question
stringlengths
17
90
answers
sequencelengths
1
43
prop
stringclasses
15 values
s_wiki_title
stringlengths
4
68
id
int64
1.53k
6.54M
pop
int64
2
99
ctxs
listlengths
25
25
What is Henry Feilden's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Henry Feilden (Conservative politician)
4,382,392
58
[ { "id": "11341299", "title": "Henry Feilden (Conservative politician)", "text": " Henry Master Feilden (21 February 1818 – 5 September 1875) was an English Conservative Party politician.", "score": "1.6985543" }, { "id": "3064835", "title": "Feilden", "text": "Bernard Feilden (1919–2008), British conservation architect ; Bob Feilden (1917–2004), British mechanical engineer ; Gerry Feilden (1904–1981), British general and horse racing identity ; Henry Feilden (disambiguation) ; Joseph Feilden (1824–1895), British politician ; Richard Feilden (1950–2005), British architect ; William Feilden (1772–1850), British politician ", "score": "1.5850108" }, { "id": "14189134", "title": "Feilden baronets", "text": " Henry Wemyss Feilden, second son of the second Baronet, was an Arctic explorer.", "score": "1.572508" }, { "id": "13370826", "title": "Bernard Feilden", "text": " Feilden was born in Hampstead, London. He was educated at Bedford School and The Bartlett School of Architecture, University College, London, completing his training at the Architectural Association after the second world war. His love of architecture was inherited from his grandfather, Brightwen Binyon (1846-1905), an Ipswich architect and former pupil of Alfred Waterhouse. He joined the practice of Edward Boardman and Son in Norwich, where he designed the Trinity United Reformed Church. He set up an architectural practice, Feilden+Mawson, with David Mawson in 1956, to which offices in Norwich, London and Cambridge were later added. In 1968 Feilden took over as consultant architect to the University ", "score": "1.544341" }, { "id": "2423008", "title": "Henry Wemyss Feilden", "text": " Colonel Henry Wemyss Feilden, CB (6 October 1838 – 8 June 1921) was a British Army officer, Arctic explorer and naturalist.", "score": "1.5208797" }, { "id": null, "title": "Henry Feilden (Conservative politician)", "text": "Henry Feilden (Conservative politician)\n\nHenry Master Feilden (21 February 1818 – 5 September 1875) was an English Conservative Party politician.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Edward Hornby", "text": "Edward Hornby\n\nEdward Kenworthy Hornby (16 June 1839, in Blackburn – 25 June 1887) was an English Conservative Party politician. He sat in the House of Commons from 1869 to 1874.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Daniel Thwaites", "text": "Daniel Thwaites\n\nDaniel Thwaites (1817 – 21 September 1888) was an English brewer<ref name=\"gazette-1875\" /> and a Conservative Party<ref name=\"craig1832-1885\" /> politician from Blackburn in Lancashire. He owned what is now Thwaites Brewery, and sat in the House of Commons from 1875 to 1880.\n\nHe was the son of Daniel Thwaites (1777–1843), an excise man who in 1807 had become one of the three partners of the Eanam Brewery in Blackburn, and sole owner of the business in 1824.\nThe younger Daniel inherited the business in partnership with two of his brothers, and became sole owner in 1857.<ref name=\"thwaites-200\" />\n\nAt the 1874 general election, he unsuccessfully contested the borough of Blackburn.\nHowever, he won the seat at a by-election in October 1875 after the death of Henry Master Feilden, and was one of the two Members of Parliament (MPs) for Blackburn until his defeat at the 1880 general election.<ref name=\"craig1832-1885\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:British naturalists", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Politics of Blackburn with Darwen", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "11361512", "title": "Richard Feilden", "text": " In 2005, the Richard Feilden Foundation was set up in his memory. The charity is a network of professionals, with expertise of the built environment and education sectors who provide skills and transfer knowledge to enhance educational infrastructure across Africa. It partners with like-minded organisations and individuals to collaborate on building education projects in Africa.", "score": "1.5164903" }, { "id": "2423009", "title": "Henry Wemyss Feilden", "text": " Feilden was the second son of Sir William Henry Feilden (1812−1879), 2nd Baronet of Feniscowles. Feilden was born at Newbridge Barracks in Kildare where his father was then serving in the 17th Lancers. He was educated at Cheltenham College. After joining the Black Watch, at the age of nineteen, he fought in the suppression of the Indian Mutiny 1857-58 and at the Taku Forts in China in 1860. In 1862 he volunteered for the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War of 1861−1865. He served as assistant adjutant-general with the remnant of the Army of Tennessee under General Joseph E. Johnston and was present at the surrender at Bennett Place. He then returned ", "score": "1.5119551" }, { "id": "13370825", "title": "Bernard Feilden", "text": " Sir Bernard Melchior Feilden CBE FRIBA (11 September 1919 – 14 November 2008) was a conservation architect whose work encompassed cathedrals, the Great Wall of China and the Taj Mahal.", "score": "1.500639" }, { "id": "3064837", "title": "Feilden", "text": "Feilden baronets ", "score": "1.492554" }, { "id": "11361509", "title": "Richard Feilden", "text": " Feilden was born in Lincoln on 29 March 1950. His father, Bob Feilden, was an engineer who served as the Director General of the British Standards Institution from 1970 to 1981. His uncle Bernard Feilden was a conservation architect. Richard Feilden changed his university studies from engineering to architecture, graduating from Cambridge University, followed by further studies at the Architectural Association. In 1978 he set up his own architecture practice in Bath, Somerset, with fellow architect Peter Clegg: now Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios. The practice specialised in designing and constructing low-energy housing. He built his own house in Warleigh, Wiltshire. He was known to be outspoken, honest and critical of the problems with building design and wider issues, such as global sustainability. He argued that head teachers should be centrally involved in the design of their schools and criticised the mediocrity ", "score": "1.4920564" }, { "id": "11341300", "title": "Henry Feilden (Conservative politician)", "text": " On 16 March 1869, the result of the 1868 general election in the borough of Blackburn was declared null and void, after an election petition had been lodged. The two Conservatives who had been elected, William Henry Hornby and Feilden's father Joseph Feilden, were unseated when Mr Justice Willes found that there had been widespread intimidation of voters. Henry Feilden was elected at the resulting by-election on 31 March 1869, along with William Henry Hornby's son Edward. Both candidates had appealed for support as a tribute to their fathers. Feilden was re-elected at the 1874 general election, and held the seat until his death in 1875 aged 57.", "score": "1.4919429" }, { "id": "2423010", "title": "Henry Wemyss Feilden", "text": " the British Army, where he made captain in the Royal Artillery in 1874. He served in the First Boer War in 1881 and again in Africa in 1890. After the outbreak of the Second Boer War, he was again appointed Paymaster of Imperial Yeomanry on 3 February 1900. He was decorated for his service in India, China and South Africa, and was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Bath (CB) for his services to Imperial Yeomanry in 1900. Feilden also collected information on the geology, flora and fauna of newly explored areas, and served as naturalist on Sir George Nares' British Arctic Expedition of 1875-76 on board Alert. During his service in ", "score": "1.4881613" }, { "id": "15257876", "title": "Henry Raymond Selden", "text": " Henry Raymond Selden (1821–1865) from Vermont, was an officer in the United States Army during the Mexican–American War, and in service on the frontiers and then in the Union Army during the American Civil War in New Mexico Territory.", "score": "1.4875369" }, { "id": "3064834", "title": "Feilden", "text": " Feilden may refer to:", "score": "1.4823432" }, { "id": "2423011", "title": "Henry Wemyss Feilden", "text": " he contributed notes on the birds of the region to Allan Octavian Hume. He was a fast friend of the famous writer and poet Rudyard Kipling. The surgeon on HMS Alert, Dr Edward L. Moss, held a low opinion of Feilden's scientific expertise. In 1864, Feilden married Julia, daughter of Judge David James McCord (1797–1855) of South Carolina. In 1880 Feilden settled in Wells-next-the-Sea, Norfolk. Feilden joined the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society in 1880 and became President in 1885. He lived in Norfolk for over 20 years, moving to Burwash, Sussex in 1902. One of his discoveries in 1888 was a stuffed specimen of the Great Bustard which had been shot in Norfolk. ", "score": "1.4706583" }, { "id": "2423012", "title": "Henry Wemyss Feilden", "text": " contributed to Transactions of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists' Society and submitted scientific papers to The Zoologist and Ibis (the journal of the British Ornithologists' Union, to which he was elected in 1873), amongst others. In 1895 and 1897, accompanying Henry J. Pearson, Feilden partook in expeditions to Novaya Zemlya, Kolguyev, Spitsbergen, Lapland and the Kara Sea. As well as being a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society, Feilden was nominated as a Fellow of the Royal Society of London, but was rejected. The following is from his nomination certificate: \"Was naturalist to Sir George Nares' Polar Expedition of 1875−6, when, besides making large and valuable zoological observations and collections, he laid down ", "score": "1.4671994" }, { "id": "2423013", "title": "Henry Wemyss Feilden", "text": " geology of 300 miles of the coast of Smith's Sound, and brought home 2000 specimens, carefully localised, illustrating and confirming his surveys. On the same voyage he discovered the Miocene Flora of Grinnell's Land, his collection and observations on which from an important contribution to Heer's \"Flora Fossilis Arctica.\" He has made three subsequent voyages to Arctic Europe and Asia, visiting Novaya Zemlya, Barents Land, Kolguev Island, Spitsbergen, and Russian Lapland, for the purpose of collating the geology, zoology, and botany of Arctic Europe with those of America…\" Feilden died at his home in Burwash in 1921, aged 83, about one year after his wife Julia McCord Feilden (1837–1920). He had no children.", "score": "1.4644794" }, { "id": "11361508", "title": "Richard Feilden", "text": " Richard John Robert Feilden OBE (29 March 1950 – 3 January 2005) was a British architect who co-founded Feilden Clegg Architects.", "score": "1.4590552" }, { "id": "11361510", "title": "Richard Feilden", "text": " school design. According to architect Sunand Prasad, Feilden's greatest achievement was to form Feilden Clegg into \"a modern form of practice that explicitly embraces the collaborative nature of producing architecture.\" In 1998 he became part of Lord Rogers' Urban Task Force and, in 2000, was appointed to the Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment. Feilden was accidentally killed in Warleigh on 3 January 2005, when a tree fell on him while he was clearing a patch of woodland as a memorial to his father, who had died eight months earlier. In tribute the 2005 RIBA President, George Ferguson, said of Feilden: \"He showed that good architecture needn't be showy or iconic. What is great about his practice is that, although Richard led from the front, it wasn't reliant on one single person. They're the one firm we lose to graciously.\"", "score": "1.4562211" }, { "id": "25520532", "title": "Feilden Clegg Bradley Studios", "text": " The Richard Feilden Foundation was set up in memory of Richard Feilden in 2005. The charity’s mission is to support sustainable architecture and education projects in Africa, promoting community involvement and the use of African expertise and technologies. The charity uses the skills and knowledge of the practice to work with like-minded organisations. Projects include an HIV Training Clinic in Mzuzu Malawi, Rubengera Technical Secondary School in Rwanda and a number of schools in Uganda.", "score": "1.4467373" } ]
What is Herlyn Espinal's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Herlyn Espinal
1,223,902
88
[ { "id": "5316421", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Espinal was born and raised in the Santa Rita district of Yoro. In a 2009 interview he said that from an early age he had aspirations of becoming a journalist. In his youth, Espinal was active in the La Fragua theater company in El Progreso, Yoro.", "score": "1.8138638" }, { "id": "5316420", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Herlyn Iván Espinal Martínez (14 September 1982 – 20 July 2014) was a Honduran journalist and television reporter who worked as chief correspondent in San Pedro Sula, the second largest city in Honduras, for Televicentro's daily newscast Hoy Mismo. Espinal was abducted in the vicinity of Santa Rita, in the department of Yoro, early on the morning of 20 July 2014. He was found dead, a victim of multiple gunshot wounds, in a nearby location on the morning of 21 July. He was the forty-third journalist killed in Honduras since 2013.", "score": "1.7767518" }, { "id": "5316424", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Espinal was found dead on 21 July 2014. He was 31 at the time of his murder. In the aftermath of his murder, contradictory information circulated regarding the last hours of his life and the circumstances of his death. Some sources claimed he was shot two times, others that he had been shot up to five times. One report of his death stated that the city in which he worked, San Pedro Sula, is \"considered the most violent city in the most violent country on the planet\". Espinal's mother stated that he had been at her home in Santa Rita watching television around 9 ", "score": "1.6238754" }, { "id": "5316422", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " His first job as a journalist was with a local television channel in Agua Blanca Sur, Yoro, as a reporter and a presenter. He did both his own field work and presented it later on camera. He told an interviewer that journalists should always be \"objective, impartial, and honest\", and that journalists who take bribes will ultimately be exposed, adding, \"Truth is mighty and will prevail\". He also worked as a correspondent for Radio Progreso. Both the La Frague theater company and Radio Progreso were founded by the Jesuit order in El Progreso, Yoro. As chief correspondent for Hoy Mismo, which aired in San Pedro ", "score": "1.5473511" }, { "id": "5316425", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " on July 19 when an unidentified man phoned and arranged a meeting, which Espinal agree to. Later that evening, according to multiple accounts, Espinal met with friends at a restaurant in Santa Rita, and also left with friends very early on the morning of July 20, 2014. He reportedly arrived back at his mother's home around 3 a.m., parked his car in front of the house, and then voluntarily entered a white panel truck in which three other persons were seated. Some sources added further details, some of which appeared to conflict with others for timeline reasons. It was stated, for example, that ", "score": "1.5463312" }, { "id": null, "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": "Herlyn Espinal\n\nHerlyn Iván Espinal Martínez (14 September 1982 20 July 2014) was a Honduran journalist and television reporter who worked as chief correspondent in San Pedro Sula, the second largest city in Honduras, for Televicentro's daily newscast \"Hoy Mismo\".\n\nEspinal was abducted in the vicinity of Santa Rita, in the department of Yoro, early on the morning of 20 July 2014. He was found dead, a victim of multiple gunshot wounds, in a nearby location on the morning of 21 July. He was the forty-third journalist killed in Honduras since 2013.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Portal:Honduras", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:Recent additions/2014/December", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:Database reports/Unused templates/9", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "18174514", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": "2014. He reportedly arrived back at his mother's home around 3 a.m., parked his car in front of the house, and then voluntarily entered a white panel truck in which three other persons were seated. Some sources added further details, some of which appeared to conflict with others for timeline reasons. It was stated, for example, that Espinal, after leaving Las Tejas at around 2 a.m., had soon after joined up with friends with whom he proceeded to socialize at various other places in Santa Rita. Another detail that was mentioned in some reports but not others had Espinal arriving", "score": "1.5512105" }, { "id": "5316423", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Cortés, Honduras's second largest city, he coordinated all news reports from northern Honduras. On multiple occasions he ran as a Liberal Party candidate for city council, and at the time of his death was planning to run yet again. He said in 2009 that his \"greatest personal ambition\" was to pursue investigative journalism and to become mayor of Santa Rita and create new work opportunities for the town. The two people he admired most, he stated, were his grandmother, \"a worthy example of perseverance and triumph\", and his mother. At the time of his murder, he was living in an apartment in San Pedro Sula.", "score": "1.5129324" }, { "id": "5316426", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " after leaving Las Tejas at around 2 a.m., had soon after joined up with friends with whom he proceeded to socialize at various other places in Santa Rita. Another detail that was mentioned in some reports but not others had Espinal arriving that same night at the Paradise Motel shortly after 3:00 a.m. and leaving it shortly before 4:00 a.m. At least one source stated that he had entered the Paradise Motel with \"a man of fair complexion, height about 1.93 m tall and burly\", and had left the motel with that man, Espinal being at that point \"semi-naked\". Also at around 4 ", "score": "1.499503" }, { "id": "726651", "title": "Ari Espinal", "text": " Aridia Espinal (born c. 1988) is an American politician from New York.", "score": "1.4691113" }, { "id": "5316428", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " Espinal's body was reportedly discovered along a road between the towns of El Olivar and La Danta in an area called El Batey, in the department of Yoro. He was allegedly found face down and shirtless, his body already partially decomposed and his face disfigured by gunfire. Several reports variously described his body as having been found in a vacant lot, in bushes in a pasture, and in a ditch. One report indicated that according to forensics reports, he had been shot five times, sustaining wounds to his arm, torso, neck, and a fatal shot to the back of the head, and had been killed about 24 hours before his body was found, which was inconsistent with known facts. His body was reportedly identified at the scene by his stepfather, José Santos Ramírez, and another relative, José Jiménez. On the same day that Espinal's body was found, a pool of blood and shell casings were purportedly found on a bridge over the Humuya River on the road between Santa Rita and La Barca.", "score": "1.4552312" }, { "id": "5316430", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " una Ciudadanía Participativa (ACI PARTICIPA) and El Centro de Prevención, Tratamiento y Rehabilitación de Victimas de la Tortura y sus Familiares (CPTRT), expressed deep concern over the disappearance and murder of Espinal. Juan Mairena, head of the Honduran journalists' association, called his murder \"a heavy blow for journalism\". After the Honduran Minister of Security, Arturo Corrales, suggested that the killing may have been a crime of passion or the result of an inheritance dispute, rather than an act of retribution motivated by his work as a reporter, PEN, the international organization for writers, expressed concern that investigators had ruled out Espinal's activity as a journalist as a possible motive within 24 hours of his body being found.", "score": "1.4494631" }, { "id": "5316433", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " had attended a party. It was reported that Bueso, after his arrest, had spoken with police for six hours and that he maintained that authorities had singled him out only because he owned a white vehicle similar to the one that Espinal had last been seen entering. Authorities stated with \"great fanfare\" on 29 August that Bueso was \"instrumental\" in the case, but the next day they released him, citing lack of evidence of his involvement. On 31 August, the public prosecutor claimed that Bueso had never been detained, but had simply been interviewed as a witness because he was one of ", "score": "1.447213" }, { "id": "5316436", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " considered a perpetrator, and that there was also an arrest order out for another person in connection with the murder. In mid-September 2014, Hector Hernandez, coordinator of forensic medicine in San Pedro Sula, who had already been subjected to a 15-day suspension, was removed from his position because he had made public statements about the murder of Espinal. He had said that Espinal had died of multiple gunshot wounds, even though evidence had not yet been collected at the scene. While Hernandez would continue to operate as a forensic doctor on call, he would no longer be coordinator of the city morgue.", "score": "1.4258015" }, { "id": "5316434", "title": "Herlyn Espinal", "text": " last people to see Espinal alive. A local commentator, who criticized authorities on 31 August for their supposed sloppiness in the matter of Bueso, also charged them with failing to follow up leads properly and refusing to make information about the investigation publicly available. This same commentator also made sweeping accusations of official corruption and incompetence in the handling of the case, and noted that suspicion had now fallen upon a person named Juan Carlos Acosta Manzanares, although a similarity in names and appearance had caused someone named Juan Carlos Acostas Meléndez to be dragged into the case. On 1 September, Espinal's ", "score": "1.4162192" }, { "id": "27726857", "title": "Raynel Espinal", "text": " Raynel Joseph Espinal (born October 6, 1991) is a Dominican professional baseball pitcher wjp os a free agent. He has made a single appearance in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Boston Red Sox. Listed at 6 ft and 215 lb, he throws and bats right-handed.", "score": "1.409116" }, { "id": "8899115", "title": "Rogelio Espina", "text": " Espina was born in Manila, Philippines. From 1976 to 1980, he studied at the Far Eastern University with a bachelor's degree on zoology. From 1980 to 1984 at the same school, he studied a degree on Doctor of Medicine. He was a medical specialist in the Philippine Department of Health (Valenzuela District) from January 1, 1997 to April 1, 1998.", "score": "1.3929961" }, { "id": "2976460", "title": "Gerardo Espina Jr.", "text": " Gerardo J. Espina Jr. (born August 7, 1970), also known as Gerry Espina, is a Filipino politician. He is currently the Representative of the lone District of Biliran, having been elected in the 2010 elections. Prior to this, he was a member of the 13th Congress of the Philippines as representative of the lone legislative district of Biliran which he served for one term from 2004-2007.", "score": "1.3902413" }, { "id": "12576432", "title": "Pinoy Idol", "text": " 16 and August 17, 2008 at the SMX Convention Center. Gretchen (Stephanie) Espina is 20 from Biliran. She is the daughter of Rogelio J. Espina, the governor of the said province. She is studying in the University of the Philippines, Diliman where she is a member of the internationally acclaimed University of the Philippines Singing Ambassadors (UPSA). During the competition, she was never in the bottom group. She auditioned in Pasay accompanied by a bodyguard. Jay Ann \"Jayann\" Bautista is 21 from Pampanga. She studies in the University of the Philippines, Diliman and her parents run their own businesses. She was formerly a ", "score": "1.3902358" }, { "id": "12596238", "title": "Inday Espina-Varona", "text": " Ma. Salvacion Espina Varona, more popularly known as Inday Espina-Varona is a Filipina journalist. She is Head of Regions for Rappler.com. She was formerly became a senior contributing editor and a writer for ABS-CBN Integrated News & Current Affairs.", "score": "1.3827875" }, { "id": "8124050", "title": "Erika Casupanan", "text": " Casupanan was born in the municipality of Hermosa, located in Bataan, a province of the Philippines. When she was young, she emigrated with her parents to Canada. She grew up in Niagara Falls, Ontario, where she attended St. Paul Catholic High School. She later earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Media, Information & Technoculture from the University of Western Ontario (Western University). Eventually, she moved to Toronto, where she worked as an agency consultant at Media Profile for five years, and a communications manager at Kijiji for four years.", "score": "1.3719412" }, { "id": "8027147", "title": "Gretchen Espina", "text": " Espina came from a musically-inclined family who is also the prominent political family in Biliran, with her father, Congressman Dr. Rogelio \"Roger\" J. Espina, Representative of the Lone District of Biliran, described as a \"good piano player and singer.\" Her mother, Cecil, works as a pediatrician; while her grandfather, Gerry, was a Mayor of Kawayan, Biliran. Her uncle, Gerry (Gerryboy) Espina Jr. is the present Governor of Biliran. Espina was born in Quezon City, Metro Manila, where she spent her early years studying in School of the Holy Spirit before transferring to Naval Central School where she finished elementary level with honors. She had her secondary education in Cathedral School of La Naval, where she graduated as a salutatorian. Espina pursued college in University of the Philippines Diliman campus in Quezon City, with a major in European Languages. She is a member of The University of the Philippines Singing Ambassadors and represented UP in the Inter-Collegiate Singing Contest held in Shantou University, Guangdong, China, where she won the first prize as a solo performer.", "score": "1.3694384" } ]
What is Edward Corser's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Edward Corser
3,994,636
74
[ { "id": "30588349", "title": "Edward Corser", "text": " Corser was born at Upton Cressett, near Birmingham in England, and was educated in Worcester. He migrated to Brisbane, Queensland with his family in 1864 and worked for three years on the Maryborough Sugar Company's plantation. He then worked as a clerk for the Commercial Banking Company of Sydney, variously stationed in Maryborough, Brisbane and Gayndah, rising to become acting manager of the Gayndah branch at the age of 21. In 1872, he opened his own wholesale merchant business, Corser and Co. Ltd., which became a \"large commercial establishment\" at Maryborough selling wine, spirits and general merchandise, and continued to be managed by one of his sons after he entered ", "score": "1.8303025" }, { "id": "30588348", "title": "Edward Corser", "text": " Edward Bernard Cresset Corser (1852 &ndash; 31 July 1928) was an Australian politician. He was a Liberal Party member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly for Maryborough from 1909 to 1915 and a Commonwealth Liberal Party and then Nationalist Party member of the Australian House of Representatives from 1915 until his death.", "score": "1.7874286" }, { "id": "30588350", "title": "Edward Corser", "text": " Corser was a co-founder and president of the Maryborough Chamber of Commerce, a long-serving member and nine-year chairman of the Burrum Divisional Board, president of the Maryborough Harbour Board, president of the Western Railway Association, one of the original shareholders of the Maryborough Co-operative Dairy Association Ltd., and was a member and president of the Maryborough Grammar School board and local hospitals' committee. As a prominent local figure prior to his entry into politics, he championed the construction of the Nanango railway line, Gayndah railway line and the failed Port of Urangan project. He was a supporter of both Federation and the White Australia Policy and was a strong protectionist.", "score": "1.7119396" }, { "id": "1992935", "title": "Corser", "text": "Bernard Corser, (1882–1967) Australian politician ; Edward Corser, (1852–1928) Australian politician ; Frederick Corser, (1849–1924) American architect ; Rodger Corser, (born 1973) Australian actor ; Thomas Corser, (1793–1876) British clergyman ; Troy Corser, (born 1971) Australian motorcycle racer Corser is a surname, and may refer to: ", "score": "1.6155844" }, { "id": "30588412", "title": "Bernard Corser", "text": " Corser was born at Maryborough in 1882 to Edward Corser and Mary Jane (née Stewart). He was educated at Maryborough Christian Brothers' School, Riverview College, Sydney, and returned to Queensland to study at Queensland Agricultural College, Gatton.", "score": "1.516441" }, { "id": null, "title": "Edward Corser", "text": "Edward Corser\n\nEdward Bernard Cresset Corser (1852 – 31 July 1928) was an Australian politician. He was a Liberal Party member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly for Maryborough from 1909 to 1915 and a Commonwealth Liberal Party and then Nationalist Party member of the Australian House of Representatives from 1915 until his death.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bernard Corser", "text": "Bernard Corser\n\nBernard Henry Corser (4 January 1882 – 15 December 1967) was a politician in Queensland, Australia. He was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly from 1912 to 1928 and a member of the Australian House of Representatives from 1928 to 1954.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Joseph Booker", "text": "Charles Joseph Booker\n\nCharles Joseph Booker (3 June 1865 – 4 June 1925) was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "William Mitchell (Australian politician)", "text": "William Mitchell (Australian politician)\n\nWilliam Mitchell (March 1850 - 21 May 1923) was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrew Fisher", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "25632923", "title": "John M. Corse", "text": " Corse was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but moved at the age of seven with his family to Burlington in the Iowa Territory. His father, John Lockwood Corse, served six terms as the mayor of that town and established a prosperous book and stationery business. Young Corse became a partner in the family business. He was appointed to the United States Military Academy and studied there for two years. Leaving West Point in 1855, Corse chose not to stay in the military, but instead attended a law school in Albany, New York, and passed his bar exam. He later returned to Iowa and was nominated as the new state's lieutenant governor by the Iowa Democratic Party. In 1860, he unsuccessfully ran for secretary of state.", "score": "1.462837" }, { "id": "30588411", "title": "Bernard Corser", "text": " Bernard Henry Corser (4 January 1882 &ndash; 15 December 1967) was a politician in Queensland, Australia. He was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly from 1912 to 1928 and a member of the Australian House of Representatives from 1928 to 1954.", "score": "1.461197" }, { "id": "12672278", "title": "Edward Gonner", "text": " Gonner was born on 5 March 1862 in Mayfair, London, to Peter Kersey Gonner, a silk mercer, and Elizabeth Carter. He attended Merchant Taylors' School in London, before matriculating at Lincoln College, Oxford in 1880, graduating B.A. in 1884.", "score": "1.4558742" }, { "id": "15345032", "title": "Eskdale, Maryborough", "text": " 1868 James Dowzer retired to a dairy farm near Tiaro and Eskdale was acquired by solicitor Edward Corser, who had arrived in Brisbane in 1863 and moved to Maryborough the following year. The house was reportedly not yet finished when the Corser family moved in, and they named it as a reminder of Eskdale in the Lake District of Northern England. Corser died in 1874, and his son, Edward Bernard Corser, inherited the property. E. B. Corser was a prominent local merchant, establishing the business of Corser and Co., and later a successful politician, serving in both the Legislative Assembly of Queensland and Australian House of Representatives. E. ", "score": "1.4473352" }, { "id": "3116688", "title": "Rodger Corser", "text": " Corser's big role came in 1998, when he was cast in the leading role (from a field of 6,000) in the Australian production of the musical Rent. Corser portrayed the role of Roger, an HIV-positive musician. The show played seasons in Sydney and Melbourne and launched Corser into a successful career in television. His other theatre credits include Leader of the Pack and Below. In 2009, he took to the stage in the theatre production Secret Bridesmaids' Business. Corser played Detective Senior Constable George Newhouse in the final four episodes of Water Rats in 2001. Corser played Peter Johnson in the Australian drama ", "score": "1.4344323" }, { "id": "15345033", "title": "Eskdale, Maryborough", "text": " Corser died at home at Eskdale while still a serving federal MP in 1928, and Eskdale was transferred to one of his sons, Edward Stewart Corser. E. S. Corser retained ownership until 1961, and it remained in the Corser family until October 1975 when it was bought by Peter and Jacqueline Holtorf. The Holtorfs used the residence as their family home until 1999 when they converted the house into a Bed and Breakfast. The original section of the house has been authentically restored and is used for guests. The house originally stood on five acres of land on which there were three tennis courts, stables and gymnasium all ", "score": "1.4337004" }, { "id": "30588351", "title": "Edward Corser", "text": " In 1909, he was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Queensland as the member for the multi-member seat of Maryborough, and when it became a single-member seat in 1912 was re-elected by only 10 votes. A by-election was ordered, which he was eventually declared to have won by 2 votes; a further challenge did not proceed for procedural reasons. He was defeated at the 1915 state election. His son, Bernard Corser, sat in the Legislative Assembly along with him as the member for Burnett. In 1915, as the candidate of the conservative Commonwealth Liberal Party, he transferred to federal Parliament by winning the ", "score": "1.4275954" }, { "id": "29442523", "title": "Edward Sexton", "text": " Edward Sexton (born 9 November 1942) is a British Savile Row tailor, fashion designer and manufacturing consultant. Sexton has been called a key player in the history of Savile Row.", "score": "1.4172117" }, { "id": "13563778", "title": "Edward", "text": "Edward Barker, English cartoonist who signed his drawings simply as Edward ; Edward Blishen, English author ; Ed Byrne (academic), Principal of King's College London and former Vice-Chancellor of Monash University ; Edward Duyker (born 1955), Australian historian ; Edward Dutton, English author ; Edward Elgar (1857–1934), English composer ; Edward Gamble, English comedian ; Edward Gibbons, English musician ; Edward Gorey, American illustrator ; Edward Gould, English animator and creator of Eddsworld ; Edward Grimes, one of the two members of Irish pop duo Jedward ; Edward Hopper (1882–1967), American realist painter ; Edward Jayakody (born 1952), Sri Lankan Sinhala musician and composer ; Edward Killy, American filmmaker ; Edward Daniel Leahy, Irish painter ; Edward MacDowell (1860–1908), American composer and pianist ; Edward Norton (born 1969), American actor ; Edward Platt, (1916-1974), American actor ; Edward John David \"Eddie\" Redmayne (born 1982), English actor ; Edward Said (1935–2003), Palestinian-American academic ; Ed Sheeran, English singer-songwriter and musician ; Edward van de Vendel, Dutch author of children's literature ; Edward \"Eddie\" Van Halen, Dutch-American musician ; Eddie Vedder, American singer, musician, songwriter ; Edward W. Hardy (born 1992), American composer, musician, and producer ", "score": "1.4157951" }, { "id": "26691588", "title": "Edward Stevenson (costume designer)", "text": " Edward Manson Stevenson was born in Pocatello, Idaho on May 13, 1906 to Jennie Uhland Stevenson (née Dolly) and Andrew Burtner Stevenson. Andrew worked for the Oregon Shortline Railroad, a subsidiary of Union Pacific, rising from dispatch clerk to division superintendent. He served a term in 1903 as senator from Bannock County in the Idaho state legislature and was the Republican nominee in 1907 for Pocatello mayor. Andrew's political activity was often limited by time spent fulfilling his duties with the railroad, duties which included a great deal of travel. Jennie, a widowed former schoolteacher, had two sons from her first marriage ", "score": "1.4082531" }, { "id": "10161283", "title": "Edward Sels", "text": " Edward Sels (born 27 August 1941 at Vorselaar, Belgium) is a former Belgian professional road bicycle racer. He was professional from 1963 to 1972, winning 35 races. He was road champion of Belgium in 1961 (Military) and 1964. He won seven stages in the Tour de France and one in the Giro d'Italia. He wore the yellow jersey for two days in the 1964 Tour de France. His sister, Rosa Sels, was a cyclist too.", "score": "1.4040847" }, { "id": "28071574", "title": "Edward Henry Corbould", "text": "(web version: ) ", "score": "1.4020488" }, { "id": "9244369", "title": "Edward Morris (basketball)", "text": " Edward Bernard Morris Jr. (born May 4, 1984) is a US-born Japanese professional basketball player for the Yokohama B-Corsairs in Japan. He played college basketball for the Pittsburg State University Gorillas.", "score": "1.4005889" }, { "id": "3116687", "title": "Rodger Corser", "text": " Corser graduated from Deakin University in 1996 with an Honours B.A. in Media Studies. He formed a band called Tender Prey when he was 16. They played their majority of gigs at the Shoppingtown Hotel, Doncaster, Victoria. He was also lead vocalist in a band called Stone the Crows. They played Rolling Stones and Black Crowes covers as well as many original songs. They released \"Perfect Face\" on a Nu-Music CD in the mid-1990s. Corser was also the lead vocalist in a 4-piece cover band called \"Sideshow Bob\" that played around a few Melbourne pubs during the mid-late 90s (1995–1996) – namely at places like the Royal Hotel in Essendon, Victoria, Australia.", "score": "1.3986468" }, { "id": "7055252", "title": "Edward Augustus Brackett", "text": " Edward Augustus Brackett (October 1, 1818 – March 15, 1908) was a self-taught American sculptor, author, and conservationist. Brackett was born in Vassalboro, Maine to Reuben and Elizabeth (Starkey) Brackett, and moved with his parents in the spring of 1837 to Cincinnati, where he started work as a sculptor. In 1839 he showed a pair of portrait busts at the Cincinnati Academy of Fine Arts, and subsequently moved to New York City. In 1841, after roughly two years in New York, he moved to Boston with an introduction from his friend William Cullen Bryant, where from 1843 he lived in Winchester, ", "score": "1.3971109" } ]
What is John Finlay's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
John Finlay (Canadian politician)
4,711,830
48
[ { "id": "5833268", "title": "John Finlay (footballer)", "text": " John Finlay (16 February 1919 – 5 March 1985) was an English professional footballer who played as an inside forward for Sunderland. John Finlay made his debut on the 11th of September 1946 as a substitute for Sunderland AFC on their 4th match of the season in Division 1 against Charlton Athletic. 27,425 attended the match witnessing John's Debut. The Match which started at 6:00pm at Charlton Athletic's stadium “The Valley” was refereed by W.H.E Evans", "score": "1.6728635" }, { "id": "6137936", "title": "Andrew Finlay", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.6535826" }, { "id": "7879702", "title": "John Finlay (poet)", "text": " John Finlay (1782–1810) was a Scottish poet.", "score": "1.6485124" }, { "id": "7879703", "title": "John Finlay (poet)", "text": " Finlay was born in Glasgow in December 1782. He was educated in one of the academies at Glasgow, and at the age of fourteen entered the university, where he had as a classmate John Wilson (alias 'Christopher North'), who states that he was distinguished \"above most of his contemporaries\". The prospect of obtaining a situation in one of the public offices led him to visit London in 1807, and while there he contributed to the magazines some articles on antiquarian subjects. Not finding suitable employment he returned to Glasgow in 1808. He began to collect materials for a continuation of Warton's History of Poetry, but in 1810 he left Glasgow to visit Professor Wilson at Ellerlay, Westmoreland; on the way he fell ill at Moffat, and died there on 8 December.", "score": "1.6356311" }, { "id": "30032455", "title": "John Finlay (Canadian politician)", "text": " John Finlay (April 22, 1837 &ndash; November 13, 1910) was a Canadian politician. Born in Dummer Township, Peterborough County, Upper Canada, Finlay was educated in the Public Schools of Dummer. A manufacturer, Finlay was Councillor and Reeve of the Village of Norwood and County Councillor. He was elected to the House of Commons of Canada for the electoral district of Peterborough East in the general elections of 1904. A Liberal, he did not run in the 1908 elections.", "score": "1.6026491" }, { "id": null, "title": "John Martin Finlay", "text": "John Martin Finlay\n\nJohn Martin Finlay (January 24, 1941 – February 17, 1991) was an American poet and writer of essays, reviews, fiction, letters, and diaries. \n\nFinlay is best known for his posthumously published poetry collection, \"Mind and Blood: The Collected Poems of John Finlay\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jacques Raphael Finlay", "text": "Jacques Raphael Finlay\n\nJacques Raphaël Finlay (1768–1828), commonly known as Jaco or Jacco (pr. Jocko), was an early Canadian fur trader, scout, and explorer associated with the North West Company. He built Spokane House and Kootanae House, two key fur-trading posts of the era, and helped David Thompson cross the Continental Divide and discover the Columbia River.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Francis Dalzell Finlay", "text": "Francis Dalzell Finlay\n\nFrancis Dalzell Finlay (1793–1857), was an Irish journalist.\n\nFinlay was the son of John Finlay, tenant farmer, of Newtownards, County Down, by his wife, Jane Dalzell, was born 12 July 1793 at Newtownards, and began life as a printer's apprentice in Belfast, where he started as a master printer in 1820. The letterpress which issued from his works was distinguished by both accuracy and elegance, being far superior to any that had previously been produced in Ireland.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "David Rintoul", "text": "David Rintoul\n\nDavid Rintoul (born David Wilson; 29 November 1948) is a Scottish stage and television actor. Rintoul was born in Aberdeen, Scotland. He studied at the University of Edinburgh, and won a scholarship to study at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "George Finlay", "text": "George Finlay\n\nGeorge Finlay (21 December 1799 – 26 January 1875) was a Scottish historian.", "score": null }, { "id": "8838045", "title": "John Finlay (fur trader)", "text": " John Finlay (1774 – December 19, 1833) was a fur trader and explorer with the North West Company. He is best remembered for establishing the first fur trading post in what is now British Columbia, Canada and for his exploration of the Finlay River, one of the two major rivers forming the Peace River. Finlay was born in Montreal, the son of James Finlay, who himself was a significant player in the western Canadian fur trade. Finlay was apprenticed as a clerk in the North West Company in 1789 at the age of 15. He accompanied Alexander Mackenzie on his historic trip across the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean in 1792-93 becoming, with him, the first European to traverse North America. He was placed ", "score": "1.59461" }, { "id": "14072084", "title": "Matt Finlay", "text": " Matt Finlay (born September 28, 1962 in Toronto, Ontario) is a former professional Canadian football linebacker who played one season with the Montreal Alouettes and nine seasons for the Calgary Stampeders of the Canadian Football League.", "score": "1.5767738" }, { "id": "30736550", "title": "John Finlayson (engraver)", "text": " John Finlayson (c. 1730–1776) was an English engraver. Finlayson was born about the year 1730, and worked in London. In 1773 he received a premium from the Society of Arts, and about three years after this he died. He engraved in mezzotint several portraits, and a few plates of historical subjects.", "score": "1.5701385" }, { "id": "29418044", "title": "Harold John Finlay", "text": " Harold John Finlay (22 March 1901 – 7 April 1951) was a New Zealand palaeontologist and conchologist. He was born in Comilla, India (now Bangladesh), on 22 March 1901. His main research interest was marine and non-marine malacofauna of New Zealand, both recent and fossil. He also specialised on fossil Foraminifera. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of New Zealand in 1939, and was awarded the scoiety's Hector Memorial Medal in 1941.", "score": "1.5601242" }, { "id": "11290975", "title": "John Baird Finlay", "text": " John Baird Finlay (January 29, 1929 &ndash; October 17, 2010) was a member of the House of Commons of Canada from 1993 to 2004. His career had been in the school system, as a teacher and superintendent. Finlay was born in 1929 in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. He attended John Wanless public school in Toronto (1934–36), then a PNEU school in Croydon. England in 1936. He returned to Toronto in 1937 and attended Hodgson public school until 1942 followed by University of Toronto Schools until 1947. He then studied at Victoria College, Toronto earning a Bachelor of Arts in 1952. His teaching career included ", "score": "1.5570289" }, { "id": "6619809", "title": "John Martin Finlay", "text": " John Martin Finlay (January 24, 1941 – February 17, 1991) was an American poet and writer of essays, reviews, fiction, letters, and diaries. Finlay is best known for his posthumously published poetry collection, Mind and Blood: The Collected Poems of John Finlay.", "score": "1.5367768" }, { "id": "25651834", "title": "George Finlay", "text": " Finlay was born in Faversham, Kent, where his Scottish father, Captain John Finlay FRS, an officer in the Royal Engineers, was inspector of government powder mills. Finlay's father died in 1802, and his Scottish mother and uncle (Kirkman Finlay) took hand of his education. His love of history was attributed to his mother. Intended for the law, he was educated at the University of Glasgow, the University of Göttingen, and the University of Edinburgh, but becoming an enthusiast in the cause of Greece, he joined Byron in the war of independence, and thereafter bought a property near Athens, where he settled and busied himself with schemes for the improvement of the country, which met with little success. For many years, he acted as the special correspondent of the London Times. He was elected ", "score": "1.5281287" }, { "id": "28330420", "title": "Richard J. Finlay", "text": " Some of his main publications include: He has also edited such books as:", "score": "1.526387" }, { "id": "15589585", "title": "Bob Finlay", "text": " Robert Finlay (born 3 August 1943) is a Canadian long-distance runner. He competed in the 5000 metres at the 1968 Summer Olympics and the 1972 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.5248778" }, { "id": "10844458", "title": "Finlay Macdonald (minister)", "text": " Finlay A. J. Macdonald is a retired minister of the Church of Scotland. He was Principal Clerk to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland from 1996 until 2010. In addition to his rapid rise up the ranks of the Church of Scotland, Macdonald is known for fostering co-operation between the various boards and committees which administer the Church and for steering the Church smoothly through its annual business meetings.", "score": "1.5171382" }, { "id": "6443480", "title": "Jock Finlay", "text": " John Finlay (19 October 1882 – 31 March 1933) was a Scottish footballer who played as a left half for Rangers (where he played only once in the Scottish Football League in his first season as a professional), Airdrieonians (where he became an established top division regular over five years), and Newcastle United (where he was registered as a player for 15 years, though World War I interrupted his career and the last few seasons involved only a handful of appearances – by then he was also working as a trainer for the club, a position he held until 1930). Finlay was selected once for the Scottish Football League XI in 1909, and in 1920 played in the Home Scots v Anglo-Scots international trial match, but he never received a full cap for Scotland.", "score": "1.5141184" }, { "id": "9545452", "title": "Ian Finlay (cricketer)", "text": " Ian William Finlay (born 14 May 1946 in Woking) was an English first-class cricketer active 1971–74 who played for Surrey.", "score": "1.5082836" }, { "id": "247298", "title": "William Finlay", "text": " William was born in Lisburn, Ireland on July 12, 1853 and worked in the whole sale grocery business before moving to Montreal, Quebec in 1873. He moved to the Medicine Hat region 10 years later in 1883 and started working for the Northwest Lumber Company, and later his own firm Finlay and Company. He got married and became interested in territorial politics in 1898.", "score": "1.5074791" }, { "id": "6137934", "title": "Andrew Finlay", "text": " Andrew Finlay (born 10 February 1901; date of death unknown) was a Scottish footballer who played as a forward for Port Vale, Airdrieonians, Manchester City, Crewe Alexandra, Third Lanark, Dundee United and Hibernian in the 1920s.", "score": "1.500494" }, { "id": "8838047", "title": "John Finlay (fur trader)", "text": " Finlay in 1824, noting that \"he had studied Finlay’s chart.\" Nonetheless, it would appear from the information Black had that Finlay had only made it as far as the Ingenika River, about 130 km north of the Finlay River's confluence with the Peace. Indeed, Black's journal makes clear that the northern branch, far from being less complicated, was all but impassable in many parts, perhaps explaining Finlay's reluctance to travel more than about one-quarter of the river's actual length. Finlay remained in the North West Company's Athabasca Department, becoming a partner of the company in 1799. He retired from the fur trade in 1804 and returned to Montreal. Little is known of his life there, except that he obtained an appointment as deputy commissary-general.", "score": "1.5003464" } ]
What is Bruce McDaniel's occupation?
[ "composer" ]
occupation
Bruce McDaniel
3,583,128
91
[ { "id": "8011557", "title": "Bruce McDaniel", "text": " Bruce McDaniel (born September 23, 1962) is an American musician, composer, producer and recording engineer, currently living in New Orleans. Bruce McDaniel was born in Boston, Massachusetts of Mexican and Scottish/American parents on 23 September 1962 and grew up in New York. He was raised by musical parents who met while attending the Juilliard School of Music. He had an early start in NYC's underground punk rock scene as lead guitarist for the Sic F*cks with Tish Bellomo and Snooky Bellomo, a band who, despite the inability to have their name said on the radio, parlayed their comedy-punk spectacle to a feature in Playboy Magazine and movie appearances, including 1982's Alone in ", "score": "1.7091708" }, { "id": "33123058", "title": "Jerry McDaniel", "text": " '91\" poster. An official AFL-CIO special-run artist-signed copy of this print is in the University of Missouri St. Louis Art Collection – \"The Bruce & Barbara Feldacker Labor Art Collection\", and the Special Collections of the Frostburg State University, Frostburg, MD. McDaniel has also conceived and produced short films and film titles, among them the film ICE (Idea, Composition, and Execution) and the film titles for The Bolshoi at The Bolshoi. In 2008, the New York Society of Illustrators commemorated the 50th anniversary of their Annual Show by publishing a book entitled Icons and Images: 50 Years of Illustration, containing 500 ", "score": "1.5812864" }, { "id": "25075024", "title": "Randall McDaniel", "text": " Randall Cornell McDaniel (born December 19, 1964) is an American former football player who was a guard in the National Football League (NFL).", "score": "1.5408397" }, { "id": "8401702", "title": "Ed McDaniel", "text": " Edward McDaniel (born March 23, 1969) is a former American football linebacker in the NFL. He was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings, 5th round (125th overall) of the 1992 Draft. He spent his entire professional career with the Minnesota Vikings. McDaniel is a co-owner of D1 Sports Training in Greenville, South Carolina. He resides in a suburb of the Twin Cities in Minnesota and owns a number of apartment buildings in Minneapolis and St. Paul.", "score": "1.5247586" }, { "id": "9439297", "title": "John McDaniel", "text": " John McDaniel (born September 23, 1951 in Birmingham, Alabama) is a former American football wide receiver in the National Football League for the Cincinnati Bengals and the Washington Redskins. He played college football at Lincoln University of Missouri and was drafted in the eighth round of the 1974 NFL Draft.", "score": "1.5160909" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gene McDaniels", "text": "Gene McDaniels\n\nEugene Booker McDaniels (February 12, 1935 – July 29, 2011) was an American singer and songwriter. He had his greatest recording success in the early 1960s, reaching number three on the U.S. \"Billboard\" Hot 100 singles chart with \"A Hundred Pounds of Clay\" and number five with \"Tower Of Strength,\" both hits in 1961. He had continued success as a songwriter with titles including \"Compared to What\" and Roberta Flack's \"Feel Like Makin' Love\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bruce Channel", "text": "Bruce Channel\n\nBruce Channel ( ; born November 28, 1940) is an American singer-songwriter best known for his 1962 million-selling number-one hit record, \"Hey! Baby\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bo Diddley", "text": "Bo Diddley\n\nEllas McDaniel (born Ellas Otha Bates; December 30, 1928 – June 2, 2008), known professionally as Bo Diddley, was an American guitarist who played a key role in the transition from the blues to rock and roll. He influenced many artists, including Buddy Holly, Elvis Presley, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, The Animals, George Thorogood, and The Clash.\n\nHis use of African rhythms and a signature beat, a simple five-accent hambone rhythm, is a cornerstone of hip hop, rock, and pop music. In recognition of his achievements, he was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1987, the Blues Hall of Fame in 2003, and the Rhythm and Blues Music Hall of Fame in 2017. Diddley is also recognized for his technical innovations, including his use of tremolo and reverb effects to enhance the sound of his distinctive rectangular-shaped guitars.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jay McDaniel", "text": "Jay McDaniel\n\nJay B. McDaniel is an American philosopher and theologian. He specializes in Buddhism, Whiteheadian process philosophy and process theology, constructive theology, ecotheology, interfaith dialogue, and spirituality in an age of consumerism. His current interest is \"to see how these myriad concerns might unfold in China\".\n\nIn addition to publishing numerous books and articles, McDaniel is an active voices for process philosophy and theology on social media. He runs a blog called [www.openhorizons.org \"Open Horizons\"], formerly \"Jesus, Jazz, and Buddhism\", whose aim is \"to offer ideas that might help people create multi-cultural, interfaith communities that are creative, compassionate, participatory, ecologically wise, and spiritually enjoyable\". He also created a series of YouTube videos on process thought. He's also a consultant for the China Project of the Center for Process Studies in Claremont, California, and a member of the advisory board of the Institute for Postmodern Development of China.\n\nHe earned a B.A. in English literature and Philosophy from Vanderbilt University and a Ph.D. in Philosophy of Religion and Theology from Claremont Graduate University.<ref name=\"about\"/>\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fritz Werner", "text": "Fritz Werner\n\nFritz Werner (15 December 1898 – 22 December 1977) was a German choral conductor, church music director, conductor, organist and composer. He founded the Heinrich-Schütz-Chor Heilbronn in 1947 and conducted it until 1973.", "score": null }, { "id": "4495677", "title": "Hardy McLain", "text": " Bruce Hardy McLain was born in September 1952, in San Francisco, US. McLain earned a bachelor's degree in economics and public policy from Duke University, North Carolina, followed by an MBA in finance and marketing from UCLA, California.", "score": "1.5029008" }, { "id": "11039178", "title": "Pellom McDaniels", "text": " Pellom McDaniels III (February 21, 1968 – April 19, 2020 ) was an American professional football player who was a defensive lineman in the National Football League (NFL). After his playing career, he became a professor and curator at Emory University.", "score": "1.4879283" }, { "id": "12466064", "title": "Steve McDaniel", "text": " Steve K. McDaniel is a former Republican Party Representative from the US state of Tennessee, having represented all of Henderson, Chester, Decatur and Perry Counties.", "score": "1.4839301" }, { "id": "9697872", "title": "David McDaniel", "text": " David McDaniel was born 16 June 1939, in Toledo, Ohio. He studied cinematography at San Diego State University, then moved to Los Angeles. While living in Los Angeles he joined science fiction fandom, using the pseudonym Ted Johnstone. This makes him one of the few authors to write under his real name but conduct his social life under a pseudonym. He was also known by the nickname \"Tedron\", the name of his character in a Shared universe fantasy called Coventry. David McDaniel died sometime in the early morning of 1 November 1977 while alone at his home. At the time of his death he was contracted to fly to Baton Rouge, Louisiana for freelance work as a cameraman.", "score": "1.4790139" }, { "id": "32916678", "title": "Terry McDaniel", "text": " Terence Lee McDaniel (born February 8, 1965) is a former American football player who played 11 seasons in the National Football League, mostly with the Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders. A 5'10\", 180-pound cornerback, he played college football at the University of Tennessee, and was selected in the first round (9th overall) of the 1988 NFL Draft. A five-time Pro Bowl selection from 1992 to 1996, McDaniel had 35 career interceptions for 667 yards and 6 touchdowns. His five interceptions returned for touchdowns over his career with the Raiders are a team record. His 34 interceptions are the third-highest in franchise history, and his 624 return yards are the second-highest.", "score": "1.478832" }, { "id": "33123048", "title": "Jerry McDaniel", "text": " Jerry W. McDaniel (born 1935) is an American heterogeneous artist; graphics artist, illustrator, communication designer, educator and modernist painter. He distinguished himself by doing advertising work for numerous large corporations (PanAm, Intercontinental Hotels, Philip Morris International), creating posters, doing book and magazine illustrations, and influencing numerous students of advertising and communication design. In parallel with his commercial career he was a prolific multimedia artist, painting in acrylic and in watercolor, in various fields such as landscape, portraits, sports, and political graphics. He also designed sports stamps. He was one of the first illustrators to embrace computer graphics.", "score": "1.4785742" }, { "id": "6487874", "title": "James McDaniel", "text": " James McDaniel (born March 25, 1958) is an American stage, film and television actor. He is best known for playing Lt. Arthur Fancy on the television show NYPD Blue. He created the role of Paul in the hit Lincoln Center play Six Degrees of Separation. He played a police officer in the ill-fated 1990 series Cop Rock, and a close advisor to the director Spike Lee regarding the activist Malcolm X in the 1992 film Malcolm X. He also played Sgt. Jesse Longford in the ABC television series Detroit 1-8-7. He was born in Washington, D.C.", "score": "1.4779923" }, { "id": "4495676", "title": "Hardy McLain", "text": " Bruce Hardy McLain (born September 1952) is an American retired hedge fund manager, and a co-founder and former managing partner of CVC Capital Partners.", "score": "1.4774718" }, { "id": "13235941", "title": "Clint McDaniel", "text": " Clinton Eugene McDaniel (born February 26, 1972) is a retired American professional basketball player. A 6'4\" (1.93 m) guard from the University of Arkansas, McDaniel was a key member of the 1994 National Championship team that defeated Duke University, 76–72. Born and raised in Tulsa, Oklahoma, McDaniel was considered the best on ball defender in the country. McDaniel went on to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA),signing as a free agent Sacramento Kings during the 1995-96 NBA season signing with the Washington Wizards 1996–97 season but later released. He has also played professionally in Europe and in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL) with the Perth Wildcats and the South East Melbourne Magic. McDaniel has been selected as a recipient of the prestigious 2014 SEC Men's Basketball Legends Award. McDaniel is the first of only two players in SEC history to ever record 100 steals in a single season(102). McDaniel was named to the AP 3rd Team All-Conference 1995, and named to the 1995 Final Four All-Tournament Team.", "score": "1.4764533" }, { "id": "11039181", "title": "Pellom McDaniels", "text": " Following his collegiate career, McDaniels worked for Procter & Gamble as a Health and Beauty Care representative in the Portland, Oregon area before pursuing a professional football career in the World League of American Football with the Birmingham Fire. In 1991, McDaniels signed his first contract in the National Football League with the Philadelphia Eagles. After having hip surgery, he spent his recovery time coaching football defensive lineman at Sunset High School in Beaverton, Oregon. Pellom spent his evenings after practice working on his own reconditioning and strength building. He was considered one of the best coaches to have worked at Sunset High according to his students. In 1992, the Kansas City Chiefs asked McDaniels to ", "score": "1.4762685" }, { "id": "11312642", "title": "Wayne McDaniel", "text": " Wayne McDaniel is an American former professional basketball player. He spent much of his career in the Australian National Basketball League (NBL), playing 288 games from 1983-1994. He scored over 7,600 points in his career at an average of 26.5 points per game over twelve seasons with 4 teams. He was a four-time NBL All-Star. Born in San Francisco, California, McDaniel played college basketball for the Cal State Bakersfield Roadrunners from 1980 to 1982. He played professionally for the Adelaide 36ers (1983), Geelong Supercats (1984–1985), Newcastle Falcons (1986–1988) and Hobart Devils (1989–1994) of the NBL. Setting many single-game and single-season records, he retired in 1995. As of the ", "score": "1.4649651" }, { "id": "12047895", "title": "Rodger McDaniel", "text": " University of Wyoming College of Law with a Juris Doctor Degree and practiced law for twenty years, specializing in employment and insurance law. McDaniel also served as the Wyoming lobbyist for State Farm Insurance and Anheuser Busch Companies for all of his legal career. He also participated, as a member of the Lawyer's Guild, as a human rights observer in Guatemala. From 1991–1992, McDaniel and his family joined Habitat for Humanity as International Partners in Guatemala and Nicaragua. Shortly after his return to Wyoming, McDaniel closed his law practice in order to attend Iliff School of Theology in Denver, Colorado, earning a Masters in Divinity Degree. Between 1999 and 2002, McDaniel consulted for the Wyoming Department of Health's Substance Abuse Division, where he ", "score": "1.4602727" }, { "id": "9697871", "title": "David McDaniel", "text": " David Edward McDaniel (16 June 1939 &ndash; 1 November 1977) was an American science fiction author, who also wrote spy fiction, including several novels based upon the television series The Man from U.N.C.L.E.", "score": "1.4593353" }, { "id": "31640190", "title": "Bruce McLenna", "text": " A native of Holly, Michigan, McLenna grew up in Fenton, Michigan.", "score": "1.4548012" }, { "id": "12350931", "title": "Jim McMullan", "text": " James P. McMullan (October 13, 1936 – May 31, 2019 ) was an American actor from Long Island, New York, best known for his role as Dr. Terry McDaniel on the 1960s series Ben Casey and as Senator Andrew Dowling on the CBS primetime soap opera Dallas. McMullan studied Industrial Design at New York University and Parsons School of Design; he graduated from the University of Kansas in 1961 with a Bachelor of Architecture degree. Guest starred in a 1962 episode of Laramie, as Virg Walker", "score": "1.451833" } ]
What is Edwin Wallock's occupation?
[ "actor", "actress", "actors", "actresses" ]
occupation
Edwin Wallock
2,303,897
68
[ { "id": "1632413", "title": "Edwin Wallock", "text": " Edwin Wallock (November 6, 1877 &ndash; February 4, 1951) was an American actor of the silent film era. He appeared in 60 films between 1912 and 1923. He was born in Council Bluffs, Iowa and died in Los Angeles, California.", "score": "1.9331672" }, { "id": "4590667", "title": "Ronnie Wallwork", "text": " Ronald Wallwork (born 10 September 1977) is an English former professional footballer who played as a midfielder. An England under-20 international, he began his career at Manchester United, where he made his professional debut in 1997. He never fully established himself in the United first-team however, and was loaned out to Carlisle United and Stockport County. During a further loan spell at Royal Antwerp, he was banned from football for life for attacking a Belgian referee, although the ban was later substantially reduced. In 2002, Wallwork moved to West Bromwich Albion, where he was the Player of the Year for 2004–05. He was not always a regular in the side however, and spent time on loan at ", "score": "1.5390942" }, { "id": "12133673", "title": "Frank K. Hallock", "text": " Frank Kirkwood Hallock (August 18, 1860 – April 29, 1937) was an American medical doctor and book collector. He was born in Oyster Bay, Long Island, on August 18, 1860. Hallock received a Bachelor of Arts in 1882 and a Master of Arts in 1885, both from Wesleyan University; and a MD from the College of Physicians at Wesleyan in 1885. He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He studied neurology in Germany for two years. He was medical director at Cromwell Hall from 1890 until his death. He was also director and president of the Cromwell Savings Bank. Hallock was a trustee of Wesleyan University from 1917 to 1937. He died in Cromwell, Connecticut on April 29, 1937.", "score": "1.5361872" }, { "id": "10005401", "title": "Merrill G. Wheelock", "text": " Merrill Greene Wheelock (1822&ndash;1866) was an artist and architect in Boston, Massachusetts in the 19th century. He served in the Massachusetts infantry in the American Civil War.", "score": "1.4850821" }, { "id": "6493182", "title": "Nathan M. Hallock", "text": " Nathan Mullock Hallock (August 23, 1844 - March 21, 1903) was a Union Army soldier in the American Civil War who received the U.S. military's highest decoration, the Medal of Honor. Hallock was born in Mount Hope, New York on August 23, 1844. He was awarded the Medal of Honor, for extraordinary heroism shown on June 15, 1863, while serving as a Private with Company K, 124th New York Volunteer Infantry Regiment, at Bristoe Station, Virginia. His Medal of Honor was issued on September 10, 1897. Hallock died at the age of 58, on March 21, 1903 and was buried at Hillside Cemetery in Middletown, Orange County, New York.", "score": "1.465008" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Male actors from Iowa", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Oliver Curwood", "text": "James Oliver Curwood\n\nJames Oliver Curwood (June 12, 1878 – August 13, 1927) was an American action-adventure writer and conservationist. His books were often based on adventures set in the Hudson Bay area, the Yukon or Alaska and ranked among the top-ten best sellers in the United States in the early and mid 1920s, according to \"Publishers Weekly.\" At least one hundred and eighty motion pictures have been based on or directly inspired by his novels and short stories; one was produced in three versions from 1919 to 1953. At the time of his death, Curwood was the highest paid (per word) author in the world.\nHe built Curwood Castle as a place to greet guests and as a writing studio in his hometown of Owosso, Michigan. The castle was listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is now operated by the city as a museum. The city commemorates him with an annual Curwood Festival.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Hans Wallach", "text": "Hans Wallach\n\nHans Wallach (November 28, 1904 – February 5, 1998) was a German-American experimental psychologist whose research focused on perception and learning. Although he was trained in the Gestalt psychology tradition, much of his later work explored the adaptability of perceptual systems based on the perceiver's experience, whereas most Gestalt theorists emphasized inherent qualities of stimuli and downplayed the role of experience. Wallach's studies of achromatic surface color laid the groundwork for subsequent theories of lightness constancy, and his work on sound localization elucidated the perceptual processing that underlies stereophonic sound. He was a member of the National Academy of Sciences, a Guggenheim Fellow, and recipient of the Howard Crosby Warren Medal of the Society of Experimental Psychologists.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "The Cold Deck (film)", "text": "The Cold Deck (film)\n\nThe Cold Deck is a 1917 American silent Western film directed by and starring William S. Hart.\n\nAn incomplete copy of the film is at the Library of Congress.<ref name=LOC/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Wallach", "text": "John Wallach\n\nJohn Paul Wallach, (January 18, 1943 – July 10, 2002) born in New York City, was an American journalist, and author. He served as foreign editor and diplomatic correspondent for \"Hearst newspapers\" for nearly 30-years, traveling to more than 70 countries with five different Presidents, Lyndon B. Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, Jimmy Carter, and Ronald Reagan.\n\nAfter the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, Wallach founded Seeds of Peace, an international summer camp that brings children together from all over the world who are dealing with war and conflict. After the September 11 attacks, Wallach hosted a five-day conference that brought visitors and representatives from all over the world to support the prevention of terrorism.\n\nWallach was the son of German Jews, Paul and Edith Wallach, who escaped Nazi Germany in 1941, after the government took possession of their family's clothing factory. Wallach died of lung cancer in New York City; he was survived by his wife, Janet, and two sons.<ref name=\":0\" />", "score": null }, { "id": "6574579", "title": "Stephen Warnock", "text": " Stephen Warnock (born 12 December 1981) is an English former professional footballer who played as a defender. Starting off his career at Liverpool, he went on to also represent Coventry City, Bradford City, Blackburn Rovers, Aston Villa, Bolton Wanderers, Leeds United, Derby County, Wigan Athletic and Burton Albion during a career that spanned between 2002 and 2018. A full international between 2008 and 2010, he was capped twice by the England national team and was part of the nation's squad at the 2010 FIFA World Cup.", "score": "1.4646119" }, { "id": "9611359", "title": "Richard Wallwork", "text": " Richard Wallwork (2 January 1882 – 14 April 1955) was a New Zealand artist. Born in England, he studied at the Manchester School of Art and then Royal College of Art. He taught at Liverpool City School of Art and in 1910 was recruited to teach at the Canterbury College School of Art in Christchurch in New Zealand. He moved there with his wife Elizabeth Wallwork and established a reputation as a respected teacher and eventually rose to become director of the college. He had a prodigious output of landscapes of Canterbury and historical works of classic and Maori legends as well as taking commissions for portraits. He died in Christchurch at the age of 73.", "score": "1.4440193" }, { "id": "9421004", "title": "Harry D. Belock", "text": " He was born April 10, 1908 in New York City. Belock was a self-taught scientist. He was described as one of the world’s greatest electronic scientists without a string of college degrees after his name. An early occupation was construction of one of Brooklyn’s first radio stations, WARS atop the Shelburne Hotel. Belock spent 1933-1935 as a sound engineer in Hollywood and years as a freelance inventor. He designed transmitters and sound-effects equipment for CBS. He also worked for Bing Crosby, troubleshooting the photo finish timer system at Del Mar Racetrack. During World War II and after, Belock developed the REAC computer for Reeves Instrument Corporation (for which he became a vice president and general manager). The REAC was one of ", "score": "1.4431176" }, { "id": "26778634", "title": "Fritz Poock", "text": " Carl Rudolph \"Fritz\" Poock (February 20, 1877 – January 2, 1945) was an American artist born in Germany. He was a noted practitioner of the Plein-Air Painting style, an important movement in pre-World War II Southern California, and a part of the influential Arroyo Seco art scene.", "score": "1.4370741" }, { "id": "10895690", "title": "Alfred Lubbock", "text": " Alfred Lubbock (31 October 1845 – 17 July 1916) was an English insurance underwriter and banker. He is best known as an amateur cricketer who played first-class cricket for a variety of sides including Kent County Cricket Club and the Marylebone Cricket Club between 1863 and 1875. He was considered to be one of the best batsman of his era, comparable to WG Grace, and also played association football, playing for Old Etonians in the 1875 FA Cup Final.", "score": "1.4288042" }, { "id": "3778985", "title": "Kevin Horlock", "text": " Kevin Horlock (born 1 November 1972) is an English-born Northern Irish former footballer. He is a currently manager of Needham Market and assistant manager of the Northern Ireland under-21 team. Horlock is a former Northern Ireland international and is most associated with Manchester City, for whom he played in three different divisions including the Premier League. He also played for Swindon Town, West Ham United, Ipswich Town, Doncaster Rovers and Mansfield Town. Horlock was well known for his accurate set pieces and is particularly skilled at taking free kicks.", "score": "1.4198565" }, { "id": "26778636", "title": "Fritz Poock", "text": " In 1905, Poock moved to Los Angeles, eventually settling in the Highland Park neighborhood. He worked in construction — including a stint at Manzanillo, Mexico, where he also painted — and as a mechanical drafter until retiring at age 50 to devote himself full-time to painting.", "score": "1.410002" }, { "id": "28675232", "title": "Joe Moock", "text": " Joseph Geoffrey Moock (born March 12, 1944) is an American former professional baseball infielder who appeared in 13 games as a third baseman and pinch hitter in the Major Leagues for the New York Mets in. Born in Plaquemine, Louisiana, he batted left-handed and threw right-handed, stood 6 ft tall and weighed 180 lb. Moock attended Louisiana State University and was selected in the third round of the initial June amateur draft, held in 1965. In his second pro season, 1966 with the Auburn Mets, Moock led the New York–Penn League in hits with 146. He spent most of the first five months ", "score": "1.4092534" }, { "id": "11792884", "title": "James Orrock", "text": " James Orrock R.I., R.O.I. (1829 – 10 May 1913), was a prominent Scottish collector of art and oriental ceramics, illustrator and landscape watercolourist. The scale of his involvement with the art trade and with top collectors such as John Ruskin is highlighted in the large two volume set of books published about him by Byron Webber: published in London, Chatto and Windus 1903: James Orrock R.I., Painter, Connoisseur, Collector. Rather than being a forger as some modern scholars like to believe Orrock was a dedicated enthusiast of contemporary British art and emulated some of those artists in his own work. He illustrated three books in the style of Turner: Mary Queen-of-Scots, 1906; Old England : her story mirrored in her scenes, 1908; and, In the Border country, 1906.", "score": "1.4061148" }, { "id": "13695164", "title": "William Archibald Wall", "text": " William Archibald Wall (1828 &ndash; 1888) was an American painter, born in New York in 1828. Died in Paddington, London in 1888. He specialized in waterscapes, landscapes and rural and urban views. Although American by birth, Wall spent many years living and working in London. Wall was the son of Irish-born painter William Guy Wall (1792 – 1864). Wall the elder got married in 1812, the same year he left Ireland for the United States. He and his wife had two daughters; William Archibald was their only son. Wall contributed a landscape to the Royal Hibernian Academy in 1847 and again in 1853. He was in London in 1857 and 1858, and exhibited landscapes in those ", "score": "1.4017764" }, { "id": "26341252", "title": "Charles Hallock", "text": " Charles Hallock (March 13, 1834 &ndash; December 2, 1917) was an American author and publisher born in New York City to Gerard Hallock and Elizabeth Allen. On September 10, 1855 he married Amelia J. Wardell. He studied at Yale, 1850–51, and Amherst College. He was assistant editor of the New Haven Register, 1854–56; proprietor and associate editor of the New York Journal of Commerce, of which his father was editor, 1856-62. He was founder and publisher, from 1873–80, of Forest and Stream, which was later incorporated into its main competitor Field and Stream. He experimented in Sunflower cultivation, using the seed for oil; in sheep raising on Indian reservations; in establishing a reservation for sportsmen in Minnesota; in the development of Alaska and Florida, and of special industries in North Carolina; and in various other sanitary and economic schemes. He originated the code of uniform game laws and incorporated with Fayette S. Giles and others the first great American game preserve at Blooming Grove, Pike County, Pennsylvania Hallock, Minnesota was named after him.", "score": "1.3982687" }, { "id": "16075279", "title": "Joseph N. Hallock", "text": " When he was 21, he moved to Greenport and purchased an interest in the Suffolk Times. He spent the next two years learning the printing business, followed by a year working as a teacher. He then became associate editor of the Long Island Traveller in Southold, where he stayed for the next three years. After the paper's owner, M. B. Vandusen, sold the paper and bought the Advance in Patchogue, Hallock followed him and worked for that paper for about a year. In 1889, he bought the Traveller and became its editor and proprietor. Hallock for several years was the editor of the Cosmopolitan Magazine having achieved the number of 1,200 subscriptions.", "score": "1.3888636" }, { "id": "26980646", "title": "DJ Edwin", "text": " Edwin was a resident DJ at The Beat Nightclub in Fortitude Valley for thirteen years, playing five nights a week on the 2-5am shift, and later was a resident DJ at Rockafella's, playing four nights a week. Edwin worked at Central Station Records for many years — both in the original Fortitude Valley store and the Brisbane CBD store. He would put aside music and make suggestions for many of the regulars. Edwin also DJ'd at Radical Clothing store in the city in the 1990s.", "score": "1.3880017" }, { "id": "31035261", "title": "Freddy Willockx", "text": " Frederik A. A. Willockx (born 2 September 1947) is a Belgian socialist politician, member of the Flemish Different Socialist Party. Freddy Willockx was first elected to the Belgian Chamber of Representatives in 1979 and served until 1994. He served as state secretary for finances in 1980 and as minister of post, telephony and telegraph services from 1980 to 1981 and from 1988 to 1989. He served as minister of pensions 1992-1994. He was elected a Member of the European Parliament (1994–1999). In June 1999 he was elected again to the Chamber of Representatives but resigned in July when he was appointed special government commissioner for the handling of the Dioxin Affair and for the implementation of European Directives (1999–2001). He was named as minister of state in 2002. He served as mayor of Sint-Niklaas from 1989 to 1995 and once again from 2001 to 2010, when he retired.", "score": "1.3879833" }, { "id": "8712248", "title": "Terry Rollock", "text": " Terry Euclyn Rollock (born 25 September 1969) is a former Barbadian cricketer. Rollock was a right-handed batsman who bowled leg break googly. He was born at Saint Lucy, Barbados. Rollock made his first-class debut for Barbados against Free State during the South African Provinces tour of the West Indies in 1996. From the 1996/97 season to the 1997/98 season, he represented Barbados in 11 first-class matches, the last of which came against Trinidad and Tobago. In his 11 first-class matches, he scored 299 runs at a batting average of 19.93, with a single half century high score 53. In the field he took 7 catches. With the ball he took 21 wickets at a bowling average of 23.95, with a single five wicket haul which gave him best figures of 6/15. During the 2003 English cricket season, Rollock represented the Kent Cricket Board in a single List A match against Derbyshire in the 3rd round of the 2003 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy. In his only List A match, he scored 5 runs and took a single wicket at a cost of 28 runs.", "score": "1.385417" } ]
What is Matthew McKay's occupation?
[ "dentist", "dentists", "dental surgeon" ]
occupation
Matthew McKay (politician)
5,120,341
63
[ { "id": "15072933", "title": "Matthew McKay (politician)", "text": " Matthew McKay (6 October 1858 – 14 February 1937) was a Liberal party member of the House of Commons of Canada. He was born in West Gwillimbury Township, Ontario and became a dentist, dental surgeon and schoolteacher. McKay attended high school at Bradford, Whitby Collegiate Institute, Normal School in Toronto and Queen's University in Kingston (Bachelor of Arts) and the Royal College of Dental Surgeons in Toronto. McKay was a councillor of Pembroke, Ontario for five years and once served as the community's mayor. He was first elected to Parliament at the Renfrew North riding in the 1921 general election. After serving one term, he was defeated by Ira Delbert Cotnam of the Conservative party in the 1925 election. After unsuccessful attempts to unseat Cotnam in 1926 and 1930, McKay returned to the House of Commons by defeating Cotnam in the 1935 election. McKay died at an Ottawa hospital on 14 February 1937 from influenza and pneumonia before completing his term in the 18th Canadian Parliament. He was survived by a wife, two daughters and a son.", "score": "1.6476088" }, { "id": "2979521", "title": "Matt McKay (English footballer)", "text": " Matt McKay (born 21 January 1981) is an English footballer who played as a midfielder in the Football League for Chester City. McKay joined Everton from Chester on transfer deadline day on 26 March 1998. He did not make any appearances for the Everton first team and was forced to retire at the early age of 21 due to injury.", "score": "1.6228268" }, { "id": "9751469", "title": "Adam McKay", "text": "Acting roles ", "score": "1.572121" }, { "id": "9211131", "title": "Ben McKay (footballer)", "text": " Ben McKay (born 24 December 1997) is a professional Australian rules footballer playing for the North Melbourne Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL).", "score": "1.526839" }, { "id": "1191712", "title": "Christian McKay", "text": " McKay was born in Bury, Lancashire. He has a sister, Karen. His mother, Lynn, worked as a hairdresser, and his father, Stuart, was a railway worker. He studied piano as a youth, and performed the Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No. 3 at age 21. McKay subsequently halted his concert career and enrolled at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art to study acting.", "score": "1.5221274" }, { "id": null, "title": "Chris McKay", "text": "Chris McKay\n\nChristopher McKay, also known as Chris Taylor (born November 11, 1973), is an American filmmaker. He is best known for directing and editing three seasons of \"Robot Chicken\" and two seasons of \"Moral Orel\". He made his feature directorial debut with \"The Lego Batman Movie\" (2017). He directed the film \"The Tomorrow War\" (2021), and is attached to direct \"Renfield\".\nSection::::Early life and education.\nMcKay was born in Winter Park, Florida, but spent most of his childhood in Chicago, Illinois. Growing up, McKay was inspired by Alfred Hitchcock films and decided to pursue film. He shot his earliest work on his parents' Super 8 film camera. McKay attended Southern Illinois University for two years as a film student, and completed his degree at Columbia College Chicago. While studying in Chicago, McKay attended his first film shoot for the 1989 comedy \"Uncle Buck\".<ref name=\"YDJ\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Luke Perry", "text": "Luke Perry\n\nCoy Luther \"Luke\" Perry III (October 11, 1966 – March 4, 2019) was an American actor. He became a teen idol for playing Dylan McKay on the Fox television series \"Beverly Hills, 90210\" from 1990 to 1995, and again from 1998 to 2000. He also starred as Fred Andrews on the CW series \"Riverdale.\" He had guest roles on notable shows such as \"Criminal Minds\", \"\", \"The Simpsons\", and \"Will & Grace\", and also starred in several films, including \"Buffy the Vampire Slayer\" (1992), \"8 Seconds\" (1994), \"The Fifth Element\" (1997), and \"Once Upon a Time in Hollywood\" (2019), his final feature performance.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Beverly Hills, 90210 characters", "text": "List of Beverly Hills, 90210 characters\n\nThe following is a list of characters from \"Beverly Hills, 90210\", an American drama series which aired from October 4, 1990, to May 17, 2000, on the Fox television network, before entering syndication. It is the first show of the \"Beverly Hills, 90210\" franchise.\n\nThroughout its decade-long run, the series had substantial cast changes.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Will Ferrell", "text": "Will Ferrell\n\nJohn William Ferrell (; born July 16, 1967) is an American actor, comedian, and producer. He first established himself in the mid-1990s as a cast member on the NBC sketch comedy show \"Saturday Night Live\", where he performed from 1995 to 2002, and has subsequently starred in comedy films such as \"Elf\" (2003), \"\" (2004), \"Kicking & Screaming\" (2005), \"\" (2006), \"Semi-Pro\" (2008), \"Step Brothers\" (2008), and \"Land of the Lost\" (2009). He founded the comedy website Funny or Die in 2007 with his writing partner Adam McKay. Other notable film roles include \"The Other Guys\" (2010), \"The Campaign\" (2012), \"Get Hard\" (2015), \"Holmes & Watson\" (2018), and the animated films \"Curious George\" (2006), \"Megamind\" (2010) and \"The Lego Movie\" film franchise (2014-2019).\n\nFerrell is considered a member of the \"Frat Pack\", a generation of leading Hollywood comic actors who emerged in the late 1990s and the 2000s, including Jack Black, Ben Stiller, Steve Carell, Vince Vaughn, Paul Rudd, and brothers Owen and Luke Wilson. He received an Emmy Award nomination for his work on \"Saturday Night Live\", and three Golden Globe Award nominations for acting in \"The Producers\" (2005) and \"Stranger than Fiction\" (2006) and for producing \"Vice\" (2018). He was also named the best comedian of 2015 in the British \"GQ\" Men of the Year awards. Ferrell received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on March 24, 2015.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Dylan McKay", "text": "Dylan McKay\n\nDylan Michael McKay, played by Luke Perry, is a fictional character from the television series, \"Beverly Hills, 90210\".", "score": null }, { "id": "15908158", "title": "Ian G. McKay", "text": " McKay was born in Kamloops, British Columbia, and was raised in Penticton, British Columbia. He is the youngest of five boys. In July 1980, he was sent by his hometown to live in the city of Ikeda, on Japan’s island of Hokkaido. At the age of 16, he developed a lifelong appreciation for the country and for its language. Upon graduating from Penticton Secondary School in 1981, he returned to Japan as a Rotary Youth Exchange student. Following his studies, McKay worked and lived in Japan over the course of 14 years. McKay studied Political Science and Asian Studies at the University of Victoria and the University of British Columbia; he received an MBA from Queen's University in Kingston, Ontario, in 2005.", "score": "1.4855819" }, { "id": "8184804", "title": "Tim McKay", "text": " McKay graduated from Humboldt State University and was a long-term resident of Trinidad, California.", "score": "1.4839413" }, { "id": "9165023", "title": "Alexander Gordon McKay", "text": " Alexander Gordon \"Sandy\" McKay, (December 24, 1924 &ndash; August 31, 2007) was a Canadian academic who specialized in Vergilian studies. Born in Toronto, Ontario, McKay graduated from Upper Canada College in 1942. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1946 from the University of Toronto, a Master of Arts degree in 1947 from Yale University, a A.M. degree in 1948 from Princeton University and a Ph.D in 1950 from Princeton. He started his academic career as an instructor at Princeton University from 1947 to 1949. He then taught at Wells College (1949-1950), the University of Pennsylvania (1950-1951), the University of Manitoba (1951-1952), Mount ", "score": "1.4837801" }, { "id": "27173559", "title": "John McKay (pianist)", "text": " John McKay (born November 11, 1938) is an American pianist and music educator of Canadian birth. He has performed in concerts, recitals, and on radio and television broadcasts throughout North America and Europe. His programs often include works by contemporary American and Canadian composers, and he has performed the world premieres of works by Mortimer Barron, Clermont Pépin and Harry Somers among other composers. He has also performed extensively as a chamber musician and accompanist, including in performances with his wife, contralto Sara Hayden. In 1989 he co-founded the Minnesota Valley Sommarfest.", "score": "1.4716108" }, { "id": "4810636", "title": "John McKay (politician)", "text": " John Norman McKay (born March 21, 1948) is a Canadian lawyer and politician. He is the Liberal Member of Parliament for the riding of Scarborough—Guildwood. McKay was Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Finance from 2003 to 2006 during the government of Paul Martin, then served as an opposition MP and critic until November 2015 during the government of Stephen Harper. As of April, 2019, he serves as Chair of the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security; Chair of the Canadian Section of the Canada-United States Permanent Joint Board on Defence; Chair of the Canada-United Kingdom Inter-Parliamentary Association, Vice-Chair of the Canada-United States Inter-Parliamentary Group, and Counsellor Canadian NATO Parliamentary Association. McKay was sworn in as a ", "score": "1.4711405" }, { "id": "15153147", "title": "John McKay (mathematician)", "text": " McKay earned his Bachelor and Diploma in 1961 and 1962 at the University of Manchester, and his Ph.D. in 1971 from the University of Edinburgh. Since 1974 he works at Concordia University, since 1979 as a professor in Computer Science. He was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2000, and won the 2003 CRM-Fields-PIMS prize. In April 2007 a Joint Conference was organised by the Université de Montréal and Concordia University honouring four decades of the work of John McKay.", "score": "1.4687953" }, { "id": "4810641", "title": "John McKay (politician)", "text": " Between 2015 and 2019 McKay served as the Parliamentary Secretary to then Minister of National Defence Harjit Sajjan.", "score": "1.4630879" }, { "id": "1491120", "title": "Christopher McKay", "text": " Dr Christopher P. McKay (born 1954) is an American planetary scientist at NASA Ames Research Center, studying planetary atmospheres, astrobiology, and terraforming. McKay majored in physics at Florida Atlantic University, where he also studied mechanical engineering, graduating in 1975, and received his PhD in astrogeophysics from the University of Colorado in 1982.", "score": "1.4554855" }, { "id": "1191711", "title": "Christian McKay", "text": " Christian Stuart McKay (born 30 December 1973 ) is an English stage and screen actor. He is perhaps best known for his portrayal of Orson Welles in the 2008 film Me and Orson Welles, for which he was nominated for over two dozen awards including the BAFTA Award for Best Supporting Actor. He also appeared in movies such as Florence Foster Jenkins, The Theory of Everything, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy and Rush.", "score": "1.4535503" }, { "id": "31138824", "title": "Joel McKay", "text": " Joel McKay (born 16 July 1979) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong in the Australian Football League (AFL). Geelong secured McKay with the 15th selection of the 1997 National Draft. He was drafted from the Murray Bushrangers, but came from Wodonga originally. During his time at Geelong he struggled with back injuries and played just four senior AFL games, two in 1998 and two in 2000.", "score": "1.4513147" }, { "id": "4810642", "title": "John McKay (politician)", "text": "Liberal Party of Canada Critic for Environment – 2013–2015 ; Liberal Party of Canada Critic for Defence – 2011-2013 ; Official Opposition Critic for Small Business and Tourism – 2008 ; Official Opposition Critic for Crown Corporations – 2006 McKay served as the Critic for the Environment for the Liberal Party of Canada during the government of Steven Harper He was appointed to the role by Liberal Party Leader Justin Trudeau on August 21, 2013. His positions include: ", "score": "1.4486526" }, { "id": "27173560", "title": "John McKay (pianist)", "text": " Born in Montreal, McKay studied the piano with Lubka Kolessa in his native city as a boy. He graduated from the Schulich School of Music at McGill University with a Bachelor of Music in 1961. In 1962 he won the Prix d'Europe which enabled him to pursue studies in Vienna and Cologne with Bruno Seidlhofer and in Brussels with Stefan Askenase. In 1969 he joined the music faculties of both the University of Toronto and The Royal Conservatory of Music. He taught concurrently at those institutions until 1972 when was appointed head of the piano department at Dalhousie University. In ", "score": "1.4472618" }, { "id": "9073096", "title": "Matthew Good", "text": " Matthew Frederick Robert Good (born June 29, 1971) is a Canadian musician. He was the lead singer and songwriter for the Matthew Good Band, one of the most successful alternative rock bands in Canada during the 1990s and early 2000s. Since the band disbanded in 2002, Good has pursued a solo career and established himself as a political commentator and mental health activist. Between 1996 and 2016, with sales by Matthew Good Band included, Good was the 25th best-selling Canadian artist in Canada. Good has been nominated for 21 Juno Awards during his career, winning four.", "score": "1.4449303" }, { "id": "7094373", "title": "Nicholas McKay (actor)", "text": " Nicholas \"Nick\" McKay is an Australian actor who has appeared in a recurring role on the television series Farscape. In addition, he voiced Nev, a bull elephant seal in the acclaimed 2006 animated film, Happy Feet. He is the voice actor for The X Factor (Australia) and he was the original narrator of MasterChef Australia from 2009 until 2012. He was educated at The King's School, Parramatta. He was the voice-over for Network 10 multi-channel One HD, between 2009 & 2012. He is currently voice-over for the Seven News division of the Seven Network and associated promos.", "score": "1.4443958" }, { "id": "15153146", "title": "John McKay (mathematician)", "text": " John K. S. McKay (born 18 November 1939, Kent) is a dual British/Canadian citizen, a mathematician at Concordia University, known for his discovery of monstrous moonshine, his joint construction of some sporadic simple groups, for the McKay conjecture in representation theory, and for the McKay correspondence relating certain finite groups to Lie groups.", "score": "1.4426943" } ]
What is Dominick Bellizzi's occupation?
