "Greens/EFA", "MEPs" ]
[ [ "Austria", "6", "4", "", "2", "17" ], [ "Belgium", "5", "5", "5", "4", "22" ], [ "Bulgaria", "6", "4", "5", "", "17" ], [ "Cyprus", "2", "2", "", "", "6" ], [ "Czech Republic", "2", "7", "", "", "22" ], [ "Denmark", "1", "4", "3", "2", "13" ], [ "Estonia", "1", "1", "3", "1", "6" ], [ "Finland", "4", "2", "4", "2", "13" ], [ "France", "29", "14", "6", "14", "72" ], [ "Germany", "42", "23", "12", "14", "99" ], [ "Greece", "8", "8", "", "1", "22" ], [ "Hungary", "14", "4", "", "", "22" ], [ "Ireland", "4", "3", "4", "", "12" ], [ "Italy", "35", "21", "7", "", "72" ], [ "Latvia", "3", "1", "1", "1", "8" ], [ "Lithuania", "4", "3", "2", "", "12" ], [ "Luxembourg", "3", "1", "1", "1", "6" ], [ "Malta", "2", "3", "", "", "5" ], [ "Netherlands", "5", "3", "6", "3", "25" ], [ "Poland", "28", "7", "", "", "50" ] ]
Political groups -- Members in groups by country
Seventh_European_Parliament_0
The seventh European Parliament was elected in the 2009 elections and lasted until the 2014 elections.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nandi_Award_for_Best_Male_Playback_Singer
Nandi Award for Best Male Playback Singer
[ "Year", "Singer", "Film", "Song" ]
[ [ "2016", "Vandemataram Srinivas", "Dandakaranyam", "Kammanaina Amma Paata" ], [ "2015", "M. M. Keeravani", "Baahubali : The Beginning", "Shivuni Aana" ], [ "2014", "Vijay Yesudas", "Legend", "Nee Kanti Choopullo" ], [ "2013", "Kailash Kher", "Mirchi", "Pandagala Digivachchavu" ], [ "2012", "Shankar Mahadevan", "Shirdi Sai", "Okkade Devudu" ], [ "2011", "Gaddar", "Jai Bolo Telangana", "Jai Bolo Telangana" ], [ "2010", "M. M. Keeravani", "Maryada Ramanna", "Telugammayi" ], [ "2009", "S. P. Balasubrahmanyam", "Mahatma", "Konthamandi Inti Peru Kadu Ra Gandhi" ], [ "2008", "Shankar Mahadevan", "Venkatadri", "" ], [ "2007", "Karthik", "Happy Days", "Oh My Friend" ], [ "2006", "K. J. Yesudas", "Ganga", "Vellipothunnava" ], [ "2005", "S. P. Balasubrahmanyam", "Pellam Pichodu", "Rupaayive" ], [ "2004", "Sagar", "Arya", "Edo Priya Raagam Vintunna" ], [ "2003", "S. P. Balasubrahmanyam", "Seetayya", "Idigo Rayalaseema Gadda" ], [ "2002", "S. P. Balasubrahmanyam", "Vasu", "Paadanaa theeyagaa kammani" ], [ "2001", "M. M. Keeravani", "Student No . 1", "Yekkado Putti" ], [ "2000", "S. P. Balasubrahmanyam", "Raghavayyagari Abbai", "" ], [ "1999", "Hariharan", "Annayya", "Hima Seemallo" ], [ "1998", "Vandemataram Srinivas", "Sri Ramulayya", "Vippa Pula Chettu Siganu" ], [ "1997", "S. P. Balasubrahmanyam", "Priya Ragalu", "Chinna Chiru Chiru Navvula Chinna" ] ]
Winners
List of winners of Nandi Awards for Best Playback Singer Male Artist Wins S.P.Balasubrahmanyam 19 K. J. Yesudas 4 M. M. Keeravani 3 Vandemataram Srinivas 3 Shankar Mahadevan 2
Nandi_Award_for_Best_Male_Playback_Singer_0
The Nandi Award for Best Male Playback Singer was commissioned in the year 1977:. S.P.Balasubrahmanyam holds the successful record of winning most number of Nandi Awards for Best Playback Singer Male that is 19 times.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2012–13_UCI_Africa_Tour
2012–13 UCI Africa Tour
[ "Rank", "Team", "Points" ]
[ [ "1", "MTN-Qhubeka", "332.67" ], [ "2", "Vélo Club SOVAC", "291.68" ], [ "3", "Team Europcar", "240.67" ], [ "4", "Christina Watches-Onfone", "234" ], [ "5", "Groupement Sportif Pétrolier Algérie", "225" ], [ "6", "Torku Şekerspor", "134" ], [ "7", "SP Tableware", "108" ], [ "8", "Dukla Trenčín-Trek", "80" ], [ "9", "BDC-Marcpol Team", "55" ], [ "10", "La Pomme Marseille", "45" ] ]
Team classification
2012–13_UCI_Africa_Tour_3
The 2012-13 UCI Africa Tour was the ninth season of the UCI Africa Tour. The season began on 3 October 2012 with the Grand Prix Chantal Biya and ended on 12 May 2013 with the Trophée de la Maison Royale. The points leader, based on the cumulative results of previous races, wears the UCI Africa Tour cycling jersey. Tarik Chaoufi of Morocco was the defending champion of the 2011-12 UCI Africa Tour. Adil Jelloul of Morocco was crowned as the 2012-13 UCI Africa Tour champion. Throughout the season, points are awarded to the top finishers of stages within stage races and the final general classification standings of each of the stages races and one-day events. The quality and complexity of a race also determines how many points are awarded to the top finishers, the higher the UCI rating of a race, the more points are awarded. The UCI ratings from highest to lowest are as follows:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_PDRM_FA_season
2019 PDRM FA season
[ "Date", "Opponents", "H / A", "Result F-A", "Scorers", "League position" ]
[ [ "1 February 2019", "UiTM", "H", "1-3", "Lee 90+3 ' ( pen . )", "12th" ], [ "9 February 2019", "Negeri Sembilan", "H", "1-1", "Lee 45+4 ' ( pen . )", "11th" ], [ "16 February 2019", "Penang", "A", "0-1", "", "12th" ], [ "23 February 2019", "Selangor United", "H", "0-1", "", "11th" ], [ "2 March 2019", "Sabah", "A", "1-3", "Redžović 53 '", "11th" ], [ "9 March 2019", "UKM", "H", "0-1", "", "11th" ], [ "5 April 2019", "Johor Darul Ta'zim II", "H", "1-1", "Fauzan 86 '", "11th" ], [ "12 April 2019", "PDRM", "A", "1-0", "", "11th" ], [ "20 April 2019", "Terengganu II", "H", "1-1", "Wleh 53 '", "10th" ], [ "27 April 2019", "Sarawak", "A", "1-0", "Lee 51 ' ( pen . )", "8th" ], [ "3 May 2019", "Johor Darul Ta'zim II", "A", "1-0", "Lee 76 '", "7th" ], [ "11 May 2019", "Sarawak", "H", "6-2", "Shahurain ( 2 ) 12 ' , 41 ' ( pen . ) , Lee 27 ' , Andrezinho 29 ' , Gopinathan ( 2 ) 73 ' , 90+2 '", "6th" ], [ "17 May 2019", "Terengganu II", "A", "0-1", "", "6th" ], [ "15 June 2019", "UKM", "A", "3-2", "Fauzan 8 ' , Redžović 49 ' , Lee 77 ' ( pen . )", "7th" ], [ "19 June 2019", "Sabah", "H", "1-2", "Lee 33 '", "7th" ], [ "25 June 2019", "Selangor United", "A", "3-2", "Agba ( 2 ) 2 ' , 56 ' , Ezrie 24 ' ,", "7th" ], [ "6 July 2019", "UiTM", "A", "2-1", "Agba ( 2 ) 44 ' , 52 '", "7th" ], [ "10 July 2019", "Kelantan", "H", "3-1", "Agba ( 2 ) 51 ' , 90+4 ' , Fakrul 57 '", "5th" ], [ "13 July 2019", "Negeri Sembilan", "A", "3-2", "Agba 36 ' , Lee ( 2 ) 85 ' , 90+5 '", "3rd" ], [ "20 July 2019", "Penang", "H", "1-2", "Wleh 29 '", "4th" ] ]
Malaysia Premier League -- Matches
The Malaysian Football League ( MFL ) announced the fixtures for the 2019 season on 22 December 2018 . [ 6 ]
2019_PDRM_FA_season_1
The 2019 season is PDRM's 3rd season in the Malaysia Premier League since being relegated from the Malaysia Super League in 2016.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Athletics_at_the_1986_Commonwealth_Games_–_Men's_3000_metres_steeplechase
Athletics at the 1986 Commonwealth Games – Men's 3000 metres steeplechase
[ "Rank", "Name", "Nationality", "Time" ]
[ [ "1", "Graeme Fell", "Canada", "8:24.49" ], [ "2", "Roger Hackney", "Wales", "8:25.15" ], [ "3", "Colin Reitz", "England", "8:26.14" ], [ "4", "Peter Renner", "New Zealand", "8:27.12" ], [ "5", "Nick Peach", "England", "8:37.64" ], [ "6", "Mike Gilchrist", "New Zealand", "8:43.96" ], [ "7", "Peter McColgan", "Northern Ireland", "8:45.51" ], [ "8", "Eddie Wedderburn", "England", "8:46.42" ], [ "9", "Phil Laheurte", "Canada", "8:52.53" ], [ "10", "Tom Hanlon", "Scotland", "8:53.56" ], [ "11", "Colin Hume", "Scotland", "9:05.40" ], [ "12", "Richard Charleston", "Scotland", "9:21.73" ], [ "13", "Bob Rice", "Canada", "9:25.84" ] ]
Results
Athletics_at_the_1986_Commonwealth_Games_–_Men's_3000_metres_steeplechase_0
The men's 3000 metres steeplechase event at the 1986 Commonwealth Games was held on 27 July at the Meadowbank Stadium in Edinburgh.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_documentary_films_about_World_War_II
List of documentary films about World War II
[ "Year", "Country", "Title", "Director" ]
[ [ "1940", "Nazi Germany", "Deutsche Panzer ( German Panzer )", "Walter Ruttmann" ], [ "1940", "Nazi Germany", "Deutsche Waffenschmieden ( German Weapons-Forge )", "Walter Ruttmann" ], [ "1940", "Nazi Germany", "Feldzug in Polen ( Campaign in Poland )", "" ], [ "1941", "Canada", "Churchill 's Island", "Stuart Legg" ], [ "1941", "Canada", "Inside Fighting China", "Stuart Legg" ], [ "1941", "USA", "Kukan", "Rey Scott" ], [ "1941", "Kingdom of Italy", "Uomini sul fondo ( Men on the bottom )", "Francesco De Robertis" ], [ "1942", "Nazi Germany", "Männer , Meer und Stürme ( Men , Sea and Storms )", "Heinrich Hauser , Hubert Schonger" ], [ "1942", "United Kingdom", "The Soldier 's Food", "unknown" ], [ "1944", "Nazi Germany", "Panorama", "" ], [ "1944", "United States", "The Battle for the Marianas", "Gordon Hollingshead" ], [ "1944", "Japan", "Calling Australia ( オーストラリアを呼び出します ) ( Ōsutoraria o Yobidashimasu )", "Hae Yeong" ], [ "1944", "United States", "Memphis Belle : A Story of a Flying Fortress", "William Wyler" ], [ "1945", "Denmark", "Danmark i Lænker ( Denmark in Chains )", "Sven Methling" ], [ "1946", "United States", "Let There Be Light", "John Huston" ] ]
1940s
List_of_documentary_films_about_World_War_II_0
The following is a list of World War II documentary films.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_Supreme_Court_cases,_volume_567
List of United States Supreme Court cases, volume 567
[ "Case name", "Citation", "Date decided" ]
[ [ "Elgin v. Department of Treasury", "567 U.S. 1", "2012" ], [ "Parker v. Matthews", "567 U.S. 37", "2012" ], [ "Williams v. Illinois", "567 U.S. 50", "2012" ], [ "Christopher v. SmithKline Beecham Corp", "567 U.S. 142", "2012" ], [ "Salazar v. Ramah Navajo Chapter", "567 U.S. 182", "2012" ], [ "Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians v. Patchak", "567 U.S. 209", "2012" ], [ "FCC v. Fox Television Stations , Inc. ( 2012 )", "567 U.S. 239", "2012" ], [ "Dorsey v. United States", "567 U.S. 260", "2012" ], [ "Knox v. Service Employees", "567 U.S. 298", "2012" ], [ "Southern Union Co. v. United States", "567 U.S. 343", "2012" ], [ "Arizona v. United States", "567 U.S. 387", "2012" ], [ "Miller v. Alabama", "567 U.S. 460", "2012" ], [ "American Tradition Partnership , Inc. v. Bullock", "567 U.S. 516", "2012" ], [ "National Federation of Independent Business v. Sebelius", "567 U.S. 519", "2012" ], [ "United States v. Alvarez", "567 U.S. 709", "2012" ], [ "First American Financial Corp. v. Edwards", "567 U.S. 756", "2012" ], [ "Tennant v. Jefferson County Commn", "567 U.S. 758", "2012" ], [ "Maryland v. King", "567 U.S. 1301", "2012" ] ]
This is a list of all the United States Supreme Court cases from volume 567 of the United States Reports :
List_of_United_States_Supreme_Court_cases,_volume_567_0
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nebraska_Educational_Telecommunications
Nebraska Educational Telecommunications
[ "Station", "City of license", "Channels ( VC / RF )", "Parent station", "Facility ID" ]
[ [ "K23AA", "Beatrice", "23 ( UHF )", "KHNE", "47983" ], [ "K24GO", "Blair", "24 ( UHF )", "KUON", "47969" ], [ "K46KP-D", "Broken Bow", "46 ( UHF )", "KMNE", "181534" ], [ "K06JC", "Chadron", "6 ( VHF )", "KTNE", "47977" ], [ "K06KR", "Crawford", "6 ( VHF )", "KTNE", "47991" ], [ "K44FN", "Culbertson", "44 ( UHF )", "KPNE", "47954" ], [ "K34IB", "Decatur", "34 ( UHF )", "KXNE", "47976" ], [ "K46FG-D", "Falls City", "25 ( UHF )", "KUON-TV", "47970" ], [ "K08LN", "Harrison", "8 ( VHF )", "KUON", "47992" ], [ "K33FO", "Max", "33 ( UHF )", "KPNE", "48009" ], [ "K50IO", "Neligh", "50 ( UHF )", "KXNE", "47985" ], [ "K14MI", "Niobrara", "14 ( UHF )", "KXNE", "47988" ], [ "K33AC", "Pawnee City", "33 ( UHF )", "KUON", "47993" ], [ "K10JW", "Verdigre", "10 ( VHF )", "KXNE", "47989" ], [ "K20IJ", "Wauneta", "20 ( UHF )", "KPNE", "47980" ] ]
Television stations -- Translators
NET operates 15 translators to widen its coverage area . Nine directly repeat KUON , four repeat KXNE and one repeats KMNE .
Nebraska_Educational_Telecommunications_1
Nebraska Educational Telecommunications (NET) is a state network of public radio and television stations in the U.S. state of Nebraska and is based in Lincoln. It is operated by the Nebraska Educational Telecommunications Commission. The television stations are all members of PBS, while the radio stations are members of NPR. The network is headquartered in the Terry M. Carpenter & Jack G. McBride Nebraska Educational Telecommunications Center which is located at 1800 N. 33rd Street on the East campus of the University of Nebraska in Lincoln, and has a satellite studio in Omaha.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spain_women's_national_under-20_basketball_team
Spain women's national under-20 basketball team
[ "Year", "Pld", "W", "L" ]
[ [ "2000", "8", "7", "1" ], [ "2002", "8", "4", "4" ], [ "2004", "7", "3", "4" ], [ "2005", "8", "2", "6" ], [ "2006", "8", "4", "4" ], [ "2007", "8", "8", "0" ], [ "2008", "8", "5", "3" ], [ "2009", "9", "8", "1" ], [ "2010", "9", "8", "1" ], [ "2011", "9", "9", "0" ], [ "2012", "9", "8", "1" ], [ "2013", "9", "9", "0" ], [ "2014", "9", "7", "2" ], [ "2015", "9", "9", "0" ], [ "2016", "7", "6", "1" ], [ "2017", "7", "7", "0" ], [ "2018", "7", "7", "0" ], [ "2019", "7", "6", "1" ], [ "Total", "146", "117", "29" ] ]
FIBA Europe Under-20 Championship for Women
Spain_women's_national_under-20_basketball_team_1
The Spain women's national Under-20 and under-21 is the national basketball team of Spain and is governed by the Spanish Basketball Federation. It represents Spain in international under-21 and Under-20 (under age 21 and under age 20) women's basketball competitions.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2013_NBA_draft
2013 NBA draft
[ "Player", "Position", "Nationality", "School/club team" ]
[ [ "Chris Babb", "SG", "United States", "Iowa State ( Sr . )" ], [ "Vander Blue", "SG", "United States", "Marquette ( Jr . )" ], [ "Ryan Broekhoff", "SF/SG", "Australia", "Valparaiso ( Sr . )" ], [ "Will Cherry", "PG", "United States", "Montana ( Sr . )" ], [ "Ian Clark", "SG", "United States", "Belmont ( Sr . )" ], [ "Jack Cooley", "PF", "United States", "Notre Dame ( Sr . )" ], [ "Robert Covington", "F", "United States", "Tennessee State ( Sr . )" ], [ "Seth Curry", "PG", "United States", "Duke ( Sr . )" ], [ "Troy Daniels", "SG", "United States", "VCU ( Sr . )" ], [ "Brandon Davies", "PF", "United States", "BYU ( Sr . )" ], [ "Dewayne Dedmon", "C", "United States", "USC ( Jr . )" ], [ "Matthew Dellavedova", "PG", "Australia", "Saint Mary 's ( Sr . )" ], [ "Larry Drew II", "PG", "United States", "UCLA ( Sr . )" ], [ "Elias Harris", "F", "Germany", "Gonzaga ( Sr . )" ], [ "Reggie Hearn", "SG", "United States", "Northwestern ( Sr . )" ], [ "Rodney McGruder", "SG", "United States", "Kansas State ( Sr . )" ], [ "Trey McKinney-Jones", "SG", "United States", "Miami ( Florida ) ( Sr . )" ], [ "Nicolò Melli", "PF/C", "Italy", "Olimpia Milano ( Italy )" ], [ "Brandon Paul", "SG", "United States", "Illinois ( Sr . )" ], [ "Phil Pressey", "PG", "United States", "Missouri ( Jr . )" ] ]
Notable undrafted players
Further information : List of National Basketball Association undrafted players Robert Covington was undrafted , but went on to become a starter for the Philadelphia 76ers , and was later named to the NBA All-Defensive Team in 2018 . These players were not selected in the 2013 NBA draft but have played at least one game in the NBA .