[ "jockey" ]
occupation
Dominick Bellizzi
3,931,528
97
[ { "id": "5985263", "title": "Dominick Bellizzi", "text": " Dominick Bellizzi (c. 1912 – 17 May 1934) was an American jockey who died at age 21 as a result of a horse racing accident. He was known as \"The Duke\". Bellizzi was born in New York to Albanian immigrants Samuel and Teresa Bellizzi. An up-and-coming young jockey in Thoroughbred racing, during 1933 Bellizzi rode to victory in the Futurity at Chicago's Arlington Park for Charles T. Fisher's Dixiana Farm. Competing on the New York circuit, he won the Adirondack Stakes and for the prominent Brookmeade Stable, owned by heiress Isabel Dodge Sloane, he captured both the Toboggan Handicap and the Whitney Handicap. In 1934, Bellizzi rode Brookmeade's colt High Quest to victory in the Wood Memorial Stakes, an important prep race for the Kentucky Derby. However, trainer Robert A. Smith opted to run the stable's Florida Derby winner ", "score": "1.6386243" }, { "id": "25616400", "title": "Dominic A. Cariello", "text": " Cariello obtained a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Parkside in 1992. As a civilian he works at a paving and construction manufacturer in Racine, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.5080992" }, { "id": "15868748", "title": "Bellizzi (surname)", "text": "Domenico Bellizzi (1918–1989), Albanian poet ; Dominick Bellizzi (c. undefined 1912–1934), American jockey ; Mario Bellizzi (born 1957), Italian poet Bellizzi is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.4930758" }, { "id": "14622947", "title": "Odelvis Dominico", "text": " Odelvis Dominico Speek (born May 6, 1977) is a male volleyball player from Cuba, who plays as a middle-blocker for the Men's National Team. He became Best Blocker at the first 2008 Olympic Qualification Tournament in Düsseldorf, where Cuba ended up in second place and missed qualification for the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, PR China.", "score": "1.4619482" }, { "id": "26113257", "title": "Vincent Fantauzzo", "text": " Vincent Fantauzzo (born 1977, Manchester, England), is a Melbourne-based Australian portrait artist known for his award winning portraits of Heath Ledger, Brandon Walters, Matt Moran, Emma Hack, Baz Luhrmann, Asher Keddie and his son Luca. He has won the Doug Moran National Portrait Prize twice, the Archibald Packing Room Prize, and the Archibald People's Choice Award four times.", "score": "1.4100292" }, { "id": null, "title": "Dominick Bellizzi", "text": "Dominick Bellizzi\n\nDominick Bellizzi ( – 17 May 1934) was an American jockey who died at age 21 as a result of a horse racing accident. He was known as \"The Duke\".\n\nBellizzi was born in New York to Albanian immigrants Samuel and Teresa Bellizzi. An up-and-coming young jockey in Thoroughbred racing, during 1933 Bellizzi rode to victory in the Futurity at Chicago's Arlington Park for Charles T. Fisher's Dixiana Farm. Competing on the New York circuit, he won the Adirondack Stakes and for the prominent Brookmeade Stable, owned by heiress Isabel Dodge Sloane, he captured both the Toboggan Handicap and the Whitney Handicap.\n\nIn 1934, Bellizzi rode Brookmeade's colt High Quest to victory in the Wood Memorial Stakes, an important prep race for the Kentucky Derby. However, trainer Robert A. Smith opted to run the stable's Florida Derby winner Time Clock in the Derby and under Bellizzi, finished seventh.\n\nA week after the Kentucky Derby, Bellizzi was back in New York where he rode Brookmeade's Psychic Bid in the Youthful Stakes at Jamaica Race Course. As the field turned for home, the promising but still immature two-year-old colt veered wide and when Bellizzi attempted to guide him back in, the bit slipped in the horse's mouth. The motion caused the young jockey to lose his balance and he was thrown from his mount into the path of several onrushing horses. Severely injured, Bellizzi was rushed to Marymount Hospital in Jamaica, Queens. He underwent surgery for his injuries, which included a broken spine and damage to his intestines, and died five days later.<ref name=\"nytobit\"/>\n\nBellizzi, whose coffin was carried by 10 other jockeys as pallbearers, was buried in his jockey uniform.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1933 Kentucky Derby", "text": "1933 Kentucky Derby\n\nThe 1933 Kentucky Derby was the 59th running of the Kentucky Derby. The race took place on May 6, 1933.\n\nThe first two finishers of the race were Brokers Tip, ridden by Don Meade, and Head Play, ridden by Herb Fisher. Head Play led early, but Brokers Tip went through an opening on the inside to pull even. As the horses ran side-by-side down the stretch, their jockeys grabbed and whipped each other, and the race became known as the \"fighting finish.\" The racing stewards declared Brokers Tip the winner by a nose. It was the only victory of his career.\n\nMeade and Fisher later fought in the jockey's room; both were suspended for 30 days for their actions during the race. Fisher claimed that Head Play had won and that Brokers Tip should have been disqualified. Meade, when interviewed 50 years later, said, \"I couldn't push him away from me because he had ahold of me, so I had to get ahold of him. So from there down to the wire, that's what it was - grab and grab and grab.\"<ref name=\"Courier-journal.com\"/>\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:American jockeys", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:1910s births", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Jockeys who died while racing", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "16159317", "title": "Jason Capizzi", "text": " Jason Capizzi (born June 19, 1983) is a former American football offensive tackle for the Las Vegas Locomotives of the United Football League. He was signed by the Pittsburgh Steelers as an undrafted free agent in 2007. Capizzi later won Super Bowl XLIII with the Steelers over the Arizona Cardinals, his only championship. He played college football at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Capizzi has also been a member of the New York Jets, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Kansas City Chiefs, St. Louis Rams, Cleveland Browns and Carolina Panthers.", "score": "1.4092532" }, { "id": "12314155", "title": "D. Dominick Lombardi", "text": " D. Dominick Lombardi was born into the family of an Italian-American carpenter in the Bronx, New York, in 1954. He worked in the family carpentry shop as a teenager. He was a regular contributor for the Huffington Post from 2012 to 2018, and a curator for the Hampden Gallery at UMASS Amherst, with his most recent effort titled \"A Horse Walks Into a Bar\" and the Morean Arts Center in St. Petersburg, Florida, titled \"I Am...\". He was a curator and a curatorial advisor for the Lab Gallery (2004-2006), producing over 60 exhibitions in three years with a cycle of 10-day exhibitions. Lombardi taught life drawing, painting, and beginning drawing as an adjunct art professor at Westchester Community College from 1988-2015. ", "score": "1.388659" }, { "id": "8805740", "title": "Giano Vetusto", "text": "Dominick Pezzulo ", "score": "1.3825374" }, { "id": "13879752", "title": "Pierluca Zizzi", "text": " He was born in Turin in 1970 and graduated from the Polytechnic of Turin.", "score": "1.37895" }, { "id": "30589241", "title": "Dominic Zito", "text": " Dominic Zito (born June 13, 1982) is an American choreographer. He is the National Team choreographer for USA Gymnastics and has worked with gymnasts, including Olympians, such as Jordyn Wieber, Kyla Ross, Gabby Douglas, Simone Biles, Dominique Moceanu and Elise Ray.", "score": "1.3730398" }, { "id": "14449428", "title": "Tayavek Gallizzi", "text": " Tayavek Gallizzi (born February 8, 1993) is an Argentine professional basketball player who currently plays for Regatas Corrientes of the Argentine Liga Nacional de Básquet (LNB). He defends Argentina.", "score": "1.3667967" }, { "id": "2908093", "title": "Dominic W. Lanza", "text": " Dominic William Lanza (born May 20, 1976) is a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Arizona. He was formerly an Assistant United States Attorney for the District of Arizona.", "score": "1.3652337" }, { "id": "9985664", "title": "Dominic", "text": "Dom DiMaggio (1917–2009), American baseball player ; Hans Dominik (1872–1945), German science fiction writer ; Dominic Adiyiah (born 1989), Ghanaian footballer ; Dominic Andres (born 1972), Swiss curler and Olympic champion ; Dominic Ball (born 1995), English footballer ; Dominic Bird (born 1991), New Zealand rugby union player ; Dominic Calvert-Lewin (born 1997), English footballer ; Dominic Cork (born 1971), English cricketer ; Dominic Jones (born 1987), American football player ; Dominic Matteo (born 1974), Scottish footballer ; Dominic Moore (born 1980), Canadian professional ice hockey centre ; Dominic Tan (born 1997), Malaysian footballer ; Dominic Thiem (born 1993), professional Austrian tennis player ; Dominic Thomas (born 1995), English footballer ; Dominic Thompson (footballer) (born 2000), English footballer ; Dominic Waters (born 1986), American basketball player in the Israel Basketball Premier League ; Dominick Cruz (born 1985), American mixed martial artist, former UFC bantamweight champion ; Dominik Halmoši (born 1987), Czech professional ice hockey goaltender ; Dominik Hašek (born 1965), Czech professional ice hockey goaltender ; Dominik Hrbatý (born 1978), Slovakian male tennis player ; Dominik Landertinger (born 1988), Austrian biathlete ; Dominik Paris (born 1989), Italian alpine skier ; Dominick Zator (born 1994), Canadian soccer player ", "score": "1.3648083" }, { "id": "32600358", "title": "Dominic Armato", "text": " Dominic Armato (born November 18, 1976) is an American voice actor, journalist and food critic. He is best known for his work on LucasArts games. His most famous role is the voice of Guybrush Threepwood in the Monkey Island series. After ending his active voice-acting career in the early 2000s (with brief appearances in games), Armato has worked in the dining industry. Until 2015, Armato wrote a food-oriented blog, Skillet Doux. He was employed by The Arizona Republic as a food critic and journalist from 2015-2020.", "score": "1.3615868" }, { "id": "2168973", "title": "Matthew Dominick", "text": " Matthew Stuart Dominick was born on December 7, 1981 in Wheat Ridge, Colorado to Donald and Rhonda Dominick. He graduated from D'Evelyn Junior/Senior High School in Littleton, Colorado. In 2005, he received a Bachelor of Science in electrical engineering at the University of San Diego with minors in physics and mathematics, and was a member of the Navy ROTC and Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.", "score": "1.3580172" }, { "id": "31217809", "title": "Dominic Agostino", "text": " Born in Sicily, Italy, Agostino was raised in Hamilton, Ontario and attended Mohawk College in that city. He worked as rehabilitation counsellor with the Ontario March of Dimes, and was a special assistant to Ontario Minister of Culture Lily Munro from 1985 to 1987.", "score": "1.356549" }, { "id": "711610", "title": "Vince Bellissimo", "text": " Vince Bellissimo (born December 14, 1982) is a Canadian retired professional ice hockey player. Bellissimo was selected by the Florida Panthers in the 5th round (158th overall) of the 2002 NHL Entry Draft.", "score": "1.3555796" }, { "id": "13879753", "title": "Pierluca Zizzi", "text": " Zizzi began working as an architect.", "score": "1.354264" }, { "id": "7643297", "title": "Domenick Lombardozzi", "text": " Domenico \"Domenick\" Lombardozzi (, ; born March 25, 1976) is an American actor. He is best known for portraying Herc in The Wire, and is also known for his roles in A Bronx Tale (1993), Entourage, and The Irishman (2019).", "score": "1.3527912" }, { "id": "16332676", "title": "Steve Lombardozzi Jr.", "text": " Stephen Anthony Paul Lombardozzi Jr. (born September 20, 1988) is an American professional baseball second baseman and left fielder for the Long Island Ducks of the Atlantic League of Professional Baseball. He previously played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Washington Nationals, Baltimore Orioles, Pittsburgh Pirates and Miami Marlins.", "score": "1.3502247" } ]
What is Ole Krarup's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Ole Krarup
6,539,068
61
[ { "id": "30906171", "title": "Ole Krarup", "text": " Ole Krarup (17 March 1935 &ndash; 7 October 2017) was a Danish EU politician and former professor of law at the University of Copenhagen.", "score": "2.1450615" }, { "id": "30906173", "title": "Ole Krarup", "text": " Krarup died on 7 October 2017 at the age of 82.", "score": "2.1211822" }, { "id": "30906172", "title": "Ole Krarup", "text": " From 1994 through 2006 he was Member of the European Parliament with the Folkebevægelsen mod EU (People's Movement against the EU), Member of the Bureau of the European United Left - Nordic Green Left and sat onthe European Parliament's Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs and its Committee on Budgetary Control. Krarup was a substitute for the Committee on Constitutional Affairs and a member of the Delegation for relations with South Africa. Krarup resigned as an MEP on 1 January 2007 due to medical consequences after a traffic accident while riding his bicycle in Strasbourg in 2006. He was succeeded by MEP Søren Bo Søndergaard.", "score": "1.8858776" }, { "id": "15783519", "title": "Søren Krarup", "text": " Krarup was born in Grenaa, to vicar Vilhelm Krarup and Bodil Marie Krarup (née Langballe). He is married to Anette Elisabeth (née Lund Steen), with whom he has four children, one of whom, Marie, has also entered politics. He is the grandson of Alfred Krarup and cousin of Jesper Langballe and Ole Krarup. Krarup graduated from Christianshavns Gymnasium in 1957 and cand.theol. in 1965. He has been vicar in Seem and resident curate at Ribe Cathedral from 1965 to 2005 and ward chairman from 1965. He was director of Studenterkredsen from 1961 to 1963. From 2000 to 2001 he represented his party on the board of DR. He was from 1965 co-publisher of Tidehverv, and editor from 1984. In October 2000 he was listed as the Danish People's Party candidate in Sønderborg and was elected to parliament for the Sønderjylland constituency on 20 November 2001. Krarup has an extensive writing career behind him, as he from 1960 to 2001 published 26 books. Especially through his role in Tidehverv and as MP for the Danish People's Party, he has had great influence on modern Danish theology and modern Danish national conservative politics.", "score": "1.8041322" }, { "id": "9489499", "title": "Lenny Ibizarre", "text": " Lenny Ibizarre (born Lennart Krarup), is a Danish producer and musician from Copenhagen. He is known for his work as a DJ and record producer in Ibiza.", "score": "1.797159" }, { "id": null, "title": "Agner Krarup Erlang", "text": "Agner Krarup Erlang\n\nAgner Krarup Erlang (1 January 1878 – 3 February 1929) was a Danish mathematician, statistician and engineer, who invented the fields of traffic engineering and queueing theory.\n\nBy the time of his relatively early death at the age of 51, Erlang had created the field of telephone networks analysis. His early work in scrutinizing the use of local, exchange and trunk telephone line usage in a small community to understand the theoretical requirements of an efficient network led to the creation of the Erlang formula, which became a foundational element of modern telecommunication network studies.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Søren Krarup", "text": "Søren Krarup\n\nSøren Krarup (born 3 December 1937) is a Danish pastor, writer, and politician, who was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Danish People's Party from 2001 to 2011.\n\nKrarup is a significant and influential critic from the Danish national conservative movement, as well as the theological movement \"Tidehverv\". He has written several books about Christianity, history and politics, and is regarded by both his supporters and many of his opponents as a great intellectual capacity. He has been regarded as the main ideologue of the Danish People's Party, although he rejects the particular term himself, as he regards \"love for the fatherland\" not to be an ideology or \"-ism\", but rather a fundamental precondition for one's life. He is a noted critic of Cultural Radicalism (Danish cultural relativist movement), Marxism and official Danish social policy, EU policy and immigration and refugee policy.\n\nHe has, like a number of other prominent Danish politicians from the Danish People's Party, been a member of \"Den Danske Forening\", but along with party members Jesper Langballe and Søren Espersen resigned from the association in 2002 after it had publicly compared Islam with the plague. In 2007, while he was still not a member of the association, he however stated in a speech at its jubilee that he continued to hold its magazine \"with great pleasure\", and said he regarded the association as \"the freedom fighters of our time\".<ref name=\"Hoffmann\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Talk:Scania", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Talk:Skåne/Archive 1", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "14736034", "title": "Søren Krarup", "text": "Sønderborg and was elected to parliament for the Sønderjylland constituency on 20 November 2001. Krarup has an extensive writing career behind him, as he from 1960 to 2001 published 26 books. Especially through his role in \"Tidehverv\" and as MP for the Danish People's Party, he has had great influence on modern Danish theology and modern Danish national conservative politics. Søren Krarup Søren Krarup (born 3 December 1937) is a Danish pastor, writer, and politician, who was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Danish People's Party from 2001 to 2011. Krarup is a significant and influential critic from the", "score": "1.7075436" }, { "id": "15783516", "title": "Søren Krarup", "text": " Søren Krarup (born 3 December 1937) is a Danish pastor, writer, and politician, who was a Member of Parliament (MP) for the Danish People's Party from 2001 to 2011. Krarup is a significant and influential critic from the Danish national conservative movement, as well as the theological movement Tidehverv. He has written several books about Christianity, history and politics, and is regarded by both his supporters and many of his opponents as a great intellectual capacity. He has been regarded as the main ideologue of the Danish People's Party, although he rejects the particular term himself, as he regards \"love for the fatherland\" not to be an ideology or \"-ism\", but rather a fundamental precondition for one's ", "score": "1.7345469" }, { "id": "29824797", "title": "Carl Emil Krarup", "text": " Krarup was originally a civil engineer. He was in charge of public works in Copenhagen until 1898 when he joined the Danish Telegraph Administration. In 1901 he conducted research at the University of Würzburg in Germany on loaded lines. Returning to Denmark he continued the theoretical work at the University of Copenhagen and published a paper in 1902.", "score": "1.7338071" }, { "id": "12801088", "title": "Krarup", "text": "Carl Emil Krarup (1872–1909), Danish telegraph engineer ; Kai Aage Krarup (born 1915), Danish equestrian ; Ole Krarup (1935–2017), Danish politician ; Søren Krarup (born 1937), Danish pastor Notable people with this surname include:", "score": "1.7128072" }, { "id": "4858282", "title": "Steen Krarup Jensen", "text": " Steen Krarup Jensen (born April 12, 1950 in Copenhagen, Denmark) is a Danish sculptor, poet, song writer and social critic. He is educated in sculpture at The Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts during the period from 1971 to 1978. In 1977 he received Viggo Jarls Legacy. Steen Krarup Jensen has worked with marble and granite and been experimenting with a lot of other materials in mobiles and assemblages. He is also one of the two inventors of the asphaltophone (see musical road). Steen Krarup Jensen was the founder of Danske Billedkunstneres Fagforening, a union of Danish sculptors. In connection to that, he became famous in 1981 when he blew up a sculpture with dynamite as a protest against the living conditions of Danish sculptors. As a writer he has written a large number of texts for variety shows, songs and newspaper chronicles. In 2007, Steen Krarup Jensen and composer Jakob Freud-Magnus won a Danish contest by writing a suggestion for a new national anthem. Steen Krarup Jensen is the father of jazz musician Simon Jensen.", "score": "1.6364355" }, { "id": "15783517", "title": "Søren Krarup", "text": " He is a noted critic of Cultural Radicalism (Danish cultural relativist movement), Marxism and official Danish social policy, EU policy and immigration and refugee policy. He has, like a number of other prominent Danish politicians from the Danish People's Party, been a member of Den Danske Forening, but along with party members Jesper Langballe and Søren Espersen resigned from the association in 2002 after it had publicly compared Islam with the plague. In 2007, while he was still not a member of the association, he however stated in a speech at its jubilee that he continued to hold its magazine \"with great pleasure\", and said he regarded the association as \"the freedom fighters of our time\".", "score": "1.6326629" }, { "id": "32964927", "title": "People's Movement against the EU", "text": " in the European Parliament, but then switched to being associate members of the GUE-NGL group. Ole Krarup stated that the other Danish subgroup of EDD, Jens-Peter Bonde from the June Movement, increasingly aimed at \"democratising\" or \"improving\" the EU, according to Krarup making it impossible for the People's Movement to pursue their policies within the group. Krarup claimed that the group membership was a primarily technical matter, and that only the GUE-NGL group could secure full political autonomy of the People's Movement. He stated that the movement's political cross-spectrum position was not affected. The People's Movement is a member of EUdemocrats and TEAM (the European Alliance of EU-critical Movements) ", "score": "1.6206255" }, { "id": "12801087", "title": "Krarup", "text": " Krarup is a Danish surname. In 2004 it was Denmark's 332nd most common surname.", "score": "1.5979018" }, { "id": "9759341", "title": "Ole Jacob Bull", "text": " Ole Jacob Bull (born 11 March 1948) is a Norwegian translator and cultural director. He holds the cand.mag. degree from 1974. He worked as director of the Norwegian Writers' Center from 1980 to 1982, studied abroad from 1982 to 1983 (and 1979 to 1980), and then worked in the publishing house Aschehoug Forlag from 1985 to 1997. He was acting director of the Arts Council Norway from 1997 to 2010 and he translates novels and plays from English, Swedish, and Danish.", "score": "1.5842888" }, { "id": "10940766", "title": "Ole Jacob Frich", "text": " Ole Jacob Frich (4 June 1954 – 19 August 2015) was a Norwegian communications director and politician for the Labour Party. Frich was born in Cooma, Australia. He took his education at Sagene Teachers' College. In politics, he has been a city councillor (kommunalråd) in Oslo. From 1992 to 1996 he served in Brundtland's Third Cabinet as a State Secretary in the Ministry of Health and Social Affairs. He entered the private sector, and worked at Geelmuyden.Kiese and the Norwegian Financial Services Association. In 2000 he was hired in KLP, where he is executive vice president for communication. He died on 19 August 2015.", "score": "1.5837253" }, { "id": "911438", "title": "Marie Krarup", "text": " Marie Krarup Soelberg (born 6 December 1965 in Seem near Ribe) is a Danish politician, who is a member of the Folketing for the Danish People's Party. She was elected into parliament in the 2011 Danish general election.", "score": "1.572604" }, { "id": "5309587", "title": "Ole Humlum", "text": " Ole Humlum (born 21 July 1949) is a Danish professor emeritus of physical geography at the University of Oslo, Department of Geosciences and adjunct professor of physical geography at the University Centre in Svalbard. His academic focus includes glacial and periglacial geomorphology and climatology.", "score": "1.5710158" }, { "id": "29266929", "title": "Ole Lysø", "text": " Ole Lysø (born 29 April 1940) is a Norwegian labourer, trade unionist and politician for the Labour Party. He is the mayor of Austrheim. He was born in Kornstad as a son of fisher and farmer Alfred Magnar Lysø (1900–1960) and housewife Olianna Sofie Aardal (1898–1978). He finished secondary modern school in 1955, worked at the farm until 1961, then served his compulsory military service in Gaza. Then, from 1963 to 1965, he worked and learned the skill of welding at Bergen Mekaniske Verksted. He worked in different factories between 1965 and 1992. From 2000 to 2002 he was a senior manager in the company Vestec. He was a member of Austrheim municipal council from 1967 to 1979 and 1991 to present, serving as mayor from 1991 to 1999 and 2003 ", "score": "1.56352" }, { "id": "3313494", "title": "Erik Arup", "text": " Arup was born at Slangerup in Frederikssund Municipality, Denmark. He was the son of the physician Peter Michael Christian Arup (1845–1915) and Malvina Cathrine Ipsen (1852–1934). He was raised in a cultured home and was the cousin of Danish-English structural engineer Ove Arup (1895–1988). He was educated as both a theologian and a historian. Arup attended the University of Copenhagen and was awarded his dr.phil. in 1907. As a young man he was deeply impressed by Viggo Hørup and his political anti-militarist line. During World War I, Arup was connected to the cabinet of social-liberal Carl Theodor Zahle as a permanent under-secretary. From 1908-1914 he was archivist in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. In 1916, Arup replaced Kristian Erslev as professor of history at the University of Copenhagen, a position he held until 31 January 1947. Arup was also the editor of Historisk Tidsskrift from 1917 to 1924, involved in editing Danish medieval sources from 1931 to 1937, and for some years collaborator to the pioneering Danish-Swedish periodical Scandia. He took a particular interest in Iceland and, as member of several organisations dealing with Danish-Icelandic relations, he generally showed himself compliant with Icelandic views.", "score": "1.5624087" }, { "id": "11614039", "title": "Ole Kassow (social entrepreneur)", "text": " Ole Kassow (born 26 June 1966) is a Danish social entrepreneur. He founded the nonprofit organization Cycling Without Age in 2012. Ole Kassow was born in Odense, Denmark. He grew up with a handicapped father and brother, experiencing early in his age stigmatization and exclusion of persons with certain disabilities. However, his father's practical jokes and humour to overcome the handicaps in their life and to infuse happiness into people around them, helped to develop Ole's positive attitude towards disabilities and old age. After completing high school, Ole travelled to various countries to learn more about different cultures and languages. He then attended the University of Southern Denmark between 1986 ", "score": "1.5512841" }, { "id": "6507623", "title": "Pandrup", "text": "Ole Christensen (born 1955), politician and former MEP ; Pernille Holmsgaard (born 1984), handball player ", "score": "1.5495845" } ]
What is Antonio Álvarez Alonso's occupation?
[ "composer", "pianist" ]
occupation
Antonio Álvarez Alonso
1,772,720
75
[ { "id": "29001709", "title": "Edu Alonso", "text": " Eduardo 'Edu' Alonso Álvarez (born 30 May 1974) is a Spanish retired footballer who played as a right midfielder. He spent the better part of his career with Alavés after starting out at Athletic Bilbao, playing 180 competitive matches for the former club. Overall, he made more than 200 appearances in both La Liga and Segunda División.", "score": "1.6456099" }, { "id": "13167572", "title": "Antonio Álvarez Alonso", "text": " Antonio Álvarez Alonso (11 March 1867 - 22 June 1903) was a Spanish pianist and composer. He is best known for his Pasodoble Suspiros de España.", "score": "1.6396657" }, { "id": "4454482", "title": "Alonso Fernández Alvarez", "text": " Alonso is an international model and assistant manager with a license in business administration. He has high ambitions to be an important businessman who can benefit the national economy holding a business administration college degree. He is also an enthusiastic sportsman who practices yoga and meditation, as well as gymnastics, acrobatics and swimming. Alonso started modeling commercials at the age of 4 through 12, then 19 shooting photos for Levi's Jeans. Alonso speaks Spanish, French and English. He works as a print and runway model.", "score": "1.6311052" }, { "id": "6904289", "title": "José Antonio", "text": "José Antonio Alvarez (born 1960), Spanish corporate executive ; José Antonio Attolini Lack (1931–2012), Mexican architect ; José Antonio Fernández Carbajal (born 1954), Mexican corporate executive ; Jose Antonio Ortega Bonet (1929–2009), Cuban-American entrepreneur and businessman ; José Antonio Sosa (born 1957), Spanish architect and researcher, member of the Royal Spanish Academy ", "score": "1.6141322" }, { "id": "30553954", "title": "Antonio Álvarez (footballer, born 1955)", "text": " Born in Marchena, Seville, and a product of hometown Sevilla FC's youth system, Álvarez made his La Liga debut during the 1975–76 season, scoring once in eight games as the team finished in 11th position. In the following decade he would be more often than not an undisputed starter for the Andalusians, eventually playing 370 matches all competitions comprised. At the end of the 1987–88 campaign, still with Sevilla in the top division, the 33-year-old Álvarez – having made just 17 league appearances – opted to move on, and signed with neighbouring CD Málaga. In summer 1991 he joined another club in the region, Segunda División B's Granada CF, eventually retiring at the age of 40.", "score": "1.6122012" }, { "id": null, "title": "Alonso Álvarez de Pineda", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Spanish composers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tony A. Da Wizard", "text": "Tony A. Da Wizard\n\nTony Alvarez, known as DJ Tony A. Da Wizard (TT Wizard\") is an American DJ/producer and film director. He is best known for creating \"The Roadium Mixtapes\" with Dr. Dre and Steve Yano at the Roadium Swap Meet in Gardena, California as well as producing and DJing for the rapper Hi-C featuring Tony A. on the album titled \"Skanless\". ", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fernando Alonso", "text": "Fernando Alonso\n\nFernando Alonso Díaz (; born 29 July 1981) is a Spanish racing driver currently competing for Aston Martin in Formula One. He won the series' World Drivers' Championship in and with Renault, and has also driven for McLaren, Ferrari, and Minardi. With Toyota, Alonso won the 24 Hours of Le Mans twice, in and , and the FIA World Endurance Championship in 2018–19. He also won the 24 Hours of Daytona with Wayne Taylor Racing in 2019.\n\nBorn in Oviedo, Asturias to a working-class family, Alonso began kart racing at the age of three and achieved success in local, national, and world championships. He progressed to car racing at the age of 17, winning the Euro Open by Nissan in 1999 and was fourth in the International Formula 3000 Championship of 2000. He debuted in Formula One with Minardi in before joining Renault as a test driver for . Promoted to a race seat in , Alonso won two drivers' championships in 2005 and 2006, becoming the youngest pole-sitter, youngest race winner, youngest world champion, and youngest two-time champion in the sport's history at the time. After finishing just one point behind eventual champion Kimi Räikkönen with McLaren in , he returned to Renault for and and won two races in the former year for fifth overall. Alonso drove for Ferrari from to , finishing runner-up to Sebastian Vettel in 2010, , and with the title battles in 2010 and 2012 going down to the last race of the season. A second stint with McLaren from to resulted in no further success. After a two-year sabbatical, Alonso returned to Formula One in with Alpine. At the 2021 Qatar Grand Prix, Alonso scored his first podium in seven years. At the 2022 Singapore Grand Prix, he broke the record for most starts in Formula One.\n\nAt the time of his sabbatical, Alonso had won 32 Grands Prix, 22 pole positions, and 1,899 points from 311 starts. He is currently the only Spanish Formula One driver to have won the World Championship. Alonso won the 2001 Race of Champions Nations Cup with the rally driver Jesús Puras and the motorcyclist Rubén Xaus for Team Spain and thrice entered the Indianapolis 500 in 2017, 2019 and 2020. He has been awarded the Prince of Asturias Award for Sports, the Premios Nacionales del Deporte Sportsman of the Year Award and the Gold Medal of the Royal Order of Sports Merit and has twice been inducted into the FIA Hall of Fame. Alonso runs an esports and junior racing team and is a UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fernando Álvarez de Toledo, 3rd Duke of Alba", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "30553956", "title": "Antonio Álvarez (footballer, born 1955)", "text": "Copa del Rey: 2009–10 ; Supercopa de España runner-up: 2010 ", "score": "1.6093795" }, { "id": "13967876", "title": "Antonio Hernández-Gil Álvarez-Cienfuegos", "text": " Antonio Hernández-Gil Álvarez-Cienfuegos (1953–2020) was a Spanish lawyer, legal scholar and university professor. He was the Dean of Madrid Bar Association.", "score": "1.5971087" }, { "id": "13967877", "title": "Antonio Hernández-Gil Álvarez-Cienfuegos", "text": " Born in Burgos in 1953. He obtained a Law Degree from the Complutense University of Madrid, with the Extraordinary Prize of Degree and Extraordinary Doctorate Award. In 1975 he began teaching at the Complutense University of Madrid and in 1978 he was Adjunct Professor of Civil Law at the National University of Distance Education (UNED). In 1983 he obtained the Chair of Civil Law at the University of Santiago de Compostela and in 1986, the Chair of Civil Law at UNED, where he continued to teach until 2020. In 1974 he joined the Madrid Bar Association as a lawyer, dedicating himself to Civil and Commercial Law, especially in judicial procedures and arbitrations, both national and international, and from 1981 to ", "score": "1.5896702" }, { "id": "29953752", "title": "Antonio Alonso Martinez", "text": " Antonio Alonso Martinez (born 29 April 1963 in Portugal) is a Portuguese/ Spanish painter. Since the 80s, the artist argues that humanity will find their own spiritual reality. This has been the central theme of his work for more than 30 years. Born in Portugal to Spanish parents, Martinez opted for the Spanish nationality in 1978. He studied Fine Arts at the Center for Art and Visual Communication, Lisbon, Portugal. In 1984 was co-author of the Manifest of the Multi-instrumentalist Painting published in the Newspaper of Letters, Arts and Ideas on 26 June 1984. This manifest was accompanied by an exhibition at the University of Fine Arts of Lisbon, creating enthusiasm among the new artists and critic. In January 2011 one of his work - Portrait of Kurt Cobain - reached the second higher value in the sale of Contemporary Art at the Austrian auction house Dorotheum. In September 2012 another portrait of Kurt Cobain by Martinez was sold at Christie's in London. In January 2013 in Warsaw one of his works - Diana - reached the highest value on auction at Forbes Millionaires Club.", "score": "1.5809481" }, { "id": "30553953", "title": "Antonio Álvarez (footballer, born 1955)", "text": " Antonio Álvarez Giráldez (born 10 April 1955) is a Spanish former football central defender and manager.", "score": "1.5783274" }, { "id": "30931503", "title": "José Antonio Álvarez Lima", "text": " Álvarez Lima was born in Apizaco, Tlaxcala. As a child, he worked in a shoe store owned by friends of his father. A graduate from the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) after a brief stint at the Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, he taught at several universities, including the Universidad Iberoamericana, Universidad Popular Autónoma del Estado de Puebla, and the UNAM; he was the president of the National Political Science College, a professional organization, from 1979 to 1980. After several years as the deputy director of operations at Canal Once and a stint as the news director of Canal 13, in 1980, Álvarez Lima was tapped ", "score": "1.5696276" }, { "id": "4454477", "title": "Alonso Fernández Alvarez", "text": " Alonso Fernández Álvarez (born March 16, 1982) is a Costa Rican fashion model and beauty pageant titleholder who was crowned Mister Costa Rica 2009 and represented Costa Rica at Mister International 2009 but unplaced.", "score": "1.551297" }, { "id": "31206981", "title": "Antonio De Diego", "text": " Antonio de Diego Álvarez is a Spanish paracanoeist and member of the National Spanish Canoeist Team, Paracanoe class A (maximum level of disability). He has won several medals: gold medal at the Europe Paracanoe Championship Trasona 2010(K-1 200 m), silver medal at the world championship Paracanoe Poznan 2010 (K-1 200 m), bronze medal World Paracone Szeged 2011 (K-1 200 m) and silver medal at the Europe Paracanoe Championship Zagreb 2012. He also practices other sports such as diving, yachting and handcycling. On 2 July 2004 he suffered a motorciclying accident requiring a double femoral amputation and causing major paralysis in his right arm. Currently he is training for the 2016 Summer Paralympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He was born in Madrid on 2 July 1967, with an 85% physical disability rating. He has gone from not being able to turn around in ", "score": "1.5421278" }, { "id": "9747314", "title": "Fernando Luis Alvarez", "text": " Alvarez was born in Greenwich, Connecticut, and he was moved to Colombia at the age of three, where he lived with his grandmother till the age of twelve. Alvarez went through the school system from elementary to Greenwich High School. He then moved to London to pursue higher study from Richmond, The American International University in London in International Business & Finance, Economics and Political Science. In 2008, he started working with collector and gallerist Allan Stone. In the same year, while working at the Stone residence, he started the solo studio, Greenwich Soho Factory in Greenwich and in 2009 he founded the Fernando Luis Alvarez Gallery in Stamford,Connecticut which opened its second wing in the year 2013.", "score": "1.5396633" }, { "id": "9810461", "title": "Carlos Álvarez (baritone)", "text": " Carlos Álvarez (born 1966 in Málaga) is a Spanish baritone who has had a major international opera career since the early 1990s. His recording of the title role in Isaac Albéniz's Merlin with Plácido Domingo as King Arthur won a Latin Grammy Award in 2001, and his recording of the role of Ford in Giuseppe Verdi's Falstaff won the Grammy Award for Best Opera Recording in 2006.", "score": "1.5135214" }, { "id": "13806484", "title": "Carlos Manuel Álvarez", "text": " Alvarez was born in Matanzas and studied journalism at the University of Havana.", "score": "1.5040252" }, { "id": "11100752", "title": "José Antonio Alonso Navarro", "text": " José Antonio Alonso Navarro is a philologist, university professor of English and English literature, and European literature in general. In addition, he is a medievalist, a translator, and a writer. He was born in Madrid (Spain) in 1965. Navarro holds a BA in English Philology from the Complutense University of Madrid (Spain) and a PhD in English Philology from the Coruña University (Spain). He wrote a doctoral dissertation about the afterlife in Medieval Europe, and included a complete comparative analysis of two medieval texts on the afterlife within the same genre. He was awarded the \"CUM LAUDE\" accolade. On 21 March 2017 Nick White, Deputy Head of Mission and Chargé d´Affaires at the British Embassy of Asuncion, Paraguay, awarded Navarro a Certificate of Honor on behalf of the British Ambassador in Asuncion, Jeremy Hobbs due to his outstanding contribution to the translation and spread of Medieval English Literature in both Spain and Paraguay for almost 20 years.", "score": "1.4994211" }, { "id": "4343929", "title": "José Luis Álvarez (politician)", "text": " José Luis Álvarez y Álvarez (born 4 April 1930) is a Spanish politician. He was the city of Madrid's mayor from March 3, 1978 and to January 5, 1979. He then worked with Adolfo Suárez and Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo as Minister of Transport and Communications from 1980 to 1981. He also was the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food between 1981 and 1982. He was born in Madrid.", "score": "1.4985808" }, { "id": "11411335", "title": "Adalberto Álvarez Marines", "text": " Adalberto Alvarez Marines (born 1952 ) is a Mexican artist and artisan who specializes in creating sculptures and other works in hard paper mache, called cartonería in Mexican Spanish. As a child, Alvarez began drawing and writing, with some success in publishing illustrations and stories. In his mid twenties, he discovered cartoneria and shifted his artistic work to this medium, first on a personal basis while working at a factory until in 1994, when he dedicated himself to the craft full-time. Alvarez's work is distinct in Mexican cartoneria because of its often non-traditional themes and artistic sense, often classed as art, rather than handcraft. With the exception of alebrijes and skeletal figures, Alvarez avoids traditional forms in favor of exploring what can be done with the medium, focusing on sculpture, decorative items and furniture. He was named a \"grand master\" of Mexican folk art in 2014 and has exhibited his work in Mexico and the United States. However, he does not like to spend time in exhibition and promotion, establishing his own Cartoneria Museum at his home in Santa Catarina Ayotzingo, Chalco, State of Mexico", "score": "1.4906934" }, { "id": "11341949", "title": "Antonio Domínguez Álvarez", "text": " Dominguez Alvarez worked at various private sector companies for 30 years before becoming the Inspector General of the Panama Canal. This included a role as director of Frito-Lay for Central America.", "score": "1.4829943" } ]
What is Boutheina Jabnoun's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Boutheina Jabnoun Marai
3,553,522
57
[ { "id": "5925269", "title": "Boutheina Jabnoun Marai", "text": " Boutheina Jabnoun Marai (Tunisian Arabic: بثينة جبنون مرعي) is a Tunisian journalist and magazine publisher. She is the co-owner and the editor-in-chief of Bouthaina magazine. She currently resides in Abu Dhabi, the United Arab Emirates.", "score": "1.8451962" }, { "id": "3087012", "title": "Boutheina", "text": "Boutheina Jabnoun Marai, Tunisian journalist ; Bouthaina Shaaban, Syrian politician ; Bouthayna Shaya, Syrian actress and voice actress ; Buthaina Al-Yaqoubi, Omani athlete Boutheina (also spelled Bothayna or Buthaina; بثينة) is an Arabic given name for females. People with the name include: ", "score": "1.6228919" }, { "id": "32083142", "title": "Lubna Jaffery", "text": " Lubna Boby Jaffery (born 2 April 1980) is a Norwegian politician for the Labour Party. Born in Norway to parents of Pakistani origin she grew up in Bergen. She took her secondary education in Åsane in 1999, and at the University of Bergen she took the cand.mag. degree in 2004 and the master's degree in 2007. She was an adviser in the Workers' Youth League in 2000, before becoming a central board member from 2000 to 2004. She had previously chaired the county branch from 1998 to 1999. Jaffery was a member of Bergen city council from 1999 to 2003 and ", "score": "1.5815189" }, { "id": "11128790", "title": "Loubna Mrie", "text": " Mrie comes from an Alawite family from a village near Latakia. Her father is a high official in the Syrian Air Force Intelligence. Despite her family ties, she is one of a few Alawites to join the fight against the Assad regime and has been branded a traitor by her father. As rioting broke out in the initial stages of the Syrian Civil War, Loubna attended Latakia University but moved to Damascus in 2012 as Latakia was deemed to be unsafe for activists. This was due to Assad troops opening fire on civilian protestors. She later joined the Free Syrian Army (FSA) where she helped with the transport of food and medical aid, then with the smuggling of ", "score": "1.5358397" }, { "id": "7563085", "title": "Bouthaina Shaaban", "text": " US sanctioned Shaaban together with other five other Syrian officials. She is the author of Both Right and Left Handed: Arab Women Talk About Their Lives (1988), a book composed mostly of interviews with Syrian, Lebanese, Palestinian, and Algerian women. In this study, Shaaban invited Arab women to talk openly about their lives and the roles of women in their societies, how they feel they've changed through different times of war and crisis, and what they think the future holds for Arab women. Another of her books published in English is her study of Arab female writers Voices revealed: Arab women novelists, 1898-2000. In his article of 2012, \"Failing the masses: Buthaina Shabaan and the public intellectual crisis\", A. Al-Saleh described her public image like this: \"The shift of Shabaan from being a feminist to serving the propaganda of the regime has damaged her integrity as an intellectual.\"", "score": "1.5231831" }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Tunisian women writers", "text": "List of Tunisian women writers\n\nThis is a list of women writers who were born in Tunisia or whose writings are closely associated with that country.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "20931878", "title": "Samah Jabr", "text": "Middle East Affairs\" and the \"Middle East Monitor.\" Her perspective is that \"the Israeli occupation is not only a political issue, but indeed a mental health problem\". Jabr has also been a guest of organizations supporting the Palestinian people in France, where she has been invited by local association Les amis de Jayyous, as well as national Association France-Palestine Solidarité (AFPS) and Union juive française pour la paix (UJFP). Institutions including the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), the Tavistock & Portman NHS Foundation Trust and the Institut de Recherche et d'Études Méditerranée Moyen-Orient (iReMMO, Paris) have had her", "score": "1.5043633" }, { "id": "14429184", "title": "Bouthaina Shaaban", "text": "lives and the roles of women in their societies, how they feel they've changed through different times of war and crisis, and what they think the future holds for Arab women. She represents the feminist perspective of Syrian politics. Shaaban's rise within the Syrian government is due to her close friendship with Bushra Al-Assad. Sometime in the late 1980s, Shaaban also introduced Bushra to her future husband Assef Shawkat. In 2005 Shaaban was presented with \"the Most Distinguished Woman in a Governmental Position\" award by the Arab League. Bouthaina Shaaban Bouthaina Shaaban () (born 1953) is a Syrian politician and", "score": "1.4914393" }, { "id": "19131240", "title": "Mouna Bassili Sehnaoui", "text": "Collection as well as many private collections around the world. She is also known for her paintings depicting the Lebanese civil war. Mouna Bassili Sehnaoui Mouna Bassili Sehnaoui (born 1945) is a Lebanese painter, writer and artist. Born in Egypt, Lebanese artist Mouna Bassili Sehnaoui attended the American University of Beirut and the University of Arizona, where she studied Fine Arts. Sehnaoui works in a variety of formats ranging from painting, writing, design and sculpture. She has had solo exhibitions in Paris, Dubai, and Beirut. Sehnaoui currently lives and works in Beirut with husband Marwan, President of the Lebanese Order", "score": "1.4628804" }, { "id": "18453024", "title": "Nassira Belloula", "text": "Montreal, Canada. Belloulas work deals most significantly with women's issues, including cultural and religious restrictions, education, social relations, traditions, confinement, and violence. She was a founding member of the executive board of the Algerian Human Rights Foundation of the Child and Adolescent (1993-1998). Her 2000 text, \"Algérie, le massacre des innocents\", concerns itself with the massacre of Algerian civilians. She served two terms as a member of the Algerian Commission on Human Rights, an affiliate of the United Nations. Nassira Belloula Nassira Belloula (نصيرة بلولة) (born 13 February 1961 in Batna) is an Algerian feminist journalist and writer in French.", "score": "1.4626981" }, { "id": "11128789", "title": "Loubna Mrie", "text": " Loubna Mrie (Arabic: لبنى مرعي ; born 1991) is a Syrian civil rights activist.", "score": "1.5031798" }, { "id": "8336463", "title": "Ghada Chreim Ata", "text": " Ghada Chreim Ata (غادة شريم), born on September 30, 1968, is a Lebanese female politician and professor of French literature at the Lebanese University. She is Minister for Refugees in the government of Hassan Diab since January 2020.", "score": "1.4753947" }, { "id": "13978634", "title": "Bouthayna Shaya", "text": " Born in Sweida area in Syria graduated from the Higher Institute of Theatrical Arts in 1989 and has a chorus Directed by theater.", "score": "1.4713254" }, { "id": "15112045", "title": "Paula Yacoubian", "text": " Paulette Siragan Yaghobian (بوليت سيراغان يعقوبيان; born 4 April 1976) is a Lebanese journalist, television host and politician. She was previously known as a journalist and a television host. Throughout her career, she had worked as a host in a number of Lebanese and pan-Arab international television stations. Known for the transformational impact she's had in her organizations and the broader community, Paula became one of the experts chosen by the World Bank group as a member of their 'External Advisory Panel for Diversity and Inclusion' as a result of her advocacy for women's rights, her efforts for women empowerment, as well as for being a fierce defender of electoral women quota and a fairer electoral law in Lebanon. In 2018, she announced her candidacy for the 2018 Lebanese Parliamentary Elections, running for the Armenian Orthodox seat in the Beirut I constituency. She was officially announced as a winner following the elections which took place on Sunday 6 May 2018. On 8 August 2020, she resigned and called for a new government after the 2020 Beirut explosions.", "score": "1.4686071" }, { "id": "26995533", "title": "Soumia Benkhaldoun", "text": " Soumia Benkhaldoun (1963) is a Moroccan engineer, politician, and activist in the field of gender equality. Benkhaldoun graduated from the École Mohammadia d'ingénieurs. She started working as State engineer in 1986, was a professor at the Ecole Superieure de Technologie Fès between 1987 and 1994, and then at Ibn Tofail University between 1994 and 2006. She also worked as an expert in the field of women and development with ISESCO, the Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. In addition she has been part of various organizations and committees in the field of gender equality. On 10 October 2013, she was appointed Minister Delegate to the Minister of Higher Education, Scientific Research and Executive Training in the Benkirane II Government. She resigned from this position in May 2015, and was replaced by Jamila el Moussali.", "score": "1.4642689" }, { "id": "630698", "title": "Louisa Hanoune", "text": " Hanoune was born in Chekfa, Jijel Province. Her parents were mountain peasants from Chekfa, Jijel Province, and she fled with her family to the city of Annaba, after her parental home was bombed by the French army during the Algerian War (1954–1962). She was the first woman of her family to go to school. With Algeria's free and compulsory education system, Hanoune completed secondary school and went on to obtain her bachelor's degree before joining the air transport sector. Hanoune studied law at the University of Annaba, a decision which was opposed by her father. She has stated that \"It is this right to education which will completely change the position, the representation of women in our society and of which I am partly a product.\"", "score": "1.4526643" }, { "id": "8781887", "title": "Mai Ghoussoub", "text": " Her father, Raymond Ghoussoub, a Maronite Christian, was a professional footballer. She studied at the French lycée in Beirut, then mathematics at the American University of Beirut, and French literature at the Lebanese University, and later sculpture at Morley College and the Henry Moore Studio in London. She was a Trotskyite at the start of the Lebanese Civil War in 1975, but soon became disillusioned and moved on to humanitarian work, establishing two medical dispensaries in a poor Muslim area after the doctors had left and the pharmacies had closed. She lost an eye in 1977, after her car was hit by a shell while taking someone to hospital. She moved to London to be treated, and spent time in Paris, where she worked as a journalist for Arab newspapers. She wrote Comprendre le Liban with her childhood friend André Gaspard, under the ", "score": "1.4507481" }, { "id": "630702", "title": "Louisa Hanoune", "text": " At the international level, Louisa Hanoune was a founding member of the International Workers and Peoples in January 1991. She has participated as a representative of PT conferences against privatization, for the defense of trade union organizations, and campaigned for workplace standards. She is a committee member of the women workers and of the Africa Committee of the International Workers. She was involved with a coalition of unions that spoke out against the war in Iraq, including the International Confederation of Arab Trade Unions and the International Confederation of Workers (EIT). In March 2010, Haroune joined other women's-rights activists in calling for repeal of Algeria's Family Code on grounds of its failure to provide adequate protection for females. In February 2011, she criticised a 12 February anti-Bouteflika demonstration in ", "score": "1.4486158" }, { "id": "3242224", "title": "Bahaa Trabelsi", "text": " Bahaa Trabelsi (born 1966) is a Moroccan novelist. Trabelsi was born in Rabat and went to secondary school in Morocco and then she emigrated to France. After her graduation in France (troisième cycle) she returned to Morocco for some time. She now holds a Doctorate degree in economic studies from the university of Aix en Provence. She is the author of the successful novel \"Une femme simplement\" (1995). \"Une Vie à trois\" is her second novel. Bahaa has worked in a government job and is now a journalist and head of the Moroccan magazine \"Masculin\" and prominent member of an association fighting Aids. Her third novel is \"Slim\". Bahaa Trabelsi is an active member of civil society and has participated in the creation of several associations, including Women and Development. The Keeper's Chair is her fifth novel and won the 2017 Sofitel Literary Award. Tahar Ben Jelloun was the chairman of the jury that awarded the award on that occasion.", "score": "1.4484448" }, { "id": "27291512", "title": "Amina Zoubir", "text": " Amina Zoubir (born 1983) is a contemporary artist, filmmaker and performer from Algiers, Algeria. She is known as a feminist performer through video-actions entitled Take your place, which she directed in 2012 during the 50th anniversary of Algerian independence, aiming to question gender issues and conditions of women in Algerian society. She has worked with different art mediums such as sculpture, drawing, installation art, performance and video art. Her work relates to notions of body language in specific spaces of North Africa territories.", "score": "1.444788" }, { "id": "11128791", "title": "Loubna Mrie", "text": " She promoted the aims of the revolution in the Alawitian community and spoke with the victims of government-run troops. After her father issued a warrant for her arrest, she fled in August 2012 to Turkey. On August 11, 2012, her mother was abducted, according to her father, who subsequently broke off all contact with her. Loubna later received information from a friend about the death of her mother. She later became a photojournalist with Reuters based in Aleppo where she covered the conflict then moved to New York where she is a researcher and commentator on Syrian and Middle Eastern affairs. She has been published in The Washington Post, Rosa-Luxemburg-Stiftung, and The New Republic, among other publications.", "score": "1.4434421" }, { "id": "7563084", "title": "Bouthaina Shaaban", "text": " Shaaban worked first as an interpreter for the Syrian presidents Hafez al-Assad and Bashar al-Assad, his son. Under Hafez she became an \"adviser to the Foreign Ministry,\" and in 2003 she was named Minister of Expatriates, \"a new post created to try to lure wealthy Syrian expatriates abroad — or at least their resources — back home.\" In 2008, she was appointed political and media adviser to president Bashar al-Assad. Between 1985 and 2003 she was also the professor of Romantic poetry at the English department of Damascus University. Shaaban was particularly visible in English-speaking media after the Valentine's Day 2005 assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri, when she participated in several television interviews and wrote several op-ed pieces attacking the United Nations probe into Syrian involvement in the murder and insisted that Israel and the United States were responsible for Hariri's assassination. In August 2011, ", "score": "1.442604" }, { "id": "28591327", "title": "Nada Sehnaoui", "text": " Country'' (1992–present). Sehnaoui's works have been exhibited internationally in Europe, the United States, and the Middle East and North Africa, including in New York, Boston, Washington D.C., London, Paris, Marseille, Liège, Houston, Munich, Beirut, Dubai, and Doha. An activist in the fields of human rights and political reform, Sehnaoui is a member of Beirut Madinati, an urban public policy organization under whose umbrella she ran for a seat on Beirut's municipal council in 2016. She is also a founding member of the Civil Center for National Initiative, whose works include a legal campaign to remove reference to sect from state records, and an initiative to legally administer civil marriages in Lebanon.", "score": "1.4402145" }, { "id": "25366553", "title": "Boutheïna Amiche", "text": " Boutheïna Amiche (born 12 September 1990) is a Tunisian handball player for ASF Sfax and the Tunisian national team. She participated at the 2015 World Women's Handball Championship.", "score": "1.4401473" }, { "id": "630697", "title": "Louisa Hanoune", "text": " Louisa Hanoune (لويزة حنون; born 7 April 1954) is the head of Algeria's Workers' Party (Parti des Travailleurs, PT). In 2004, she became the first woman to run for President of Algeria. Hanoune was imprisoned by the government several times prior to the legalization of political parties in 1988. She was jailed soon after she joined the Trotskyist Social Workers Organisation, an illegal party, in 1981 and again after the 1988 October Riots, which brought about the end of the National Liberation Front's (FLN) single-party rule. During Algeria's civil war of the 1990s, Hanoune was one of the few opposition voices in parliament, and, despite her party's laicist values, a strong opponent of the government's \"eradication\" policy toward Islamists. In January 1995, she signed the Sant'Egidio Platform together with representatives of other opposition parties, notably the Islamic Salvation Front, the radical Islamist party whose dissolution by military decree brought about the start of the civil war.", "score": "1.4355195" } ]
What is Derek Wheatley's occupation?
[ "novelist", "barrister", "barrister-at-law", "Bar-at-law" ]
occupation
Derek Wheatley
3,901,091
43
[ { "id": "6141368", "title": "Derek Wheatley", "text": " Derek Peter Francis Wheatley QC (died 23 September 2018) was an English barrister, legal advisor and novelist. Wheatley was educated at University College, Oxford, going up to Oxford in 1944. He became a barrister and was involved with the case of Isabel Earl, who was tried at the Old Bailey for murder. As a barrister, he handled both criminal and commercial cases. Subsequently, he was a Recorder (judge) of the Crown Court and a Deputy Coroner of the Queen's Household (1959–64). Later, he joined Lloyds Bank as its Chief Legal Advisor. Wheatley wrote many articles for newspapers and legal journals. He also wrote a novel, The Silent Lady (Mona Lisa), based on his experiences as a barrister, especially the Isabel Earl case. He died on 23 September 2018 at the age of 92.", "score": "1.7449834" }, { "id": "9397223", "title": "Kevin Wheatley", "text": " Wheatley was born in the Sydney suburb of Surry Hills on 13 March 1937, the third child of Raymond and Ivy (née Newman) Wheatley, both natives of Sydney. He was educated at Maroubra Junction Junior Technical School. Upon completing his schooling, Wheatley worked as a labourer in Sydney. On 20 July 1954, aged 17, he married Edna Davis; together they would have four children. He was a keen rugby player, and he earned the nickname of \"Dasher\" on the field.", "score": "1.5547738" }, { "id": "7672867", "title": "Ron Wheatley", "text": " Roland Wheatley (20 June 1924 – 27 July 2003) was an English professional footballer who played as a wing half.", "score": "1.5434202" }, { "id": "9993822", "title": "Ossie Wheatley", "text": " Oswald Stephen Wheatley (born 28 May 1935) is a former cricketer who played for Cambridge University, Warwickshire and Glamorgan, whom he captained from 1961 to 1966. Wheatley was born at Low Fell, Gateshead, County Durham. He was educated at King Edward's School, Birmingham, and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge. A tall, fair-haired right-arm fast-medium bowler, he came to prominence for Cambridge University in 1958 when he set the record for the most wickets in the university's abbreviated season with 80 first-class wickets for under 18 each. He played in the university holidays for Warwickshire with very limited success but in 1959 joined that county full-time, taking 100 wickets in the ", "score": "1.5179558" }, { "id": "27133755", "title": "Barrie Wheatley", "text": " Barrie Wheatley (born 21 February 1938) is an English former professional footballer who played for Crewe Alexandra and Rochdale.", "score": "1.5175442" }, { "id": null, "title": "Derek Jacobi", "text": "Derek Jacobi\n\nSir Derek George Jacobi (; born 22 October 1938) is an English actor. He has appeared in numerous Shakespearean stage productions including \"Hamlet\", \"Much Ado About Nothing\", \"Macbeth\", \"Twelfth Night\", \"The Tempest\", \"King Lear\", and \"Romeo and Juliet\". He has also performed in Anton Chekhov's \"Uncle Vanya\" and Edmond Rostand's \"Cyrano de Bergerac\". He was given a knighthood for his services to theatre by Queen Elizabeth II in 1994 and is a member of the Danish Order of the Dannebrog.\n\nIn addition to being a founding member of the National Theater Company as Stanley Baldwin in \"The Gathering Storm\" (2002), as the Master in \"Doctor Who\" (2007), as Stuart Bixby in the ITV comedy \"Vicious\" (2013–2016) and as Alan Buttershaw in \"Last Tango in Halifax\" (2012–2020). In 2019, he played Edward VIII, the Duke of Windsor, in the third season of the critically acclaimed Netflix series \"The Crown\".\n\nThough principally a stage actor, Jacobi has appeared in a number of films, including \"Othello\" (1965), \"The Day of the Jackal\" (1973), \"Henry V\" (1989), \"Dead Again\" (1991), \"Hamlet\" (1996), \"Gladiator\" (2000), \"Gosford Park\" (2001), \"Nanny McPhee\" (2005), \"The Riddle\" (2007), \"The King's Speech\" (2010), \"My Week with Marilyn\" (2011), \"Anonymous\" (2011), \"Cinderella\" (2015), and \"Murder on the Orient Express\" (2017).\n\nJacobi has twice been awarded a Laurence Olivier Award, first for his performance of the eponymous hero in \"Cyrano de Bergerac\" in 1983 and the second for his Malvolio in \"Twelfth Night\" in 2009. He also received a Tony Award for his performance in \"Much Ado About Nothing\" in 1984. Jacobi has also received two Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Movie for \"The Tenth Man\" (1988), and Outstanding Guest Actor in a Comedy Series for \"Frasier\" (2001). Jacobi has also earned two Screen Actors Guild Awards along with the ensemble cast for Robert Altman's \"Gosford Park\" (2001), and Tom Hooper's \"The King's Speech\" (2010).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Dylan McDermott", "text": "Dylan McDermott\n\nDylan McDermott (born Mark Anthony McDermott; October 26, 1961) is an American actor. He is known for his role as lawyer and law firm head Bobby Donnell on the legal drama series \"The Practice\", which earned him a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series – Drama and a nomination for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series.\n\nMcDermott is also known for his roles in four seasons (first, second, eighth and ninth) of the FX horror anthology series \"American Horror Story\", subtitled \"\", \"\", \"\", and \"\" portraying Ben Harmon, Johnny Morgan and , respectively. He also starred as narcotics crime lord Richard Wheatley on the \"\" spinoff \"\"; Lt. Carter Shaw on the TNT series \"Dark Blue\"; in two short-lived CBS dramas, \"Hostages\" and \"Stalker\"; and in the 1994 remake of the film \"Miracle on 34th Street\". In 2022, he joined \"\" as the new lead, replacing the departing Julian McMahon.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Glenn Wheatley", "text": "Glenn Wheatley\n\nGlenn Dawson Wheatley (23 January 1948 – 1 February 2022) was an Australian musician, talent manager and tour promoter.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lee Thompson Young", "text": "Lee Thompson Young\n\nLee Thompson Young (February 1, 1984 – August 19, 2013) was an American actor who began his career as a teenager, playing the titular character on the Disney Channel television series \"The Famous Jett Jackson\" (1998–2001). As an adult, major roles included playing Chris Comer in the movie \"Friday Night Lights\" (2004) and Boston police detective Barry Frost on the TNT police drama series \"Rizzoli & Isles\" (2010–14).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Stephen Merchant", "text": "Stephen Merchant\n\nStephen James Merchant (born 24 November 1974) is an English comedian, actor, director, presenter and writer.\n\nAlongside Ricky Gervais, Merchant was the co-writer and co-director of the British TV comedy series \"The Office\" (2001–2003), and co-writer, co-director, and co-star of both \"Extras\" (2005–2007) and \"Life's Too Short\" (2011–2013). With Gervais and Karl Pilkington, he hosted \"The Ricky Gervais Show\" in its radio, podcast, audiobook, and television formats; the radio version won a bronze Sony Award. He also provided the voice of the robotic \"Intelligence Dampening Sphere\" Wheatley in the 2011 video game \"Portal 2\". Merchant co-developed the Sky1 travel series \"An Idiot Abroad\" (2010–2012) and co-created \"Lip Sync Battle\" (2015–present).\n\nMerchant has performed as a stand-up comedian, which led to him writing and starring in the HBO series \"Hello Ladies\" (2013–2014), based on his stand-up material. He starred in his first play, Richard Bean's \"The Mentalists\", at London's Wyndham's Theatre in 2015. He wrote and directed Fighting with My Family in 2019, and in 2021 he starred in, co-wrote, co-produced, and co-directed the 12-part comedy crime series \"The Outlaws\". He also appeared as the mutant Caliban in the superhero film \"Logan\" (2017), and as serial killer Stephen Port in the 2022 television drama \"Four Lives\". He has received numerous accolades, including two Golden Globe Awards, three BAFTA Awards, a Primetime Emmy Award, and four British Comedy Awards.", "score": null }, { "id": "10104169", "title": "Peter Jaffrey Wheatley", "text": " Wheatley was born on 5 March 1921 in Wilmslow, Cheshire. He was educated at King Edward VII School (photo) in Sheffield, where he was Head Prefect in 1938/1940, Captain of cricket for two years and 1st XI footballer for four. He began a degree at Oxford at the start of World War II, but was soon enlisted as a bombardier. He was captured during the Fall of Singapore in 1942. After four years as a prisoner of war, and working on the Burma railway, and then regaining his health, Wheatley returned to Oxford, studying at Queen's Colllege (1946-1948) and Merton College (1948-1949). He ", "score": "1.5065641" }, { "id": "3949797", "title": "Austin Wheatley", "text": " Austin Wheatley (born November 16, 1977) is a former American football tight end. He played college football at Iowa. He was drafted in the 5th round 158th overall) in the 2000 NFL draft by the New Orleans Saints.", "score": "1.5042915" }, { "id": "10888021", "title": "Rebecca Wheatley", "text": " Rebecca Wheatley (born 25 April 1965) is a British actress and musician. Wheatley grew up in Teddington, Middlesex, where she went to St Catherine's convent school, before gaining her BA in English literature from the University of Wales, Lampeter. She sang in “In the Smoke”, S5:E7 of Pie in the Sky (1997). Wheatley is best known as Amy Howard, the receptionist in the BBC's Casualty drama, a role which she played for four years from September 1997 until March 2001. She was a regular panellist on Loose Women in 2002. Although Wheatley originally trained as a classical singer, she has become well known for various types of popular music. She has sung in many of the cabaret venues in the West End of London, including The Café Royal, The Ritz and The Savoy. She has also sung at the Grand Opera House in Belfast in televised performances for BBC ", "score": "1.4950452" }, { "id": "37481", "title": "Paul Wheatley (geographer)", "text": " After serving as navigator in the Bomber Command and the Pathfinder Group 205 in World War II, Wheatley took a degree in geography at Liverpool University, at first specializing in English historical geography. When he moved to University College, London, he became interested in the historical geography of Southeast Asia and China, then moved to University of Malaya, in Malaysia, then University of California, Berkeley, returned for a time to University College, and finally to University of Chicago, where he stayed from 1971 until retiring in 1991.", "score": "1.4942374" }, { "id": "11255295", "title": "Alan Wheatley", "text": " Alan Wheatley (19 April 1907 &ndash; 30 August 1991) was an English actor. He was a well known stage actor in the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s, appeared in forty films between 1931 and 1965 and was a frequent broadcaster on radio from the 1930s to the 1990s, and on television from 1938 to 1964. His most prominent television role was the Sheriff of Nottingham in the 1950s TV series The Adventures of Robin Hood, with Richard Greene as Robin Hood; Wheatley played the sheriff in 54 episodes between 1955 and 1959. Earlier, he had played Sherlock Holmes in the first television series featuring the great detective. In addition to acting, Wheatley was a radio announcer during the Second World War, broadcasting to occupied Europe, where he became a well known voice. Poetry was another of his interests: he translated the poetry of Federico García Lorca and was a frequent reader of poems on air. In his later years he worked mainly in radio, as a narrator, a verse-reader and an actor.", "score": "1.4924582" }, { "id": "30355555", "title": "Dennis Wheatley", "text": " Wheatley was commissioned as a 2nd Lieutenant into the Royal Field Artillery during the First World War, receiving his basic training at Biscot Camp in Luton. He was assigned to the City of London Brigade and the 36th (Ulster) Division. Wheatley was gassed in a chlorine attack during Passchendaele and was invalided out, having served in Flanders, on the Ypres Salient, and in France at Cambrai and Saint-Quentin. In 1919 he took over management of the family's wine business. In 1931, however, after business had declined because of the Great Depression, he sold the firm and began writing. During the Second World War Wheatley was a member of the London Controlling ", "score": "1.4912133" }, { "id": "13041643", "title": "Wheatley (surname)", "text": "Nicky Wheatley in the British soap-opera Coronation Street ", "score": "1.4824643" }, { "id": "30355554", "title": "Dennis Wheatley", "text": " Wheatley was born at 10 Raleigh Gardens, Brixton Hill, London to Albert David and Florence Elizabeth Harriet (Baker) Wheatley. He was the eldest of three children in the family, which owned Wheatley & Son of Mayfair, a wine business. He admitted to having little aptitude for schooling and was later expelled from Dulwich College for allegedly forming a \"secret society\" (as he mentions in his introduction to The Devil Rides Out). Soon after his expulsion Wheatley became a British Merchant Navy officer cadet on the training ship HMS Worcester.", "score": "1.4822521" }, { "id": "9306896", "title": "Derek Rackley", "text": " Rackley attended the University of Minnesota and was a four-year letterman in football. He saw action as tight end, in addition to handling long snapper duties for four years. He worked for General Mills in Minnesota before he began his professional career.", "score": "1.4747066" }, { "id": "28382346", "title": "Keith Wheatley", "text": " Keith James Wheatley (born 20 January 1946 in Guildford, Surrey) is a retired English cricketer. Wheatley was a right-handed batsman and a right-arm off break bowler. Wheatley represented Hampshire, making his first-class debut for the county in the 1965 County Championship season against Leicestershire. He made his List-A debut against Glamorgan in 1967. Wheatley's final first-class match for the club came in 1970 against Somerset and his final one-day game coming in the same year against local rivals Sussex. At the end of the 1970 season Wheatley left Hampshire. Wheatley represented Hampshire in 79 first-class matches, scoring 1,781 runs at an average of 18.55. He also took 69 wickets at an average of 28.31 with his off breaks, including brilliant best figures of 4/1 against Glamorgan in 1968. In one-day cricket Wheatley fared less well, playing just 10 matches and scoring 53 runs at an average of 5.30.", "score": "1.4735587" }, { "id": "26661779", "title": "Benjamin Robert Wheatley", "text": "Attribution ", "score": "1.4585408" }, { "id": "1907931", "title": "Tyrone Wheatley Jr.", "text": " Tyrone Wheatley Jr. (born February 4, 1997), also known as T.J. Wheatley, is an American football offensive lineman for the Chicago Bears of the National Football League (NFL). Wheatley played college football at the University of Michigan and Stony Brook University.", "score": "1.4545546" }, { "id": "8118076", "title": "Moreton John Wheatley", "text": " of the Royal Parks of London, lands originally owned by the monarchy and officially designated public parks with the introduction of the Crown lands Act 1851. Among other duties, he was in charge of the keepers and civil officers in the parks, and he lived in a house inside Hyde Park. Shortly before his retirement as Bailiff, he was appointed a Companion (civil) of the Order of the Bath (CB) in the November 1901 Birthday Honours list, and invested by King Edward VII on 17 December 1901. He lived at Gwersyllt in Denbighshire, and died on 13 May 1916.", "score": "1.4511167" }, { "id": "13246713", "title": "Charles M. Wheatley", "text": " Charles Moore Wheatley (16 March 1822 – 6 May 1882) was an American miner and palaeontologist of the 19th century. He is noted for identifying several new fossilized species, some of which bear his name, and for his connection to the Port Kennedy Bone Cave, which contained one of the most important middle Pleistocene (Irvingtonian, approximately 750,000 years ago) fossil deposits in North America. In 1879, he was elected as a member to the American Philosophical Society. He also managed successful mines in Connecticut and Pennsylvania, including a lead mine in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania.", "score": "1.4476004" }, { "id": "28517892", "title": "Wheatley (Portal)", "text": " Wheatley is a fictional artificial intelligence from the Portal franchise first introduced in the 2011 video game Portal 2. He is voiced by British comedian and writer Stephen Merchant, and created in part by Portal 2s designer Erik Wolpaw. In the Portal narrative, Wheatley is one of several spherical \"personality cores\" developed to restrain GLaDOS, the main artificial intelligence that operates the Aperture Science facility, from becoming rampant, though Wheatley is later revealed to have been built to act as an intelligence dampener towards GLaDOS. Initially serving as a comedic foil to the player-character Chell during the first half of Portal 2, Wheatley becomes the main antagonist ", "score": "1.4460328" } ]
What is Herman A. Barnett's occupation?
[ "surgeon", "surgeons" ]
occupation
Herman A. Barnett
837,389
86
[ { "id": "26546057", "title": "Henry W. Barnett", "text": " Henry W. Barnett (January 9, 1927 – May 11, 1994) was an American politician who served in the New York State Assembly from the 89th district from 1983 to 1992.", "score": "1.6829561" }, { "id": "30782661", "title": "Charlie Barnett (comedian)", "text": " Charles Barnett (September 23, 1954 – March 16, 1996) was an American comedian and actor.", "score": "1.5921013" }, { "id": "32890274", "title": "William A. Barnett", "text": " William Arnold Barnett (born October 30, 1941) is an American economist, whose current work is in the fields of chaos, bifurcation, and nonlinear dynamics in socioeconomic contexts, econometric modeling of consumption and production, and the study of the aggregation problem and the challenges of measurement in economics.", "score": "1.5913837" }, { "id": "28821479", "title": "Oliver Barnett", "text": " Oliver Wesley Barnett (born April 9, 1966, in Louisville, Kentucky) is a former American football defensive lineman in the National Football League who played for the Atlanta Falcons, Buffalo Bills, and San Francisco 49ers.", "score": "1.5698048" }, { "id": "28537012", "title": "Homer Barnett", "text": " Homer Garner Barnett (1906 in Bisbee, Arizona – May 9, 1985) was an American anthropologist, thinker, fieldworker, and teacher.", "score": "1.5616361" }, { "id": null, "title": "Herman A. Barnett", "text": "Herman A. Barnett\n\nDr. Herman Aladdin Barnett, lll (January 22, 1926 – May 27, 1973) was an African-American fighter pilot, surgeon and anesthesiologist. He became the first African-American graduate from the University of Texas Medical School in 1953.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ferdinand Lee Barnett (Chicago)", "text": "Ferdinand Lee Barnett (Chicago)\n\nFerdinand Lee Barnett (February 18, 1852 – March 11, 1936) was an American journalist, lawyer, and civil rights activist in Chicago, Illinois, beginning in the late Reconstruction era.\n\nBorn in Nashville, Tennessee, as a child he fled with his family to Windsor, Ontario, Canada, just before the American Civil War. After the war, they settled in Chicago, where Barnett graduated from high school, and then obtained his law degree from what is today Northwestern University School of Law. He was a founding editor of the African-American oriented \"The Chicago Conservator\" monthly in 1878. The third black person to be admitted to the practice of law in Illinois, he also became a successful lawyer.\n\nIn 1895, Barnett married Ida B. Wells, a journalist and anti-lynching activist. In 1896, Barnett became Illinois' first black assistant state's attorney. He was active in anti-lynching and civil rights causes and was called \"one of the foremost citizens Chicago has ever had\" by the \"Chicago Defender\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ida B. Wells", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Herman Kemna", "text": "Herman Kemna\n\nHerman Kemna (c. 1858 – June 7, 1937) was an American architect who designed many buildings in the state of Montana.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Norman Mailer", "text": "Norman Mailer\n\nNachem Malech Mailer (January 31, 1923 – November 10, 2007), known by his pen name Norman Kingsley Mailer, was an American novelist, journalist, essayist, playwright, activist, filmmaker and actor. In a career spanning over six decades, Mailer had 11 best-selling books, at least one in each of the seven decades after World War II.\n\nHis novel \"The Naked and the Dead\" was published in 1948 and brought him early renown. His 1968 nonfiction novel \"Armies of the Night\" won the Pulitzer Prize for non-fiction as well as the National Book Award. Among his best-known works is \"The Executioner's Song\", the 1979 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.\n\nMailer is considered an innovator of \"creative non-fiction\" or \"New Journalism\", along with Truman Capote, Joan Didion, Hunter S. Thompson, and Tom Wolfe, a genre which uses the style and devices of literary fiction in factual journalism. He was a cultural commentator and critic, expressing his views through his novels, journalism, frequent press appearances and essays, the most famous and reprinted of which is \"The White Negro\". In 1955, he and three others founded \"The Village Voice\", an arts and politics-oriented weekly newspaper distributed in Greenwich Village.\n\nIn 1960, Mailer was convicted of assault and served a three-year probation after he stabbed his wife Adele Morales with a penknife, nearly killing her. In 1969, he ran an unsuccessful campaign to become the mayor of New York. Mailer was married six times and had nine children.", "score": null }, { "id": "11146021", "title": "Ben Barnett (footballer)", "text": " Benjamin James Barnett (born 18 December 1969) is an English former professional footballer who played in the Football League as a forward.", "score": "1.5581858" }, { "id": "14470712", "title": "Ferdinand Lee Barnett (Chicago)", "text": " Barnett started practicing law around 1883. His prominence grew quickly and in 1888 he was considered for a Republican nomination for Cook County Commissioner. In 1892, he started a law partnership with S. Laing Williams. The pair split over Williams' affiliation with Booker T. Washington, whom Barnett frequently opposed.", "score": "1.5578756" }, { "id": "32890275", "title": "William A. Barnett", "text": " Barnett received his B.S. degree in mechanical engineering from M.I.T., his M.B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University.", "score": "1.5521739" }, { "id": "5447896", "title": "George Ezra Barnett", "text": "1) REDIRECT: George Ezra ", "score": "1.5519357" }, { "id": "5598379", "title": "Powell S. Barnett", "text": " Powell S. Barnett (2 August 1883 &ndash; 16 March 1971) was a Seattle-based musician, civil rights activist, and African American community leader.", "score": "1.5485116" }, { "id": "13658497", "title": "J. D. Barnett (politician)", "text": " Joel Dwight Barnett (January 2, 1845 - December 9, 1897) served in the California State Assembly for the 24th district. In 1964, during the American Civil War, he served in Company A, 44th Wisconsin Volunteer Infantry Regiment of the Union Army.", "score": "1.5339775" }, { "id": "14465252", "title": "Fred Barnett (English footballer)", "text": " Fred Barnett (13 April 1896 – 1982) was an English professional footballer who played for Hawley, Northfleet United, Tottenham Hotspur, Southend United, Watford and Dartford.", "score": "1.5317199" }, { "id": "32277632", "title": "Morris S. Barnett", "text": " Morris S. Barnett (1808 &ndash; April 30, 1902) was an American politician. Barnett owned a sawmill in Eldorado, Wisconsin in the 1840s. United States Senator Philetus Sawyer worked for Barnett at the sawmill. He was active in the anti-slavery movement in Wisconsin. He lived in Milwaukee, Wisconsin and served on the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisors. Barnett then moved to Fond du Lac, Wisconsin. In 1851 and 1857, Barnett served in the Wisconsin Assembly while living in Fond du Lac. Barnett was a member of the Whig and Free Soil Party. Barnett later supported the Republican Party. Barlett died from pneumonia at his son's home in Neenah, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.5292557" }, { "id": "14470708", "title": "Ferdinand Lee Barnett (Chicago)", "text": " Ferdinand Lee Barnett (February 18, 1852 – March 11, 1936) was an American journalist, lawyer, and civil rights activist in Chicago, Illinois, beginning in the late Reconstruction era. Born in Nashville, Tennessee, as a child, his family fled to Windsor, Ontario, Canada, just before the American Civil War. After the war, they settled in Chicago, where Barnett graduated from high school, and then obtained his law degree from what is today Northwestern University School of Law. He was a founding editor of the African-American oriented The Chicago Conservator monthly in 1878. The third black person to be admitted to the practice of law in Illinois, he also became a successful lawyer. In 1895, Barnett married Ida B. Wells, a journalist and anti-lynching activist. In 1896, Barnett became Illinois' first black assistant state's attorney. He was active in anti-lynching and civil rights causes and was called \"one of the foremost citizens Chicago has ever had\" by the Chicago Defender.", "score": "1.5290765" }, { "id": "11786167", "title": "Rex Barnett", "text": " Rex Barnett (born October 22, 1938) is an American politician and former member of the Missouri State Highway Patrol. A Republican, he represented District 4 (Atchison, Nodaway and Worth Counties) in the Missouri House of Representatives for four terms (from 1994 to 2002). During this time, he sat on committees for criminal law, public safety and law enforcement, and appropriations for corrections and public safety.", "score": "1.5277228" }, { "id": "14470720", "title": "Ferdinand Lee Barnett (Chicago)", "text": " Barnett left the position of assistant state's attorney in 1910, turning to private practice where he advocated for African-American rights. He often worked pro bono, focusing on employment discrimination and criminal cases. In 1917 he was a candidate for alderman of the second ward in Chicago. His most famous case was the defense with attorneys Robert M. McMurdy and Cowen of \"Chicken Joe\" Campbell. Although Campbell was convicted for the murder of Odelle B. Allen, his death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment by Governor Frank O. Lowden on April 12, 1918. In the 1920s, Barnett and his wife supported Marcus Garvey and the Universal Negro Improvement Association. In the 1920s and 1930s, Barnett began to support the Democratic Party. Barnett died March 11, 1936.", "score": "1.5235555" }, { "id": "7656602", "title": "George E. Barnett", "text": " George Ernest Barnett (February 19, 1873 – June 17, 1938) was an American economist. He was a professor of economics at Johns Hopkins University from 1911 to 1938. In 1932, he served as president of the American Economic Association.", "score": "1.5196286" }, { "id": "15676573", "title": "James V. Barnett II", "text": " Barnett earned a BS degree in Ceramic Engineering from the University of Illinois in 1967. His early career was spent at Fairchild Semiconductor, Raytheon Semiconductor, American Microsystems, Ness Time, and Zilog Semiconductor.", "score": "1.5175636" }, { "id": "15891276", "title": "Charlie Barnett (footballer)", "text": " Charlie John Barnett (born 19 September 1988) is an English footballer.", "score": "1.5169728" }, { "id": "5598381", "title": "Powell S. Barnett", "text": " its chairman, and chairing the committee that revised the Seattle Urban League. Barnett, a sousaphone player, was the first black member of the once all-white Seattle Musicians Union, Local 76 and was instrumental in the merger between the black and white musicians' locals into the Musician's Association of Seattle 76-493. In 1967 he was named Seattle-King County's Senior Citizen of the Year for his history of service and contributions to the local community. Barnett's account of Black and Asian race relations in Seattle in 1909 has been used in scholarship to substantiate the anti-black discrimination and racial tensions that were pervasive in Seattle at the time.", "score": "1.5138004" } ]
What is Modou Dia's occupation?
[ "diplomat", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Modou Dia
2,523,400
51
[ { "id": "10842463", "title": "Modou Dia", "text": " Modou Dia (born 27 March 1950) is a Senegalese politician and former diplomat. Dia represented Senegal in Saudi Arabia, the Soviet Union, West Germany and Austria. He also was the Senegalese permanent representative to the Organisation of the Islamic Conference. Dia was a candidate in the February 2007 presidential election, placing last out of 15 candidates with about 0.13% of the vote. Dia attended the Institut catholique d'arts et métiers in Lille.", "score": "1.7689778" }, { "id": "12723485", "title": "Modou Jobe", "text": " Born in Sanyang, he has played club football for Real de Banjul, Niarry Tally, Linguère and El-Kanemi Warriors. He re-joined Linguère in October 2017 for pre-season training, before signing for Nigerian club El-Kanemi Warriors in November 2017. He made his debut for the club in the Nigerian Professional Football League in March 2018.", "score": "1.6850992" }, { "id": "2772815", "title": "Modou Diagne", "text": " Modou Diagne (born 3 January 1994) is a Senegalese professional footballer who plays for Cypriot club Olympiakos Nicosia. As a youth, he was capped for the France U20 team, but switched to Senegal U23 team for the 2015 Africa U-23 Cup of Nations. He also holds French citizenship.", "score": "1.6354527" }, { "id": "26509252", "title": "Modou Jobe (footballer, born 2000)", "text": " He is the product of Superstars Academy. He then spent two years in Israel with Hapoel Ramat Gan debuting in the Liga Leumit. He played back half year before joining Serbian SuperLiga side Inđija where he played the second half of the 2020-21 season. Having the club ended relegated Jobe was released in Summer 2021.", "score": "1.6226583" }, { "id": "31285092", "title": "Modou", "text": "Modou Bamba Gaye, Gambian politician ; Modou Barrow (born 1992), Gambian football player ; Kabba-Modou Cham (born 1992), Belgian-born Gambian football player ; Modou Dia (born 1950), Senegalese politician and diplomat ; Modou Diagne (born 1994), Senegalese football player ; Modou Jadama (born 1994), American association football player of Gambian descent ; Modou Jagne (born 1983), Gambian association football player ; Pa Modou Jagne (born 1989), Gambian association football player ; Pa-Modou Kah (born 1980), Norwegian football coach and former player ; Modou Kouta, Chadian football player and manager ; Modou Sady Diagne (born 1954), Senegalese basketball player ; Modou Sougou (born 1984), Senegalese football player ; Modou Sowe (born 1963), Gambian football referee ; Modou Tall (born 1953), Senegalese basketball player Modou is an African masculine given name that may refer to", "score": "1.5655699" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Senegalese politicians", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Senegal", "text": "Senegal\n\nSenegal, officially the Republic of Senegal, is a country in West Africa, on the Atlantic Ocean coastline. Senegal is bordered by Mauritania to the north, Mali to the east, Guinea to the southeast and Guinea-Bissau to the southwest. Senegal nearly surrounds the Gambia, a country occupying a narrow sliver of land along the banks of the Gambia River, which separates Senegal's southern region of Casamance from the rest of the country. Senegal also shares a maritime border with Cape Verde. Senegal's economic and political capital is Dakar.\n\nSenegal is notably the westernmost country in the mainland of the Old World, or Afro-Eurasia. It owes its name to the Senegal River, which borders it to the east and north. The climate is typically Sahelian, though there is a rainy season. Senegal covers a land area of almost and has a population of around /1e6 round 0 million. The state is a unitary presidential republic; since the country's foundation in 1960, it has been recognized as one of the most stable countries on the African continent.\n\nThe state was formed as part of the independence of French West Africa from French colonial rule. Because of this history, French is the official language, but it is understood only by a minority of the population. Over 30 languages are spoken in Senegal, and Wolof is the most widely spoken one, with 80% of the population speaking it as a first or second language, acting as Senegal's lingua franca alongside French. Like other post-colonial African states, the country includes a wide mix of ethnic and linguistic communities, with the largest being the Wolof, Fula, and Serer people. Senegalese people are predominantly Muslim.\n\nSenegal is classified as a heavily indebted poor country, with relatively low HDI ranked 170th in the Human Development index. Most of the population is on the coast and works in agriculture or other food industries; other major industries include mining, tourism, and services. The country does not have notable natural resources, but the basis of its development lies in education, where almost half the state's budget is spent. Senegal is a member state of the African Union, the United Nations, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Organisation internationale de la Francophonie, and the Community of Sahel-Saharan States. Internationally, Senegal is best known in the sporting world for the Paris-Dakar Rally.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Senegalese expatriate men's footballers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Papa Bouba Diop", "text": "Papa Bouba Diop\n\nPapa Bouba Diop (28 January 197829 November 2020) was a Senegalese professional footballer. His preferred position was defensive midfield but he could also play as a centre back, where he previously played at Lens. Diop was considered a strong and aggressive player. His playing style and ability drew comparisons to Patrick Vieira.\n\nDiop spent much of his career in England, where fans nicknamed him \"The Wardrobe\" for his stature.<ref name=kemble/> He played for Fulham and Portsmouth in the Premier League, and won the FA Cup with the latter club in 2008. He also played top-flight football in Switzerland for Neuchâtel Xamax and Grasshopper, in France for Lens and in Greece for AEK Athens.\n\nDiop's second of a total of 11 international goals for Senegal came in a 1–0 victory over then-world champions France in the opening match of the 2002 FIFA World Cup, in Senegal's first match at the FIFA World Cup. He also played at four Africa Cup of Nations tournaments, finishing as runners-up in 2002.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Senegalese football biography stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "14265243", "title": "Mamadou Diop (musician)", "text": " Mamadou Diop, also known as Modou Diop, is a Senegalese performing artist, now living in the United States. With his trademark West African rhythm guitar he has performed with the likes of Thione Seck, Baaba Maal, Jimi Mbaye, Orchestre Baobab, Nicolas Menheim, Papa Seck, the Grand Soda Mama, and many other notable musicians from West Africa. Through his music, he has traveled the world, finally settling in New England just north of Boston, Massachusetts in Salem 1996. During his musical career in Senegal, Mamadou contributed his talents to support many other professional musicians, both seasoned and well-known artists and up-and-coming artists alike. When he arrived in the United States he formed his own band of musicians. Formed in 1998, the group was known as \"Mamadou Diop and the Jolole Band\". In 2000, the ensemble simplified their name to \"MAMADOU\". Mamadou performs regularly with the band MAMADOU, showcasing his unique brand of dance music. In November 2011, Mamadou Diop was awarded the Boston Music Award as International Artist of the Year.", "score": "1.5522202" }, { "id": "32795273", "title": "Modibo Diakité", "text": " Born in Bourg-La-Reine, France, Diakité also owns a Malian passport, as both of his parents are originally from Mali.", "score": "1.5495064" }, { "id": "7553382", "title": "Mamadou Sidiki Diabaté", "text": " Mamadou Sidiki Diabaté, widely known as \"Madou,\" was born on September 23, 1982 in Bamako, Mali. He is a Muslim and he's the youngest son of the late Sidiki Diabaté and Mariam Kouyaté. He is part of the seventy-first generation of kora players in his family. His family has a long heritage in the oral tradition of jalis (sometimes spelled djeli), or griots. \"Jali\" is the Mandingo word for the repository musician and storyteller of Mande's ancient oral tradition, transmitting history and culture from generation to generation, from father to son. \"Mandé,\" often used to describe Madou and his family, is a broad cultural designation of several ethnic groups in West Africa, including (though not exclusively) the Mandinka, Maninka (or \"Malinke\"), ", "score": "1.5420837" }, { "id": "26649694", "title": "Modou Faal", "text": " Modou Faal (11 February 2003) is a Gambian professional footballer who plays as a forward for Championship club West Bromwich Albion.", "score": "1.5352695" }, { "id": "32493703", "title": "AS CotonTchad", "text": "Modou Kouta ; 2011 –? Oumar Francis ; 2016 - Modou Kouta ; 2018 - Mahamat Allamine 'Boli' ", "score": "1.5246282" }, { "id": "7553385", "title": "Mamadou Sidiki Diabaté", "text": " drum,) also of West African descent. Madou is renowned for his extensive knowledge of traditional kora repertoire and command of both jazz sensibilities and foreign influences. His style is often associated with the \"Jazz Manding\" music movement developing Mali today. While Madou prides himself on preserving the tradition and legacy of the kora, he is also known for having diverged from his father's style, inspired by afro-Latin groups like the Rail Band (also called the Super Rail Band, or Bamako Rail Band,) in addition to his brother's music (particularly Toumani's Bembeya Jazz). In 2004, Madou received a degree in music from the Institut National des Arts (INA), in Bamako, Mali. Madou now resides in with his wife, singer Safiatou Diabaté.", "score": "1.5129502" }, { "id": "26570855", "title": "Oumou Armand Diarra", "text": " Oumou Armand Diarra is the pseudonym of Malian writer Oumou Modibo Sangare. She is the author of several articles about the struggle of women in Africa and Mali. She advocates social development while being consistent with the positive rules of the traditional and modern society of her country.", "score": "1.512907" }, { "id": "26509251", "title": "Modou Jobe (footballer, born 2000)", "text": " Modou Jobe (born 13 June 2000) is a Gambian footballer.", "score": "1.5047295" }, { "id": "26649695", "title": "Modou Faal", "text": " Faal was born in The Gambia but relocated to Birmingham, England with his family when he was seven years old.", "score": "1.4968224" }, { "id": "15672291", "title": "Institut catholique d'arts et métiers", "text": "Modou Dia, Senegalese politician and former diplomat ; ; Jean-Marie Vanlerenberghe, French politician. ", "score": "1.4691362" }, { "id": "32795272", "title": "Modibo Diakité", "text": " A tactically versatile right-footed defender, Diakité is usually deployed as a centreback in a 3 or 4-man defence, although he is also capable of playing as a rightback. A quick, large, hard-working, and physically strong player, although not particularly skilled technically, he is known in particular for his ball-winning abilities and his strength in the air.", "score": "1.468626" }, { "id": "30792045", "title": "Modupeola Fadugba", "text": " Modupeola Fadugba studied engineering, economics, and education. She has received an MA in Economics from the University of Delaware, and holds an MEd from Harvard University. Her parents were Nigerian Diplomats, and the artist spent most of her youth in England and the United States. She is a self-taught artist. Her recent series Dreams from the Deep End, which she developed during a residency at the International Studio and Curatorial Program in New York, was included in a recent solo exhibit at Gallery 1957.", "score": "1.4667315" }, { "id": "12723484", "title": "Modou Jobe", "text": " Alagie Modou Jobe (born 27 October 1988) is a Gambian international footballer who plays for Jeddah, as a goalkeeper.", "score": "1.4657793" }, { "id": "7168259", "title": "Modou Bamba Gaye", "text": " Modou Bamba Gaye is a Gambian politician who was the National Assembly Member for Lower Saloum, representing the National Reconciliation Party (NRP), from a 2015 by-election to the 2017 parliamentary election.", "score": "1.4645648" }, { "id": "30792044", "title": "Modupeola Fadugba", "text": " Modupeola Fadugba (born 1985) is a self-taught Nigerian multi-media artist, living and working in Nigeria.", "score": "1.4545264" } ]
What is Jon Eikemo's occupation?
[ "actor", "actress", "actors", "actresses" ]
occupation
Jon Eikemo
3,154,588
75
[ { "id": "31930791", "title": "Jon Eikemo", "text": " Jon Eikemo (born 30 November 1939 in Åsane, Norway) is a Norwegian actor. He debuted on stage in 1961. He made his film debut in 1968, with the movie De ukjentes marked ('The Market of the Unknown'). Eikemo has been a minor political candidate for the Norwegian Centre Party.", "score": "1.9179833" }, { "id": "30323607", "title": "Eikemo", "text": "Jon Eikemo (born 1939), Norwegian actor ; Olve Eikemo (born 1973), Norwegian musician Eikemo is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.7562011" }, { "id": "16279916", "title": "Jon Ewo", "text": " Jon Ewo ( born 29 June 1957) is a Norwegian novelist, short story writer, crime fiction writer and children's writer. He was born in Oslo and educated as librarian. He made his literary debut in 1986 with the short story collection Det sies at oktober er en fin måned. His crime novels include Torpedo (1996), ''Hevn. Torpedo II (1997) and Gissel. Torpedo III'' (1998). He received the Brage Prize in 2007, for the biography Fortellingen om et mulig drap (jointly with illustrator Bjørn Ousland.", "score": "1.5750715" }, { "id": "1648852", "title": "Marit Eikemo", "text": " Marit Eikemo (born 1971) is a Norwegian essayist, novelist, journalist and magazine editor. Eikemo was born in Odda. She edited the book Her, no: Møte med unge menneske in 1999, and contributed to the essay collection Synd.no from 2001. Her first novel was Mellom oss sagt from 2006. In 2008 she published the essay collection Samtidsruinar, and in 2009 the novel Arbeid pågår. She was awarded the Nynorsk Literature Prize for the novel Samtale ventar in 2011. Eikemo was co-editor of the cultural and political magazine Syn og Segn from 2003 to 2006, jointly with Hilde Sandvik.", "score": "1.5734534" }, { "id": "437074", "title": "Olav Eikeland", "text": " Olav Eikeland (born 10 October 1955) is a Norwegian philosopher and working life researcher. Since 2008, he is professor of work research and research director for the Program for Research on Education and Work at Oslo Metropolitan University (formerly Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences). Since 2012, he is also vice dean of the Faculty of Education and International Studies. He was a researcher at the Work Research Institute from 1985 to 2008, and served as the institute's director 2003-2004.", "score": "1.5338743" }, { "id": null, "title": "De ukjentes marked", "text": "De ukjentes marked\n\nDe ukjentes marked (The Market of the Outcasts) is a Norwegian film from 1968. It was directed by Nils R. Müller, who also wrote the screenplay and edited the film. The film is based on Åge Rønning's 1966 novel \"De ukjentes marked\". The film premiered on November 7, 1968, at cinemas in Oslo, Kristiansand, Tønsberg, Drammen, and Ski.<ref name=\"Film\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Einar Schanke", "text": "Einar Schanke\n\nEinar Leonard Schanke (19 May 1927 – 23 February 1992) was a Norwegian composer, pianist, revue writer, theatre director and theatrical producer. He wrote revues for the Edderkoppen Theatre, and later for Chat Noir, where he was also director from 1962 to 1975.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kurt Foss", "text": "Kurt Foss\n\nKurt Foss (1 January 1925 – 17 October 1991) was a Norwegian composer, singer and vaudeville artist.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Solveig Kringlebotn", "text": "Solveig Kringlebotn\n\nSolveig Kringlebotn () (4 June 1963), better known outside Norway as Solveig Kringelborn, is an internationally known Norwegian operatic soprano.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Orion's Belt (film)", "text": "Orion's Belt (film)\n\nOrion's Belt () is a 1985 Norwegian dual-language, political action thriller film, directed by Ola Solum and Tristan de Vere Cole. It is based on Jon Michelet's 1977 novel by the same name. The film follows three Svalbard-based shabby seamen, played by Helge Jordal, Sverre Anker Ousdal and Hans Ola Sørlie, who discover a Soviet bearing station. They are subsequently targets of Soviet liquidation and American interrogation in an attempt to quiet them and retain the political \"status quo\". The Cold War topics were a critique of the Norwegian policy of allowing a Soviet presence on Svalbard.\n\nThe film was produced by Dag Alveberg and Petter Borgli, and the script was written by Briton Richard Harris. Two versions of the film were recorded, a Norwegian cinematic film and an English-language television film. First Solum shot the Norwegian-language scenes, and then Cole shot the same scene with the actors speaking English. The entire crew and cast lived on board a ship which traveled through Svalbard and Finnmark during production. The theme music, Svalbardtema, was composed by Geir Bøhren and Bent Åserud and has become an anthem for Svalbard.", "score": null }, { "id": "29723170", "title": "Jon Eirik Ødegaard", "text": " Jon Eirik Ødegaard (born 29 September 1972) is a retired Norwegian footballer. Hailing from Røros, he failed to break through from the junior ranks to the senior team at Rosenborg and instead tried his luck in Hamkam. Following relegation from the 1995 Tippeligaen he moved back to Trondheim and took one year in Strindheim and Byåsen each. He was brought back to the first tier by Vålerenga, and played three seasons there and four in Moss. Originally a midfielder, he was converted to left back while at Moss. After quitting his professional career due to serious injury he had outings for low-league teams Rapid and Tronvik. The son of a camping site and hotel owner in Røros, Ødegaard elected not to take over the family business and instead settled at Jeløya in Moss. He coached Moss' junior team for four years before becoming Tor Thodesen's assistant manager ahead of the 2011 season. He was later a player developer in local minnows Sprint-Jeløy and used his chef training to lead a cafeteria.", "score": "1.5280622" }, { "id": "10902812", "title": "Efosa Ojomo", "text": " Efosa was born in Nigeria. He attended Secondary School in Nigeria. After failing college entry exams twice, he proceeded to the Fisk University and later to Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee where he obtained a bachelor's degree in computer engineering. He also holds an MBA from Harvard Business School, where he worked as a researcher under Late Professor Clayton Christensen at the Forum for Growth and Innovation. He also worked as an engineer for National Instruments right after graduation.", "score": "1.5045593" }, { "id": "8348459", "title": "Jon Reidar Øyan", "text": " Jon Reidar Øyan (born 15 April 1981) is a Norwegian gay rights activist and politician for the Labour Party. He made his mark as leader of the Norwegian National Association for Lesbian and Gay Liberation, and stepped down in 2008. He was then hired as an advisor for the parliamentary group of the Norwegian Labour Party. He had a background as a member of Snillfjord municipal council. In October 2009 he was appointed political advisor in the Norwegian Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion. From November to December 2011 he was an acting State Secretary in the Ministry of Government Administration, Reform and Church Affairs. He was later a personal adviser to Helga Pedersen.", "score": "1.4925078" }, { "id": "25621639", "title": "Sten Ove Eike", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.471422" }, { "id": "10902811", "title": "Efosa Ojomo", "text": " Efosa Ojomo is a Nigerian author, researcher and speaker. He leads the Global Prosperity research group at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation, a think tank based in Boston and Silicon Valley and is a senior research fellow at the Harvard Business School. Efosa speaks regularly on innovation and has presented his work at TED, the Aspen Ideas Festival, the World Bank, Harvard, Yale, Oxford and at several other conferences and institutions. In January 2019, Efosa and Harvard Business School professor, Clayton Christensen published \"The Prosperity Paradox: How Innovation Can Lift Nations Out of Poverty\".", "score": "1.4577703" }, { "id": "26385636", "title": "Jon Kvist", "text": " Jon Kvist (born 6 January 1967) is a Danish researcher and author. He is a professor at the Institute of Society and Globalization, at the Roskilde University, as well as a member of the Nordic Centre of Excellence on Reassessing the Nordic Welfare Model.", "score": "1.4454195" }, { "id": "5523503", "title": "Ola Henmo", "text": " Ola Henmo (born 1965) is a Norwegian journalist and non-fiction writer. Hailing from Grav in Bærum, he played football for the clubs Frigg, Fossum, Stabæk and then Fossum again. He became a journalist working 15 years in Aftenposten. As a journalist he worked extensively with the 2011 Norway attacks, and was a consultant for the television series Utøya. He published a book for the 75th anniversary of the Norwegian Cancer Society (2013) and portrait books about activist Kim Friele (2015) and disabled politician Torstein Lerhol (2019), the latter two on the publishing house Cappelen Damm.", "score": "1.4371643" }, { "id": "11557674", "title": "James Eike", "text": " James W. Eike (September 29, 1911 – February 8, 1983) was a birdwatcher and former president of the Virginia Society of Ornithology. The James W. Eike Service Award was created by the Society in his honor in 1984. Eike was born in Woodbridge, Virginia. He graduated from Georgetown University in 1932 and began a federal career in 1934 with the U.S. Public Health Service. He later worked for the Civil Service Commission and joined the U.S. State Department in 1946. He retired in 1970 from the U.S. Information Agency. He lived in Northern Virginia around Falls Church and Fairfax. He kept detailed field notebooks which recorded his observation of birds, as well as weather conditions, for over 30 years, rarely missing a day. His observations were concentrated near his home in Northern Virginia, but also include Maryland, Washington D.C., and North Carolina. Eike joined the Virginia Society of Ornithology in 1933, and was an active member and officer of the Society for the rest of his life. Eike's personal papers are held by the Smithsonian Institution Archives. His collection of 111 field books are part of Smithsonian's Field Book Registry; they have been scanned and posted online.", "score": "1.4227158" }, { "id": "10902813", "title": "Efosa Ojomo", "text": " Efosa Ojomo is the director of Global Prosperity at the Clayton Christensen Institute for Disruptive Innovation. He was formerly a senior research fellow at the Forum for Growth and Innovation at the Harvard Business School. He was mentored by Late Professor Clay Christensen, one of the world's top experts on strategy, growth, and innovation. Efosa's research examines how emerging economies, or what he now refers to as growth economies, including sub-Saharan Africa, can engender prosperity for their citizens by focusing on investments in market-creating innovations. He also works with firms to help them develop a market-creating innovation strategy. Efosa was also the President and co-founder of “Poverty Stops Here”. He was a Co-President, Harvard Business School Africa Business Club from 2014 till 2015. He worked as an engineer and in business development for National Instruments for eight years following graduation. He was named THINKER S50 Radar Class of 2020.", "score": "1.4219942" }, { "id": "11383409", "title": "Jon Asamoah", "text": " Jonathan Yao-Lante Asamoah (born July 21, 1988) is a former offensive guard who played in the National Football League (NFL). He was drafted by the Kansas City Chiefs in the third round of the 2010 NFL Draft. He played college football at Illinois. Asamoah was considered one of the top interior offensive linemen for the 2010 NFL Draft. Asamoah has also played for the Atlanta Falcons.", "score": "1.4194162" }, { "id": "10872321", "title": "Arne Eidsmo", "text": " Arne Eidsmo (4 April 1941 – 16 October 2011) was a Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party. He hailed from Tromsø, and for 42 years he was the regional director of the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise in Northern Norway. He retired in April 2011. He also served as State Secretary in the Ministry of Fisheries from 1989 to 1990, in Syse's Cabinet. Eidsmo was also a freemason, since 1967, and the last two years of his life he was a \"Provincial Master\" in the organization. He died in October 2011 at the University Hospital of North Norway following short-term illness.", "score": "1.4189136" }, { "id": "32083260", "title": "Raimo Valle", "text": " Raimo Valle (born 15 September 1965) is a Norwegian civil servant and politician for the Labour Party. He hails from Unjárga - Nesseby. He graduated as cand.mag. from the University of Tromsø in 1989. Outside politics he worked as a consultant in Troms County Municipality from 1993 to 2007. He was a board member of the Centre for Sami Studies, University of Tromsø after graduating, was the county leader of the Federation of Norwegian Professional Associations in Troms from 1999 to 2003 and from 2001 to 2007 he was a board member of the Association of Social Scientists. In 2007 he was appointed to Stoltenberg's Second Cabinet as a State Secretary in the Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion. He left office in 2012.", "score": "1.416105" }, { "id": "6303665", "title": "John Eidsmoe", "text": " John A. Eidsmoe is an attorney and a professor of constitutional law and related subjects. He has previously taught at the Thomas Goode Jones School of Law, Faulkner University, Montgomery, Alabama, the O. W. Coburn School of Law at Oral Roberts University and Oak Brook College of Law and Government Policy. He was in the US Air Force as a lieutenant colonel and is an Alabama State Defense Force colonel, headquarters judge advocate, deputy chaplain and training officer. He earned his J.D. from the University of Iowa, M.A. from Dallas Theological Seminary, M. Div. from Lutheran Brethren Seminary and D. Min. from O.R.U. In a 2001 interview, Eidsmoe said, \"When Biblical law conflicted with American law, O.R.U. students were generally taught that 'the first thing you should try ", "score": "1.4132652" }, { "id": "29924689", "title": "Frank Jonke", "text": " Frank Jonke (born January 30, 1985) is a Canadian former soccer player who played in the USL Premier Development League, Canadian Soccer League, Kakkonen, Ykkönen, Veikkausliiga, and the North American Soccer League.", "score": "1.4120677" }, { "id": "25621638", "title": "Sten Ove Eike", "text": " Eike was born in Skudenes, and played for the local club Skudenes UIL before he joined Haugesund in 2004. Eike suffered from a heart attack after a match against Stavanger on 27 September 2009, but he made his comeback in the 2011 Tippeligaen. He played 124 matches and scored 20 goals for Haugesund. On 15 August 2011, Eike signed a half-year contract with the 1. divisjon club Sandefjord. With the help of Eike's six goals in nine matches, Sandefjord came third in 2011 Norwegian First Division, but missed out on the promotion to Tippeligaen. After the season, he decided to step down from the professional football career, and got a job as director of football and janitor in his youth club Skudenes, but he admitted that he would probably play some matches for the team in the Norwegian Fifth Division. Until 2017 he played some Skudenes games every season, being a prolific goalscorer.", "score": "1.4021623" } ]
What is Marco Ameglio's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Marco Ameglio
900,521
74
[ { "id": "14830513", "title": "Marco Ameglio", "text": " Marco Antonio Ameglio Samudio (b. 1961) is a Panamanian politician and businessman. He served as the President of the National Assembly from 1991 to 1992. Ameglio has been on the Panama Canal Authority Board of Directors since March 23, 2010. He was sworn for a period of 9 years.", "score": "1.7832141" }, { "id": "1327565", "title": "Pietro Ameglio", "text": " Pietro Ameglio (born 1957) is a Uruguayan-born naturalized Mexican citizen and Gandhian civil rights and peace activist best known for his role in promoting nonviolence and creating a movement for peace and anti-militarism in Mexico. In May 2011, Ameglio helped to organize demonstrations in support of survivor and victim rights related to ongoing violence in Mexico following the death of Juan Francisco Sicilia Ortega, the son of Javier Sicilia, bringing hundreds of thousands of people together across Mexico and in 17 countries around the world. A practitioner of Gandhian methodology, Ameglio's philosophy is to tap the positive values and moral sensibilities of Mexican culture which can be marshaled to oppose war and to change the model of \"Armed Peace\" to a model of \"Peace with Justice.\" This combination of practical and formal peace work has led Pietro Ameglio to be described as \"one of the most important teachers and practitioners of active nonviolence in Latin America today.\" Pietro Ameglio has been selected as the 2014 winner of the El-Hibri Peace Education Prize, the eighth annual Laureate to be selected.", "score": "1.6441958" }, { "id": "5264013", "title": "Ameglia", "text": "Roberto Pazzi ", "score": "1.6041577" }, { "id": "31702113", "title": "Ameglio", "text": "Carlos Ameglio (born 1965), Uruguayan film director ; Giovanni Ameglio (1854–1921), Italian general ; Marco Ameglio (born 1961), Panamanian businessman ; Pietro Ameglio (born 1957), Uruguayan-born Mexican activist Ameglio is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5976529" }, { "id": "13195205", "title": "Divino Otelma", "text": " Marco Amleto Belelli, or Divino Otelma, (born 8 May 1949) is an Italian television personality, politician and singer.", "score": "1.5746372" }, { "id": null, "title": "Juan Carlos Varela", "text": "Juan Carlos Varela\n\nJuan Carlos Varela Rodríguez (; born 13 December 1963) is a Panamanian businessman and former politician who served as the President of Panama from 2014 to 2019. \nVarela was Vice President of Panama from 2009 to 2014, and Minister of Foreign Relations from July 2009 to August 2011. He was President of the Panameñistas, the third-largest political party in Panama, from 2006 to 2016.\n\nVarela won the 2014 presidential election with over 39% of the votes, against the Cambio Democrático Party, led by his former political partner Ricardo Martinelli, whose candidate was José Domingo Arias. He was sworn in as president on 1 July 2014.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Battle of Benghazi (1911)", "text": "Battle of Benghazi (1911)\n\nThe Battle of Benghazi occurred during the Italo-Turkish War when the Kingdom of Italy attacked and took possession of the major cities of the Ottoman Empire's North African Tripolitania province, now Libya. Benghazi was one of the five strategic cities captured and held by the Italians during the entire length of the war.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Mario Del Monaco", "text": "Mario Del Monaco\n\nMario Del Monaco (27 July 191516 October 1982) was an Italian operatic tenor.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Panamanian politicians", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Italo-Turkish War", "text": "Italo-Turkish War\n\nThe Italo-Turkish or Turco-Italian War (, \"Tripolitanian War\", , \"War of Libya\") was fought between the Kingdom of Italy and the Ottoman Empire from 29 September 1911, to 18 October 1912. As a result of this conflict, Italy captured the Ottoman Tripolitania Vilayet, of which the main sub-provinces were Fezzan, Cyrenaica, and Tripoli itself. These territories became the colonies of Italian Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, which would later merge into Italian Libya.\n\nDuring the conflict, Italian forces also occupied the Dodecanese islands in the Aegean Sea. Italy agreed to return the Dodecanese to the Ottoman Empire in the Treaty of Ouchy in 1912. However, the vagueness of the text, combined with subsequent adverse events unfavourable to the Ottoman Empire (the outbreak of the Balkan Wars and World War I), allowed a provisional Italian administration of the islands, and Turkey eventually renounced all claims on these islands in Article 15 of the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne.\n\nThe war was a precursor of the First World War. Members of the Balkan League, sensing Ottoman weakness and motivated by incipient Balkan nationalism, attacked the Ottoman Empire in October 1912, starting the First Balkan War a few days before the end of the Italo-Turkish War.\n\nThe Italo-Turkish War saw numerous technological changes, most notably the use of airplanes in combat. On 23 October 1911, an Italian pilot, \"Capitano\" Carlo Piazza, flew over Turkish lines on the world's first aerial reconnaissance mission, and on 1 November, the first aerial bomb was dropped by \"Sottotenente\" Giulio Gavotti, on Turkish troops in Libya, from an early model of Etrich Taube aircraft. The Turks, using rifles, were the first to shoot down an airplane. Another use of new technology was a network of wireless telegraphy stations established soon after the initial landings. Guglielmo Marconi, the inventor of wireless telegraphy, came to Libya to conduct experiments with the Italian Corps of Engineers.", "score": null }, { "id": "25166053", "title": "Carlos Ameglio", "text": " Carlos Ameglio (born 23 June 1965 in Montevideo) is a Uruguayan film director. His film La cáscara was distinguished as the best film at the AFIA Film Festival in Aarhus. Currently he is working on the Kiken project with Diego Dubcovsky.", "score": "1.5498623" }, { "id": "16207569", "title": "Marco Dispaltro", "text": " Marco Dispaltro (born 2 August 1967) is a Canadian boccia player who competes at international elite competitions. He is a Paralympic bronze medalist in the pairs with Josh Vander Vies and a Parapan American Games champion in the individual events.", "score": "1.5351508" }, { "id": "1079034", "title": "Marco Ambrosini", "text": " Marco Ambrosini (born 1964 in Forlì, Italy) is an Italian musician, composer and arranger living in Germany.", "score": "1.5272427" }, { "id": "709298", "title": "Marco Mazzoni", "text": " Marco Mazzoni (born 17 January 1982) is a Milan-based Italian artist, originally from Tortona. He is generally considered a portrait artist and only uses coloured pencils in his work. Mazzoni's work holds a strong interest in flora and fauna(flora e fauna), and often depicts the female herbalists of 16th—18th Century Sardinia. Notably, Marco created a portrait of musician Anomie Belle included in the album art for Flux, and as the cover of The Good Life EP. Mazzoni received a bachelor's degree in painting from Brera Art Academy in Milan. His work has been exhibited in galleries throughout Europe and the United States.", "score": "1.5240207" }, { "id": "13621746", "title": "Lucas Ambrogio", "text": " .", "score": "1.5116861" }, { "id": "32155147", "title": "Marco Aurelio Denegri", "text": " Marco Aurelio Denegri Santagadea (16 May 1938 &ndash; 27 July 2018) was a Peruvian intellectual, literary critic, television host and sexologist.", "score": "1.5095224" }, { "id": "32155152", "title": "Marco Aurelio Denegri", "text": " He died on 27 July 2018 due to pulmonary emphysema.", "score": "1.5045564" }, { "id": "30440661", "title": "Marco Amenta", "text": " Marco Amenta (Palermo, 11 August 1970) is an Italian director, producer, and photojournalist.", "score": "1.4998683" }, { "id": "15294249", "title": "Marco Di Vaio", "text": " Marco Di Vaio (born 15 July 1976) is an Italian former professional footballer who played as a striker. A prolific goalscorer, in his long club career, Di Vaio scored over 200 league goals while playing for several clubs, mainly in Italy, as well as in Monaco, Spai and Canada. At international level, Di Vaio represented the Italy national football team at Euro 2004.", "score": "1.4854094" }, { "id": "1327572", "title": "Pietro Ameglio", "text": " Born in Uruguay and educated in Mexico, Ameglio completed his undergraduate studies in History at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and earned a Master’s in Contemporary History at the Autonomous University of Morelos (UAEM). Ameglio served 18 years as Chair of the Humanities Department at La Salle University in Cuernavaca. Ameglio has held both the Henry D. Thoreau Special Chair and the Spanish Exile Masters – Due Disobedience Special Chair (2008-2014) within the School of Philosophy and Literature at National Autonomous University (UNAM) in Mexico City. He teaches classes on “Peace Pedagogy”, “Civil Resistance” and “Techniques of Nonviolence” at the UNAM and the Universidad del Claustro de Sor Juana. These courses ", "score": "1.4745625" }, { "id": "27046512", "title": "Marco Bertolotto", "text": " Marco Bertolotto (born 8 September 1959 in Quiliano) is an Italian doctor and politician, formerly president of the Province of Savona. A graduate in medicine and surgery, Bertolotto pursued a number of specializations in medicine, surgery, and sanitary management prior to beginning his political career. He served as director of the pain therapy and palliative care unit at Santa Corona hospital in Pietra Ligure, before being elected to the first of two terms as mayor of Toirano in 1995. During his second term of office he generated a lively council debate over the construction of a waste incinerator on municipal land. He also engineered a twinning agreement, inaugurated in October 2003, with the Christian community of Rumbek in South Sudan. Bertolotto was in ", "score": "1.4691827" }, { "id": "32155150", "title": "Marco Aurelio Denegri", "text": " Denegri never married and was very reserved regarding his private life. In some programs he expressed being friends with some intellectuals, although during the last years of his life he became totally isolated. His main link to the world was his assistant and maid Rosa Torres; anyone interested in speaking to Denegri had to ring her cellphone to request a telephone conversation with Denegri. After Denegri gave her permission, she connected the phone line and the person in question could communicate directly with him. During his youth he frequently visited Jirón Huatica in Lima, a meeting place for prostitutes and their clients. In \"Miscelánea humanística\" he drew a map of the location as he knew it. He was also a witness to peculiar sexual encounters. In one of ", "score": "1.4606564" }, { "id": "27617188", "title": "Marco Stradiotto", "text": " Marco Stradiotto (born 7 October 1965) is an Italian politician. Stradiotto was born on 7 October 1965 in Noale. He was elected to the Legislature XIV as a member of the Chamber of Deputies, serving from 2001 to 2006, while affiliated with The Daisy. Between 2008 and 2013, Stradiotto sat on the Senate for the Democratic Party.", "score": "1.4596047" }, { "id": "31544820", "title": "Marco Evaristti", "text": " Marco Evaristti (born 1963) is a Chilean artist who has lived in Denmark since the 1980s. While a trained and practicing architect, he is best known for hosting a dinner party where the main course was agnolotti pasta that was topped with a meatball made with his own fat, removed earlier in the year in a liposuction operation.", "score": "1.4588833" }, { "id": "26005852", "title": "Marco Tulio Boasso", "text": " Marco Tulio Boasso (born in 1962 in Montevideo, Uruguay) served as the International Organization for Migration's (IOM) Special Envoy and Chief of Mission in Afghanistan. He was appointed to this position by the IOM Director General in March 2009.", "score": "1.4495682" } ]
What is Valgerður Bjarnadóttir's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Valgerður Bjarnadóttir
4,062,418
73
[ { "id": "14732035", "title": "Valgerður Bjarnadóttir", "text": " Valgerður Bjarnadóttir (born 13 January 1950) is an Icelandic politician.", "score": "2.0333462" }, { "id": "11503300", "title": "Valgerður Þóroddsdóttir", "text": " Valgerður Þóroddsdóttir (also Vala Thorodds) is an Icelandic poet, publisher, translator and literary curator. Valgerður is the founder and director of two independent publishers of poetry and prose – Partus Press, based in the UK, and Partus forlag, based in Reykjavík, Iceland. Her first chapbook, the booklet-length poem Það sem áður var skógur (What Once Was Forest), was edited by Sjón and published in the chapbook series Meðgönguljóð in Iceland in 2015. She edited and translated from the Icelandic the selected poems of Kristín Ómarsdóttir, Waitress in Fall, which was co-published in the UK in 2018 by Carcanet Press and Partus Press.", "score": "1.8209221" }, { "id": "25391000", "title": "Valgerður Sverrisdóttir", "text": " Valgerður Sverrisdóttir (born 23 March 1950) is an Icelandic politician. She was a member of the Althing (Iceland's parliament) for the Progressive Party for the Northeast constituency starting in 1987 and was Chairman of the Progressive Party parliamentary group from 1995 to 1999, Minister of Industry and Commerce from 1999 to 2006, and Minister for Nordic Cooperation from 2004 to 2005. She was Minister for Foreign Affairs from 15 June 2006 to 24 May 2007. She has been a member of the Progressive Party's central committee since 1983.", "score": "1.8133285" }, { "id": "3389307", "title": "Valgerður Gunnarsdóttir", "text": " Valgerður Gunnarsdóttir is an Icelandic politician, a member of the Icelandic parliament, and the former headmaster of Laugar Junior College. She was a member of Húsavík town council from 1986 to 1998 and served as the president of the town council from 1994 to 1998. Valgerður has been a member of the Budget Committee since 2013 and a member of the Icelandic Delegation to the Nordic Council from the same year. She has been a member of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe since 2016 and serves as deputy chairman for the Icelandic delegation.", "score": "1.7633004" }, { "id": "11292284", "title": "Guðrún Valgerður Stefánsdóttir", "text": " Guðrún Valgerður Stefánsdóttir graduated from Iceland's Social Pedagogue School in 1976, completed special pedagogue education from the University of Oslo in 1983 and Teacher Certification from the Iceland University of Education in 1991. She completed a master's from Iceland University of Education in 1998 and a Ph.D in Disability Studies from the University of Iceland’s Faculty of Social Sciences in 2008. Before Guðrún began her academic career, she worked with disabled people, as both a social pedagogue and special teacher. She started teaching at the Social Pedagogue School of Iceland in 1989. In 1998, Iceland University of Education (now the School of Education at the University of Iceland) hired her as assistant professor. Guðrún is now a professor in disability studies in the School of Education at the University of Iceland.", "score": "1.7498629" }, { "id": null, "title": "Vilmundur Gylfason", "text": "Vilmundur Gylfason\n\nVilmundur Gylfason (7 August 1948 – 19 June 1983) was an Icelandic politician, historian and poet. He was the son of Gylfi Þorsteinsson Gíslason and Guðrún Vilmundardóttir.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by nationality ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Iceland/Lists of pages/Articles", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Iceland/Article alerts/Archive 1", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Metrics/June 2021", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "10789191", "title": "Sigurlína Ingvarsdóttir", "text": " Sigurlína (Lína) Valgerður Ingvarsdóttir (born 1978) is an Icelandic engineer, project manager and video games specialist. Starting in 2012, she worked in Stockholm, Sweden, for EA DICE, and coordinated the development of Star Wars Battlefront and later of FIFA. Since 2021, she has been chair of Icelandic game developer Solid Clouds.", "score": "1.7452278" }, { "id": "3808424", "title": "Valgerður Hafstað", "text": " into a home near the French capital of Paris the following year and relocated to New York City in 1974. From 1981, she worked at the Reykjavík Art Museum Kjarvalsstaðir. Valgerður partook in the American-based Scandinavian Today between 1982 and 1984 and then with the travelling Borealis exhibition for which she received a salary from 1983 to 1984. Early in 1983, Valgerður took part in an exhibition held at the Reykjavík Art Museum Kjarvalsstaði. Her works in Iceland include stained glass windows she did in Tjarnarkirkja in Svarfaðardalur and decorated a wall in Varmahlíðarskóli in Skagafjörður. Valgerður also produced several privately owned paintings. A posthumous exhibition of her works took place at Berg Culture House in July 2012. Three years later, the Kópavogur Art Museum held an exhibition of Valgerður's paintings.", "score": "1.7316278" }, { "id": "3808423", "title": "Valgerður Hafstað", "text": " On 1 June 1930, Valgerður was born in Vík in the South Constituency. She was the daughter of Árni Hafstað and Ingibjörg Sigurðardóttir. Valgerður had ten siblings and she was the youngest of them all. She was educated in art at the Academy of Free and Mercantile Art in Copenhagen before matriculated to the School of Arts and Crafts in Reykjavík. Valgerður remained in Reykajvik until 1948, when she went to Paris to study at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. She studied mosaic and painting at the Academy, remaining there until 1952. Valgerður went on to study mosaic processing at the Ecole des Arts Italiennes, and worked on mineral windows and mosaics. Her first art exhibition was a joint venture with Gerður Helgadóttir at Paris' Galerie La Rouge in 1957. Valgerður ", "score": "1.7246795" }, { "id": "10205332", "title": "Sigríður Dúna Kristmundsdóttir", "text": " Sigríður Dúna Kristmundsdóttir (born 1952) is a professor of anthropology at the University of Iceland.", "score": "1.6850634" }, { "id": "3808422", "title": "Valgerður Hafstað", "text": " Valgerður Hafstað (1 June 1930 – 9 March 2011) was an Icelandic painter who worked with acrylic, oil and watercolours. She was educated at the Academy of Free and Mercantile Art in Copenhagen, the School of Arts and Crafts in Reykjavík and Paris' Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Valgerður worked on mineral windows and mosaics and produced several privately owned paintings.", "score": "1.6736774" }, { "id": "2268596", "title": "Helga Vala Helgadóttir", "text": " Helga Vala Helgadóttir (born 14 March 1972 in Reykjavik) is an Icelandic politician of the Social Democratic Alliance (Samfylkingin). She is a member of the Althing, elected in the 2017 Icelandic parliamentary election on 28 October 2017, representing the constituency of Reykjavík North. She was educated at Menntaskólinn við Hamrahlíð and then in 1998 trained in acting at the Icelandic Academy of the Performing Arts. She later gained a BA in 2009 and a master's degree in law from Reykjavík University in 2011. In 2011 she also received her lawyer's license and from 2011 to 2017, she operated her own law firm.", "score": "1.6683646" }, { "id": "11292283", "title": "Guðrún Valgerður Stefánsdóttir", "text": " Guðrún Valgerður Stefánsdóttir is a professor in disability studies at the School of Education of the University of Iceland.", "score": "1.667688" }, { "id": "15850942", "title": "Sigga Björg Sigurðardóttir", "text": " Sigga Björg Sigurðardóttir (born 1977) is an Icelandic artist. She was born in Reykjavík, studied at the Iceland Academy of the Arts and went on to receive a MFA from the Glasgow School of Art. She has had solo exhibitions in Reykjavík, Frankfurt, New York City and Montreal and participated in group exhibitions at the Gothenburg Art Museum, the Centre for Contemporary Arts in Glasgow and the Reykjavík Art Museum. She works with drawing, painting, sculpture and animation. Her art evokes a mythical world infused with both humour and wildness. Her figures combine attributes of both humans and beasts. She also produced art for album covers for various artists including Jónsi, Sigur Rós and Alex Somers. In 2014, she collaborated with Erica Eyres in an installation at the Listasafn ASÍ art museum called Sniffer. Her work is held in collections around the world including the Zabludowicz Art Trust in London, the Nordic Watercolour Museum in Sweden, the Kunsthaus Zürich in Switzerland and the Reykjavík Art Museum.", "score": "1.6660619" }, { "id": "13777334", "title": "Þorgerður Ólafsdóttir", "text": " Þorgerður Ólafsdóttir is an Icelandic visual artist. She was born in 1985 in Reykjavík and received Bachelor of Fine Arts from IAA in 2009. She graduated with Master of Fine Arts from the Glasgow School of Art in Scotland in 2013. She currently resides in Reykjavik, Iceland.", "score": "1.6292138" }, { "id": "4930866", "title": "Birgitta Jónsdóttir", "text": " Birgitta Jónsdóttir (born 17 April 1967) is an Icelandic politician, anarchist, poet, and activist. She was a Member of the Althing (MP) for the Southwest Constituency from 2013 to 2017, representing the Pirate Party, having been elected at the 2013 election. She was previously an MP for Reykjavík Constituency South from 2009 to 2013. In November 2017, she has announced to retire from politics \"for now\". She published her first book of poetry at the age of 22, and later became a web developer. She was a noted Icelandic activist, and took on a number of roles during the protests following the 2007–2008 financial crisis. She was first elected as an MP representing the Citizens' Movement in the 2009 election. Later in ", "score": "1.6233901" }, { "id": "8739337", "title": "Ólína Þorvarðardóttir", "text": " Ólína Kjerúlf Þorvarðardóttir (born 8 September 1958) was a member of the Althing, representing the Social Democratic Alliance for the Northwest Constituency from 2009 to 2016.", "score": "1.623085" }, { "id": "14500545", "title": "Valdís Óskarsdóttir", "text": " Valdís Óskarsdóttir (born 1950 in Akureyri, Iceland) is an Icelandic film editor, whose work includes The Celebration, Les Misérables, Finding Forrester and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. She received multiple awards in early 2005 for her work on Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind. In addition, she has twice won the Danish Film Academy's Robert Award for Best Editing. Sveitabrúðkaup (Country Wedding), her directorial debut, premiered in Iceland in August 2008.", "score": "1.6117591" }, { "id": "2268600", "title": "Helga Vala Helgadóttir", "text": " Helga Vala worked as an actress and director at Akureyri Theater in 1999 and also as an actress at New Perspective Theater Company in 2000. She was also a program director on the Bylgjan, RÚV, NFS from 2000 to 2006. Correspondent at publishing company Edda 2002. In 2008, she worked as a journalist on Mannlíf. She then came a legal representative at Lögron, Reykjavik Law Office and neighbor, 2009–2011. From 2011 to 2017, Helga ran her own law firm, Valva Lawyers. Helga Vala has held numerous confidential positions, including serving on the board of the Icelandic Actors Association, the National Theater Council and the Copyright Council. In her work as a lawyer, Helga has specialized in the affairs of refugees, immigrants and families. Helga Vala has also as a lawyer worked with victims of sexual and domestic violence. Helga Vala received recognition from Icelandic Ethical Humanist Association in 2014 for work in the field of human rights and humanitarianism in Iceland", "score": "1.607228" }, { "id": "11292288", "title": "Guðrún Valgerður Stefánsdóttir", "text": " Guðrún has served in various positions of confidentiality at the University of Iceland and outside it. Examples include her participation on the Editorial Board of the journal Uppeldi og menntun (Icelandic Journal of Education). She was one of its two editors during the four-year period from 2013 to 2016. In addition, she has been director of the social pedagogue programme and participated in developing undergraduate and graduate curriculums for social pedagogues. She was also a member of the Doctoral Programme Committee of the School of Education for several electoral terms and participated in developing the School's doctoral curriculum. In addition, she was one of the initiators of university studies for people with intellectual disabilities and has participated in international cooperation in that context. The curriculum has won various awards, including the Múrbrjót of the National Association of Intellectual ", "score": "1.6049294" }, { "id": "2638890", "title": "Jónína Kristín Berg", "text": " with her own art. She performs aromatherapy and has served on the Board of Icelandic Healers. She followed Ásatrúarfélagið from its inception as she was a neighbour of the co-founder Sveinbjörn Beinteinsson. She became active in the organization in 1985. In 1993 she was elected as a board member. Since 1994 she is responsible for annual blóts in Snæfellsnes and Borgarfjörður and since 1996 she is the regional gothi of the Western Region. In 2002 she became the interim allsherjargoði after a conflict resulted in Jörmundur Ingi Hansen's removal from the office. She was succeeded by Hilmar Örn Hilmarsson in 2003 after a regular election could be held. She has legal rights to perform marriages.", "score": "1.6040269" } ]
What is Russell Stokes's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Russell Stokes
5,651,252
84
[ { "id": "24902660", "title": "Russell Stokes", "text": " Russell Newton Stokes (26 August 1903 &ndash; 6 July 1974) was an Australian politician. Born in Ivanhoe to manufacturer Henry Richmond Stokes and Emma Rowdon Wippell. He attended Melbourne Grammar School and became a manufacturer with the family badge- and medallion-making firm, Stokes & Sons, based in Brunswick. He was the managing director and chairman of the company from 1932 to 1974. Stokes also owned a 600-acre dairy and Angus property at Yarra Glen and further property at Yea. He married Margaret Black, with whom he had three children, on 16 November 1935. In 1944, he was the co-author of Political Rehabilitation in Australia, in which year he was also a foundation member of the Liberal Party. He sat on the member qualifications committee from 1954 to 1956, and in 1958 was elected to the Victorian Legislative Assembly as the member for Evelyn. He served until his retirement in 1973 and died in 1974 at Cairns. He is buried at Warringal Cemetery at Heidelberg.", "score": "1.6459734" }, { "id": "5024563", "title": "Marcus Stokes", "text": " Before his career in films, Marcus worked in Architectural design and holds a master's degree from the University of California, Berkeley. Marcus also worked in rural Japan as a language instructor and translator.", "score": "1.4599125" }, { "id": "7597678", "title": "Rob Stokes", "text": " Robert Gordon Stokes (born 17 January 1975), an Australian politician, is the New South Wales Minister for Planning and Public Spaces in the second Berejiklian ministry since April 2019. He is a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly representing Pittwater for the Liberal Party since 2007. Stokes has previously served as the Minister for Education from January 2017 until March 2019 in the First Berejiklian ministry; the Minister for the Environment, the Minister for Heritage, the Assistant Minister for Planning, and the Minister for the Central Coast during 2014 and 2015 in the first Baird government; and the Minister for Planning from April 2015 until January 2017 in the second Baird government.", "score": "1.4007319" }, { "id": "26533396", "title": "Rufus Stokes", "text": " after, they moved to Kansas City, Missouri, where Stokes was employed as a part-time auto mechanic. In 1947, they moved once again, to Waukegan, Illinois where he found temporary employment as a pipe and sheet metal worker. Between late 1947 and 1949, Stokes was employed as an orderly at the Chicago Veterans Administration Hospital, specifically in the Tuberculosis Sanitarium. It was during this time that he first saw the negative health effects of the city's pollution. In 1949, he left the hospital and found work at Brule Inc., an incinerator manufacturing company in Chicago. He quickly learned the process of combustion and was thought to have contributed heavily in the designs of new incinerators, but was never credited for his work. For that reason, he left to pursue his own interests.", "score": "1.3995953" }, { "id": "7226424", "title": "Anthony Stokes", "text": " <references group=Note1 />", "score": "1.3989849" }, { "id": null, "title": "Bill Russell", "text": "Bill Russell\n\nWilliam Felton Russell (February 12, 1934 – July 31, 2022) was an American professional basketball player who played as a center for the Boston Celtics of the National Basketball Association (NBA) from 1956 to 1969. A five-time NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP) and a 12-time NBA All-Star, he was the centerpiece of the Celtics dynasty that won 11 NBA championships during his 13-year career. Russell and Henri Richard of the National Hockey League are tied for the record of the most championships won by an athlete in a North American sports league. Russell is widely considered to be one of the greatest basketball players of all time. He led the San Francisco Dons to two consecutive NCAA championships in 1955 and 1956,<ref name=\"usf\"/> and he captained the gold-medal winning U.S. national basketball team at the 1956 Summer Olympics.<ref name=\"nbacomsummary\"/>\n\nDespite his limitations on offense, as Russell averaged 15.1 points per game, his rebounding, defense, and leadership made him one of the dominant players of his era. Standing at tall, with a arm span, his shot-blocking and man-to-man defense were major reasons for the Celtics' dominance during his career. Russell was equally notable for his rebounding abilities, and he led the NBA in rebounds four times, had a dozen consecutive seasons of 1,000 or more rebounds, and remains second all time in both total rebounds and rebounds per game. He is one of just two NBA players (the other being prominent rival Wilt Chamberlain) to have grabbed more than 50 rebounds in a game.\n\nRussell played in the wake of black pioneers Earl Lloyd, Chuck Cooper, and Sweetwater Clifton, and he was the first black player to achieve superstar status in the NBA. He also served a three-season (1966–69) stint as player-coach for the Celtics, becoming the first black coach in the NBA and the first to win a championship. In 2011, Barack Obama awarded Russell the Presidential Medal of Freedom for his accomplishments on the court and in the civil rights movement.\n\nRussell was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1975, was one of the founding inductees into the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in 2006 and was enshrined in the FIBA Hall of Fame in 2007. He was selected into the NBA 25th Anniversary Team in 1971 and the NBA 35th Anniversary Team in 1980, named as one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History in 1996, In 2021, he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame a second time for his coaching career. Shortly after his death in 2022, the NBA retired Russell's #6 jersey league-wide, making him the only player in NBA history to receive the honor.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kathleen Cody (actress)", "text": "Kathleen Cody (actress)\n\nKathleen Cody (born October 30, 1954), often credited as Kathy Cody, is an American actress. She is best known for her role as the characters Hallie Stokes and Carrie Stokes, on the television series \"Dark Shadows\", appearing from June 1970 through April 1971. Her career in film and television lasted over 30 years.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ernest John Russell", "text": "Ernest John Russell\n\nErnest John Russell FAIA (1870–1956) was an English-born American architect in practice in St. Louis from 1900 until his death in 1956. From 1932 to 1935 he was president of the American Institute of Architects.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Chase Stokes", "text": "Chase Stokes\n\nJames Alexander Chase Stokes is an American actor. He is best known for his role as John B in the Netflix teen drama series \"Outer Banks\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Nick Stokes", "text": "Nick Stokes\n\nNicholas \"Nick\" Stokes is a fictional character from the CBS crime drama \"\", portrayed by George Eads. He made his first screen appearance in the show's , broadcast on October 6, 2000, and departed the series on February 15, 2015, in \"The End Game\". Eads is credited in 335 episodes of the series.", "score": null }, { "id": "5024564", "title": "Marcus Stokes", "text": " Marcus is the founder and president of The Working Director, a Santa Monica-based company specializing in training aspiring professional directors. Marcus' current directing projects include The Signal, starring Michael Ealy and Grace Phipps, and post-apocalyptic thriller, O2, which he is collaborating on with Cody Zwieg (The Lazarus Effect, The Hills Have Eyes).", "score": "1.3976996" }, { "id": "13318481", "title": "Carl Stokes", "text": " Stokes was born in Cleveland's Central neighborhood, the son of Louise (Stone) and Charles Stokes, a laundryman who died when Carl was two years old. He and his brother, politician Louis Stokes, were raised by their mother in Cleveland's first federally funded housing project for the poor, Outhwaite Homes. Although a good student, Stokes dropped out of high school in 1944, worked briefly at Thompson Products (later TRW), then joined the U.S. Army at age 18. Stokes returned to Cleveland after his discharge in 1946, earning his diploma at East Technical High School in 1947. Inspired by civil rights activist Paul Robeson, Stokes decided to pursue a career in public service. After attending several colleges, he earned his bachelor's degree in 1954 from the University of Minnesota. In 1956, he graduated from Cleveland-Marshall College of Law and in 1957, was admitted to the Ohio State Bar Association. While studying law, he served as a probation officer. He served as assistant prosecutor for four years, eventually becoming a partner in the law firm of Stokes, Stokes, continuing that practice into his political career; it was successful after one year.", "score": "1.3965513" }, { "id": "29626012", "title": "Trey Stokes", "text": " Trey Stokes (born 1960 in Nashville, Tennessee) is an American filmmaker and puppeteer, best known for his Star Wars parody series Pink Five, and his puppeteering work on various movie, TV, and motion-ride projects.", "score": "1.3934057" }, { "id": "28342289", "title": "Harvey J. Stokes", "text": " Harvey J. Stokes (born 1957) is an American composer and oboist. As of 2020, he is Professor of Music at Hampton University in Hampton, Virginia, where he founded and directs a Computer Music Laboratory. Stokes earned his PhD from Michigan State University, where he studied with Jere Hutcheson and Charles Ruggerio, his MM from the University of Georgia, and his BM from East Carolina University. His previous teaching appointments include Miami University, Christopher Newport University, and the College of William and Mary. Stokes is a highly-prolific composer, whose output includes 11 piano sonatas, 8 string quartets, at least 4 symphonies, and many other works for ensembles large and small. His style could be described as neoclassical, with tonal centers ", "score": "1.386829" }, { "id": "29012910", "title": "Adrian Scott Stokes", "text": " Charles Adrian Scott Stokes (23 December 1854 – 30 November 1935) was an English landscape painter. Born in Southport, Lancashire, he became a cotton broker in Liverpool, where his artistic talent was noticed by John Herbert RA, who advised him to submit his drawings to the Royal Academy. He entered the Royal Academy Schools in 1872 and exhibited at the Academy from 1876.", "score": "1.3857554" }, { "id": "26090141", "title": "Sean Stokes", "text": " Stokes enlisted in the U.S. Marine Corps shortly after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.", "score": "1.3818996" }, { "id": "13191358", "title": "Philip Stokes", "text": " Philip William Clifford Stokes, OBE (25 October 1906 – 18 October 1983) was an Australian politician. Born in Melbourne, he attended state schools and then Austral College. He was a bank officer before serving in the military 1940–45. On his return, he was an auctioneer and real estate agent. In 1955, he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as the Liberal member for Maribyrnong. He held the seat until his defeat in 1969. Stokes died in 1983.", "score": "1.3795526" }, { "id": "28607463", "title": "James Graham Phelps Stokes", "text": " James Graham Phelps Stokes (March 18, 1872 – April 8, 1960), known to his friends as \"Graham\", was an American millionaire socialist writer, political activist, and philanthropist. He is best remembered as a founding member and key figure in the Intercollegiate Socialist Society and as the husband of Rose Pastor Stokes, a radical union organizer and activist in the Communist Party of America. Graham Phelps Stokes split with the Socialist Party of America over the question of American participation in World War I, objecting to the party's staunchly antimilitarist stance. He separated from his wife and left radical politics during this period.", "score": "1.3778906" }, { "id": "12271423", "title": "Tony Stokes", "text": " Anthony Ronald Stokes (born 7 January 1987) is an English footballer who plays as a forward for Hullbridge Sports in the Isthmian Division One North. He played in the Football League for Rushden & Diamonds and Brighton & Hove Albion.", "score": "1.3721228" }, { "id": "10376262", "title": "Evelyn Stokes", "text": " Stokes was founding editor of the New Zealand Journal of Geography, which she formed from what was previously a pamphlet, the New Zealand Geographical Society Record, and for 10 years she served as its editor. Two major areas of Stokes' academic publication were on the history of the Tauranga area of New Zealand and of the Māori. She edited Te Raupatu o Tauranga Moana, a collection of written works related to the Tauranga area, her Masters thesis work was on settlements in the Tauranga area, and in 1980 she published a book on the history of Tauranga County which Bedford calls \"the definitive history\" of the area and for ", "score": "1.3716677" }, { "id": "29757935", "title": "Russell Howarth", "text": " Howarth was born in York, North Yorkshire to Michael and Lyn Howarth (née Hammond). He was baptised in Riccall, North Yorkshire and attended Barlby High School. As a youth, he played as a goalkeeper for Olympia Station FC, before representing York and District Schools aged 12. In one season, however, he played as a left winger and scored 29 goals. He soon returned to playing in goal and impressed Huntington School teacher Alan Whitehead, a former York City player, who ran the York and District team.", "score": "1.3716543" }, { "id": "32242241", "title": "George Stokes (rugby union)", "text": " George Stokes (born 13 July 1995) is a Scottish rugby union player who plays for Darlington Mowden Park. His usual position is at the Flanker position. He was previously with Glasgow Warriors, Ayr, Toulon and Northampton Saints,", "score": "1.3695529" }, { "id": "7448512", "title": "Stuart Stokes", "text": " Stuart Stokes (born 5 October 1976) is a British track and field athlete competing in the 3000 metres steeplechase and full-time teacher. He competed in the steeplechase at the 2012 Summer Olympics where he finished 35th.", "score": "1.3691201" }, { "id": "27093974", "title": "Louis Stokes", "text": " Stokes was born in Cleveland, Ohio, the son of Louise (née Stone) and Charles Stokes. He and his brother, politician Carl B. Stokes, lived in one of the first federally funded housing projects, the Outhwaite Homes. Stokes attended Central High School and later served in the U.S. Army from 1943-46. After attending Western Reserve University and Cleveland-Marshall College of Law on the G.I. Bill, Stokes began practicing law in Cleveland in 1953. He argued the \"stop and frisk\" case of Terry v. Ohio before the United States Supreme Court in 1968. Later in 1968, he was elected to the House, representing the 21st District of Ohio on Cleveland's East Side. He shifted to the newly created 11th District, covering much of the same area following a 1992 redistricting. Stokes served 30 years in total, retiring in 1999.", "score": "1.3690258" }, { "id": "10055222", "title": "Stokes (surname)", "text": "Cameron Stokes, Australian footballer ; Carl B. Stokes (1927–1996), mayor of Cleveland, Ohio and first African American mayor of a major U.S. city ; Charles Stokes (1852–1895), Irish missionary turned trader who lived much of his life in Africa ; Chris Stokes (record producer), American record producer ; Colin Stokes (born 1987), American cellist ; Corey Stokes, American basketball player ", "score": "1.3665504" } ]
What is Jim Brown's occupation?
[ "radio personality", "radio presenter", "radio hostess", "host", "hostess", "radio host", "radio jockey", "radio program boss", "RJ" ]
occupation
Jim Brown (radio host)
4,674,890
98
[ { "id": "31718046", "title": "Jim W. Brown", "text": " Jim Brown (18 December 1926 – 8 April 2014) was a former Australian rules footballer who played with Fitzroy in the Victorian Football League (VFL). In 1948 Brown moved to Tasmania and played with New Norfolk in the Tasmanian Football League. He won the William Leitch Medal, the competition Best and Fairest that year.", "score": "1.8523693" }, { "id": "10808393", "title": "Jim Brown (footballer, born 1939)", "text": " James Birrell Brown (7 June 1939 – 18 January 2015) was a Scottish footballer, who played as a wing half in the Scottish League for Dumbarton and in the English Football League for Darlington.", "score": "1.8485119" }, { "id": "16175875", "title": "Jim Brown", "text": "(autobiography) ; (autobiography) ", "score": "1.841557" }, { "id": "14332881", "title": "Jim Brown (Ontario politician)", "text": " James Gary Brown (July 23, 1943 – January 31, 2020) was a politician in Ontario, Canada. He was a Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Assembly of Ontario from 1995 to 1999 who represented the east Toronto riding of Scarborough West.", "score": "1.8393304" }, { "id": "13310215", "title": "Jim Brown (Western Australian politician)", "text": " James McMillan Brown (5 April 1927 – 28 May 2020) was an Australian politician who served in both houses of the Parliament of Western Australia, representing the Labor Party. He was a member of the Legislative Assembly from 1971 to 1974, and later served in the Legislative Council from 1980 to 1992.", "score": "1.8241521" }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Brown", "text": "Jim Brown\n\nJames Nathaniel Brown (born February 17, 1936) is a former American football player, sports analyst and actor. He played as a fullback for the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League (NFL) from 1957 through 1965. Considered to be one of the greatest running backs of all time, as well as one of the greatest players in NFL history, Brown was a Pro Bowl invitee every season he was in the league, was recognized as the AP NFL Most Valuable Player three times, and won an NFL championship with the Browns in 1964. He led the league in rushing yards in eight out of his nine seasons, and by the time he retired, he had shattered most major rushing records. In 2002, he was named by \"The Sporting News\" as the greatest professional football player ever.\n\nBrown earned unanimous All-America honors playing college football at Syracuse University, where he was an all-around player for the Syracuse Orangemen football team. The team later retired his number 44 jersey, and he was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1995. He also excelled in basketball, track and field, and lacrosse. He is also widely considered one of the greatest lacrosse players of all time, and the Premier Lacrosse League MVP Award is named in his honor.\n\nIn his professional career, Brown carried the ball 2,359 times for 12,312 rushing yards and 106 touchdowns, which were all records when he retired. He averaged 104.3 rushing yards per game, and is the only player in NFL history to average over 100 rushing yards per game for his career. His 5.2 yards per rush is third-best among running backs, behind Marion Motley and Jamaal Charles. Brown was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1971. He was named to the NFL's 50th, 75th, and 100th Anniversary All-Time Teams, comprising the best players in NFL history. Brown was honored at the 2020 College Football Playoff National Championship as the greatest college football player of all time. His number 32 jersey is retired by the Browns. Shortly before the end of his football career, Brown became an actor, and had several leading roles throughout the 1970s.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Brown (interpreter)", "text": "Jim Brown (interpreter)\n\nJames W. Brown (born 1953) is a retired American diplomat, mainly specializing in Mandarin Chinese. More commonly known simply as “Jim” he has translated for 6 U.S presidents since Ronald Reagan to more recently Donald Trump’s visit to China in November of 2017\n\nBrown was born in Washington D.C. as the son of a U.S. diplomat, and studied history and international relations at the Fu Jen University in Taiwan before joining Pan-American Airlines in the late 1970s. In 1980, he was hired by the U.S. Department of Defense, and joined the U.S. State Department the following year. Although admitting that he wanted to be a \"generalist\", the U.S. government considered his proficiency in the Chinese language to be an asset as China reopened its once-closed gate to the world at that time, and assigned Brown to multiple tenures at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing. He retired from the State Department in 2021. In 2021 Jim became a fellow at the University of San Diego’s China Center. \n\nBrown's languages include Cantonese, French, Japanese, and Korean, but is best known for his knowledge of the Mandarin language.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Thiruchelvam Nihal Jim Brown", "text": "Thiruchelvam Nihal Jim Brown\n\nThiruchchelvam Nihal Jim Brown (1972 – 2006) was a minority Sri Lankan Tamil, Roman Catholic parish priest who disappeared during the Sri Lankan civil war. He was active helping his parishioners during the bombing of his church in northern Sri Lanka. He went missing with Wenceslaus Vinces Vimalathas on August 20, 2006 and is presumed dead.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Brown", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Ed Brown", "text": "Jim Ed Brown\n\nJames Edward Brown (April 1, 1934 – June 11, 2015) was an American country singer-songwriter who achieved fame in the 1950s with his two sisters as a member of the Browns. He later had a successful solo career from 1965 to 1974, followed by a string of major duet hits with fellow country music vocalist Helen Cornelius, through 1981. Brown was also the host of the \"Country Music Greats Radio Show\", a syndicated country music program from Nashville, Tennessee.", "score": null }, { "id": "6555362", "title": "Jim N. Brown", "text": " Brown served in the United States Marine Corps during World War II.", "score": "1.8186815" }, { "id": "13310216", "title": "Jim Brown (Western Australian politician)", "text": " Brown was born in Merredin, in the Wheatbelt, to Susan Marion (née Godridge) and William McMillan Brown. His family moved to Perth when he was a child, where he attended John Curtin Senior High School. In April 1945, after turning 18, he enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF), although the imminent end of the war meant his time in the military was short-lived. Brown played high-level Australian rules football as a youth, appearing in three senior games for during the 1949 WANFL season. He moved to the country in 1950, initially running a store in Muntadgin with his brother, and later running a service station and Massey Ferguson dealership in Merredin.", "score": "1.8096938" }, { "id": "30044136", "title": "Jim Brown (footballer, born 1952)", "text": " As a teenager, Brown attended St. Ambrose High School in Lanarkshire.", "score": "1.8092253" }, { "id": "5649045", "title": "Jim J. Brown", "text": " Jim Brown (26 March 1925 – 16 November 1995) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "score": "1.8032215" }, { "id": "25954781", "title": "Jim Brown (outfielder)", "text": " James Donaldson Brown (March 31, 1897 – October 22, 1944) was a professional baseball player. He played parts of two seasons in Major League Baseball, 1915 for the St. Louis Cardinals and 1916 for the Philadelphia Athletics, primarily as an outfielder. According to the May/June 2010 Report of the Biographical Research Committee for the Society for American Baseball Research, after his baseball career, Brown was listed in the Los Angeles city directories at various times as a ballplayer, actor, and studio worker. He died October 22, 1944 in Bradwood, Oregon. The death certificate said that he was a resident of Hollywood, worked as a carpenter for a movie firm, and that he had been in Oregon for two months. He was buried in Oregon.", "score": "1.7868279" }, { "id": "16175843", "title": "Jim Brown", "text": " James Nathaniel Brown (born February 17, 1936) is a former American football fullback, sports analyst and actor. He played for the Cleveland Browns of the National Football League (NFL) from 1957 through 1965. Considered to be one of the greatest running backs of all time, as well as one of the greatest players in NFL history, Brown was a Pro Bowl invitee every season he was in the league, was recognized as the AP NFL Most Valuable Player three times, and won an NFL championship with the Browns in 1964. He led the league in rushing yards in eight out of his nine seasons, and by the time he retired, he had shattered most ", "score": "1.7797512" }, { "id": "30044135", "title": "Jim Brown (footballer, born 1952)", "text": " James Grady Brown (born 11 May 1952) is a Scottish former professional footballer, who played as a goalkeeper. During his career, he made over 300 appearances in the Football League and spent four years in the North American Soccer League playing for the Detroit Express, Washington Diplomats and Chicago Sting. He also gained one cap for Scotland in 1975.", "score": "1.7640537" }, { "id": "25780269", "title": "Jim Brown (catcher)", "text": " James R. Brown (May 16, 1892 – January 21, 1943) was an American baseball catcher and first baseman in the Negro leagues. He played from 1920 to 1935, playing mostly with the Chicago American Giants. Brown died after being thrown out of a car, breaking his neck.", "score": "1.7614" }, { "id": "30044138", "title": "Jim Brown (footballer, born 1952)", "text": " to Britain in 1982, spending a brief time at Cardiff City before joining Kettering Town as cover for the injured Steve Conroy. He made his league debut for the Poppies in 3–2 defeat to Frickley Athletic and made 18 appearances during the 1982–83 season. At the start of the following season, he rejoined Chesterfield as the club began suffering a financial crisis. He competed with Chris Marples for the starting spot for several years before Marples departure to Stockport County in 1987. Several years after officially retiring Brown was named as a substitute on two occasions in his forties, the 1995 Football League Third Division play-off Final and the first round of the FA Cup in 1997, at the age of 45.", "score": "1.7572688" }, { "id": "5333330", "title": "Jim Brown (New South Wales politician)", "text": " James Hill Brown (19 March 1918 – 17 January 1999) was an Australian politician, elected as a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly. Brown was born in Cessnock and educated at Cessnock Public School and Maitland Boys High School. He became an insurance executive. Brown was elected as the Country Party member for Raleigh in 1959 and held it to Raleigh's abolition in 1981, when he became the member for Oxley until his retirement in 1984. In the 1995 Australia Day Honours Brown's \"service to the community and to the NSW Parliament\" was recognised by the award of Medal of the Order of Australia. Brown died in Coffs Harbour.", "score": "1.7547513" }, { "id": "6555360", "title": "Jim N. Brown", "text": " James Nelson Brown (December 9, 1926 – April 14, 1991) was an American politician who served on the Michigan House of Representatives from 1969 to 1972.", "score": "1.7467631" }, { "id": "30044137", "title": "Jim Brown (footballer, born 1952)", "text": " Brown began his career at Albion Rovers, appearing over 100 times for the club after making his debut at the age of 16. In 1972, he played in a pre-season friendly against Chesterfield and impressed the club's management. Several months later, in December 1972, he joined the club, turning down a move to Brighton & Hove Albion. He quickly established himself in the first-team and attracted the attention of First Division side Sheffield United, joining the Blades on the final day of the transfer window in the 1973–74 season. He went on to spend five years at Bramall Lane, winning the club's player of the year award in 1975, before moving to the North American Soccer League with Detroit Express in 1979. He ", "score": "1.734909" }, { "id": "32376174", "title": "Jim Brown (director)", "text": " James Bradford Brown (born June 7, 1950) is an American film director, primarily known for his work in documentary film. He has won four Emmys, most recently for Pete Seeger: The Power of Song. He has directed and produced four feature documentaries that received theatrical distribution. He heads Jim Brown Productions, LLC and Ginger Group Productions, Inc., production companies specializing in cultural and social documentaries and music concerts. He studied film at Tisch School of the Arts, and is an associate professor at New York University's Kanbar Institute of Film and Television at Tisch School of the Arts. Brown has also produced and directed works for film and television, most notably Peter Seeger: The Power of Song; 50 Years ", "score": "1.7318892" }, { "id": "30782185", "title": "Jim Brown (soccer, born 1908)", "text": " Having retired from playing professionally in 1941, Brown resumed his trade as a riveter in the Troon Shipyard and then moved back to the U.S. to coach Varsity soccer and Riflery.", "score": "1.7259641" }, { "id": "30782173", "title": "Jim Brown (soccer, born 1908)", "text": " James Brown (December 31, 1908 – November 9, 1994) was a Scottish American soccer player who played for the United States men's national soccer team at the 1930 FIFA World Cup, scoring the only goal of the American team in their 6–1 semi-final loss to Argentina. He began his career in the American Soccer League before moving to England and then Scotland. After retiring from playing, he coached at the youth, senior amateur, and professional levels. He was inducted into the U.S. National Soccer Hall of Fame in 1986.", "score": "1.7257891" } ]
What is Edwin E. Ellis's occupation?
[ "photographer", "photog", "photographers" ]
occupation
Edwin E. Ellis
843,797
66
[ { "id": "11557207", "title": "Edwin E. Ellis", "text": " Edwin Earl Ellis (August 28, 1924 - April 2, 1989) was an American inventor and photographer.", "score": "1.7123853" }, { "id": "11557209", "title": "Edwin E. Ellis", "text": " As an inventor he holds a patent for an awning support system.", "score": "1.6257229" }, { "id": "12731273", "title": "Charles Alton Ellis", "text": " Ellis was born in Parkman, Maine in 1876. He earned a degree in mathematics from Wesleyan University (where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon fraternity). In 1922, he received his graduate certificate in engineering (C.E.) from the University of Illinois.", "score": "1.5509813" }, { "id": "25634990", "title": "Edward S. Ellis", "text": " Edward Sylvester Ellis (April 11, 1840 &ndash; June 20, 1916) was an American author who was born in Ohio and died at Cliff Island, Maine. Ellis was a teacher, school administrator, journalist, and the author of hundreds of books and magazine articles that he produced by his name and by a number of noms de plume. Notable fiction stories by Ellis include The Steam Man of the Prairies and Seth Jones, or the Captives of the Frontier. Internationally, Edward S. Ellis is probably known best for his Deerfoot novels read widely by young boys until the 1950s.", "score": "1.5419338" }, { "id": "11557208", "title": "Edwin E. Ellis", "text": " He served in the U.S. Navy from 1943 to 1949 as a photographer. During this time he participated in the landings at the Battle of Okinawa. Most notably, he was a photographer on Operation Highjump, becoming one of the first people to visually document Antarctica. The Ellis Fjord and the Ellis Glacier are named after him. After the South Pole, he went to Norfolk, and was part of the crew that commissioned the USS Coral Sea (CV-43). He was also the founder of the Ellis Trailer Park in Paducah. The land it sat on is now owned by Cardinal Lanes.", "score": "1.5397196" }, { "id": null, "title": "Edwin E. Ellis", "text": "Edwin E. Ellis\n\nEdwin Earl Ellis (August 28, 1924 - April 2, 1989) was an American inventor and photographer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Perry Ellis", "text": "Perry Ellis\n\nPerry Edwin Ellis (March 3, 1940 – May 30, 1986) was an American fashion designer who founded his eponymous sportswear house in the mid-1970s. Ellis' influence on the fashion industry has been called \"a huge turning point\" because he introduced new patterns and proportions to a market which was dominated by more traditional men's clothing.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Edwin E. Tozer", "text": "Edwin E. Tozer\n\nEdwin Ellis (Ed) Tozer (born 1943) is a British retired management and IT consultant and SF author, particularly known for his early work on business information systems in the 1970s and 1980s.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bret Easton Ellis", "text": "Bret Easton Ellis\n\nBret Easton Ellis (born March 7, 1964) is an American author, screenwriter, short-story writer, and director. Ellis was first regarded as one of the so-called literary Brat Pack and is a self-proclaimed satirist whose trademark technique, as a writer, is the expression of extreme acts and opinions in an affectless style. His novels commonly share recurring characters.\n\nWhen Ellis was 21, his first novel, the controversial bestseller \"Less than Zero\" (1985), was published by Simon & Schuster. His third novel, \"American Psycho\" (1991), was his most successful. Upon its release the literary establishment widely condemned it as overly violent and misogynistic. Though many petitions to ban the book saw Ellis dropped by Simon & Schuster, Ellis's novels have become increasingly metafictional. \"Lunar Park\" (2005), a pseudo-memoir and ghost story, received positive reviews. \"Imperial Bedrooms\" (2010), marketed as a sequel to \"Less than Zero\", continues in this vein. \"The Shards\" (2023) is a fictionalized memoir of Ellis's final year of high school in 1981 in Los Angeles.\n\nFour of Ellis's works have been made into films. \"Less than Zero\" was adapted in 1987 as a film of the same name, but the film bore little resemblance to the novel. Mary Harron's adaptation of \"American Psycho\" was released in 2000. Roger Avary's adaptation of \"The Rules of Attraction\" was released in 2002. \"The Informers\", co-written by Ellis and based on his collection of short stories, was released in 2008. Ellis also wrote the screenplay for the 2013 film \"The Canyons\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Edith Pargeter", "text": "Edith Pargeter\n\nEdith Mary Pargeter (28 September 1913 – 14 October 1995), also known by her \"nom de plume\" Ellis Peters, was an English author of works in many categories, especially history and historical fiction, and was also honoured for her translations of Czech classics. She is probably best known for her murder mysteries, both historical and modern, and especially for her medieval detective series The Cadfael Chronicles.", "score": null }, { "id": "15521798", "title": "Edwin Ellis (musician)", "text": " Edwin Ellis (1844–1878) was an English musician.", "score": "1.5349919" }, { "id": "1837761", "title": "Edward F. W. Ellis", "text": " Ellis was a longtime member of Freemasonry, having been a member of Felicity Lodge #102, Orion Chapter #42 Royal Arch Masons, Connell Council #18 Royal & Select Masons, Lafayette Lodge F. & A.M. (in Nevada, California, part of the Grand Lodge of Wisconsin), Nevada Lodge #13 F. & A.M., and a founding member of the Star of the East Lodge #166 A.F. & A.M., which is still in existence. The E.F.W. Ellis Lodge #633 is named in tribute to Ellis and meets in the same building as the Star of the East Lodge. The Ellis Arts Academy, an elementary school ", "score": "1.5315177" }, { "id": "27188696", "title": "Edward D. Ellis", "text": " Edward D. Ellis (October 7, 1801 – May 15, 1848) was an American newspaper publisher and politician in the U.S. state of Michigan. He represented Monroe County in the Michigan Senate in its first two sessions.", "score": "1.5205885" }, { "id": "15521800", "title": "Edwin Ellis (musician)", "text": " His published compositions consisted of selections for small orchestra from Friedrich von Flotow's Alessandro Stradella, Ambroise Thomas's Caïd, and Jacques Offenbach's La belle Hélène, besides songs to words by Edward Litt Laman Blanchard and others.", "score": "1.5049481" }, { "id": "6279590", "title": "Edwin Ellis (poet)", "text": " Ellis was married, with a German wife who died around 1922.", "score": "1.4979681" }, { "id": "15521799", "title": "Edwin Ellis (musician)", "text": " Ellis received his professional training from his father, and appeared when a boy of seven as solo violinist at Cremorne Gardens. He joined the orchestras of the Princess's and Adelphi theatres, becoming general musical director at the Adelphi about 1867, and composing music suitable for the dramas given there. In poor health, he then worked in the band of the Queen's Theatre, Liverpool, for a change of air. His health, however, did not improve, and he died aged 35, at St. Thomas's Hospital, 20 October 1878.", "score": "1.4925232" }, { "id": "1837757", "title": "Edward F. W. Ellis", "text": " Ellis was born in Jay, Maine. He moved to Felicity, Ohio, in 1838, where he was a lawyer and a school teacher. He married Harriet Ortus on October 25, 1842. Harriet and Ellis had three daughters, who all died during childhood. However, Harriet died soon after the birth of their third child in February 1845. On August 2, 1845, Ellis married one of his former students, Lucy Ann Dobbyns. While in Felicity, he served as both the Clerk to the Trustees and later, the School Examiner, for Franklin Township. Ellis joined the California gold rush and he went to Nevada City, California, and tried to set up shop as a retail salesman, a prospector and lawyer. In 1851 he was elected to the California State Assembly, where one of the resolutions he sponsored granted women the right to own property in the state ", "score": "1.4887543" }, { "id": "27188697", "title": "Edward D. Ellis", "text": " Edward Ellis was born on October 7, 1801, in Niles, New York. His father died two months before he was born, and he spent his youth on the family farm. After being put to work with a tanner, he found he disliked the work and went to Auburn, New York, to work in a printing office. Around the age of twenty, he worked for a time as a journeyman printer in Boston, and in 1825 he purchased equipment and moved west to Monroe, Michigan, where he began printing the Michigan Sentinel, the first newspaper in the Michigan Territory printed outside Detroit. Ellis gained prominence as a political writer ", "score": "1.465802" }, { "id": "6279587", "title": "Edwin Ellis (poet)", "text": " Edwin John Ellis (1848–1916) was a British poet and illustrator. He is now remembered mostly for the three-volume collection of the works of William Blake he edited with W. B. Yeats. It is now criticised, however, for weak scholarship, and preconceptions.", "score": "1.4587955" }, { "id": "9999296", "title": "Edwin E. Tozer", "text": " Edwin Ellis (Ed) Tozer (born 1943) is a British retired management and IT consultant and SF author, particularly known for his early work on business information systems in the 1970s and 1980s.", "score": "1.4549472" }, { "id": "11469887", "title": "Edgar C. Ellis", "text": " Edgar Clarence Ellis (October 2, 1854 – March 15, 1947) was a U.S. Representative from Missouri. Born in Vermontville, Michigan, Ellis attended Olivet (Michigan) College, and was graduated from Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, in 1881. Instructor in Latin at Carleton College in 1881 and 1882. Superintendent of the public schools at Fergus Falls, Minnesota from 1882 to 1885. He studied law. He was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Beloit, Kansas, in 1885. He moved to Kansas City, Missouri, in 1888 and continued the practice of his profession. Ellis was elected as a Republican to the Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth Congresses (March 4, 1905-March 3, 1909). He was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1908 to the Sixty-first Congress. He resumed the practice of law ", "score": "1.4488585" }, { "id": "25547113", "title": "Leven H. Ellis", "text": " Leven Handy Ellis (April 6, 1881 – January 4, 1968) was an American politician who served as the 15th lieutenant governor of Alabama from 1943 to 1947. Ellis was born in Nixburg, in Coosa County, Alabama. He obtained a B.Ped. degree from Troy Normal School in 1907, and a Bachelor of Law degree from the University of Alabama in 1909. Ellis practiced law in Columbiana, Alabama. He served as a state senator from 1927 to 1931, a representative in the Alabama Legislature from 1936 to 1943, and a mayor of Columbiana for two terms. In 1948, Ellis served as an Alabama delegate at the Democratic National Convention. After Hubert Humphrey's address, Ellis led 13 members of the Alabama delegation (that was also joined by the entire Mississippi delegation) in a walkout, leading to the creation of the short-lived Dixiecrat political party.", "score": "1.4466219" }, { "id": "28640040", "title": "Abram Halstead Ellis", "text": " Ellis was born May 21, 1847 in Cayuga, New York, to Elmer Eugene and Jane Maria (née Halstead) Ellis. He moved with his parents to Eaton County, Michigan when he was still a child and received his education at the schools in Battle Creek.", "score": "1.4443116" }, { "id": "12552495", "title": "Edwin Jacob", "text": " Edwin Ellis Jacob (10 April 1878 &ndash; 3 December 1964) was a British sailor who competed in the 1924 Summer Olympics. He was born in Kensington. In 1924 he won the silver medal as crew member of the British boat Emily in the 8 metre class event.", "score": "1.4397817" }, { "id": "32464103", "title": "Ron Ellis (author)", "text": " Ronald Walter Ellis (born 12 September 1941) has been, among other occupations, a crime novelist, broadcaster, and journalist. In 1992, The Sun described him as the \"man with the most jobs in Britain\".", "score": "1.4392066" } ]
What is Muhammad Ali Luqman's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Muhammad Ali Luqman
5,178,335
94
[ { "id": "9329009", "title": "Muhammad Ali Luqman", "text": " Muhammad Ali Luqman (6 November 1898 &ndash; 24 March 1966) was a Yemeni lawyer, writer, and journalist. He established Faṫāṫ Al-Jazīrah (فَـتَـاة الْـجَـزِيْـرَة), the first independent newspaper in Yemen.", "score": "1.581651" }, { "id": "27094949", "title": "Abu Luqman", "text": " Ali Moussa Al-Shawakh, (1973 –17 April 2018) known by his kunya Abu Luqman, Abu Ayyub al-Ansari or Ali al-Hamoud, was a Syrian man and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant governor of Raqqa, Syria as of July 2015. He used to be governor of Aleppo province.", "score": "1.569897" }, { "id": "28592324", "title": "Luqman Oyebisi Ilaka", "text": " Between 1994 and 1997, he worked for Guardian Royal Exchange Assurance, a large British insurance company where he served as a Tax/Financial Consultant dealing with life assurance, investments, inheritance tax and mortgage cases. He worked as a partner in Salfiti and Co Solicitors based in London particularly, land, trust and commercial cases. He was later engaged as an associate partner in the Jacob Rothschild Partnership.", "score": "1.4848633" }, { "id": "2080758", "title": "Usman Haji Muhammad Ali", "text": " Second Sergeant Usman bin Haji Muhammad Ali (18 March 1943 – 17 October 1968), also spelt Osman bin Haji Mohamed Ali, was an Indonesian marine and convicted murderer. He uses the aliases Janatin or Usman Janatin during his task of bombing the MacDonald House, which killed three people and injured 33 other people. Usman was executed alongside his accomplice Harun Said for the murders of the three deceased victims from the MacDonald House bombing.", "score": "1.4778332" }, { "id": "30156558", "title": "Muhammad Imman Ali", "text": " Ali was born on 1 January 1956 to Israil Ali and Alifjan Bibi.", "score": "1.4755757" }, { "id": null, "title": "Muhammad Ali Luqman", "text": "Muhammad Ali Luqman\n\nMuhammad Ali Luqman (6 November 1898 – 24 March 1966) was a Yemeni lawyer, writer, and journalist. He established \"Faṫāṫ Al-Jazīrah\" (), the first independent newspaper in Yemen.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Luqman", "text": "Luqman\n\nLuqman (; also known as Luqman the Wise or Luqman al-Hakim) was a wise man after whom Surah Luqman, the 31st sura (chapter) of the Quran, was named. Luqman ( BC) is believed to have been from Nubia or from Egypt. There are many stories about Luqman in Persian, Arabic and Turkish literature, with the primary historical sources for his life being Tafsir ibn Kathir and \"Stories of the Qur'an\" by Ibn Kathir. While the Quran does not state whether Luqman was a prophet or not, some believe him to be a prophet and thus, add the honorific ʿAlaihis Salam (A.S.) after his name.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Abu Luqman", "text": "Abu Luqman\n\nAli Moussa Al-Shawakh, (1973 –17 April 2018) known by his kunya Abu Luqman, Abu Ayyub al-Ansari or Ali al-Hamoud, was a Syrian man and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant governor of Raqqa, Syria as of July 2015. He used to be governor of Aleppo province.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Yemeni lawyers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Muhammad", "text": "Muhammad\n\nMuhammad (;  570 – 8 June 632 CE) was an Arab religious, social, and political leader and the founder of Islam. According to Islamic doctrine, he was a prophet divinely inspired to preach and confirm the monotheistic teachings of Adam, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and other prophets. He is believed to be the Seal of the Prophets within Islam. Muhammad united Arabia into a single Muslim polity, with the Quran as well as his teachings and practices forming the basis of Islamic religious belief.\n\nMuhammad was born approximately 570CE in Mecca. He was the son of Abdullah ibn Abd al-Muttalib and Amina bint Wahb. His father Abdullah was the son of Quraysh tribal leader Abd al-Muttalib ibn Hashim, and he died a few months before Muhammad's birth. His mother Amina died when he was six, leaving Muhammad an orphan. He was raised under the care of his grandfather, Abd al-Muttalib, and paternal uncle, Abu Talib. In later years, he would periodically seclude himself in a mountain cave named Hira for several nights of prayer. When he was 40, Muhammad reported being visited by Gabriel in the cave and receiving his first revelation from God. In 613, Muhammad started preaching these revelations publicly, proclaiming that \"God is One\", that complete \"submission\" (\"islām\") to God is the right way of life (\"dīn\"), and that he was a prophet and messenger of God, similar to the other prophets in Islam.\n\nMuhammad's followers were initially few in number, and experienced hostility from Meccan polytheists for 13 years. To escape ongoing persecution, he sent some of his followers to Abyssinia in 615, before he and his followers migrated from Mecca to Medina (then known as Yathrib) later in 622. This event, the \"Hijra\", marks the beginning of the Islamic calendar, also known as the Hijri Calendar. In Medina, Muhammad united the tribes under the Constitution of Medina. In December 629, after eight years of intermittent fighting with Meccan tribes, Muhammad gathered an army of 10,000 Muslim converts and marched on the city of Mecca. The conquest went largely uncontested and Muhammad seized the city with little bloodshed. In 632, a few months after returning from the Farewell Pilgrimage, he fell ill and died. By the time of his death, most of the Arabian Peninsula had converted to Islam.\n\nThe revelations (each known as \"Ayah —\" literally, \"Sign [of God]\") that Muhammad reported receiving until his death form the verses of the Quran, regarded by Muslims as the verbatim \"Word of God\" on which the religion is based. Besides the Quran, Muhammad's teachings and practices (\"sunnah\"), found in the Hadith and \"sira\" (biography) literature, are also upheld and used as sources of Islamic law (see Sharia).", "score": null }, { "id": "2595542", "title": "Muhammad Hamid Ali", "text": " Ali was born in Lukhnow, Uttar Pradesh, British Raj on 4 September 1906. On 13 October 1931 he joined the Indian Civil Service.", "score": "1.4537237" }, { "id": "2080759", "title": "Usman Haji Muhammad Ali", "text": " Usman Haji Muhammad Ali was born in Jatisobo, Banyumas, on 18 March 1943. He graduated from middle school in 1962. On 1 June 1962, he entered the Indonesian Marine Corps, and was appointed as one of three volunteers to serve in the military operation Komando Siaga (later renamed Komando Mandala Siaga), led by Air Force Vice Admiral Omar Dhani, during the Indonesia-Malaysia confrontation. Usman was later stationed at Sambu Island, Riau.", "score": "1.4527601" }, { "id": "4129371", "title": "Mirza Muhammad Yusuf Ali", "text": " He began his career joining as a teacher in school of Cooch Behar. He was also teacher in Loknath School and Rangpur Government Normal School. He served as school-inspector and sub-registrar. He retired in 1917.", "score": "1.4402108" }, { "id": "27094950", "title": "Abu Luqman", "text": " Abu Luqman was born in as-Sahl village in Raqqa province. He studied law at the University of Aleppo. He is from the Ajeel clan of Raqqa. It is claimed he used to have a Sufi orientation because he followed Mahmud al-Aghasi (known as Abu Qaqa) who was the leader of Ghuraba al-Sham. He was freed from Sednaya Prison, Damascus in the summer of 2011 by President Bashar al-Assad, at the outset of the uprising against the Syrian government.", "score": "1.4344485" }, { "id": "14206130", "title": "Ali Muhammad Khan", "text": " Ali Muhammad Khan (born 30 November 1977) is a Pakistani politician who is the current Minister of State for Parliamentary Affairs, in office since 17 September 2018. He is currently a member of the National Assembly of Pakistan, since August 2018. By profession, he is an Engineer and a law graduate as well. Previously he was a member of the National Assembly from June 2013 to May 2018.", "score": "1.429935" }, { "id": "32720267", "title": "Muhammad Ali (footballer, born 1989)", "text": " Mohammad Reza Ali Nazari Hassan Dabous (born 2 September 1989) is a Pakistani international footballer, who plays in Denmark for Greve Fodbold. He played his first international match in 2012 against Singapore.", "score": "1.4235723" }, { "id": "1863613", "title": "Athar Ali (politician)", "text": " Athar Ali (born 5 March 1961 in Panjan Kasana, Gujrat) is a Pakistani Norwegian who has represented the Norwegian political party Red. He served as a deputy representative to the Norwegian Parliament from Oslo during the term 1993&ndash;1997. He was the first non-Western immigrant to meet as a parliamentary representative; the first to get elected as a regular representative was Afshan Rafiq. Ali was a member of Oslo municipality council from 1987 to 1995 and 1999 to 2003. He is founder and head of the Norwegian Immigrants Forum. Ali is a graduate in social work. He works as a clinical social worker.", "score": "1.4164522" }, { "id": "16431891", "title": "Muhammad Ali Siddiqui", "text": " He was born on 7 March 1938 in Amroha, India, and was brought up in Karachi, Pakistan. He died on 9 January 2013 at Karachi, Pakistan. His family had migrated to Pakistan in 1948. He received his early education at Christian Mission School in Karachi. Then he went on to receive his master's degree in English literature from the University of Karachi in 1962. He was able to use English, French, Persian, Punjabi, Sindhi, Seraiki and Urdu languages. Muhammad Ali Siddiqui completed his D.Litt degree in Pakistan Studies in 2003 after doing his PhD in the same subject in 1992. ", "score": "1.4157526" }, { "id": "25856697", "title": "Muhammad Yawar Ali", "text": " Muhammad Yawar Ali (born 23 October 1956) is a Pakistani jurist who served as the 46th Chief Justice of Lahore High Court (LHC).", "score": "1.4101319" }, { "id": "6802268", "title": "Saeed Abu Ali", "text": " Saeed Abu Ali was born in 1955 in the Jenin Governorate, northern part of West Bank, State of Palestine. He studied bachelor's degree in Law from Al-Quds University. Then he moved to Tunisia and joined the Palestine Liberation Organization. He obtained a bachelor's degree in journalism and information, a master's degree in 1989 in political science and a doctorate in law in 1995. In 1992 he got doctorate in international organizations from University of Toulouse, France. In 2015 he received a degree Professor from Al-Quds University.", "score": "1.4087722" }, { "id": "14102096", "title": "Muhammad Ali (writer)", "text": " Ali was born in Murar, Kapurthala State (now in Ludhiana district, Punjab, India) in 1874. He obtained a Master of Arts in English and a Bachelor of Laws in 1899. He joined the Ahmadiyya Movement in 1897 and dedicated his life to the service of the movement as part of what he saw as a restored and pristine Islam. He died in Karachi on October 13, 1951, and is buried in Lahore. Marmaduke Pickthall, British Muslim and translator of the Quran into English, wrote a review of Muhammad Ali's book The Religion of Islam when this book was published in 1936. The review was published in the journal Islamic Culture of Hyderabad ", "score": "1.4019935" }, { "id": "27854286", "title": "Muhammad Ali (Pakistani boxer)", "text": " Muhammad Ali (born 19 June 1933) is a Pakistani boxer. He competed in the men's lightweight event at the 1952 Summer Olympics. At the 1952 Summer Olympics, he lost to Vicente Matute of Venezuela.", "score": "1.4008555" }, { "id": "1169381", "title": "Muhammad Ali Mirza", "text": " Muhammad Ali Mirza was born on 4 October 1977 in Jhelum, a city in Punjab, Pakistan. He is a 19th grade mechanical engineer in a government department. Ali gives online lectures where he talks about different religious issues runs a research academy where he imparts religious education based on his own understanding of Quran and Sunnat. He has been criticized for a number of his speeches which have been deemed as derogatory towards Sahabah, Auliya and traditional scholars by his critics. Ali allegedly opined that present day Ahmadis are better than Jews and Christians (the people of the book). He, however still declared them as non-Muslims and said that his video clips have been presented out of context. He was arrested on 4 May 2020 in suspicion of spreading hate speech towards religious scholars. Pakistani actor Hamza Ali Abbasi and anchor Shafaat Ali posted on social media condemning his arrest. He was later released on 6 May 2020. According to Ali, one of his lectures was presented completely out of context. He later said that if one starts presenting other opinions in such a way then even the verses of the Qur'an can be presented out of context..", "score": "1.3857172" }, { "id": "15157039", "title": "Lutfur Rahman Kajal", "text": " Kajal was born on 18 November 1960. He has a B.com degree.", "score": "1.3844645" }, { "id": "3975387", "title": "Mansur Ali Khan (Karnataka cricketer)", "text": " Mansur Ali Khan Ludhi (born 22 May 1972) is an Indian former first-class cricketer who played for Karnataka between the 1993/94 and the 2001/02 seasons. He worked as a cricket coach after retirement, including a four-year stint as Karnataka's bowling coach and one season as the team's assistant coach.", "score": "1.3832451" } ]
What is Ivo Perilli's occupation?