2013_NBA_draft_3
The 2013 NBA draft was held on June 27, 2013, at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. National Basketball Association (NBA) teams took turns selecting amateur U.S. college basketball players and other eligible players, including international players. State Farm was the presenting sponsor. The lottery took place on May 21, 2013. This was the first draft for New Orleans under their new Pelicans name after playing as the New Orleans Hornets previously. It would also be the last draft for the Charlotte Bobcats under their old name, as they went back to playing under their old Hornets moniker that they last used in 2002 once the 2013-14 NBA season was over. Anthony Bennett, the first pick, bounced around the league, and then was finally released by the Brooklyn Nets after averaging just 5.2 PPG. He is considered the most recent candidate of being named the worst #1 draft pick in recent memory, with next to no major media outlets even considering him a potential #1 pick up until the day of the draft. Highlights of the draft included the first Canadian number one selection (Anthony Bennett). The draft also included the first Canadian pair of lottery picks (Bennett and Kelly Olynyk), the first Iranian draft choice (Arsalan Kazemi), the first New Zealander first round pick (Steven Adams) and the last first round draft selections announced by then-NBA commissioner David Stern, the very last of which included a visit by Hakeem Olajuwon, Stern's first pick he ever announced back in 1984. He was replaced by current commissioner Adam Silver beginning with the 2014 NBA draft.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2017–18_Belgian_First_Division_A
2017–18 Belgian First Division A
[ "Rank", "Player", "Club", "Clean sheets" ]
[ [ "1", "Sinan Bolat", "Royal Antwerp FC", "14" ], [ "2", "Lovre Kalinić", "KAA Gent", "13" ], [ "3", "Danny Vukovic", "KRC Genk", "10" ], [ "4", "Matz Sels", "RSC Anderlecht", "9" ], [ "4", "Nicolas Penneteau", "Sporting Charleroi", "9" ] ]
Season statistics -- Clean sheets
As of matches played on 30 April 2018 . [ 38 ]
2017–18_Belgian_First_Division_A_12
The 2017-18 Belgian First Division A was the 115th season of top-tier football in Belgium. The season began on 28 July 2017 and concluded on 20 May 2018. The fixtures were announced in early June 2017. Anderlecht were the defending champions but had to settle for third place with Club Brugge taking their 15th title.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_League_of_Ireland_Premier_Division
2007 League of Ireland Premier Division
[ "Team", "Base", "Manager", "Main sponsor", "Kit supplier", "Stadium", "Capacity" ]
[ [ "Bohemians", "Phibsborough", "Sean Connor", "Des Kelly Interiors", "Diadora", "Dalymount Park", "8,500" ], [ "Bray Wanderers", "Bray", "Eddie Gormley", "Hard Metal", "Umbro", "Carlisle Grounds", "7,000" ], [ "Cork City", "Cork", "Damien Richardson", "Beamish", "O'Neill 's", "Turners Cross", "8,000" ], [ "Derry City", "Derry", "John Robertson", "MeteorElectrical.com", "Umbro", "Brandywell Stadium", "7,700" ], [ "Drogheda United", "Drogheda", "Paul Doolin", "Murphy Environmental", "Jako", "United Park", "5,400" ], [ "Galway United", "Galway", "Tony Cousins", "Harrmack Developments", "Umbro", "Terryland Park", "4,500" ], [ "Kildare County", "Newbridge", "John Ryan", "Swifts", "Umbro", "Station Road", "2,500" ], [ "Shamrock Rovers", "Drumcondra", "Pat Scully", "Woodie 's DIY", "Umbro", "Tolka Park", "12,000" ], [ "Sligo Rovers", "Sligo", "Paul Cook", "Toher 's", "Jako", "The Showgrounds", "5,500" ], [ "St Patrick 's Athletic", "Inchicore", "John McDonnell", "Paddy Power", "Umbro", "Richmond Park", "5,500" ], [ "UCD", "Belfield", "Pete Mahon", "Budweiser", "O'Neills", "Belfield Park", "2,500" ], [ "Waterford United", "Waterford", "Gareth Cronin", "Perennial Freight", "Diadora", "Waterford Regional Sports Centre", "8,000" ] ]
Club information
2007_League_of_Ireland_Premier_Division_0
The 2007 League of Ireland Premier Division was the 23rd season of the League of Ireland Premier Division. The division was made up of 12 teams. Drogheda United were champions for the first time while St Patrick's Athletic finished as runners-up.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_top-division_futsal_clubs_in_UEFA_countries
List of top-division futsal clubs in UEFA countries
[ "Team", "Home city/suburb", "Court" ]
[ [ "Academic Futsal", "Dublin", "" ], [ "B & H United Futsal", "Dublin", "" ], [ "Blue Magic Futsal", "Clondalkin", "Collinstown Park Community College" ], [ "Crumlin United Futsal", "Crumlin , Dublin", "" ], [ "Puskas & Hagi Futsal", "Dublin", "" ], [ "St Ita 's Futsal", "Donabate / Portrane", "Donabate and Portrane Community and Leisure Centre" ], [ "Saints & Scholars Futsal", "Whitechurch , County Dublin", "St Columba 's College" ], [ "Transylvania Futsal", "Blanchardstown", "IT Blanchardstown" ] ]
Republic of Ireland
Country : Republic of Ireland Association : Football Association of Ireland Top-level league : Emerald Futsal League UEFA ranking : 2014–15 Emerald Futsal League
List_of_top-division_futsal_clubs_in_UEFA_countries_0
The Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) is the administrative and controlling body for European futsal. It consists of 54 member associations, each of which is responsible for governing futsal in their respective countries. All widely recognised sovereign states located entirely within Europe are members, with the exceptions of the United Kingdom, Monaco and Vatican City. Eight states partially or entirely outside of Europe are also members: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Russia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Israel, Cyprus and Turkey. The United Kingdom is divided into the four separate football associations of England, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales; each association has a separate UEFA membership. Each UEFA member has its own futsal league system, except Liechtenstein. Clubs playing in each top-level league compete for the title as the country's club champions. Clubs also compete in the league or national cup competitions for places in the following season's UEFA club competitions, the UEFA Futsal Cup.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairfield,_California
Fairfield, California
[ "#", "Employer", "# of Employees" ]
[ [ "1", "Travis Air Force Base", "13,414" ], [ "2", "Fairfield-Suisun Unified School District", "2,187" ], [ "3", "County of Solano", "2,133" ], [ "4", "NorthBay Medical Center", "1,969" ], [ "5", "Solano Community College", "750" ], [ "6", "Partnership Health Plan", "561" ], [ "7", "City of Fairfield", "541" ], [ "8", "Jelly Belly", "489" ], [ "9", "Sutter Regional Medical Foundation", "475" ], [ "10", "Westamerica Bank", "418" ] ]
Industry and major employers -- Top employers
According to the City 's 2017 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report , [ 18 ] the top employers in the city are :
Fairfield,_California_1
Fairfield is a city in and the county seat of Solano County, California, in the North Bay sub-region of the San Francisco Bay Area. It is generally considered the midpoint between the cities of San Francisco and Sacramento, approximately 40 miles (64 km) from the city center of both cities, approximately 40 miles (64 km) from the city center of Oakland, less than 19 miles (31 km) from Napa Valley, 16 miles (26 km) from the Carquinez Bridge, and 14 miles (23 km) from the Benicia Bridge. Fairfield was founded in 1856 by clippership captain Robert H. Waterman, and named after his former hometown of Fairfield, Connecticut. It is the home of Travis Air Force Base and the headquarters of Jelly Belly. With a population of 108,321 at the 2010 census, it is slightly smaller in population than Vallejo. Other nearby cities include Suisun City, Vacaville, Rio Vista, Benicia, and Napa.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018–19_Sheffield_Wednesday_F.C._season
2018–19 Sheffield Wednesday F.C. season
[ "No", "Pos", "Name", "Competition", "Award", "Date" ]
[ [ "18", "FW", "Lucas Joao", "Championship", "Team of the Week", "Matchday 5" ], [ "10", "MF", "Barry Bannan", "Championship", "Sky Bet Championship Goal of the Month", "August" ], [ "20", "MF", "Adam Reach", "Championship", "Team of the Week", "Matchday 10" ], [ "18", "FW", "Lucas Joao", "Championship", "Team of the Week", "Matchday 12" ], [ "20", "MF", "Adam Reach", "Championship", "PFA Fans Championship Player of the Month", "September" ], [ "15", "DF", "Tom Lees", "Championship", "Team of the Week", "Matchday 20" ], [ "20", "MF", "Adam Reach", "Championship", "Sky Bet Championship Goal of the Month", "October" ], [ "18", "FW", "Lucas Joao", "Championship", "Team of the Week", "Matchday 21" ], [ "18", "FW", "Lucas Joao", "Championship", "Sky Bet Championship Goal of the Month", "December" ] ]
Awards -- EFL Awards
2018–19_Sheffield_Wednesday_F.C._season_14
The 2018-19 season is Sheffield Wednesday's seventh consecutive season in the Championship. Along with competing in the Championship, the club will also participate in the FA Cup and EFL Cup. The season covers the period from 1 July 2018 to 30 June 2019.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_Boston_Red_Sox_season
2019 Boston Red Sox season
[ "#", "Date", "Opponent", "Score", "Win", "Loss", "Save", "Stadium", "Attendance", "Record", "Box/ Streak" ]
[ [ "31", "May 1", "Athletics", "7-3", "Walden ( 4-0 )", "Fiers ( 2-3 )", "-", "Fenway Park", "33,708", "14-17", "W3" ], [ "32", "May 2", "@ White Sox", "4-6", "Fulmer ( 1-1 )", "Brasier ( 1-1 )", "-", "Guaranteed Rate Field", "15,118", "14-18", "L1" ], [ "33", "May 3", "@ White Sox", "6-1", "Sale ( 1-5 )", "López ( 2-4 )", "-", "Guaranteed Rate Field", "17,504", "15-18", "W1" ], [ "34", "May 4", "@ White Sox", "15-2", "Rodríguez ( 3-2 )", "Bañuelos ( 2-1 )", "-", "Guaranteed Rate Field", "30,068", "16-18", "W2" ], [ "35", "May 5", "@ White Sox", "9-2", "Workman ( 2-1 )", "Herrera ( 0-2 )", "-", "Guaranteed Rate Field", "36,553", "17-18", "W3" ], [ "36", "May 6", "@ Orioles", "1-4", "Means ( 4-3 )", "Smith ( 0-1 )", "Givens ( 4 )", "Camden Yards", "11,042", "17-19", "L1" ], [ "37", "May 7", "@ Orioles", "8-5", "Walden ( 5-0 )", "Kline ( 1-1 )", "Barnes ( 3 )", "Camden Yards", "10,703", "18-19", "W1" ], [ "38", "May 8", "@ Orioles", "2-1 ( 12 )", "Brasier ( 2-1 )", "Ramírez ( 0-1 )", "Hembree ( 1 )", "Camden Yards", "12,451", "19-19", "W2" ], [ "39", "May 10", "Mariners", "14-1", "Rodríguez ( 4-2 )", "Swanson ( 1-4 )", "-", "Fenway Park", "33,731", "20-19", "W3" ], [ "40", "May 11", "Mariners", "9-5", "Porcello ( 3-3 )", "Hernández ( 1-4 )", "-", "Fenway Park", "36,024", "21-19", "W4" ], [ "41", "May 12", "Mariners", "11-2", "Velázquez ( 1-2 )", "Gonzales ( 5-2 )", "-", "Fenway Park", "33,069", "22-19", "W5" ], [ "42", "May 14", "Rockies", "4-5 ( 11 )", "Dunn ( 1-0 )", "Brasier ( 2-2 )", "Davis ( 7 )", "Fenway Park", "35,804", "22-20", "L1" ], [ "43", "May 15", "Rockies", "6-5 ( 10 )", "Workman ( 3-1 )", "Bettis ( 1-3 )", "-", "Fenway Park", "37,032", "23-20", "W1" ], [ "44", "May 17", "Astros", "1-3", "Harris ( 1-0 )", "Porcello ( 3-4 )", "Osuna ( 11 )", "Fenway Park", "35,558", "23-21", "L1" ], [ "45", "May 18", "Astros", "3-7", "James ( 1-0 )", "Velázquez ( 1-3 )", "", "Fenway Park", "36,887", "23-22", "L2" ], [ "46", "May 19", "Astros", "4-3", "Walden ( 6-0 )", "Valdez ( 1-2 )", "Workman ( 1 )", "Fenway Park", "35,796", "24-22", "W1" ], [ "47", "May 20", "@ Blue Jays", "12-2", "Price ( 2-2 )", "Jackson ( 0-1 )", "-", "Rogers Centre", "26,794", "25-22", "W2" ], [ "48", "May 21", "@ Blue Jays", "3-10", "Stroman ( 2-6 )", "Rodríguez ( 4-3 )", "-", "Rogers Centre", "14,407", "25-23", "L1" ], [ "49", "May 22", "@ Blue Jays", "6-5 ( 13 )", "Hembree ( 1-0 )", "Cordero ( 0-1 )", "-", "Rogers Centre", "18,285", "26-23", "W1" ], [ "50", "May 23", "@ Blue Jays", "8-2", "Weber ( 1-0 )", "Gaviglio ( 3-1 )", "-", "Rogers Centre", "36,526", "27-23", "W2" ] ]
2019_Boston_Red_Sox_season_11
The 2019 Boston Red Sox season was the 119th season in the team's history, and their 108th season at Fenway Park. The Red Sox entered the season as reigning World Series champions, but did not repeat, as they were eliminated from the playoff race on September 20. With a record of 84-78 (.519), they finished third in the American League East, the first time they did not win their division since 2015.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolina_Marín
Carolina Marín
[ "Year", "Tournament", "Opponent", "Score", "Result" ]
[ [ "2019", "Italian International", "Rituparna Das", "21-19 , 21-14", "Winner" ], [ "2014", "Spanish Open", "Kirsty Gilmour", "19-21 , 18-21", "Runner-up" ], [ "2013", "Italian International", "Sabrina Jaquet", "21-15 , 21-14", "Winner" ], [ "2013", "Spanish Open", "Beatriz Corrales", "19-21 , 18-21", "Runner-up" ], [ "2013", "Finnish Open", "Beatriz Corrales", "21-10 , 21-15", "Winner" ], [ "2013", "Swedish Masters", "Nicole Schaller", "21-6 , 21-10", "Winner" ], [ "2011", "Irish International", "Pai Hsiao-ma", "21-12 , 19-21 , 7-21", "Runner-up" ], [ "2011", "Spanish Open", "Olga Konon", "21-13 , 21-14", "Winner" ], [ "2011", "Morocco International", "Juliane Schenk", "21-17 , 21-13", "Winner" ], [ "2010", "Italian International", "Olga Konon", "20-22 , 14-21", "Runner-up" ], [ "2010", "Cyprus International", "Olga Golovanova", "21-12 , 25-27 , 21-14", "Winner" ], [ "2010", "Uganda International", "Anne Hald Jensen", "21-18 , 19-21 , 21-18", "Winner" ], [ "2009", "Irish International", "Rachel van Cutsen", "22-24 , 21-14 , 21-16", "Winner" ], [ "2009", "Cyprus International", "Špela Silvester", "21-23 , 21-23", "Runner-up" ] ]
Achievements -- BWF International Challenge/Series ( 9 titles , 5 runners-up )
Women 's singles
Carolina_Marín_8
Carolina María Marín Martín (born 15 June 1993) is a Spanish professional badminton player. She is the reigning Olympic Champion, three-time World Champion, four-time European Champion, the World's No. 1 in HSBC World Tour rankings and the former World's No. 1 in BWF rankings for the women's singles discipline, holding the World No. 1 title for a record number of 66 weeks. Widely regarded as one of the greatest female athletes in the badminton circuit, she holds the distinction of having won a medal in almost every BWF tournament, along with the consecutive golds at the Olympics, the World Championships and the European Championships. She has become the World Champion in women's singles three times, winning in 2014, 2015 and 2018. She has also consecutively won the BWF European Championships title for 4 times in 2014, 2016, 2017 and 2018. She won her first Olympics gold medal in women's singles at the 2016 Rio Olympics. In 2018, she won the BWF World Championships for the third time, thereby becoming the first ever female badminton athlete to have achieved this feat. In June 2017, she was appointed as the Brand ambassador of Meliá Hotels International. She was also appointed the brand ambassador of football major LaLiga for its promotion in other countries.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Damon_filmography
Matt Damon filmography
[ "Year", "Title", "Role", "Notes" ]
[ [ "1990", "Rising Son", "Charlie Robinson", "Television movie" ], [ "1995", "The Good Old Boys", "Cotton Calloway", "Television movie" ], [ "2001-05 , 2015", "Project Greenlight", "Himself", "Executive producer" ], [ "2002", "Push , Nevada", "-", "Executive producer" ], [ "2002 , 2018", "Saturday Night Live", "Himself/host , Brett Kavanaugh", "Episodes : Matt Damon/ Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band Adam Driver / Kanye West ( cameo ) Matt Damon/ Mark Ronson & Miley Cyrus" ], [ "2002", "The Bernie Mac Show", "Himself", "Episode : Keep It on the Short Grass" ], [ "2002", "Will & Grace", "Owen", "Episode : A Chorus Lie" ], [ "2003-14", "Journey to Planet Earth", "Narrator", "Documentary ; 9 episodes" ], [ "2006-present", "Jimmy Kimmel Live !", "Himself", "Variety Show ; 26 episodes" ], [ "2007", "Arthur", "Himself ( voice )", "Episode : The Making of Arthur/Dancing Fools" ], [ "2009", "Entourage", "Himself", "Episode : Give a Little Bit" ], [ "2009", "The People Speak", "Narrator", "Documentary ; executive producer" ], [ "2010", "Cubed", "Himself", "Episode : Welcome Matt Damon" ], [ "2010-11", "30 Rock", "Carol Burnett", "Episodes : I Do Do , The Fabian Strategy , Live Show and Double-Edged Sword" ], [ "2013", "House of Lies", "Himself", "Episode : Damonschildren.org" ], [ "2014", "Years of Living Dangerously", "Himself", "Documentary ; episode : A Dangerous Future" ], [ "2015", "The Leisure Class", "-", "Television movie ; executive producer" ], [ "2016", "The Runner", "-", "Executive producer" ], [ "2016", "Incorporated", "-", "Executive producer" ], [ "2019", "City on a Hill", "-", "Executive producer" ] ]
Television
Damon volunteering in Haiti in 2009 , which was featured in the television documentary Years of Living Dangerously ( 2014 )
Matt_Damon_filmography_3