[ "screenwriter", "scenarist", "writer", "screen writer", "script writer", "scriptwriter" ]
occupation
Ivo Perilli
1,901,465
84
[ { "id": "8290402", "title": "Ivo Perilli", "text": " Ivo Perilli (10 April 1902 &ndash; 24 November 1994) was an Italian screenwriter. He wrote for more than 50 films between 1933 and 1977.", "score": "1.8229578" }, { "id": "3318786", "title": "Ivo", "text": " author ; Ivo Perilli (1902–1994), Italian screenwriter ; Ivo Peters (1915–1989), British photographer ; Ivo Petrić (1931–2018), Slovenian composer ; Ivo Pinto (born 1990), Portuguese footballer ; Ivo Pitanguy (1926–2016), Brazilian plastic surgeon ; Ivo Pogorelić (born 1958), Croatian pianist ; Ivo Ringe (born 1951), German painter ; Ivo Robić (1923–2000), Croatian singer and songwriter ; Ivo Rodrigues (footballer) (born 1995), Portuguese footballer ; Ivo Rodrigues (runner) (born 1960), Brazilian marathon runner ; Ivo Ron (born 1967), Ecuadorian footballer ; Ivo Samkalden (1912–1995), Dutch politician ; Ivo Sanader (born 1953), Croatian politician ; Ivo Snijders (born 1980), Dutch rower ; Ivo Stourton (born 1982), English author ; ", "score": "1.5802124" }, { "id": "13324111", "title": "Achille Perilli", "text": " Achille Perilli (28 January 1927 – 16 October 2021) was an Italian painter and sculptor.", "score": "1.5523646" }, { "id": "10900140", "title": "Ivo Mammini", "text": " .", "score": "1.5469253" }, { "id": "26878447", "title": "Antonio Casilli", "text": " Antonio A. Casilli (born 1972) is a Professor of Sociology at Télécom Paris, the school of telecommunications engineering of the Polytechnic Institute of Paris, and an Associate Researcher at the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences. His research focuses on computer-mediated communication, labour, and fundamental rights. He has been a regular commentator at La Grande Table and Place de la Toile on France Culture.", "score": "1.5419677" }, { "id": null, "title": "Ivo Perilli", "text": "Ivo Perilli\n\nIvo Perilli (10 April 1902 – 24 November 1994) was an Italian screenwriter. He wrote for more than 50 films between 1933 and 1977.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Five Branded Women", "text": "Five Branded Women\n\nFive Branded Women is a 1960 Italian-American film directed by Martin Ritt (his only war film) and produced by Dino De Laurentiis. It features an international cast including Silvana Mangano, Barbara Bel Geddes, Jeanne Moreau and Vera Miles. The film is set during the Nazi occupation of Yugoslavia and was shot in Italy and Klagenfurt, Austria.`", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Europe '51", "text": "Europe '51\n\nEurope '51 (), also known as The Greatest Love, is a 1952 Italian neorealist film directed by Roberto Rossellini, starring Ingrid Bergman and Alexander Knox. The film follows an industrialist's wife who, after the death of her young son, turns towards a rigorous humanitarianism.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "La voce senza volto", "text": "La voce senza volto\n\nLa voce senza volto () is a 1939 Italian \"white-telephones\" comedy film directed by Gennaro Righelli. It is part of the tradition of \"telefoni bianchi\" () comedies, popular in Italy at the time.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "War and Peace (1956 film)", "text": "War and Peace (1956 film)\n\nWar and Peace () is a 1956 epic historical drama film based on Leo Tolstoy's 1869 novel of the same name. It is directed and co-written by King Vidor and produced by Dino De Laurentiis and Carlo Ponti for Paramount Pictures. The film stars Audrey Hepburn as Natasha, Henry Fonda as Pierre, and Mel Ferrer as Andrei, along with Oskar Homolka, Vittorio Gassman, Herbert Lom, Jeremy Brett, John Mills and Anita Ekberg in one of her first breakthrough roles. The musical score was composed by Nino Rota and conducted by Franco Ferrara.\n\n\"War and Peace\" opened on August 21, 1956 to a mixed reception, with some reviewers critical with the film truncating much of Tolstoy's novel, and the casting of 50-year-old Henry Fonda as the 20-year-old Pierre Bezukhov. It received Academy Awards nominations for Best Director, Best Cinematography (Color), and Best Costume Design (Color). It was also nominated for four Golden Globes, including Best Motion Picture – Drama and Best Actress in a Motion Picture – Drama (Audrey Hepburn), and won Best Foreign Film.\n\nIn February 2020, the film was shown at the 70th Berlin International Film Festival, as part of a retrospective dedicated to King Vidor's career.", "score": null }, { "id": "14471360", "title": "Perilli", "text": "Alessandra Perilli (born 1988), Sammarinese sport shooter ; Alessio Perilli (1983–2004), Italian motorcycle racer ; Arianna Perilli (born 1978), Sammarinese sport shooter ; Frank Ray Perilli (born 1925), American screenwriter, playwright and actor ; Ivo Perilli (1902–1994), Italian screenwriter ; Lorenzo Perilli, Italian classicist and academic ; Simone Perilli (born 1995), Italian footballer Perilli is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5394143" }, { "id": "9522844", "title": "Ivo Battelli", "text": " Ivo Battelli (born 12 March 1904, date of death unknown) was an Italian architect and set decorator. His work was part of the architecture event in the art competition at the 1932 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.5351896" }, { "id": "10935554", "title": "Jorge Otero-Pailos", "text": " Jorge Otero-Pailos (born 27 October 1971) is an artist, preservation architect, theorist and educator, commonly associated with experimental preservation and the journal Future Anterior. He is best known for his “The Ethics of Dust” ongoing series of artworks derived from the cleaning of monuments, which was exhibited at the 53rd Venice Biennale. Westminster Hall, the Victoria & Albert Museum, and SFMoMA, amongst others. He is Director and Professor of Historic Preservation at Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation (Columbia GSAPP).", "score": "1.5198791" }, { "id": "578404", "title": "Lorenzo Perilli", "text": " Perilli’s main fields of research include Ancient Greek medicine (Temple medicine, Hippocrates, Galen, empiricism), the history of ideas, Ancient Greek philosophy and science, textual criticism and classical philology. He is also recognised as an expert in humanities computing.", "score": "1.5192282" }, { "id": "28529120", "title": "Ivo Cassol", "text": " Ivo Cassol (born January 20, 1959) is a Brazilian politician. He has represented Rondônia in the Federal Senate since 2011. Previously, he was Governor of Rondônia from 2004 to 2010, when he resigned to seek election to the Senate. He is a member of the Progressive Party.", "score": "1.5190737" }, { "id": "562101", "title": "Enrico Venti", "text": " Enrico Venti (Born 30 December 1978) is an Italian actor and comedian. Better known as Ivo Avido, his best known character, he is famous for his participation in television programs such as Mai dire... on Italia 1. With Marcello Macchia, he leads Shortcut Productions, the company that produces their own videos. From 2011 he is a member of the crew of Lo Zoo di 105. In 2015 he took part in his first movie, Italiano medio.", "score": "1.5108818" }, { "id": "13890530", "title": "Frank Ray Perilli", "text": " Frank Ray Perilli (August 30, 1925 – March 8, 2018 ) was an American screenwriter with more than 15 screen credits, and a playwright of four stage plays. He began his career as a standup comic in the mob-controlled nightclubs of Chicago’s North Side, and made appearances on major television shows of the day such as The Ed Sullivan Show. His acting career included more than a dozen feature films, some of which he wrote and/or produced. He was also a comedy writer for Don Rickles, Shecky Greene, and Lenny Bruce, among others, and at times a manager for Greene and Bruce. His biography, The Candy Butcher by William Karl Thomas, was released in 2016 by Media Maestro-Book Division. He is known for such films as She Came to the Valley, End of the World, Laserblast, Mansion of the Doomed and Alligator.", "score": "1.4936774" }, { "id": "13324112", "title": "Achille Perilli", "text": " Born in Rome on 28 January 1927, Achille Perilli attended classical secondary school and earned a degree in literature with a thesis on Giorgio de Chirico. After World War II, he founded the group Forma 1 alongside Carla Accardi, Ugo Attardi, Pietro Consagra, Antonio Sanfilippo, and Giulio Turcato. He was a master in Italian abstractionism, as seen in his exhibitions at the Esposizione internazionale d'arte di Venezia in 1952, 1958, 1962, and 1968. From 1948 to 1986, he participated in the Rome Quadriennale on five separate occasions. From 1963 to 1964, he participated in the Peintures italiennes d'aujourd'hui in the Middle East and North Africa. In 1995, he became a member of the Accademia di San Luca and received the award of the President of the Republic of Italy in 1997. Perilli died in Orvieto on 16 October 2021.", "score": "1.4914787" }, { "id": "578402", "title": "Lorenzo Perilli", "text": " Lorenzo Perilli is an Italian classicist and academic at the University of Rome Tor Vergata. A Professor of Classical Philology, he is the Director of the interdisciplinary Research Centre in Classics, Mathematics and Philosophy Forms of Knowledge in the Ancient World, established in 2013 and devoted to ancient science and related disciplines. He is Co-director of the periodical [http://www.libraweb.net/riviste.php?chiave=105 ''Technai. An international journal on ancient science and technology], and serves on the board of the journal of ancient medicine Galenos''. He was educated in Classics at the University of Rome (1983–1989), where he also received his PhD in Philosophy. He was awarded several international research grants and prizes, among them a 2-year grant from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (University of Munich, Germany, 1996), and the Prize of the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage in 2001 for his studies on ancient philosophy and science. In 2007 he won ", "score": "1.4814665" }, { "id": "3318777", "title": "Ivo Mattozzi", "text": " Ivo Mattozzi (born June 6, 1940 in Pescara), is a professor at the University of Bologna. He teaches methodology and teaching of history. He has given lectures in Italy, Spain, Brazil and Argentina and was the president of the history association, \"Clio '92\". His articles and publications have been translated into Spanish, Portuguese and Greek.", "score": "1.4389884" }, { "id": "12774551", "title": "Gastone Brilli-Peri", "text": " Count Gastone Brilli-Peri (24 March 1893 – 22 March 1930) was an Italian racing driver, who won the 1925 Italian Grand Prix in an Alfa Romeo P2, securing the inaugural World Manufacturers' Championship title for Alfa Romeo. Known simply as \"Brilli\", his face had been permanently scarred in an accident during a Tour of Italy motorcycle race. He used to race wearing a hat similar to a Basque beret, which is now known in Italy as a brilliperi.", "score": "1.435558" }, { "id": "32381361", "title": "Jean Perillier", "text": " Jean Perillier, also Périllié was a French Consul in Salé Morocco in the 17th century, from 1683 to 1689. He succeeded Henri Prat, who was Consul in Salé from 1648 to 1682, and was himself succeeded by Jean-Baptiste Estelle in 1689.", "score": "1.4236922" }, { "id": "29187823", "title": "Alessandro Perissinotto", "text": " Alessandro Perissinotto (born 1964 in Turin) is an Italian writer, translator and university professor.", "score": "1.4195141" }, { "id": "1296838", "title": "Ivo Perišin", "text": " Ivo Perišin (4 July 1925 – 30 October 2008) was a Croatian economist, politician and academician. He held various senior governmental posts in the Socialist Republic of Croatia in the 1970s and was mayor of Split, Croatia from 1965 to 1967. In 1949, Perišin graduated from the University of Zagreb Faculty of Economics. He continued studies at the University of Belgrade, and defended his doctoral thesis at the Belgrade Faculty of Economics in 1959. From 1956 he was a professor of economics at the University of Zagreb. From 1965 to 1967 he was the Mayor of Split. He served as the governor of the National Bank of Yugoslavia from 1 November 1969 to 31 December 1971. He was President of the Assembly of SR Croatia from 1974 to 1978. He was admitted as full member of the Yugoslav Academy of Sciences and Arts (today Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts) on 17 May 1990.", "score": "1.4151754" }, { "id": "12774552", "title": "Gastone Brilli-Peri", "text": " Brilli-Peri was born in Florence into a noble family. He debuted in a bicycle race in 1907, aged 14. In 1911 he won the Tuscan cycling championship. In 1912 he bought a motorcycle, and in 1914 he debuted in a race at the Lake Trasimeno, winning the 1st Motogiro of Italy in the same year. He first raced as a car driver just after World War I, where he had acted asa motorcycle driver. In 1925, in an Alfa Romeo P2, he won his first Grand Prix at the Italian Grand Prize at Monza. In 1929, still in the Alfa Romeo P2, he won the Circuit of Cremona and the Tripoli Grand Prix in Italian ", "score": "1.4151589" } ]
What is Rinaldo del Mel's occupation?
[ "composer" ]
occupation
Rinaldo del Mel
5,586,772
62
[ { "id": "30977540", "title": "Rinaldo del Mel", "text": " Rinaldo del Mel (also René del Mel, del Melle) (probably 1554 – c. 1598) was a Franco-Flemish composer of the Renaissance, mainly active in Italy, and a member of the Roman School of composition. He likely studied with Palestrina, and was a skilled and prolific composer, especially of cyclic madrigals of the type popular in Rome.", "score": "1.8732963" }, { "id": "30977541", "title": "Rinaldo del Mel", "text": " Mel was born in Mechelen to an aristocratic family closely connected to the Duchy of Lorraine; his father was in charge of the financial management of the Duke's estate. In 1562, at the probable age of eight, he began study at the Cathedral of St. Rombaut, with Séverin Cornet being his principal teacher. In 1572, after finishing his schooling, he was sent to Lisbon by his family, where he may have served as maestro di cappella at the court (according to Giuseppe Baini, the 19th century writer on music, who was not always a reliable source). By 1580 he was in Rome, possibly studying with Palestrina. Records indicate he was at Chieti in 1583, and in January 1584 in Venice; in July of that year he accepted a position ", "score": "1.7293749" }, { "id": "7851002", "title": "Rinaldo Melucci", "text": " Rinaldo Melucci (born 26 January 1977) is an Italian politician. He is member of the Democratic Party. He was born in Taranto, Italy. He is married and has three children. Melucci was elected Mayor of Taranto on 26 June 2017.", "score": "1.6633084" }, { "id": "30977542", "title": "Rinaldo del Mel", "text": " maestro di cappella at Rieti Cathedral, but was dismissed shortly thereafter for being too often absent from his duties. Between 1585 and 1591 Mel traveled widely, returning to Flanders, including Liège and Antwerp. He served briefly as maestro di cappella for the Duke of Bavaria, then in Liège, for at least a few months beginning in July 1587. He visited Venice, Rome, Magliano Capo di Sabina, and Aquila during the years 1585 to 1591 as well. Between 1591 and 1597 he was music director at the cathedral and seminary in Magliano Capo di Sabina. He disappears from the record after 1597, but a book of newly composed chansons by him, published in Antwerp that year, has suggested that he may have again returned to the land of his birth.", "score": "1.6520436" }, { "id": "30977543", "title": "Rinaldo del Mel", "text": " All of Rinaldo del Mel's surviving music is vocal, and it is both sacred and secular. He was a prolific composer, and wrote both motets and madrigals, as well as some forms that blended elements of the sacred and secular, such as a collection of \"spiritual canzonets\". His style shows the craftsmanship of an exceptional Netherlandish musical training, as well as the influence of Palestrina, who was probably his teacher, as claimed by Baini. Mel's sacred music, as would be expected of a composer of the Roman School, is more conservative stylistically than his secular music. Since his music is yet to appear in a modern edition it has not been fully evaluated by scholars. Mel wrote several sets of cyclic madrigals, i.e. sets of madrigals which set successive stanzas of a long poem (Monteverdi's Sestina: Lagrime d'Amante al Sepolcro ", "score": "1.591794" }, { "id": null, "title": "Talk:Rinaldo del Mel", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Belgian male classical composers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1593 in music", "text": "1593 in music\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Virgin River (TV series)", "text": "Virgin River (TV series)\n\nVirgin River is an American romantic drama streaming television series, produced by Reel World Management, filmed in British Columbia, Canada, and based on the \"Virgin River\" novels by Robyn Carr. The first season premiered on Netflix on December 6, 2019.<ref name=\"SeriesPremiere\"/> In September 2021, the series was renewed for a fourth and fifth season.<ref name=\"S4–S5Renewal\"/> The fourth season was released on July 20, 2022.<ref name=\"S4Premiere\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Radamel Falcao", "text": "Radamel Falcao\n\nRadamel Falcao García Zárate (born 10 February 1986) is a Colombian professional footballer who plays as a forward for La Liga club Rayo Vallecano and often captains the Colombia national team. Nicknamed \"\"El Tigre\"\" (Spanish for \"The Tiger\"), he is considered one of the greatest Colombian footballers of all time.\n\nFalcao began his professional career in the Colombian Second Division at the age of 13 at Lanceros Boyacá, before moving to the Argentine club River Plate, where he played with their youth academy from 2001 until 2005 and later won the 2007–08 Clausura tournament. In 2009, he joined Portuguese club Porto, where he won several trophies, including the UEFA Europa League and Primeira Liga double in 2011. In August 2011, Falcao moved to Spanish club Atlético Madrid for a club record €40 million. He was integral in the club's 2012 Europa League and Super Cup victories.<ref name=\":10\" /> Falcao was also prolific in La Liga during his time with Atlético, being the third-highest goalscorer in 2011–12 and 2012–13, both behind Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo.\n\nWidely regarded as one of the best strikers in the world, Falcao controversially signed for newly promoted Ligue 1 side Monaco in 2013 for a club record €60 million, despite interest from top European clubs. In the second half of his debut season, an ACL injury ruled him out for six months; he went on to spend the next two seasons on loan at Premier League clubs Manchester United and Chelsea. Rejoining Monaco in the summer of 2016, he regained his best form and led them to their first Ligue 1 title in 17 years. Falcao joined Turkish club Galatasaray in 2019, before returning to La Liga in 2021 with Rayo Vallecano. \n\nFalcao made his senior debut for Colombia in 2007, and has since earned over 100 caps and scored 36 goals, making him their all-time top scorer since breaking the previous record of 25 goals in June 2017. He represented his country at the 2011, 2015 and 2019 Copa América. Falcao missed the 2014 FIFA World Cup through injury, but made his World Cup debut at the 2018 tournament in Russia.\n\nFalcao is Porto's all-time top goalscorer in international club competitions, set the record for most goals (17) in a European campaign in 2011, is the first player to win consecutive Europa League titles with two teams (Porto in 2011 and Atlético in 2012), and is Monaco's highest goalscorer this century (83). He was named in the FIFA FIFPro World XI in 2012, finished in fifth place for the 2012 FIFA Ballon d'Or, and was awarded the 2012 Globe Soccer Best Footballer.", "score": null }, { "id": "28463313", "title": "Rinaldo (footballer, born 1966)", "text": " Antônio Rinaldo Gonçalves, commonly known simply as Rinaldo (born October 31, 1966), is an association footballer. He played for several Campeonato Brasileiro Série A clubs. He also played for Portuguese Liga clubs and for the Brazilian national team.", "score": "1.5668391" }, { "id": "30977545", "title": "Rinaldo del Mel", "text": "Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN: 0-393-09530-4 Gustave Reese, Music in the Renaissance. New York, W.W. Norton & Co., 1954. ISBN: 0-393-09530-4 ", "score": "1.5598705" }, { "id": "12505061", "title": "Arnaldo Rivera", "text": " Arnaldo Rivera (1919 - 1987) was an Italian teacher, entrepreneur and partisan. For almost forty years he was the mayor and the primary school teacher of Castiglione Falletto, so 1958 he founded the Cantina Terre del Barolo, one of the oldest and largest cooperative wineries in Piedmont still active.", "score": "1.5337969" }, { "id": "31418735", "title": "Rinaldo (footballer, born 1975)", "text": " He played South Korean side FC Seoul in 2004.", "score": "1.5129018" }, { "id": "1289576", "title": "Rinaldo Cavalchini", "text": " Rinaldo Cavalchini (1291–1362) lived in Villafranca di Verona near Verona and was better known as Rinaldo from Villafranca.", "score": "1.5073407" }, { "id": "6052427", "title": "Edoardo Arborio Mella", "text": " Edoardo Arborio Mella (18 November 1808 – 8 January 1884) was an Italian architect, restorer and scholar. Well-known at the time for his ‘stylish’ restorations of medieval buildings in Piedmont, he has been described as ‘one of the most representative protagonists of the Gothic revival in northern Italy’.", "score": "1.4990183" }, { "id": "5909570", "title": "Rinaldo Carnielo", "text": " Rinaldo Carnielo (1853 - 1910) was an Italian sculptor known for his macabre sensibility.", "score": "1.4932669" }, { "id": "6113179", "title": "Antonio Rinaldo", "text": " Antonio Rinaldo (1816 – 27 September 1875) was an Italian-Swiss painter. Born in Tremona, Switzerland, he painted mainly of genre, but also of religious subjects.", "score": "1.4827228" }, { "id": "28463314", "title": "Rinaldo (footballer, born 1966)", "text": " Born in Campina Grande, Paraíba state, Rinaldo started his professional career playing for Campinense, then moving to their rivals Treze. He played 36 Série A games for Santa Cruz between 1987 and 1988, scoring five goals. He then joined Fluminense, playing 21 Série A games and scoring seven goals for the Rio de Janeiro-based club. With São Paulo, Rinaldo played 15 Série A games, scoring two goals, between 1991 and 1992. Including other competition games, he played 28 games for São Paulo, and scored four goals. In 1992, he played four Copa do Brasil games for Sport Recife, scoring four goals. He left the club after the 1993 season. After leaving Sport Recife, he played for Portuguesa, then Portuguese Liga clubs Marítimo and Moreirense, Juventude, and in 1994 Kärnten of Austria, when he retired and moved to Recife city.", "score": "1.480698" }, { "id": "32719680", "title": "Rinaldo Rinaldi", "text": " Rinaldo Rinaldi (April 13, 1793 – July 28, 1873) was an Italian Sculptor.", "score": "1.4750719" }, { "id": "5501052", "title": "Rinaldo Saporiti", "text": " Rinaldo Saporiti (Milan 1840 - 1913) was an Italian painter. He was born to an aristocratic family, and studied at the Brera Academy in Milan, where among his mentors were Giuseppe Mazzola and Luigi Bisi. He was eclectic in thematic, which included both landscapes and figures, using both oils and watercolors. In 1861, he exhibited at the Brera: Mattino and Un mercato. In 1863, he exhibited some works based on a trip to Tunisia, including Una via a Tunisi, in 1867, La Goletta-Laguna di Tunisi. He also exhibited subjects from Sardinia and Liguria. In 1870 at the Parmesan Mostra Italiana of Fine Arts, he sent three paintings representing Caneto (Lago Maggiore); The Alps; Valle di Sitsa, and a fourth watercolor: Quassa (Lago Maggiore). Also at the Exposition of Turin, in 1880, were two paintings representing la Riviera di Genoa and The Adriatic. Four years later at the same Turin exhibition, he exhibited: Caccia -nelle canne e la Pesca; and he exhibited anew, in 1886, at the Exhibition of Fine Arts in Milan.", "score": "1.4745458" }, { "id": "8057704", "title": "Stravaganza (series)", "text": " a result of working for the di Chimici. He abruptly ends his service with the di Chimici family and forces his help upon Luciano and the other Stravaganti. Introduced as a diplomat from the di Chimici to Bellezza, Rinaldo is a humourless and physically unattractive man delegated by the head of the family to persuade Silvia, the Duchessa of Bellezza, to join in an alliance with the di Chimici. After multiple diplomatic attempts fail, Rinaldo resorts to underhanded tactics including murder and kidnapping to secure Bellezza, which also fail. He subsequently leaves Bellezza and is eventually assigned to become chaplain to his uncle, Pope Lenient VI, and quickly rises to ", "score": "1.473912" }, { "id": "31418736", "title": "Rinaldo (footballer, born 1975)", "text": "Campeonato Cearense:2007 ", "score": "1.4714371" }, { "id": "659157", "title": "Arnaldo Pomodoro", "text": " Arnaldo Pomodoro was born on 23 June 1926 in Morciano di Romagna, Montefeltro area. He received his diploma from the Technical Institute for Surveyors in Rimini, and then worked at the Public Works Office in Pesaro. He developed an interest in art and scenography, and attended the Art Institute in Pesaro.", "score": "1.4711852" }, { "id": "8397634", "title": "Rinaldo Mantovano", "text": " Rinaldo's birth and death dates are unknown. We know that he was born in Mantua, and he was among those charged with decorating the Palazzo del Te in Mantua. In this work he assisted with the Sala dei Venti, the Camera delle Aquile (1527) and the Loggia di David (1531). During part of 1531 he is documented as collaborating with Giulio Romano in decoration of the Castello di San Giorgio of Mantua. From 1532 to 1536 he participated in executing the frescoes in the Sala dei Giganti, where we see his somewhat flat and decorative style of painting on a large part of the ceilings and walls. From 1536 to 1539 he was part of the group of artists who decorated the Ducal Palace of Mantua. There he worked on the ", "score": "1.4643216" } ]
What is Annie Beustes's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Annie Beustes
2,171,332
33
[ { "id": "12580425", "title": "Annie Beustes", "text": " Annie Beustes (born 15 June 1945 in Arget) is a New Caledonian politician. She has served in the Congress of New Caledonia as a member of The Rally–UMP, and is anti-independence; she also served in the government of Jean Lèques. She served a short term as Vice President of the Government of New Caledonia in August 2007, and was succeeded by Déwé Gorodey of the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS: Front de Libération Nationale Kanak et Socialiste).", "score": "1.8504024" }, { "id": "15918238", "title": "Arget", "text": "Annie Beustes, born Annie Campagne, is a New Caledonian politician, born on 15 August 1945 in Arget. ", "score": "1.6878337" }, { "id": "32543589", "title": "Annie Abrahams", "text": " Annie Abrahams (born 1954) is a Dutch performance artist specialising in video installations and internet based performances, often deriving from collective writings and collective interaction. Born and raised in Hilvarenbeek in the Netherlands, she migrated to and settled in France in 1987. Her performance work challenges and questions the limitations and possibilities of online communication and collaboration. Abrahams describes her body of work as \"an aesthetics of trust and attention.\" Studying biology became an inspiration for her future line of work. \"When studying biology I had to observe a colony of monkeys in a zoo. I found this very interesting because I learned something about human communities by watching the apes. In a certain way I watch the internet with the same appetite and interest. I consider it to be a universe where I can observe some aspects of human attitudes and behaviour without interfering.\"", "score": "1.4898129" }, { "id": "9968409", "title": "Annie Cuyt", "text": " Cuyt was born on 27 May 1956 in Elizabethstad (now Lubumbashi), in the Belgian Congo. She earned her Ph.D. at the University of Antwerp in 1982. Her dissertation, Padé approximants for operators: theory and applications, was promoted by Luc Wuytack. She was a postdoctoral researcher with support from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, and completed a habilitation in 1986. She is a professor in the Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at the University of Antwerp, where she leads the computational mathematics group.", "score": "1.426354" }, { "id": "9968408", "title": "Annie Cuyt", "text": " Annie A. M. Cuyt (born 1956) is a Belgian computational mathematician known for her work on continued fractions, numerical analysis, Padé approximants, and related topics. She is a professor at the University of Antwerp, and a member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Science and the Arts.", "score": "1.4017057" }, { "id": null, "title": "Annie Beustes", "text": "Annie Beustes\n\nAnnie Beustes (born 15 June 1945 in Arget) is a New Caledonian politician. She has served in the Congress of New Caledonia as a member of The Rally–UMP,<ref name=congres/> and is anti-independence; she also served in the government of Jean Lèques.\n\nShe served a short term as Vice President of the Government of New Caledonia in August 2007, and was succeeded by Déwé Gorodey of the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front (FLNKS: Front de Libération Nationale Kanak et Socialiste).\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Déwé Gorodey", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Oceanian politician stubs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia talk:Unreferenced BLP Rescue/Archive 5", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "963936", "title": "Annie Sprinkle", "text": "of her activist and sex education work reflects this philosophy. In 2009, she appeared in the French documentary film \"Mutantes: Punk, Porn, Feminism,\" speaking about the beginnings of the movement as well as her own contributions to it. In 2017, Sprinkle and Stephens were official artists in Documenta 14, widely considered to be the most significant art exhibition in the world. They presented performances and visual art, lectured, and previewed their new film documentary, Water Makes Us Wet: An Ecosexual Adventure. As noted above, Steinberg first gave herself the name “Annie” when she started working in pornography. As her career", "score": "1.3607959" }, { "id": "31989785", "title": "Annie Famose", "text": "} ", "score": "1.3888428" }, { "id": "15578597", "title": "Annie Preece", "text": " Preece's career started with showings at downtown art walks and group shows, painted shoes for Project Canvas with other artists, and volunteering many hours telling her story of addiction, recovery and passion for art with at-risk youth. In 2012 she again picked up the spray can and created a humorous piece on a Melrose and Fairfax wall, and again with a mural drew complaints from the L.A. City Council for its depiction of sex organs. Her first solo show was in 2013 at Space 1520 in Hollywood. She was asked to be the first female artist to paint a mural on the Roxy Theater in West Hollywood. Notable collaboration include ", "score": "1.3695648" }, { "id": "10378132", "title": "Annie Lobert", "text": " Annie Lobert (born September 26, 1967) is an American former call girl and sex industry worker, who founded the international Christian ministry Hookers for Jesus. In 2010, she produced and starred in a three-part documentary on the organization, Hookers: Saved on the Strip, which was broadcast nationwide on cable television's Investigation Discovery. Lobert worked as a prostitute in Las Vegas, Minneapolis, and Hawaii for 16 years. She left the sex industry with the support of Al Nakata, one of her regular customers, who had fallen in love with her. After leaving prostitution, Nakata trained her in estimates and service reviews in order to work with him in his Super GT Series auto body and design firm.", "score": "1.3679761" }, { "id": "32839214", "title": "Annie Brisset", "text": " Annie Brisset, a member of the Royal Society of Canada, is a Professor of Translation Studies and Discourse Theory at the School of Translation and Interpretation of the University of Ottawa, Canada.", "score": "1.3648531" }, { "id": "32839217", "title": "Annie Brisset", "text": " a UNESCO consultant for the development of multilingual communication for Central and Eastern Europe, and former President and founding member of IATIS (International Association for Translation and Intercultural Studies. In 2007, she served as a member of jury for the Governor General of Canada's Literary Awards. In 2009 she was elected fellow of the Royal Society of Canada for her exceptional achievements in the areas of sciences and arts & humanities in 1991, she received the Ann Saddlemyer Award(Canadian Association for the History of Theatre), while in 1987, she received the Jean-Béraud Theatre Critic of the Year Award (Canadian and Quebec associations of theatre critics.", "score": "1.3612111" }, { "id": "32068457", "title": "Annie Bersagel", "text": " Anne Golden Bersagel (born March 30, 1983) is an American long-distance runner and lawyer.", "score": "1.3607464" }, { "id": "13304070", "title": "Annie Lafleur", "text": " Annie Lafleur (born 1980 in Montreal) is a Canadian poet from Quebec. She is most noted for her poetry collection Bec-de-lièvre, which was a shortlisted finalist for the Governor General's Award for French-language poetry at the 2017 Governor General's Awards. Her other poetry collections have included Prolégomènes à mon géant (2007), Handkerchief (2009), Rosebud (2013) and Nouvelles vagues (2014).", "score": "1.3576386" }, { "id": "32543590", "title": "Annie Abrahams", "text": " Abrahams was born in a small farmer's village in the Netherlands with four younger sisters. She gained a Doctorate in Biology from the University of Utrecht (1978) and a Diploma from the Academy of Fine Arts Arnhem (1985). Brought into a world of agriculture, her academic pathway led her to becoming internationally known for her pioneering networked performance art and collective writing experiments. After completing her doctorate, she was assigned as an assistant researcher at the University. At the same time she studied painting, and after gaining her diploma, Abrahams received arts funding from the Dutch government to practice in ", "score": "1.356658" }, { "id": "32469698", "title": "Annie Segarra", "text": " Annie Segarra (born August 22, 1990), also known as Annie Elainey, is an American YouTuber, artist, and activist for LGBT and disability rights. Segarra, who is queer, Latinx, and disabled, advocates for accessibility, body positivity, and media representation of marginalized communities.", "score": "1.347139" }, { "id": "32839215", "title": "Annie Brisset", "text": " Brisset received a Licence d'anglais from the Université de Nantes (France), an MA in Applied Linguistics (Translation) from the University of Ottawa, and a PhD in Semiotics & Literary Studies from the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM). Her areas of research include Translation theories, Discourse theories, Sociology and Sociocritique of translation, and Interpretation. She is a member of the Advisory board of The Translator a refereed international journal that publishes articles on a variety of issues on translation and interpreting as acts of intercultural communication, and a member of the international advisory board of TTR (Translation, Terminology and Writing), a scholarly biannual journal of the ", "score": "1.3443266" }, { "id": "32543595", "title": "Annie Abrahams", "text": " how people react and form relationships in distributed online groups, for example in Huis Clos / No Exit and Angry Women. She has collaborated with a number of artists including Mark River, MTAA, Nicolas Frespech, Igor Stomajer, and Antye Greie. Her interactive performances often follow a desired 'footprint left in the sand' imprinted and left by the duration of the piece as well as formulating and creating a collective language from many different ethnicities and identities of individuals. The key factor of investigation revolves around the notion of human behavior when presented with a new interactive archive of networked based performance; she explores how participants 'click' and 'choose' opportunities to create new behaviors and perhaps a new way of thinking, for example a personal interaction without any interference from peers in ViolenceS, a 2009 collaboration with Nicolas Frespech.", "score": "1.342501" }, { "id": "28739360", "title": "Annie M. Aggens", "text": " Annie M. Aggens (also known as Annie Aggens) is a polar expedition leader for Polar Explorers. She is one of only a few women who have led treks to both the North and South Poles. In May 2008, she led an international team on a 25-day trek across the Greenland Ice Cap. She is also the co-author, with Chris Townsend, of the Encyclopedia of Outdoor & Wilderness Skills: The Ultimate A-Z Guide for The Adventurous. 2003. Ragged Mountain Press. ISBN: 0-07-138406-5. In 2006, she founded ICECAAP, an international consortium of polar explorers dedicated to preserving the polar environment.", "score": "1.3422358" }, { "id": "15313312", "title": "Annie Rockfellow", "text": " clubs besides the Historical and Pioneer Society, among then The Archeological society, The Natural History society, The Fine Arts, The Daughters of the American Revolution, The business and Professional Women's Club, The Tucson branch of the National League of American Pen women, and a long time board member of the Y.W.C.A. and at present sponsor for their business girls group, the Otonka Circle. When business permits I spend some time each year with my brother and sister-in-law in cochise Stronghold, riding their horses, and climbing the mountains, and a part of the summers \"doing something different\" each year, but always ", "score": "1.3285964" }, { "id": "15578595", "title": "Annie Preece", "text": " Annie Preece (born February 23, 1981), also known as \"Love Annie\", is an American visual artist, public speaker and comedian who lives and works in Los Angeles, California.", "score": "1.3202612" }, { "id": "2292418", "title": "List of people from Philadelphia", "text": " known as Annie or Anna or Drinkwater, or her pen name, Edith May ; Brian McDonough (b. ), Medical Editor, author, physician ; Jim McKay (1921–2008), ABC sports journalist ; Chris McKendry (b. 1968), ESPN SportsCenter anchor ; Larry Mendte (b. 1957), KYW-TV news anchor ; James A. Michener (1907–1997), author ; Aubertine Woodward Moore (1841–1929), musician, writer, musical critic, translator, lecturer ; Christopher Morley (1890–1957), novelist, short-story writer, poet ; Wesley Morris (b. 1975), film critic, podcast host ; Thom Nickels (b. ), author, journalist ; Joe Queenan (b. 1950), author, humorist ; Matthew Quick (b. 1973), author of The Silver Linings Playbook ; Edgar Allan Poe ", "score": "1.3194592" } ]
What is Kazuyoshi Sekine's occupation?
[ "playwright", "dramatist", "playwrite", "scriptwriter" ]
occupation
Kazuyoshi Sekine
2,062,111
72
[ { "id": "16485390", "title": "Kazuyoshi Sekine", "text": " Kazuyoshi Sekine (関根和美 Sekine Kazuyoshi), also known as Kazumi Sekine, is a Japanese film director, a dramatist, and a movie producer and the president of Sekine Production production company (関根プロ). He mainly directs movies produced by independent film studios. He is married to the actress Izumi Aki, who has appeared in his films. Many of his films are urban love stories.", "score": "1.6800501" }, { "id": "6010445", "title": "Gen Sekine", "text": " Endo was the leader of an Inagawa-kai-affiliated criminal group who acted as the supervisor of Sekine, who was also a customer of the Africa Kennel. Following Kawasaki's disappearance, he attended a meeting with his family who suspected that Sekine had something to do with it. Agreeing with their sentiment, he began to extort Sekine for a large amount of money. Eventually, Sekine and Kazama, who were planning on building a new pet shop, began worrying that their property would be taken away, and decided to get rid of Endo. At the same time, they concluded that they should also dispose of his chauffeur, Susumu Wakui, who had no prior interactions with either of them. On the night of July 21, 1993, Sekine, Kazama and ", "score": "1.5239501" }, { "id": "424462", "title": "Ryuichi Sekine", "text": " Ryuichi Sekine (関根龍一) is a Japanese professional wrestler, currently working as a freelancer and is best known for his time in the professional wrestling promotion Kaientai Dojo.", "score": "1.5015919" }, { "id": "5618220", "title": "Kazuyo Sejima", "text": " Sejima was born on 29 October 1956 in Mito, Ibaraki, Japan. She graduated from Japan Women's University in 1979. She then went on to complete the Master's Degree course in architecture in 1981. In the same year, she began working with the architecture firm Toyo Ito and Associates until 1987.", "score": "1.4757338" }, { "id": "5737053", "title": "Thomas T. Sekine", "text": " Tomohiko Sekine (関根 友彦), a.k.a. Thomas T. Sekine is a Japanese economist and is considered to be one of the most important theorists on the field of Marx's labor theory of value. His main work The Dialectic of Capital was published in 1986. He is a scholar of Kozo Uno.", "score": "1.4756393" }, { "id": null, "title": "Izumi Aki", "text": "Izumi Aki\n\n, a.k.a. ; (born May 15, 1960), is a Japanese actress especially known for her roles in \"pink film\".\n\nIzumi made her \"pink film\" debut in October 1980 in produced by Shishi Pro () and released by Toei. In the next four years, Aki appeared in about sixty pink films primarily for the Shintōhō Eiga and Million Film studios. In November 1981, she had a role in actress Rumi Tama's debut as a director in the \"pink film\" distributed by Million Film. Aki starred in two low-budget films directed by Hiroki Hirakawa, the August 1982 and the April 1983 production for Million Film.\n\nIn June 1984, Aki starred in , an entry in Nikkatsu's Roman Porno series, directed by Genji Nakamura, one of \"The Three Pillars Of Pink\". In one of her last \"pink film\" roles, in February 1985, she played opposite actor and director Yutaka Ikejima in another Million Film production .\n\nAfter marrying the film director Kazuyoshi Sekine her \"pink film\" acting career seemed to have ended. Izumi later returned to the screen in 1999, starring in \"Hatsujō midare zuma\" (発情乱れ妻).\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kin'ichi Kusumi", "text": "Kin'ichi Kusumi", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Megumi Makihara", "text": "Megumi Makihara", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Perfume (Japanese band)", "text": "Perfume (Japanese band)\n\nThe group was formed in early 2000 inside the young talent academy Actor's School Hiroshima and debuted with their first Hiroshima-local single \"Omajinai Perori\" released on March 21, 2002. A year later they moved to Tokyo, started to work with Capsule's producer Yasutaka Nakata, and released their first nationwide indie single, \"Sweet Donuts\" on August 6, 2003. In 2005, they made a major contract deal with Tokuma Japan Communications and released their major debut single \"Linear Motor Girl\" on September 21.\n\nIt was not until 2008 when the group's seventh single \"Polyrhythm\", which was chosen as the theme song of a recycle campaign by NHK, that they started to receive major attention in Japan. The single peaked at number seven on the Oricon charts, becoming their first Top 10 single in Japan, and since then, all of their subsequent works starting with their eighth single \"Baby Cruising Love\" have debuted within the Top 5 of the charts.\n\nPerfume's first original studio album, \"Game\", released on April 16, 2008, became their first number one album in Japan, and \"Love the World\", released on July 9, 2008, became their first number one single. With roughly combined sales of both singles and albums, the group has sold over 5 million records.\n\nThe group was formed with an original post-Shibuya-kei sound and later transitioned toward contemporary electronic dance music that incorporated elements of synthpop, bubblegum pop, dance-pop, techno, and house music. The group is also known for their heavily processed vocals, making clever use of autotune, Harmony Engine, and vocoders. Over the years, Perfume has been one of the most successful acts in Asian music. The group's musical structure has been identified as technopop.\n\nIn 2012 the group announced that they had signed a global contract with Universal Music Group, Their fourth studio album \"Level 3\" was released on October 2, 2013, and was soon followed by \"Sweet Refrain\" a month after, serving as the lead single for their fifth studio album \"Cosmic Explorer\", which was released on April 6, 2016, and selected as one of \"20 Best Pop Albums of 2016\" by \"Rolling Stone\". Their sixth studio album \"Future Pop\" was released on August 15, 2018.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Renji Ishibashi", "text": "Renji Ishibashi\n\n, born is a Japanese actor. He won the award for best supporting actor at the 15th Hochi Film Award for \"Rōnin-gai\".\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "1500519", "title": "Nobuo Sekine", "text": " Nobuo Sekine (関根 伸夫) was a Japanese sculptor who resided in both Tokyo, Japan, and Los Angeles, California. A graduate of Tama Art University, he was one of the key members of Mono-ha, a group of artists who became prominent in the late 1960s and early 1970s. The Mono-ha artists explored the encounter between natural and industrial materials, arranging them or interacting with them in mostly unaltered, ephemeral states. Sekine’s signature materials included earth, water, stone, oilclay, sponge, steel plates, among others. His Phase—Mother Earth, consisting of a hole dug into the ground, 2.7 meters deep and 2.2 meters in diameter, with the excavated earth compacted into a cylinder of exactly ", "score": "1.4618924" }, { "id": "6010433", "title": "Gen Sekine", "text": " Gen Sekine (January 2, 1942 – March 27, 2017) was a Japanese dog breeder and serial killer who, together with his common-law wife Hiroko Kazama, murdered at least four clients in Kumagaya from April to August 1993 in what were called the Saitama Dog Lover Murders (Japanese: 埼玉愛犬家連続殺人事件). Both were sentenced to death for their crimes, but Sekine died on death row prior to execution.", "score": "1.4587485" }, { "id": "6010435", "title": "Gen Sekine", "text": " in his twenties, Sekine started breeding dogs, for which he later earn celebrity status in the industry for popularizing the Alaskan Malamute breed in the country. Some claim sources claim that he was also responsible for the boom of Siberian Huskies. Sekine originally ran a pet shop and animal leasing business in his hometown, where he gained notoriety for his malicious business practices, often stealing dogs and selling them to customers, or killing the customer's dog and selling them an entirely new one. Residents in the area also complained that he looked after dangerous animals such as tigers and lions. Due to brewing problems with gangsters, Sekine moved temporarily to Itō, Shizuoka, but in 1982, he returned ", "score": "1.4555674" }, { "id": "6010436", "title": "Gen Sekine", "text": " Saitama Prefecture and opened the \"Africa Kennel\" in Kumagaya. Sekine was adept at predicting human behavior, and many were thusly drawn to his unique humor and speaking skills, which were contrary to his yakuza-like style. On the other hand, many of his peers avoided involving themselves too deeply with him due to his business practices, propensity to threaten customers and his friendship with local gangsters. In addition, he was a pathological liar who made many boastful claims to not only acquaintances and customers, but also to interviewers for magazines and television programs, with the aim of advertising his store. One such lie concerned his missing pinky finger, which he claimed had been bitten off by a lion ", "score": "1.4439979" }, { "id": "29475812", "title": "Sekino Jun'ichirō", "text": " In April 1939 Sekino moved to Tokyo where he was employed by publisher Shimo Taro and met Kōshirō Onchi. He was one of the founding members of Onchi's Ichimokukai (First Thursday Society), where he was considered Onchi's \"right-hand man.\" During the Second World War, Sekino procured lodging and theater facilities for entertainment troupes. Through this role he met famous kabuki actor Nakamura Kichiemon I whose woodblock portrait he produced in 1947. Alongside further depictions of artists such as Shikō Munakata and Onchi, it became one of his most renowned pieces, and established him as the country's pre-eminent woodblock portraitist. Besides portraits, Sekino produced still lifes, landscapes (both ", "score": "1.440095" }, { "id": "9113166", "title": "Yoshiharu Sekino", "text": " Sekino was born in 1949 in Tokyo. While a student at Hitotsubashi University, he cofounded and participated in a university team that descended the entire length of the Amazon, thereafter travelling around South America. He received a B.A. in law from Hitotsubashi University in 1975 and an M.D. from Yokohama City University School of Medicine in 1982. Since 2002 Sekino has been a professor of cultural anthropology at Musashino Art University.", "score": "1.437746" }, { "id": "1091946", "title": "Kazuyoshi Kino", "text": " Born the son of the head priest of Kempon Hokke Myorenji Temple in Yamaguchi Prefecture, Kino moved at the age of four to Hiroshima Prefecture, to Honshoji (temple), when his father became head priest there. While he was a second year student at the School of Indian Philosophy, Literature Department, Imperial University of Tokyo, he was drafted into the Imperial Japanese Army. At the end of World War II, in 1945, he was taken prisoner in Taiwan. In the same year his family died in the atomic bombing of Hiroshima. He was repatriated in 1946, resumed his studies and graduated in 1948. In the 1990s he became president of Hosen Gakuen College, Tokyo. He was also vice-president of Shogen Junior College in Minokamo, Gifu. He had his own radio show called Kino Kazuyoshi no sekai (\"Kazuyoshi Kino's World\") on Radio Nikkei. He died on December 28, 2013, of pneumonia.", "score": "1.4346943" }, { "id": "11992760", "title": "Kazuyoshi Nakamura", "text": " Nakamura was born in Fujieda on April 8, 1955. After graduating from Hosei University, he joined Fujitsu in 1978. In 1978 season, however he played 11 games and scored 3 goals, the club was relegated to Division 2. He retired in 1981.", "score": "1.4286244" }, { "id": "29475813", "title": "Sekino Jun'ichirō", "text": " scenes and cityscapes), depictions of animals, and abstract works. He also worked in lithography and etching, and in 1953 founded the Japanese Etchers Society. In 1958, at the invitation of the Japan Society, Sekino taught at America's Pratt Institute. In 1963 Gordon Gilkey of the Oregon State University hired him to teach a class. He also taught at the University of Washington and worked in New Mexico at the Tamarind Studio where he studied with Glen Alps, the inventor of collography. In 1969 he returned to Oregon State where, in 1975, his series depicting the Fifty-three Stations of the Tōkaidō was exhibited with Hiroshige's famous 1834 version.", "score": "1.4282532" }, { "id": "1500522", "title": "Nobuo Sekine", "text": " Nobuo Sekine was born in 1942 in Shiki City, Saitama Prefecture, Japan. From 1962 to 1968, he was a student in the painting department at Tama Art University in Tokyo, where he studied under influential artist-teachers Yoshishige Saitō and Jiro Takamatsu. Takamatsu’s illusionistic paintings and sculpture were central to the development of the Tokyo art scene at that time, as well as his performances and actions that belong to the anti-art trend (Yamanote Line Incident, and other events of the group Hi-Red Center, which he co-founded). Sekine’s early work reflected this approach. He was included in the seminal Tricks and Vision: Stolen Eyes group exhibition held at Tokyo Gallery and Muramatsu Gallery in 1968. There, he exhibited Phase No.4 (1968) (位相 No.4), a wall-mounted sculpture. Depending on the angle from which one viewed this work, its cylindrical shape appeared whole or fragmented. Sekine held his first solo exhibition at Tokyo Gallery the following year. ", "score": "1.4278629" }, { "id": "6010471", "title": "Gen Sekine", "text": " a daikokuten. ; Yamazaki later speculated that Sekine had killed others before, judging from his expertise and dexterity at dismembering the bodies. In his book dedicated to the case, he noted that the yakuza and truck driver who had disappeared in 1984 were friends of Sekine, and that the latter had a weird ritual of wrapping \"venison\" around bamboo sticks. He also said that Sekine had once told him that he belonged to the Takada Group, an organized crime group affiliated with the Inagawa-kai. ; Kazama, who remains on death row, continues to assert this innocence, a claim supported by Yamazaki, who in turn says that Sekine had coerced them both into committing the crimes. ", "score": "1.4265645" }, { "id": "12361536", "title": "Kazuyoshi Akaba", "text": " Kazuyoshi Akaba (赤羽 一嘉) is a Japanese politician who served as the Minister of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism from September 2019 to October 2021. He is also a member of the House of Representatives, representing the Hyogo 2nd district since 2012. A member of the Komeito Party, he was elected to the House of Representatives for the first time in 1993. He served as a representative until 2009, ending when he lost his re-election bid. In 2012, he ran again and successfully won back the seat.", "score": "1.4248955" }, { "id": "7770395", "title": "Taiki Sekine", "text": " Taiki Sekine (関根 大気) is a professional Japanese baseball player. He plays outfielder for the Yokohama DeNA BayStars.", "score": "1.419429" }, { "id": "6010438", "title": "Gen Sekine", "text": " Hiroko Kazama was born on February 19, 1957, in Kumagaya. She was raised by her father, a childcare worker and later a real estate agent. A quiet but strong woman who loved big dogs, Kazama was studying to work as a land surveyor to help her father financially. In 1983, she visited the Africa Kennel where she met Sekine, and after getting acquainted, the pair were married not long after. Both of them had been previously married (Sekine having married thrice before; Kazama was divorced with two children), so in order to show her devotion for him, Kazama carved a dragon tattoo on her back as a sign of their unity, in opposition to his previous wives, who had tattoed ", "score": "1.4183402" }, { "id": "31403594", "title": "Tsutomu Sekine", "text": "Current Former ", "score": "1.4174033" } ]
What is Domingo Eyzaguirre's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Domingo Eyzaguirre
3,930,846
47
[ { "id": "13535383", "title": "Domingo Eyzaguirre", "text": " Domingo de Eyzaguirre y Arechavala (July 17, 1775 – April 22, 1854) was a Chilean politician and philanthropist. He was born in Santiago, Chile, the son of the Basque Domingo Eyzaguirre Escutasolo and of María Rosa de Arechavala y Alday. He studied in the seminary of his native City, and showed remarkable aptitude for mathematics and chemistry. When scarcely nineteen years old he was appointed as assayer of the royal mint of Santiago, but resigned the next year, and devoted himself entirely to the cultivation of a farm near Santiago, inherited from his father. There his labors tended more to the improvement of the condition of the ", "score": "1.7499089" }, { "id": "13535387", "title": "Domingo Eyzaguirre", "text": " its president. He was several times deputy to the National congress, where he soon became noted for his honesty. In 1845 he attempted to establish a socialistic colony in the country, where all should share the labor and produce, but soon dissensions broke out, and the project failed. A few years later he undertook to establish a large cloth factory, with the object of improving the condition of the poor and giving occupation to women and children. In this enterprise he invested the greater part of his fortune, but before the factory was finished he died. The Maipo canal board erected a statue to his memory.", "score": "1.6210246" }, { "id": "13535386", "title": "Domingo Eyzaguirre", "text": " soon converted the arid plain into a fertile garden. It was placed by the government under the administration of a board, of which Eyzaguirre was appointed president. In 1823 he was commissioned to reorganize the charitable institutions, and undertook the task of building a home for wayfarers and needy persons. Within a few years he had collected the necessary means, and a new and commodious building was erected. In 1835 he was appointed first governor of the department of Victoria, the capital of which he had founded and spent a good part of his fortune in improving. He established the agricultural society in 1838, and was ", "score": "1.6131206" }, { "id": "13535384", "title": "Domingo Eyzaguirre", "text": " classes than to his own pecuniary interest. He improved the yield of some of the poorest lands by his knowledge of chemistry, introduced modern agricultural implements, and, by giving his laborers better than the accustomed wages and caring for their moral and material welfare, soon assembled a colony of well to do and contented people. He also introduced looms, which, although imperfect, served to weave from native wool the coarse cloth worn by the peasantry. From the first years of his country life he agitated the project of a canal to water the barren plain surrounding Santiago, which had been begun some time before, but was abandoned. ", "score": "1.6000557" }, { "id": "11558303", "title": "Jaime Eyzaguirre", "text": " Jaime Eyzaguirre (21 December 1908 – 17 September 1968) was a Chilean lawyer, essayist and historian. He is variously recognized as a writer of Spanish traditionalist or conservative historiography in his country.", "score": "1.5483017" }, { "id": null, "title": "Jaime Eyzaguirre", "text": "Jaime Eyzaguirre\n\nJaime Eyzaguirre (21 December 1908 – 17 September 1968) was a Chilean lawyer, essayist and historian. He is variously recognized as a writer of Spanish traditionalist or conservative historiography in his country.<ref name=Eyzaguirrememoria/>", "score": null }, { "id": "10817011", "title": "Nicolás Eyzaguirre", "text": "\"Aquelarre\", playing titles such as, \"El cautivo de Tiltil\" and \"Valparaíso\". Eyzaguirre began his career in politics as a member of the Christian Democrat Party, and then migrated to the Christian Left Party and then to the Communist Party, where he stayed until his departure to the United States. He graduated as a Commercial Engineer with a mention in Economics at the University of Chile, and obtained his master's degree in Economics from the same university, specializing in Economic Development. Later, he traveled to the United States to obtain a Doctorate in Macroeconomics and International Trade from the Harvard University,", "score": "1.6142502" }, { "id": "10817010", "title": "Nicolás Eyzaguirre", "text": "Nicolás Eyzaguirre Nicolás Eyzaguirre Guzmán (born 3 January 1953 in Santiago) is a Chilean economist, and the former Minister of Education of his country. Previously, he was Chile's Minister of Finance between 2000 and 2006. He is the son of architect Joaquín Eyzaguirre and actress Delfina Guzmán. Eyzaguirre received his secondary education at the elite Colegio Verbo Divino private school. A music enthusiast, at the age of 15 he was admitted to the University of Chile Conservatory to study classical guitar, being lured by the Nueva canción movement. With his brother, Joaquín, he was part was of the folk group", "score": "1.5904288" }, { "id": "19106873", "title": "Jaime Eyzaguirre", "text": "Jaime Eyzaguirre Jaime Eyzaguirre (21 December 1908 – 17 September 1968) was a Chilean lawyer, essayist and historian. He is variously recognized as a writer of traditionalist or conservative historiography in his country. Eyzaguirre was born into a religious upper class family in Santiago. As young man he studied law in the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (PUC) and was member of the Catholic student organization Asociación Nacional de Estudiantes Católicos. During his studies he was influenced by the Jesuit Fernando Vives and the writings of Manuel Lacunza. Eyzaguirre started to court Adriana Philippi in 1929 and married her in", "score": "1.5088236" }, { "id": "4379110", "title": "Agustín Eyzaguirre", "text": "Agustín Eyzaguirre Agustín Manuel de Eyzaguirre y Arechavala (; May 3, 1768 – July 19, 1837) was a Chilean political figure. He served as Provisional President of Chile between 1826 and 1827. He was born in Santiago, Chile, the son of the Basque Domingo Eyzaguirre Escutasolo and of María Rosa de Aretxabala y Alday. He studied law and theology at the \"Real Universidad de San Felipe\", graduating in 1789. Originally he wanted to become a priest, but later changed his mind, and decided to take over the family hacienda in Calera de Tango. He married María Teresa de Larraín y", "score": "1.4892719" }, { "id": "33159264", "title": "Juan Manuel Eguiagaray", "text": " Eguiagaray was born into a family of Basque origin in Bilbao in 1945. He received degrees in economics and in law from Deusto University in Bilbao and holds a PhD degree in economics.", "score": "1.5170407" }, { "id": "11558306", "title": "Jaime Eyzaguirre", "text": " do with the currency inflation experienced in Chile. Nevertheless, he was allowed to rent a small local owned by the Archbishopric of Santiago at a relatively low price. Here, Eyzaguirre ran a small bookshop called El Arbol until the late 1950s when it was closed. Despite his economic hardships he twice refused to be assigned ambassador to Spain. Eyzaguirre thought any diplomatic work he did would need to compete with his work as historian and therefore he would not be able to accomplish a dedicated work in diplomacy. At the same time the writings of Léon Bloy provided him with comfort about his economic hardship.", "score": "1.5120509" }, { "id": "6429662", "title": "Roberto Eyzaguirre", "text": " Roberto Eyzaguirre (September 10, 1923 &ndash; October 19, 2004) was a Peruvian-American classical pianist and famed piano pedagogue. He was a longtime friend and pupil of the legendary 20th-century virtuoso pianist Claudio Arrau, who had studied under a pupil of Franz Liszt. He was noted for his colorful playing and \"big tone.\"", "score": "1.4938459" }, { "id": "12307412", "title": "Raul Yzaguirre", "text": " Raul Humberto Yzaguirre (born July 22, 1939) is an American civil rights activist. He is a life member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He served as the president and CEO of the National Council of La Raza from 1974 to 2004 and as U.S. Ambassador to the Dominican Republic from November 2010 to May 2013.", "score": "1.4819596" }, { "id": "33159263", "title": "Juan Manuel Eguiagaray", "text": " Juan Manuel Eguiagaray (born 1945) is a Spanish economist, academic, businessman and retired politician. He served as the minister of industry and energy from 1993 to 1996.", "score": "1.454866" }, { "id": "26767726", "title": "Fernando Valerio-Holguin", "text": " Valerio-Holguin was hired in 1982 as assistant professor at the Universidad Autonoma de Santo Domingo in the Dominican Republic. He remained in this position for three years. He also worked as a provisional professor at the same university from 1987 through 1991. In 1991, he became an assistant Spanish professor at Tulane University, moving in 1994 to Allegheny College, and in 1999, to Colorado State University. At Colorado State, he was promoted to associate professor in 2002 and to full professor in 2008. An interview with Valerio-Holguin was included in the 2018 book Voces con Caudal by Carlos Enrique Cabrera.", "score": "1.4547606" }, { "id": "13535385", "title": "Domingo Eyzaguirre", "text": " Spanish government approved the plan, and in 1802 made Eyzaguirre director. He pushed the work with energy until it was interrupted by the revolution of 1810, and notwithstanding he sympathized with the patriotic cause, he abstained from any participation. His prestige as an honorable and impartial man was so great that, even when his brothers were exiled, he suffered no persecution from the Spanish authorities, and was enabled to alleviate the sufferings of his compatriots. When the independence of Chile was finally established in 1817, he resumed his favorite work, and in 1820, amid great festivities, the canal of Maipo was opened. This, with many smaller lateral ", "score": "1.4518296" }, { "id": "31592854", "title": "José Manuel Eguiguren Urrejola", "text": " Urrejola worked as a lawyer for the Municipality of Santiago from 1845. He next served as collector of Customs in Valparaiso from 1848 and then later was appointed Judge in Cauquenes from 1850.", "score": "1.4495344" }, { "id": "26767725", "title": "Fernando Valerio-Holguin", "text": " Valerio-Holguin was born in La Vega, Dominican Republic. He received a bachelor's degree in literature from the Universidad Autónoma de Santo Domingo in 1982, a Master of Arts in Spanish American Literature from Tulane University in 1987, and a Doctor of Philosophy, also from Tulane, in Spanish American Literature and Literary Theory (1994), as a holder of a Fulbright Scholarship.", "score": "1.4382935" }, { "id": "3434537", "title": "Emir Izaguirre", "text": " .", "score": "1.4320736" }, { "id": "11558304", "title": "Jaime Eyzaguirre", "text": " Eyzaguirre was born into a religious upper-class family in Santiago. As young man he studied law in the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile (PUC) and was member of the Catholic student organization Asociación Nacional de Estudiantes Católicos. During his studies he was influenced by the Jesuit Fernando Vives and the writings of Manuel Lacunza. Eyzaguirre started to court Adriana Philippi in 1929 and married her in 1934.", "score": "1.428878" }, { "id": "11781499", "title": "Eyzaguirre", "text": "Agustín Eyzaguirre, Provisional President of Chile (1826–1827) ; Domingo Eyzaguirre, Chilean politician and philanthropist ; Francisca Eyzaguirre, Chilean actress ; Ignacio Eizaguirre, Basque footballer ; Jaime Eyzaguirre, Chilean historian ; Luis Eyzaguirre, Chilean soccer player ; Nicolás Eyzaguirre, Chilean Minister of Finance (2000–2006) ; Sebastián Eyzaguirre, Chilean journalist ; Xabier Eizagirre, Basque footballer ; Delfín Eyzaguirre Sanjinés, Renown Bolivian Lawyer (1889-1963) ; Fermín Eyzaguirre, Bolivian Signee of the Declaration of Independence of Bolivia Eyzaguirre is a surname of Basque origin. Spelling variants include Eizaguirre, attested specially in Spain, or Eizagirre, modern Basque spelling. Other historically attested forms (as cited by Luis Michelena) are \"Aizaguirre\" (Gipuzkoa, 1782), \"Aiçaguer\", \"Aizagerri\" (placename in Pamplona, 1574). Many Eizag(u)irre surnames come from the coastal area of Getaria and Zarautz, in the province of Gipuzkoa (Spain), where it is popular nowadays. It probably means 'place exposed to wind': (h)aize ('wind') + agirre ('exposed place, hill'). It may refer to: ", "score": "1.4149795" }, { "id": "16264023", "title": "Domingo Pelliza", "text": " Domingo Pelliza (c. 1700 – c. 1770) was a politician and merchant of Genoese ancestry. He held several council posts in the City Council of the Viceroyalty of Peru, serving as Alcalde (Mayor) of \"Hermandad\" and Mayordomo of Buenos Aires.", "score": "1.4128292" }, { "id": "28422079", "title": "Domingo Namuncura", "text": "Profile at El Quinto Poder ", "score": "1.4093063" }, { "id": "6690600", "title": "Emilio Izaguirre", "text": " Izaguirre is known to live a modest lifestyle and is a Christian.", "score": "1.3963284" } ]
What is Charles Harrison's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Charles Harrison (Bewdley MP)
3,689,415
51
[ { "id": "28243279", "title": "Charles &quot;Chuck&quot; Harrison", "text": " Charles \"Chuck\" Harrison (September 23, 1931 — November 29, 2018) was an American industrial designer, speaker and educator. He was known for his pioneering role as one of the first African-American industrial designers of the era and the first to lead a design department at a major corporation. He was the first African-American executive to work at Sears, Roebuck and Company, starting in 1961 as a designer and eventually becoming manager of the company's entire design group. He was involved in the design of over 750 consumer products, including the portable hair dryer, toasters, stereos, lawn mowers, sewing machines, Craftsman power tools, the see-through measuring cup, fondue pots, stoves, and the first plastic trash can, which has been credited with changing the ", "score": "1.7409818" }, { "id": "28243284", "title": "Charles &quot;Chuck&quot; Harrison", "text": " Between his undergraduate and graduate degrees, Harrison was drafted into the United States Army and posted to Germany. He served two years in the topography unit doing spot mapping and drafting. Getting through the segregated system in the United States and finding employment was hard for Harrison. Once he made my way through that he was able to proceed to develop a lifetime career. He said that other challenges were trying to live and pursue a professional career as a black person. Back in the U.S., fresh out of school, Harrison began looking for work with a design firm. He interviewed at Sears but was ", "score": "1.7342861" }, { "id": "28243282", "title": "Charles &quot;Chuck&quot; Harrison", "text": " the elder Mr. Harrison taught shop at the Phoenix Union Colored High School, from which Charles graduated in 1948. He briefly attended the City College of San Francisco, where he was told his future lay in art, and he headed for the prestigious School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Harrison attended George Washington Carver High School, an all-black high school. The school closed when integration became law in the 1950s, and is now a museum and cultural center celebrating the contributions of African-Americans; a room in the museum is dedicated to Harrison's work. Harrison was active in extracurricular activities at the high school, playing basketball and tennis, and participating in the band and chorus.", "score": "1.720463" }, { "id": "28243283", "title": "Charles &quot;Chuck&quot; Harrison", "text": " Harrison attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (SAIC) from 1949 to 1954, earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts. One of his undergraduate professors was Henry P. Glass, a high-profile industrial designer who Harrison was really energized to be associated with. Glass recognized Harrison and rewarded him with good grades and the opportunity to visit his studios. They were very accommodating and passionate. Glass would prove to be one of Harrison's greatest mentors and allies over the course of his career. It was also while attending SAIC that Harrison met his future wife. In 1956, he returned to the school to pursue graduate studies, transferring later to the Illinois Institute of Technology to complete his Master's in Art Education. He received his Master of Science in Art Education from the Institute of Design in 1963.", "score": "1.7201948" }, { "id": "28243285", "title": "Charles &quot;Chuck&quot; Harrison", "text": " that he could not be hired on staff because he was black. The hiring manager liked Harrison's work, however, and was able to feed him freelance work from Sears on the side. But it was Henry Glass, one of Harrison's undergraduate professors, who gave him his first job with a design firm, putting him to work on furniture designs. Harrison credits Glass with teaching him a great deal about detailing, drawing, and production, as well as the business elements of the trade, such as client relations. Over the next several years, Harrison worked for Ed Klein & Associates and Robert Podall Associates. It was at ", "score": "1.708584" }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles \"Chuck\" Harrison", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Harrison Mason", "text": "Charles Harrison Mason\n\nBishop Charles Harrison Mason Sr. (September 8, 1866 – November 17, 1961) was an American Holiness–Pentecostal pastor and minister. He was the founder and first Senior Bishop of the Church of God in Christ, based in Memphis, Tennessee. It developed into what is today the largest Holiness Pentecostal church denomination and one of the largest predominantly African-American Christian denominations in the United States.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Harrison Brown", "text": "Charles Harrison Brown\n\nCharles Harrison Brown (October 22, 1920 – June 10, 2003) was a two-term U.S. representative from Missouri's 7th congressional district from 1957–61, and is the most recent Democrat to serve from that district.\n\nBrown was born in Coweta, Oklahoma, attended public schools in Humansville and Republic, Missouri, and high school in Springfield. He attended Drury College in 1937, 1938 and 1940 and George Washington University in Washington, D.C. in 1939.\n\nFrom 1937–38, Brown was program director of KWTO-AM in Springfield, where he had been an announcer at age 16. He was radio publicity director for the Missouri Conservation Commission in 1940, and was an account executive for an advertising agency in St. Louis, Missouri from 1943 to 1945.\n\nHe founded and was president of Brown Radio-TV Productions, Inc. in Springfield; and was a partner with the Brown Brothers Advertising Agency, with offices in Nashville, Tennessee; St. Louis; and Springfield. He briefly produced \"The Eddy Arnold Show\" on ABC-TV in 1956 before resigning in August of that year after he had won the primary election.\n\nBrown served as delegate to Democratic state and national conventions in 1956, 1960 and 1964. He was elected as a Democrat to the 85th and 86th Congresses (January 3, 1957 – January 3, 1961), but was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1960. Brown voted in favor of the Civil Rights Acts of 1957 and 1960.\n\nHe became a public relations consultant in Washington, D.C. and Los Angeles, California, and was senior vice president of an oil refining company in Los Angeles from 1973 to 1979. Brown died on June 10, 2003 in Henderson, Nevada at age 82.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Harrison Townsend", "text": "Charles Harrison Townsend\n\nCharles Harrison Townsend (13 May 1851 — 26 December 1928) was an English architect. He was born in Birkenhead, educated at Birkenhead School and articled to the Liverpool architect Walter Scott in 1870. He moved to London with his family in 1880 and entered partnership with the London architect Thomas Lewis Banks in 1884. Townsend became a member of the Art Workers' Guild in 1888 and in the same year was elected a Fellow of the more conservative Royal Institute of British Architects. He remained an active member of both organisations throughout his career and was elected Master of the Art Workers' Guild in 1903. He is important Modern Style (British Art Nouveau style) architect whose favourite motif was the tree.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Custis Harrison", "text": "Charles Custis Harrison\n\nCharles Custis Harrison (May 3, 1844 – February 12, 1929) owned several sugar refineries in Philadelphia from 1863 to 1892, and served as Provost of the University of Pennsylvania from 1894 to 1910. ", "score": null }, { "id": "28243281", "title": "Charles &quot;Chuck&quot; Harrison", "text": " Charles Alfred Harrison Jr. was born in Shreveport, La., on Sept. 23, 1931. At the time Harrison was born, his father, Charles Harrison Sr., was teaching industrial arts at Southern University in Louisiana. In 1936, the family moved to Texas where Harrison Sr. become a professor at Prairie View A&M University, a historically black university in Prairie View, Tex. His mother, Cora Lee (Smith) Harrison, had gone back to her parents’ house in Shreveport for the birth, since many hospitals at the time did not welcome blacks. Both Harrison Sr. and Harrison's maternal grandfather were carpenters, and Harrison credits his interest and ability in design to their influence. In 1945, the family moved to Phoenix, Arizona ", "score": "1.7044244" }, { "id": "13191196", "title": "Henry P. Glass", "text": "Charles \"Chuck\" Harrison ", "score": "1.6806818" }, { "id": "2076713", "title": "Charles Harrison (musician)", "text": " Whilst at Carlisle Cathedral, Harrison developed his career as a solo instrumentalist, appearing in recitals and numerous international competitions. In 1999, he was awarded prizes in the St Albans International Organ Festival, and in the following year at the Odense International Organ Competition. After three years at Carlisle, he moved to Belfast, Northern Ireland.", "score": "1.660157" }, { "id": "28243288", "title": "Charles &quot;Chuck&quot; Harrison", "text": " moulding process. These considerations reduced the cost to the end user. His dream was to connect with a manufacturer or company that could produce a product for public consumption with little consideration for profit margin but to give the customer the best they could have in that design. To develop products for the severely disabled who need low-cost products to be able to live more independently; the need is there. After retirement, Harrison taught part-time at the University of Illinois at Chicago, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and at Columbia College Chicago and made it a point to mentor students of color.", "score": "1.645682" }, { "id": "2076714", "title": "Charles Harrison (musician)", "text": " In 2000, Harrison took up a part-time teaching position at Queen's University Belfast, specialising in harmony, counterpoint and keyboard skills. He also became Director of Music at St George's Church, Belfast.", "score": "1.6454691" }, { "id": "25403886", "title": "Charles Lee Harrison", "text": " Charles Lee Harrison (March 21, 1921 – January 17, 2015) was a United States Marine Corps lieutenant colonel. He is one of just two Marines to be captured as a prisoner of war (POW) twice, the first during World War II, and the second during the Korean War.", "score": "1.6338358" }, { "id": "3749219", "title": "Charles Robert Harrison", "text": " Charles Robert Harrison (July 3, 1868 &ndash; February 7, 1946) was a Canadian politician. He represented the riding of Nipissing in the House of Commons of Canada from 1917 to 1921. He was a Conservative member of Robert Borden's Unionist caucus. Harrison, who was born in Frodingham, Lincolnshire, England, was a train conductor before entering politics. He served only a single term, and was defeated by Edmond Lapierre in the 1921 election. He subsequently served a term in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario, representing the provincial electoral district of Nipissing from 1930 to 1934 as a member of the Conservatives.", "score": "1.6288209" }, { "id": "8177448", "title": "Harrison Dunk", "text": " Harrison Charles Dunk (born 25 October 1990) is an English professional footballer who plays as a left back or left midfielder for club Cambridge United.", "score": "1.6257732" }, { "id": "2076711", "title": "Charles Harrison (musician)", "text": " Charles Harrison (born 21 March 1974) has been Organist and Master of the Choristers of Chichester Cathedral since September 2014, succeeding Sarah Baldock. He has also held musical posts at Southwell Minster, Carlisle and Lincoln Cathedral.", "score": "1.6246766" }, { "id": "6549682", "title": "Charles Harrison (basketball)", "text": " Harrison was born to Lullelia Walker Harrison and Alexander Crystal Harrison in Gary, Indiana. Harrison was raised in Houston, Texas after his family moved there in 1933. He had one older brother, Alexander Crystal Harrison II. Harrison's father was a small business operator as well as the regional manager of General Foods, Inc. His mother was an educator, civil rights activist, author, and community servant to many volunteer organizations. Her civil rights efforts included her assistance in establishing the Texas State University of Negroes and the Thurgood Marshall School of Law. Walker Harrison also served on the board of directors for over a dozen organizations and was a teacher and guidance counselor for schools in the Houston Independent District. Harrison attended Wheatley High School in Houston.", "score": "1.6024082" }, { "id": "14680849", "title": "Charlie Harrison (footballer, born 1861)", "text": " Charles Edwin Harrison (born Q3 1861) was an English footballer who played in the Football League for Bolton Wanderers. Charlie Harrison' first club was his local club, Newton Heath, at that time a non-League club based on railway works. He signed in 1886 and left Newton Heath after two seasons and joined Bolton Wanderers.", "score": "1.5968691" }, { "id": "26723769", "title": "Charles Harrison (RAF officer)", "text": " Lieutenant Charles Philip Harrison (born 27 July 1888) was a British World War I flying ace credited with five aerial victories.", "score": "1.5963209" }, { "id": "5088822", "title": "Burton Harrison", "text": " Harrison was born in New Orleans, Louisiana, to Jesse Burton Harrison (who died three years later) and Frances Anne Brand Harrison. He attended the University of Mississippi from 1854 to 1855. In 1859 he graduated from Yale University, where he was a member of Skull and Bones. Later that year he took a job at the University of Mississippi as an associate professor of mathematics and began to study law.", "score": "1.5864431" }, { "id": "2076712", "title": "Charles Harrison (musician)", "text": " Harrison was a cathedral chorister at Southwell Minster, where was tutored by Kenneth Beard and Paul Hale, and he took up the organ scholarship at Southwell in 1991 while he studied for A-levels at Southwell Minster School. In the following year, he started as an organ scholar at Jesus College, Cambridge in 1992, where he read for a degree in music. Whilst at Cambridge, he studied the organ with David Sanger and, in his second year, became a prizewinning Fellow of the Royal College of Organists. When he graduated, he was appointed to the position of Assistant Organist at Carlisle Cathedral.", "score": "1.5837146" }, { "id": "5236792", "title": "Joseph Harrison (horticulturalist)", "text": "\"Joseph Harrison – Sometime Florist\", F. Boase, Gardener's Chronicle, series iii, (1950) ; \"Charles and Joseph Harrison, Forgotten Horticulturalists\" Jo Trafford-Owen Garden History November 2010 ; Benjamin Daydon Jackson (1891). Harrison, Joseph. In: Leslie Stephen, Sidney Lee (1891). Dictionary of National Biography. 25: 36–37. London: Elder Smith & Co. ", "score": "1.5812192" } ]
What is Richard Harris's occupation?