Matt Damon is an American actor, producer and screenwriter. He made his screen debut with a minor role in the 1988 film Mystic Pizza. After appearing in a series of supporting parts in much of the 1990s, Damon was cast by Francis Ford Coppola as the lead of the 1997 legal drama The Rainmaker. His breakthrough came later that year when he played the title role of an unrecognized genius in Good Will Hunting, a drama which he also co-wrote with Ben Affleck. They won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay and Damon was nominated for Best Actor. He followed it by playing the title roles of a soldier in Steven Spielberg's war drama Saving Private Ryan (1998) and of the criminal Tom Ripley in the thriller The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999), both of which gained critical and commercial success. A production company he formed in 2000 with Affleck and Sean Bailey, named LivePlanet, produced Project Greenlight (2001-05, 2015), a television series that helps newcomers develop their first film. Damon has served as the executive producer of a number of projects directed by winners of the show. Damon's profile continued to expand in the 2000s, as he took on starring roles in two lucrative film franchises. He featured as a con man in Steven Soderbergh's Ocean's Trilogy (2001-07) and played the titular spy Jason Bourne in four of the five films in the Bourne series (2002-16). Damon co-wrote, co-edited and starred in the drama Gerry in 2002, which polarized critics. He played an energy analyst in the thriller Syriana in 2005, and the following year, he collaborated with Leonardo DiCaprio in the acclaimed crime drama The Departed.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2010_Thai_League_Cup
2010 Thai League Cup
[ "Team 1", "Agg", "Team 2", "1st leg", "2nd leg" ]
[ [ "Chanthaburi", "1 - 2", "TOT-CAT", "1-2", "0-0" ], [ "Roi Et United", "1 - 2", "Thai Port", "1-0", "0-2" ], [ "Air Force United", "3-4", "Muangthong United", "2-0", "1-4" ], [ "Thai Honda", "2 - 2", "Suvarnabhumi Customs", "1-0", "1-2" ], [ "Nakhon Pathom", "3 - 6", "Rajnavy Rayong", "2-3", "1-3" ], [ "PTT Rayong", "2 - 2", "Prachinburi", "1-0", "1-2" ], [ "Chula United", "3 - 4", "Samut Songkhram", "0-2", "3-2" ], [ "Chiangrai United", "1 - 2", "Pattaya United", "1-1", "0-1" ], [ "Sriracha", "3 - 3", "BEC Tero Sasana", "0-0", "3-3" ], [ "Police United", "4-8", "Osotspa Saraburi", "1-1", "3-7" ], [ "RBAC Mittraphap", "3-2", "Khonkaen", "2-1", "1-1" ], [ "Narathiwat", "2 - 9", "Bangkok United", "0-4", "2-5" ], [ "Nakhon Phanom", "5-10", "Sisaket", "2-2", "3-8" ], [ "Buriram PEA", "2 - 0", "TTM Phichit", "2-0", "0-0" ], [ "Nong Khai", "4 - 3", "Royal Thai Army", "1-1", "3-2" ], [ "Chonburi", "0 - 3", "Bangkok Glass", "0-2", "0-1" ] ]
Second round
2010_Thai_League_Cup_3
The 2010 Thai League Cup kicked off on 4 August 2010 with the Bangkok & field regional qualifiers. The Thai League Cup was readmitted back into Thai football after a 10-year absence. This edition was sponsored by Toyota thus naming it Toyota League Cup. The prize money for this prestigious award is said to be around 5 million baht and the runners-up will be netting 1 million baht. The prize money was not the only benefit of this cup, the team winning the fair play spot wins a Hilux Vigo. The MVP of the competition got a Toyota Camry Hybrid Car. The winner of the cup earned the right to participate on a cup competition in Japan. This was the first edition of the competition and the qualifying round was played in regions featuring clubs from the Regional League Division 2.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_Football_Second_League
Austrian Football Second League
[ "Club Name", "City", "Stadium", "Capacity" ]
[ [ "SKU Amstetten", "Amstetten", "Ertl Glas Stadion", "3,000" ], [ "Austria Klagenfurt", "Klagenfurt", "Wörthersee Stadion", "30,000" ], [ "Austria Lustenau", "Lustenau", "Reichshofstadion", "8,800" ], [ "FC Blau-Weiß Linz", "Linz", "Donauparkstadion", "2,000" ], [ "FC Dornbirn 1913", "Dornbirn", "Stadion Birkenweise", "12,000" ], [ "SV Horn", "Horn", "Waldviertler Volksbank Arena", "3,500" ], [ "FC Juniors OÖ", "Pasching", "TGW Arena", "6,009" ], [ "Kapfenberger SV", "Kapfenberg", "Franz-Fekete-Stadion", "12,000" ], [ "SV Lafnitz", "Lafnitz", "Fußballarena Lafnitz", "3,000" ], [ "FC Liefering", "Salzburg", "Untersberg-Arena", "4,128" ], [ "SV Ried", "Ried im Innkreis", "Keine Sorgen Arena", "7,680" ], [ "SK Vorwärts Steyr", "Steyr", "Vorwärts-Stadion", "6,000" ], [ "FC Wacker Innsbruck II", "Innsbruck", "Tivoli Stadion Tirol", "16,008" ], [ "Grazer AK", "Graz", "Liebenauer Stadium", "2,500" ], [ "FAC Wien", "Vienna", "FAC-Platz", "3,000" ], [ "Young Violets Austria Wien", "Vienna", "Generali Arena", "17,500" ] ]
Teams and stadia for the 2019–20 season
Kapfenberger SV 's ground , the Franz Fekete Stadium ( formerly Alpenstadion ) Starting in the 2018–19 season , the former First League changed its name to the Second League [ 1 ] and expanded from 10 teams to 16 teams . [ 2 ] The 16 teams competing in the 2019–20 Second League season are :
Austrian_Football_Second_League_0
The Austrian Football Second League () is the second highest professional division in Austrian football. It was formerly called the First League (Erste Liga), from 2002 to 2018. The division currently contains 16 teams, and the champion of the league is promoted to the Austrian Bundesliga. The three last placed teams are directly relegated from the Second League into the regional leagues. The Austrian Football Second Bundesliga is currently known as HPYBET 2.liga for sponsorship reasons.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A-1_Pictures
A-1 Pictures
[ "Title", "Year", "Notes" ]
[ [ "Namisuke", "2007", "" ], [ "Ōkiku Furikabutte : Honto no Ace ni Nareru Kamo", "2007", "Nintendo DS game ; Produced the animation and CG segments" ], [ "Takane no Jitensha ( a.k.a . Takane 's Bike )", "2008", "winner of Animax 's Animax Taishō award" ], [ "Persona 4", "2008", "PlayStation 2 game ; Produced the 2D animation with Studio Hibari" ], [ "Valkyria Chronicles II", "2010", "PlayStation Portable game" ], [ "Phoenix Wright : Ace Attorney − Spirit of Justice", "2016", "Nintendo 3DS , iOS , Android game" ], [ "Radiant Historia : Perfect Chronology", "2017", "Nintendo 3DS game ; Produced the opening animation" ], [ "Layton 's Mystery Journey", "2017", "Nintendo Switch , Nintendo 3DS , iOS , Android game" ] ]
Works -- Others
A-1_Pictures_3
A-1 Pictures Inc. (Japanese: 株式会社A-1 Pictures, Hepburn: Kabushikigaisha A - 1 pikucha) is a Japanese animation studio founded by ex-Sunrise producer Mikihiro Iwata, a subsidiary of Sony Music Entertainment Japan's anime production firm Aniplex.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:2018_Winter_Olympics_mixed_doubles_curling_standings
Template:2018 Winter Olympics mixed doubles curling standings
[ "Country v t e", "Athletes", "W", "L", "PF", "PA", "Ends won", "Ends lost", "Blank ends", "Stolen ends", "Shot%" ]
[ [ "Canada", "Kaitlyn Lawes / John Morris", "6", "1", "52", "26", "28", "20", "0", "9", "80%" ], [ "Switzerland", "Jenny Perret / Martin Rios", "5", "2", "45", "40", "29", "26", "0", "10", "71%" ], [ "Olympic Athletes from Russia", "Anastasia Bryzgalova / Alexander Krushelnitskiy", "4", "3", "36", "44", "26", "27", "1", "7", "67%" ], [ "Norway", "Kristin Skaslien / Magnus Nedregotten", "4", "3", "39", "43", "26", "25", "1", "8", "74%" ], [ "China", "Wang Rui / Ba Dexin", "4", "3", "47", "42", "27", "27", "1", "6", "72%" ], [ "South Korea", "Jang Hye-ji / Lee Ki-jeong", "2", "5", "40", "40", "23", "29", "1", "7", "67%" ], [ "United States", "Rebecca Hamilton / Matt Hamilton", "2", "5", "37", "43", "26", "25", "0", "9", "74%" ], [ "Finland", "Oona Kauste / Tomi Rantamäki", "1", "6", "35", "53", "23", "29", "0", "6", "67%" ] ]
Final round robin standings Key Teams to playoffs Teams to tiebreaker
Template:2018_Winter_Olympics_mixed_doubles_curling_standings_1
Final round robin standings
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miss_World
Miss World
[ "Year", "Winner", "Represented", "Placement at Miss World" ]
[ [ "2004", "Yessica Ramírez", "Mexico", "Top 15" ], [ "2007", "Zhang Zilin", "China", "Miss World 2007" ], [ "2008", "Ksenia Sukhinova", "Russia", "Miss World 2008" ], [ "2009", "Perla Beltrán", "Mexico", "1st Runner-up" ], [ "2010", "Mariann Birkedal", "Norway", "Top 7" ], [ "2011", "Zhanna Zhumaliyeva", "Kazakhstan", "Top 15" ], [ "2012", "Atong Demach", "South Sudan", "Top 7" ], [ "2013", "Megan Young", "Philippines", "Miss World 2013" ], [ "2014", "Isidora Borovčanin", "Bosnia and Herzegovina", "Unplaced" ], [ "2015", "Mireia Lalaguna", "Spain", "Miss World 2015" ], [ "2016", "Jing Kong", "China", "Top 11" ], [ "2017", "Ugochi Ihezue", "Nigeria", "Top 15" ], [ "2018", "Maëva Coucke", "France", "Top 12" ], [ "2019", "Nyekachi Douglas", "Nigeria", "Top 5" ] ]
Fast track events -- Miss World Top Model
The Miss World Top Model is a modeling fast track competition at the Miss World Pageant . [ 107 ] The competition was first held in 2004 , but not in 2005-2006 . It has been held since 2007 ; the winner of the competition automatically qualifies for the semifinals .
Miss_World_Beach_Beauty_3
Miss World is the oldest running international beauty pageant. It was created in the United Kingdom by Eric Morley in 1951. Since his death in 2000, Morley's widow, Julia Morley, has co-chaired the pageant. Along with Miss Universe, Miss International and Miss Earth, this pageant is one of the Big Four international beauty pageants - the most coveted beauty titles when it comes to international pageant competitions. The current Miss World is Toni-Ann Singh of Jamaica who was crowned on 14 December 2019 in London, England. She is the fourth Jamaican to win Miss World.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seabiscuit_(film)
Seabiscuit (film)
[ "Group", "Category", "Recipient", "Result" ]
[ [ "ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards", "Top Box Office Films", "Randy Newman", "Won" ], [ "76th Academy Awards", "Best Picture", "Kathleen Kennedy , Frank Marshall and Gary Ross", "Nominated" ], [ "76th Academy Awards", "Best Writing ( Adapted Screenplay )", "Gary Ross", "Nominated" ], [ "76th Academy Awards", "Best Art Direction", "Art Direction : Jeannine Oppewall ; Set Decoration : Leslie Pope", "Lost" ], [ "76th Academy Awards", "Best Cinematography", "John Schwartzman", "Lost" ], [ "76th Academy Awards", "Best Costume Design", "Judianna Makovsky", "Nominated" ], [ "76th Academy Awards", "Best Film Editing", "William Goldenberg", "Lost" ], [ "76th Academy Awards", "Best Sound Mixing", "Andy Nelson , Anna Behlmer and Tod A. Maitland", "Nominated" ], [ "54th ACE Eddie Awards", "Best Edited Feature Film - Dramatic", "William Goldenberg", "Nominated" ], [ "American Society of Cinematographers Awards 2003", "Outstanding Achievement in Cinematography in Theatrical Releases", "John Schwartzman", "Won" ], [ "Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards 2003", "Best Film", "", "Nominated" ], [ "Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards 2003", "Best Screenplay", "Gary Ross", "Nominated" ], [ "Directors Guild of America Awards 2003", "Outstanding Directing - Feature Film", "Gary Ross", "Nominated" ], [ "61st Golden Globe Awards", "Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama", "", "Nominated" ], [ "61st Golden Globe Awards", "Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture", "William H. Macy", "Nominated" ], [ "Satellite Awards 2003", "Best Supporting Actor - Motion Picture", "Jeff Bridges", "Nominated" ], [ "Satellite Awards 2003", "Best Art Direction and Production Design", "", "Nominated" ], [ "Satellite Awards 2003", "Best Cinematography", "John Schwartzman", "Nominated" ], [ "Satellite Awards 2003", "Best Costume Design", "Judianna Makovsky", "Nominated" ], [ "Satellite Awards 2003", "Best Editing", "William Goldenberg", "Nominated" ] ]
Reception -- Accolades
Seabiscuit_(film)_0
Seabiscuit is a 2003 American equestrian sports film co-produced, written and directed by Gary Ross and based on the best-selling non-fiction book by Laura Hillenbrand. The film is loosely based on the life and racing career of Seabiscuit, an undersized and overlooked Thoroughbred race horse, whose unexpected successes made him a hugely popular media sensation in the United States during the Great Depression. Seabiscuit was nominated for seven Academy Awards.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Los_Angeles_Chargers_first-round_draft_picks
List of Los Angeles Chargers first-round draft picks
[ "Year", "Pick", "Player name", "Position", "College" ]
[ [ "1960", "N/A", "Monty Stickles", "End", "Notre Dame" ], [ "1961", "7", "Earl Faison", "DE", "Indiana" ], [ "1962", "8", "Bob Ferguson", "FB", "Ohio State" ], [ "1963", "2", "Walt Sweeney †", "G", "Syracuse" ], [ "1964", "8", "Ted Davis", "LB", "Georgia Tech" ], [ "1965", "6", "Steve DeLong", "DE", "Tennessee" ], [ "1966", "7", "Don Davis", "DT", "Los Angeles State" ], [ "1967", "14", "Ron Billingsley", "DT", "Wyoming" ], [ "1968", "4", "Russ Washington †", "T", "Missouri" ], [ "1968", "18", "Jim Hill", "DB", "Texas A & M-Kingsville" ], [ "1969", "9", "Marty Domres", "QB", "Columbia" ], [ "1969", "18", "Bob Babich", "LB", "Miami ( OH )" ], [ "1970", "15", "Walker Gillette", "WR", "Richmond" ], [ "1971", "13", "Leon Burns", "RB", "Long Beach State" ], [ "1972", "-", "- No pick", "-", "-" ], [ "1973", "25", "Johnny Rodgers", "WR", "Nebraska" ], [ "1974", "2", "Bo Matthews", "RB", "Colorado" ], [ "1974", "15", "Don Goode", "LB", "Kansas" ], [ "1975", "8", "Gary Johnson †", "DT", "Grambling State" ], [ "1975", "22", "Mike Williams", "DB", "LSU" ] ]
Player selections
LaDainian Tomlinson was the Chargers ' 2001 first round pick Quentin Jammer was the Chargers ' first round pick in 2002 Shawne Merriman was one of the Chargers ' first round picks in 2005 Melvin Ingram was the Chargers ' first round pick in 2012
List_of_Los_Angeles_Chargers_first-round_draft_picks_0
The Los Angeles Chargers are a National Football League (NFL) franchise. They began play in 1960, a charter member of the American Football League. The Chargers moved to San Diego, California in 1961, changing their name to the San Diego Chargers. In 2017, the Chargers relocated back to Los Angeles. The Chargers' first draft selection was Monty Stickles, an end from the University of Notre Dame. The team's most recent first round selection was Jason Verrett, a cornerback from Texas Christian University. The Chargers have selected the number one overall pick in the draft once. They have also selected the second overall pick three times. The University of Tennessee and the University of Texas are tied for the most players chosen by the Chargers from one university, with three selections each. Every year during April, each NFL franchise seeks to add new players to its roster through a collegiate draft known as the NFL Annual Player Selection Meeting, which is more commonly known as the NFL Draft. Teams are ranked in inverse order based on the previous season's record, with the worst record picking first, and the second worst picking second and so on. The two exceptions to this order are made for teams that appeared in the previous Super Bowl; the Super Bowl champion always picks 32nd, and the Super Bowl loser always picks 31st.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018–19_ABA_League_First_Division
2018–19 ABA League First Division
[ "Team", "Home city", "Arena", "Capacity" ]
[ [ "Budućnost VOLI", "Podgorica", "Morača Sports Center", "5,500" ], [ "Cedevita", "Zagreb", "Dom sportova", "3,100" ], [ "Cibona", "Zagreb", "Dražen Petrović Hall", "5,400" ], [ "Crvena zvezda mts", "Belgrade", "Aleksandar Nikolić Hall", "5,878" ], [ "FMP", "Belgrade", "Železnik Hall", "3,000" ], [ "Igokea", "Aleksandrovac", "Laktaši Sports Hall", "3,050" ], [ "Krka", "Novo Mesto", "Leon Štukelj Hall", "2,500" ], [ "Mega Bemax", "Sremska Mitrovica", "Pinki Sports Hall", "2,500" ], [ "Mornar", "Bar", "Topolica Sport Hall", "2,625" ], [ "Partizan NIS", "Belgrade", "Aleksandar Nikolić Hall", "5,878" ], [ "Petrol Olimpija", "Ljubljana", "Arena Stožice", "12,480" ], [ "Zadar", "Zadar", "Krešimir Ćosić Hall", "7,997" ] ]
Teams -- Venues and locations
BelgradeBudućnostZagrebIgokeaKrkaMegaMornarOlimpijaZadarBelgrade clubs : Crvena zvezdaFMPPartizanZagreb clubs : CedevitaCibona Location of teams in the 2018–19 ABA League First Division
2018–19_ABA_League_First_Division_0
The 2018-19 ABA League First Division is the 18th season of the ABA League with 12 teams from Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Slovenia and Serbia participating in it. It is the first time since the 2011-12 season that there are no participants from North Macedonia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Once_Upon_a_Time_in_America
Once Upon a Time in America
[ "Award", "Category", "Nominee", "Result" ]
[ [ "38th British Academy Film Awards", "Best Costume Design", "Gabriella Pescucci", "Won" ], [ "38th British Academy Film Awards", "Best Film Music", "Ennio Morricone", "Won" ], [ "38th British Academy Film Awards", "Best Direction", "Sergio Leone", "Nominated" ], [ "38th British Academy Film Awards", "Best Actress in a Supporting Role", "Tuesday Weld", "Nominated" ], [ "38th British Academy Film Awards", "Best Cinematography", "Tonino Delli Colli", "Nominated" ], [ "42nd Golden Globe Awards", "Best Director", "Sergio Leone", "Nominated" ], [ "42nd Golden Globe Awards", "Best Original Score", "Ennio Morricone", "Nominated" ], [ "8th Japan Academy Prize", "Outstanding Foreign Language Film", "-", "Won" ], [ "10th Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards", "Best Film", "-", "Nominated" ], [ "10th Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards", "Best Director", "Sergio Leone", "Nominated" ], [ "10th Los Angeles Film Critics Association Awards", "Best Music Score", "Ennio Morricone", "Won" ] ]
Critical reception -- Accolades
Despite its modern critical success , the initial American release did not fare well with critics and received no Academy Award nominations . [ 46 ] The film 's music was disqualified from Oscar consideration for a technicality , [ 47 ] as the studio accidentally omitted the composer 's name from the opening credits when trimming its running time for the American release . [ 24 ]
Once_Upon_a_Time_in_America_0