[ "composer" ]
occupation
Richard Harris (composer)
5,574,760
80
[ { "id": "30490009", "title": "Richard A. Harris", "text": " Richard A. Harris (born 6 February 1934) is an American film editor with a career spanning nearly forty years. He graduated from the School of Cinematic Arts of the University of Southern California in 1956. He is most associated with the films of Michael Ritchie (Downhill Racer, The Candidate, An Almost Perfect Affair) and James Cameron (Terminator 2: Judgment Day, True Lies).", "score": "1.8128872" }, { "id": "6332642", "title": "J. Richard Harris", "text": " John Richard Harris (born 1910) was an Irish entomologist, fishing consultant, tackle merchant, and author. He was a keen angler and tier of flies from boyhood. He was a sometime merchant seaman, journalist, and freshwater biologist. He was a demonstrator in limnology at Trinity College, Dublin. He was a director of Garnetts & Keegan's Ltd, Dublin, gunsmiths and suppliers of fishing tackle, until his retirement in 1984. He wrote An Angler's Entomology, a book about mayflies for fly fishermen. He has been called, \"perhaps the greatest living Irish angler-entomologist\". He has also been described as, \"a large affable man 'with a sharing attitude towards his whiskey and a colourful manner of expressing his trenchant views on fishing, fishermen, journalists, rugby, life and other matters'\".", "score": "1.7905458" }, { "id": "2181998", "title": "Richard Harris (composer)", "text": " Richard Frank Keith Harris (born 5 March 1968) is a London-based composer, arranger, transcriber, teacher and pianist. Richard Harris studied composition and orchestration at the University of Edinburgh, where his tutors included Kenneth Leighton. At Edinburgh he co-founded the contemporary classical ensemble Piano Circus, with whom he was a member until 2002, commissioning and performing works by Arvo Pärt, Brian Eno, Philip Glass and Steve Reich. The ensemble was signed to Decca/Argo, producing five CDs. Compositions by Harris feature on the Argo CD Loopholes, and in full on the ensemble's own CD Landscapes Of The Heart; he also produced successful arrangements of works by Terry Riley and Thomas Ades. His work Hexada was featured in the UK television programme The Score. ", "score": "1.7714828" }, { "id": "32705269", "title": "Richard Harris (television writer)", "text": " Richard Harris (born 1934) is a British television writer, most active from the early 1960s to the mid-1990s. He writes primarily for the crime and detective genres, having contributed episodes of series such as The Avengers, The Saint, The Sweeney, Armchair Mystery Theatre, and Target. He has helped to create several programmes of the genre, including Adam Adamant Lives!, Man in a Suitcase, and Shoestring. Despite a career that has been largely spent writing for the crime and detective genre, in 1994 he won the prize for best situation comedy from the Writers' Guild of Great Britain for Outside Edge, a programme he had originated as a stage play. Though the majority of his work has been for television, a substantial amount of his output has been for the stage.", "score": "1.7504795" }, { "id": "30671628", "title": "Richard Harris (anaesthetist)", "text": " Harris is a cave diver with over 30 years of experience. Harris's cave diving experiences include leading a team of Australian divers to record depths of 192 and 221 m in 2011 and 2012 whilst searching for the source of New Zealand's Pearse River, the mission was filmed for National Geographic. In 2011, Harris was requested by the South Australian Police to participate in the recovery of the body of his close friend Agnes Milowka, who had died whilst exploring a cave near Tantanoola in the south east of South Australia. In 2009 Harris was awarded the \"Outstanding Achievement\" award at the Australian technical diving conference Oztek, to mark his exceptional contributions to cave diving exploration, in 2017 he was awarded the \"Australasian Technical Diver of the Year\" at Oztek.", "score": "1.7380509" }, { "id": null, "title": "Richard Harris", "text": "Richard Harris\n\nRichard St John Francis Harris (1 October 1930 – 25 October 2002) was an Irish actor and singer. He appeared on stage and in many films, notably as Corrado Zeller in Michelangelo Antonioni's \"Red Desert\", Frank Machin in \"This Sporting Life\", for which he was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actor, and as King Arthur in the 1967 film \"Camelot\", as well as the 1981 revival of the stage musical.\n\nHe played an English aristocrat captured by the Sioux in \"A Man Called Horse\" (1970), Oliver Cromwell in \"Cromwell\" (1970), an embattled Irish farmer in Jim Sheridan's \"The Field\" (which earned him a second Academy Award nomination for Best Actor), English Bob in Clint Eastwood's revisionist Western \"Unforgiven\" (1992), Roman emperor Marcus Aurelius in \"Gladiator\" (2000), \"The Count of Monte Cristo\" (2002) as Abbé Faria, and Albus Dumbledore in the first two \"Harry Potter\" films: \"Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone\" (2001) and \"Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets\" (2002), the latter of which was his final film role. Harris had a number-one singing hit in Australia, Jamaica and Canada, and a top-ten hit in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and the United States with his 1968 recording of Jimmy Webb's song \"MacArthur Park\". In 2020, he was listed at number 3 on \"The Irish Times\"s list of Ireland's greatest film actors.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Richard Harris (anaesthetist)", "text": "Richard Harris (anaesthetist)\n\nRichard \"Harry\" Harris, , is an Australian anaesthetist and cave diver who played a crucial role in the Tham Luang cave rescue. He and Craig Challen were jointly awarded 2019 Australian of the Year as a result of that rescue.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jared Harris", "text": "Jared Harris\n\nJared Francis Harris (born 24 August 1961) is a British actor. His roles include Lane Pryce in the AMC television drama series \"Mad Men\", for which he was nominated for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series; David Robert Jones in the science fiction series \"Fringe\"; King George VI in the historical drama series \"The Crown\"; Anderson Dawes on the science fiction series \"The Expanse\"; Captain Francis Crozier in the AMC series \"The Terror\"; and Valery Legasov in the HBO miniseries \"Chernobyl\", for which he won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor and was nominated for the 2019 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie\".\" He has also had significant supporting roles in films such as \"Mr. Deeds\" (2002), \"The Curious Case of Benjamin Button\" (2008), \"\" (2011), \"Lincoln\" (2012), and \"Allied\" (2016). In 2021, he took the role of Hari Seldon, a leading character in the Apple TV+ science fiction series \"Foundation\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Richard Rankin", "text": "Richard Rankin\n\nRichard Rankin (born Richard Harris on 4 January 1983) is a Scottish film, television and theatre actor. He is best known for the Scottish sketch show \"Burnistoun\" and as Roger Wakefield MacKenzie in the Starz drama \"Outlander\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Richard A. Harris", "text": "Richard A. Harris\n\nRichard A. Harris (born February 6, 1934) is an American film editor with a career spanning nearly forty years. He graduated from the School of Cinematic Arts of the University of Southern California in 1956. He is most associated with the films of Michael Ritchie (\"Downhill Racer\", \"The Candidate\", \"An Almost Perfect Affair\") and James Cameron (\"\", \"True Lies\").\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "11414100", "title": "Richard Harris (footballer)", "text": " Richard Harris (born 23 October 1980 in Croydon) is a former professional footballer who played in the Football League for Crystal Palace and Wycombe Wanderers during the late 1990s and early 2000s. He made an appearance in the FA Youth Cup final against Leeds United in the 1996–97 season against players like Paul Robinson, Harry Kewell and Alan Smith.", "score": "1.7005905" }, { "id": "1828588", "title": "Richard Harris (college principal)", "text": " Richard Harris (fl. 1558 – 1595) was an academic at the University of Oxford and clergyman in the sixteenth century.", "score": "1.6895897" }, { "id": "30671627", "title": "Richard Harris (anaesthetist)", "text": " After completing school at St Peter's College, Adelaide, Harris completed a Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery at Flinders University in 1988, he subsequently completed anaesthetics training in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. Harris works as an aeromedical consultant and anaesthetist for the South Australian Ambulance Service’s medical retrieval service, he has also worked on medical assistance teams in natural disasters in the Pacific region and taken part in Australian Aid missions to Vanuatu.", "score": "1.6842834" }, { "id": "30671626", "title": "Richard Harris (anaesthetist)", "text": " Richard \"Harry\" Harris,, is an Australian anaesthetist and cave diver who played a crucial role in the Tham Luang cave rescue. He and Craig Challen were jointly awarded 2019 Australian of the Year as a result of that rescue.", "score": "1.6807396" }, { "id": "26062174", "title": "Richard H. Harris", "text": " Richard Henry Harris, Jr. (August 22, 1918 - July 24, 1976) was a prominent civil rights leader and pharmacist. A personal friend, neighbor and collaborator of Dr Martin Luther King Jr in Montgomery, Alabama, Harris was instrumental in three of the most seminal protests of the U.S. civil rights movement: the Freedom Riders, the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Selma to Montgomery marches. Harris's home, best known as the famed “Richard Harris House”, was Montgomery, Alabama’s central command center and safe haven for beaten and bloodied Freedom Riders as they traveled to Jackson, Mississippi amidst physically violent racial rioters, National Guard protection, and Alabama segregationist authorities’ call for martial law. In 2018, the World Monuments Fund (WMF) listed Harris’ home on its World Monuments Watch list of 20 threatened cultural sites not only for the potential risk to its physical structure, but the potential risk to its historical significance and backstory. A former U.S. Army Air Force Captain, Harris was one of the U.S. military's first African American combat fighter pilots, serving with the prodigious 332nd Fighter Group's 99th Fighter Squadron, best known as the Tuskegee Airmen, \"Red Tails,\" or “Schwartze Vogelmenschen” (\"Black Birdmen\") among enemy German pilots.", "score": "1.6739819" }, { "id": "4197948", "title": "Richard Harris", "text": " On 30 September 2006, Manuel Di Lucia, of Kilkee, County Clare, a longtime friend, organised the placement in Kilkee of a bronze life-size statue of Richard Harris. It shows Harris at the age of eighteen playing the sport of squash. The sculptor was Seamus Connolly and the work was unveiled by Russell Crowe. Harris was an accomplished squash racquets player, winning the Tivoli Cup in Kilkee four years in a row from 1948 to 1951, a record unsurpassed to this day. Another life-size statue of Richard Harris, as King Arthur from his film Camelot, has been erected in Bedford Row, in the centre ", "score": "1.6600337" }, { "id": "11855447", "title": "Richard Harris (American football)", "text": " Richard Drew Harris (January 21, 1948 – July 26, 2011) was an American football defensive end who played seven seasons in the National Football League. He was an All-American in 1970 for Grambling and was drafted in the first round (5th overall pick) of the 1971 NFL Draft by the Philadelphia Eagles, the first defensive player chosen. Harris was named to the NFL All-Rookie team in 1971 and was widely regarded as one of the fastest defensive linemen in professional football before being hobbled by knee injuries. Harris spent seven seasons as a lineman in the NFL — three with the Philadelphia Eagles, two more with the Chicago Bears, and a final two years with the Seattle Seahawks. After his retirement from the NFL, Harris began a second career as a coach, leading several indoor football teams as head coach before working as a defensive assistant for the BC Lions, Ottawa Renegades, and Winnipeg Blue Bombers of the Canadian Football League.", "score": "1.6591852" }, { "id": "4197945", "title": "Richard Harris", "text": " on the interior. Harris was a vocal supporter of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (PIRA) from 1973 until 1984. In January 1984 remarks he made on the previous month's Harrods bombing caused great controversy, after which he discontinued his support for the PIRA. At the height of his stardom in the 1960s and early 1970s Harris was almost as well known for his hellraiser lifestyle and heavy drinking as he was for his acting career. He was a longtime alcoholic until he became a teetotaler in 1981. Nevertheless, he did resume drinking Guinness a decade later. He gave up drugs after almost dying from a cocaine overdose in 1978. Richard Harris was among hundreds of artists whose master tapes were destroyed in the 2008 Universal fire.", "score": "1.6562045" }, { "id": "27854316", "title": "Richard Harris (1777–1854)", "text": " Richard Harris (1777 – 2 February 1854) was a British Radical politician. Harris was elected Radical Member of Parliament (MP) for Leicester at a by-election in 1848—caused by the previous election being declared void on petition—and held the seat until 1852 when he did not seek re-election.", "score": "1.6512334" }, { "id": "4197926", "title": "Richard Harris", "text": " Harris was born on 1 October 1930, in Limerick. He was schooled by the Jesuits at Crescent College. A talented rugby player, he appeared on several Munster Junior and Senior Cup teams for Crescent, and played for Garryowen. Harris's athletic career was cut short when he caught tuberculosis in his teens. He remained an ardent fan of the Munster Rugby and Young Munster teams until his death, attending many of their matches, and there are numerous stories of japes at rugby matches with actors and fellow rugby fans Peter O'Toole and Richard Burton. After recovering from tuberculosis, Harris moved to Great Britain, wanting to become a director. He could not find any suitable training courses, and enrolled in the London ", "score": "1.6466928" }, { "id": "6064207", "title": "Richard Reader Harris (Conservative politician)", "text": " Richard Reader Harris (4 June 1913 – 7 July 2009) was a British Conservative Party politician. He was Member of Parliament for Heston and Isleworth from 1950 until 1970. Reader Harris was born in Fulham, the son of Richard Reader Harris and Elsie (née Tagen). He was Chairman of Rolls Razor, which made washing machines. In July 1964 the company went bankrupt, and a subsequent investigation revealed irregularities in the company's accounts. In 1969, Harris was charged with carrying on company business with intent to defraud the company's creditors, falsifying the balance sheet, and deceiving investors as to the company's financial state. With ", "score": "1.6446321" }, { "id": "26828889", "title": "Dick L. Harris", "text": " Richard Leonard Harris (14 October 1885 – 31 October 1945) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Essendon, Carlton and St Kilda in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Harris was a defender and played his early football with North Melbourne in the Victorian Football Association (VFA). He joined Essendon in 1905 and made three appearances before crossing to Carlton the following season. In the 1907 semi final against St Kilda, Harris was moved to full-forward and starred with three goals. As a result, he remained near goals for the Grand Final and earned a premiership. He retired after the win but returned to action in 1909, now back in defense. He finished his career at St Kilda where he played two seasons.", "score": "1.6304129" }, { "id": "11855465", "title": "Richard Harris (American football)", "text": " In 2001 Harris joined the staff of the Canadian Football League's BC Lions as a defensive assistant. He moved to the staff of the fledgling Ottawa Renegades in 2005, coaching there for a single season. Harris joined the staff of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in 2006, remaining with that team until his death.", "score": "1.6277621" }, { "id": "11414101", "title": "Richard Harris (footballer)", "text": " Harris joined Crystal Palace as a seven-year-old and progressed through the youth and reserve teams to the first team, for whom he made his debut against Huddersfield Town in May 1999. He made 13 league and cup appearances for Crystal Palace, and had loan spells at Mansfield Town and Wycombe Wanderers, before joining Wycombe Wanderers on a permanent basis in April 2002. Harris scored eight goals in 39 appearances in all competitions for Wycombe Wanderers, including two goals in a League Cup victory over First Division side Wimbledon in August 2003. He joined non-league side Woking in December 2003, and later Maidenhead United, before being released by Wycombe Wanderers at the end of the 2003–04 season. He then dropped into non-league football with spells at Eastbourne Borough, Maidenhead United, Horsham, Merthyr Tydfil, Llanelli, Sutton United, and Tonbridge Angels.", "score": "1.6107252" }, { "id": "1828589", "title": "Richard Harris (college principal)", "text": " Harris, from Herefordshire, obtained his B.A. degree from Oxford University on 3 November 1558 and his M.A. degree on 26 June 1562. He was appointed rector of Kentchurch, Herefordshire in 1571 and became a canon of Hereford Cathedral in 1575. He was Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford from 1573/4 to 1595. During this time, he was appointed by the royal charter of 1589 as one of the Commissioners to draw up statutes for Jesus College, Oxford.", "score": "1.6071608" } ]
What is Peter Murnoy's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Peter Murnoy
5,431,559
24
[ { "id": "26987504", "title": "Peter Murnoy", "text": " Peter Murnoy was a nationalist politician and political activist in Northern Ireland. Murnoy was a farmer and was a volunteer in the Irish Republican Army from 1916 until 1922. In 1926, he was the joint founder of the National Defence Association, which opposed recognition of Stormont. In 1937, Murnoy launched the National Council of Unity, which aimed to apply the new Constitution of Ireland to the whole of the island. Murnoy was elected to the Parliament of Northern Ireland as the Nationalist Party MP for South Down at the 1945 general election. He was active in the Irish Anti-Partition League, but controversially refused to condemn T. J. Campbell leaving the Parliament to become a judge. Murnoy was defeated at the South Down Nationalist selection convention before the 1949 Northern Ireland general election, and stood down.", "score": "1.5791477" }, { "id": "10298366", "title": "Peter W. Mullin", "text": " Peter William Mullin was born in South Pasadena, California near Los Angeles, California. He graduated with a bachelor of arts degree in Economics from the University of California, Santa Barbara.", "score": "1.4568139" }, { "id": "16073660", "title": "Peter Moyo", "text": " .", "score": "1.4322515" }, { "id": "16073659", "title": "Peter Moyo", "text": " .", "score": "1.4322515" }, { "id": "16429881", "title": "Peter Gallo", "text": " Peter Gallo (born 1959 in Rutland, Vermont) is an artist and writer who lives and works in Hyde Park, VT. He received his Ph.D. and MA in Art History from Concordia University, Montreal, and has written about the intersection of biopolitics, medicalization, and artistic experience from the eighteenth to early twenty-first centuries. He has a BA from Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. For many years Gallo worked as a psychiatric crisis support worker and services coordinator for people with psychiatric and developmental disabilities in northern Vermont. Additionally, the artist has been active in the Grass Roots Art and Community Efforts (GRACE) in Hardwick, VT. He has organized numerous exhibitions ", "score": "1.4147189" }, { "id": "9844022", "title": "Peter Gallo", "text": "a genuine part of his aesthetic, whose ungainliness keeps us thinking.“ Peter Gallo Peter Gallo (born 1959 in Rutland, VT) is an artist and writer who lives and works in Hyde Park, VT. He received his Ph.D. and MA in Art History from Concordia University, Montreal, and has written about the intersection of biopolitics, medicalization, and artistic experience from the eighteenth to early twenty-first centuries. He has a BA from Middlebury College, Middlebury, VT. Additionally, the artist has been active in the Grass Roots Art and Community Efforts (GRACE) in Hardwick, VT. He has organized numerous exhibitions including \"Insider Art,\"", "score": "1.3988273" }, { "id": "9207326", "title": "Peter Clohessy", "text": "Restaurant in Murroe, east Limerick. The menu has a Limerick/rugby theme. Peter Clohessy Peter Clohessy (born 22 March 1966) is an Irish former rugby union footballer. Clohessy played for Munster, Queensland Reds and Ireland. He played as a prop and was known by his fans as \"The Claw\". He played most of his career at tighthead prop but later switched to loosehead. Clohessy made his Munster debut against Ulster in 1987. He was part of the Munster team that lost 9-8 to Northampton Saints in the 2000 Heineken Cup Final, and he was again on the losing side when Munster", "score": "1.3887737" }, { "id": "17683223", "title": "Peter Frank (academic)", "text": "Peter Frank (academic) Peter John Frank (6 May 1934 - 21 November 2013) was a professor of Russian politics in the Department of Government at the University of Essex and a media commentator on Russian affairs. He was born in Whitby, Yorkshire and after leaving school in 1950 did national service in the Army where he learnt the Russian language. He then trained as a teacher and did post-graduate work at the University of Leeds, before becoming a lecturer at the University of Essex in 1968. He was known for his television appearances on \"Channel 4 News\" as an expert", "score": "1.3859028" }, { "id": "18146874", "title": "Peter Michael Musone", "text": "Peter Michael Musone Peter Michael Musone is an Italian-American art critic and writer. In 1990 Musone moved to Florence and began a close collaboration with the Art Gallery La Pergola Arte. He came into contact with the art world in Florence, making friends with journalist Enrico Nistri and poets Franco Manescalchi, Anna Balsamo and Duccia Camiciotti. Beginning in 2007, he produced and presented a variety of exhibitions and their catalogues for the gallery. In 2010 he arranged poetry exhibitions in Florence. In 2011 he published the poetry anthology \"A hundred voices to the sky\". In 2016 he produced exhibitions at", "score": "1.3784931" }, { "id": "9692699", "title": "Peter Walsh (organizer)", "text": "Peter Walsh (organizer) Peter Walsh (born 1956) is an Australian-American professional organizer, writer, and media personality. He became an American citizen in 2002, and has dual citizenship. He lives in Los Angeles. Walsh was born in rural Victoria, Australia. He was educated at Salesian College, Rupertswood. He holds a master's degree with a specialty in educational psychology. Upon graduation from university he taught high school math, science, and graphic art. He also worked in drug abuse prevention and health promotion, and in developing health, education, and training programs for schools and corporations. He moved to Los Angeles in 1994, to", "score": "1.3780539" }, { "id": "32461412", "title": "Peter Mui", "text": " Peter Kan Mui was born on April 29, 1953 in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma to Chinese immigrants. His father was an economics professor at Oklahoma City University. He graduated from Trinity University with a Bachelor of Arts degree.", "score": "1.3905449" }, { "id": "3606599", "title": "Peter McCullagh", "text": " McCullagh is from Plumbridge, Northern Ireland. He attended the University of Birmingham and completed his PhD at Imperial College London, supervised by David Cox and Anthony Atkinson.", "score": "1.3880663" }, { "id": "6971388", "title": "Peter Mundy", "text": " Peter Mundy (fl. 1597 – 1667) was a seventeenth-century British merchant trader, traveller and writer. He was the first Briton to record, in his Itinerarium Mundi ('Itinerary of the World'), tasting Chaa (tea) in China and travelled extensively in Asia, Russia and Europe.", "score": "1.3822637" }, { "id": "760828", "title": "Peter Walsh (organizer)", "text": " Peter Walsh (born 1956) is an Australian-American professional organizer, writer, and media personality. He became an American citizen in 2002, and has dual citizenship. He lives in Los Angeles.", "score": "1.3676133" }, { "id": "32940522", "title": "Peter McColl", "text": " McColl was educated at Methodist College Belfast. McColl is a geography graduate of the University of Edinburgh and was previously a Vice President of the Edinburgh University Students Association. He was assessor to Mark Ballard during his term as Rector of the University from 2006–09, and was involved in the campaigns to elect both Robin Harper and Tam Dalyell as rector.", "score": "1.3624253" }, { "id": "26341690", "title": "Peter Mennim", "text": " Peter Mennim (born 1955) is a British artist, based in Cambridge. He grew up in York, and was educated at Worksop College and Reading University. His commissions include a large group portrait for the 40th anniversary of Wolfson College, Cambridge (his father Michael Mennim having been the architect of its first buildings) and Group Portrait of the Company of Merchant Adventurers of the City of York held at the Merchant Adventurers' Hall, York and a portrait of Duncan Robinson, commissioned when master of Magdalene College, Cambridge. During the 1980s and early 1990s he worked as an illustrator and produced many film posters and book covers including the book jacket The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams., the record cover art for the Rum Sodomy & the Lash by The Pogues, the movie posters The Crow (1994 film) and Highlander II: The Quickening.", "score": "1.3613005" }, { "id": "25339387", "title": "Peter A. Munch", "text": " Peter Andreas Munch (December 19, 1908 – January 10, 1984) was a Norwegian-born sociologist, educator, and author. In 1948, he immigrated to the United States as a post-doctoral research fellow studying Norwegian-American rural sociology in the Midwest. He ended his professional career at Southern Illinois University, with a focus on graduate studies and sociological research based on trips to the remote South Atlantic island Tristan da Cunha.", "score": "1.3601735" }, { "id": "13377948", "title": "Peter Musson", "text": " Peter Musson (born 1940) was a principal Bassoonist in the Queensland Symphony Orchestra and Senior Lecturer in Bassoon at the Queensland Conservatorium and is a soloist and member of chamber music ensembles.", "score": "1.3566909" }, { "id": "26551735", "title": "Peter Smith (historian)", "text": " Peter Smith helped establish Mahidol University International College (MUIC) in 1987, where he served as university administrator and chair of the Social Science Division until his retirement in 2013. He also teaches courses at the Wilmette Institute, an online Baháʼí educational institution, and is an author of several books specializing in Baháʼí studies.", "score": "1.3566597" }, { "id": "12510779", "title": "Peter Mullen", "text": " Peter Mullen (born 11 January 1942) is a British Church of England priest. He is the former Rector of St Michael, Cornhill and St Sepulchre-without-Newgate in the City of London. Mullen is Chaplain to the Honourable Company of Air Pilots, one of the Livery Companies of the City of London and the Anglican Chaplain to the London Stock Exchange, a largely honorific and historical post.", "score": "1.3557531" }, { "id": "32940521", "title": "Peter McColl", "text": " Peter McColl (born 9 May 1980) is a political campaigner and writer who was Rector of the University of Edinburgh 2012–2015. He has been involved with charity work and is editor of the progressive blog Bright Green.", "score": "1.3557233" }, { "id": "9248065", "title": "James Mullin", "text": " James Mullin (1846–1920) was born in Cookstown, County Tyrone. He left school at the age of eleven and worked on a farm, after which he spent nine years as a carpenter. He was one of the first recruits of the Fenian Brotherhood which he joined in 1865. Aged 22, he worked his way whilst attending the Cookstown Academy. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree at Queen's College, Galway. He tutored students to fund himself for the degree of Doctor of Medicine. He later practised in London and Cardiff, where he was chairman of the local branch of the United Irish League. At one period of his life he served as a ship's surgeon. A journalist later in life, he wrote an autobiography, The Story of a Toiler's Life, which was published posthumously in 1921 and reprinted in 2000 as part of University College Dublin's Classics of Irish History series.", "score": "1.3514562" }, { "id": "28598880", "title": "Stevedore", "text": " worked as a longshoreman from 1954–1956 ; Peter MacKay – Minister of National Defense of Canada ; Frank McCourt – noted Irish-American author ; Daniel Patrick Moynihan – sociologist, Ambassador to the United Nations and to India, U.S. Senator from New York ; Don Muraco – Former professional wrestler, most famous as \"Magnificent Muraco\" ; Michael \"Ozzie\" Myers – U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania ; Bruce Nelson – labor historian, author of Workers on the Waterfront ; Bartolomeo Pagano – Italian actor ; Charles Plymell – poet ; Benito Quinquela Martín – painter from Buenos Aires, Argentina. His works reflect the work at the docks in La ", "score": "1.3425757" }, { "id": "32667903", "title": "Peter Murchie", "text": " Peter Edward Murchie (born 7 January 1986) is a Scottish professional rugby union coach for Glasgow Warriors and a former Scotland international player. He previously was an Assistant Coach for Stade Niçois; and Head Coach for Ayr and then the Ayrshire Bulls. He formerly played for Glasgow Warriors in the Guinness Pro12, making over 100 appearances for the club. His playing position was full-back.", "score": "1.3420568" }, { "id": "29977793", "title": "Peter Muyzers", "text": " Peter Muyzers is a special effects artist. He was nominated at the 82nd Academy Awards for his work on the film District 9. His nomination was shared with Matt Aitken, Robert Habros and Dan Kaufman", "score": "1.340611" } ]
What is James M. Geraghty's occupation?
[ "lawyer", "attorney", "solicitor", "barrister", "lawyers", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
James M. Geraghty
4,626,587
66
[ { "id": "3196444", "title": "James M. Geraghty", "text": " James M. Geraghty (February 2, 1870 – April 29, 1940) was an Irish American politician. He is known as a former member of the Washington State House of Representatives, elected in 1897 to represent the 3rd legislative district from Spokane, Washington. An attorney by trade, he served as Spokane's city attorney from 1905 to 1907, and again from 1916 to 1932. In 1933, he was appointed to the Washington State Supreme Court, by Governor Clarence D. Martin.", "score": "1.9578073" }, { "id": "942212", "title": "James Geraghty", "text": " Geraghty was born in Parramatta, New South Wales. He was the son of a railway porter, and was educated at Christian Brothers' High School, Lewisham. He worked as a railway engineer and hotel manager and owned substantial suburban property.", "score": "1.8444638" }, { "id": "3196445", "title": "James M. Geraghty", "text": " James M. Geraghty was born on February 2, 1870, in County Mayo, Ireland. He is the son of Patrick and Bridget (née Haley) Geraghty. In 1880, the family immigrated to the US, arriving in New York and establishing a farm in Indiana. He attended school in Rush County, Indiana. After relocating to Spokane in 1892, he initially worked as a teamster, before attending business school. In 1908, Geraghty married Nora Toolen. Together, they raised nine children in Spokane. They were members of the Catholic Church, known for supporting Catholic interests throughout the Pacific Northwest. In December 1939, Geraghty began experiencing symptoms from a recurring kidney disease and died on April 29, 1940, in Spokane.", "score": "1.8141156" }, { "id": "942211", "title": "James Geraghty", "text": " James Leo Geraghty (1896 – 27 June 1960) was an Australian politician. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1941 until 1953. He was a member of the Labor Party (ALP) until 1950 and then sat as an Independent Labor member.", "score": "1.7692881" }, { "id": "13290246", "title": "Thomas F. Geraghty", "text": " Thomas F. Geraghty is the Class of 1967 B. James Haddad Professor of Law, and formerly the Associate Dean for Clinical Legal Education and Director of the Bluhm Legal Clinic at the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law. He has also worked in Tanzania, Uganda, and Malawi on research projects with law students involving juvenile justice, the legal problems of street children, the status of children orphaned by HIV/AIDS, women in the legal profession, and freedom of the press. In 1996, He helped to design a clinical curriculum for the Addis Ababa University School of Law and recently completed an assessment of Legal Education in Ethiopia for ABA/ROLI.", "score": "1.7566967" }, { "id": null, "title": "James M. Geraghty", "text": "James M. Geraghty\n\nJames M. Geraghty (February 2, 1870 – April 29, 1940) was an Irish American politician. He is known as a former member of the Washington State House of Representatives, elected in 1897 to represent the 3rd legislative district from Spokane, Washington. An attorney by trade, he served as Spokane's city attorney from 1905 to 1907, and again from 1916 to 1932. In 1933, he was appointed to the Washington State Supreme Court, by Governor Clarence D. Martin.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jack Geraghty", "text": "Jack Geraghty\n\nJohn Vincent \"Jack\" Geraghty, Jr. (born February 23, 1934) is an Irish American civic politician, journalist, and public relations consultant from Spokane, Washington. In 1964, he was elected to the Spokane County Board of Commissioners, while simultaneously serving in the Air National Guard and working as a staff journalist with the \"Spokane Daily Chronicle\". He resigned as County Commissioner in 1971, when the City of Spokane began preparing to host the 1974 World's Fair. While he was initially named as the Director of Public Relations, he was later appointed to serve as the Vice President of Exhibitor and Guest Relations. At that time, he established the public relations consulting firm of Jack Geraghty and Associates. In 1975, he founded the short-lived weekly newspaper, known as \"The Falls\". In 1992, he was elected as the 39th mayor of the city, serving from 1993 to 1998. In 2011, he was honored as a member of the University of Washington Department of Communication's Alumni Hall of Fame.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James O'Keefe", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jim Webb", "text": "Jim Webb\n\nJames Henry Webb Jr. (born February 9, 1946) is an American politician and author. He has served as a United States senator from Virginia, Secretary of the Navy, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Reserve Affairs, Counsel for the United States House Committee on Veterans' Affairs and is a decorated Marine Corps officer.\n\nOutside of working in government, Webb is also an Emmy Award winning journalist, filmmaker, and author of ten books. In addition, he taught literature at the United States Naval Academy and was a Fellow at the Harvard Institute of Politics. As a member of the Democratic Party, Webb announced on November 19, 2014, that he was forming an exploratory committee to evaluate a run for President of the United States in 2016. On July 2, 2015, he announced that he would be joining the race for the Democratic nomination for president, but stepped down from running in the primaries on October 20, 2015, stating that he was \"not comfortable\" with many political positions from the party's leadership.\n\nIn 2020, Webb was named the first distinguished fellow of University of Notre Dame's International Security Center.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "The Hurt Locker", "text": "The Hurt Locker\n\nThe Hurt Locker is a 2008 American war thriller film directed by Kathryn Bigelow and written by Mark Boal. It stars Jeremy Renner, Anthony Mackie, Brian Geraghty, Christian Camargo, Ralph Fiennes, David Morse, and Guy Pearce. The film follows an Iraq War Explosive Ordnance Disposal team who are targeted by insurgents and shows their psychological reactions to the stress of combat. Boal drew on his experience during embedded access to write the screenplay.\n\n\"The Hurt Locker\" premiered at the 2008 Venice International Film Festival before it was released in the United States on June 26, 2009, by Summit Entertainment. The film earned acclaim from critics, who praised Bigelow's directing, Renner's performance, Boal's screenplay, editing, and action sequences. The film was nominated for nine Academy Awards and won six, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Original Screenplay. It was the first Best Picture winner to have been directed by a woman. The film grossed $49.2 million worldwide.\n\nIn 2020, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being \"culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant\".", "score": null }, { "id": "3196448", "title": "James M. Geraghty", "text": " Geraghty is the grandfather of Jack Geraghty (b. 1934), who served as the 39th Mayor of Spokane, Washington. Ironically, while Geraghty served as Spokane's City Attorney during the first decade of the 20th century, his grandson served as the mayor of the city during the last decade.", "score": "1.6932261" }, { "id": "3196447", "title": "James M. Geraghty", "text": " Geraghty attended classes at the Georgetown University Law Center. After three years, he returned to Spokane and joined the law practice of John P. Judson. After Turner's term in the senate ended, Geraghty joined a law practice with him in Spokane. In 1905, Geraghty was appointed under a Democratic administration to serve a two-year term as city attorney in Spokane in the same office where he previously worked as a stenographer. In 1916, under a nonpartisan city administration, he returned to the same office, serving until 1910, when he was selected to serve as a member of Governor Martin's cabinet.", "score": "1.6750338" }, { "id": "942213", "title": "James Geraghty", "text": " Geraghty was elected to the New South Wales Parliament as the Labor member for the seat of North Sydney at the 1941 state election. He defeated the sitting United Australia Party member, Hubert Primrose. Geraghty retained the seat for the Labor Party at the next 2 elections.", "score": "1.6643443" }, { "id": "11608785", "title": "Jim Geraghty", "text": " Jim Geraghty is the senior political correspondent of National Review and author of several books. In addition to writing for National Review, Geraghty blogs for National Review Online and is a former reporter for States News Service.", "score": "1.6400042" }, { "id": "33111", "title": "Michael Geraghty", "text": " Michael C. Geraghty (born July 21, 1952) is an American lawyer who served as the Attorney General of Alaska from 2012 until 2014. He was nominated for this position by Governor Sean Parnell, confirmed by the Alaska Senate and sworn in on April 10, 2012. Prior to his appointment as AG, Geraghty was a lawyer in private practice. Geraghty is also a commissioner with the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. Geraghty was born in Fairbanks, Alaska. He received his undergraduate degree in Political Science from the University of Hawaii in 1974 and his J.D. from the Santa Clara University School of Law in 1978. He is married with five children and lives in Anchorage, Alaska.", "score": "1.6247993" }, { "id": "3196446", "title": "James M. Geraghty", "text": " Following his graduation from business school, Geraghty joined the staff of the City of Spokane's Corporate Counsel, William H. Plummer, where he worked as a stenographer. During this time, he was drawn to the legal profession and began studying law, under the guidance of Plummer. In 1896, running as a Conservative, under the Fusion ticket, Geraghty was elected as the youngest member of the Washington House of Representatives. In 1897, he passed the state bar in Olympia and began practicing law. When the state legislature elected George Turner as US Senator, Geraghty joined him as his private secretary. While in Washington ", "score": "1.6205454" }, { "id": "8123174", "title": "Sarah Geraghty", "text": " Geraghty served as a law clerk for Judge James B. Zagel of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois from 2000 to 2002. From 2002 to 2003, she was a Staff Attorney with the Office of the Appellate Defender in New York. Since 2003, she has been with the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta and from 2015 to 2020 served as Managing Attorney of the Impact Litigation Unit.", "score": "1.6014762" }, { "id": "15451288", "title": "Jack Geraghty", "text": " John \"Jack\" Vincent Geraghty, Jr. was born on February 23, 1934, in Seattle, Washington and raised in Spokane. He is the son of John Vincent and Gladys Ida (née Johnson) Geraghty, Sr. His father worked in advertising as art director and account executive on staff with Spokane-area agencies for over 45 years. He was also a commercial water color artist and a member of the Spokane Water Color Society. Geraghty's siblings include brothers Michael and Thomas, and sisters Kathleen Whitbeck and Mary Sturm. Geraghty is a third-generation Irish American. His great grandparents immigrated to the US from County Mayo, Ireland in 1880, when his grandfather, James M. Geraghty, was ten years old. His grandfather served as Spokane's City Attorney and member of the Washington State House of Representatives from the 3rd legislative district. Ironically, while Geraghty's grandfather served as Spokane's City Attorney during the first decade of the 20th century, Geraghty served as the mayor of the city during the last decade. In 1933, his grandfather was appointed to the Washington State Supreme Court, by Governor Clarence D. Martin.", "score": "1.5885516" }, { "id": "13290247", "title": "Thomas F. Geraghty", "text": " Gaherty has received an AB cum laude from Harvard University and JD from Northwestern University.", "score": "1.5826405" }, { "id": "113230", "title": "Patrick Geraghty", "text": " Patrick Geraghty (February 4, 1843 - ?) was an American farmer and schoolteacher from Elkhart Lake, Wisconsin who spent a single one-year term as a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly from Sheboygan County.", "score": "1.580683" }, { "id": "5668729", "title": "Brian Geraghty", "text": " In his free time, Geraghty enjoys surfing.", "score": "1.5666039" }, { "id": "3745082", "title": "Johnny Geraghty", "text": " Johnny Geraghty (born 1942 in Galway, Ireland) is an Irish former sportsperson. He played Gaelic football with his local club St Paul's and was a member of the Galway senior inter-county team from 1964 until 1969.", "score": "1.558096" }, { "id": "8123172", "title": "Sarah Geraghty", "text": " Sarah Elisabeth Geraghty (born 1974) is an American lawyer from Georgia who serves as Senior Counsel for the Southern Center for Human Rights. She is a nominee to be a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia.", "score": "1.5544956" }, { "id": "27132727", "title": "Gerald Geraghty", "text": " Gerald Geraghty (August 10, 1906 – July 8, 1954) was an American screenwriter, mostly of Westerns.", "score": "1.5402846" }, { "id": "8123173", "title": "Sarah Geraghty", "text": " Geraghty received her Bachelor of Arts from Northwestern University in 1996, her Master of Social Work from the University of Michigan School of Social Work in 1998 and her Juris Doctor from the University of Michigan Law School in 1999.", "score": "1.5370119" } ]
What is Michael Hutchings's occupation?
[ "chef", "chef de cuisine" ]
occupation
Michael Hutchings (chef)
896,602
60
[ { "id": "15325657", "title": "Chris Hutchings", "text": " Christopher Hutchings (born 5 July 1957) is an English former footballer and manager. He played for a number of clubs including Chelsea and played more than 100 games for Brighton & Hove Albion and Huddersfield Town. He has managed in the Premier League with Bradford City and Wigan Athletic, while his most recent tenure was at Walsall. He left Ipswich Town in November 2012 following Paul Jewell's departure.", "score": "1.6900065" }, { "id": "15731863", "title": "Timothy Hutchings", "text": " Timothy Hutchings (born 1974) is an American visual artist living and working in New York City. He uses a diverse range of media, ranging from video to sculpture to drawing. Hutchings has exhibited work internationally, notably at P.S.1/MOMA and the New Museum in New York City, Western Bridge in Seattle, the Centro de Arte de Salamanca and Museo de Arte Contemporane in Spain, and the Borusan Cultural Center in Istanbul. He also constructed the World's Largest Wargame Table for Real Art Ways in Hartford, Connecticut.", "score": "1.6787481" }, { "id": "5827618", "title": "Michael Hutchings (chef)", "text": " Michael Hutchings (born 1949) is a professional chef who is best known as the chef/owner of Michael's Waterside in Santa Barbara, California. He appears with Julia Child on the PBS cooking program Dinner at Julia's and on Cox Television with Jeanne Berg's Cooking Local program. Since 2015, he has appeared as the Chef Host of the Santa Barbara ABC-Affiliate cooking program The Inn Crowd.", "score": "1.6784685" }, { "id": "5827619", "title": "Michael Hutchings (chef)", "text": " Michael Hutchings first worked at a restaurant in college. His first major job was in the kitchen of the private Club 33 at Disneyland. Michael Hutchings eventually became executive chef of Club 33, and afterwards worked under several Los Angeles chefs, including James Sly and Jean Grodin. He then opened Michael's Waterside in Santa Barbara. He sold Michael's Waterside in 1993, and worked at other restaurants for some time. Chef Michael currently oversees a food consulting and service business in Santa Barbara.", "score": "1.6469445" }, { "id": "9100374", "title": "Tim Hutchings", "text": " Timothy (\"Tim\") Hilton Hutchings (born 4 December 1958 in London) is a male former middle- and long-distance runner who represented England and Great Britain internationally.", "score": "1.6256869" }, { "id": null, "title": "Michael Hutchings (chef)", "text": "Michael Hutchings (chef)\n\nMichael Hutchings (born 1949) is a professional chef who is best known as the chef/owner of Michael's Waterside in Santa Barbara, California. He appears with Julia Child on the PBS cooking program \"Dinner at Julia's\" and on Cox Television with Jeanne Berg's \"Cooking Local\" program. Since 2015, he has appeared as the Chef Host of the Santa Barbara ABC-Affiliate cooking program \"The Inn Crowd\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Geoffrey Hutchings", "text": "Geoffrey Hutchings\n\nGeoffrey Hutchings (8 June 1939 – 1 July 2010) was an English stage, film and television actor.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Sarah Hutchings", "text": "Sarah Hutchings\n\nSarah Hutchings \"née\" Reneer (born September 27, 1984) is an American composer of contemporary opera, art song, and choral works.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert H. Goddard", "text": "Robert H. Goddard\n\nRobert Hutchings Goddard (October 5, 1882 – August 10, 1945) Goddard successfully launched his rocket on March 16, 1926, which ushered in an era of space flight and innovation. He and his team launched 34 rockets between 1926 and 1941, achieving altitudes as high as and speeds as fast as 885 km/h (550 mph).<ref name=\"Goddard Launch History\" />\n\nGoddard's work as both theorist and engineer anticipated many of the developments that would make spaceflight possible. He has been called the man who ushered in the Space Age. His 1919 monograph \"A Method of Reaching Extreme Altitudes\" is considered one of the classic texts of 20th-century rocket science. Goddard successfully pioneered modern methods such as two-axis control (gyroscopes and steerable thrust) to allow rockets to control their flight effectively.\n\nAlthough his work in the field was revolutionary, Goddard received little public support, moral or monetary, for his research and development work.<ref name= \"Caidin\" /> He was a shy person, and rocket research was not considered a suitable pursuit for a physics professor.<ref name= \"Frank\" /> The press and other scientists ridiculed his theories of spaceflight. As a result, he became protective of his privacy and his work.\n\nYears after his death, at the dawn of the Space Age, Goddard came to be recognized as one of the founding fathers of modern rocketry, along with Robert Esnault-Pelterie, Konstantin Tsiolkovsky and Hermann Oberth. He not only recognized early on the potential of rockets for atmospheric research, ballistic missiles and space travel but also was the first to scientifically study, design, construct and fly the precursory rockets needed to eventually implement those ideas.\n\nNASA's Goddard Space Flight Center was named in Goddard's honor in 1959. He was also inducted into the International Aerospace Hall of Fame in 1966, and the International Space Hall of Fame in 1976.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jeffrey A. Hutchings", "text": "Jeffrey A. Hutchings\n\nJeffrey Alexander Hutchings FRSC (September 11, 1958 – January 30, 2022) was a Canadian fisheries scientist. He was a professor of biology, and the Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Chair in Fish, Fisheries, and Oceans at Dalhousie University.", "score": null }, { "id": "29566409", "title": "Michael Hutchings (mathematician)", "text": " Michael Lounsbery Hutchings is an American mathematician, a professor of mathematics at the University of California, Berkeley. He is known for proving the double bubble conjecture on the shape of two-chambered soap bubbles, and for his work on circle-valued Morse theory and on embedded contact homology, which he defined.", "score": "1.6190748" }, { "id": "2811353", "title": "Carl Hutchings", "text": " Carl Emil Hutchings (born 24 September 1974) is an English retired professional footballer who played as a utility player. He is best remembered for his five years in the Football League with Brentford, for whom he made over 200 appearances. He also played league football for Bristol City, Southend United and Exeter City. Hutchings was described as an \"intelligent footballer\", who performed \"with infectious exuberance\".", "score": "1.6132262" }, { "id": "15312712", "title": "Steve Hutchings", "text": " Stephen Hutchings (born 13 December 1990) is an English footballer, who played as a striker for Conference South club Havant & Waterlooville and previously Bournemouth. He now plays for Portsmouth-based Moneyfields FC in the Southern League Division One South. Hutchings made his debut for Bournemouth at home to Millwall, in the 2–0 win in League One on 29 March 2008. He joined Conference South side Dorchester Town on a work experience deal on 13 February 2009. He returned to Bournemouth from his work experience deal at Dorchester Town on 30 March 2009.", "score": "1.5487299" }, { "id": "14901655", "title": "Jeffrey A. Hutchings", "text": " Jeffrey A. Hutchings FRSC (born 11 September 1958) is a Canadian-born fisheries scientist, Professor of Biology, and Izaak Walton Killam Memorial Chair in Fish, Fisheries, and Oceans at Dalhousie University. He is known for his work on the evolution of fish life histories and on the collapse, recovery, and sustainable harvesting of marine fishes. In addition to being Chair of a 2012 Royal Society of Canada Expert Panel on Marine Biodiversity (and member of a 2001 Expert Panel on genetically modified foods), he chaired Canada's national science body (Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada) responsible, by law, for advising the Canadian federal Minister of the Environment on species at risk of extinction. Past-President and Co-Founder of the Canadian Society for Ecology and Evolution, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada (Academy of Science) in 2015. In 2017, he was awarded the international A.G. Huntsman Award for Excellence in the Marine Sciences. He was elected Fellow of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters in 2018.", "score": "1.5379217" }, { "id": "31230755", "title": "Cory Hutchings", "text": " Cory Francis Hutchings (born 5 March 1972) is a former world surf lifesaving Ironman champion from Gisborne, New Zealand. Hutchings was born in Gisborne to a family of passionate sportspeople. His father Ben was the coach of the New Zealand men's canoeing team who won gold in four events at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. Cory's involvement in surf lifesaving begun at age five.", "score": "1.528924" }, { "id": "8197295", "title": "Alex Hutchings", "text": " Alex Hutchings (born November 7, 1990) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player who is currently playing for IF Björklöven of the Swedish HockeyAllsvenskan (Allsv). He was selected by the Tampa Bay Lightning in the 4th round (93rd overall) of the 2009 NHL Entry Draft.", "score": "1.5283167" }, { "id": "4493172", "title": "Hutchings", "text": " American baseball pitcher ; Keith Hutchings, Canadian politician ; Kenneth Hutchings (1882–1916), English cricketer ; Kimberly Hutchings, British academic ; Mark Hutchings (born 1991), Australian rules footballer ; Michael Hutchings (chef) (born 1949), American chef ; Michael Hutchings (mathematician), American mathematician ; Noah Hutchings (born 1922), American religious broadcaster ; Richard Hutchings (born 1978), English cricketer ; Robert Hutchings, American academic ; Sarah Hutchings (born 1984), American composer ; Steve Hutchings (born 1990), English footballer ; Stuart James Hutchings (born 1951), Welsh chess master ; Tim Hutchings (born 1958), English runner ; Timothy Hutchings (born 1974), American artist ; William Hutchings (1879–1948), English cricketer ; William S. Hutchings (1832–1911), American mathematics prodigy Hutchings is a surname of English and Scottish origin. People with the surname include: ", "score": "1.527898" }, { "id": "15325665", "title": "Chris Hutchings", "text": " Outside football, Hutchings has also worked as a bricklayer and a second-hand car salesman.", "score": "1.523989" }, { "id": "13035169", "title": "Andrew Hutchings", "text": " Andrew William Seymour Hutchings (3 December 1907 &ndash; 30 October 1996) was a British trade union leader. Hutchings studied at Cotham School in Bristol and then St Catharine's College, Cambridge, before becoming a teacher. His first appointment was assistant master at Downside School in 1929, he then moved to the Methodist College, Belfast and the Holt School in Liverpool. Active in the Assistant Masters' Association, he became its full-time assistant secretary in 1936, then its general secretary in 1939. As leader of the union, Hutchings represented it on a number of other bodies; he was honorary secretary of the Joint Committee of Four Secondary Associations, and served on the executives of the World Confederation of Organisations of ", "score": "1.5174276" }, { "id": "32149259", "title": "Michael Hutt (academic and translator)", "text": " Michael James Hutt (born 11 October 1957) is Professor of Nepali and Himalayan Studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London. He is engaged in the study of modern and contemporary Nepali literature, and as a translator. He has also published on Nepali politics, Nepali art and architecture, censorship in the Nepali print media, and the Bhutanese refugee issue.", "score": "1.5115192" }, { "id": "8070191", "title": "Keith Hutchings", "text": " Hutchings was born the youngest of six children in Mobile, a community on the south coast of the Avalon Peninsula. He attended Memorial University of Newfoundland (MUN) in St. John's where he completed a Bachelor of Arts degree, with a major in political science and a minor in history. Hutchings also has a Certificate in Public Administration from MUN, and has completed an Occupational Health and Safety Program from Ryerson University in Toronto, Ontario. Hutchings spent 11 years working with the Workplace Health Safety and Compensation Commission. From 1996 to 1998 he served as Chief of Staff and Executive Assistant to Loyola Sullivan, then the Leader of the Official Opposition in the House of Assembly. Prior to entering politics he worked as a consultant. He also owned and operated IMPACC Consulting.", "score": "1.510623" }, { "id": "27833807", "title": "Arthur Hutchings", "text": " Arthur James Bramwell Hutchings (14 July 1906 – 13 November 1989 ) was an English musicologist, composer, and professor of music successively at the University of Durham and the University of Exeter. He wrote extensively on topics as varied as nineteenth-century English liturgical composition, Schubert, Purcell, Edmund Rubbra, and baroque concertos; but his most famous book was the Companion to Mozart's Piano Concertos, published in 1948 and often reissued since. Among his other books are The Invention and Composition of Music and Church Music in the Nineteenth Century. During the late 1970s his articles on music regularly appeared in the monthly magazine Records and Recording. His compositions include the Seasonal Preludes for organ, the overture Oriana Triumphans, the opera Marriage à la Mode, and the operetta The Plumber's Arms. Among his choral works are Hosanna to the Son of David, God is Gone Up, Grant Them Rest, and the Communion Service on Russian Themes. Hutchings served for many years as a director of the English Hymnal Company and three of his tunes were included in the 1986 New English Hymnal.", "score": "1.5056839" }, { "id": "9276454", "title": "Richard Hutchings", "text": " Richard Martin Hutchings (born 6 May 1978) is an English cricketer. Hutchings is a right-handed batsman who plays primarily as a wicket-keeper. He was born in Leicester, Leicestershire. Hutchings represented the Leicestershire Cricket Board in List A cricket. His debut List A match came against Hertfordshire in the 1999 NatWest Trophy. From 1999 to 2001, he represented the Board in four List A matches, the last of which came against the Kent Cricket Board in the 2nd round of the 2002 Cheltenham & Gloucester Trophy which was played in 2001. In his 4 List A matches, he scored 28 runs at a batting average of 7.00, with a high score of 15. In the field he took 2 catches. Despite being able to play as a wicket-keeper, he did not keep wicket for the Board. From 2004 to 2009, he played for Hinckley Town in the Leicestershire Premier League.", "score": "1.4951507" }, { "id": "30475879", "title": "Graham Hutchings", "text": " Graham John Hutchings CBE FRS FIChemE FRSC FLSW is a British chemist, Professor for Research at Cardiff University. He gained his BSc in 1972 at University College London, a PhD from University College in 1975 in Biological Chemistry and a DSc from the University of London in 2002 for his work on heterogeneous catalysis. His scientific career has included being Scientific Officer (1975–79) and Research and Production Manager (1979-1981) at ICI Petrochemicals and Chief Scientific Officer at AE & CI (African Explosives and Chemical Industries), Modderfontein, South Africa (1981–84). He was then in turn Lecturer, Senior Lecturer and Professor in the Department of Chemistry, University of ", "score": "1.4915566" }, { "id": "4680262", "title": "Ashley Hutchings", "text": " Ashley Stephen Hutchings, MBE, sometimes known in early years by his nickname, \"Tyger\" Hutchings (born 26 January 1945) is an English bassist, vocalist, songwriter, arranger, band leader, writer and record producer. He was a founding member of three noteworthy English folk-rock bands: Fairport Convention, Steeleye Span and The Albion Band. Hutchings has overseen numerous other projects, including records and live theatre, and has collaborated on film and television projects.", "score": "1.4693083" } ]
What is James Alex Msekela's occupation?
[ "diplomat", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
James Msekela
3,954,287
87
[ { "id": "8889170", "title": "James Kakooza", "text": " He was born on 18 February 1962, in Lyantonde District.", "score": "1.5332081" }, { "id": "3378243", "title": "James Mworia", "text": " Mworia was born in 1978. He attended Alliance High School, Strathmore University, and the University of Nairobi. He has a Bachelor of Laws from University of Nairobi. He is also a certified public accountant and a chartered financial analyst. In 2016, Machakos University awarded him an honorary doctorate degree.", "score": "1.5093709" }, { "id": "28213591", "title": "James Kauluma", "text": " Kauluma was born in Ovamboland. In 1949, he began studying at St. Mary's School in Odibo. He was baptised in 1951 at the age of 18. In 1953, he was recruited by the South West African Native Labour Association (SWANLA) and was sent to work in the diamond mines in Oranjemund in the far south of the country. He studied at the Dorothea Mission in Johannesburg between 1958 and 1959, and in Kenya, before returning to Namibia in 1964. In 1965 he travelled to Canada and the United States for further study, graduating with a BA degree from the University of Toronto and an MA from New York University. He was ordained: made a deacon on 22 June 1975 at the Church of the Ascension, ", "score": "1.5008622" }, { "id": "11175403", "title": "James Webb (South African artist)", "text": " James Webb (born June 20, 1975 in Kimberley, Northern Cape) is a South African artist best known for his interventions and installations incorporating sound. Webb also works as a sound designer, curator and teacher. His sound installations place special emphasis on the sourcing and presentation of the sound clips, as well as the social significance and context of these sounds. Often referred to as a \"collector of sounds,\" Webb is interested in the role that aural events play in our everyday life. The physical presentation of the work, including the installation space and the logistics of speakers, are also deliberate choices for Webb. Webb received the 2008 ABSA L'Atelier Award and his work is featured in many private and public collections, including the Iziko South African National Gallery, the Johannesburg Art Gallery, and the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Art Museum.", "score": "1.4868374" }, { "id": "14684418", "title": "James Motlatsi", "text": " James Motlatsi (born 5 June 1951) is a Mosotho mining executive and former trade union leader, who has been active in South Africa. Born in Mohale's Hoek in Lesotho, Motlatsi became a labourer at the Welkom gold mine in 1970. He was gradually promoted, becoming a driller, then a team leader, and eventually working as a personnel assistant. In 1981, the Council of Unions of South Africa resolved to establish a mining union, and Motlatsi met Cyril Ramaphosa, who was its main organiser. Motlatsi was enthusiastic, and immediately began recruiting members at the mine. When the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) was officially founded, in 1982, he was elected as its first president. The NUM grew rapidly, to become ", "score": "1.4747916" }, { "id": "3332930", "title": "David James (footballer, born 1970)", "text": "Malawi to study for a master's degree at Westminster. The charity has been supported by the Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE). James is also a global ambassador for the Special Olympics and works with Access Sport to provide sports provision in deprived areas of the United Kingdom. James is an avid artist, and has auctioned several of his paintings for charity. In addition to being an art lover, he writes a regular column for \"The Observer\" newspaper, and donates his article fee to charity. James was also the illustrator on the children's book \"Harry's Magic Pockets: The Circus\" written by", "score": "1.5777235" }, { "id": "8018043", "title": "Selema Masekela", "text": "Selema Masekela Selema Mabena \"Sal\" Masekela (born August 28, 1971) is an American television host, sports commentator, actor, and singer. Masekela was born in Los Angeles, the son of the South African jazz musician Hugh Masekela, and a Haitian mother. Masekela is also the older half-brother of \"\" contestant Nathan Gonzalez. He was raised in Staten Island, New York and Carlsbad, California, where he attended Carlsbad High School. Masekela is the co-founder of Berkela Motion Pictures with Jason Bergh. When he was a teenager, Masekela’s upbringing brought him to Southern California, where he was first exposed to surfing, snowboarding, and", "score": "1.5370072" }, { "id": "8018049", "title": "Selema Masekela", "text": "action sports. He also serves on the advisory boards of The Lunchbox Fund, a non-profit organization which provides a daily meal to students of township schools in Soweto of South Africa, and The Tony Hawk Foundation, an organization dedicated to financing and building high-quality, legal skateboarding parks for kids. Masekela is also a strong public supporter of the Surfrider Foundation and Life Rolls On. Selema Masekela Selema Mabena \"Sal\" Masekela (born August 28, 1971) is an American television host, sports commentator, actor, and singer. Masekela was born in Los Angeles, the son of the South African jazz musician Hugh Masekela,", "score": "1.5233355" }, { "id": "13547339", "title": "Wilmot James", "text": "Institute of Technology in Pasadena, California. In 2005 James was appointed Director of the Africa Genome Education Institute. James is an Honorary Professor of Sociology (University of Pretoria) and Human Genetics (University of Cape Town). In 2001, James was appointed Associate Editor at the \"Cape Argus\" newspaper, but left the paper later that year. In 2004 he became a Director at Naspers's Media24. James served as a trustee of the Ford Foundation of New York between 1996 and 2009. In 2009 James became a Member of Parliament with the Democratic Alliance, South Africa's opposition party. He was appointed Shadow Minister", "score": "1.4921067" }, { "id": "20495238", "title": "James Zikusoka", "text": "of the Public Service Commission. In 1988, he was ordained a deacon in Christ the King Cathedral at Bugembe. The following year, he was elected as reverend, canon and dean of the cathedral. He also helped with civil repairs to the physical building and purchased and financed the installation of a church organ out of his own pocket. He died on 29 January 2012, at Nakasero Hospital, in the country's capital, Kampala. He was interned at his ancestral home at Namungalwe, in Iganga District. He was survived by a widow and six of his seven children. James Zikusoka James Mbuzi", "score": "1.4709618" }, { "id": "4141246", "title": "David James (actor, born 1972)", "text": " James grew up in Paarl, Western Cape on a wine farm. His family were conservatives and separatists, his father a Dutch Reformed man, whereas James was liberal. He and his family also clashed early on regarding his choice of careers. As a young man, James struck a bargain with his family that if he were to receive his WP-colours in sports, he could then pursue his choice of studies. After accomplishing this and after his tour of duty in the military, he chose to study acting. From 1995 to 2001, James studied acting, singing, dancing, and the flute. One of his instructors was the famous Joan Brickhill, a \"grand dame\" of South African theatre and a Tony Award-nominated choreographer, under whom James studied from 1997 through 2001. During this time he also worked selling cars, washing cars, cleaning pools, and even caring for the elderly.", "score": "1.4732697" }, { "id": "31515185", "title": "James H. Sutherland", "text": " Sutherland arrived in Cape Town in 1896 at the age of 24, with no fixed ideas of a career. Initially he engaged in various occupations in Johannesburg, Mafeking, Matabeleland, Lake Tanganyika and the Congo, including professional boxing, running African trading stores, and working as a labour overseer on the construction of the Beira-Mashonaland railway. On the outbreak of the Anglo Boer War in 1899, he moved into the African hinterland to hunt elephant professionally.", "score": "1.4697623" }, { "id": "7057224", "title": "James Manyika", "text": " Born and raised in Zimbabwe, he received a Bachelor of Science at the University of Zimbabwe. He attended Oxford University as a Rhodes Scholar, earning a Master of Science in mathematics and computation, a Master of Arts, and a Doctor of Philosophy in electrical engineering. Manyika holds a doctorate in AI and robotics from Oxford University,", "score": "1.469423" }, { "id": "31274953", "title": "David James (footballer, born 1970)", "text": " In 2005, James visited the south eastern African nation of Malawi to help raise AIDS awareness. He subsequently set up the David James Foundation in order to help maize farmers in Malawi develop more efficient production techniques. The foundation also aims to give teenagers the skills, such as mechanical and construction skills, needed to go out and work. James has also made connections with West Exe Technology College, Exeter. This college has brought to his attention the Malawian charity, Friends of Mulanje Orphans. The foundation funds the David James Foundation Scholarship at the University of Westminster, which funds a student from Malawi to study for a master's degree at Westminster. The charity has been supported by the Institution of Chemical Engineers (IChemE). James is also a global ambassador for the Special Olympics and works with Access Sport to provide sports provision in deprived areas of the United Kingdom.", "score": "1.4628769" }, { "id": "2110850", "title": "V. J. James", "text": " V. J. James was born in Changanassery, Kottayam, Kerala, India. He attended St. Theresa's Higher Secondary School, Vazhappally and St. Mary's Higher Secondary School, Champakulam, before studying at St. Berchmans College, Changanacherry. He has a bachelor's degree in mechanical engineering from Mar Athanasius College of Engineering. He currently works for Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, Thiruvananthapuram, as an engineer.", "score": "1.4608053" }, { "id": "4141257", "title": "David James (actor, born 1972)", "text": " James currently lives in Parkview, a suburb of Johannesburg. He is bilingual, speaking both English and Afrikaans. He has an older sister, Lorraine, who owns and operates a vacation resort property in Paarl.", "score": "1.4568261" }, { "id": "10062607", "title": "Masoja Msiza", "text": " Masoja Josiah Msiza (born October 5, 1990) is a South African actor, poet and musician. He is best known for portraying \"Nkunzi Mhlongo\" in the award-winning telenovela Uzalo.", "score": "1.4522085" }, { "id": "27849583", "title": "James Klutse Avedzi", "text": " James is married with four children. He is a Christian who worships in the Global Evangelical Church His wife died on 30 January 2020 after being unwell for some time at the Ketu South District Hospital.", "score": "1.4467369" }, { "id": "27849582", "title": "James Klutse Avedzi", "text": " James Klutse Avedzi was born on 14 July 1964. He hails from Xipe in the Volta Region of Ghana. He attended University of Liverpool and graduated with a master's degree in Finance and Accounting in 2016. He further pursued a doctorate in International and Political Finance in Business at the University of Costa Rica. He also had his ICA-G from the Institute of Chartered Accountant in Ghana and also his MCIT from Ghana Chartered Institute of Taxation. He also had his Fcfia from the Chartered Institute of Financial and Investment Analysis in Ghana.", "score": "1.4445803" }, { "id": "31236756", "title": "King James (singer)", "text": " Ruhumuriza was born in 1990 in CHK (Centre Hospitalier de Kigali), Kigali city, Rwanda, the sixth of seven children in a Seventh-day Adventist family. He completed his secondary studies at the French-language Ecole APE Rugunga, and as of 2013 is enrolled at Mount Kenya University where he got a degree in Journalism and Mass Communication. As a child he aspired to become a professional football player. He was later exposed to the songs of American R&B artist Brandy and became inspired to begin composing and performing music.", "score": "1.4328609" }, { "id": "12548164", "title": "James Igbekeme", "text": " James Omonigho Igbekeme (born 4 July 1995) is a Nigerian footballer nicknamed The Black Panther, who plays for Spanish club Real Zaragoza as a left winger.", "score": "1.4315574" }, { "id": "15641225", "title": "Asmaa James", "text": " James was born in Freetown and brought up as an orphan in Pujehun. In 2016, she was selected for Mandela Washington Fellowship for Young African Leaders award, giving her the opportunity to hone her skills and develop professionally at a higher education institution in the United States.", "score": "1.4311483" }, { "id": "13137512", "title": "Hugh Masekela", "text": " Hugh Ramapolo Masekela was born in the township of KwaGuqa in Witbank (now called Emalahleni), South Africa, to Thomas Selena Masekela, who was a health inspector and sculptor and his wife, Pauline Bowers Masekela, a social worker. His younger sister Barbara Masekela is a poet, educator and ANC activist. As a child, he began singing and playing piano and was largely raised by his grandmother, who ran an illegal bar for miners. At the age of 14, after seeing the 1950 film Young Man with a Horn (in which Kirk Douglas plays a character modelled on American jazz cornetist Bix Beiderbecke), Masekela took up playing the trumpet. His first trumpet was bought for him from a local music store by Archbishop Trevor Huddleston, the anti-apartheid ", "score": "1.4265661" }, { "id": "12249999", "title": "Henry Joe Sakala", "text": " Sakala attended Rokana Primary School in Kitwe from 1986 to 1992 and then proceeded to Libala Boys Secondary School from 1993 to 1997 in Lusaka where he completed his GCE Ordinary Levels. He further attended college at Evelyn Hone College of Applied Arts and Commerce from 1999 to 2001 where he studied Diploma in Journalism and Public Relations and also obtained a Certificate in Video Production and Editing.", "score": "1.4259632" }, { "id": "640972", "title": "Cynthia Majeke", "text": " Cynthia Nocollege Majeke is a South African politician affiliated with the United Democratic Movement party. Between 2014 and 2019, Majeke served as a Member of Parliament in the National Assembly.", "score": "1.4247762" } ]
What is Masayoshi Nataniya's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Masayoshi Nataniya
5,111,257
78
[ { "id": "29484826", "title": "Masayoshi Nataniya", "text": " Masayoshi Nataniya (那谷屋 正義) is a Japanese politician of the Constitutional Democratic Party and a member of the House of Councillors in the Diet (national legislature). A native of Yokohama, Kanagawa and graduate of Yokohama National University, he was elected for the first time in 2004.", "score": "1.99517" }, { "id": "32701600", "title": "Natsuyuki Nakanishi", "text": " Nakanishi was born in Ōimachi, Shinagawa, Tokyo in 1935. In 1958, he graduated with a bachelor's degree from Tokyo University of the Arts, where he focused on oil painting. Jirō Takamatsu, who would become an important collaborator, was a classmate of Nakanishi’s during this time. While at Tokyo University of the Arts, Nakanishi became interested in art’s ability to engage social issues when he came into contact with the “workers’ culture circle” movement. In 1960, Nakanishi was a frequent participant in the activities of the short-lived but influential \"anti-art\" collective Neo-Dada Organizers, of which his future Hi-Red Center compatriot Genpei Akasegawa was a member. Nakanishi began his artistic career as a painter, creating works ", "score": "1.7039801" }, { "id": "32701599", "title": "Natsuyuki Nakanishi", "text": " Natsuyuki Nakanishi (Kanji: 中西夏之, Nakanishi Natsuyuki, b. July 14, 1935, Tokyo, d. October 23, 2016) was a Japanese visual and conceptual artist associated with the 1960s avant-garde art movement in Japan. His artworks ranged from Neo-Dadaist object-based works, happenings and performance art, to abstract painting. Nakanishi co-founded the groundbreaking artistic collective Hi-Red Center along with Jirо̄ Takamatsu and Genpei Akasegawa. Later in his career, Nakanishi would become known for painting practice featuring subdued palettes and idiosyncratic marks. He is also recognized for his pedagogical work, including his involvement with the experimental Bigakko school as well as professorship as Tokyo University of the Arts.", "score": "1.6286461" }, { "id": "973116", "title": "Masayoshi", "text": "Abe Masayoshi (阿部 正由), Japanese daimyō ; Masayoshi Ebina (蛯名 正義), Japanese jockey ; Masayoshi Esashi (江刺 正喜), Japanese engineer ; Masayoshi Hamada (浜田 昌良), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi Haneda (羽田 昌義), Japanese actor ; Hotta Masayoshi (堀田 正睦), Japanese Rōjū ; Masayoshi Ito (伊東 正義), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi \"Mabo\" Kabe (加部 正義), Japanese-French musician ; Masayoshi Kan (簡 優好), Japanese sprinter ; Masayoshi Kato (加藤 政義), Japanese baseball player ; Kanematsu Masayoshi (兼松 正吉), Japanese samurai ; Kurimoto Masayoshi (栗本 昌臧), Japanese entomologist ; Masayoshi Manabe (真鍋 政義), Japanese volleyball player ; Matsukata Masayoshi (松方 正義), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi Motegi (茂木 正淑), Japanese professional wrestler ; Masayoshi Nagata (永田 雅宜), Japanese mathematician ; Masayoshi Namiki (並木 正芳), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi Nataniya (那谷屋 正義), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi Okada (岡田 正義), Japanese football ", "score": "1.6119285" }, { "id": "11052765", "title": "Masaya Imanishi", "text": " Masaya Imanishi was born in Nara, Nara, Japan, in 1947. He graduated from the Kyoto City University of Arts and then learned porcelain glazing from Yūzō Kondo(近藤悠三)who was Living National Treasure in Japan. He was certified as a Nihon Kogeikai regular member in 1979. After that Imanishi continued to create works at Akishino Kiln in Nara. In 1991, he studied modeling and ceramics in the United States as Overseas Study Program Awardee by the Agency for Cultural Affairs. During that time he made many works and held personal exhibitions and artist demonstrations at the Archie Bray Foundation for the Ceramic Arts and various universities. The theme for his works is “the energy of nature,” stemming from how he was deeply moved by from his observations of nature in the United States, and particularly the American West.", "score": "1.6072283" }, { "id": null, "title": "Kazuya Shimba", "text": "Kazuya Shimba", "score": null }, { "id": "16384814", "title": "Shigeru Nakanishi", "text": "termed \"Melancholic Paris Ⅱ\" in 12 locations throughout the country. In 2013 he painted a mural \"Stockholm Twilight\" at the Tokyo University of Science. In 2014, he bought an inn abandoned in Nagoya Onsen, in the city Izunokuni, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan. Having refurbished the inn, he founded what is called \"Izunokuni Art Village\". \"Izunokuni Art Village\" is a place dedicated to creation where everyone freely expresses his creativity. Shigeru Nakanishi Nakanishi graduated from the Tokyo University of Science Engineering Division, Architecture Section in 1969. He then became an architectural designer, painting as a hobby. After winning the leading prize in", "score": "1.5281439" }, { "id": "13833078", "title": "Masayoshi Soken", "text": "Masayoshi Soken Born in La Paz, Baja California Sur, Mexico, Soken and his family later moved to Tokyo, where he attended the Tokyo University of Science. He joined Square in 2001, where his first assignment was arranging two songs on the extended play \"\"; he was credited as \"Masayoshi Kikuchi\". His debut as a composer came with the Japan-exclusive sports games \"Nichibeikan Pro Baseball: Final League\", in which he was the sole composer, and \"World Fantasista\" with synthesizer programmer Takeharu Ishimoto. Soken came into the public eye when he performed at the 2005 Square Enix Party event and was confirmed", "score": "1.5038223" }, { "id": "7688514", "title": "Masayoshi Esashi", "text": "Masayoshi Esashi Born in Sendai, Japan, in 1949, Masayoshi Esashi received his B.E. degree in electronic engineering in 1971 and a Doctor of Engineering degree in 1976 at Tohoku University. Esashi served as a research associate from 1976 and an associate professor from 1981 at the Department of Electronic Engineering, Tohoku University. Since 1990 he has been a professor. Currently, he is the director of micro/nanomachining research and education center in Tohoku University. He is an associate director of the Semiconductor Research Institute. He was a director of the Venture Business Laboratory in Tohoku University (1995–1998), and was a President", "score": "1.5011703" }, { "id": "16384812", "title": "Shigeru Nakanishi", "text": "Shigeru Nakanishi Nakanishi graduated from the Tokyo University of Science Engineering Division, Architecture Section in 1969. He then became an architectural designer, painting as a hobby. After winning the leading prize in the \"Selection of Contemporary Western Painting\" in 1990, he made his debut with the first solo exhibition \"Melancholic Paris\" at the Ichimai-no-e Gallery in Ginza, Tokyo. He has held a solo exhibition every year since. In 1995, he began his series of paintings titled \"Ruins\" after the Great Hanshin earthquake in Kobe. In 2000, he retired from architecture and began painting exclusively. In 2001, he received the Special", "score": "1.4995925" }, { "id": "11052764", "title": "Masaya Imanishi", "text": " Masaya Imanishi (今西 方哉) is a Japanese ceramic artist.", "score": "1.6058257" }, { "id": "973117", "title": "Masayoshi", "text": " ; Masayoshi Ōhira (大平 正芳), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi Oshikawa (押川 方義), Japanese Protestant missionary and educator ; Ryūhō Masayoshi (琉鵬 正吉), Japanese sumo wrestler ; Satake Masayoshi (佐竹 昌義), Japanese samurai ; Masayoshi Shimizu (清水 聖義), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi Soken (祖堅 正慶), Japanese video game composer ; Masayoshi Son (孫正義), Korean-Japanese businessman ; Masayoshi Takanaka (高中 正義), Japanese guitarist ; Masayoshi Takemura (武村 正義), Japanese politician ; Masayoshi Toyoda (豊田 正義), Japanese journalist ; Masayoshi Urabe (浦邊 雅祥), Japanese musician ; Masayoshi Watanabe (渡邉 正義), Japanese chemist ; Masayoshi Yamaguchi (山口 正義), Japanese professor ; Masayoshi Yamamoto (山本 雅賢), Japanese artistic gymnast ; Masayoshi Yamashita (山下 昌良), Japanese bass guitarist ; Masayoshi Yamazaki (山崎 まさよし / 山崎 将義), Japanese musician ; Masayoshi Yoshida (吉田 匡良), Japanese footballer ; Masayoshi Yoshino (吉野 正芳), Japanese politician ", "score": "1.6047451" }, { "id": "31037063", "title": "Masayoshi Takemura", "text": " Takemura was born in Gamō district in Shiga Prefecture to a family of farmers. Initially studying engineering at Nagoya University, he graduated from University of Tokyo studying education and finance. He began his professional life as a bureaucrat in the home affairs ministry.", "score": "1.5822711" }, { "id": "24990408", "title": "Masayoshi Mitani", "text": " Masayoshi Mitani (見谷 昌禧, born January 5, 1938) is a retired Japanese alpine skier. He competed in the downhill, slalom and giant slalom events at the 1960 Winter Olympics with the best result of 33rd place in the giant slalom. While preparing for the 1964 Winter Olympics, Mitani suffered a serious head injury, which left him bedridden for 3 months and forced him to retire from competitions. After graduating from Waseda University, Mitani joined Tokyu Corporation and was transferred to the affiliated Hakuba Tourism Development. He then returned to Waseda University to work as a skiing coach and researcher. In 1969 he became head coach of the national alpine skiing team, and prepared it to the 1972 Winter Olympics in Sapporo. After the Olympics, he worked at a ski school and provided commentaries and reports on major international skiing competitions.", "score": "1.5820236" }, { "id": "30351154", "title": "Masayoshi Esashi", "text": " Masayoshi Esashi (江刺 正喜) is an engineer. He is a global authority of Microelectromechanical systems and serves as the professor of the Tohoku University graduate school engineering graduate course. Born in Sendai, Japan, in 1949, Masayoshi Esashi received his B.E. degree in electronic engineering in 1971 and a Doctor of Engineering degree in 1976 at Tohoku University. Esashi served as a research associate from 1976 and an associate professor from 1981 at the Department of Electronic Engineering, Tohoku University. Since 1990 he has been a professor. Currently, he is the director of micro/nanomachining research and education center in Tohoku University. He is an associate director of the Semiconductor Research Institute. He was ", "score": "1.566582" }, { "id": "12361186", "title": "Masayoshi Yoshino", "text": " Masayoshi Yoshino (吉野 正芳) is a Japanese politician of the Liberal Democratic Party, a member of the House of Representatives in the Diet (national legislature). A native of Iwaki, Fukushima and graduate of Waseda University, he was elected to the first of his three terms in the assembly of Fukushima Prefecture in 1987 and then to the House of Representatives for the first time in 2000. In 2012, he won a seat in the House of Representatives for the Chugoku region, and in 2014 returned to Fukushima which he has represented since 2014. On 26 April, 2017, he became the minister responsible for disaster reconstruction in the Tohoku Region, after the previous minister, Masahiro Imamura, resigned after making insensitive remarks about the 2011 earthquake and tsunami which had hit the Tohoku region.", "score": "1.5642748" }, { "id": "14324577", "title": "1-nichi Gaishutsuroku Hanchō", "text": " laborers who appears in chapter 57. He is from Saga Prefecture. He sits next to Numakawa at the \"Kyushu People's Underground Gathering\" and talks to Numakawa about the characteristics of Saga. ; Satoshi Aida (相田 さとし) ; An aspiring comedian turned laborer who appears in chapter 50 of Mr. Tonegawa: Middle Management Blues and reappears in chapter 61 of this series. He was inadvertently mixed in with the candy-related talk by Ōtsuki and his team that had started by chance on the day of the inspection of the underground work. However, Ōtsuki did not know him and was inwardly puzzled. He claims the best ", "score": "1.5156322" }, { "id": "12135335", "title": "Masayoshi Nakatani", "text": " Masayoshi Nakatani (中谷 正義, Nakatani Masayoshi, born March 8, 1989) is a Japanese professional boxer. He held the OPBF lightweight title between 2014 and 2019, and won the WBO Inter-Continental lightweight title in 2020.", "score": "1.5155032" }, { "id": "32701621", "title": "Natsuyuki Nakanishi", "text": " walking about. According to Nakanishi, the Bigakko’s purpose was not just to provide a radically new form of art education, it was also a structure that could support artists who were not supported by an existing art market. In April of 1970 the workshop was introduced with a rotating faculty of Nakanishi, Nakamura, Genpei Akasegawa, Yutaka Matsuzawa, and Mokuma Kikuhata. In April 1996 he became a professor in the Department of Painting at the Tokyo University of the Arts. In 2003 he retired from Tokyo University of the Arts and in 2004 he became a professor at Kurashiki University of Science and Technology where he remained until 2007. He was Professor Emeritus as Tokyo University of the Arts.", "score": "1.5142918" }, { "id": "8618889", "title": "Masatoshi", "text": " ; Masatoshi Matsuda (松田 正俊), Japanese footballer ; Masatoshi Mihara (三原 雅俊), Japanese footballer ; Masatoshi Mizutani (水谷 允俊), Japanese footballer ; Masatoshi Muto (武藤 正敏), Japanese diplomat ; Masatoshi Nagase (永瀬 正敏), Japanese actor ; Masatoshi Nagatomi (1926–2000), Japanese professor of Buddhist studies at Harvard University ; Masatoshi Naitō (内藤 正敏), Japanese photographer ; Masatoshi Nakamura (中村 雅俊), Japanese actor and singer ; Masatoshi Nakayama (中山 正敏), Japanese karateka ; Masatoshi Nei (根井 正利), Japanese scientist ; Masatoshi Ōkōchi (大河内 正敏), Japanese physicist ; Masatoshi Ono (小野 正利), Japanese singer-songwriter ; Masatoshi Sanma (三馬 正敏), Japanese slalom canoeist ; Masatoshi Shima (嶋 正利), Japanese electronics ", "score": "1.5010115" }, { "id": "32701611", "title": "Natsuyuki Nakanishi", "text": " wearing Nakanishi’s white shirts and white pants.” Influenced by Hijikata and Butoh, Nakanishi strove to make paintings between the corporeal and the painterly. This underscores the significance of the body in relation to the phenomenological interrogations Nakanishi’s conducted through his artistic practice. As art historian Michio Hayashi has observed of the connected but different approaches by the two artists, “In contrast to Hijikata, who eagerly incorporated the effects of the gravitational pull on his body as an important element of his choreography, and, moreover, positively acknowledged the physical ground under his feet as their unquestionable support, Nakanishi expressed his suspicion about such phenomenological optimism.”", "score": "1.4954333" }, { "id": "32701667", "title": "Hi-Red Center", "text": " This event was held on May 28-29 at Gallery Naiqua, inaugurating the space. The group (and its members) had frequently worked and exhibited in Naiqua (内科; internal medicine) Gallery, and continued to do so individually after their disbanding. Nakanishi was childhood friends with the owner, Miyata Kunio, and influenced him to open the rental gallery (kashi garo). Thus, they did not have to pay any rental fees when they used the space. Presenting what would become one of his most famous works, Nakanishi staged Sentaku basal wa kakuhan koi wo shucho suru (Clothes Pegs Assert Churning Action), walking around in the square in front of the Shinbashi rail station, covered with metal clothespins and carrying balloons. These common clothespins were attached en-masse to canvas, clothing and human flesh. The work had previously been staged at the March 1963 Yomiuri Indépendant Exhibition. Nakanishi conceived of the work as interactive, allowing the passerby audience to participate by taking the clothespins off or putting them on. The audience reacted to the work in bemusement, without realising the physical pain Nakanishi had subjected himself to. The group also made suits out of balloons for performers on the streets of Tokyo.", "score": "1.4953895" }, { "id": "25856433", "title": "Hiroya Masuda", "text": " Masuda was born in Tokyo in 1951, and graduated from the University of Tokyo in 1977. He joined the Ministry of Construction after graduation, and was thereafter appointed to several management positions in the Japanese government, including Director of the Traffic Enforcement Division at Chiba Prefectural Police Headquarters (1982), Director of the Railway Traffic Division for Ibaraki Prefecture (1986), Director for River Administration Policy Planning at the Ministry of Construction (1993), and Director for Construction Disputes Settlement at the Ministry of Construction (1994).", "score": "1.4919429" }, { "id": "973113", "title": "Masayoshi", "text": " Masayoshi is a masculine Japanese given name.", "score": "1.4879808" }, { "id": "29042476", "title": "Masayoshi Soken", "text": " Masayoshi Soken (祖堅正慶) is a Japanese video game composer and sound editor who has worked for Square Enix since 2001. Soken is best known for being the lead composer and sound director of Final Fantasy XIV and its expansions. Throughout his musical career, Soken has also used the names \"Sorbonne Soken\" and \"Louise Noma\".", "score": "1.482928" } ]
What is Ernst Timme's occupation?