Once Upon a Time in America (Italian: C'era una volta in America) is a 1984 epic crime drama film co-written and directed by Italian filmmaker Sergio Leone and starring Robert De Niro and James Woods. The film is an Italian-American venture produced by The Ladd Company, Embassy International Pictures, PSO Enterprises, and Rafran Cinematografica, and distributed by Warner Bros. Based on Harry Grey's novel The Hoods, it chronicles the lives of best friends David Noodles Aaronson and Maximilian Max Bercovicz as they lead a group of Jewish ghetto youths who rise to prominence as Jewish gangsters in New York City's world of organized crime. The film explores themes of childhood friendships, love, lust, greed, betrayal, loss, broken relationships, together with the rise of mobsters in American society. It was the final film directed by Leone before his death five years later, and the first feature film he had directed in 13 years. It is also the third film of Leone's Once Upon a Time Trilogy, which includes Once Upon a Time in the West (1968) and Duck, You Sucker! (1971). The cinematography was by Tonino Delli Colli, and the film score by Ennio Morricone. Leone originally envisaged two three-hour films, then a single 269-minute (4 hours and 29 minutes) version, but was convinced by distributors to shorten it to 229 minutes (3 hours and 49 minutes). The American distributors, The Ladd Company, further shortened it to 139 minutes, and rearranged the scenes into chronological order, without Leone's involvement. The shortened version was a critical and commercial flop in the United States, and critics who had seen both versions harshly condemned the changes that were made. The original European cut has remained a critical favorite and frequently appears in lists of the greatest gangster films of all time.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_presidential_trips_made_by_Barack_Obama_(2009)
List of presidential trips made by Barack Obama (2009)
[ "Country/ U.S. state", "Areas visited", "Dates", "Details" ]
[ [ "Arizona", "Phoenix", "May 13", "President Obama visited Arizona State University" ], [ "New Mexico", "Albuquerque", "May 14", "President Obama visited Rio Rancho High School to discuss credit card reform" ], [ "Indiana", "South Bend", "May 17", "President Obama visited the University of Notre Dame to give a commencement address" ], [ "Maryland", "Annapolis", "May 22", "President Obama visited the United States Naval Academy" ], [ "Virginia", "Arlington", "May 25", "President Obama participated in Memorial Day ceremonies at Arlington National Cemetery" ], [ "Nevada", "Las Vegas Valley", "May 26", "President Obama made a speech at a fundraiser for the re-election campaign of Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid" ], [ "California", "Los Angeles", "May 27", "President Obama delivered remarks at a fundraiser for the Democratic National Committee" ], [ "New York", "New York City", "May 30", "No official business . President and First Lady dined at Blue Hill and attended the Broadway revival of Joe Turner 's Come and Gone" ] ]
May
List_of_presidential_trips_made_by_Barack_Obama_(2009)_3
This is a list of presidential trips made by Barack Obama during 2009, the first year of his presidency as the 44th President of the United States. Following his inauguration on January 21, 2009, Obama traveled to 22 different states internationally, in addition to many more trips made domestically within the United States. This list excludes trips made within Washington, D.C., the U.S. federal capital in which the White House, the official residence and principal workplace of the President, is located. Additionally excluded are trips to Camp David, the country residence of the President, and to the private home of the Obama family in Kenwood, Chicago.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipwrecks_in_May_1825
List of shipwrecks in May 1825
[ "Ship", "Country", "Description" ]
[ [ "Catherine", "United Kingdom", "The ship foundered in the Atlantic Ocean . Her crew were rescued by Three Sisters ( United Kingdom )" ], [ "Catharina Sophia", "Prussia", "The ship was wrecked on Bornholm , Denmark" ], [ "Hermit", "United Kingdom", "The ship was abandoned off Bird Island , British North America before 16 May" ], [ "Hibernia", "United Kingdom", "The ship was driven ashore in the Hooghly River . She was on a voyage from Bengal , India to Rangoon" ], [ "Lydia & Mary", "United States", "The ship was capsized and sunk by a waterspout . Her crew survived . She was on a voyage from Faial Island , Azores to Tampico , Mexico" ], [ "Mary Ann", "United States", "The ship foundered in the Atlantic Ocean on or before 23 May" ], [ "Pallas", "Gibraltar", "The ship was driven ashore at the mouth of the Mississippi River on or before 24 May" ], [ "Prince of Saxe Coburg", "United Kingdom", "The ship ran aground on the Hogsty Reef and was damaged . She was on a voyage from Jacmel , Haiti to Plymouth , Devon . Prince of Saxe Coburg was refloated and put into Norfolk , Virginia , United States" ], [ "Sons of Commerce", "United Kingdom", "The ship was wrecked on Folly Reef , off Aux Cayes , Haiti before 21 May . She was on a voyage from Jacmel , Haiti to London" ], [ "St. Lawrence", "British North America", "The ship ran aground in the St. Lawrence River . She was on a voyage from Quebec City , Lower Canada to London" ], [ "Trevor", "United Kingdom", "The ship was driven ashore near Wells-next-the-Sea , Norfolk" ], [ "Vittoria", "United Kingdom", "The ship was driven ashore in the Hooghly River . She was on a voyage from Calcutta to Rangoon" ], [ "Vrow Gesina", "Netherlands", "The ship was lost near Pero . She was on a voyage from Dantzig to Amsterdam , North Holland" ] ]
List_of_shipwrecks_in_May_1825_24
The list of shipwrecks in May 1825 includes some ships sunk, wrecked or otherwise lost during May 1825.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_federal_judges_appointed_by_Ronald_Reagan
List of federal judges appointed by Ronald Reagan
[ "#", "Judge", "Court", "Nomination date", "Confirmation date", "Began active service", "Ended active service", "Ended senior status" ]
[ [ "1", "William Walter Wilkins", "D.S.C", "July 9 , 1981", "July 20 , 1981", "July 22 , 1981", "July 10 , 1986", "Elevated" ], [ "2", "William Charles Lee", "N.D. Ind", "July 1 , 1981", "July 27 , 1981", "July 28 , 1981", "February 3 , 2003", "Incumbent" ], [ "3", "Joseph Edward Stevens Jr", "E.D . Mo . W.D . Mo", "July 9 , 1981", "September 16 , 1981", "September 18 , 1981", "July 1 , 1995", "December 18 , 1998" ], [ "4", "D. Brook Bartlett", "W.D . Mo", "July 9 , 1981", "September 16 , 1981", "September 19 , 1981", "January 21 , 2000", "-" ], [ "5", "John R. Gibson", "W.D . Mo", "July 9 , 1981", "September 16 , 1981", "September 19 , 1981", "March 30 , 1982", "Elevated" ], [ "6", "John C. Coughenour", "W.D . Wash", "August 11 , 1981", "September 25 , 1981", "September 28 , 1981", "July 27 , 2006", "Incumbent" ], [ "7", "Conrad K. Cyr", "D. Me", "August 11 , 1981", "September 25 , 1981", "September 28 , 1981", "November 20 , 1989", "Elevated" ], [ "8", "Joseph M. McLaughlin", "E.D.N.Y", "July 29 , 1981", "September 25 , 1981", "September 28 , 1981", "October 18 , 1990", "Elevated" ], [ "9", "Roger Miner", "N.D.N.Y", "July 28 , 1981", "September 25 , 1981", "September 28 , 1981", "January 1 , 1997", "February 18 , 2012" ], [ "10", "John E. Sprizzo", "S.D.N.Y", "July 29 , 1981", "September 25 , 1981", "September 28 , 1981", "January 1 , 2000", "December 16 , 2008" ], [ "11", "Henry Rupert Wilhoit Jr", "E.D . Ky", "August 11 , 1981", "September 25 , 1981", "September 28 , 1981", "December 31 , 2000", "Incumbent" ], [ "12", "Hayden Wilson Head Jr", "S.D . Tex", "September 17 , 1981", "October 21 , 1981", "October 26 , 1981", "November 13 , 2009", "Incumbent" ], [ "13", "James Robertson Nowlin", "W.D . Tex", "September 17 , 1981", "October 21 , 1981", "October 26 , 1981", "May 31 , 2003", "Incumbent" ], [ "14", "Hugh Franklin Waters", "W.D . Ark", "August 28 , 1981", "October 21 , 1981", "October 26 , 1981", "August 1 , 1997", "April 16 , 2002" ], [ "15", "Paul A. Magnuson", "D. Minn", "September 28 , 1981", "October 29 , 1981", "October 29 , 1981", "February 9 , 2002", "Incumbent" ], [ "16", "Robert Daniel Potter", "W.D.N.C", "October 1 , 1981", "October 29 , 1981", "October 29 , 1981", "May 1 , 1994", "July 2 , 2009" ], [ "17", "C. Arlen Beam", "D. Neb", "October 14 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "November 9 , 1987", "Elevated" ], [ "18", "Emmett Ripley Cox", "S.D . Ala", "October 14 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "April 25 , 1988", "Elevated" ], [ "19", "Cynthia Holcomb Hall", "C.D . Cal", "October 14 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "October 4 , 1984", "Elevated" ], [ "20", "John Bailey Jones", "D.S.D", "October 20 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "November 18 , 1981", "January 1 , 1995", "Incumbent" ] ]
District Courts
List_of_federal_judges_appointed_by_Ronald_Reagan_2
Following is a list of all Article III United States federal judges appointed by President Ronald Reagan during his presidency. In total Reagan appointed: four justices to the Supreme Court of the United States, including the appointment of a sitting associate justice as chief justice, 83 judges to the United States Courts of Appeals, 290 judges to the United States District Courts and 6 judges to the United States Court of International Trade. Reagan's total of 383 Article III judicial appointments is the most by any President. In addition to these appointments, Reagan signed the Federal Courts Improvement Act in 1982, which transferred five judges from the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals, and seven judges from the appellate division of the United States Court of Claims, into the newly created United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. Although each of those twelve judges had been appointed to their original tribunals by previous presidents, Reagan's signing of the act effectively placed all of them on the new Court of Appeals.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_San_Diego_Padres_season