[ "farmer", "agriculturist", "grower", "raiser", "cultivator", "agriculturer", "farmer (occupation)", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Ernst Timme
4,057,234
61
[ { "id": "11761046", "title": "Ernst Timme", "text": " Ernst Gerhardt Timme (June 23, 1843 – April 1, 1923) was a German American immigrant, farmer, and Republican politician. He was the 13th Secretary of State of Wisconsin (1882&ndash;1891) and a member of the Wisconsin State Senate, representing Racine and Kenosha counties. He was a Union Army volunteer in the American Civil War and lost an arm at the Battle of Chickamauga.", "score": "1.7579348" }, { "id": "11761047", "title": "Ernst Timme", "text": " Timme was born in Werden, a borough of the city of Essen, in what is now western Germany. At the time of his birth, this region was part of the Rhine Province, part of the Kingdom of Prussia. At age 5, Timme emigrated with his parents to the United States by sea. The voyage was difficult, the boat was shipwrecked twice during the crossing, and ultimately took seven weeks to reach its destination. The Timme family arrived at Southport, Wisconsin Territory (now Kenosha), on August 17th of that year. They quickly acquired land in the western part of the county, in the town of Wheatland, and established a homestead. Timme was educated in the common schools in Wheatland, and, on turning 18, he enlisted in the Union Army for service in the American Civil War.", "score": "1.643288" }, { "id": "14063903", "title": "Timme", "text": "Drew Timme (born 2000), American basketball player ; Ernst Timme (1843–1923), American politician ; Herman Timme (born 1933), Dutch decathlete ", "score": "1.5914958" }, { "id": "14063902", "title": "Timme", "text": "Timme Hoyng (born 1976), Dutch field hockey player ; Timme Rosenkrantz (1911–1969), Danish aristocrat, author and jazz enthusiast ", "score": "1.584892" }, { "id": "3995470", "title": "Ernst Thomke", "text": " Thomke first completed an apprenticeship as a mechanic at the factory of ETA SA in Grenchen Canton of Solothurn. Between 1961 and 1967, he studied natural sciences, mainly chemistry at the University of Bern and University of Lausanne. Then he pursued medical studies in Berne, while working full-time. He was promoted to doctor in 1975. He completed his education with management studies and marketing at the (INSEAD), Fontainebleau.", "score": "1.5746105" }, { "id": null, "title": "John F. Reynolds (politician)", "text": "John F. Reynolds (politician)\n\nJohn F. Reynolds (July 25, 1852June 20, 1934) was an American farmer and Republican politician. He was a member of the Wisconsin State Senate (1899–1902) and State Assembly (1895–1898), representing Kenosha County.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Edwin Coe", "text": "Edwin Coe\n\nEdwin Delos Coe (June 11, 1840May 5, 1909) was an American newspaper editor, publisher, and Republican politician. He was a member of the Wisconsin State Assembly, representing northern Walworth County in 1878 and 1879. He subsequently served as chief clerk of the Assembly for four terms and was elected chairman of the Republican Party of Wisconsin in 1896.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Grand High Witch", "text": "Grand High Witch\n\nThe Grand High Witch of All the World or just The Grand High Witch, known as Eva Ernst and Lilith, is a fictional character and the main antagonist in the 1983 children's dark fantasy novel \"The Witches\" by Roald Dahl, as well as the graphic novel and the two film adaptations, in which she was played by Anjelica Huston (in 1990) and Anne Hathaway (in 2020). In the narrative, it is a title given to the all-powerful leader of all the witches on Earth.\n\n\"The Witches\" presents The Grand High Witch as a particularly powerful, evil and feared witch who hides her ancient age and hideous appearance behind an attractive disguise, in order to blend in with society, and plots to wipe out all the children in England after summoning the country's witches for the task. The boy protagonist and his grandmother (herself a retired witch-hunter who once searched the world for The Grand High Witch, but could never find her) encounter her by accident in a hotel in England, setting in motion the main plot of the novel.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James R. Lyon", "text": "James R. Lyon\n\nJames R. Lyon (November 4, 1833c. 1914) was an American merchant, Republican politician, and Union Army volunteer in the American Civil War.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:People from the Kingdom of Prussia", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "26042622", "title": "Joachim Christian Timm", "text": " Joachim Christian Timm, the son of tobacconist Matthias Ernst Timm (1704–1779), was born in Wangerin in Farther Pomerania, Prussia (now in Poland) and attended school there. In 1749 he started a five-year apprenticeship as an apothecary, initially with Friedrich John in Wangerin, where he served for a year as an assistant. In the 1750s he was in Mecklenburg, working in Rostock. At the end of the 1750s he moved to Malchin to manage the apothecary business of Georg Heinrich Kruger and his successors. In 1760, Timm became the official apothecary of Malchin. In 1771 he was elected senator. In 1778 he became the Second or Vice-Mayor ", "score": "1.5528644" }, { "id": "10210526", "title": "Eimbert Timmermans", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.5433774" }, { "id": "3995469", "title": "Ernst Thomke", "text": " Ernst Thomke (born 21 April 1939 in Biel/Bienne Canton of Berne, on the Franco-German linguistic border), is a Swiss physician and watchmaker. First a trained mechanic, he acquired the Swiss federal maturity degree and pursued academic studies, while in employment.", "score": "1.5090702" }, { "id": "1691226", "title": "Uwe Timm", "text": " Uwe Timm (born 30 March 1940 in Hamburg) is a German writer.", "score": "1.5083618" }, { "id": "26042621", "title": "Joachim Christian Timm", "text": " Joachim Christian Timm (7 December 1734 – 3 February 1805) was a German apothecary, mayor of Malchin, and a botanist with a particular interest in cryptograms. This botanist is denoted by the author abbreviation Timm when citing a botanical name.", "score": "1.4993658" }, { "id": "11761052", "title": "Ernst Timme", "text": " Ernst Timme married Caroline J. Maas, of Wheatland, on March 25, 1867. They had at least eight children, though only three survived to adulthood.", "score": "1.4971125" }, { "id": "11761048", "title": "Ernst Timme", "text": " Timme enrolled with a company of volunteers from Kenosha County on a three-year enlistment. The company proceeded to Camp Scott in Milwaukee, and was integrated into the 1st Wisconsin Infantry Regiment, which was reorganizing after its previous 3-month enlistment had expired. Timme's company was designated Company C. The reorganized 1st Wisconsin was ordered to proceed to Jefferson, Indiana, and then to Elizabethtown, Kentucky, where they were attached to the brigade of General James S. Negley, in the division of Alexander McDowell McCook, and shortly thereafter became part of the Army of the Cumberland. With his regiment, Timme participated in the battles of Perryville, Stones River, Hoover's Gap, and Chickamauga, in the campaign for control over Middle Tennessee in the western theater of the war. Timme was wounded during the first day of fighting at the Battle of Chickamauga; the wound was so severe that the surgeon had to amputate his left arm. Though only a private at the time, for his bravery at Chickamauga, he received a brevet to the rank of captain, and later advanced to colonel.", "score": "1.4867904" }, { "id": "26042624", "title": "Joachim Christian Timm", "text": " megapolis. At the instigation of the author of a monograph on Timmia, Guy Brassard, a mountain on the Arctic Ellesmere Island was named \"Mount Timmia\" in honour of Timm. In 1762, Timm married Anna Christine Elisabeth Witte (1743–1792), a merchant's daughter from Röbel. They had ten children, including the sons Joachim (1768–1801) and Hans Timm (1774–1852), who one after the other succeeded their father as the official apothecary in Malchin. Another son, Helmuth Timm (1782–1848), became a pastor in Groß Gievitz and later in Malchin. Joachim Christian Timm died in Malchin in 1805 and is regarded today as a pioneer of modern botany in Germany.", "score": "1.4800744" }, { "id": "11021939", "title": "Erwin Timmers", "text": " Originally from Amsterdam, Timmers moved to California and graduated from Santa Monica College of Design, Art and Architecture.", "score": "1.4695439" }, { "id": "150418", "title": "Alfred Thieme", "text": " Alfred Thieme (1830 – 1906) was a German industrialist and art collector from Leipzig. What little is known of his life was published in his art catalog, which was written by his son, the art historian Ulrich (known for Thieme-Becker) and the art historian Wilhelm von Bode. It was illustrated with engravings of artworks by Albert Krüger. He donated much of his collection, also known as the Thiemeschen Sammlung, to the Museum der bildenden Künste. Thieme was also the father of Georg Thieme who founded a medical publishing business, today Thieme Medical Publishers.", "score": "1.464042" }, { "id": "5984050", "title": "Christian Timm", "text": " Christian Timm (born 27 February 1979) is a German former professional football who played as a striker.", "score": "1.4610443" }, { "id": "25612550", "title": "Herman Timme", "text": " Herman Johannes Timme (born 21 July 1933) is a retired Dutch decathlete. He competed at the 1960 Summer Olympics and finished in 15th place. Between 1957 and 1967 Timme won more than 20 medals at national championships, but never a national title. He retired from competitions in 1970.", "score": "1.4595504" }, { "id": "32700459", "title": "Achim Timmermann", "text": " Following the completion of his Ph.D in 1996, Timmermann became a research assistant at Courtauld Institute of Art until 1998 and a research scholar in Index of Christian Art at Princeton University between 1997 and 1999. He also acted as a visiting lecturer at Birkbeck, University of London in 1996, at Morley College in 1997 and at Humboldt University of Berlin in 2001. He first became a lecturer in 2002 at University of California, Berkeley, where he taught for one year until moving to Berlin as a member of the faculty at European College of Liberal Arts until 2004. Between 2004 and 2010, Timmermann was assistant professor for the History of Art Department at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor then moving on to become Associate Professor. He became Assistant Professor for the Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor in 2006 and Associate Professor in 2010. Timmermann served on the Editorial Board of ArtHist.net, in the role of Reviews Editor in 2001-2004.", "score": "1.4467399" }, { "id": "32005763", "title": "Georg Wilhelm Timm", "text": " Georg Wilhelm Timm, also known as Vasily Fyodorovich Timm (Russian: Василий Фёдорович Тимм; 21 June 1820, in Riga – 19 April 1895, in Berlin) was a Baltic-German painter, lithographer and ceramic designer, known for his genre and battle scenes. He was also the publisher of the Russian Art Gazette.", "score": "1.443049" }, { "id": "26831243", "title": "Uwe Timm (libertarian author)", "text": " Uwe Timm (5 February 1932 – 7 March 2014) was a German writer, anarchist, and anti-militarist. He was the co-editor of espero. He was born in Hamburg, Nazi Germany. Timm died on 7 March 2014 in Barcelona, Spain. He was 82 years old.", "score": "1.4388528" } ]
What is Ludwig Lichtschein's occupation?
[ "rabbi", "Rav" ]
occupation
Ludwig Lichtschein
5,032,330
58
[ { "id": "14623353", "title": "Franz Lichtblau", "text": " Franz Lichtblau (23 February 1928 - 25 November 2019) was a German architect. Lichtblau studied after his Abitur 1946 and after an apprenticeship as a carpenter with Egon Eiermann at the Technical University of Karlsruhe as well as with Robert Vorhoelzer, Martin Elsaesser, Hermann Leitenstorfer and Hans Döllgast at the Technical University of Munich. In 1956 he took part in a competition for the Protestant Church in Oberaudorf am Inn, which he won. Subsequently, he established a number of Protestant churches in Upper Bavaria and from 1962 also in Würzburg, Coburg, Erlangen, Augsburg, Bamberg and Kempten. In addition, he undertook numerous monumental renovations in Nördlingen, Memmingen, ", "score": "1.5210584" }, { "id": "10501770", "title": "Lichtensteig", "text": "Jost Bürgi (1552 in Lichtensteig – 1632) a Swiss clockmaker, a maker of astronomical instruments and a mathematician. ; Augustine Reding (1625 in Lichtensteig - 1692) a Swiss Benedictine, the Prince-Abbot of Einsiedeln, and theological writer ; Max Rychner (1897 in Lichtensteig – 1965) a Swiss writer, journalist, translator, and literary critic ; Paula Rueß (1902 in Lichtensteig - 1980) a German political activist, forced into exile by the Nazi takeover, during the early 1940s she worked with the French Resistance ", "score": "1.486141" }, { "id": "9260585", "title": "Ludwig Lichtheim", "text": " Ludwig Lichtheim (7 December 1845 in Breslau – 13 January 1928) was a German physician of Jewish descent.", "score": "1.4834199" }, { "id": "9260586", "title": "Ludwig Lichtheim", "text": " He was educated at the gymnasium in Breslau, and studied medicine at the universities of Berlin, Zurich, and Breslau, graduating in 1868. From 1869 to 1872 he was assistant in the medical hospital at Breslau under Hermann Lebert; from 1872 to 1873 in the surgical hospital at Halle under Richard von Volkmann; and from 1873 to 1877 again at Breslau in the medical polyclinic, under Lebert and Michael Anton Biermer. He became privat-docent at Breslau University in 1876; an assistant professor at the University of Jena in 1877; and was called in 1888 to the University of Königsberg as a professor of medicine, his final position. In 1891, with Adolph Strümpell, Wilhelm Heinrich Erb and Friedrich Schultze (1848-1934), he founded the journal \"Deutsche Zeitschrift für Nervenheilkunde\". He was an expert on aphasia and developed an explanation of language processing in the brain, which was used as part of medical school training in neurology. Furthermore, he developed an early model about the functional principle of the (human) brain, the so-called Wernicke-Lichtheim Model.", "score": "1.4669056" }, { "id": "32728293", "title": "Louis Lichtenberger", "text": " In Chicago, young Lichtenberger apprenticed in carriage and wagon-making and carried on this occupation in both San Francisco and Los Angeles. In the latter city he formed a partnership with Louis Roeder, from 1866 to 1869. He retired in 1886, having invested in real estate. In 1891 he was vice-president of the German-American Savings Bank at 114 South Main Street, Los Angeles.", "score": "1.4512267" }, { "id": null, "title": "Csurgó", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of victims of the September 11 attacks (H–N)", "text": "List of victims of the September 11 attacks (H–N)\n\nThese are the nearly 3,000 victims of the September 11 attacks, as they appear inscribed at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum in New York.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "13937924", "title": "Hugo Licht", "text": "recommendation Licht could change in the studio of the architect Richard Lucae in Berlin. In contrast to the orientation of Adler at the work of Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Lucae favored the formal language of the Italian Renaissance. Later he moved to Vienna and worked with the architect Heinrich von Ferstel. From 1869 until the end of 1870 Licht traveled through Italy. This study tour took him through the whole country, but priorities were Rome and Pompeii. After returning to Germany, he married Clara Heckmann the same year. In the spring of the following year he established himself as a freelance", "score": "1.4365653" }, { "id": "13937923", "title": "Hugo Licht", "text": "Hugo Licht Hugo Georg Licht (21 February 1841 in Nieder-Zedlitz (today Siedlnica, Poland) – 28 February 1923 in Leipzig, Germany) was a German architect. Licht was the son of the landholder Georg Hugo Licht. In the years 1862 and 1863 he was mason trainee at the renowned Berlin architects Wilhelm Böckmann and Hermann Ende. At this time, they embossed at that time the late Neoclassical architecture in Berlin – especially with private villas and other magnificent buildings. In 1864, he enrolled at the Berlin Royal Prussian Academy of Architecture and was a pupil of Friedrich Adler. Later and with his", "score": "1.4154136" }, { "id": "11415154", "title": "Ludwig Merwart", "text": "Ludwig Merwart Ludwig Merwart (1 September 1913 – 13 July 1979) was an influential Austrian painter and graphic artist. He is an important representative of Tachism and was a major force in graphic arts and prints, especially after World War II. His work belongs to the most significant and interesting contributions to graphic arts in Austria to this day. Merwart’s unique technique of iron etching attracted great attention in the 50s and 60s and 70s. In 1959 he exhibited his work at the documenta 2 in Kassel (Germany) and at the V. Biennale de São Paulo (Brasil), the following year", "score": "1.4071507" }, { "id": "8552319", "title": "Hugo Licht", "text": " Hugo Georg Licht (21 February 1841 in Nieder-Zedlitz (today Siedlnica, Poland) – 28 February 1923 in Leipzig, Germany) was a German architect.", "score": "1.4210612" }, { "id": "8552321", "title": "Hugo Licht", "text": " worked with the architect Heinrich von Ferstel. From 1869 until the end of 1870 Licht traveled through Italy. This study tour took him through the whole country, but priorities were Rome and Pompeii. After returning to Germany, he married Clara Heckmann the same year. In the spring of the following year he established himself as a freelance architect in Berlin and worked as such until 1879. The plot of the land and the important buildings of the Jewish cemetery in Berlin-Weissensee were built after his plans in 1879/1880. During his time in Berlin, Licht made several study trips to Paris and London, where he also met with colleagues. In 1879 Licht was entrusted with the leadership of the ", "score": "1.4118844" }, { "id": "8552320", "title": "Hugo Licht", "text": " Licht was the son of the landholder Georg Hugo Licht. In the years 1862 and 1863 he was mason trainee at the renowned Berlin architects Wilhelm Böckmann and Hermann Ende. At this time, they embossed at that time the late Neoclassical architecture in Berlin – especially with private villas and other magnificent buildings. In 1864, he enrolled at the Berlin Royal Prussian Academy of Architecture and was a pupil of Friedrich Adler. Later and with his recommendation Licht could change in the studio of the architect Richard Lucae in Berlin. In contrast to the orientation of Adler at the work of Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Lucae favored the formal language of the Italian Renaissance. Later he moved to Vienna ", "score": "1.4114944" }, { "id": "3385460", "title": "Leopold Lichtwitz", "text": " Leopold Lichtwitz (9 December 1876 in Ohlau &ndash; 16 March 1943 in New Rochelle, New York) was a German-American internist. He studied medicine in several German universities, receiving his doctorate in 1901 from the University of Leipzig. In 1906/07 he studied chemistry at Leipzig, and during the following year, obtained his habilitation for medicine at the University of Göttingen. In 1910 he was named head of the medical polyclinic in Göttingen, where in 1913 he became an associate professor. In 1916 he was appointed director of the department of internal medicine at the municipal hospital in Altona. In 1931 he relocated to Berlin as director of the Rudolf Virchow Hospital. Because of his Jewish heritage, he was dismissed from his post at the hospital by the Nazi regime in 1933. He then emigrated to the United States, where he subsequently found employment as director of the department of internal medicine at Montefiore Hospital in New York. In New York, he was also a professor at Columbia University. The \"Leopold-Lichtwitz-Medaille\" is an award offered by the Deutschen Gesellschaft für Innere Medizin (DGIM) to those who distinguish themselves through their work and commitment in the interests of internal medicine.", "score": "1.4045298" }, { "id": "12028092", "title": "Ernst Lichtblau", "text": " From 1910 to 1939 Lichtblau worked as a freelance architect in Vienna. From 1910 to 1920 he was also a freelancer of Wiener Werkstätte, later he was in a relationship with the Social Democrat-led community Rotes Wien, led a housing consultation, the consulting position for interior decoration (BEST), in the Karl-Marx-Hof and participated in communal housing. Lichtblau's most famous buildings include the so-called \"chocolate house\" in Vienna-Hietzing, a part of the Paul-Speiser-Hof and a double dwelling in the Vienna Werkbundsiedlung due to its façade design with dark brown majolica.", "score": "1.4044763" }, { "id": "15426115", "title": "Moritz Coschell", "text": " World War I, he served as a Hauptmann in the Austrian Army. In 1921, he married Lucy Agnes Emma Wiskott, a banker's daughter, from Dortmund. They had one son. He and Lucy were both members of a Protestant church but, due to his Jewish origins, his professional license was withdrawn in 1933. Soon after, his works were declared to be \"degnerate\", and he had no source of income. He took Lucy and his son to Dortmund, to live with Lucy's father. He was unable to live with them, due to certain provisions in the anti-Semitic Nuremberg Laws, so that failed to improve their situation. When stricter laws kept ", "score": "1.4037105" }, { "id": "11326282", "title": "Walter Licht", "text": " Walter Licht (born July 15, 1946) is an American historian specializing in labor history, economic history, and the history of American capitalism. He is currently Walter H. Annenberg Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania.", "score": "1.4010797" }, { "id": "8552322", "title": "Hugo Licht", "text": " Surveyor of the city of Leipzig. He held this office until 1896 and was released by the office in October 1896 for the work on the Neues Rathaus (New Town Hall (Leipzig)). He held the function as a city planner until 1906. Licht served from 1901 as editor of ''Die Architektur des XX. Jahrhunderts'' (The Architecture of the XX. Century) and from 1905 he was additional the editor of Der Profanbau (The Secular Building). Also in 1905 he became honorary doctorate (Dr.-Ing. E. h.) by the Technische Universität Dresden. In 1906 he was awarded with the title professor by the Universität Leipzig. At the age of almost 82 years, Licht died on 28 February 1923 in Leipzig.", "score": "1.3976133" }, { "id": "31467986", "title": "Ludwig Greiner", "text": " Greiner was born to the family of the Lutheran pastor Karl Greiner in the small village of Lichtentanne (today part of Probstzella) in Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld in 1796. His baptismal name is still spelled Ludwig in German, Polish, and some Slovak sources, which was also the name he used in his publications. Most Slovak sources now render his baptismal name as Ľudovít, the Hungarian sources render it as Lajos. Non-specialist sources also mostly misidentify him as a rank-and-file forester. After high school, he took special qualifying tests in forestry and spent several years gaining experience as forester in Austria and on the Lubomirski estates (administrated by the heirs of Julia Lubomirska) in Habsburg Galicia in the Łańcut and Lviv regions, now in Poland and Ukraine. He finished his education at the Vienna University of Technology where he took mathematics, physics, and chemistry in 1824–1826. He then became the director of forest management and timber rafting on Duke Ernest of Saxe-Coburg's estates, from where he was hired by Ernest's brother Ferdinand as the head of forestry and land management of all of his estates.", "score": "1.3957343" }, { "id": "5177221", "title": "Horst Lichter", "text": " Wilhelm Horst Lichter (born 15 January 1962) is a German cook, television cook, cookbook author, and television presenter. He also occasionally appears on stage as an entertainer.", "score": "1.38972" }, { "id": "12662129", "title": "Hugo Lichte", "text": " Hugo Lichte studied mathematics, physics and chemistry at the University of Göttingen from 1909 to 1913. He then joined the scientific staff of the “Torpedoinspektion Kiel” of the Imperial German Navy until 1919. After the end of World War I he worked at the “Signal GmbH” in Kiel and then in Berlin, starting in 1924 at the :de:Mix & Genest AG and in 1926 at the AEG.When the research institute of the AEG was founded in 1928 under the leadership of Carl Ramsauer, he was appointed head of the electro-acoustic department in Berlin. After the end of World War II he became a teacher at the :de:Lilienthal-Gymnasium (Berlin-Lichterfelde) in Berlin until 1959. In addition he was a lecturer of physics at the Free University of Berlin from 1949.", "score": "1.388705" }, { "id": "32892410", "title": "Eduard Peithner von Lichtenfels", "text": " Eduard Peithner von Lichtenfels (18 November 1833, Vienna — 22 January 1913, Berlin) was an Austrian landscape painter. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts, Vienna, under Franz Steinfeld and Thomas Ender. He taught landscape painting at the Academy from 1872 to 1901; his students included Alfred Roller.", "score": "1.3885734" }, { "id": "1883833", "title": "Henri Lichtenberger", "text": " In 1885 he received his agrégation in German studies at Paris, and two years later, began work as a lecturer at the University of Nancy. In 1891 he became a full professor of foreign literature at Nancy, and in 1905 returned to Paris, where he served as a professor of German language and literature. In 1914-15 he was a visiting professor of comparative literature at Harvard University.", "score": "1.3873942" }, { "id": "9249175", "title": "Wilhelm, Duke of Urach", "text": " He was keenly interested in the arts and sciences, and in particular in art history and archeology. He made study trips and co-founded the württembergischen Altertumsverein (Württemberg Society for Ancient History) in 1843 and the Verein für vaterländische Naturkunde (Association for National Natural history) in 1844 and continued to support these. He also acted repeatedly as president of the overall association of German societies of Ancient History. His taste for art showed in 1840 and 1841, when he constructed Lichtenstein Castle on the spot of the by then completely ruined ancient castle made famous by Wilhelm Hauff's novel Lichtenstein. He moved a significant number of Renaissance style sculptures from the Neues Lusthaus in Stuttgart to Lichtenstein Castle when the Lusthaus was to be demolished in 1844, to make room for the Royal Court Theater. He was an honorary member of several scientific associations and learned societies, such as the Bavarian Academy of Sciences.", "score": "1.3789878" }, { "id": "12028088", "title": "Ernst Lichtblau", "text": " Born in an assimilated Jewish family (the father was managing director of a factory for Meerschaum pipes), Lichtblau graduated in 1902 from the state school in the Schellinggasse in downtown Vienna, in which he later (1906-1914) should return as a teacher of furniture design. From 1902 to 1905 he studied at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts in the master class of Otto Wagner.", "score": "1.3760374" } ]
What is Władysław Sławny's occupation?
[ "photographer", "photog", "photographers" ]
occupation
Władysław Sławny
2,712,125
21
[ { "id": "7452621", "title": "Władysław Sławny", "text": " Władysław Sławny (1907–1991) was a Polish photographer.", "score": "1.6538733" }, { "id": "28685218", "title": "Walery Sławek", "text": " injuries, and the death of his wife. Józef Piłsudski ordered him to oversee party finances. In 1908, he was sent to Paris, and after his return, took part in the legendary Bezdany raid. On June 1, 1909, Sławek, already a member of the Union of Active Struggle (ZWC), was arrested by the Austrian authorities. He was released after two weeks, with help from Austrian military intelligence (Hauptkundschaftstelle, HK-Stelle), which cooperated with the leadership of the ZWC. The Austrians highly appreciated the information on Russian army, stationed in Congress Poland. In exchange, the HK-Stelle allowed the ZWC to carry out its activities.", "score": "1.5979807" }, { "id": "28685215", "title": "Walery Sławek", "text": " 1903, while being transferred to a prison in Sieradz. Soon afterwards, by the order of Piłsudski, he began working on the creation of a secret, paramilitary organization within the socialist party. On November 13, 1904, he organized a mass anti-Tsarist rally at Warsaw's Grzybowski Square. Sławek delivered weapons to some participants, and the rally ended in an exchange of fire with the police. It was the first act of armed resistance in Congress Poland since the January Uprising. During the 1905 Congress of the PPS, Sławek was elected to the Central Workers Committee (CKR), as its youngest member. His main duty was ", "score": "1.5188478" }, { "id": "28685219", "title": "Walery Sławek", "text": " Sławek was one of the chief advisors of Piłsudski. In mid-1914, he joined 1st Brigade, Polish Legions, but in August, he did not march with First Cadre Company to Congress Poland, remaining in Kraków. In 1915, Sławek was sent by Piłsudski to Warsaw, where he created local structures of Polish Military Organisation (POW). At the same time, he formed a secret body within the POW, called Military Association (Zwiazek Wojskowy), later renamed into Organization A. In December 1916, after the creation of Provisional Council of State, Sławek was employed by its Military Commission. Following the Oath crisis, he was arrested by the Germans (July 13, 1917), and sent to Warsaw Citadel and then to Szczypiorno and Modlin. He was finally released on November 12, 1918.", "score": "1.5171771" }, { "id": "29332436", "title": "Władysław Sikorski", "text": " enterprises related to construction, real estate and petroleum trade. During his studies at the Polytechnic, Sikorski became involved in the People's School Association (Towarzystwo Szkoły Ludowej), an organization dedicated to spreading literacy among the rural populace. Around 1904–1905 he was briefly involved with the endecja Association of the Polish Youth \"Zet\", and then drifted towards paramilitary socialist organizations related to the Polish Socialist Party, which was intent on securing Polish independence. He made contact with the socialist movement around 1905–1906 through the Union for the Resurrection of the Polish Nation (Związek Odrodzenia Narodu Polskiego). In 1908, in Lwów, Sikorski—together with Józef Piłsudski, Marian Kukiel, Walery Sławek, Kazimierz Sosnkowski, ", "score": "1.5124462" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Polish photographers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wiesław Ochman", "text": "Wiesław Ochman\n\nWiesław Ochman (; born 6 February 1937) is a Polish tenor.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Polish people", "text": "List of Polish people\n\nThis is a partial list of notable Polish or Polish-speaking or -writing people. People of partial Polish heritage have their respective ancestries credited.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Talk:Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth/Archive 1", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Talk:Warmia", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "10431962", "title": "Władysław Kowalski (politician)", "text": " Władysław Kowalski (26 August 1894 – 14 December 1958) was a Polish communist politician, writer and journalist who served as the Minister of Art and Culture and the Sejm Marshal during the first postwar parliament Sejm of the Polish People's Republic (1947–1952) and, in his capacity as Sejm Marshal, ex officio, as the acting head of state (Acting President of the State National Council) for one day (4–5 February 1947). He was also a publisher and writer. Kowalski was also known by the pseudonyms Sałas, Bartłomiej Zarychta and Stanisławski.", "score": "1.4999259" }, { "id": "8773083", "title": "Władysław Raginis", "text": " Władysław Raginis (June 27, 1908 – September 10, 1939) was a Polish military commander during the Polish Defensive War of 1939 of a small force holding the Polish fortified defense positions against a vastly larger invasion during the Battle of Wizna. Because the positions were held at great cost for three days before being annihilated with few survivors, Wizna is referred to as the Polish Thermopylae and Captain Raginis as a modern Leonidas.", "score": "1.4963018" }, { "id": "28685216", "title": "Walery Sławek", "text": " of local party chambers in southwestern corner of Congress Poland. Sławek himself never became a true Socialist: he regarded this party as the only real organization which would bring back independent Poland. During the Revolution of 1905, he was a key member of Combat Organization of the Polish Socialist Party, and participant in numerous missions. On September 10, 1905, he was arrested and sent to the Warsaw Citadel. Russian authorities planned to send him to Siberia, but on October 19, amnesty was declared, and on November 4, 1905, Sławek was released. He continued his activities: during a raid on a train ", "score": "1.4937286" }, { "id": "10596589", "title": "Sławomir Zgrzywa", "text": " Sławomir Zgrzywa (born 8 April 1962 in Łomża) is a Polish right-wing politician, local government official and historian. He served as voivode for the Łomża Voivodeship, and as Voivodeship marshal for the Podlaskie Voivodeship.", "score": "1.4909661" }, { "id": "27296061", "title": "Władysław Frasyniuk", "text": " Since Law and Justice came into power in Poland, Frasyniuk has been actively engaged in protests against their policy. He participates in Committee for the Defence of Democracy and Citizens of Poland demonstrations. During one of the Citizens of Poland demonstrations he was accused of assaulting a policeman and later detained.", "score": "1.488965" }, { "id": "2567757", "title": "Władysław Wicha", "text": " Władysław Wicha (born June 3, 1904 in Warsaw – died on December 13, 1984 Warsaw) was a Polish politician in the early communist period. Minister of Interior in the years 1954–1964, member of the Council of State (1965–1969), deputy to the Sejm of the Polish People's Republic of the first and fourth term.", "score": "1.4872377" }, { "id": "7979997", "title": "Władysław Hieronim Sanguszko", "text": " Prince Władysław Hieronim Sanguszko (1803&ndash;1870) was a Polish nobleman, landowner, conservative politician. Władysław participated in the November Uprising in 1830&ndash;1831. He was owner of Gumniśki estate and ran there an Arabian horse stud farm. From 1861 to 1869 member of the National Sejm in Galicia and member of the Herrenhaus. An opposite of the January Uprising of 1863&ndash;1864. Since 1854 chairman of the \"Society of Friends of Arts\" in Kraków.", "score": "1.4853508" }, { "id": "15320357", "title": "Władysław Czapliński", "text": " Władysław Czapliński (3 October 1905 in Tuchów – 17 August 1981 in Wrocław) was a Polish historian, a professor of the University of Wrocław, author of many popular books about Polish history. He finished his studies at the Jagiellonian University in 1927 in the Second Polish Republic, and for the next several years he was a teacher of history. During the Second World War he took part in the underground education in Poland during World War II. After the war he moved to Wrocław, where he worked at the local university until his retirement in 1975. He received many awards, including an honoris causa diploma from University of Gdańsk. He specialized in the 17th century: history of Denmark, Chmielnicki Uprising, Władysław IV Vasa and the Thirty Years' War.", "score": "1.4786971" }, { "id": "26440810", "title": "Władysław Ważny", "text": " Władysław Ważny was born on 3 February 1908 in the village of Ruda Różaniecka to a peasant family. He was the son of Błażej and Maria née Sigłowa and was the oldest of their five daughters and four sons. He attended the teacher's seminary in Cieszanów. After graduating from a teacher's seminary in 1930, he worked as a village teacher in Bobrówka, then in Surochów and in Sośnica near Jarosław, where he became headmaster. In January 1934 he was awarded the rank of second lieutenant in the Polish Army reserve.", "score": "1.478214" }, { "id": "28685225", "title": "Walery Sławek", "text": " to the fact that in late 1930 and early 1931, Józef Piłsudski spent three months in Madeira, Sławek was de facto the most important person in Poland. He faced several difficulties: the economic situation of the country was worsening, the opposition fiercely attacked the cabinet, and the Pacification of Ukrainians in Eastern Galicia (1930) had just ended. Sławek urged members of the BBWR not to engage in any talks with the opposition, and the government quickly accepted a number of new regulations. At the same time, the case of Minister of Treasury, Gabriel Czechowicz, was dropped without ruling due to pressure from the regime. On May 26, 1931, Sławek resigned from his ", "score": "1.4758694" }, { "id": "3242216", "title": "Władysław Stępień", "text": " Władysław Piotr Stępień (born 24 October 1946 in Wrzawy) is a Polish politician. He was elected to Sejm on September 25, 2005 getting 10505 votes in 23 Rzeszów district, candidating from Democratic Left Alliance list. He was also a member of Sejm 1993-1997, Sejm 1997-2001, and Sejm 2001-2005.", "score": "1.4731184" }, { "id": "26440811", "title": "Władysław Ważny", "text": " After the outbreak of World War II, he participated in the September campaign as a platoon commander in the 39th Lwów Rifles Infantry Regiment (stationed in Jarosław). After the conquest of Poland by Nazi Germany and Soviet invasion of Poland, in October 1939, he escaped to France, where he joined the emerging Polish Army in France (1939–40). After the Fall of France, along with the 2nd Rifle Division (Poland), he journeyed to an internment camp in Switzerland. He escaped and traveled through France to Spain. He was arrested in the Pyrenees. From 21 January to 25 July 1943 he was imprisoned in Barcelona. He was transferred to the concentration camp ", "score": "1.4716456" }, { "id": "1960823", "title": "Władysław the White", "text": " Władysław (Włodko) the White or Władysław of Gniewkowo (Władysław (Włodko) Biały (Gniewkowski); ca. 1327/1333 &ndash; 29 February 1388), was a Polish prince member of the House of Piast, Duke of Gniewkowo during 1347/1350–1363/1364 (his final and official resignation was in 1377) and last male representative of the Kujavian line. He was the only surviving son of Kazimierz III of Gniewkowo by his unknown wife.", "score": "1.4665569" }, { "id": "26440809", "title": "Władysław Ważny", "text": " Władysław Ważny (3 February 1908 &ndash; 19 August 1944), also known as Wladyslaw Rozmus and Tiger, was a Polish Army officer and Special Operations Executive agent. He served during World War II. He searched for German V-1 flying bomb and V-2 launchers in occupied France and was an organizer of the French resistance movement.", "score": "1.4641547" }, { "id": "27296058", "title": "Władysław Frasyniuk", "text": " Władysław Frasyniuk (born 25 November 1954 in Wrocław) is a Polish politician, former activist of Solidarity trade union, and former chairman of the Partia Demokratyczna - demokraci.pl political party. He served as a member of the Sejm (Polish parliament) from 1991 to 2001.", "score": "1.4626682" } ]
What is Walter Köbel's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Walter Köbel
141,296
81
[ { "id": "27087355", "title": "Jacob Köbel", "text": " Jacob Köbel (1462–1533) was a printer and publisher in Oppenheim. Köbel graduated in arts and law from Heidelberg University in 1491. He appears to have then studied mathematics at Cracow, and is said to have been a fellow student of Copernicus there. He learnt the publishing trade as editor and proofreader for Heinrich Knoblochtzer in Heidelberg. In 1494 he married a woman from Oppenheim and settled there as secretary to the city council.", "score": "1.5726118" }, { "id": "9412328", "title": "Arthur Kober", "text": " Kober was born into a Jewish family in Brody, Galicia, in what was then the Austro-Hungarian Empire (now part of western Ukraine). His family emigrated to the United States when he was 4. They first moved to Harlem before settling in The Bronx. He attended the High School Of Commerce (later known as Louis D. Brandeis High School) for one semester before working at a series of jobs, including as a stock clerk at Gimbels. He then found work as a theatrical press agent for the Shubert brothers, Jed Harris, Herman Shumlin, and Ruth Draper. His grandnephew is actor Andrew Kober. Kober married Lillian Hellman on December 31, 1925. During their marriage, they often lived apart. They divorced in 1932, after Hellman had started a relationship with Dashiell Hammett. He later married Margaret Frohnknecht in 1941, who died in 1951. They had one daughter, Catherine.", "score": "1.5229936" }, { "id": "15116559", "title": "Walter Köberle", "text": " Walter Köberle (born 13 January 1949 in Kaufbeuren) is an ice hockey player who played for the West German national team. He won a bronze medal at the 1976 Winter Olympics.", "score": "1.5208666" }, { "id": "25202427", "title": "Kobell", "text": "Ferdinand Kobell (1740–1799), German painter and engraver ; Franz Kobell (1749–1822), German painter, etcher, and draftsman ; Hendrik Kobell (1751–1779), Dutch landscape and marine painter, etcher, draftsman, and watercolorist ; Jan Kobell (1779–1814), Dutch animal and landscape painter ; Wilhelm von Kobell (1766–1853), German painter, printmaker, and teacher ; Wolfgang Franz von Kobell (1803–1882), German mineralogist, inventor, writer, and poet Kobell (Surname) may refer to: ", "score": "1.502058" }, { "id": "10231097", "title": "Hermann Kober", "text": " Hermann Kober (born 1888 in Beuthen, Germany (now Bytom, Poland), died 4 October 1973 in Birmingham, England) was a Jewish-German mathematician who introduced Erdélyi–Kober operators. He taught (mathematics and science), up to the early 1960s, at some of the King Edward VI Foundation schools in Birmingham.", "score": "1.4929051" }, { "id": null, "title": "Rüsselsheim am Main", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "World Slavery Tour", "text": "World Slavery Tour\n\nThe World Slavery Tour was a concert tour by the heavy metal band Iron Maiden in support of their fifth album, \"Powerslave\", beginning in Warsaw, Poland on 9 August 1984 and ending in Irvine, California on 5 July 1985.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Oppenheim", "text": "Oppenheim\n\nOppenheim () is a town in the Mainz-Bingen district of Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany. The town is a well-known wine center, being the home of the German Winegrowing Museum, and is particularly known for the wines from the Oppenheimer Krötenbrunnen vineyards.", "score": null }, { "id": "15405057", "title": "Adolf Kober", "text": "Adolf Kober Adolf Kober (3 September 1879 in Beuthen, Oberschlesien; - 30 December 1958 in New York City) was a rabbi and a historian. Kober studied History, Philosophy and Oriental Languages at the University of Breslau (Wrocław) and received a PhD there in 1903 with a thesis on the medieval history of the Jews in Cologne. He attended the Jewish Theological Seminary in Breslau, receiving his rabbinical diploma from Israel Lewi in 1907. From 1906 to 1908 he acted as substitute rabbi and religious instructor in the Cologne community. From 1908 to 1918 he was rabbi of the City and", "score": "1.4703424" }, { "id": "9585448", "title": "Craig Kobel", "text": "a sports hernia and underwent season-ending surgery. Kobel reached an injury settlement with the Eagles and was waived by the Philadelphia Eagles on August 28, 2007. Kobel signed a contract as a draft pick with Team Florida of the All-American Football League. Kobel signed with the New York Jets on June 9, 2009. He was waived on August 30. Craig Kobel Craig Kobel (born January 26, 1982) is a former American football linebacker. He was signed by the Utah Blaze as a free agent in 2006. He played college football at South Florida. Kobel has also been a member of", "score": "1.4547296" }, { "id": "9412327", "title": "Arthur Kober", "text": " Arthur Kober (August 25, 1900 – June 12, 1975) was an American humorist, author, press agent, and screenwriter. He was married to the dramatist Lillian Hellman.", "score": "1.4926208" }, { "id": "4381790", "title": "Heinrich Köberle", "text": " Heinrich Köberle, born in 1946, is a German athlete. He competes in wheelchair marathons in a handcycle, and has won four gold medals in marathons at the Paralympic Games - more than any other athlete. He holds the record for the fastest men's marathon in his disability category (the most severe for wheelchair athletes), set in Berlin in 1995, in 2:23:08.", "score": "1.4486706" }, { "id": "25379440", "title": "Ferdinand Kobell", "text": " Ferdinand Kobell (7 June 1740, Mannheim – 1 February 1799, Munich) was a German painter and copper engraver.", "score": "1.4388636" }, { "id": "27738917", "title": "Christian Koeberl", "text": " Born in Vienna, Austria, in 1959, Köberl attended a technical high school specializing in chemistry, and from 1978 studied chemistry and physics at the Technical University of Vienna, as well as astronomy at the University of Vienna. In 1983, he completed his PhD studies at the University of Graz, Austria, with a dissertation in cosmochemistry. In 1985 he joined the faculty of the newly founded Institute of Geochemistry at the University of Vienna, becoming an assistant professor. In 1988, he joined the Lunar and Planetary Institute (Houston, TX, USA) and the NASA Johnson Space Center for half a year as a ", "score": "1.4372902" }, { "id": "25088156", "title": "Peter Kobel", "text": " Peter Kobel (born 25 April 1969) is a retired Swiss football goalkeeper.", "score": "1.4371166" }, { "id": "27743437", "title": "Wolfgang Franz von Kobell", "text": " Kobell was born in Munich, Bavaria (where he also died), son of the painter Wilhelm Kobell. After studying mineralogy in Landshut, he became professor of mineralogy in 1826 at the University of Munich, and in 1856 was appointed first curator of the Bavarian State collection of minerals. His greatest contributions were new methods in crystallography. In 1855 he invented the stauroscope for the study of the optical properties of crystals. The mineral kobellite is named after him, and he invented a comparative fusibility scale. Besides his work as a mineralogist, Kobell is also famous for writing many short stories and ", "score": "1.4352949" }, { "id": "3502037", "title": "Theodor Kober", "text": " Theodor Kober (born February 13, 1865 in Stuttgart; died December 20, 1930 in Friedrichshafen) was a twentieth-century German aviation engineer who contributed to the building of the first Zeppelin.", "score": "1.4282252" }, { "id": "11113293", "title": "Adolf Kober", "text": " distress among people ashamed to ask for aid (Notstand für veschaemte Armte). In 1925 he took the responsibility of the interregional department for Jewish history at the “Millennium Exhibition of Rhineland“, that took place in the Cologne Fair grounds. In Cologne Kober started in 1929 the \"Jüdische Lehrhaus (Jewish training house)\" as a site for Jewish adults education and took the responsibility in the same year of the planning of the contents of the Jewish press pavilion in the large Cologne culture exhibition \"Pressa\". Beside his rabbi activity Kober devoted himself to several scientific publications on the history of Jews of Rhineland. He was a member of the editorial staff of ", "score": "1.4254957" }, { "id": "11113292", "title": "Adolf Kober", "text": " Kober studied History, Philosophy and Oriental Languages at the University of Breslau (Wrocław) and received a PhD there in 1903 with a thesis on the medieval history of the Jews in Cologne. He attended the Jewish Theological Seminary in Breslau, receiving his rabbinical diploma from Israel Lewi in 1907. From 1906 to 1908 he acted as substitute rabbi and religious instructor in the Cologne community. From 1908 to 1918 he was rabbi of the City and district of Wiesbaden. In 1918 he took in Cologne, the then-largest Jewish community in Germany, the office of community rabbi. In 1922, at the time of the inflation, he founded an organization for the relief ", "score": "1.4246259" }, { "id": "5407794", "title": "Walter Abell", "text": " Walter Halsey Abell was born in 1897 in Brooklyn, New York. The Barnes Foundation sponsored him to study in France. He became a teacher of art and an art theoretician, interpreting art from Marxist and psychological viewpoints. He taught at Antioch College in Yellow Springs, Ohio (1925–27).", "score": "1.4185534" }, { "id": "14348305", "title": "Patrik Köbele", "text": " Patrik Köbele (born 1962 in Weil am Rhein) is a German politician and leader of the German Communist Party (DKP). Between 1989 and 1994, Köbele was leader of the Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterjugend (SDAJ), the DKP's youth organization. Between 2004 and 2009, he was member of the city council of Essen. He has advocated for the reinstitution of the Stasi and forced labor camps. On 2 March 2013 he was elected leader of the DKP. Köbele won with 91 to 60 votes against former leader Bettina Jürgensen. Köbele defended the Berlin Wall and Inner German Border as a guard in the 1980s and has stated that both were necessary for East Germany's security. For his service, he was awarded the Order of Karl Marx. Privately, Köbele lives in Essen with his two children and works as IT consultant. He has cited former East German leaders Erich Honecker, Willi Stoph, Hilde Benjamin and Erich Mielke as his childhood heroes. He is close friends with former East German leader Egon Krenz.", "score": "1.4124503" }, { "id": "5874076", "title": "Kevin Kobel", "text": " Kevin Richard Kobel (born October 2, 1953) is a former professional baseball pitcher. Having made his major league debut with the Milwaukee Brewers a month shy of his twentieth birthday on September 8,, he is the only pitcher in franchise history to make his major league debut as a teenager.", "score": "1.4123511" }, { "id": "7661466", "title": "Fritz Köberle", "text": " Fritz Köberle was born in Eichgraben, Austria, and studied medicine at the University of Vienna, Austria, graduating magna cum laude in 1934. He began to work in the Institute of Pathology while he was a student and, soon after his 1935 graduation, he was admitted as an assistant professor. With the annexation of Austria to Germany (Anschluss), Köberle was drafted into the Army as a medical lieutenant and worked as a pathologist in the Central Army Hospital of Vienna. With the outbreak of the Second World War hostilities, Köberle was attached as field pathologist to the XII Army Group of the Wehrmacht in 1940 and served in the fronts of France, Belgium, Poland and Russia. He was able to acquire during this period an enormous experience on ", "score": "1.4120641" }, { "id": "30845229", "title": "Gerhard Beil", "text": " After completing primary school, Beil trained as a commercial clerk. From 1943 to 1945 he was with the Reich Labor Service. In April 1944 he applied for membership in the NSDAP, but was rejected in October 1944. In 1945 he became a locksmith and worked in the sales department of I.G. Farben in Frankfurt am Main (1946/1947), as a machinist in the brown coal plant Espenhain, miner at Wismut AG Aue (1949) and steel locksmith in Leipzig (1950 to 1952). In 1949 Beil joined the FDJ. He studied in Berlin from 1953/1954 at the Hochschule für Planökonomie and until 1957 at the Humboldt-Universität with a degree in economics. In 1953 he joined the SED. From 1954 to 1956 he worked as a department and main department ", "score": "1.4087837" }, { "id": "25379488", "title": "Franz Kobell", "text": " Franz Kobell (23 November 1749 in Mannheim &ndash; 14 January 1822 in Munich) was a German painter, etcher and draftsman.", "score": "1.4087589" } ]
What is John Barnes's occupation?
[ "monk", "monks" ]
occupation
John Barnes (monk)
4,700,304
69
[ { "id": "7412922", "title": "John Barnes", "text": "As of 6 September 2009 ", "score": "1.8023908" }, { "id": "8427426", "title": "John Barnes (musician)", "text": " John Barnes (born 15 May 1932) is an English-born jazz saxophonist and clarinettist, who played New Orleans-styled jazz in his early career, but later also played saxophones in the mainstream style.", "score": "1.7524852" }, { "id": "7633583", "title": "John Barnes (athlete)", "text": " John Barnes (October 12, 1929 &ndash; August 25, 2004) was an American middle-distance runner. He competed in the men's 800 metres at the 1952 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.7301924" }, { "id": "7412872", "title": "John Barnes", "text": " John Charles Bryan Barnes MBE (born 7 November 1963) is a former professional football player and manager. He currently works as a commentator and pundit for ESPN and SuperSport. Initially a quick, skilful left winger, he moved to central midfield later in his career. Barnes won two league titles with Liverpool, with whom he also won two cup finals at Wembley. He was also an FA Cup runner-up with Watford, Liverpool and Newcastle United. Barnes earned 79 international caps for England. Barnes was born and initially raised in Jamaica as the son of a military officer from Trinidad and Tobago and a Jamaican mother. He moved to London, England with his family when he was 12 years old. ", "score": "1.71735" }, { "id": "28029821", "title": "John Barnes (Australian footballer)", "text": " John Barnes (born 1 June 1969) is a retired Australian rules footballer in the Australian Football League.", "score": "1.7131666" }, { "id": null, "title": "John Barnes", "text": "John Barnes\n\nJohn Charles Bryan Barnes MBE (born 7 November 1963) is a former professional football player and manager. He currently works as an author, commentator and pundit for ESPN and SuperSport. Initially a quick, skilful left winger, he moved to central midfield later in his career. Barnes won two league titles with Liverpool, with whom he also won two cup finals at Wembley. He was also an FA Cup runner-up with Watford, Liverpool and Newcastle United. Barnes earned 79 international caps for England.\n\nBarnes was born and initially raised in Jamaica as the son of a military officer from Trinidad and Tobago and a Jamaican mother. He moved to London, England with his family when he was 12 years old. Barnes joined Watford aged 17 in 1981 before playing 296 competitive games for them scoring 85 goals. He was a Watford 1984 FA Cup Final runner-up. He debuted for England in 1983 and in 1987 joined Liverpool for £900,000. In his 10 seasons there Liverpool won the then top-flight First Division twice and the FA Cup twice. He scored 106 goals in 403 matches. By the time of his last cap in 1995, he had more caps than any other black England player. After two years at Newcastle United, he ended his playing career at Charlton Athletic in 1999.\n\nBarnes was the PFA Players' Player of the Year once (in 1987–88) and the Football Writers' Association Footballer of the Year twice (in 1987–88 and 1989–90). In the run-up to England's 1990 FIFA World Cup campaign he recorded a rap for the official team song, New Order's \"World in Motion\". In 2005, he was inducted into the English Football Hall of Fame. In 2006, in a poll of Liverpool fans' favourite players, Barnes came fifth; a year later, \"FourFourTwo\" magazine named him Liverpool's best all time player. In 2016, \"The Times\" readers voted him England's greatest ever left-footed player. \n\nBarnes had 8 months as Celtic head coach when his former Liverpool manager Kenny Dalglish was director of football. Barnes has since managed the Jamaica national team in 2008–09 and English club Tranmere Rovers for four months in 2009.\n\nBarnes has published two books, including \"John Barnes: The Autobiography\" (1999), which was followed by \"The Uncomfortable Truth About Racism\" (2021); the latter was met with a largely positive reception. In 2022, he returned to Liverpool as an official Club Ambassador.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Barnes (author)", "text": "John Barnes (author)\n\nJohn Barnes (born 1957 in Angola, Indiana) is an American science fiction author.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Barnes Chance", "text": "John Barnes Chance\n\nJohn Barnes Chance (November 20, 1932 – August 16, 1972) was an American composer. Chance studied composition with Clifton Williams at the University of Texas, Austin, and is best known for his concert band works, which include \"Variations on a Korean Folk Song\", \"Incantation and Dance\", and \"Blue Lake Overture\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Barnes (musician)", "text": "John Barnes (musician)\n\nJohn Barnes (born 15 May 1932) is an English-born jazz saxophonist and clarinettist, who played New Orleans-styled jazz in his early career, but later also played saxophones in the mainstream style.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Barnes Wells", "text": "John Barnes Wells\n\nJohn Barnes \"Jack\" Wells (October 17, 1880 – August 8, 1935), was an American composer and singer. He sang as a tenor. He was once described as \"one of the best known concert singers in New York.\" He was a popular singer and was featured on many 78-rpm recordings released in the early 1900s. He starred in the 1903 musical theater production of \"The Wizard of Oz\".\n", "score": null }, { "id": "25920547", "title": "John Barnes (outfielder)", "text": " John Delbert Barnes (born April 24, 1976) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. Barnes is a graduate of Granite Hills High School and attended Grossmont College in El Cajon, California", "score": "1.6917255" }, { "id": "6625606", "title": "John Barnes (New South Wales politician)", "text": " John Frederick Barnes (1838 &ndash; 21 April 1915) was an English-born Australian politician. He was born in London to storekeeper John Barnes and Elizabeth Ellen King. The family emigrated to New South Wales and settled at Little River, a small sheep station near Yass. Young John attended Burwood Denominational School until the age of fourteen, when he went to the Turon River gold rush. After trying unsuccessfully at Ophir and Abercrombie, he returned to Sydney to be apprenticed to a cabinet maker. After another abortive attempt on the goldfields, he worked as a salesman. In 1860 he married Jane Marshall in Sydney; they would have seven children. ", "score": "1.6886858" }, { "id": "29119139", "title": "John Barnes (Australian politician)", "text": " Barnes was born at Hamilton, South Australia, the son of John Thomas Barnes, a drover who had emigrated from Somerset, England, and his wife, Mary, née Comerford, from County Clare, Ireland. Barnes was educated at a local primary school but left to obtain work as a farm labourer, shearer, miner and general bush worker; his father had died when the boy was six. In his swag he carried copies of works by Henry George, Robert Blatchford, Henry Lawson and other writers on economic and social questions and he thus became largely self-educated.", "score": "1.6632266" }, { "id": "29119138", "title": "John Barnes (Australian politician)", "text": " John Barnes (17 July 1868 – 31 January 1938) was a union official and Australian federal politician representing the Labor Party.", "score": "1.6598101" }, { "id": "27251482", "title": "John E. Barnes Jr.", "text": " John E. Barnes Jr. (born June 12, 1958) is an American politician who served as a member of the Ohio House of Representatives, representing the 12th district from 2011 to 2018. He formerly served in the same seat from January 1999 to February 2002.", "score": "1.6494079" }, { "id": "27251483", "title": "John E. Barnes Jr.", "text": " Barnes was born in Cleveland, Ohio and raised in the Union–Miles Park neighborhood. He earned a Master of Science degree in business management from Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University.", "score": "1.6449823" }, { "id": "7412875", "title": "John Barnes", "text": " Barnes was born in Jamaica, to Roderick Kenrick \"Ken\" Barnes (a Trinidadian) and Frances Jeanne Hill (a Jamaican). Ken Barnes hailed from Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago emigrating to Jamaica in 1956 as a member of the West India Regiment. He joined the Jamaica Defence Force when formed after the nation's 1962 independence when he was initially commanding officer of the 1st Battalion Jamaica Regiment. In 1973 he was promoted to colonel remaining in the army until retiring in 1989. While in the army, he was a semi-professional footballer for a Jamaica National Premier League club and also captained the Jamaica national football team. Barnes spent his early childhood living in Jamaica's biggest military base, playing football ", "score": "1.640392" }, { "id": "2613445", "title": "John Barnes (mayor)", "text": " John Barnes (24 December 1817–18 November 1889) was Mayor of Dunedin, New Zealand, in 1885. Barnes was born in Stockport in 1817. He emigrated to Port Chalmers aboard the Nourmabal, arriving in May 1858, where he began business as a carter and contractor, ferrying goods to the goldfields, and contracting for public works. He held contracts for the construction of Rattray Street, Stuart Street, Pelichet Bay jetties, and a part of the Port Chalmers railway. Barnes was elected to the Town Board in 1863 and the new Town Council in 1866. Barnes was also appointed inspector of works in 1877, and ultimately mayor in 1885, despite ", "score": "1.6224827" }, { "id": "3090638", "title": "John Barnes (judge)", "text": " John Barnes (July 26, 1859 – January 1, 1919) was an American attorney and judge from Wisconsin. He was a justice of the Wisconsin Supreme Court from 1908 until 1916, and was one of the first Wisconsin Railroad Commissioners. He worked as general counsel for the Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company from 1916 until his death.", "score": "1.6205775" }, { "id": "14949271", "title": "John Barnes (manager)", "text": " John Sloane Barnes (August 30, 1855 - September 15, 1929) was a Minor League Baseball manager, athlete, promoter, and proponent of physical fitness. Born in Ireland, Barnes organized the Pacific Northwest League in 1890, the first professional baseball league in the region. In that same year, he led the Spokane team to the Pacific Northwest League pennant. After managing the Portland Webfeet in 1892, he played a key role in the reorganization of the Western League, which later became the American League, before devoting a decade to the promotion of physical fitness in China. In 1909, Barnes returned to manage the Butte Miners in Montana, and in 1915 operated the Aberdeen Black Cats franchise. Barnes is interred at Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park in Seattle, Washington.", "score": "1.6170199" }, { "id": "28029822", "title": "John Barnes (Australian footballer)", "text": " Barnes' VFL/AFL career included two State of Origin games for Victoria.", "score": "1.6169891" }, { "id": "33060166", "title": "John Barnes (computer scientist)", "text": " John Gilbert Presslie Barnes is a British computer scientist best known for his role in developing and publicising the programming language Ada. He is the primary inventor of and protagonist for the Ada Rendezvous mechanism. Barnes studied mathematics at University of Cambridge and later worked at Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI). He was an industrial fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford in the very late 1970s or early 1980s, most likely at the suggestion of Professor Tony Hoare. Before working on the Ada design team, while at ICI, he designed and implemented a dialect of the language ALGOL, named Real-Time Language 2 (RTL/2) for real-time computing. Barnes was awarded an honorary Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) from the University of York in 2006.", "score": "1.6133723" }, { "id": "431321", "title": "John Barnes (Scottish broadcaster)", "text": " John Barnes (born Irvine; c. 1960) is a sports commentator working for BBC Scotland. He is one of the most respected sports broadcasters in Scotland and has worked on both television and radio, mainly as a football commentator on the flagship programmes Sportscene and Sportsound. He joined the BBC in 1993 after previously having worked in broadcasting for Radio Clyde, STV, West Sound Radio and BT Supercall Sport. Barnes was a writer for the Scottish Daily Express before joining the BBC. He commentated for the BBC at the 1998 World Cup Finals in France, the last time Scotland were at the finals of a major tournament. He was the last Scot to provide radio commentary on a ", "score": "1.6086035" }, { "id": "32266206", "title": "John Barnes Jr.", "text": " John S. Barnes Jr. is an American politician who served in the New Hampshire Senate for the 17th district, from 1992 to 1998 and again from 2000 to 2012. A member of the Republican Party, he previously served as a member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives from 1988 until 1992. He won the New Hampshire primary for Vice President of the United States in 2008. The following year, he co-sponsored a bill which abolished the vice-presidential preference ballot. The bill passed both houses of the state legislature and took effect in 2012.", "score": "1.60373" }, { "id": "28029834", "title": "John Barnes (Australian footballer)", "text": " Barnes was a runner for Essendon and was fined by the AFL for spending too long on the ground, before he was controversially suspended for two matches by the AFL for interfering with play during the 2005 season. In 2004, he played for the East Keilor Football Club in the Essendon District Football League. He participated in the 2006 AFL Legends Match, playing for Victoria. Barnes became the ruck coach for the Western Bulldogs in the 2008 season. In 2009, he was appointed as coach of the Doutta Stars Football Club in the Essendon District Football League. He also had a stint as the ruck coach for the Collingwood Football Club, but left that role and 'got completely out of footy' to become, as of 2015, a garbage collector in suburban Melbourne.", "score": "1.6033407" } ]
What is Adil Shamoo's occupation?
[ "biochemist", "biological chemist" ]
occupation
Adil Shamoo
3,228,628
86
[ { "id": "12791863", "title": "Adil Abdel Aati", "text": " Adil Entered elementary, middle and high Schools in Atbara, Sudan. He studied later at the Faculty of Law at Cairo University, Khartoum Branch (Now Neelain University) in Khartoum, Sudan in the years 1985-1988. In Poland he studied Polish Language and Literature at University of Łódź in the academic year 1988-1989. He studied journalism and political science at the faculty of Journalism and Political Science at the University of Warsaw (1989-2004) and at Warsaw School of Journalism (2005-2007). Adil has taken many courses and training (1997–Present) and gained several certificates in the fields of IT, Finance, Services and Leadership", "score": "1.4366119" }, { "id": "3496592", "title": "Adil Omar", "text": " Adil Omar (born 17 May 1991) is a recording artist, rapper, record producer, singer and songwriter from Islamabad, Pakistan. He released his debut album and film, Transcendence, on 8 July 2018. In addition to being a solo artist, he is also involved in the songwriting and production for other artists.", "score": "1.4205775" }, { "id": "14996946", "title": "Shamsher-ul-Hyderi", "text": " During his professional career, Shamsher-ul-Hyderi held a variety of jobs. His various employers included: the Pakistan Public Works Department (as clerk), the Cooperative Bank in Badin (as manager), the Sindhi Adabi Board (as clerk, and in 1993 Secretary), Mehran magazine (as assistant editor), Naee Zindagi Monthly magazine (as editor), the National Shipping Corporation (as publishing manager), Daily Mehran newspaper (as editor), and Daily Hilal Pakistan newspaper (as editor).", "score": "1.412755" }, { "id": "12791864", "title": "Adil Abdel Aati", "text": " Adil worked professionally in the areas of education, journalism, media, publishing, translation, business services and NGOs. He worked while studying as porter and bar-mate (1990-1997) later as teacher (1997-1999). He was a co-founder, member of the Board and General Director of Omda International LTD, (1999-2003). He worked as Vice-Chairman of the Board and General Director of OIA Ltd (2003- 2005). Adil run his own private business and he is the Owner and General Director of Amalia Services (2005 – present). He worked also as Analyst and an Economic Adviser on Poland and Central and Eastern Europe and the Baltic States for several Arabic embassies in Poland (2005–present). He was a member of the Board of Supervisors of Mayfair Capital Polska S.A., HÖHER S.A, Mayfair Business Services S.A, and he is now a member of the Board of Supervisors of the Accounting Office ECONOM Ltd. and CEO of the Harambi Foundation.", "score": "1.4126377" }, { "id": "9455144", "title": "Shamsul Alam Dudu", "text": " Dudu was born on 10 November 1957. He has a B.A., M.A., and law degree.", "score": "1.3780065" }, { "id": null, "title": "Adil Shamoo", "text": "Adil Shamoo\n\nAdil E. Shamoo (born August 1, 1941) is an Iraqi biochemist with an interest in biomedical ethics and foreign policy. He is currently a professor at the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at the University of Maryland.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Stanley Pons", "text": "Stanley Pons\n\nBobby Stanley Pons (born August 23, 1943) is an American electrochemist known for his work with Martin Fleischmann on cold fusion in the 1980s and 1990s.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Martin Fleischmann", "text": "Martin Fleischmann\n\nMartin Fleischmann FRS (29 March 1927 – 3 August 2012) was a British chemist who worked in electrochemistry.<ref name = \"CSM2012\">", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tony LaMadrid", "text": "Tony LaMadrid\n\nAntonio \"Tony\" LaMadrid (born 1968; died 1991) was both a patient and research subject at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Medical Center. He is believed to have committed suicide by jumping off the roof of a nine-story building. His death led to a federal investigation by the Office for Human Research Protections/Office of Protection from Research Risks that concluded UCLA had violated aspects of informed consent. The research subjects were not told how severe their possible relapses might be.\n\nLaMadrid had schizophrenia and the research study he was involved in was titled, \"Developmental Processes in Schizophrenic Disorders\". The study began in 1983 and was run by psychologist Keith H. Nuechterlein, and psychiatrist Michael Gitlin.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Iraqis", "text": "List of Iraqis\n\nThis list of Iraqis includes people who were born in Iraq and people who are of Iraqi ancestry, who are significantly notable for their life and/or work.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\ncamp in Israel to the Iraqi Jewish immigrants Bertha and Gabriel Gavriel. \n Ahmad Harhash born July 20 2001 syrian Canadian Actor\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "12616969", "title": "Shamim Farooqui", "text": " He was from Bihar, India. He did his schooling from Gumla High School and did M.A. in Urdu from Ranchi University.", "score": "1.3709288" }, { "id": "2243302", "title": "Shama Ishaq Baloch", "text": " Baloch was born in 1969 in Mastung District. She has a degree of the Bachelor of Medicine and Bachelor of Surgery from Bolan Medical College.", "score": "1.3709238" }, { "id": "5263835", "title": "Adi Shamir", "text": " Born in Tel Aviv, Shamir received a Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree in mathematics from Tel Aviv University in 1973 and obtained his Master of Science (MSc) and Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) degrees in Computer Science from the Weizmann Institute in 1975 and 1977 respectively.", "score": "1.3634496" }, { "id": "32940831", "title": "Muhammad Adil", "text": " Muhammad Adil Iqbal (born 9 July 1992 ) is a Pakistani footballer who plays as a midfielder for Hawkescity F.C of National Premier Leagues NSW in Australia and the Pakistan national team. A right-footed player, he usually plays as central midfielder. Earlier in his career he primarily played as a wide midfielder. Adil is known for his dribbling skills, speed, crossing ability and his accurate right foot long-range shots from the centre of midfield. Adil first came to prominence with Pak Elektron, signing a professional contract for the club at the age of 18 - scoring six goals in 25 appearances in his first season. The following season he signed for Khan Research Laboratories, where he went ", "score": "1.3584201" }, { "id": "28371739", "title": "Ajmal Shams", "text": " Ajmal Shams (born 1972 in Noorgal district of Kunar province) is an Afghan politician. Shams has been president of the Afghan Social Democratic Party since October 2005. He served as Deputy Minister of the Ministry of Urban Development and Housing in the Afghan Government since December 2016 till June 2018. He speaks Pashto, Persian, English and Urdu. He is a certified Project Management Professional (PMP) with Project Management Institute (PMI) and a Licensed Professional Engineer in the state of Kentucky, USA. Shams is a regular columnist in the Middle East's reputed English daily newspaper Arab News mainly writing on political, developmental and economic issues of Afghanistan. He also contributes opinion articles for various other international media outlets including Foreign Policy, Diplomat, National Interest, Gulf News, Global Times (China), Korea Times and others.", "score": "1.3575487" }, { "id": "12791862", "title": "Adil Abdel Aati", "text": " Adil Abdel Aati was born in the city of Atbara in River Nile State, in the Republic of Sudan on 04/02/1966. He left Sudan in 1988 to Poland and since then he lives and works between the two countries in the cities of Atbara – Sudan and Warsaw – Poland.", "score": "1.3564394" }, { "id": "890397", "title": "Adil Ibrahim", "text": " Adil Ibrahim has his roots at Tirur, Malappuram, Kerala, India. He was born in Dubai, United Arab Emirates. He pursued his academic career from New Indian Model School and Birla Institute of Technology and Science, Pilani – Dubai Campus. After completing his graduation in engineering, he worked for nearly two years before leaving the job to pursue a career in acting.", "score": "1.3555079" }, { "id": "1971776", "title": "Ali Shamal Abdulla", "text": " Shamal began playing football as a goalkeeper, in island level tournaments for the neighbourhood club, Dhoondigalona. He later had a brief trial at Maziya before playing for Dhoondigan as a back-up keeper for the 2015 Minivan Championship. In 2016, he joined Club Eagles and played there three seasons before joining United Victory in 2020.", "score": "1.3546605" }, { "id": "11381575", "title": "Adil Mansuri", "text": " Adil Mansuri was born in Ahmedabad on 18 May 1936. He completed his primary education from Premchand Raichand Training College, Ahmedabad. He completed his secondary education from J. L. New English School, Ahmedabad and Metropolitan Highschool, Karachi. He completed matriculation. He tried his hand on several businesses. He worked at his father's cloth shop in Karachi and later at business of cotton and clothes in Ahmedabad. He also worked as journalist with English Topic and Gujarati Angana magazines. He was copywriter of advertising agency Shilpi in 1972. He left India and moved to United States. He died in New Jersey, US on 6 November 2008.", "score": "1.3360562" }, { "id": "1971775", "title": "Ali Shamal Abdulla", "text": " Ali Shamal Abdulla (born 21 March 1999) is a Maldivian professional footballer who plays as a right-back or centre-back for United Victory and Maldives national team.", "score": "1.3360544" }, { "id": "32940838", "title": "Muhammad Adil", "text": " Adil was born in Bahawalpur, Punjab and was a fruit and sugarcane seller, going around the streets of Bahwalpur with his cart, to financially support his family. However, he used to play football whenever he found the time and thus was scouted when he got selected for the regional team in the National U-14 Championship held in 2006. He eventually impressed the coaches to secure a call-up for the Pakistan U-14 side that took part in AFC Festival of Football in Bangladesh. Adil has described the Argentina national team player Carlos Tevez as his ideal football star and has been compared with Brazilian footballer Roberto Carlos for his quick pace and composure by the local media in Pakistan. He is considered one of the best footballers in South Asia alongside fellow Pakistani Kaleemullah Khan, Sunil Chetri from India and Ali Ashfaq from Maldives. In an interview with Football Pakistan, Adil said that he enjoys eating the national dish of Kyrgyzstan, Pilaf, which is a particular favourite of his, and he also enjoys grabbing a slice of pizza or two when possible.", "score": "1.3336074" }, { "id": "26748940", "title": "Adil Charkaoui", "text": " Adil Charkaoui (in Arabic عادل الشرقاوي born 1974) is a Morocco-born Canadian citizen who was arrested by the Canadian government under a security certificate in May 2003. Before issuing the certificate, evidence was submitted that he had trained in an anti-Soviet Jihadist camp in Afghanistan. The court was also not satisfied with his reasons for visiting Pakistan for six months in 1990. Evidence that he practiced Karate was also among the submissions. Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) testimonies included opinions that he would also \"have been trained in such areas as: operating rocket-propelled grenade-launchers, sabotage, urban and assassination.\" CSIS also alleged that \"[i]t was noteworthy that one of those who participated in the hijacking of [the September 11 attacks in 2001] had taken martial arts training in preparation...\" and suggested that Charkaoui represented a sleeper agent. This led to the issuance of the security certificate by the two responsible government ministers after which he was detained, and such evidence was also enough to uphold the certificate by Federal Court upon review.", "score": "1.3322264" }, { "id": "8312076", "title": "Nurali Yusifbayli", "text": " Yusifbayli Nurali Adil was born on 28 March 1963 in Azerbaijan Republic. In 1980 he joined the Electroenergetics faculty of Kiev Polytechnic Institute (currently Kiev Technical Academy) and graduated in 1986 from that university's \"Electric Systems Cybernetics\" specialty. From 1986 to 1989 he worked as an electrical engineer in Thermal Power Plant No.1 in Sumgait, heading the electrical department and power plant; from 1989 to 1993 he worked as head dispatcher at \"Azerenergy\" JSC. He continued his activities as a chief, head dispatcher, deputy of chief engineer at \"Azerenergy\" JSC from 1993 to 2001. In 2001–02 he worked as deputy of Head director of \"Azerenergy\" ", "score": "1.3305628" }, { "id": "890396", "title": "Adil Ibrahim", "text": " Adil Ibrahim (born 6 February 1988) is an Indian actor, radio jockey, television host and model. In 2014, he debuted in Sanjeev Sivan's Malayalam movie, Endless Summer. Apart from acting, he is well known for hosting the shows D 4 Dance and Still Standing on Mazhavil Manorama.", "score": "1.3295047" }, { "id": "9847374", "title": "Adil", "text": "Adil Basher (1926–1978), Iraqi footballer ; Adil Belgaïd (born 1970), Moroccan judoka ; Adil Chihi (born 1988), Moroccan footballer ; Adil Ibragimov (born 1989), Russian footballer ; Adil El Makssoud (born 1985), Moroccan basketball player ; Adil Ramzi (born 1977), Moroccan footballer ; Adil Rashid (born 1988), English cricketer ; Adil Shamasdin (born 1982), Canadian tennis player ; Adel Abdulaziz (born 1980), Emirati footballer ; Adel Abdullah (born 1984), Syrian footballer ; Adel Amrouche (born 1968), Algerian football manager ; Adel Chedli (born 1976), Tunisian footballer ; Adel Eid (born 1984), Egyptian-Finnish footballer ; Adel Fellous (born 1978), French rugby league ", "score": "1.3273402" } ]
What is Patrick Mulvany's occupation?