2020 San Diego Padres season
[ "#", "Date", "Opponent", "Score", "Save" ]
[ [ "9", "August 1", "@ Rockies", "-", "-" ], [ "10", "August 2", "@ Rockies", "-", "-" ], [ "11", "August 3", "Dodgers", "-", "-" ], [ "12", "August 4", "Dodgers", "-", "-" ], [ "13", "August 5", "Dodgers", "-", "-" ], [ "14", "August 7", "Diamondbacks", "-", "-" ], [ "15", "August 8", "Diamondbacks", "-", "-" ], [ "16", "August 9", "Diamondbacks", "-", "-" ], [ "17", "August 10", "@ Dodgers", "-", "-" ], [ "18", "August 11", "@ Dodgers", "-", "-" ], [ "19", "August 12", "@ Dodgers", "-", "-" ], [ "20", "August 13", "@ Dodgers", "-", "-" ], [ "21", "August 14", "@ Diamondbacks", "-", "-" ], [ "22", "August 15", "@ Diamondbacks", "-", "-" ], [ "23", "August 16", "@ Diamondbacks", "-", "-" ], [ "24", "August 17", "@ Rangers", "-", "-" ], [ "25", "August 18", "@ Rangers", "-", "-" ], [ "26", "August 19", "Rangers", "-", "-" ], [ "27", "August 20", "Rangers", "-", "-" ], [ "28", "August 21", "Astros", "-", "-" ] ]
2020_San_Diego_Padres_season_5
The 2020 San Diego Padres season is the 52nd season of the San Diego Padres franchise. The Padres play their home games at Petco Park as members of the Major League Baseball's National League West Division.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Phi_Kappa_Theta_chapters
List of Phi Kappa Theta chapters
[ "University", "Chapter", "Status" ]
[ [ "Case Western Reserve University", "Ohio Alpha Beta", "Active" ], [ "The Ohio State University", "Ohio Gamma Theta", "Active" ], [ "University of Cincinnati", "Ohio Omicron", "Active" ], [ "Ohio University", "Ohio Psi", "Inactive" ], [ "Ohio Northern University", "Ohio Zeta", "Inactive" ], [ "Kent State University", "Ohio Phi", "Inactive" ] ]
Ohio
List_of_Phi_Kappa_Theta_chapters_25
A list of chapters of the Phi Kappa Theta fraternity categorized by state. This list includes both active and inactive chapters. As of 2015, there are 45 active chapters and 7 colonies, all located within the continental United States.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2014–15_Nemzeti_Bajnokság_I_(men's_handball)
2014–15 Nemzeti Bajnokság I (men's handball)
[ "Team", "Location", "Arena", "Capacity" ]
[ [ "Balatonfüred", "Balatonfüred", "Észak-Balatoni Reg . Konf . Központ", "712" ], [ "Balmazújváros", "Balmazújváros", "König Rendezvényközpont", "850" ], [ "Cegléd", "Cegléd", "Gál József Sportcsarnok", "1,200" ], [ "Csurgó", "Csurgó", "Sótonyi László Sportcsarnok", "800" ], [ "Gyöngyös", "Gyöngyös", "Városi Sportcsarnok", "1,500" ], [ "Komlói BSK", "Komló", "Komlói Sportközpont", "800" ], [ "Mezőkövesd", "Mezőkövesd", "Városi Sportcsarnok", "800" ], [ "Orosháza", "Orosháza", "Eötvös Sportcsarnok", "600" ], [ "PLER", "Budapest", "Lőrinci Sportcsarnok", "700" ], [ "Szeged", "Szeged", "Újszegedi Sportcsarnok", "3,200" ], [ "Tatabánya", "Tatabánya", "Földi Imre Sportcsarnok", "1,000" ], [ "Veszprém", "Veszprém", "Veszprém Aréna", "5,096" ] ]
Team information
VeszprémBalatonfüredCsurgóTatabányaKomlóPLERGyöngyösMezőkövesdCeglédSzegedOrosházaBalmazújváros Location of teams in 2014-15 Nemzeti Bajnokság I The following 12 clubs compete in the NB I during the 2014–15 season :
2014–15_Nemzeti_Bajnokság_I_(men's_handball)_0
The 2014-15 Nemzeti Bajnokság I is the 63rd season of the Nemzeti Bajnokság I, Hungary's premier Handball league.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2007_South_American_Championships_in_Athletics_–_Results
2007 South American Championships in Athletics – Results
[ "Name", "Nationality", "Time" ]
[ [ "Sergio Lobos", "Chile", "8:37.83" ], [ "Gladson Barbosa", "Brazil", "8:43.69" ], [ "José Gregorio Peña", "Venezuela", "8:54.43" ], [ "Santiago Figueroa", "Argentina", "8:56.12" ], [ "Celso Ficagna", "Brazil", "9:06.09" ], [ "Mariano Mastromarino", "Argentina", "9:10.72" ], [ "Mario Bazán", "Peru", "DNF" ] ]
Men 's results -- 3000 meters steeplechase
Final – 9 June
2007_South_American_Championships_in_Athletics_–_Results_14
These are the results of the 2007 South American Championships in Athletics which took place from June 7 through June 9, 2007 in São Paulo, Brazil. The list was compiled from various sources and is still incomplete, especially concerning details of the field events.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Negro_league_baseball_champions
List of Negro league baseball champions
[ "Year", "Lg", "Champion", "Games", "Lg", "Runner-up" ]
[ [ "1922", "NNL1", "Chicago American Giants", "3-2", "East", "Bacharach Giants of New York" ], [ "1924", "NNL1", "Kansas City Monarchs", "5-4-1", "ECL", "Hilldale Club" ], [ "1925", "ECL", "Hilldale Club", "5-1", "NNL1", "Kansas City Monarchs" ], [ "1926", "NNL1", "Chicago American Giants", "5-4-2", "ECL", "Bacharach Giants" ], [ "1927", "NNL1", "Chicago American Giants", "5-3-1", "ECL", "Bacharach Giants" ] ]
1920–1931 : First endeavor of organized league play
With the emergence of the hard-fisted leadership of former pitcher Rube Foster , playing a formal scheduled season between other black teams became reality . Foster , known for his business acumen , recognized that attendance was just high enough so that a reasonable profit can be derived from gate receipts to sustain the travel and commitment required to maintain a league schedule . This led to the formation of a handful of official Negro leagues , and later to a planned end-of-season World Series . Western-region champions Eastern-region champions Year Lg Champion Games Runner-up Ref Year Lg Champion Games Runner-up Ref 1920 NNL1 Chicago American Giants 1920 — Brooklyn Royal GiantsHilldale Club 1–1–2 ( tie ) 1921 NNL1 Chicago American Giants 1921 — Bacharach GiantsHilldale Club 2–2 ( tie ) 1922 NNL1 CHICAGO AMERICAN GIANTS 1922 — Bacharach Giants of New York § 1923 NNL1 Kansas City Monarchs 1923 ECL Hilldale Club 1924 NNL1 KANSAS CITY MONARCHS 1924 ECL Hilldale Club 1925 NNL1 Kansas City Monarchs 5–3 St. Louis Stars 1925 ECL HILLDALE CLUB 1926 NNL1 CHICAGO AMERICAN GIANTS 5–4 Kansas City Monarchs 1926 ECL Bacharach Giants 1927 NNL1 CHICAGO AMERICAN GIANTS 4–0 Birmingham Black Barons 1927 ECL Bacharach Giants 1928 NNL1 St. Louis Stars 5–4 Chicago American Giants 1928 — Bacharach Giants § 1929 NNL1 Kansas City Monarchs 1929 ANL Baltimore Black Sox 1930 NNL1 St. Louis Stars 4–3 Detroit Stars 1930 — Homestead Grays 6–4 New York Lincoln Giants 1931 NNL1 St. Louis Stars 1931 — Hilldale Daisies § Team in CAPITAL LETTERS went on to win that season 's World Series Team went on to lose that season 's World Series — First half champion — Second half champion — Both first and second half champion § — Unofficial champion derived from estimates of the known won-loss records ; no team claimed or was awarded a championship in these years due mainly to the organized schedule being abandoned for financial reasons and the team listed is only a generalization 1921 — Southern Colored Champion : Nashville Elite Giants 4 games to 0 over Montgomery Grey Sox . World champions Main article : Negro World Series Beginning in 1924 , the championships during this period were formal , pre-arranged post-season challenges agreed to by the respective leagues . The 1922 championship was an informal post-season challenge issued by the individual teams .
List_of_Negro_league_baseball_champions_6
This List of Negro league baseball champions includes champions of black baseball prior to the organization of any traditional Negro league and goes through to the collapse of segregated baseball after Jackie Robinson broke the baseball color line in 1946. Champions include self-declared, regional and (later) league champions, but is limited to top-tier teams and major Negro leagues. The champions listed after 1948 through the 1950s are listed for posterity, but the quality of play had deteriorated so far as to only incidentally be covered by contemporary media or historians.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2009–10_Detroit_Red_Wings_season
2009–10 Detroit Red Wings season
[ "Player", "Former team", "Contract terms" ]
[ [ "Doug Janik", "Montreal Canadiens", "One year , $ 500,000" ], [ "Kris Newbury", "Toronto Maple Leafs", "One year , $ 500,000" ], [ "Jeremy Williams", "Toronto Maple Leafs", "One year , $ 500,000" ], [ "Travis Ehrhardt", "Portland Winterhawks", "Three year entry-level contract" ], [ "Andy Delmore", "Hamburg Freezers", "One year , $ 500,000" ], [ "Patrick Eaves", "Boston Bruins", "One year , $ 500,000" ], [ "Jason Williams", "Columbus Blue Jackets", "One year , $ 1.5 million" ], [ "Todd Bertuzzi", "Calgary Flames", "One year , $ 1.5 million" ], [ "Brad May", "Toronto Maple Leafs", "One year , $ 500,000" ] ]
Free agents acquired
2009–10_Detroit_Red_Wings_season_21
The 2009-10 Detroit Red Wings season was the team's 84th season of play for the franchise (78th as the Detroit Red Wings). The Red Wings once again qualified for the Stanley Cup playoffs, but lost in the Western Conference Semifinal.