[ "farmer", "agriculturist", "grower", "raiser", "cultivator", "agriculturer", "farmer (occupation)", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Patrick Mulvany
5,394,014
42
[ { "id": "32826132", "title": "Patrick Mulvany", "text": " Patrick James Mulvany (2 July 1871 – 16 May 1951) was an Irish politician and farmer. He was first elected to Dáil Éireann at the 1923 general election as a Farmers' Party Teachta Dála (TD) for the Meath constituency. He did not contest the June 1927 general election.", "score": "1.7205085" }, { "id": "31170974", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Attribution", "score": "1.6661867" }, { "id": "1148621", "title": "John Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was born in Diralagh, County Meath, Ireland c. 1839 to tenant farmers, Francis Lee and Thomas Mulvany. When he immigrated to New York City in 1851 at the age of 12, he was old enough to have witnessed and grasped the horrors of the Irish Famine. He worked as a tow boy on the Erie Canal and came to the attention of Professor Juan Wandersford at the National Academy of Design in New York City. In 1859 Mulvany enrolled in classes there. before he went to Washington, D.C. to work for Mathew Brady by 1863. Mulvany never served in the army but may have worked as a sketch artist for a Chicago newspaper. Mulvany's later Civil War paintings were praised for their realism - paintings such as Sheridan’s Ride at Winchester, 1896 McPherson and Revenge, 1889, Battle of Shiloh and The Death of General Mulligan.", "score": "1.6300989" }, { "id": "31170972", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany wrote for The Citizen on Irish artists. During the last years of his life Mulvany was employed in editing the Life of James Gandon. The book was published in 1846. It was based on papers of James Gandon the younger, and Maurice James Craig also edited the work.", "score": "1.6022148" }, { "id": "26365001", "title": "William Thomas Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany qualified through practical experience as an engineer. He learned technical drawing with an architect and joined the Irish Survey Office at the age of 20 years as a surveyor. In 1836 he became an employee of the Board of Public Works in Ireland. Mulvany was successively responsible for planning of waterways and the modernization of the fishing industry, but especially for the purpose of drainage of large areas of agricultural exploitation. During the Great Irish Famine 1845 - 1849 the projects of the Board of Works were simultaneously job creation schemes for the suffering rural population and in 1853, the work was stopped due to high costs, and Mulvany quit the civil service. In 1851 published his paper which introduced the rational method in Hydrology. This is one of the most important result for the hydrological planning of drainage systems even today.", "score": "1.5934241" }, { "id": null, "title": "Paddy Mulvany", "text": "Paddy Mulvany\n\nPatrick F. Mulvany (born 1940) is an Irish former Gaelic footballer who played for club side Skryne and at inter-county level with the Meath senior football team. He usually lined out as a right corner-forward.\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kate Mulvany", "text": "Kate Mulvany\n\nKate Mulvany (born 24 February 1977) is an Australian actress, playwright and screenwriter. She works in theatre, television and film, with roles in \"Hunters\" (2020), \"The Great Gatsby\" (2013), \"Griff the Invisible\" (2010) and \"The Final Winter\" (2007). She has played lead roles with Australian theatre companies as well as appearing on television and in film. In 2004 she won the Philip Parsons Young Playwrights Award for \"The Seed\". In 2017, she won the Helpmann Award for Best Female Actor in a Play for her role in \"Richard 3\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Elle Mulvaney", "text": "Elle Mulvaney\n\nElle Jade Mulvaney (born 1 October 2002)", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Mulvaney", "text": "John Mulvaney\n\nDerek John Mulvaney (26 October 1925 – 21 September 2016), known as John Mulvaney and D. J. Mulvaney, was an Australian archaeologist. He was the first qualified archaeologist to focus his work on Australia.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John D'Alton", "text": "John D'Alton\n\nJohn Francis Cardinal D'Alton (11 October 1882 – 1 February 1963) was an Irish Cardinal of the Roman Catholic Church who served as Archbishop of Armagh and thus Primate of All Ireland from 1946 until his death. He was elevated to the cardinalate in 1953.", "score": null }, { "id": "31170970", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Thomas James Mulvany (1779–1845) was an Irish painter and keeper of the Royal Hibernian Academy.", "score": "1.5633504" }, { "id": "31878431", "title": "Thomas Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was born in Moynalty, County Meath on the 1 March 1864. He was ordained a priest of the Diocese of Meath on 6 March 1892.", "score": "1.5322492" }, { "id": "26365000", "title": "William Thomas Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was one of seven children of Catholic parents in Dublin: his father was the painter Thomas James Mulvany. He converted to the Anglican Communion as Catholics were barred from all but the very lowest grades of the civil service. He joined the Ordnance Survey in 1826 and ten years later moved to the Office of Public Works. In 1832, he married Alicia Winslow, the daughter of a wealthy landowner from Fermanagh. He had five children with her. From 1855 until his death, Mulvany lived in Düsseldorf. In 1875, he built the \"Mulvany Villa\" in Herne, but it's not known whether he ever lived there. He died in 1885 and was buried in Düsseldorf. The city of Gelsenkirchen made him an honorary citizen in 1880. In Herne, a street near the former Shamrock coal mine was named after him. Also Castrop-Rauxel, Recklinghausen and Düsseldorf also named streets after the entrepreneur.", "score": "1.5300035" }, { "id": "32657207", "title": "Mulvaney", "text": "Mulvaney ; Dick Mulvaney (b. 1942), English football player ; Elle Mulvaney (b. 2002), English actress ; Jimmy Mulvaney (1921–1993), Scottish football player ; John Mulvaney (1925–2016), Australian archaeologist ; Mick Mulvaney (b. 1967), U.S. politician, Director of the Office of Management and Budget Mulvany ; Dominic Mulvany (b. 1956), Irish singer-songwriter ; Edward Joseph Mulvany (1871-1951), Australian public servant ; George Francis Mulvany (1809–1869), Irish painter ; Isabella Mulvany (1854–1934), educator ; John Mulvany (1839-1906), Irish-American artist ; John Skipton Mulvany (1813-1870), Irish architect ; Josephine and Sybil Mulvany (1899-1967 and 1901-1983), New Zealand weavers ; Josh Mulvany (b. 1988), English football player ; Kate Mulvany (b. 1978), Australian playwright and actress ; Patrick Mulvany (1871-1951), Irish politician ; William Thomas Mulvany (1806-1885), Irish entrepreneur Mulvaney or Mulvany is a surname. Notable people with the surname: ", "score": "1.5198084" }, { "id": "15148637", "title": "Patrick McCay", "text": " Patrick McCay (born 1952) is an Irish-born, Scottish/American painter currently residing in the U.S. state of New Hampshire. He is currently Chair of the Visual Arts Department at the New Hampshire Institute of Art.", "score": "1.5177121" }, { "id": "31170971", "title": "Thomas James Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was an exhibitor with the Dublin Society of Artists, at the rooms of the Dublin Society in Hawkins Street, Dublin, in May 1809. When the Dublin Society in 1819 disposed of their premises and the artists were left without a place for exhibition, Mulvany, with his brother, John George Mulvany, also a painter, was active in advocating for a charter of incorporation to the artists of Ireland. A charter was obtained in 1823 and the Royal Hibernian Academy founded under the presidency of Francis Johnston; Mulvany and his brother were two of the 14 academicians first elected. Subsequently Mulvany became keeper of the Academy, in 1841. He died in 1845.", "score": "1.5125593" }, { "id": "4202027", "title": "George Francis Mulvany", "text": " George Francis Mulvany was the son of Thomas James Mulvany, a painter and the RHA's keeper. George Francis Mulvany studied at the Academy school and would first exhibit there in 1827. In 1835 he became a member of the RHA, and took over as keeper upon his father's death in 1845. Mulvany became the first director of the National Gallery of Ireland in 1862.", "score": "1.5031211" }, { "id": "26464893", "title": "Mick Mulvaney", "text": " Mulvaney was born in Alexandria, Virginia, to Mike, a real estate developer, and Kathy Mulvaney, a teacher. He grew up in Charlotte, North Carolina. He later moved to Indian Land, South Carolina. He has Polish and Irish ancestry, with roots in County Mayo, Ireland. He attended Charlotte Catholic High School and then Georgetown University, where he majored in international economics, commerce and finance. At Georgetown, he was an Honors Scholar of the School of Foreign Service, and ultimately graduated with honors in 1989. Mulvaney attended law school at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He earned a full scholarship to attend law school, where his focus was on antitrust law. He earned a Juris Doctor in 1992.", "score": "1.5025551" }, { "id": "4202026", "title": "George Francis Mulvany", "text": " George Francis Mulvany (1809 &ndash; 1869) was an Irish painter and the first director of the National Gallery of Ireland.", "score": "1.5018101" }, { "id": "26364999", "title": "William Thomas Mulvany", "text": " William Thomas Mulvany (11 March 1806 in Dublin, Ireland &ndash; 30 October 1885 in Düsseldorf, Germany) was an Irish entrepreneur in Germany.", "score": "1.4934678" }, { "id": "25630109", "title": "Kate Mulvany", "text": " Kate Mulvany's father, Danny, was a Vietnam Veteran. Her mother, Glenys, is a schoolteacher. She has a sister, Tegan, who is an actor and an improvisor. In 1997, Mulvany received her Bachelor of Arts degree from Curtin University, Perth. Mulvany was diagnosed with a Wilms's tumor (renal cancer) at age two and spent much of her childhood in the hospital. Her cancer has been linked to her father's exposure to Agent Orange during his service in the Vietnam War.", "score": "1.4801452" }, { "id": "26464890", "title": "Mick Mulvaney", "text": " John Michael Mulvaney (born July 21, 1967) is an American politician who served as United States special envoy for Northern Ireland from March 2020 until January 2021. He also served as director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) from February 2017 until March 2020, and as acting White House chief of staff from January 2019 until March 2020. He previously served as the acting director of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) from November 2017 to December 2018. Mulvaney, a Republican, served in the South Carolina General Assembly from 2007 to 2011, first in the House of Representatives and then the State Senate. He served as a U.S. representative from ", "score": "1.4791787" }, { "id": "1148626", "title": "John Mulvany", "text": " Mulvany was a lifelong member of the Irish secret society, Clan na Gael, whose aim was Irish independence. He narrowly escaped imprisonment by the authorities while researching uniforms for his Aughrim painting at the Tower of London just days before it was bombed in the Fenian dynamite campaign in 1885. His involvement in internecine fighting within the Chicago branch in 1886 cost him the Aughrim commission and after his friend, Dr. Patrick Henry Cronin, was murdered in 1889 over financial irregularities with this same branch, Mulvany left Chicago for the west. He married Mrs. Ellen Welch in 1890. and was divorced two years later in CO. He also had a romantic involvement with Lucy Deere, whom he met c. 1880 and contacted before his death in 1906. Mulvany painted in Oregon, San Francisco, Colorado and Kansas City before he finally headed East in 1896. Over his lifetime, he set up studios in 21 different cities, sketching, painting and moving on; often leaving finished works and at least one debt behind.", "score": "1.4777763" }, { "id": "29068914", "title": "John Skipton Mulvany", "text": " John Skipton Mulvany (1813 &ndash; 10 May 1870) was a notable Irish architect. He was the fourth son of Thomas James Mulvany, one of the founder members, with his own brother John George, of the Royal Hibernian Academy. Most of the buildings he designed are still in daily use and are well preserved.", "score": "1.4728353" }, { "id": "6613122", "title": "Dominic Mulvany", "text": " Dominic Mulvany (born 1956) is a singer-songwriter from Dublin who has released a number of singles and albums, mainly via his 'Kish' record label, since the 1980s. His career commenced with the release of \"In The City / Your Smile is on My Mind\" in 1981 (on Kish). With 'Ibiza', his follow-up single (released on Vixen records), he attained very large amounts of airplay in Ireland; this in turn led to several high-profile TV appearances (including RTÉ's Kenny Live show and Nighthawks). Further singles followed, including one produced by Arsenal and Irish International football player John Devine: \"Travelling People\". Dominic has released three albums: Stranger on My Highway (1985), Vagabond Moon (1990) and Diving for Pearls (2004). The last of these was produced by Irish singer-songwriter Chris Singleton, whom Dominic taught piano. Dominic also engineered some of Chris Singleton's early material – an album called 'Start'.", "score": "1.4657543" } ]
What is Arcangelo Ghisleri's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Arcangelo Ghisleri
2,738,003
85
[ { "id": "27356440", "title": "Arcangelo", "text": "S. Michele Arcangelo, archangel in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic teachings ; Andrea di Cione Arcangelo (1308–1368), Italian painter, sculptor, and architect active in Florence ; Antonio di Arcangelo, Italian painter, active in Florence in a Renaissance style, between 1520 and 1538 ; Arcangelo Califano (1730–1750), baroque composer and cellist ; Arcangelo Placenza da Calatafimi, (1390–1460) venerated Italian Franciscan friar and preacher ; Arcangelo Canetoli (1460–1513), venerated Catholic priest ; Arcangelo Cascieri (1902–1997), influential sculptor, major figure in Boston Architectural College in Boston, Massachusetts ; Arcangelo di Cola (active 1416-1429) Italian late-Gothic painter ; Arcangelo Corelli (1653–1713), Italian violinist and composer of Baroque music ; Arcangelo Ghisleri (1855–1938), geographer who created numerous maps of Africa ; Arcangelo Guglielmelli (c. 1650–1723), Italian ", "score": "1.5794013" }, { "id": "25214002", "title": "Arcangelo Guglielmelli", "text": " Arcangelo Guglielmelli (c. 1650—1723) was an Italian architect and painter, active in his native Naples, Italy, in a late-Baroque style. He was involved in the building and reconstruction of churches, many of which had been damaged by the earthquakes of 1688 and 1694.", "score": "1.5530169" }, { "id": "25214009", "title": "Arcangelo Guglielmelli", "text": " helped restore the facade of the church of San Paolo Maggiore. From 1677 onward, Arcangelo had worked for the Jesuits in the church of Gesù Nuovo, but only after 1688, did he succeed as main architect from Dionisio Lazzari (who had taken the post from Fanzago in 1678). He rebuilt, between 1692 and 1693, the fallen dome (1629–35) of Giuseppe Valeriano, but Arcangelo's dome also developed flaws, and was demolished in 1775. Arcangelo also restored the chapels of St Francis Xavier and St Ignatius, and with Bartolomeo and Pietro Ghetti overlaid a rich baroque decoration into the Renaissance style entry portal.", "score": "1.5238612" }, { "id": "8752852", "title": "Ildebrando D'Arcangelo", "text": " Ildebrando D'Arcangelo (born 14 December 1969) is an Italian opera singer. He has been called a bass-baritone, though he prefers the term basso cantabile.", "score": "1.4961131" }, { "id": "4692672", "title": "Arcangelo Sannicandro", "text": " Arcangelo Sannicandro (born 9 July 1943) is an Italian politician from the Left Ecology Freedom. As of 2014 he serves as member of the Chamber of Deputies representing Apulia.", "score": "1.4861169" }, { "id": null, "title": "Arcangelo Ghisleri", "text": "Arcangelo Ghisleri\n\nArcangelo Ghisleri (5 September 1855 – 19 August 1938) was an Italian geographer, writer, and Socialist politician.\n\nGhisleri was born in the \"comune\" of Persico Dosimo (in today's province of Cremona).\n\nA well known geographer by profession, he created numerous maps of Africa. As a journalist, he was part of a wave of philosophically positivist and politically progressive writers who carried the mantle of Mazzini's republican nationalism in the late 19th century. From 1887 to 1890 he founded and edited the review 'Cuore e Critica' which, together with the journals \"La rivista repubblicana\" and \"L'educazione politica\", was important in defining the republican ideology of the times. Politically, Ghisleri was close to the revolutionary movements of his time: in 1895 he was one of the founders of the Italian Republican Party.\n\nHis friend and fellow radical and Freemason Filippo Turati took over the journal in 1891 and renamed it Critica Sociale, moving it quickly into a socialist direction. In 1867, Ghisleri founded the \"Società di Liberi Pensatori\" (Society of the Free Thinkers) in Cremona, on behalf of the Grand Master Giuseppe Garibaldi, together with Mauro Macchi and Ausonio Franchi. In 1879, he was a co-founder of the Masonic Lodge \"Pontida\" in Bergamo that he joyned until 1906 when he was initiated to the regular lodge \"Carlo Cattaneo\" in Milan.\n\nGhisleri was not a systematic ideologist: a systematic version of his republican ideology is best exemplified in the work of Giovanni Conti.\n\nGhisleri died in Bergamo in 1938.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Filippo Turati", "text": "Filippo Turati\n\nFilippo Turati (; 26 November 1857 – 29 March 1932) was an Italian sociologist, criminologist, poet and socialist politician.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Napoleone Colajanni", "text": "Napoleone Colajanni\n\nNapoleone Colajanni (Castrogiovanni, 27 April 1847 – Castrogiovanni, 2 September 1921) was an Italian writer, journalist, criminologist, socialist and politician. In the 1880s he abandoned republicanism for socialism, and became Italy's leading theoretical writer on the issue for a time. He has been called the father of Sicilian socialism. Due to the Socialist party's discourse of Marxist class struggle, he reverted in 1894 to his original republicanism. Colajanni was an ardent critic of the Lombrosian school in criminology. In 1890 he was elected in the national Italian Chamber of Deputies and was re-elected in all subsequent parliaments until his death in September 1921.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Italian journalists", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Oliviero Zuccarini", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "25214003", "title": "Arcangelo Guglielmelli", "text": " He was born to Marcello Guglielmelli and Caterina Vera, but grew up in the house of a painter, Onofrio de Marino, whose daughter he married in March 1677. His two sons were Marcello, also an architect who worked with his father, and Gaetano, who became a novice at Santa Maria della Vita. Early in his career, Arcangelo helped design ephemeral decorations for the frequent festivals held in Naples, such as in 1671 for the festival of San Gennaro, and 1677 for the festival of Quarantore, held by the Theatines of San Paolo Maggiore. He trained under Dionisio Lazzari. In 1677, in the ", "score": "1.4853895" }, { "id": "14603676", "title": "Allan D'Arcangelo", "text": " Allan D'Arcangelo (June 16, 1930 – December 17, 1998) was an American artist and printmaker, best known for his paintings of highways and road signs that border on pop art and minimalism, precisionism and hard-edge painting, and also surrealism. His subject matter is distinctly American and evokes, at times, a cautious outlook on the future of this country.", "score": "1.4711183" }, { "id": "27356441", "title": "Arcangelo", "text": " and painter from Naples ; Arcangelo Madrignano (died 1529), Italian Catholic prelate and Bishop of Avellino e Frigento ; Arcangelo Pinelli (born 1944), Italian fencer ; Arcangelo Resani (1670–1740), Italian painter of the Baroque period ; Arcangelo Salimbeni (circa 1536 –1579), Italian Mannerist painter active in Sienna ; Arcangelo Sannicandro (born 1943), Italian lawyer and politician from Apulia ; Arcangelo Tadini (1846–1912), Catholic priest, beatified on 24 October 2001, canonized on 19 April 2009 ; Arcangelo Felice Assunta Wertmuller von Elgg (born 1928), Italian screenwriter and director professionally known as Lina Wertmüller ; Arcangelo, a British classical ensemble led by cellist Jonathan Cohen (conductor) Arcangelo is a given name and a family name. Notable people with the name include: ", "score": "1.4629529" }, { "id": "26701681", "title": "Ghislieri", "text": "Ghislieri ; Michele Ghislieri (1504–1572), also known as Pope Pius V. ; Ghislieri College ; Ghislieri Choir and Consort, Giulio Prandi Ghisleri ; Arcangelo Ghisleri (1855–1938), an Italian journalist. The Ghislieri, or less commonly Ghisleri, were an ancient Bolognese aristocratic family : ", "score": "1.4565547" }, { "id": "14603677", "title": "Allan D'Arcangelo", "text": " Allan D'Arcangelo was born in Buffalo, New York to Italian immigrant parents. He studied at the University at Buffalo from 1948–1953, where he got his bachelor's degree in history. After college, he moved to Manhattan and picked up his studies again at the New School of Social Research and the City University of New York. At this time, he encountered Abstract Expressionist painters who were in vogue at the moment. After joining the army in the mid 1950s, he used the GI Bill to study painting at Mexico City College from 1957–59, driving there over 12 days in an old bakery truck retrofitted as a camper. However, he returned to New York in 1959, in search of the unique American experience. It was ", "score": "1.4559528" }, { "id": "2984505", "title": "Domiziano Arcangeli", "text": " Domiziano Arcangeli (born June 10, 1968) is an Italian actor, producer and writer best known for low-budget independent, and particularly exploitation, films. Having worked as a model and stage actor and played small parts in Joe D'Amato's Pomeriggio Caldo (1988), Liliana Cavani's Francesco (1989), Tinto Brass's Paprika (1991), Stelvio Massi's L'urlo della verità (1992) and Enzo Papetti's Beniamino Gad - Alle soglie dell'incubo (1994), Arcangeli relocated from Italy to the United States and was cast in Zalman King's TV series ChromiumBlue.com (2002-2003). He then moved on to darker roles, such as his first American antagonist in the thriller Sin's Kitchen (2004), and worked in several other independent films, like Luigi Desole's The Seer (2007) and Kurando Mitsutake's Samurai Avenger: The Blind Wolf (2009). He ", "score": "1.4538902" }, { "id": "935775", "title": "Arcangeli", "text": "Angela Arcangeli (born 1991), Italian basketball player ; Chiara Arcangeli (born 1983), Italian female volleyball player ; Giovanni Arcangeli (1840–1921), Italian botanist ; Domiziano Arcangeli (born 1968), Italian-American actor, producer and writer ; Francesco Arcangeli (1737–1768), Italian cook and criminal ; Luigi Arcangeli (1902–1931), Italian motorcycle racer ; Telemaco Arcangeli (1923–1998),Italian racewalker Arcangeli is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.4482889" }, { "id": "28547524", "title": "Arcangelo Corelli", "text": " Arcangelo Corelli (, also, , ; 17 February 1653 – 8 January 1713) was an Italian violinist and composer of the Baroque era. His music was key in the development of the modern genres of sonata and concerto, in establishing the preeminence of the violin, and as the first coalescing of modern tonality and functional harmony.", "score": "1.4426975" }, { "id": "888791", "title": "Marco Antonio Ghislina", "text": " Marco Antonio Ghislina (1676–1756) was an Italian painter, active mainly in Casalmaggiore and Cremona, painting sacred subjects in a Baroque-style. He was born in Casalmaggiore, Italy. From a young age was inclined to painting. He moved to Cremona at a young age, and was active for many years there. It is not known who was his master there. He painted in the church of the Santissima Annunciata (Chiesa dell'ex Ospedale) in Casalmaggiore. He was aided in his work by his wife and daughter.", "score": "1.4382908" }, { "id": "25214006", "title": "Arcangelo Guglielmelli", "text": " and Cosimo Fanzago's original project from 1646 (construction began in 1661). Here the final plan recalls the church of Santa Maria dell'Aiuto (where Arcangelo worked under Lazzari in 1672). Also by Arcangelo are the design of San Michele Arcangelo in Anacapri (1698) and Santa Maria delle Grazie, in Piazzetta Mondragone (begun 1715). This last one was likely completed with the intervention of Guglielmelli's main pupil, Giovanni Battista Nauclerio. Arcangelo was also the author of restorations after 1688 of the cathedrals of Amalfi and Salerno. After the 1688 earthquake, he was involved in the reconstruction of the Cathedral of San Gennaro. For example, ", "score": "1.4373419" }, { "id": "3763191", "title": "Arcangelo Salimbeni", "text": " Arcangelo Salimbeni (circa 1536 –1579) was an Italian painter of the Renaissance period active in his native Siena, Italy. He was the father of the painter Ventura Salimbeni, stepfather of Francesco Vanni, and son of Leonardo. He was a follower of Domenico Beccafumi and Il Sodoma, and influenced by Federico Zuccaro. He painted in a delicate, often diaphonous Mannerist style.", "score": "1.4288437" }, { "id": "1263199", "title": "Arcangelo Resani", "text": " Arcangelo Resani (1670–1740) was an Italian painter of the Baroque period. He was born at Rome and was a pupil of Giovanni Battista Boncuore. He chiefly excelled in painting animals and hunted game. His simple realistic works were highly esteemed at Siena, Bologna, and Venice. His portrait, with dead game in the background, is in the Uffizi collection.", "score": "1.4286339" }, { "id": "25214005", "title": "Arcangelo Guglielmelli", "text": " of San Agostino. Starting from 1694 in the same church, Arcangelo in collaboration with Lorenzo Vaccaro, provided the stucco ornamentation. In 1682, Arcangelo helped design the baroque facade Santa Maria in Portico a Chiaia. From 1690 to 1693, Arcangelo worked on the reconstruction of the church of Santa Maria del Rosario alle Pigne (Rosario al largo delle Pigne). The plan there was a pseudo-Greek cross with transverse arms shorter than longitudinal nave. He also designed the atrium (1708) with statues in niches. Starting in 1691 he worked in the Augustinian monastery of Santa Maria degli Angeli a Pizzofalcone, where he modified Francesco ", "score": "1.425849" }, { "id": "25214010", "title": "Arcangelo Guglielmelli", "text": " From 1691 onward, the Dominicans commissioned a number of works from Arcangelo, including enlarging the church of Sanità a Barra, but here, in 1703he was replaced by the rising Francesco Solimena. He had been replaced in his work at San Paolo Maggiore by Solimena in 1701. Meanwhile, in 1699, Arcangelo completed the rebuilding of the Angevin church of St. Antonio Abate (or di Vienna), providing new windows, nave ceiling, and altar. Also for the Dominicans, Arcangelo helped design a home of the congregation of St. Vincent Ferrer being founded in the grounds of the convent of Santa Maria della Sanità, Naples (1705). In the apse of the church at that site, he created an ornamented altar to contain a statue of the Madonna and Child by Michelangelo Naccherino. After the death of Lazzari, Arcangelo also took over the building studios of the Gerolamini. With the ", "score": "1.4220774" }, { "id": "9382137", "title": "Augusto De Arcangelis", "text": " Augusto De Arcangelis (born in Lanciano, Province of Chieti, June 22, 1868) was an Italian painter, active mainly in Naples, depicting genre subjects and landscapes.", "score": "1.4203067" } ]
What is Giora Godik's occupation?
[ "impresario", "Talent Manager" ]
occupation
Giora Godik
4,245,478
98
[ { "id": "2615191", "title": "Giora Becher", "text": " Born on February 7, 1950, in Kibbutz Misgav-Am, Becher lived most of his life in Netanya. He earned a bachelor's degree from Tel Aviv University (psychology and political science), a master's degree in political science from the University of Haifa and the Israeli National Defense College.", "score": "1.4873631" }, { "id": "1199491", "title": "Rina Mor", "text": " In 1991, she began studying law at Tel Aviv University. After completing her bachelor's degree with honours, the family left for the Netherlands. She completed her master's degree there, specializing in family law. In 2002, after six years in the Netherlands, the family returned to Israel. Mor-Godor is a lawyer in Tel Aviv, working on her doctorate and appearing every week on the morning show of Channel 10, where she gives advice on family law.", "score": "1.4200158" }, { "id": "7477112", "title": "Giora Schmidt", "text": " Giora Schmidt (pronounced ghee-OH-rah) is an American/Israeli violinist.", "score": "1.3970133" }, { "id": "5762982", "title": "Giora Eiland", "text": " Giora Eiland (גיורא איילנד; born 1952 in moshav Kfar Hess) is Major General (ret.) Israel Defense Forces. Eiland is a former head of the Israeli National Security Council. After his retirement from the public sector, he was a senior research associate at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS). Eiland is a frequent commentator and contributor on international security matters on local and foreign media. In 2007 he founded a consulting company of national security and strategic services for governments and multinational organizations. He holds an M.B.A. and B.A. in economics from Bar Ilan University.", "score": "1.3883574" }, { "id": "1183342", "title": "Giora Feidman", "text": " Giora Feidman (גיורא פיידמן; born 25 March 1936) is an Argentine-born Israeli clarinetist who specializes in klezmer music.", "score": "1.3809714" }, { "id": null, "title": "Waiting for Godik", "text": "Waiting for Godik\n\nWaiting for Godik is a 2007 documentary written and directed by Ari Davidovich, chronicalling the rise and fall of the Israeli theater producer and impresario Giora Godik.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Władysław Godik", "text": "Władysław Godik\n\nWładysław Godik (Willy Godik, Godick, Godnick, Vladislav Godik) (April 1, 1892 – December 18, 1952) was a Polish Jewish singer, actor and director in Polish, Russian, and Yiddish theatre. Born in Zlatopil near Kyiv, Ukraine, he moved with his family to Warsaw, where he did two semesters in the veterinarian institute.\n\nHe acted in the dramatic section of Hazemir and in 1911 he began acting professionally at Gershanovitsh in Vitebsk, playing Baynushl in \"Pintele Yid\". During the First World War he took part in Krutshinin's Russian operettas and later some German operettas. In 1909 he appeared in Radom in Tsharnetski's Polish Operetta troupe, and played in \"Shulamis\", then founded a Polish-language revue theater called Mirage. Half a year later he joined Zygmunt Turkow and Ester Rachel Kamińska's traveling troupe. He played for four years at the Central Theater and spent one year in Vilna with Morevski.<ref name=zalmen />\n\nBetween 1920-1928 he appeared at the Habima Theatre. He became renowned as a conferencier (Master of Ceremonies). In 1918 he returned to Poland and in 1925 he convinced his wife, Ola Lilith, to join him in founding the \"Yiddish Kleynkunst Theater Azazel\". He was conferencier of the combined Azazel - Sambatiyon theater revue in 1928 and performed with the Warsaw Yiddish Art Theater (Varshever Yidisher Kunst-teater; VYKT). In 1931 he and Lilith debuted in America, in recitals and in \"The Girl from Warsaw\". He returned with Lilith to Poland; she returned to America in 1935. In 1939 he fled the Nazis by entering the Soviet Union through Białystok.\n\nIn 1942 Godik joined the Red Army. He was wounded in battle; after recovering he performed in Moscow, after 1944 in the Polish Army Theatre in Lodz; from 1946 until his death he acted at the Polish Theatre in Warsaw, where he died in 1952.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Reuven Shefer", "text": "Reuven Shefer\n\nReuven Shefer (; June 7, 1925 – March 22, 2011) was an Israeli theater and film actor.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Israeli theatre managers and producers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fiddler on the Roof", "text": "Fiddler on the Roof\n\nFiddler on the Roof is a musical with music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Harnick, and book by Joseph Stein, set in the Pale of Settlement of Imperial Russia in or around 1905. It is based on \"Tevye and his Daughters\" (or \"Tevye the Dairyman\") and other tales by Sholem Aleichem. The story centers on Tevye, a milkman in the village of Anatevka, who attempts to maintain his Jewish religious and cultural traditions as outside influences encroach upon his family's lives. He must cope with the strong-willed actions of his three older daughters who wish to marry for love; their choices of husbands are successively less palatable for Tevye. An edict of the tsar eventually evicts the Jews from their village.\n\nThe original Broadway production of the show, which opened in 1964, had the first musical theatre run in history to surpass 3,000 performances. \"Fiddler\" held the record for the longest-running Broadway musical for almost 10 years until \"Grease\" surpassed its run. The production was extraordinarily profitable and highly acclaimed. It won nine Tony Awards, including best musical, score, book, direction and choreography. It spawned five Broadway revivals and a highly successful 1971 film adaptation and has enjoyed enduring international popularity. It has also been a popular choice for school and community productions.", "score": null }, { "id": "27209944", "title": "Amos N. Guiora", "text": " Amos Guiora was born in Israel to Hungarian Holocaust survivors. The family moved to Ann Arbor, Michigan before he began school. In 1979, he graduated Kenyon College with honors in history. Prior to attending Case Western Reserve University School of Law, he worked in Washington, D.C., for two years as an assistant to Howard Wolpe and one year for a communications consulting company. After graduating from Case, Guiora returned to Israel and served in the Israeli Defense Forces Judge Advocate General Corps, attaining the rank of lieutenant colonel.", "score": "1.3805666" }, { "id": "12961433", "title": "Giora Yaron", "text": " Yaron lives in Caesarea with his wife, Zila.", "score": "1.373205" }, { "id": "10427636", "title": "Jonathan Bar Giora", "text": " Jonathan Bar Giora (יונתן בר גיורא; born 8 July 1962) is an Israeli composer and pianist. Since 2000, Bar Giora has composed scores and soundtracks for Israeli films such as Bonjour Monsieur Shlomi, Time of Favor and Aviva, My Love. He also worked as a composer with Israeli actors such as Yossi Banai, Rita and Rickie Gal. Bar Giora lectures at the Sapir Academic College and at Maale Film School. During the years 2011-2015 he managed the division for film music and sound design in the School of Audio & Visual Arts at Sapir Academic College, where he continues teaching as a senior lecturer. He also teaches at Beit Berl College and in Ma'aleh School of Television, Film and the Arts. His composition style presents diverse influences, from Mizrahi music, Jazz, Classical music, Rock music to Electronic music. He collaborated with various prominent Israeli musician, such as Meir Banai, Riki Gal, Haïm Ulliel, Miri Mesika, Yehonatan Geffen, Orli Perl and Eli Louzon.", "score": "1.3712817" }, { "id": "27920607", "title": "Pirkko Mattila", "text": " Pirkko Anneli Mattila is a Finnish politician and a former Member of the Finnish Parliament, representing the Blue Reform party at the end of her tenure. She was first elected MP in the 2011 general election. Mattila replaced Hanna Mäntylä as the Minister of Social Affairs and Health in 2016, following Mäntylä's resignation. As minister, Mattila was notably responsible for examining the implementation of negative income tax in Finland. On 13 June 2017, Mattila and 19 others resigned from the Finns Party parliamentary group and founded the New Alternative parliamentary group, which later formed the Blue Reform party. Mattila stood in the 2019 parliamentary election as a Blue Reform candidate, but was not elected. A nurse anesthetist by profession, she obtained her degree in 1988. She graduated as a Master of Science in 2005 from the University of Oulu. She has been active in the Finnish Red Cross and raises goats in Laitasaari, Muhos. She is also a member of the municipal council of Muhos. In addition to Finnish, she speaks English, Swedish and German.", "score": "1.3671277" }, { "id": "30665823", "title": "Steinunn Þóra Árnadóttir", "text": " Steinunn Þóra has a BA in Anthropology and an MA in Disability Studies, both from the University of Iceland. She has been active within the MS-Society of Iceland and the Organization of Disabled in Iceland. Steinunn Þóra has been active within the Left-Green Movement for a number of years, including taking a place on the party's ticket in five parliament elections; 2007, 2009, 2013, 2016 and 2017. When Árni Þór Sigurðsson resigned from parliament on 18 August 2014, Steinunn Þóra took a permanent seat as his replacement, representing Reykjavík North Constituency. She currently sits on the Committee of Education.", "score": "1.3490793" }, { "id": "3553947", "title": "Odelia Fitoussi", "text": " a B.A. in Criminology, Sociology, and Anthropology from Bar-Ilan University in 1998, and is a graduate of the Machon Shaharit \"120 Program for Multicultural Political Leadership\" (2015). She is a lecturer, facilitator, and art workshops coordinator on PWDs issues, such as self-advocacy, access to services, human diversity, dealing with crises, making choices, and more. She is the first Israeli Candidate to run for a seat on the UN Committee of Experts for People with Disabilities. She was born with SMA type2- Spinal Muscular Atrophy, which affects the motor nerve cells in the spinal cord, and as a result, uses a motorized wheelchair.", "score": "1.3311918" }, { "id": "28643903", "title": "Shira Yalon-Chamovitz", "text": " Shira Yalon-Chamovitz (born 8 November 1962, in Hebrew שירה ילון-חיימוביץ is an Israeli occupational therapist, Director of the Israel Institute on Cognitive Accessibility, and Dean of Students at Ono Academic College. She has made significant contributions to the field of accessibility for people with cognitive disabilities, having coined the terms \"cognitive ramps\" and \"simultaneous simplification\". She is married to Daniel Chamovitz, an American-born plant geneticist and the 7th President of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beer-Sheva, Israel.", "score": "1.328617" }, { "id": "26402398", "title": "Esther Gitman", "text": " She earned a bachelor's degree in history and sociology from Carleton University in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, and a graduate degree in criminal justice from Long Island University. She earned a PhD from City University in New York in Jewish history. She began her research into the Croatian-Jewish history in 1999 with her dissertation, entitled Rescue of Jews in the Independent State of Croatia, 1941–1945. In 2002, she received a Fulbright scholarship to travel to Croatia to continue her research. In the 2006–07 academic year Gitman was awarded, by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum and the Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies, a Barbara and Richard Rosenberg Fellowship for her research. In 2007 Gitman received a post-doctoral grant from the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. In 2008, she participated in a conference on Aloysius Cardinal Stepinac, the senior member of ", "score": "1.3252418" }, { "id": "12961428", "title": "Giora Yaron", "text": " Giora Yaron (גיורא ירון; born 1948) is a Doctor of Physics, businessman, and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Tel Aviv University.", "score": "1.3242407" }, { "id": "5000604", "title": "Monika Salzer", "text": " Salzer was born in Vienna into a multi-cultural family. After the Matura, she was trained to be a laboratory assistant at the Vienna General Hospital, completing a diploma. She then studied psychology at the University of Vienna from 1968 to 1970. She studied Protestant theology from 1977 to 1983. From 1983 to 1985, Salzer worked in a research project at the Orthopädisches Krankenhaus Gersthof, and wrote its report, Klinische Seelsorge an schwersterkrankten Jugendlichen und jungen Erwachsenen (Clinical pastoral care for seriously ill adolescents and young adults), about taking spiritual care of young people treated for serious illnesses. Salzer was ordained as a pastor in 1989, and worked for ten ", "score": "1.3237951" }, { "id": "10267487", "title": "Władysław Godik", "text": " Theatre. He became renowned as a conferencier (Master of Ceremonies). In 1918 he returned to Poland and in 1925 he convinced his wife, Ola Lilith, to join him in founding the \"Yiddish Kleynkunst Theater Azazel\". He was conferencier of the combined Azazel - Sambatiyon theater revue in 1928 and performed with the Warsaw Yiddish Art Theater (Varshever Yidisher Kunst-teater; VYKT). In 1931 he and Lilith debuted in America, in recitals and in The Girl from Warsaw. He returned with Lilith to Poland; she returned to America in 1935. In 1939 he fled the Nazis by entering the Soviet Union through Białystok. In 1942 Godik joined the Red Army. He was wounded in battle; after recovering he performed in Moscow, after 1944 in the Polish Army Theatre in Lodz; from 1946 until his death he acted at the Polish Theatre in Warsaw, where he died in 1952.", "score": "1.3206995" }, { "id": "31644114", "title": "Rasika Shekar", "text": " Rasika graduated with a Bachelor's Degree in chemical engineering from Rutgers University. She also studied jazz and flamenco music at Berklee College of Music, where she attained her Master's Degree in performance.", "score": "1.3205713" }, { "id": "26068592", "title": "Giora Bernstein", "text": " Giora Bernstein was born in Vienna in 1933 and emigrated to Palestine (now Israel) in 1938, arriving there in 1939. He began his music education in Israel, where he studied violin from 1953 to 1955 at the Tel Aviv Music Academy, as well as music history with Leo Kestenberg. In 1955, he went to the United States, where he studied violin with Edouard Dethier at the Juilliard School, and later received a Master of Fine Arts in composition from Brandeis University. He went on to study for his Doctorate in Music at Boston University, graduating in 1967. His PhD thesis was on the ", "score": "1.3173866" }, { "id": "277346", "title": "Giora Tzahor", "text": " Giora Weiss-Tzahor (27 October 1941 – 16 July 2012) was an Israeli military and Mossad officer, known for having headed Israel's efforts to abduct Mordechai Vanunu.", "score": "1.3168926" }, { "id": "11049767", "title": "Angelika Sher", "text": " Angelika Sher was born in Vilna, Lithuania. She immigrated to Israel in 1990. She has earned a BA degree in radiography and natural science from Bar-Ilan University, where she has studied from 1991 to 1995. In 2002–2005 Sher studied at the College of Photography in Kiryat Ono, followed by a two-year program at Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem (2007–2008). Angelika Sher is married to Vladimir Lumberg, a musician and a producer of the music band \"Jewrhythmics\", and a mother of three. She lives and works in Israel.", "score": "1.315708" } ]
What is Thomas Challis's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Thomas Challis
873,819
45
[ { "id": "31412649", "title": "John Challis (harpsichord)", "text": " John Challis (1907–1974) was an American builder of harpsichords and clavichords, at one time the only such maker of harpsichords in the United States. His father Charles was a jeweler and watchmaker who moved his family from South Lyon, Michigan to Ypsilanti, Michigan in 1919. John attended Michigan Normal College (now Eastern Michigan University), where his interest in constructing keyboard instruments emerged. He spent four years apprenticing with Arnold Dolmetsch in England, returning in 1930, when he set himself up building instruments in a two-story space above a dress shop in Ypsilanti. At that time he was the only harpsichord maker in America. He later moved to Detroit. When his house was condemned to build the Chrysler Freeway, he moved to New York City. As he was the son of a ", "score": "1.7030699" }, { "id": "6871421", "title": "Roger Challis", "text": " Roger Leonard Alfred Challis (born 3 August 1943) is an English former professional footballer of the 1960s. He played professionally for Gillingham and Crewe Alexandra and made a total of 13 appearances in the Football League.", "score": "1.6422287" }, { "id": "8778386", "title": "John Henry Challis", "text": " Challis was born in England, the son of John Henry Challis, sergeant in the 9th Regiment, and his first wife. He was educated at several schools and trained as a clerk. He then migrated to Sydney, New South Wales, arriving on the Pyramis on 9 May 1829 as a steerage passenger. He was employed by Marsden and Flower, merchants. In 1842 the firm was reorganized under the name of Flower, Salting and Company, when Challis was admitted as a junior partner. The business dealt in wool, whale oil other commodities and became very prosperous. He acquired several properties, including a large holding at Potts Point, pastoral licenses of over 12,000 sq. miles (31,080 km²) in southern New South Wales, more than 3,500 cattle and 11,000 sheep. In 1855 he sold his business interests and returned to England. Returning to Europe, Challis spent much of his time travelling.", "score": "1.6382909" }, { "id": "3329959", "title": "Don Challis", "text": " Donald Challis (born 26 June 1929) is a British sound and dubbing editor for many critically acclaimed films, including The Three Musketeers (1973 live-action film), A Taste of Honey (film) and Help! (film). His most famous contribution was to Oh! What a Lovely War as the sound editor, winning him a BAFTA Film Award alongside Simon Kaye for Best Film Soundtrack in 1970.", "score": "1.6120653" }, { "id": "10239909", "title": "George Challis (Australian rules footballer)", "text": " Challis was a Tasmanian and started his career at Launceston, where he was a premiership player in 1909 and regular NTFA representative at the State Championships. He also represented Tasmania at the 1911 Adelaide Carnival, participating in their famous win over Western Australia. During this time he played mainly as a half forward or rover but when he was lured to Carlton in 1912 he soon established himself as a wingman. It was in that position that he starred in Carlton's 1915 premiership team. He almost missed out on the chance to win a premiership as he had attempted to join the army at the beginning of the season, only to be refused because his toes overlapped.", "score": "1.6109762" }, { "id": null, "title": "Roger Lloyd-Pack", "text": "Roger Lloyd-Pack\n\nRoger Lloyd-Pack (8 February 1944 – 15 January 2014) was an English actor. He is best known for playing Trigger in \"Only Fools and Horses\" from 1981 to 2003, and Owen Newitt in \"The Vicar of Dibley\" from 1994 to 2007. He later starred as Tom in \"The Old Guys\" with Clive Swift. He is also well known for the role of Barty Crouch Sr. in \"Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire\" and for his appearances in \"Doctor Who\" as John Lumic in the episodes \"Rise of the Cybermen\" and \"The Age of Steel\". He was sometimes credited without the hyphen in his surname. He died in 2014 from pancreatic cancer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Mount Rushmore", "text": "Mount Rushmore\n\nMount Rushmore National Memorial is a national memorial centered on a colossal sculpture carved into the granite face of Mount Rushmore (Lakota: \"Tȟuŋkášila Šákpe\", or Six Grandfathers) in the Black Hills near Keystone, South Dakota, United States. Sculptor Gutzon Borglum created the sculpture's design and oversaw the project's execution from 1927 to 1941 with the help of his son, Lincoln Borglum. The sculpture features the heads of four United States Presidents recommended by Borglum: George Washington (1732–1799), Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826), Theodore Roosevelt (1858–1919) and Abraham Lincoln (1809–1865). The four presidents were chosen to represent the nation's birth, growth, development and preservation, respectively. The memorial park covers and the mountain itself has an elevation of above sea level.\n\nThe sculptor and tribal representatives settled on Mount Rushmore, which also has the advantage of facing southeast for maximum sun exposure. Doane Robinson wanted it to feature American West heroes, such as Lewis and Clark, their expedition guide Sacagawea, Oglala Lakota chief Red Cloud, Buffalo Bill Cody, and Oglala Lakota chief Crazy Horse. Borglum believed that the sculpture should have broader appeal and chose the four presidents.\n\nPeter Norbeck, U.S. senator from South Dakota, sponsored the project and secured federal funding. Construction began in 1927 and the presidents' faces were completed between 1934 and 1939. After Gutzon Borglum died in March 1941, his son Lincoln took over as leader of the construction project. Each president was originally to be depicted from head to waist, but lack of funding forced construction to end on October 31, 1941.\n\nSometimes referred to as the \"Shrine of Democracy\", Mount Rushmore attracts more than two million visitors annually.<ref name=\"tourismstat\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Thomas Allom", "text": "Thomas Allom\n\nThomas Allom (13 March 1804 – 21 October 1872) was an English architect, artist, and topographical illustrator. He was a founding member of what became the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). He designed many buildings in London, including the Church of St Peter's and parts of the elegant Ladbroke Estate in Notting Hill. He also worked with Sir Charles Barry on numerous projects, most notably the Houses of Parliament, and is also known for his numerous topographical works, such as \"Constantinople and the Scenery of the Seven Churches of Asia Minor\", published in 1838, and \"China Illustrated\", published in 1845.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Stella Gibbons", "text": "Stella Gibbons\n\nStella Dorothea Gibbons (5 January 1902 – 19 December 1989) was an English writer, journalist, and poet. She established her reputation with her first novel, \"Cold Comfort Farm\" (1932) which has been reprinted many times. Although she was active as a writer for half a century, none of her later 22 novels or other literary works—which included a sequel to \"Cold Comfort Farm\"—achieved the same critical or popular success. Much of her work was long out of print before a modest revival in the 21st century.\n\nThe daughter of a London medical doctor, Gibbons had a turbulent and often unhappy childhood. After an indifferent school career she trained as a journalist, and worked as a reporter and features writer, mainly for the \"Evening Standard\" and \"The Lady\". Her first book, published in 1930, was a collection of poems which was well received, and through her life she considered herself primarily a poet rather than a novelist. After \"Cold Comfort Farm\", a satire on the genre of rural-themed \"loam and lovechild\" novels popular in the late 1920s, most of Gibbons's novels were based within the middle-class suburban world with which she was familiar.\n\nGibbons became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 1950. Her style has been praised by critics for its charm, barbed humour and descriptive skill, and has led to comparison with Jane Austen. The success of \"Cold Comfort Farm\" dominated her career, and she grew to resent her identification with the book to the exclusion of the rest of her output. Widely regarded as a one-work novelist, she and her works have not been accepted into the canon of English literature—partly, other writers have suggested, because of her detachment from the literary world and her tendency to mock it.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tom Atkins (actor)", "text": "Tom Atkins (actor)\n\nTom Atkins (born November 13, 1935) is an American actor. He is known for his work in the horror and thriller film genres, having worked with writers and directors such as Shane Black, William Peter Blatty, John Carpenter, Fred Dekker, Richard Donner, Stephen King, and George A. Romero. He is also a familiar face to mainstream viewers, often playing police officers and tough authority figures and was best known for his role as Lt. Alex Diel in \"The Rockford Files\" (1974–1977).\n\nAtkins has appeared in numerous films including \"The Fog\" (1980), \"The Ninth Configuration\" (1980), \"Escape from New York\" (1981), \"Creepshow\" (1982), \"\" (1982), \"Night of the Creeps\" (1986), \"Lethal Weapon\" (1987), \"Maniac Cop\" (1988), \"Two Evil Eyes\" (1990), \"Bob Roberts\" (1992), \"Striking Distance\" (1993), \"My Bloody Valentine 3D\" (2009), \"Drive Angry\" (2011), \"Encounter\" (2018), \"Trick\" (2019) and the science fiction short film \"Polybius\" (2020) where he portrays the role of Sheriff Atkins.\n\nAtkins has also appeared in numerous television series and films such as \"Hawaii Five-O\" (1975), \"\" (1990), \"What She Doesn't Know\" (1992), \"Walker, Texas Ranger\" (1993), \"Fortune Hunter\" (1994), \"\" (1996), \"\" (1998), \"Oz\" (2003), \"\" (2003), \"The Jury\" (2004), \"Horror's Hollowed Grounds\" (2016) and \"The Last-Drive In with Joe Bob Briggs\" (2019).", "score": null }, { "id": "10239911", "title": "George Challis (Australian rules footballer)", "text": " A teacher by profession, and a committed Esperantist, he was eventually signed up and served with the 58th Infantry Battalion on the Western Front.", "score": "1.5846478" }, { "id": "11689604", "title": "John Challis", "text": " John Spurley Challis was born on 16 August 1942 in Clifton, Bristol, England. An only child, his family moved to Southeast London when he was one year old. He grew up in Epsom, after the family moved to Surrey. Challis attended the state boarding Ottershaw School near Woking, Surrey. His father was Alec, a civil servant with the Admiralty who became secretary to the energy minister; he was a strict disciplinarian. His mother was Joan (née Harden), a former ambulance driver who performed in amateur dramatics and taught drama in schools. After leaving school, he worked as a trainee estate agent, before he \"ran away with the Argyle Theatre for Youth\".", "score": "1.543709" }, { "id": "10239906", "title": "George Challis (Australian rules footballer)", "text": " George David Challis (9 February 1891 – 15 July 1916) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Carlton in the Victorian Football League (VFL) during the early 1910s.", "score": "1.5404229" }, { "id": "13684130", "title": "Harry Challis", "text": " Harry Challis (19 April 1906 – 25 November 1989) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Fitzroy in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "score": "1.5353618" }, { "id": "10239908", "title": "George Challis (Australian rules footballer)", "text": " He attended Launceston Church Grammar School.", "score": "1.5224204" }, { "id": "3329962", "title": "Don Challis", "text": " the Roof. However he fell ill during the production of the film so his role was taken over by Les Wiggins, a sound editor from Middlesex, England. This resulted in Wiggins being credited sound editor, leaving Don Challis uncredited despite his contribution. Challis' last contribution to the sound department of the film industry was in 1976 with Emily (film). Then, at the end of the same year, he moved from his home in Hertfordshire, England, to Essex with his wife and two daughters. Marking the move as the end of his career in the sound editing department, he settled for the ownership of a small post office.", "score": "1.5142034" }, { "id": "3329960", "title": "Don Challis", "text": " Don Challis was born in Tottenham, England. His career started at the age of 19 in 1948 at the Pinewood Studios in Buckinghamshire, England, with the Crown Film Unit as an apprentice assistant film editor, the studios having been commandeered by the government for making propaganda films for the Ministry of Information. His Association of Cine Technicians Union membership number was 8708. He spent some time at Beaconsfield Studios, Merton Park Studios and Countryman Films in Soho Square, London. In 1969, he took the role of sound editor for the hit musical film Oh! What a Lovely War which went down as a huge success, winning five BAFTA ", "score": "1.5124817" }, { "id": "30388721", "title": "John Challis (activist)", "text": " activist, known for his campaigns for equality in superannuation law. Challis makes media appearances as spokesman for the lobby group ComSuper Action Committee. MP Warren Entsch acknowledged Challis as being one of the leading campaigners for same-sex equality in Australia. Challis worked for the ABC until 1988, before retiring. He and his partner survive from the income of his Commonwealth superannuation. As Australia's most vocal campaigner for same-sex superannuation reform, Challis said in 2007 that at age 79, he and his partner could not afford to be patient. The couple are planning for the possibility that Challis may die before the legislative changes occur.", "score": "1.5122905" }, { "id": "8887405", "title": "George Challis (rugby league)", "text": " George Challis (1889-1965) was an Australian rugby league footballer who played for the Annandale, Eastern Suburbs and Balmain clubs in the New South Wales Rugby League(NSWRL) competition.", "score": "1.5085185" }, { "id": "31412651", "title": "John Challis (harpsichord)", "text": " changes. A Challis pedal harpsichord was used by E. Power Biggs on two Columbia Masterworks recordings of the music of J.S. Bach and two of Scott Joplin. Makers who worked or apprenticed in his shop included William Dowd, Frank Rutkowski, and Stewart Pollens. Kottick, in his authoritative A History of the Harpsichord, expresses admiration for Challis's innovative work, but also notes it was something of a dead end: during Challis's lifetime, the construction of harpsichords shifted strongly toward close imitation of the work of the historical master builders of the 18th century and earlier. Thus, Challis's harpsichords served as a something of a last hurrah for 20th century efforts to improve the harpsichord by using modern technology. The movement toward historicist construction was initiated, among others, by Challis's own student Dowd.", "score": "1.5066695" }, { "id": "33151018", "title": "Gordon Challis", "text": " Challis was born in a Welsh family in Birmingham, England, and raised there and in Sydney. After living for a time in Spain, he arrived in New Zealand in 1953 and worked as a postman in Wellington and studied psychology and social work at Victoria University. After working as a psychiatric social worker in Porirua Hospital 1961–62, he joined the new Hastings psychiatric unit as a psychologist. He returned to psychiatric social work in 1973, at Canberra, and retired from it in 1988, at Porirua, and moved to Nelson. During his final years, Challis lived in Golden Bay.", "score": "1.4997544" }, { "id": "7688227", "title": "Challis (surname)", "text": "Alva Challis (1930–2010), Welsh-born New Zealand geologist ; Christopher Challis (1919–2012), British cinematographer ; Ellie Challis (born 2004), British Paralympic swimmer ; George Challis (rugby league), Australian rugby player ; Gordon Challis (1932–2018), New Zealand poet ; James Challis, British clergyman and astronomer ; John Challis (1942–2021), English actor ; John Henry Challis, Anglo-Australian merchant and philanthropist Challis is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.4918094" }, { "id": "10239907", "title": "George Challis (Australian rules footballer)", "text": " The son of Michael Charles Challis (1865–1928), and Margaret Challis (1868–1943), née McGregor, George David Challis was born at Cleveland in the Northern Midlands of Tasmania on 9 February 1891. He is the great-great-uncle of Levi Casboult.", "score": "1.4820105" }, { "id": "10239910", "title": "George Challis (Australian rules footballer)", "text": " The Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame was established in 2005; and among all of those who had played football in Tasmania over more than a century, Challis was one of the 130 former players chosen to be in the initial list of inductees.", "score": "1.4780177" }, { "id": "24950963", "title": "Thomas Tulis", "text": " Thomas Tulis (born 1961) is an American photographer and painter living and working in Atlanta, Georgia. He was born in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Tulis lives a very simple life. After a couple of years of college, Tulis joined the United States Army. After the army he put all of his time and efforts into his art. In 1985 he was able to open his first studio and that same year was asked to do his first exhibition.", "score": "1.474124" } ]
What is Christopher Butson's occupation?
[ "priest", "reverend", "priestess" ]
occupation
Christopher Butson (priest)
262,900
56
[ { "id": "13044447", "title": "Butson", "text": "Christopher Butson, Church of Ireland bishop ; Christopher Butson (priest), Irish Anglican priest ; Matthew Butson, New Zealand Paralympic alpine skier ; Richard Butson, Canadian surgeon Butson is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.6410567" }, { "id": "28911603", "title": "Christopher Paul Hasson", "text": " Hasson was an F/A-18 aircraft mechanic in the Marine Corps from 1988 to 1993, achieving the rank of corporal. He was then on active duty with the Army National Guard for approximately two years. He served with the Virginia Army National Guard as an infantryman with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 183rd Infantry Regiment. In September 1995, Hasson transferred to the Arizona Army National Guard and left in March 1996, exiting with the same rank as when he joined. He served in the Coast Guard for more than twenty years, initially as an Electronics Technician. At the time of his arrest, Hasson was an acquisitions officer for the Coast Guard's National Security Cutter program at Coast Guard Headquarters, having served in that post since June 2016.", "score": "1.6181002" }, { "id": "13457356", "title": "James Butson", "text": " The Ven. James Strange Butson (10 February 1778 – 29 January 1845) was an Irish Anglican priest. Butson was the son of Bishop Christopher Butson. He was educated at Winchester College and New College, Oxford. He was the Prebendary of Kilconnell in Clonfert Cathedral from 1809 until 1812; and Archdeacon of Clonfert from 1812 until his death. His son was himself Archdeacon of Clonfert, then Dean of Kilmacduagh.", "score": "1.5662149" }, { "id": "8949623", "title": "Richard Butson", "text": " Butson was born in Hankow, China of British parents on 24 October 1922. He was educated in England at Leighton Park School and then at the University of Cambridge and University College Hospital, graduating MB, BChir in 1945. He served in the Home Guard and a Light Rescue Squad in London during the Blitz and as a Medical Officer with the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey in the Antarctic from 1946 to 1948. During his year in Antarctica, the expedition found a route for dog teams over the 5,000-foot high mountains of the Grahamland Peninsula and surveyed the last thousand miles of the most inaccessible coastline of the world. For Bravery and Distinguished Service in Antarctica, Butson was awarded ", "score": "1.5361611" }, { "id": "32851767", "title": "Christopher Hewison", "text": " Christopher Jon Hewison (born October 6, 1979) was an English cricketer. Born in Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, he was a right-handed batsman and a right-arm medium-pace bowler. He also played occasional as a wicket-keeper. He played first-class and List A cricket for Nottinghamshire, and Durham CB during his four-year first-class career. Most recently, he has played Minor Counties Cricket for Northumberland.", "score": "1.5336826" }, { "id": null, "title": "Stephen Sandes", "text": "Stephen Sandes\n\nStephen Creagh Sandes (1778-1842) was a Church of Ireland bishop in the Nineteenth century.\n\nA Fellow of Trinity College, Dublin, he was ordained in 1807. He was consecrated Bishop of Killaloe, Kilfenora, Clonfert and Kilmacduagh on 12 June 1836 and translated to Cashel, Emly, Waterford and Lismore in February 1839.\n\nHe died on 13 November 1842.\n\nHe was the son of William Sandes and Margaret Creagh. He was born at Sallow Glen, near Tarbert, County Kerry, where the Sandes family had been settled for several generations. He married Mary Anne Dickson, daughter of Samuel Dickson of County Limerick, and they had four children.\n\nAmong his students at Trinity College was the eminent barrister and author Gerald Fitzgibbon, who remembered with gratitude that it was Sandes who advised him, despite his lack of money or influential connections (Fitzgibbon was a small farmer's son), to persist in a career in the law.\n\nA much younger cousin, who was also named Stephen Creagh Sandes, was the father of Elise Sandes, founder of a welfare movement for soldiers which survives today.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Christopher R. Johnson", "text": "Christopher R. Johnson\n\nChristopher Ray Johnson (born January 17, 1960 in Kansas City, Kansas) is an American computer scientist. He is a Distinguished Professor of Computer Science at the University of Utah, and founding director of the Scientific Computing and Imaging Institute (SCI). His research interests are in the areas of scientific computing and scientific visualization.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Shaw's and Star Market", "text": "Shaw's and Star Market\n\nShaw's and Star Market are two American supermarket chains under united management based in West Bridgewater, Massachusetts, employing about 30,000 associates in 150 total stores; 129 stores are operated under the Shaw's banner in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, while Star Market operates 21 stores in Massachusetts, most of which are in or near Boston. Until 2010, Shaw's operated stores in all six New England states, and as of 2021 Shaw's remained the only supermarket chain with stores in five of the six, after it sold its Connecticut operations. The chain's largest competitors are Hannaford, Market Basket, Price Chopper, Roche Bros., Wegmans, and Stop & Shop. Star Market is a companion store to Shaw's, Shaw's having purchased the competing chain in 1999.\n\nShaw's and Star Market are wholly owned subsidiaries of the Boise, Idaho–based Albertsons. The combined chain has the largest base of stores that operate in New England, but is the third-largest New England-based grocer behind Quincy, Massachusetts-based Stop & Shop and Scarborough, Maine-based Hannaford; Hannaford operates stores in upstate New York, while Stop & Shop's operations extend through downstate New York and into New Jersey; only Shaw's does business solely in New England.\n\nAs of July 5, 2013, Shaw's and Star Market no longer use loyalty cards at their stores, as a way to compete with other local stores that do not have them. However, like most of Albertsons' chains, Shaw's and Star Market participate in the \"just for U\" rewards program, which does not use a physical card.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kristin Chenoweth", "text": "Kristin Chenoweth\n\nKristin Dawn Chenoweth (; born Kristi Dawn Chenoweth; July 24, 1968) is an American actress and singer, with credits in musical theatre, film, and television. In 1999, she won a Tony Award for Best Featured Actress in a Musical for her performance as Sally Brown in \"You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown\" on Broadway. In 2003, Chenoweth received a second Tony Award nomination for originating the role of Glinda in the musical \"Wicked\". Her television roles include Annabeth Schott in NBC's \"The West Wing\" and Olive Snook on the ABC comedy drama \"Pushing Daisies\", for which she won a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series in 2009. She also starred in the ABC TV series \"GCB\" in 2012, played Lavinia in \"Trial & Error\" in 2018 and was the antagonist, Mildred Layton, in the Apple TV+ musical comedy \"Schmigadoon!\" (2021).\n\nChenoweth sang gospel music as a child in Oklahoma and studied opera before deciding to pursue a career in musical theatre. In 1997, she made her Broadway debut in \"Steel Pier\", winning a Theatre World Award, before appearing in \"You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown\" and \"Wicked\". Her other Broadway roles were in \"The Apple Tree\" in 2006, \"Promises, Promises\" in 2010 and \"On the Twentieth Century\" in 2015, for which she received another Tony Award nomination. She has also appeared in five City Center Encores!, Off-Broadway and regional theatre productions.\n\nChenoweth had her own sitcom, \"Kristin\", in 2001, and has guest-starred on many shows, including \"Sesame Street\" and \"Glee\", for which she was nominated for Emmy Awards in 2010 and 2011. In films, she has played mostly character roles, such as in \"Bewitched\" (2005), \"The Pink Panther\" (2006) and \"RV\" (2006). She has played roles in made-for-TV movies, such as \"Descendants\" (2015); done voice work in animated films such as \"Rio 2\" (2014) and \"The Peanuts Movie\" (2015) along with the animated TV series \"Sit Down, Shut Up\" and \"BoJack Horseman\"; hosted several award shows; and released several albums of songs, including \"A Lovely Way to Spend Christmas\" (2008), \"Some Lessons Learned\" (2011), \"Coming Home\" (2014), \"The Art of Elegance\" (2016) and \"For the Girls\" (2019). Chenoweth also wrote a 2009 memoir, \"A Little Bit Wicked\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Glitch (Australian TV series)", "text": "Glitch (Australian TV series)\n\nGlitch is an Australian television programme which premiered on 9 July 2015 on ABC. The series is set in the fictional country town of Yoorana, Victoria, and follows seven people who return from the dead in perfect health but with no memory. No one in the town knows why the deceased have returned. The series was created by Tony Ayres and Louise Fox. The first series was awarded Best Television Drama Series at the 2016 AACTA Awards. The series also won Most Outstanding Drama Series at the 2016 Logie Awards.\n\nOn 26 October 2015, ABC TV renewed the show for a second series of six episodes. The second series premiered on 14 September 2017 on ABC. Series two follows James and the Risen as they begin to unravel the mystery of how and why they are back, though their journey of reconciliation, romance, and revenge is soon disrupted by a new and even more lethal threat. \n\nThe first series was made available to stream on Netflix globally on 15 October 2016. Series 2 premiered on 28 November 2017 internationally on Netflix. The show concluded with the third season, which was announced via Facebook on 20 August 2018 and began filming on 17 September 2018. It premiered on 25 August 2019. Netflix globally released series 3 on 25 September 2019.", "score": null }, { "id": "30440284", "title": "Christopher Grigson", "text": " firm, A/S Athene. He ran the company for several years from his father-in-law's death in 1974 until the company closed due to oil crises of the 1970s. After the business closed he worked as an independent consultant in hydrodynamics, including investigation of the sinking of the bulk ore carrier Derbyshire. In 1992 he and his family moved to Grimstad, and Grigson began lecturing at the University of Agder Engineering College, teaching hydrodynamics and basic physics. He published nearly 20 papers in the journal of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects before his death of cancer in Grimstad on 19 February 2001. Grigson was a fellow of the Royal Institution of Naval Architects.", "score": "1.5147324" }, { "id": "30889111", "title": "Christopher Rawson", "text": " Christopher Rawson (born Christopher Comstock Hart), is an American writer, university teacher and theater critic. Rawson was born in Providence, Rhode Island. His biological father was noted stage and film actor Richard Hart. His parents divorced shortly after he was born, and he was adopted by his stepfather, Jonathan Rawson.", "score": "1.5140688" }, { "id": "30440282", "title": "Christopher Grigson", "text": " Grigson was born in Hoshangabad, India to Sir Wilfrid Grigson, Deputy Commissioner of the Central Provinces and Berar, and his wife, Lady Phyllis Grigson. Grigson and his sister Claudia (who later married Henry Chilver) were both educated at a prep school in Sussex. While visiting his uncle and aunt in Cambridge he became ill with osteomyelitis of the hip, which left him bedridden for two years. Unable to leave, he was brought up by his uncle and aunt, and in 1946 won a place to study mechanical science at Trinity College, Cambridge. Despite still being ill he gained Firsts in both the Part I and Part II mechanical science triposes. After his health improved he took a PhD in electronics at Cambridge.", "score": "1.5016072" }, { "id": "8949633", "title": "Richard Butson", "text": " Butson was entitled to the following medals ", "score": "1.5010865" }, { "id": "3340685", "title": "Robert Christopherson", "text": " Robert Christopherson (born October 7, 1936) is an American boxer. He competed in the men's light heavyweight event at the 1964 Summer Olympics. At the 1964 Summer Olympics, he defeated Barkat Ali of Pakistan in the Round of 32, before losing to Aleksei Kiselyov of the Soviet Union in the Round of 16.", "score": "1.5009598" }, { "id": "28911615", "title": "Christopher Paul Hasson", "text": " Hasson is married. He lived in Silver Spring, Maryland.", "score": "1.5006844" }, { "id": "30281635", "title": "Christopher Harison", "text": " Christopher Harison (c. 1825 - 8 November 1897) was a British military officer and forestry official in South Africa. He served as Conservator of Forests and was an authority on forest practice in the region. Harison was born at Sutton Place, Seaford, East Sussex. He first arrived in the Cape of Good Hope in 1849 as a captain in the Perthshire Regiment (later the 2nd Battalion of the Black Watch, Royal Highland Regiment) to take part in the Eighth Frontier War (1850–1853). He resigned his commission on returning to England, married Louise Marie Millett Moorman, the daughter of a naval officer, and returned to Cape Agulhas to breed horses. The stud farm was not a ", "score": "1.4991028" }, { "id": "11888969", "title": "Jason Todd Ipson", "text": " Jason Todd Ipson (born July 28, 1972) is an American director, screenwriter, producer, fashion photographer and licensed physician and surgeon. Transitioning from surgical residency to the USC School of Cinematic Arts in 1999, he went on to form Asgaard Entertainment as well as write/direct the theatrically released feature films Unrest and Everybody Wants to be Italian.", "score": "1.4947748" }, { "id": "8949628", "title": "Richard Butson", "text": " Butson did postgraduate surgical studies in London until 1952, when he emigrated to Canada, settling in Hamilton, Ontario in 1953, where he practiced as a surgeon. With the establishment of McMaster University Medical School in 1970, he joined the part-time faculty, ending with the appointment of Clinical Professor in the Department of Surgery. He was Chief of Staff of St. Joseph's Hospital, a 600-bed teaching hospital, for two years and Head of the Service of General Surgery for many years. He has published about 20 papers on surgical topics. He found time to obtain a Doctorate in addition to his medical degree. Butson joined the Canadian Militia in 1956 as Medical Officer to the Royal Hamilton Light Infantry until 1972. He later commanded Hamilton's 23 Medical Company, with the ", "score": "1.4859821" }, { "id": "30889113", "title": "Christopher Rawson", "text": " active in several theater organizations. He is a board member of the American Theatre Hall of Fame, for which he supervises the annual nominations and balloting for the selection of new inductees. He has long been active in the American Theatre Critics Association (ATCA), which he has twice served as chair (1991–93 and 2007–11) and for which he has organized conferences in London, at Connecticut's O'Neill Theater Center, at Canada's Shaw and Stratford Festivals and at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival. In 2019 he was named ATCA Historian and he continues to chronicle its history through its website at www.americantheatrecritics.org. He was also a founding member of ", "score": "1.4813939" }, { "id": "30889112", "title": "Christopher Rawson", "text": " Rawson's main discipline is as a theater critic. From 1983 to 2009, he was full-time theater critic and theater editor at the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, covering theater not just in Pittsburgh but also irregularly in New York, London and the Canadian theater festivals. In 1984, he started the annual Post-Gazette (Pittsburgh) Performer of the Year Award, now (2019) in its 36th year. In 2009, he semi-retired, continuing as that paper's part-time senior theater critic. He also appears as the occasional critic for KDKA-TV. Mr. Rawson attended Deerfield Academy. His B.A. is from Harvard University and his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Washington at Seattle. Rawson ", "score": "1.472117" }, { "id": "5042823", "title": "Ryan Christopherson", "text": " Ryan Christopherson (born July 26, 1972) is a former running back in the National Football League for the Jacksonville Jaguars and Arizona Cardinals. He played college football at Wyoming and was drafted in the fifth round of the 1995 NFL Draft.", "score": "1.4710922" }, { "id": "28911602", "title": "Christopher Paul Hasson", "text": " Christopher Paul Hasson (born c. 1969) is a former United States Coast Guard lieutenant and self-described white nationalist who pleaded guilty to federal gun and drug crimes in 2019, and the following year was sentenced to more than 13 years in prison. Although not charged with a terrorism offense, prosecutors called Hasson a \"domestic terrorist\" and accused him of plotting the targeted assassinations of high-profile American politicians, media figures, and others, as well as indiscriminate terror attacks against what Hasson called \"leftists in general.\"", "score": "1.4695096" }, { "id": "31591368", "title": "Matthew Butson", "text": " Matthew Butson is a Paralympic medalist from New Zealand who competed in alpine skiing. He competed in the 1998 Winter Paralympics where he won three gold medals in Giant Slalom, Slalom and Super G, and a silver in Downhill.", "score": "1.4693394" }, { "id": "7167085", "title": "John Christopherson (cricketer)", "text": " John Clifford Christopherson (1 June 1909 – 8 January 1999) was an English cricketer and cricket administrator. Christopherson played first-class cricket for Cambridge University and for Kent County Cricket Club. Christopherson was born in 1909 in Blackheath in metropolitan Kent. He attended Uppingham School where he played in the Cricket XI from 1925 to 1928. He went up to Cambridge University and played in the 1929 Freshmen's match and in trial matches as well as for Kent's Second XI in the Minor Counties Championship in 1930 before making his first-class cricket debut for Kent against Derbyshire in May 1931. Later the ", "score": "1.4682438" } ]
What is Rich Brightman's occupation?
[ "singer-songwriter", "singer songwriter", "singer/songwriter", "singersongwriter", "singer-songwriter" ]
occupation
Rich Brightman
1,451,981
75
[ { "id": "15649139", "title": "Rich Brightman", "text": " Rich Brightman (born April 17, 1990) is an American singer-songwriter. He was born in Bay Shore, New York and raised on Long Island. Rich started writing songs on guitar in his childhood bedroom on Long Island before after dropping on music theory classes at Bay Shore High School and started to learn audio and mix engineering the school's recording studio during study hall, lunch, and his after school hours. Rich's mother, Sherry Brightman, gifted him a MacBook Pro for his high school graduation. Rich saved his high school graduation money along with his summer job earnings to buy studio equipment of his own to start work on his debut self-titled album. Rich released his first single \"Lighter Than Air\" on August 7, 2009 later releasing his first full self-titled album Rich Brightman on July 23, 2010. Rich attended Salve Regina University while writing his second album \"II\" released November 29, 2013 featuring rock alternative/pop tracks. During 2014–2016 Rich worked on his third release \"III\" which was released on Christmas Eve 2016", "score": "1.6586922" }, { "id": "2028670", "title": "Mark Bright", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.5855321" }, { "id": "2685903", "title": "Alan Richman", "text": " Richman is a graduate of the General Honors Program at the University of Pennsylvania. He was a cadet in the Army ROTC, rose to the rank of captain on active duty and served two tours in the United States Army, including one in South Vietnam, for which he was awarded the Bronze Star. He also served in the earlier U.S. invasion and occupation of the Dominican Republic.", "score": "1.5566993" }, { "id": "8888630", "title": "Larry L. Richman", "text": " Richman is a certified PMP (Project Management Professional), consultant, and trainer. He has authored seven books on project management, including two college texts. Richman directed the Publications and Media Project Office that manages the creation of 8,000 printed, media, and web products a year in up to 185 languages. This included managing the projects for writing, editing, translation, production, printing, and international distribution in 105 offices worldwide.", "score": "1.527907" }, { "id": "15681048", "title": "Damon Rich", "text": " Damon Rich (born 1975 in Creve Coeur, Missouri) is a Newark, New Jersey-based designer, urban planner, and visual artist known for investigating the politics of the built environment. He attended Deep Springs College and received a B.A. (1997) from Columbia College of Columbia University. His work looks at the shaping of the world through laws, finance, and politics. He explains his approach as follows: \"My exhibitions function as a kind of case study or experiment; each begins with a group of investigators who know little about the subject at hand, acting as stand-ins for the general public.\" In 1997, Rich founded the Center for Urban Pedagogy ", "score": "1.5197706" }, { "id": null, "title": "Rich Brightman", "text": "Rich Brightman\n\nRich Brightman (born April 17, 1990) is an American singer-songwriter. He was born in Bay Shore, New York and raised on Long Island. Rich started writing songs on guitar in his childhood bedroom on Long Island before after dropping on music theory classes at Bay Shore High School and started to learn audio and mix engineering the school's recording studio during study hall, lunch, and his after school hours.\n\nRich's mother, Sherry Brightman, gifted him a MacBook Pro for his high school graduation. Rich saved his high school graduation money along with his summer job earnings to buy studio equipment of his own to start work on his debut self-titled album. Rich released his first single \"\"Lighter Than Air\"\" on August 7, 2009 later releasing his first full self-titled album Rich Brightman on July 23, 2010. Rich attended Salve Regina University while writing his second album \"\"II\"\" released November 29, 2013 featuring rock alternative/pop tracks. During 2014–2016 Rich worked on his third release \"III\" which was released on Christmas Eve 2016\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrew Lloyd Webber", "text": "Andrew Lloyd Webber\n\nAndrew Lloyd Webber, Baron Lloyd-Webber (born 22 March 1948), is an English composer and impresario of musical theatre. Several of his musicals have run for more than a decade both in the West End and on Broadway. He has composed 21 musicals, a song cycle, a set of variations, two film scores, and a Latin Requiem Mass. \n\nSeveral of his songs have been widely recorded and were successful outside of their parent musicals, such as \"Memory\" from \"Cats,\" \"The Music of the Night\" and \"All I Ask of You\" from \"The Phantom of the Opera\", \"I Don't Know How to Love Him\" from \"Jesus Christ Superstar\", \"Don't Cry for Me Argentina\" from \"Evita\", and \"Any Dream Will Do\" from \"Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.\" In 2001, \"The New York Times\" referred to him as \"the most commercially successful composer in history\".\n\nHe has received a number of awards, including a knighthood in 1992, followed by a peerage for services to the arts, six Tonys, three Grammys (as well as the Grammy Legend Award), an Academy Award, 14 Ivor Novello Awards, seven Olivier Awards, a Golden Globe, a Brit Award, the 2006 Kennedy Center Honors, the 2008 Classic Brit Award for Outstanding Contribution to Music, and an Emmy Award. He is one of 17 people to have won an Oscar, an Emmy, a Grammy, and a Tony. He has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, is an inductee into the Songwriter's Hall of Fame, and is a fellow of the British Academy of Songwriters, Composers, and Authors.\n\nHis company, the Really Useful Group, is one of the largest theatre operators in London. Producers in several parts of the UK have staged productions, including national tours, of the Lloyd Webber musicals under licence from the Really Useful Group. Lloyd Webber is also the president of the Arts Educational Schools, London, a performing arts school located in Chiswick, West London. He is involved in a number of charitable activities, including the Elton John AIDS Foundation, Nordoff Robbins, Prostate Cancer UK and War Child. In 1992, he started the Andrew Lloyd Webber Foundation which supports the arts, culture, and heritage of the UK. In 2014 he designed a \"Cats\"-themed Paddington Bear statue, which was auctioned to raise funds for the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (NSPCC).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Don Rich", "text": "Don Rich\n\nDonald Eugene Ulrich (August 15, 1941 – July 17, 1974), best known by the stage name Don Rich, was an American country musician who helped develop the Bakersfield sound in the early 1960s. He was a noted guitarist and fiddler, and a member of The Buckaroos, the backing band of Don's best friend, country singer Buck Owens. Rich was killed in a motorcycle accident in 1974 at the age of 32.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Andrea Bocelli", "text": "Andrea Bocelli\n\nAndrea Bocelli (; born 22 September 1958) He was born visually impaired, with congenital glaucoma, and at the age of 12, Bocelli became completely blind, following a brain hemorrhage resulting from a football accident. After performing evenings in piano bars and competing in local singing contests, Bocelli signed his first recording contract with the Sugar Music label. He rose to fame in 1994, winning the 44th Sanremo Music Festival performing \"Il mare calmo della sera\".\n\nSince 1994, Bocelli has recorded 15 solo studio albums of both pop and classical music, three greatest hits albums, and nine complete operas, selling over 75 million records worldwide. He has had success as a crossover performer, bringing classical music to the top of international pop charts. His album \"Romanza\" is one of the best-selling albums of all time, while \"Sacred Arias\" is the biggest selling classical album by any solo artist in history. \"My Christmas\" was the best-selling holiday album of 2009 and one of the best-selling holiday albums in the United States. The 2019 album \"Sì\" debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart and US \"Billboard\" 200, becoming Bocelli's first number-one album in both countries. His song \"Con te partirò\", included on his second album \"Bocelli\", is one of the best-selling singles of all time. The track was licensed to feature in a series of television commercials for TIM in the late 1990s, which eventually became very popular in Italy.\n\nIn 1998, Bocelli was named one of \"People\" magazine's 50 Most Beautiful People. He duetted with Celine Dion on the song \"The Prayer\" for the animated film \"Quest for Camelot\", which won the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song.<ref name=\"Decca\"/> In 1999, he was nominated for Best New Artist at the Grammy Awards. He captured a listing in the \"Guinness Book of World Records\" with the release of his classical album \"Sacred Arias\", as he simultaneously held the top three positions on the US Classical Albums charts.<ref name=\"Decca\"/>\n\nBocelli was made a Grand Officer of the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic in 2006 and was honored with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on 2 March 2010 for his contribution to Live Theater and he was awarded a gold medal for Merit in Serbia in 2022. Singer Celine Dion has said that \"if God would have a singing voice, he must sound a lot like Andrea Bocelli\",", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Cliff Richard", "text": "Cliff Richard\n\nSir Cliff Richard (born Harry Rodger Webb; 14 October 1940) is an English singer who holds both British and Barbadian citizenship. He has total sales of over 21.5 million singles in the United Kingdom and is the third-top-selling artist in UK Singles Chart history, behind the Beatles and Elvis Presley. \n\nRichard was originally marketed as a rebellious rock and roll singer in the style of Presley and Little Richard. With his backing group, the Shadows, he dominated the British popular music scene in the pre-Beatles period of the late 1950s to early 1960s. His 1958 hit single \"Move It\" is often described as Britain's first authentic rock and roll song. In the early 1960s, he had a prosperous screen career with films including \"The Young Ones\", \"Summer Holiday\" and \"Wonderful Life\" and his own television show at the BBC. Increased focus on his Christian faith and subsequent softening of his music led to a more middle-of-the-road image, and he sometimes ventured into contemporary Christian music.\n\nIn a career spanning nearly 65 years, Richard has amassed several gold and platinum discs and awards, including two Ivor Novello Awards and three Brit Awards. More than 130 of his singles, albums, and EPs have reached the UK Top 20, more than any other artist. Richard has had 67 UK top ten singles, the second highest total for an artist (behind Presley). He holds the record, with Presley, as the only act to make the UK singles charts in all of its first six decades (1950s–2000s). He has achieved 14 UK No. 1 singles, and is the only singer to have had a No. 1 single in the UK in each of five consecutive decades. He also had four UK Christmas No. 1 singles, two of which were as a solo artist; \"Mistletoe and Wine\" and \"Saviour's Day\".\n\nRichard has sold more than 250 million records worldwide, making him one of the best-selling music artists of all time. He has never achieved the same popularity in the United States despite eight US Top 40 singles, including the million-selling \"Devil Woman\" and \"We Don't Talk Anymore\". In Canada, he had a successful period in the early 1960s, the late 1970s and early 1980s, with some releases certified gold and platinum. He has remained a popular music, film, and television personality at home in the UK as well as Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, Northern Europe and Asia, and retains a following in other countries. When not touring, he divides his time between Barbados and Portugal. In 2019, he relocated to New York.", "score": null }, { "id": "13453430", "title": "David Richman", "text": " Richman was born on May 1, 1978 and grew up in Wahpeton, North Dakota. A 2002 graduate of North Dakota State with a degree in physical education, Richman received a master's degree in sport and recreation management from NDSU in 2005.", "score": "1.512319" }, { "id": "8888628", "title": "Larry L. Richman", "text": " Larry L. Richman (born 1955) is a social media expert, Internet strategist, publishing executive, project management trainer, and author of over a dozen books, numerous book translations, and articles in professional journals and magazines. He is a translator in three languages.", "score": "1.5011064" }, { "id": "9302980", "title": "Keith Richman", "text": " Keith Stuart Richman (November 21, 1953 – July 30, 2010) was a California Republican politician. From 2000 to 2006, he served in the California State Assembly representing the 38th Assembly District based in Northwest Los Angeles County. Born in Syracuse, New York, Richman graduated from Birmingham High School in 1971 and earned his Bachelor of Science in 1975 from the University of California, Davis, where he played baseball and was named an All-Conference pitcher. As part of the 1972 UC Davis baseball team, he was named to the UC Davis Baseball Hall of Fame. In 1998, he was named the Collegiate Alumnus of the Year by ", "score": "1.4886583" }, { "id": "26352247", "title": "Jeffrey Richman", "text": " Jeffrey Richman is an American writer, producer and actor.", "score": "1.4838206" }, { "id": "27517553", "title": "Josh Richman", "text": " Josh Eric Richman (born May 21, 1965) is an American actor, writer, producer, and director. He is best known for his work with Guns N' Roses.", "score": "1.4800324" }, { "id": "15649142", "title": "Rich Brightman", "text": "FLESH 4 FLESH ; HIT LIST ; RUN ; WALDEINSAMKEIT ; LATE NIGHTS ; FIRST SIGHT ; IKTSUARPOK ; ONCE MORE ; MONO NO AWARE Source:", "score": "1.4771188" }, { "id": "3368525", "title": "Lucas Richman", "text": " Richman is the son of American actors Peter Mark Richman and Helen (Landess) Richman. He received his master of music degree in conducting from the University of Southern California. Richman earned a Dramalogue Award for conducting Leonard Bernstein’s Candide in 2005. As conductor, Richman was music director for the Knoxville Symphony Orchestra from 2003 to 2015. Richman has been current music director for the Bangor Symphony Orchestra since 2010. In 2011, Richman and his collaborators on the Christopher Tin album Calling All Dawns received the Grammy Award for Best Classical Crossover Album, with Richman conducting the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra. As composer, Richman premiered his work ", "score": "1.4726288" }, { "id": "8888629", "title": "Larry L. Richman", "text": " Richman is an online strategist with a specialty in using social media in product marketing. He is currently employed by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) to plan, evaluate, and market the church's educational materials to members and leaders worldwide. Since 2006, he has written daily articles at LDSMediaTalk.com and LDS365.com, his professional blog about LDS Church materials and using social media and technology responsibly. The blog has a total reach of 75,000 from 168 countries. Richman directed the content and services of LDS.org, coordinating with all the websites of the LDS Church, such as Mormon.org, FamilySearch.org, JosephSmith.net, and JesusChrist.lds.org. He was the domain portfolio manager of the church’s hundreds of web properties with tens of thousands of web pages (plus millions of pages of documents in the Gospel Library in many languages). LDS Church websites are visited by over 25 million people each month Richman directed a redesign and rebuild of LDS.org from 2004-2007, implementing XML, metadata and taxonomy standards, a content management system, web portal server technology, new web search tools, and a strategy for Search Engine Optimization.", "score": "1.4713373" }, { "id": "2685902", "title": "Alan Richman", "text": " Alan Richman (born January 25, 1944) is an American journalist and food writer. He was a food correspondent for GQ magazine, and has won 16 James Beard Foundation Awards for journalism.", "score": "1.4711678" }, { "id": "10303966", "title": "Jerry Brightman", "text": " Gerald Warner \"Jerry\" Brightman (September 1, 1953 &ndash; March 9, 2015) was an American pedal steel guitarist who played for Buck Owens and The Buckaroos and featured on television's Hee Haw along with performing on many top 10 records with Buck, Susan Raye, Tony Booth, and others.", "score": "1.462367" }, { "id": "12622845", "title": "Adam Richman (singer)", "text": " Adam Richman (born c. 1982) is an American indie pop singer-songwriter. He is best known for his making multi-track, multi-instrument recordings.", "score": "1.4621983" }, { "id": "1948954", "title": "Don Richman", "text": " Richman was born in 1931 and spent his childhood in Hartford, Connecticut. For his post-secondary education, he went to Vanderbilt University and the University of Southern California. While he was at USC, Richman was a sports information director from 1956 to 1959.", "score": "1.4571326" }, { "id": "6628670", "title": "Brightman", "text": "Bright Man is a Robot Master in the Mega Man series ; Brightman Street Bridge, a bridge in Fall River/Somerset, Massachusetts ", "score": "1.4541941" }, { "id": "8224704", "title": "Mike Richman", "text": " Michael Richman (born June 23, 1985) is an American mixed martial artist currently competing in the Lightweight division of the Legacy Fighting Alliance. A professional competitor in mixed martial arts since 2008, Richman has competed for Bellator MMA, and is also 2-0 as a professional boxer.", "score": "1.4455866" }, { "id": "12386511", "title": "Jonathan Richman", "text": " Jonathan Michael Richman (born May 16, 1951) is an American singer, songwriter and guitarist. In 1970, he founded the Modern Lovers, an influential proto-punk band. Since the mid-1970s, Richman has worked either solo or with low-key acoustic and electric backing. He now plays only acoustic to protect his hearing. He is known for his wide-eyed, unaffected, and childlike outlook, and music that, while rooted in rock and roll, is influenced by music from around the world.", "score": "1.444711" } ]
What is Franz Seitz Sr.'s occupation?
[ "film director", "movie director", "director", "motion picture director", "screenwriter", "scenarist", "writer", "screen writer", "script writer", "scriptwriter", "film producer", "movie producer", "producer" ]
occupation
Franz Seitz Sr.
6,408,631
73
[ { "id": "27047818", "title": "Franz Seitz Sr.", "text": " Franz Seitz Sr. (14 April 1887 &ndash; 7 March 1952) was a German film director and screenwriter. He directed 59 films between 1920 and 1951. His son Franz Seitz Jr. was a film producer. ", "score": "1.6691607" }, { "id": "28354503", "title": "Franz von Seitz", "text": " Seitz was a native of Munich, Bavaria, son of Johann Baptist Seitz. He studied at the Munich Academy of Art under Joseph Schlotthauer and afterwards worked independently as a lithographer and engraver. In 1848 he took over the artistic direction of the satirical newspaper Leuchtkugeln. From 1855 he was the costume director of the Munich Hoftheater. In 1858 he was appointed professor at the Academy of Art. In 1869 he was made artistic director of the Court Theatre (Hofbühne) and director of scenery at the Residenz Theatre, Munich. In 1876 he retired and was made an honorary Member of the Academy of Art. Franz von Seitz was buried in the Alter Südfriedhof in Munich.", "score": "1.6530781" }, { "id": "28354502", "title": "Franz von Seitz", "text": " Franz von Seitz, born Franz Seitz (31 December 1817 &ndash; 13 April 1883) was a German painter, lithographer, engraver and costume designer as well as an art teacher and theatre director.", "score": "1.635484" }, { "id": "27248527", "title": "Franz Seitz Jr.", "text": " Franz Seitz Jr. (22 October 1921 &ndash; 19 January 2006) was a German film producer, screenwriter and film director. He produced 74 films between 1951 and 2006. He was a member of the jury at the 16th Berlin International Film Festival. His 1982 film Doctor Faustus was entered into the 13th Moscow International Film Festival where it won the Silver Prize. In 1983 he was a member of the jury at the 33rd Berlin International Film Festival. In 1991 his film Success was entered into the 41st Berlin International Film Festival. In 1997 he won the Berlinale Camera award at the 47th Berlin International Film Festival. His father, Franz Seitz Sr. was also a film director.", "score": "1.5935197" }, { "id": "14322657", "title": "Otto Seitz", "text": " Otto Seitz, was a 19th-century German painter; born 3 September 1846 in Munich. As a professor with the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, he was the mentor of many major artists.", "score": "1.5045345" }, { "id": "18523907", "title": "Otto Seitz", "text": "He died March 13, 1912, and was buried in the Old South Cemetery in Munich. Otto Seitz Otto Seitz, was a 19th-century German painter; born 3 September 1846 in Munich. As a professor with the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, he was the mentor of many major artists. His primary subjects were genre scenes, floral still life and landscapes. in works with titles such as: Some of his most famous works are small, sometimes even miniatures, for example, his \"Faun and Nymph\" (oil on wood) has the dimensions 9 cm x 8 cm (3.5 x 3.1 inches) and \"Landscapes\" (watercolor", "score": "1.5004156" }, { "id": "12806513", "title": "Franz Heinrich Zitz", "text": "Franz Heinrich Zitz Dr. Franz Heinrich Zitz (November 18, 1803 in Mainz – April 30, 1877) was a prominent Mainz attorney and enjoyed much success with women due to his comeliness. He was a restless and at times dissolute man. On June 3, 1837, he married the writer Katharina Theresa Halein, not completely of his own free will, but under threat of suicide. They lived together two years and remained married for the rest of their lives. As a member of the Frankfurt parliament, Franz played a respected role on the far left, and as the head of the militia", "score": "1.491908" }, { "id": "19203182", "title": "Gustav Seitz", "text": "Gustav Seitz Gustav Seitz (11 September 1906 – 26 October 1969) was a German sculptor and artist. Seitz was born in the Neckarau quarter of Mannheim, the son of a plasterer. He attended school locally till 1921 and then embarked on a traineeship in his father's trade. In 1922 he visited the Kunsthalle (Modern and contemporary art museum) in Mannheim, and was moved to embark on two-year apprenticeship as a stonemason and sculptor across the river in Ludwigshafen with the sculptor August Dursy. He also attended drawing classes at the Mannheim Vocational College (\"\"Gewerbeschule Mannheim\"\"). After this, between 1924 and", "score": "1.4855328" }, { "id": "3040323", "title": "Karl Seitz", "text": "the Ravensbrück concentration camp, only to again return to Vienna when Nazi Germany eventually collapsed, in May 1945. Though now ill, Seitz served the newly established Social Democratic Party of Austria as its honorary chairman and a nominal National Council member until his death, at the age of 80. Karl Seitz Karl Josef Seitz (; 4 September 1869 – 3 February 1950) was an Austrian politician of the Social Democratic Workers' Party. He served as member of the Imperial Council, President of the National Council and Mayor of Vienna. Seitz was born in Vienna, the back then capital of the", "score": "1.4734559" }, { "id": "18523906", "title": "Otto Seitz", "text": "Otto Seitz Otto Seitz, was a 19th-century German painter; born 3 September 1846 in Munich. As a professor with the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, he was the mentor of many major artists. His primary subjects were genre scenes, floral still life and landscapes. in works with titles such as: Some of his most famous works are small, sometimes even miniatures, for example, his \"Faun and Nymph\" (oil on wood) has the dimensions 9 cm x 8 cm (3.5 x 3.1 inches) and \"Landscapes\" (watercolor / pencil on wood) had lateral dimensions of approximately 2 cm. (not quite 1 inch).", "score": "1.4718275" }, { "id": "10665672", "title": "Karl Seitz", "text": " Karl Josef Seitz (4 September 1869 – 3 February 1950) was an Austrian politician of the Social Democratic Workers' Party. He served as member of the Imperial Council, President of the National Council and Mayor of Vienna.", "score": "1.5040762" }, { "id": "12594832", "title": "Ludovico Seitz", "text": " His father was the painter, Alexander Maximilian Seitz, a member of the Nazarene movement; originally from Munich. His mother, Gertrud née Platner, was the daughter of the painter and diplomat, Ernst Zacharias Platner. King Ludwig I was his godfather. He initially studied art with his father, then with Friedrich Overbeck and, later, from Peter von Cornelius. In 1887, he became an Inspector (curator) at the Vatican Galleries, and was promoted to Director in 1894. He belonged to several Catholic artists' associations and produced numerous religious frescoes, mostly in Nazarene style, but also with hints of Historicism. Perhaps his best known works are ceiling frescoes, commissioned by Pope Leo XIII, in the \"Gallery ", "score": "1.4944148" }, { "id": "3910995", "title": "Franz K. Opitz", "text": " Franz K. Opitz (1916–1988) was a Swiss painter.", "score": "1.4934634" }, { "id": "12817907", "title": "Franz Sedlacek", "text": " Franz Sedlacek was born in Breslau on 21 January 1891, and moved with his family to Linz in 1897. In 1909 he graduated from the Royal High School at the Fadingerstraße. A year later, he moved to Vienna and studied architecture and chemistry. After serving in World War I, he completed his studies and in 1921 began working at the Technical Museum of Vienna. In 1923, Sedlacek married Maria Albrecht. The couple raised two daughters. Sedlacek joined the Wehrmacht in 1939, fighting in Russia, Norway and Poland. He went missing during the battle for the Toruń Fortress.", "score": "1.4802655" }, { "id": "30375916", "title": "Holger Seitz", "text": " Seitz was born in Simbach am Inn, West Germany on 9 October 1974.", "score": "1.4743156" }, { "id": "10665673", "title": "Karl Seitz", "text": " Seitz was born in Vienna, the back then capital of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. He was the son of a struggling small-time coal trader. After the premature death of his father, in 1875, the family was thrown into abject poverty, and Seitz had to be sent off to an orphanage. He nonetheless received adequate education and earned a scholarship so that he could enroll in a teacher-training college in the city of St. Pölten, Lower Austria. In 1888, he took employment as a public elementary school teacher in Vienna. Already an outspoken Social Democrat, he was disciplined several times for his political activism. His founding of a Social Democratic teachers' union in 1896 led to his delegation into the Lower Austrian Board of Education in 1897, which then led to his termination as a teacher, later that year.", "score": "1.4690526" }, { "id": "10014009", "title": "Bill Seitz", "text": " William J. Seitz III (born October 29, 1954) is the state representative for the 30th District of the Ohio House of Representatives. He is a Republican. The district consists of Cheviot, Delhi Township, Green as well as portions of Cincinnati, in Hamilton County. Formerly, Seitz represented the same seat from 2001 to 2007. He served in the Ohio Senate from 2007 to 2016. He also has served as Majority Leader since 2017.", "score": "1.4496689" }, { "id": "10222990", "title": "John F. Seitz", "text": " John Francis Seitz, A.S.C. (June 23, 1892 &ndash; February 27, 1979) was an American cinematographer and inventor. He was nominated for seven Academy Awards.", "score": "1.4451771" }, { "id": "12594831", "title": "Ludovico Seitz", "text": " Ludovico Seitz, or Ludwig Seitz (11 June 1844, Rome - 11 September 1908, Albano Laziale) was an Italian painter of German ancestry, who served as Director of the Vatican Galleries.", "score": "1.4413693" }, { "id": "1169532", "title": "Franz Šedivý", "text": " Šedivý was born on 2 December 1864 in Prague, the son of xylographer Franz Joseph Sedivý and Therese Josephine Sadlo. He was educated as a lithographer and draughtsman from Hoffenberg & Trap in 1883. He was also following classes in drawing at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in 1882.", "score": "1.4310086" }, { "id": "1885314", "title": "Wolfgang Franz (mathematician)", "text": "His work is characterized as a pattern of clarity, mastery in expression and matter, he has shown himself as a researcher of rank and is well known in his teaching abilities. As a teacher as well as a researcher, he is one of the best hopes ... Wolfgang Franz was the son of an Chief Auditor (German:Oberstudiendirektor) and studied mathematics, physics and philosophy at the University of Kiel (after his high school diploma in Kiel) with exams in Berlin, Vienna and Halle. In 1930 he passed the Lehramt examination in Kiel. He was promoted in 1930 to Dr Phil on David Hilbert's Irreduzibilitätssatz problem, with a doctoral thesis titled: Investigations on Hilbert's irreducibility (German:Untersuchungen zum Hilbertschen Irreduzibilitätssatz) in Halle, his doctoral advisor was Helmut Hasse (after he had started a dissertation with a different topic under Ernst Steinitz, but he died). Together with Hasse, Franz ", "score": "1.4246111" }, { "id": "28354504", "title": "Franz von Seitz", "text": " Among much else, Franz made many designs, with his son Rudolf, for the decoration of Schloss Linderhof. They also decorated the inside of the Royal train of King Ludwig II of Bavaria, inspired by the Palace of Versailles.", "score": "1.4227208" }, { "id": "30375915", "title": "Holger Seitz", "text": " Holger Seitz (born 9 October 1974) is a German football manager and former professional player who last coached Bayern Munich II.", "score": "1.421261" }, { "id": "24988581", "title": "Ernest Seitz", "text": " Ernest Joseph Seitz (29 February 1892 – 10 September 1978) was a Canadian composer, songwriter, pianist, and music educator. He published some of his work under the pseudonym \"Raymond Roberts\" because he did not wish to be associated with popular music. His most famous work is The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise, which he co-wrote with Gene Lockhart. Some of his other notable songs include Laddie Boy (1932), When Moonbeams Softly Fall (1935), and The Sky's the Limit (1943). He retired from performance in 1945 and from teaching in 1946. For the rest of his life he served as president of his family's business, an automobile dealership in Toronto. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts in London in 1954 and in 1984 Ernest Seitz Park was opened in Toronto.", "score": "1.4190707" }, { "id": "1169531", "title": "Franz Šedivý", "text": " Franz Šedivý (2 December 1864 – 20 April 1945) was a Danish illustrator most known for his detailed bird's-eye view prospects. He worked for many of the leading newspapers and magazines of his time. His work was also featured on postcards, advertisements and in schoolbooks.", "score": "1.4159304" } ]
What is Frederick Dundas's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Frederick Dundas
4,161,947
66
[ { "id": "32328467", "title": "Frederick Dundas", "text": " Frederick Dundas (14 June 1802 – 26 October 1872) was a British politician.", "score": "1.7091597" }, { "id": "7113676", "title": "Charles Dundas (colonial administrator)", "text": " Dundas was district commissioner of the Moshi area in Tanzania during the 1920s. In 1930 he founded the Kilimanjaro Native Cooperative Union. He popularised the area's coffee production, and was given the title Wasaoye-o-Wachagga (Elder of the Chagga). He noticed that, in Chagga society, care of the furrows was a prime social duty. If a furrow was damaged, even accidentally, one of the elders would sound a horn in the evening (which was known as the call to the furrows). The next morning, townspeople would leave their normal work and set about the business of repairing the damaged furrow. Dundas became very popular and respected during his stay at Moshi. When he left Moshi for the last time by train to Tanga and ship to Dar es Salaam, the Chagga reputedly hired a band to accompany him on board the ship and serenade him on his journey. As the boat sailed into Dar es Salaam harbour, the band apparently struck up God Save the King. Later on, Dundas was Governor of the Bahamas for eight years, to be replaced by the Duke of Windsor. Dundas then became Governor of Uganda. Dundas is buried in Kensal Green Cemetery.", "score": "1.643847" }, { "id": "10302440", "title": "George Dundas (colonial administrator)", "text": " George Dundas (12 November 1819 – 18 March 1880) was a Scottish Tory politician and colonial administrator. Born in England, he was the eldest son of James Dundas, and resided in Dundas Castle. Dundas purchased a Second Lieutenantcy in the Rifle Brigade in 1839, serving in various places such as Bermuda and Nova Scotia. He was promoted First Lieutenant without purchase in 1842. In politics, he represented Linlithgowshire in the House of Commons from 1847 until his resignation in 1859. On 8 June 1859, Dundas was appointed Governor of Prince Edward Island, a position he kept until 22 October 1868. In 1875, Dundas was appointed Lieutenant Governor of Saint Vincent in the Caribbean. In 1879, he was created a Companion of the Order of St Michael and St George. Governor Dundas died at Saint Vincent in 1880.", "score": "1.6410524" }, { "id": "32328468", "title": "Frederick Dundas", "text": " Dundas was the son of the Hon. Charles Dundas, Member of Parliament for Malton, younger son of Thomas Dundas, 1st Baron Dundas. His mother was Lady Caroline, daughter of Aubrey Beauclerk, 5th Duke of St Albans.", "score": "1.6357511" }, { "id": "25780023", "title": "Frederick Middleton Dundas", "text": " Frederick Middleton Dundas (March 26, 1885 &ndash; 1956 ) was a political figure in Saskatchewan. He represented Qu'Appelle-Wolseley from 1934 to 1944 and from 1948 to 1952 in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan as a Liberal. He was born in Qu'Appelle, Saskatchewan, the son of Andrew Dundas and Janet Mitchell, both natives of Scotland. In 1911, he married Henrietta Henson. Dundas served as mayor of Sintaluta, Saskatchewan. He was defeated by Warden Burgess when he ran for reelection to the provincial assembly in 1944 but defeated Burgess in 1948.", "score": "1.6209831" }, { "id": null, "title": "Samuel Laing (science writer)", "text": "Samuel Laing (science writer)\n\nSamuel Laing (12 December 1812 – 6 August 1897) was a British railway administrator, politician, and writer on science and religion during the Victorian era.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville", "text": "Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville\n\nHenry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville, PC, FRSE (28 April 1742 – 28 May 1811), styled as Lord Melville from 1802, was the trusted lieutenant of British Prime Minister William Pitt and the most powerful politician in Scotland in the late 18th century.\n\nDundas was instrumental in the encouragement of the Scottish Enlightenment, in the prosecution of the war against France, and in the expansion of British influence in India. Prime Minister Pitt appointed him Lord of Trade (1784–1786), Home Secretary (1791–1794), President of the Board of Control for Indian Affairs (1793–1801), Secretary at War (1794–1801) and First Lord of the Admiralty (1804–1805). His deft and almost total control of Scottish politics during a long period in which no monarch visited the country led to him being nicknamed \"King Harry the Ninth\", the \"Grand Manager of Scotland\" (a play on the masonic office of Grand Master of Scotland), the \"Great Tyrant\" and \"The Uncrowned King of Scotland\". He was, however, a controversial figure, as he proposed a gradual abolition of the British transatlantic slave trade over eight years at a time when the leaders of the abolitionist movement sought an immediate end to the slave trade and the West Indian interests opposed any abolition at all.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "H. L. D. Kirkham", "text": "H. L. D. Kirkham\n\nHarold Laurens Dundas Kirkham (24 March 1887 – 18 March 1949) was an Anglo-American plastic surgeon. He was the first Professor of Plastic Surgery at Baylor University, Texas and also served with the US Navy Medical Corps, becoming head of plastic surgery at the United States Naval Medical Center San Diego during the Second World War.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fred and Norah Urquhart", "text": "Fred and Norah Urquhart\n\nFrederick Albert Urquhart, (December 13, 1911 – November 3, 2002) was a Canadian zoologist and professor of zoology who studied the migration of monarch butterflies, \"Danaus plexippus\" L. Together with his wife, Norah Roden Urquhart, he identified their migration routes, discovered that the migration spans multiple generations of butterflies, and found their wintering place in Mexico—considered \"one of the greatest natural history discoveries\" of the 20th-century.<ref name=\":2\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Flora Shaw, Lady Lugard", "text": "Flora Shaw, Lady Lugard\n\nDame Flora Louise Shaw, Lady Lugard (born 19 December 1852 – 25 January 1929), was a British journalist and writer. She is credited with having coined the name \"Nigeria\".", "score": null }, { "id": "1654495", "title": "Dundas (surname)", "text": "Charles Dundas, one of several people including ; Charles Dundas, 1st Baron Amesbury (1751–1832), British politician ; Charles Dundas (governor), promoter of coffee cultivation in Tanganyika ; Charles Saunders Dundas, 6th Viscount Melville (1843–1926) ; David Dundas, one of several people including ; Lord David Dundas (born 1945), British composer of film and television music ; Sir David Dundas, a military officer of the 18th and 19th centuries in England ; Sir David Dundas, 1st Baronet, a distinguished surgeon ; Francis Dundas (1759?-1824), British army officer ; George Heneage Lawrence Dundas, British Sea Lord ; Henry Dundas, 1st Viscount Melville (1742–1811), British Tory politician ; Henry Dundas, ", "score": "1.6127636" }, { "id": "33123631", "title": "Joseph Rutherford Dundas", "text": " Joseph Rutherford Dundas (January 20, 1836 &ndash; January 24, 1896) was an Irish-born merchant and political figure in Ontario, Canada. He represented Victoria South in the House of Commons of Canada from 1882 to 1887 as a Conservative member. He was born in Drum, County Monaghan, the son of John Dundas, and came to Canada in 1848, settling in Peterborough. In 1856, Rutherford moved to Lindsay working in William Cluxton's dry goods store. He married Caroline Jones in 1864. Rutherford was involved in the grain trade and also served as a director of the Midland Railway.", "score": "1.6008985" }, { "id": "28517543", "title": "Thomas Dundas (British Army officer)", "text": " Major-General Thomas Dundas (30 June 1750 – 3 June 1794) was a British military officer, politician and Governor of Guadeloupe. He held a seat in the House of Commons between 1771 and 1790.", "score": "1.5974069" }, { "id": "25763961", "title": "Thomas Dundas, 1st Baron Dundas", "text": " Thomas Dundas, 1st Baron Dundas FRS (16 February 1741 &ndash; 14 June 1820), known as Sir Thomas Dundas, 2nd Baronet from 1781 to 1794, was a Scottish politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1763 to 1794, after which he was raised to the peerage as Baron Dundas. He was responsible for commissioning the Charlotte Dundas, the world's \"first practical steamboat\".", "score": "1.590631" }, { "id": "6044129", "title": "Lord David Dundas", "text": " Lord David Paul Nicholas Dundas (born 2 June 1945) is an English musician and actor, best known for his chart success in the pop genre during the 1970s as well as his later career in film and television scores.", "score": "1.5891666" }, { "id": "1069979", "title": "John Dundas (1808–1866)", "text": " The Hon. John Charles Dundas (21 August 1808 – 14 February 1866) was a British Whig, and later Liberal politician.", "score": "1.5827568" }, { "id": "1070282", "title": "John Dundas (1845–1892)", "text": " The Hon. John Charles Dundas (21 September 1845 – 13 September 1892), was a British Liberal politician.", "score": "1.5816728" }, { "id": "9938413", "title": "Charles Dundas (priest)", "text": " Charles Leslie Dundas (1 November 1847 - 17 March 1932) was an eminent Anglican priest in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.", "score": "1.566808" }, { "id": "28517546", "title": "Thomas Dundas (British Army officer)", "text": " Charles Grey in Barbados 1794. He served in the 2nd Invasion of Martinique, February and commanded the military forces under John Jervis in the invasion of Guadeloupe, landing on 12 April and capturing Grand-Terre. After accepting the French surrender on 20 April he was made Governor of Guadeloupe, but died on 3 June of Yellow Fever and was buried in the primary bastion of Fort Maltilde. When the French later regained possession of the island Victor Hugues issued a declaration on 10 December \" That the body of Thomas Dundas, interred in Guadeloupe, shall be taken up and given as prey to the birds of the air.\" This aroused great outrage in England and prompted a memorial in St.Paul's Cathedral. This was erected in 1805 and was sculpted by John Bacon.", "score": "1.5652012" }, { "id": "13006834", "title": "James Dundas", "text": " Dundas was 22 years old, and a lieutenant in the Bengal Engineers, Indian Army during the Bhutan War when the following deed took place on 30 April 1865 at Dewan-Giri, Bhutan for which he was awarded the VC in a joint citation with Major William Spottiswoode Trevor: \"For their gallant conduct at the attack on the Block-house at Dewan-Giri, in Bhootan, on the 30th of April, 1865.Major-General Tombs, C.B., V.C., the Officer in command at the time, reports that a party of the enemy, from 180 to 200 in number, had barricaded themselves in the Block-house in question, which they continued to defend after the rest of the position had been carried, and the main body was in retreat. ", "score": "1.5639937" }, { "id": "7349444", "title": "Charles Dundas (MP)", "text": " Hon. Charles Lawrence Dundas (18 July 1771 – 25 January 1810) was a British politician and Whig Member of Parliament in the House of Commons. He represented Malton from 1798–1805 and Richmond from 1806 to his death.", "score": "1.559959" }, { "id": "11889768", "title": "Philip Dundas", "text": " Philip Dundas (baptised 7 May 1762 – 8 April 1807) was a Scottish East India Company naval officer, president of the East India Marine Board, and superintendent of Bombay. He returned to Britain and became a member of parliament and returned to the Far East to become governor of Prince of Wales Island, now known as Penang.", "score": "1.5588789" }, { "id": "2265789", "title": "Sir Lawrence Dundas, 1st Baronet", "text": " Sir Lawrence Dundas, 1st Baronet (c. 1710 – 21 September 1781) was a Scottish businessman, landowner and politician.", "score": "1.5577252" }, { "id": "4525826", "title": "David Dundas (British Army officer)", "text": " In the army Dundas was nicknamed \"Old Pivot\" for his Prussian-style drill books. Burne describes him as \"A level-headed officer\", but \"cautious\", while Bunbury writes \"He...was an aged man...a brave, careful, and well-skilled soldier...Dundas was a tall, spare man, crabbed and austere, dry in his looks and demeanour...there were peculiarities in his habits and style which excited some ridicule amongst young officers. But though it appeared a little out of fashion, there was 'much care and valour in that Scotchman'\". Thoumine writes that \"Dundas was perhaps not as graceful nor as polished as some of his contemporaries, but he was as sound as oak and utterly reliable\".", "score": "1.5570765" }, { "id": "32754025", "title": "Thomas Dundas (Royal Navy officer)", "text": " Little is known about Dundas's early life, but he appears to have been born in or around 1765, and to have joined the navy in 1778, during the American War of Independence. He was promoted to lieutenant on 15 July 1793, shortly after the outbreak of the French Revolutionary War, with one of his earliest commands being the sloop. His next promotion was to commander on 2 September 1795, and he was then raised to post-captain on 9 July 1798. Dundas received command of the 20-gun sixth rate shortly afterwards and in 1799 he captured a valuable Spanish whaling ship. In March 1799 he captured a Spanish warship, the Urca Cargadora, pierced for 26 guns, but only mounting 12. He was then moved to, and escorted a convoy of merchantmen to the Mediterranean, returning to Britain on 2 July 1802.", "score": "1.554101" } ]
What is Olav T. Laake's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Olav T. Laake
5,331,265
44
[ { "id": "3205661", "title": "Olav T. Laake", "text": " Olav Trygveson Laake (born 20 October 1934) was a Norwegian judge and politician for the Labour Party. He was born in Ullensaker. He had his own lawyer's office from 1963 to 1976, and from 2007 to 2023, since 1964 as a barrister with access to working with Supreme Court cases. He served as a judge in Stavanger District Court from 1976, and from 1990 to 2004 as district stipendiary magistrate (chief justice). He also chaired the Norwegian Association of Judges from 1989 to 1995. In politics, he served as a member of Stavanger city council from 1963 to 1987, and also Rogaland county council between 1971 and 1975. He chaired his local party chapter in Stavanger from 1969 to 1975.", "score": "1.9454148" }, { "id": "3205630", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " Kristian Kristiansen Laake (9 April 1875 &ndash; 3 August 1950) was a Norwegian military officer. He is best known for having commanded the Norwegian Army in the first days after the German invasion of Norway on 9 April 1940, and for having been replaced because of what was seen by the leading Norwegian politicians as passive leadership.", "score": "1.695452" }, { "id": "3205631", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " He was born in Ullensaker as a son of farmers Kristian Gulbrandsen Laake (1835–1875) and Karen Pedersen Taugland (1839–1903). His older brother Knut M. Laake, a cavalry officer, became a politician and activist, and Kristian Laake joined the Liberal Party as well. On 24 September 1901, Laake married Nes-born farmer's daughter Signe Henaug (28 November 1879 – 8 January 1960). The couple had three children, and in 1908 they acquired the farm Stalsberg in Skedsmo, Akershus. One of their daughters married entomologist Leif Reinhardt Natvig.", "score": "1.6285338" }, { "id": "3205652", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " Laake resided at the farm Stalsberg in Skedsmo from 1908 to his death. Laake testified against Vidkun Quisling at the latter's post-war trial, telling the court about Quisling's attempts to disrupt the Norwegian mobilization after the German invasion on 9 April 1940.", "score": "1.6285176" }, { "id": "3205633", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " The appointment on 6 February 1931 of Kristian Laake as Commanding General of the Norwegian Army was a controversial one. The preceding Commanding General, Ivar Bauck, reached the age limit for Commanding Generals on 12 February of that year. When the Liberal Party cabinet appointed Laake, it was generally viewed as a political move to enable the cabinet to push through reforms of the Norwegian Army. A member of the Liberal Party himself, Laake fully expressed full support for the politicians as they reduced the budgets for the Norwegian armed forces. The general had taken part in shaping the party's new reduced-size army plans, which his predecessor had opposed vigorously. In Laake's opinion it was vital for soldiers to loyally accept the decisions of the politicians in all respects. Laake's appointment was also criticized because of his lack of previous service on the general staff. Laake had only served in the general staff until 1912, at that time holding the rank of adjoint, the second lowest officer's rank in the general staff. It was almost unheard of that an officer with such limited general staff experience should be appointed commanding general.", "score": "1.6009972" }, { "id": null, "title": "Norwegian campaign", "text": "Norwegian campaign\n\nThe Norwegian campaign (8 April 10 June 1940) describes the attempt of the Allies to defend northern Norway coupled with Norwegian forces' resistance to the country's invasion by Nazi Germany in World War II.\n\nPlanned as Operation Wilfred and Plan R 4, while the German attack was feared but had not happened, set out from Scapa Flow for the Vestfjorden with twelve destroyers on the 4th of April. British and German naval forces met at the first Battle of Narvik on 9 and 10 April, and the first British forces landed at Åndalsnes on the 13th. The main strategic reason for Germany to invade Norway was to seize the port of Narvik and guarantee the iron ore needed for critical production of steel.<ref name=grove />\n\nThe campaign was fought until 10 June 1940 and saw the escape of King Haakon VII and his heir apparent Crown Prince Olav to the United Kingdom.\n\nA British, French and Polish expeditionary force of 38,000 soldiers, many days in, landed in the north. It had moderate success, but made a rapid strategic retreat after the German Blitzkrieg invasion of France began in May. The Norwegian government then sought exile in London. The campaign ended with the occupation of the entirety of Norway by Germany, but exiled Norwegian forces escaped and fought on from overseas.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Operation Weserübung", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Portal:Norway", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Portal:Norway", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Norwegian campaign order of battle", "text": "Norwegian campaign order of battle\n\nThe German operation for the invasion of Denmark and Norway in April 1940 was code-named \"Weserübung\", or \"Weser Exercise.\" Opposing the invasion were the partially mobilized Norwegian military, and an allied expeditionary force composed of British, French, and Free Polish formations. The following list formed the order of battle for this campaign.", "score": null }, { "id": "3205634", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " During Laake's first years as Commanding General the issue of the army's preparations to deal with possible revolutions came up. At the time the Norwegian minister of defence was the future fascist collaborator Vidkun Quisling. Quisling saw internal troubles and revolutionary activities as a clear and present threat to the state, and on several occasions in the summer of 1931 employed the military to assist the police forces. Laake disagreed with Quisling's views on the social and political stability of Norway, and repeatedly opposed and delayed the defence minister's internal security measures. Among the anti-revolutionary measures that Laake opposed was blocking industrial labourers from serving in the Norwegian Royal Guards. At the time, both conservative and left-wing organizations ", "score": "1.5809128" }, { "id": "3205632", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " He finished his secondary education in 1894 and graduated from the Norwegian Military Academy in 1897 and the Norwegian Military College in 1900. He served in the artillery, and reached the rank of colonel in 1928. Laake commanded the 3rd Artillery Regiment in 1928-1929, and then the 1st Artillery Regiment from 1929. He spent April–May 1929 with the 2nd Prussian Artillery Regiment in Germany. In 1931 he was appointed as the Commanding General of Norway. He received the Royal Norwegian Order of St. Olav in 1934, and held the Order of the White Rose of Finland (Grand Cross), the Order of the Sword (Grand Cross) and the Order of the Dannebrog (Knighthood).", "score": "1.5629678" }, { "id": "3205638", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " On 9 April 1940 Norway was invaded by Nazi Germany. Laake was perceived as too passive by the political leadership, and he was asked to resign on 10 April. He stepped down on 11 April.", "score": "1.5580838" }, { "id": "10928496", "title": "Hans Olav Lahlum", "text": " Born in Mo i Rana, Lahlum grew up in Rødøy, a small community that he did not find enjoyable; he called his own childhood \"gloomy\". Lahlum finished his cand.philol. degree (master's degree) in history from the University of Oslo in 2002, including subjects in political science and history of religion. Since completing his studies, he has at times been a lecturer and advisor at the Lillehammer University College.", "score": "1.48652" }, { "id": "3205647", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " Norwegian armed forces were left leaderless on the top levels, the general staff having evacuated Oslo, and General Laake stuck at Strømmen without his uniform while he was waiting for a taxi to pick him up at his farm. When a taxi finally arrived and brought him to Slemdal, the general staff had already evacuated to Eidsvoll without making arrangements for Laake's transport. Laake duly walked to the nearby Slemdal station and took the Holmenkoll Line to Majorstuen to find a taxi. Having failed again in finding transport, Laake made his way to Norges Geografiske Oppmåling to try and see if ", "score": "1.4787354" }, { "id": "13254712", "title": "Christian Hansen Wollnick", "text": " Christian Hansen Wollnick (8 October 1867 – 27 March 1936) was a Norwegian newspaper editor, jurist and politician for the Labour Party. He was born in Tjølling as the son of a shipmaster. He took his secondary education in Skien in 1885 and worked one year as a school teacher in Larvik. He then embarked on several parallel careers; he enrolled in the military, studied law parallel and pursued a journalistic career. As a military officer he reached the ranks of Premier Lieutenant in 1894 and Captain in 1903. He had started early as a journalist, and edited the newspaper Ørebladet from 1891 to 1892. In 1895, he graduated with the cand.jur. degree. He spent the years 1896 and 1897 as a law clerk in Trondhjem, before moving to ", "score": "1.4725659" }, { "id": "28949296", "title": "Erik Sture Larre", "text": " He was born in Oslo, and grew up in Gamlebyen. He studied law, was a research assistant at the Norwegian Institute for Social Research from 1936 to 1940 and graduated from the University of Oslo with the cand.jur. degree in 1941.", "score": "1.4695693" }, { "id": "437074", "title": "Olav Eikeland", "text": " Olav Eikeland (born 10 October 1955) is a Norwegian philosopher and working life researcher. Since 2008, he is professor of work research and research director for the Program for Research on Education and Work at Oslo Metropolitan University (formerly Oslo and Akershus University College of Applied Sciences). Since 2012, he is also vice dean of the Faculty of Education and International Studies. He was a researcher at the Work Research Institute from 1985 to 2008, and served as the institute's director 2003-2004.", "score": "1.4674689" }, { "id": "10928495", "title": "Hans Olav Lahlum", "text": " Hans Olav Lahlum (born 12 September 1973) is a Norwegian historian, crime author, chess player and organizer, and politician. He has written biographies on Oscar Torp and Haakon Lie, and a history book about all the Presidents of the United States. On May 22–23, 2013, he was interviewed by VG for 30 hours, 1 minute and 44 seconds, setting a Guinness World Record for the longest interview ever, beating the previous record by over four hours.", "score": "1.4503154" }, { "id": "27179812", "title": "Andreas M. Lervik", "text": " Andreas M. Lervik (born 28 November 1969) is a Norwegian politician for the Labour Party. He served as a deputy representative to the Norwegian Parliament from Østfold during the terms 2001&ndash;2005 and 2005&ndash;2009. (He was then a member of the Socialist Left Party.) He has been a member of Sarpsborg municipal council 1995-2003 and of Østfold county council since 1999. He has had many different positions and he is currently Chair of the Østfold county councils committee for Commerce, Trade and Culture. He is also Deputy Chair of the Labour partys county council group. Lervik has been working with international questions for several years and is currently Vice President for North Sea Commission.", "score": "1.4476202" }, { "id": "3205648", "title": "Kristian Laake", "text": " had a car to lend him. When it was concluded that they did not have a car for him, Laake went to Oslo East Station, to find that the rail service was still functioning. Laake managed to board a train and make his way out of Oslo to rejoin the general staff. The General finally succeeded in finding the general staff, and set up a headquarters in the town of Rena The confusion that reigned after the German invasion led to delays in Norwegian countermeasures. At 1500hrs on 10 April, Laake and the general staff met with minister of justice Terje ", "score": "1.4458213" }, { "id": "32883907", "title": "Rune Bjerke", "text": " Rune Bjerke (born 17 June 1960) is a Norwegian businessperson and politician for the Labour Party. Rune is son of Juul Bjerke and brother of Siri Bjerke. Bjerke studied economics at the University of Oslo, and has a master's degree in public administration from Harvard University. From 1992 to 1995 he was city commissioner (byråd) of finance in the city cabinet of Oslo. He has previously been advisor in the Norwegian Ministry of Petroleum and Energy, director in Scancem and chief executive officer in Hafslund. Since 2007 he has been chief executive officer of DNB. He is the chair Doorstep, and of both the Norwegian Financial Services Association and Finance Norway. Bjerke is married to the Labour party politician Libe Rieber-Mohn.", "score": "1.4426644" }, { "id": "13254713", "title": "Christian Hansen Wollnick", "text": " N. Here, he was a solicitor from 1899 to 1904, and also edited the local newspaper Møre Tidende. He was also a deputy member of the city council for a short period. He then worked as a solicitor in Kristiania, before moving to Kristiansand S in 1909. Parallel to working as a solicitor there, he edited Sørlandets Socialdemokrat. In 1921, he was hired as police attorney. From 1929 to 1936, he served as town clerk. He was also director of the municipal cinema company, chaired the school board and the local Riksmål association. A member of the city council from 1919 to 1925, the last term in the executive committee, he was also elected to the Norwegian Parliament in 1919. He served one term, representing the Labour Party.", "score": "1.4386623" }, { "id": "26358006", "title": "Rolv Enge", "text": " Enge, who had taken the examen artium in 1942 before joining the resistance movement, took higher education in the United States after the war. He did so on a scholarship from Leif Tronstad's heritage fund. He took the bachelor of architecture degree at the University of Pennsylvania and the master of architecture degree at the University of Southern California. He was a member of the fraternities Tau Sigma Delta and Alpha Rho Chi. After taking his education he worked at Pennsylvania State University as assisting professor for some time, and also worked in various architect's offices in the US and Norway. In 1968 he was hired in the Norwegian Defence Estates Agency, and he retired in 1988. From 1974 to 1976 he worked in Zambia for Norconsult. He has resided at Jar in his later life, but later moved to Hosle. He died in April 2014.", "score": "1.4339867" }, { "id": "27790507", "title": "Erik Voake", "text": " Erik Voake is an American filmmaker and photographer born in Yorba Linda, California in 1973.", "score": "1.4299512" } ]
What is Eliza Lawrence's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Eliza Lawrence
4,018,853
49
[ { "id": "30604212", "title": "Eliza Lawrence", "text": " Eliza Lawrence (November 11, 1935 &ndash; July 24, 2016) was a Canadian territorial level politician and member of the Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories from 1983 until 1987. Born in Fort Resolution, Northwest Territories in 1935, she was the third eldest in a family of 17 children. She helped care for her siblings and worked as a nurse and nutritional educator after training in what was then the capital of the NWT, Fort Smith. Her nursing work brought her to Fort Resolution, Edmonton, including three years at the cities Charles Camsell Hospital (1956–59) as a nursing assistant, and Yellowknife among other communities. At age 24, she met Harry Lawrence to whom she was married for 56 years, raising three daughters. She was one of the founders of the Native Women's Association ", "score": "1.6262342" }, { "id": "30604213", "title": "Eliza Lawrence", "text": " the NWT (1977), and a well-known dancer with the Métis Reelers. She loved to sew and people would congregate at her camping site at the Lac Ste. Anne pilgrimage where she would feed them her famous bannock. She was a descendant of the Métis leader François Beaulieu II. Proud of her Dënesųłiné heritage, she was a fluent speaker of the Chipewyan language. Eliza Lawrence was elected to the a seat in the Northwest Territories Legislature when she ran as a candidate in the 1983 Northwest Territories general election. She won the new electoral district of Tu Nedhe. She served a single term in the Legislative Assembly until 1987. After this, she worked as a manager in the territorial government. She died on July 24, 2016 in Grande Prairie, Alberta, aged 80 years.", "score": "1.6176088" }, { "id": "5345499", "title": "Eliza Cook", "text": " Eliza Cook (24 December 1818 – 23 September 1889) was an English author and poet associated with the Chartist movement. She was a proponent of political freedom for women, and believed in the ideology of self-improvement through education, something she called \"levelling up.\" This made her hugely popular with the working class public in both England and America.", "score": "1.4598646" }, { "id": "9581743", "title": "Elizabeth Lawrence (actress)", "text": " Lawrence was born in Huntington, West Virginia and obtained a bachelor's degree in science and a master's degree in special education. She made her acting debut in 1947 off broadway in Skin of our Teeth and her Broadway debut in 1954 in The Rainmaker and would go on to act in several other theatrical productions. She would also work on the Daytime Soap Operas The Road of Life, The Edge of Night, A World Apart, The Doctors, Guiding Light, and All My Children from 1979 to 1991 where she played Myra Murdock Sloane and earned three Daytime Emmy Award nominations in 1981, 1982 and 1985 for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series. Her other notable acting work includes roles in the movies Four Friends, We're No Angels, Sleeping with the Enemy, The Butcher's Wife and The Crucible as well as guest starring roles on television series such as Law & Order, Oz and Third Watch. In the 1970s and 1980s she also worked as an auxiliary police officer in Manhattan, New York.", "score": "1.4326949" }, { "id": "16115221", "title": "Miss Scarlet and The Duke", "text": " Eliza work on numerous cases together, though she is uncredited, causing disputes between them. Eliza employs the services of a known criminal, Moses, much to William's annoyance. Moses is amused by Eliza's gumption and they connect as outsiders to society. Eliza befriends Rupert Parker, a wealthy man who loans her money for her agency as an investment. Rupert is the bachelor (and secretly gay) son of Mrs. Parker, who owns Eliza's house, and relies on Eliza's advice to navigate his personal life. Eliza lives with Ivy, who cooks for her and helped raise her after Eliza's mother died (some time before the series begins). Eliza and William bicker and argue constantly, but also share moments of subtle flirtation and care for each other deeply.", "score": "1.425946" }, { "id": null, "title": "Laurence Sterne", "text": "Laurence Sterne\n\nLaurence Sterne (24 November 1713 – 18 March 1768), was an Anglo-Irish novelist and Anglican cleric who wrote the novels \"The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman\" and \"A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy\", published sermons and memoirs, and indulged in local politics. He grew up in a military family travelling mainly in Ireland but briefly in England. An uncle paid for Sterne to attend Hipperholme Grammar School in the West Riding of Yorkshire, as Sterne's father was ordered to Jamaica, where he died of malaria some years later. He attended Jesus College, Cambridge on a sizarship, gaining bachelor's and master's degrees. While Vicar of Sutton-on-the-Forest, Yorkshire, he married Elizabeth Lumley in 1741. His ecclesiastical satire \"A Political Romance\" infuriated the church and was burnt. With his new talent for writing, he published early volumes of his best-known novel, \"The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman\". Sterne travelled to France to find relief from persistent tuberculosis, documenting his travels in \"A Sentimental Journey Through France and Italy\", published weeks before his death. His posthumous \"Journal to Eliza\" addresses Eliza Draper, for whom he had romantic feelings. Sterne died in 1768 and was buried in the yard of St George's, Hanover Square. His body was said to have been stolen after burial and sold to anatomists at Cambridge University, but recognised and reinterred. His ostensible skull was found in the churchyard and transferred to Coxwold in 1969 by the Laurence Sterne Trust.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gertrude Lawrence", "text": "Gertrude Lawrence\n\nGertrude Lawrence (4 July 1898 – 6 September 1952) was an English actress, singer, dancer and musical comedy performer known for her stage appearances in the West End of London and on Broadway in New York.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "David Jewett", "text": "David Jewett\n\nDavid Jewett (June 17, 1772 – July 26, 1842) is known for his role in the sovereignty dispute between the United Kingdom and Argentina over the Falkland Islands. He was an American naval commander in the Quasi-War with France and following the end of that conflict he offered his services as a mercenary in both Argentina and Brazil. Licensed as a privateer by the United Provinces of the River Plate (one of the precursor states of Argentina) to seize Spanish ships, he was later accused of piracy following the seizure of US and Portuguese flagged vessels. He finished his career in the Brazilian Navy, serving under Lord Cochrane and died in Rio de Janeiro in 1842.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Eliza Kennedy Smith", "text": "Eliza Kennedy Smith\n\nEliza Kennedy Smith (December 11, 1889 – October 23, 1964), also known as Mrs. R. Templeton Smith, was a 20th-century American suffragist, civic activist, and government reformer in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Upon her death in 1964, \"The Pittsburgh Press\" described her as \"a relentless, tenacious watchdog of the City's purse strings\" who \"probably attended more budget sessions over the years than anyone else in Pittsburgh either in or out of government\".\n\nPartnering with her sister, Lucy Kennedy Miller (1880–1962), and Jennie Bradley Roessing, Mary E. Bakewell, Hannah J. Patterson, and Mary Flinn Lawrence during the early 1900s, she helped to found the Allegheny County Equal Rights Association (later renamed as the Equal Franchise Federation of Western Pennsylvania and then the Allegheny County League of Women Voters).\n\nIn addition, she collaborated with her sister, Lucy Kennedy Miller, to uncover Pittsburgh city government corruption. Their investigation led to Mayor Charles H. Kline's indictment by a grand jury on forty-eight counts of malfeasance and his subsequent conviction in 1932, which resulted in a six-month prison sentence.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Elizabeth Farren", "text": "Elizabeth Farren\n\nElizabeth Farren (c. 175923 April 1829) was an Irish actress of the late 18th century. Born in Cork in 1759 her father, George Farren was a surgeon. His drinking habits brought on early death and his widow returned to Liverpool. Her mother went on the stage to support herself and her children. Elizabeth first appeared on the London stage in 1777 as Miss Hardcastle in \"She Stoops to Conquer\" and the following year appeared at Drury Lane which, along with the Haymarket Theatre became her primary venues for the rest of her acting career. She had over 100 characters in her repertoire including Shakespeare and various contemporary comedies and dramas. She was often compared to Frances Abington, who was her only real rival. Her last appearance was in April 1797, two months before her marriage to Edward Smith-Stanley, 12th Earl of Derby. They had a son and two daughters.", "score": null }, { "id": "3459475", "title": "Josie Lawrence", "text": " Lawrence is single. In an interview with good friend Jim Sweeney, she said, \"It's always the same: 'You're 41, and not married and no kids', God, I'm so bored with it\" [having to explain herself]. She resides in Hackney, London. She has two cats, a long-haired ginger (Aynuk) and a black-and-white (Ayli), named after the Black Country characters Aynuk and Ayli, who feature prominently in jokes about Black Country dialect. As a guest on QI she named David Attenborough \"her God\". In 1994, Lawrence was awarded an honorary doctorate by Dartington College of Arts, and she has since been awarded two more, an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of Wolverhampton in 2004 and in 2006 a doctorate by Aston University for \"services to the entertainment industry.\"", "score": "1.4244332" }, { "id": "4185933", "title": "Reina Lawrence", "text": " She was educated at St. John's Wood High School and received a 3rd class LLB from University College London in 1893. She was a partner with Eliza Orme, the first woman in England to receive a law degree (also from UCL), at their law office from the mid-1880s on Chancery Lane. She was on the executive of the Women's National Liberal Association 1897-1902, a trustee of the Mary Macarthur Home, and a member of the government's Central Committee on Women’s Employment during World War I. Lawrence volunteered for the homeless on the Hampstead Distress Committee from 1905 and promoted reform of the swimming baths. In the first year that women were no longer prohibited from standing for election in the United Kingdom, following the passing of the Qualification of Women Act, Lawrence stood in ", "score": "1.4169965" }, { "id": "13041623", "title": "Anna Lawrence", "text": " Anna Josephine Lawrence (born 9 March 1972 in Howick, Auckland) is a former field hockey midfielder from New Zealand, who finished sixth with her national team at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney. Lawrence was educated at Diocesan School for Girls in Auckland and moved to Christchurch in 1990. She played inside left or right, and competed for Amsterdam in the Dutch League since 1997. She was Canterbury Winter Sportsperson of the Year in 1998 and has played for The Black Sticks since 1990, and captained the team from 1996 to 2000. She won a bronze medal at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur. Her business career post hockey included various commercial and marketing roles. These included positions as National Sponsorship Manager for Lion NZ and the National Sponsorship & Communications Director for Lion Australia.", "score": "1.4142804" }, { "id": "4725068", "title": "Eliza Garth", "text": " Eliza Garth (born September 15, 1954) is an American concert pianist and recording artist, noted for her performances and recordings of music written since 1900. She was a student of Abbey Simon at The Juilliard School.", "score": "1.4130776" }, { "id": "2597210", "title": "Eliza Rennie", "text": " Eliza Rennie or Mrs. Eliza Walker was a minor Scottish-born romantic and gothic short story author most notable for writing about her friendship with Mary Shelley and her contemporaries, including meetings with such celebrities as the Duke of Wellington. Her biography remains somewhat of a mystery. She was possibly born on 17 May 1813, spent most of her adult life in London, and died sometime after 30 March 1869, when she was awarded £25 by the Royal Literary Fund. She published a two-volume autobiographical work of literary gossip entitled Traits of Character: being Twenty-Five Years' Literary and Personal Recollections, by a Contemporary.", "score": "1.4070166" }, { "id": "10643062", "title": "Eliza Smith", "text": " Eliza Smith (died 1732?) was one of the most popular female 18th-century cookery book writers. Unlike other popular woman cookbook authors whose books overlapped with hers, such as Hannah Glasse, nothing seems to be known about her personal life beyond the fact that she was one of the first popular female cookbook authors. Her one book, The Compleat Housewife, or, Accomplished Gentlewoman's Companion (London: J. Pemberton, 1727), went through 18 editions in Britain and in 1742 Smith became the first cookbook author published in colonial America. Prior to her death, the name published in her book was E___ S____. After her death it was published as E. Smith. She was a housekeeper for thirty years: \"for the Space of Thirty Years and upwards ... I have been constantly employed in fashionable and noble Families.\"", "score": "1.4058198" }, { "id": "25151470", "title": "Debbi Lawrence", "text": " Deborah \"Debbi\" A. Lawrence (née Spino, born October 15, 1961, in Columbus, Indiana) is a retired female racewalker from the United States. She set her personal best in the women's 10 km race walk event (45:03) at the 1995 World Championships in Athletics in Göteborg, Sweden.", "score": "1.4057456" }, { "id": "10721987", "title": "Jared &amp; The Mill", "text": "Eliza ", "score": "1.4057219" }, { "id": "14449434", "title": "Eliza Wyatt", "text": " Eliza Wyatt is an American playwright born in England, who has been part of the Boston theater scene for more than thirty years.", "score": "1.3965337" }, { "id": "31904625", "title": "Eliza Wheeler", "text": " Eliza Wheeler (born December 21, 1982) is an American author-illustrator of Miss Maple Seeds (Penguin), which debuted on the New York Times Bestseller list, and the illustrator of Holly Black's 2014 Newbery Medal Honor Book Doll Bones (McElderry Books), Alison McGhee's 'Tell Me A Tattoo Story', Pat Zietlow-Miller's 'Wherever You Go', and Mara Rockliff's The Grudge Keeper (Peachtree). She lives in Los Angeles, California. She is a 2006 graduate of the University of Wisconsin–Stout with a BFA in Graphic Design.", "score": "1.3961471" }, { "id": "961404", "title": "Lillian Lawrence", "text": " Lillian Lawrence (February 17, 1868 – May 7, 1926) was an American theatre and silent film actress. Her daughter Ethel Grey Terry was also an actress.", "score": "1.3951639" }, { "id": "13796937", "title": "Louise Lawrence (activist)", "text": " Lawrence was born in 1912 and was assigned male-at-birth. She began cross-dressing at a young age and would wear her mother's clothes. In 1930, she married and, when she was twenty-two, had a daughter named Anne. After the death of her first wife, she married a woman who at first accepted her cross-dressing, but they divorced three years later. After the divorce, circa 1942 to 1944, Lawrence lived full-time as a woman in Berkeley and later in San Francisco. Of her transition, Lawrence wrote in one of her journals:\"'I consider Louise to be my true identity even though the birth records say differently. And ", "score": "1.3945645" }, { "id": "30646847", "title": "Honoria Lawrence", "text": " Honoria Marshall Lawrence, Lady Lawrence (25 December 1808 – ) was an Irish-born writer whose works, according to scholar Mary Ellis Gibson, \"provide an intimate look at the domestic life of an Anglo-Indian woman during the first half of the nineteenth century\". She was the first European woman known to live in several parts of the Indian subcontinent, including Kashmir and Nepal.", "score": "1.3916757" }, { "id": "12140037", "title": "Lucile Lawrence", "text": " Lucile Lawrence (February 7, 1907 in New Orleans – July 8, 2004 in Englewood, New Jersey) was a leader among American harpists. At the end of her life, she was actively teaching as a faculty member of Boston University and the Manhattan School of Music as well as teaching privately.", "score": "1.3907453" }, { "id": "25941466", "title": "Lillian (name)", "text": " Lawrence (1868–1926), American theatre and silent film actress ; Lilian Lee (born 1959), Chinese author ; Lilian Mercedes Letona (1954–1983), Salvadoran guerrilla and revolutionary ; Lillian Metge née Grubb (1871–1954), Anglo-Irish suffragette and women's rights campaigner ; Lilian Moore (1909–2004), American author of children's books, teacher and poet Lillian Nakate (born 1978), Ugandan civil engineer and politician ; Lilian Ngoyi (1911-1980), South African anti-apartheid activist ; Lillian Offitt (1938–2020), American blues and R&B singer ; Lillian Palmer (disambiguation), multiple people ; Lilian Prunet (born 1978), French ice hockey player ; Lillian Randolph (1914/1915–September 12, 1980), American actress and singer ; Lilian Rolfe ", "score": "1.3873929" } ]
What is Charles Combe's occupation?
[ "physician", "physicians", "medical doctor", "medical practitioner", "doctor", "medical doctors" ]
occupation
Charles Combe
3,685,425
71
[ { "id": "25062137", "title": "George Combe", "text": "Attribution ", "score": "1.6398222" }, { "id": "389759", "title": "Charles Combe", "text": " Charles Combe FRS M.D. (1743–1817) was an English physician and numismatist.", "score": "1.6145046" }, { "id": "4114393", "title": "Charles Harvey Combe", "text": " Charles Harvey Combe (18 February 1863 – 14 August 1935) was a Conservative Member of Parliament from 1892 and 1897 for the English constituency of Chertsey. Combe was raised at Cobham Park. He was educated at Eton. Afterwards he travelled for three years, visiting many countries of the world. He served for three years in the Sussex Militia.", "score": "1.5801528" }, { "id": "12970434", "title": "Charles Combes", "text": " Charles Pierre Mathieu Combes (26 December 1801 &ndash; 11 January 1872) was a French engineer. He was Inspector-General of Mines and the Director of the School of Mines in Paris. His name is on the Eiffel Tower.", "score": "1.5543615" }, { "id": "12970436", "title": "Charles Combes", "text": " In 1825 he became a teacher of mathematics at the Ecole de Saint-Etienne, a post he held for two years. He then worked in industry but returned to the Saint-Etienne school in 1827 and stayed until 1831. In 1832 he started at the School of Mines in Paris. Combes' wife Louise Pauline (born Bousquet) died young in 1841. Combes took an interest in his students. A young Marcel Deprez failed to complete the course at the School of Mines. He must have made a good impression as he was employed as Combes' secretary. Deprez went on to show that electricity could be transmitted over long distances. He has been recognised as a model of what is now called a consultant engineer. He was called on to arbitrate in disputes. He ruled on the ventilation of the mines in Belgium as well as advising foundries and collieries. In 1868 he chaired the General Council of Mines.", "score": "1.5155623" }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Combes", "text": "Charles Combes\n\nCharles Pierre Mathieu Combes (26 December 1801 – 11 January 1872) was a French engineer. He was Inspector-General of Mines and the Director of the School of Mines in Paris. His name is on the Eiffel Tower.<ref name=eiffel/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Peter Combe", "text": "Peter Combe\n\nPeter Charles Combe OAM (; born 20 October 1948) is an Australian children's entertainer and musician. At the ARIA Music Awards he has won three ARIA Awards for Best Children's Album, for \"Toffee Apple\" (1988), \"Newspaper Mama\" (1989) and \"The Absolutely Very Best of Peter Combe (So Far) Recorded in Concert\" (1992) and three additional nominations (\"Chopsticks\" (1990), \"Little Groover\" (1996) and \"Live It Up\" (2017)). His best-known tracks are \"Toffee Apple\", \"Spaghetti Bolognaise\", \"Mr Clicketty Cane\", \"Juicy Juicy Green Grass\" and \"Newspaper Mama\". His \"Christmas Album\" (November 1990) reached the ARIA Albums Chart top 50.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:English numismatists", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Chambers (publisher, born 1802)", "text": "Robert Chambers (publisher, born 1802)\n\nRobert Chambers (; 10 July 1802 – 17 March 1871) was a Scottish publisher, geologist, evolutionary thinker, author and journal editor who, like his elder brother and business partner William Chambers, was highly influential in mid-19th-century scientific and political circles.\n\nChambers was an early phrenologist in the Edinburgh Phrenological Society. He was also the anonymous author of \"Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation\", which was so controversial that his authorship was not acknowledged until after his death.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of the 72 names on the Eiffel Tower", "text": "List of the 72 names on the Eiffel Tower\n\nOn the Eiffel Tower, 72 names of French scientists, engineers, and mathematicians are engraved in recognition of their contributions. Gustave Eiffel chose this \"invocation of science\" because of his concern over the protests against the tower. The engravings are found on the sides of the tower under the first balcony, in letters about tall, and originally painted in gold. The engraving was painted over at the beginning of the 20th century and restored in 1986–87 by Société Nouvelle d'exploitation de la Tour Eiffel, the company that the city of Paris contracts to operate the Tower. The repainting of 2010–11 restored the letters to their original gold colour. There are also names of the engineers who helped build the Tower and design its architecture on a plaque on the top of the Tower, where a laboratory was built as well.", "score": null }, { "id": "14749217", "title": "Thomas Combe", "text": " Thomas Combe (1796–1872) was an English printer, publisher and patron of the arts. He was 'Printer to the University' at Oxford University Press, and was also a founder and benefactor of St Barnabas Church, near the Press in Jericho and close to Oxford Canal.", "score": "1.5089331" }, { "id": "12970435", "title": "Charles Combes", "text": " Charles-Pierre-Mathieu Combes was born on 26 December 1801 in Cahors. His father was a senior policeman named Pierre Combes Mathieu. He joined the Ecole Polytechnique before the usual starting age of seventeen on 1 September 1817 and completed his studies in 1820 when he was admitted to the School of Mines. Combes completed the three-year course in just two years. He graduated on 1 July 1822.", "score": "1.5014346" }, { "id": "389760", "title": "Charles Combe", "text": " He was born on 23 September 1743, in Southampton Street, Bloomsbury, London where his father, John Combe, carried on business as an apothecary. He was educated at Harrow School, and among his schoolfellows were Sir William Jones and Samuel Parr. He rose to the sixth form, but did not proceed to university. Coming to London, he studied medicine, and on his father's death in 1768 succeeded to his business. In 1783 the degree of doctor of medicine was conferred on him by the University of Glasgow, and he began to practise as an obstetric physician. On 5 April 1784 he was admitted by the Royal College of Physicians a licentiate in midwifery; on 30 June he was nominated a governor of St. Bartholomew's Hospital. In ", "score": "1.4964683" }, { "id": "12970438", "title": "Charles Combes", "text": " He was given a number of honours. By degree on 16 August 1860, Combes achieved the rank of Commander in France's Legion of Honour awards system. In 1868, he was awarded the Italian Commander of the Order of St. Maurice and Lazarus and he was made a Commander of the Order of Leopold of Belgium.", "score": "1.4887943" }, { "id": "25062128", "title": "George Combe", "text": " George Combe (21 October 1788 – 14 August 1858) was a trained Scottish lawyer and a spokesman of the phrenological movement for over 20 years. He founded the Edinburgh Phrenological Society in 1820 and wrote a noted study, The Constitution of Man (1828). After marriage in 1833, Combe took in later years to promoting phrenology internationally.", "score": "1.4851015" }, { "id": "7100348", "title": "Rose Combe", "text": " Rose Combe, born Marie-Rosalie Bugne (14 September 1883 – 24 September 1932), was a French railway worker and writer, viewed as an archetype of Proletarian literature. Born into a poor family, despite receiving little education, she was a voracious reader and memorised one of the few books she had access to, an almanac, by the age of four. She wanted to be a teacher but instead worked for the railway between Ambert and Thiers as a level crossing operator. She continued to write, however, and through the author Henri Pourrat, who lived locally, was first published in 1927. Her work was subsequently printed in L'Auvergne littéraire et artistique and her novel Le Mile des Garre appeared in 1931. She was known as the La Garde-Barrière Auvergnate (the Auvergne Gatekeeper) from her job on the railway. She died in 1932, much of her work still unpublished.", "score": "1.4821069" }, { "id": "28639609", "title": "Combe, Dulverton", "text": " (1861–1924), born at Combe as his monument in Dulverton Church states, who spent most of his life working as a surgeon and family doctor in Dulverton, living at Battleton House, formerly part of the Combe estate. He studied medicine at St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, gained a diploma LSA in 1884 and MRCS.Eng. in 1885. Between 1885 and 1887 he worked as assistant to Dr Samuel Evans at Harwich. In 1887 he returned to Dulverton to start his career as a family doctor. He was the local secretary of the Somerset Archaeological Society, and served as a Justice of the Peace for Somerset, and was a ", "score": "1.4793415" }, { "id": "25180158", "title": "Edward Combes", "text": " Edward Combes (6 September 1830 – 18 October 1895), was an engineer, pastoralist, politician and painter. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, and later the New South Wales Legislative Council. Combes entered the Government service of New South Wales in 1858. Four years later he was appointed Government Mining Engineer, and was returned to the Assembly as the member for Bathurst in 1872 and for Orange in 1875. Combes was Secretary for Public Works in the fourth Robertson ministry from August to December 1877, and in the following year was appointed Executive Commissioner for New South Wales at the Paris International Exhibition, his seat in Parliament being declared vacant because that was held to be an office of profit under ", "score": "1.4622122" }, { "id": "1875689", "title": "Timothy Combe", "text": " Timothy Combe (born 17 October 1936) is a retired British television director and actor's agent. As a director of BBC television drama from the late 1960s to the late 1970s, he worked on series such as Doctor Who, Z-Cars and The Brothers, as well as classic serials and plays.", "score": "1.4575145" }, { "id": "389764", "title": "Charles Combe", "text": " He married, in 1769, Arthey, only daughter of Henry Taylor, by whom he had four children. His eldest son was Taylor Combe.", "score": "1.4573917" }, { "id": "14749218", "title": "Thomas Combe", "text": " Combe was the son of Thomas Combe senior (died 1836?), a printer, stationer, bookseller and newspaper proprietor in Leicester. After working with his father and, between around 1824 and 1826 with Joseph Parker in Oxford, he was freed by the Stationers' Company and went into business in his own right. In 1826, he was briefly in partnership with Michael Angelo Nattali in London, but before the end of the year he had returned to Leicester to join the family business (which was styled T. Combe and Son between 1826 and 1835). After his father's death he moved to Oxford, and joined the University Press (or Clarendon Press) in 1837 at its then new (1830) building in Walton Street. By 1838, he was superintendent of the 'learned side' of the press, and soon acquired shares in the business. By 1851, ", "score": "1.4572215" }, { "id": "28639608", "title": "Combe, Dulverton", "text": " Rev. Charles St. Barbe Sydenham (1823–1904) (son of Rev. John Sydenham (1795–1858)), who succeeded his father as Rector of Brushford, lived at Brushford Rectory and was buried at Brushford Church 10 March 1904 aged 81. He presented three ancient illuminated manuscripts to the Library of Wells Cathedral. On 8 November 1871 he was declared bankrupt. In December 1885 he petitioned the County Court in Exeter, Devon, in connection with his bankruptcy. This had presumably necessitated the sale of Combe. He married Emily Lane, daughter of Major Henry Bowyer Lane, Royal Artillery. The fourth son of Rev. Charles St. Barbe Sydenham (died 1904) was Dr George Francis ", "score": "1.4533381" }, { "id": "29518117", "title": "Charles Maude", "text": " Charles Bulmer Maude (29 April 1848 - 11 May 1927) was an Anglican priest in the last third of the nineteenth century and the first third of the twentieth. Maude was born in Chapel Allerton, Potternewton, Leeds, son of Edmund Maude, of Middleton Lodge, Leeds. He was educated at Leeds Grammar School and Exeter College, Oxford where he graduated Bachelor of Arts (B.A) in 1871 and Master (M.A.) in 1872. He was ordained in 1872 by the Bishop of Ripon. After a curacy in Leeds (1872–75) he served as the third incumbent at St Cyprian's Church, Kimberley, South Africa (1877–1881). After further incumbencies at Wilnecote (1881–86), Leek (1886–1896; and Shrewsbury (1896–1906) he was Archdeacon of Salop until 1917. He died on 11 May 1927, aged 79.", "score": "1.4514587" }, { "id": "25062129", "title": "George Combe", "text": " George Combe was born at Livingston's Yards, Edinburgh, the son of Marion (née Newton, died 1819) and George Combe, a prosperous brewer in the city. His younger brother was the physician Andrew Combe. After attending the High School of Edinburgh, he studied law at the University of Edinburgh, entered a lawyer's office in 1804, and in 1812 began a solicitor's practice at 11 Bank Street. In 1820 Combe moved his office to Mylnes Court on the Royal Mile and moved house to 8 Hermitage Place in Stockbridge. In 1825 he moved with Andrew to 2 Brown Square off the Grassmarket. The Combe brothers lived together in a large dwelling at 25 Northumberland Street in the New Town from 1829.", "score": "1.4488038" }, { "id": "11632463", "title": "Geoff Combe", "text": " Geoffrey Wade Combe (born February 1, 1956) is an American former professional baseball pitcher.", "score": "1.4475412" } ]
What is John D. Maurice's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
John D. Maurice
4,707,538
36
[ { "id": "13042669", "title": "John D. Maurice", "text": " John D. Maurice is an American journalist. He won the 1975 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing for his editorials about the Kanawha County schoolbook controversy. Maurice worked as a reporter in Huntington, West Virginia, prior to joining the Daily Mail of Charleston, West Virginia, in 1938.", "score": "1.6116953" }, { "id": "25660859", "title": "Frederick Denison Maurice", "text": " John Frederick Denison Maurice (29 August 1805 – 1 April 1872), known as F. D. Maurice, was an English Anglican theologian, a prolific author, and one of the founders of Christian socialism. Since World War II, interest in Maurice has expanded.", "score": "1.4820766" }, { "id": "25660860", "title": "Frederick Denison Maurice", "text": " John Frederick Denison Maurice was born in Normanston, Suffolk, on 29 August 1805, the only son of Michael Maurice and his wife, Priscilla. Michael Maurice was the evening preacher in a Unitarian chapel. Deaths in the family brought about changes in the family's \"religious convictions\" and \"vehement disagreement\" between family members. Maurice later wrote about these disagreements and their effect on him: \"My father was a Unitarian minister. He wished me to be one also. He had a strong feeling against the English Church, and against Cambridge as well as Oxford. My elder sisters, and ultimately my mother, abandoned Unitarianism. But ", "score": "1.3924199" }, { "id": "24951844", "title": "Frederick Maurice (British Army officer, born 1841)", "text": " Major-General Sir John Frederick Maurice (24 May 1841 – 12 January 1912) was a senior British Army officer, chiefly remembered for his military writings.", "score": "1.3858521" }, { "id": "32668550", "title": "Maurice (name)", "text": "Ann Maurice (born 1951), American interior designer and house stager, called \"The House Doctor\" ; Arthur Bartlett Maurice (1873–1946), American editor of the Woodbridge (NJ) Register ; Benoît Maurice (born 1971), French football central defender ; Charles G. Maurice (1911–1997), American teacher of dentistry and pioneer of endodontics ; Clément Maurice (1853–1933), French photographer ; David Maurice (1626–1702), Welsh priest and translator ; David M. Maurice (1922–2002), British ophthalmologist ; Emil Maurice (1897–1972), German watchmaker and senior Nazi Party official ; Florian Maurice (born 1974), French footballer ; Frederick Barton Maurice (1871–1951), British general, military correspondent, writer and academic ; Frederick ", "score": "1.3535058" }, { "id": null, "title": "F. D. Maurice", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John D. Voelker", "text": "John D. Voelker\n\nJohn D. Voelker (June 29, 1903 – March 18, 1991), also known by his pen name Robert Traver, was a noted lawyer, author and fly fisherman from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Born and raised in Ishpeming, he later attended the University of Michigan Law School. His early professional career was as an attorney and county prosecutor in Marquette County. Voelker was also appointed to the Michigan Supreme Court by Governor G. Mennen Williams in 1957. He is best known as the author of the novel \"Anatomy of a Murder\", published in 1958. The best-selling novel was turned into an Academy Award-nominated film of the same name—directed by Otto Preminger and starring James Stewart—released on July 1, 1959. Duke Ellington wrote the music for the movie. It is critically acclaimed as one of the best trial movies of all time.\n\n\"Anatomy of a Murder\" is based on a real murder (and subsequent trial) that occurred in Big Bay in the early morning of July 31, 1952. Coleman A. Peterson, a lieutenant in the Army, was charged with murdering Maurice Chenoweth. The alleged motive was revenge for the rape of Peterson's wife by Chenoweth. Voelker successfully defended Peterson, who was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Other books by Voelker were based on other legal cases in the Upper Peninsula or his love of fly fishing for brook trout. He authored over 100 opinions during his short tenure on the Michigan Supreme Court, the most famous of which was in a case called \"People v. Hildabridle\" involving a naturist community near Battle Creek.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John D. Rockefeller", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Maurice Shaftesley", "text": "John Maurice Shaftesley\n\nJohn Maurice Shaftesley OBE (1901–1981) was an English journalist and writer, and editor of \"The Jewish Chronicle\" from 1946 to 1958.\n\nHe was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1956.<ref name=ms230 />\n\nHe was the uncle of American volcanologist David Richardson.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Maurice B. Clark", "text": "Maurice B. Clark\n\nMaurice B. Clark (1827–1901) was a partner in a produce business with John D. Rockefeller Sr, along with Clark's two brothers, James and Richard. Clark was from Malmesbury, England and moved to the United States in 1847. He studied with Rockefeller at Folsom's Commercial College in Ohio.\n\nHis business career began with the firm of Otis & Sinclair. He went on partner with John Rockefeller in 1856, forming a grain and produce business that grew with the addition of several other partners to be Clark, Rockefeller, & Co in 1864.\nDuring the American Civil War (1863), the two partners went into the oil business. Eventually, Rockefeller bought Clark's (and his brothers') share of the company at auction for $72,500. Following this, Clark went on to start another oil company, the Star Oil company, which passed through several names and changes of partner, becoming Clark Brothers & Co, and Clark, Payne, & Co. In 1868, he joined new partners to form the Clark, Schurmer, & Scofield Company, which then became Clark, Scofield, and Teagle. Following his work in the oil industry, he helped to organize the Cleveland Co-operative Stove Company. At the time of his death, he presided over the board of directors and he had been the company's president for twenty years.\n\nIn addition to his work in the business community, he served one term in the City Council of Cleveland, representing the \"old fourth ward\" from 1872 to 1873. He was also a prominent abolitionist, and one of the charter members of the First Wesleyan Methodist Church, known for its abolitionist outlook.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "10106341", "title": "Charles G. Maurice", "text": " Dr. Charles G. Maurice (1911–1997) was an American dentist and academic. In a teaching career that spanned 37 years at the University of Illinois at Chicago College of Dentistry, he began in the old Department of Applied Materia Medica and Therapeutics and ended up establishing the Department of Endodontics, becoming its first head in 1967. This was not his first pioneering effort in endodontics as he was one of the founders of the American Association of Endodontists in 1943. He also was a diplomate of the American Board of Endodontics. Maurice developed, organized and conducted postgraduate courses in both periodontics and endodontics. His laboratory manual for preclinical endodontics, updated, is still in use. He authored many publications and was an important contributor to the textbook Endodontology.", "score": "1.3458688" }, { "id": "6326616", "title": "Maurice J. Power", "text": " Maurice J. Power (1836 &ndash; September 1902) was a New York-based sculptor, politician and owner of the National Fine Art Foundry, New York City.", "score": "1.3457164" }, { "id": "32649030", "title": "USS Maurice J. Manuel", "text": " USS Maurice J. Manuel (DE-351) was a acquired by the U.S. Navy during World War II. The primary purpose of the destroyer escort was to escort and protect ships in convoy, in addition to other tasks as assigned, such as patrol or radar picket.", "score": "1.3454914" }, { "id": "20517", "title": "Maurice DeLory", "text": " Maurice E. \"Mike\" DeLory (born October 5, 1927) is a Canadian politician. He represented the electoral district of Lunenburg West in the Nova Scotia House of Assembly from 1970 to 1978. He is a member of the Nova Scotia Liberal Party. DeLory was born in Georgetown, Prince Edward Island. He attended Prince of Wales College and Dalhousie University, earning B.Sc., M.D. and C.M. degrees. He was a surgeon. In 1955, he married Burdette MacInnis. He served in the Executive Council of Nova Scotia as Provincial Secretary, Minister of Lands and Forests, and Minister of Tourism.", "score": "1.3430393" }, { "id": "25785779", "title": "Maurice Jackson", "text": " Maurice Jackson is an Associate Professor of History and African-American Studies and an Affiliated Professor of Performing Arts (Jazz) at Georgetown University. He is also a political activist based in Washington, DC.", "score": "1.3411673" }, { "id": "28522291", "title": "Maurice J. O'Sullivan", "text": " Born in Jersey City, New Jersey (July 15, 1944), the son of Maurice and Agnes O'Sullivan, Professor O'Sullivan attended St. Peter's Prep before receiving his bachelor's degree from Fairfield University (1966) and his Master's and Doctoral degrees from Case Western Reserve University (1967, 1969). After several years at Ohio State, he joined the Rollins faculty in 1975. At Rollins he has served as President of the Faculty and Chair of the English Department and Humanities Division. Director of the Florida Center for the Shakespeare Studies, in 2005, he became publisher of the Angel Alley Press at Rollins and is a senior partner in the Dan McGuinnis Irish Pubs in Nashville. He serves on ", "score": "1.334738" }, { "id": "32668551", "title": "Maurice (name)", "text": " Maurice (1805–1872), British author, theologian, and socialist ; Henry Maurice (minister) (1634–1682), Welsh priest who became an Independent minister ; Henry Maurice (theologian) (c. 1647 – 1691), Welsh clergyman and professor ; Henry Gascoyne Maurice (1847–1950), English zoologist ; Hugh Maurice (1775-1825), transcriber of Welsh manuscripts ; James Maurice (1814–1884), American politician from New York ; James Wilkes Maurice (1775–1857), United Kingdom Royal Navy officer ; Jean-Eudes Maurice (born 1986), French-born Haitian footballer ; John D. Maurice, American writer and Pulitzer Prize winner ; John Frederick Maurice (1841–1912), English soldier and military writer ; María Belén Pérez Maurice (born 1985), ", "score": "1.3265109" }, { "id": "13670226", "title": "Maurice B. Rowe", "text": " Maurice Broaddus Rowe III (October 4, 1922 – November 26, 2014) was an American civil servant who served in multiple senior roles in Virginia's state government. In 1972, Governor Linwood Holton appointed him the Commonwealth's first Secretary of Commerce and Resources after he had served the previous seven years as Commissioner of the Virginia Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Rowe graduated from Virginia Tech in 1948 with a degree in agricultural education following a hiatus from school during which he served in World War II.", "score": "1.3190068" }, { "id": "27337651", "title": "Alfred-Maurice de Zayas", "text": " Alfred-Maurice de Zayas (born 31 May 1947) is a Cuban-born American lawyer, writer, historian, expert in the field of human rights and international law and retired high-ranking United Nations official. From 1 May 2012 to 30 April 2018 he served as the first [[United Nations Independent Expert on the Promotion of a Democratic and Equitable International Order|UN Independent Expert on the Promotion of a Democratic and Equitable International Order]] (appointed by the United Nations Human Rights Council).", "score": "1.3169901" }, { "id": "28204377", "title": "Maurice Davis", "text": " Maurice Davis (December 15, 1921 &ndash; December 14, 1993 ) was a rabbi, and activist. He served on the President's Commission on Equal Opportunity, in the Lyndon B. Johnson Administration and was a director of the American Family Foundation, now known as the International Cultic Studies Association. Davis was the rabbi of the Jewish Community Center of White Plains, New York and a regular contributor to The Jewish Post and Opinion.", "score": "1.3165691" }, { "id": "24951849", "title": "Frederick Maurice (British Army officer, born 1841)", "text": "Hostilities without Declaration of War (1883) ; Popular History of Ashanti Campaign (1874) ; A life of his father, John Frederick Denison Maurice (1884) ; The Balance of Military Power in Europe (1888) ; War (1891) ; National Defenses (1897) ; The Franco-German War, 1870–1871 (1900) ; Diary of Sir John Moore (1904) ; History of the War in South Africa, an official account (four volumes, 1906–1910) Maurice's reputation depends chiefly on his military writings, which include:", "score": "1.3129394" }, { "id": "107842", "title": "S. Maurice Hicks Jr.", "text": " Samuel Maurice Hicks Jr., known professionally as S. Maurice Hicks Jr., (born December 5, 1952) is the Chief United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana.", "score": "1.3122065" }, { "id": "32668552", "title": "Maurice (name)", "text": " fencer ; Mary Maurice (1844–1918), American actress ; Mathias Maurice (1684-1738), Welsh minister and writer ; Paul Maurice (born 1967), Canadian hockey player and coach ; Paule Maurice (1910–1967), French composer ; Peter Maurice (priest) (1803–1878), Welsh priest and writer ; Peter Maurice (bishop) (born 1951), English cleric - bishop of Taunton ; Richard Maurice (1893– fl. 1951), Cuban-American filmmaker and labor organizer ; Thomas Maurice (fl. 1755–1824), English poet oriental scholar, historian, chaplain and vicar ; William Maurice (1552–1622), Welsh politician (an anglicization of his patronymic, ap Morys) ; William Maurice (antiquary) (1620-1680), Welsh antiquary and collector of manuscripts ", "score": "1.3119488" }, { "id": "14624041", "title": "Maurice Mitchell (activist)", "text": " Mitchell was born and raised in Long Beach, New York, the son of Caribbean immigrants. In high school, Mitchell was a member of the Long Island Student Coalition for Peace and Justice. Mitchell earned a Bachelor of Science degree in political science from Howard University.", "score": "1.3107455" }, { "id": "25858723", "title": "Maurice D. O'Connell", "text": " Maurice D. O'Connell was born in Constable, New York, on April 23, 1839. He was educated at Franklin Academy and taught school in upstate New York. During the Civil War O'Connell worked in the Washington, D.C. office of the Comptroller of the Currency. O'Connell studied law at Columbian University (now George Washington University) while working for the comptroller, graduated in 1866, and attained admission to the bar. After the war O'Connell resided in Texas for two years, where he was employed by the San Antonio National Bank. In 1869 O'Connell moved to Fort Dodge, Iowa, where he practiced law. From 1872 to 1879 he was District Attorney ", "score": "1.3092229" } ]
What is Raymond S. Burton's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Raymond S. Burton
5,545,849
97
[ { "id": "9020570", "title": "Raymond S. Burton", "text": " Raymond S. \"Ray\" Burton (August 13, 1939 &ndash; November 12, 2013) was a New Hampshire politician who served from 1977–79 and 1981–2013 on the Executive Council as the representative of District 1, or \"The North Country\". Known as the \"Dean of the Council\", Burton, a Republican, was the longest-serving Executive Councilor in New Hampshire history. Burton also served for 22 years as a Grafton County Commissioner, representing District 2. Burton lived in the town of Bath, New Hampshire, where he died on November 12, 2013.", "score": "1.6213226" }, { "id": "2655262", "title": "Raymond Burton (rugby league)", "text": " Raymond Burton is a former professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s. He played at club level for Castleford (Heritage № 387).", "score": "1.5837305" }, { "id": "33044325", "title": "Glenn W. Burton", "text": " Burton received his bachelor's degree from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in 1932. He received his master's degree in 1933 and Ph.D. in 1936 from Rutgers University.", "score": "1.4443809" }, { "id": "1584711", "title": "Dan Burton", "text": " Danny Lee Burton (born June 21, 1938) is an American politician. Burton is the former U.S. Representative for, and previously the , serving from 1983 until 2013. He is a member of the Republican Party and was part of the Tea Party Caucus.", "score": "1.4392471" }, { "id": "7599089", "title": "S. H. Burton", "text": " Burton's publications include:", "score": "1.4306201" }, { "id": null, "title": "Tim Burton", "text": "Tim Burton\n\nTimothy Walter Burton (born August 25, 1958) is an American filmmaker and animator. He is known for his gothic fantasy and horror films such as \"Beetlejuice\" (1988), \"Edward Scissorhands\" (1990), \"The Nightmare Before Christmas\" (1993), \"Ed Wood\" (1994), \"Sleepy Hollow\" (1999), \"Corpse Bride\" (2005), \"\" (2007) and \"Dark Shadows\" (2012), as well as the television series \"Wednesday \"(2022). Burton also directed the superhero films \"Batman\" (1989) and \"Batman Returns\" (1992), the sci-fi film \"Planet of the Apes\" (2001), the fantasy-drama \"Big Fish\" (2003), the musical adventure film \"Charlie and the Chocolate Factory\" (2005), and the fantasy films \"Alice in Wonderland\" (2010) and \"Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children\" (2016).\n\nBurton has often worked with actors Winona Ryder, Johnny Depp, Lisa Marie (former girlfriend), Helena Bonham Carter (his former domestic partner) and composer Danny Elfman, who made scores for all but three of Burton's films. Burton also wrote and illustrated the poetry book \"The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy & Other Stories\", published in 1997 by British publishing house Faber and Faber, and a compilation of his drawings, sketches, and other artwork, entitled \"The Art of Tim Burton\", was released in 2009. A follow-up to that book, entitled \"The Napkin Art of Tim Burton: Things You Think About in a Bar\", containing sketches made by Burton on napkins at bars and restaurants he visited, was released in 2015. His accolades include nominations for two Academy Awards and three BAFTA Awards, and wins for an Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "LeVar Burton", "text": "LeVar Burton\n\nLevar Burton Jr. (born February 16, 1957) He also played Kunta Kinte in the ABC miniseries \"Roots\" (1977), and was host of the PBS Kids educational television series \"Reading Rainbow\" for more than 23 years (1983–2006). He received 12 Daytime Emmy Awards and a Peabody Award as host and executive producer of \"Reading Rainbow\".\n\nHis other roles include Cap Jackson in \"Looking for Mr. Goodbar\" (1977), Donald Lang in \"Dummy\" (1979), Tommy Price in \"The Hunter\" (1980), which earned him an NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Actor in a Motion Picture, and Martin Luther King Jr. in \"Ali\" (2001). Burton received the Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album at the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards for his narration of the book \"The Autobiography of Martin Luther King Jr.\" In 1990, he was honored for his achievements in television with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.\n\nBurton was chosen as the Grand Marshal of the 2022 Rose Parade in Pasadena, California, on October 5, 2021. He presided over the parade and the afternoon Rose Bowl Game on January 1, 2022.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Raymond S. Troubh", "text": "Raymond S. Troubh\n\nRaymond S. Troubh (May 3, 1926 – August 24, 2020) was an independent financial consultant who served as a general partner at Lazard from 1961 to 1974 and as interim chairman at Enron from 2002 to 2004.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Montague Burton", "text": "Montague Burton\n\nSir Montague Maurice Burton (15 August 1885 – 21 September 1952) was the founder of Burton Menswear, one of Britain's largest chains of clothes shops.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Ray Burton (musician)", "text": "Ray Burton (musician)\n\nRaymond Charles Burton (born 1945) is an Australian musician and singer-song writer. He was briefly a member of rock 'n' rollers the Delltones (1965–66) on vocals, pop group the Executives (1968–69) on guitar and vocals, progressive rockers Leo de Castro and Friends (1973) on guitar, and jazz fusion band Ayers Rock (1973–74) on guitar and vocals. In 1971 Burton was working in the United States where he co-wrote \"I Am Woman\" with fellow Australian, Helen Reddy, which became a number-one hit for her on the \"Billboard\" Hot 100 late in the following year. Another song written by the pair, \"Best Friend\", was sung by Reddy while she was also acting in a disaster film, \"Airport 1975\" (October 1974). As a solo artist, Burton issued an album, \"Dreamers and Nightflyers\" and two associated singles, \"Too Hard to Handle\" and \"Paddington Green\", in 1978 in Australia. He returned to the US where he worked as a song writer.", "score": null }, { "id": "14583387", "title": "Courtney Burton", "text": " Courtney Lee Burton (born June 28, 1978, South Bend, Indiana) is an American retired professional boxer from Benton Harbor, Michigan who fought in the super lightweight, lightweight, and welterweight divisions. Throughout his career Burton was known as a switch-hitter being able to fight either orthodox or southpaw, he stood 5' 9\" though many boxing records have him listed at 5' 7\". He held the WBO NABO lightweight title.", "score": "1.4232047" }, { "id": "13878736", "title": "David H. Burton", "text": " Burton was a World War II combat veteran in the Army's 334th Infantry and was awarded both the Purple Heart & Bronze Star for his service. After the war, he earned a degree in History from University of Scranton, before earning both an MA, PhD in History from Georgetown University. He joined the faculty of St. Joseph's University in 1953 where he taught for over 50 years and chaired the History department for 24 years.", "score": "1.4071633" }, { "id": "4116744", "title": "Dennis Burton (artist)", "text": " Dennis Burton (December 6, 1933 – July 8, 2013) was a Canadian modernist painter.", "score": "1.406507" }, { "id": "3950112", "title": "Thomas G. Burton", "text": " Burton was born on 7 January 1935 in Memphis, Tennessee. His first degree was a Bachelor of Arts from David Lipscomb College in 1956. He then received a Master of Arts in 1958 and a PhD in 1966, both from Vanderbilt University. He became a member of the Department of English of East Tennessee State University in 1958. He became a full professor in 1967, holding the position until he retired in 1995. He was appointed Professor Emeritus 1996. Burton's book on snake handling, Taking up Serpents, was described as an authoritative study of the belief by National Geographic magazine.", "score": "1.3900263" }, { "id": "9859742", "title": "Woody Burton", "text": " Charles \"Woody\" Burton (born June 11, 1945) is an American politician. He is a member of the Indiana House of Representatives from the 58th District, serving since 1988. He is a member of the Republican party. Burton served on the Johnson County Council from 1980 to 1984. His brother is former Congressman Dan Burton.", "score": "1.3886122" }, { "id": "25046242", "title": "Laurence J. Burton", "text": " Laurence Junior Burton (October 30, 1926 &ndash; November 27, 2002) was a U.S. Representative from Utah. Born in Ogden, Utah, Burton graduated from Ogden High School in 1944. Enlisted in the United States Navy Air Corps and served from January 1945 to July 1946. He graduated from Weber College at Ogden, in 1948, from the University of Utah in 1951, and from Utah State University at Logan in 1956. Took postgraduate work at Georgetown and George Washington University, Washington, D.C., in 1957 and 1958. Public relations director and athletic manager at Weber College from 1948 to 1956. Regional director for American College Public Relations Association in 1954 and 1955. He was editor of National Junior College Athletic Association ", "score": "1.3883328" }, { "id": "31096759", "title": "Mark Burton", "text": " Richard Mark Burton (born 16 January 1956) is a New Zealand politician. He is a member of the Labour Party, serving as Minister of Defence, Minister of Justice, Minister of Local Government, Minister in Charge of Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations, Deputy Leader of the House, and the Minister Responsible for the Law Commission in the Fifth Labour Government of New Zealand.", "score": "1.3881159" }, { "id": "32041085", "title": "John Burton (American politician)", "text": " Burton was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the son of Mildred (Leonard) and Thomas Burton, who was a salesman and physician. He was raised in San Francisco. Burton earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in social science in 1954 from San Francisco State University and a Juris Doctor from the University of San Francisco School of Law.", "score": "1.3856201" }, { "id": "6112686", "title": "Bruce Burton", "text": " Bruce Burton's birth was registered in Wakefield district, West Riding of Yorkshire, England.", "score": "1.3819561" }, { "id": "31933675", "title": "Burton (name)", "text": "Burton Barr (1917–1997), American politician from Arizona ; Burton Cummings (born 1947), Canadian musician ; Burton E. Green (1868–1965), American oilman and co-founder of Beverly Hills, California ; Burton Hecht (born 1927), New York politician and judge ; Burt Reynolds (1936–2018), American actor, producer and stuntman ; Burt Lancaster (1913–1994), American actor ", "score": "1.3800228" }, { "id": "29596277", "title": "William C. Burton", "text": " William C. Burton is a partner in the law firm of Sagat Burton LLP, Park Avenue, New York City. His practice is devoted primarily to lobbying for banking, financial services and insurance business interests. As an attorney, Burton has devoted a substantial part of the past twenty-two years to promoting the legal profession through his non-profit foundation. He is the author of the legal profession's first-ever legal thesaurus entitled Burton's Legal Thesaurus. Burton served as New York State Assistant Attorney General, as well as an Assistant New York State Special Prosecutor. Previously, Burton was Director of Government Affairs for one of the world's largest insurers, Continental Insurance.", "score": "1.3787763" }, { "id": "14786239", "title": "W. K. Burton", "text": " William Kinnimond Burton (11 May 1856 – 5 August 1899) was a British engineer, photographer and photography writer, born in Edinburgh, Scotland, who lived most of his career in Meiji period Japan.", "score": "1.3750918" }, { "id": "3638178", "title": "Jean-Dominique Burton", "text": " Jean-Dominique Burton, born on 13 October 1952 in Huy (Belgium), is a Belgian photographer and filmmaker, author of several books of photographs focusing on Europe, Asia and Africa. Since 1978, numerous exhibitions have been dedicated to his work, in Europe (in galleries and in the Paris metro ), Africa (notably on the occasion of the Francophonie Summit, OIF, in November 2014 ), North America (San Francisco and Stanford University ) and Asia. Many of his works have also been included in public and private collections.", "score": "1.3749945" }, { "id": "26020221", "title": "Theodore E. Burton", "text": " Theodore Elijah Burton (December 20, 1851 – October 28, 1929) was a Republican politician from Ohio. He served in the United States House of Representatives and U.S. Senate.", "score": "1.3749259" }, { "id": "25252950", "title": "Philip Burton Jr.", "text": " Philip Burton Jr. (December 9, 1934 – December 24, 2010) was a documentary filmmaker whose subjects included African-Americans and American government.", "score": "1.3735242" } ]
What is Ernst Theodor Echtermeyer's occupation?
[ "philosopher" ]
occupation
Ernst Theodor Echtermeyer
6,498,315
77
[ { "id": "28318058", "title": "Ernst Theodor Echtermeyer", "text": " Ernst Theodor Echtermeyer (12 August 1805, Bad Liebenwerda – 6 May 1844) was a German writer and philosopher. Together with Arnold Ruge, in 1838, he founded the Hallische Jahrbücher für Wissenschaft und Kunst, an organ of the Young Hegelians.", "score": "1.762161" }, { "id": "2741837", "title": "Echtermeyer", "text": "Curt Echtermeyer (1896–1971), Chilean-German painter ; Ernst Theodor Echtermeyer (1805–1844), German writer and philosopher Echtermeyer is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.67076" }, { "id": "28315996", "title": "Carl Friedrich Echtermeier", "text": " Carl Friedrich Echtermeier, also known as Carl Echtermeier or Karl Echtermeyer, (27 October 1845 - 30 July 1910) was a German sculptor.", "score": "1.5345335" }, { "id": "28315997", "title": "Carl Friedrich Echtermeier", "text": " Carl Friedrich Echtermeier, the son of a plasterer in Kassel, Germany, learnt the basics of his craft at his father's workshop. He went on to study at the art academies of Kassel, Munich and Dresden. In his early twenties he earned great acclaim with his statue of a dancing satyr. In 1870, he married Margarete Stubenrauch and embarked on a grand tour through Italy. In 1871, he founded his own sculptors' workshop in Dresden. In 1883, he started teaching at Braunschweig Polytechnic (today Braunschweig University of Technology). Professor Echtermeier, who also received the official title of \"Geheimer Hofrat\" (Privy Counsellor), died in Braunschweig in 1910. Carl Echtermeier was related to the writer Ernst Theodor Echtermeyer (1805 - 1844) and the painter Curt Echtermeyer (1896 - 1971). Possibly following a dispute with one of his three sons, he changed the spelling of his name in 1905.", "score": "1.5320442" }, { "id": "15427187", "title": "Heinrich Hagenmeyer", "text": " Heinrich Hagenmeyer (1834–1915) was a German Protestant pastor and historian, specializing in writing and editing texts from the beginning of the Crusades. Closely associated with fellow German Reinhold Röhricht, their contribution to the history of the kingdom of Jerusalem set a sound archival footing for the discipline. In particular, Hagenmeyer's biography of Peter the Hermit, Peter der Eremite, established the basis for the study of the People's Crusade.", "score": "1.513433" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:People from the Electorate of Saxony", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:19th-century German male writers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:German philosophers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "20430078", "title": "Ernst Sieper", "text": "Ernst Sieper Ernst Sieper was a German Anglicist. Soon, however, Professor Sieper's interest was directed towards the modern period of English literature, and he devoted himself to the study of the aesthetic movement in the Romantic and the Victorian age. The fruits of his researches in this never foresook the cause he had espoused. In numerous newspaper articles he pleaded for fair play and reacted against the vagaries of chauvinism. It was his sacred conviction that an ultimate adjustment of the conflicting political interests of England and Germany was possible, and that it ought to be prepared by intellectual and", "score": "1.5018146" }, { "id": "17902730", "title": "Curt Echtermeyer", "text": "as “specialist in Old Masters”. His genre views often depict comfortable middle-class men in the pursuit of their trades or hobbies, for example making or playing musical instruments. Many of these are set in the past – either the nineteenth century, whose artistic style they emulate, or those preceding. The genre senes are dominated by a warm golden brown, contrasting with the melancholy ashen tones of Echtermeyer's surrealist and expressionist imagery. The historical interiors are crammed with books, globes, plans, models and framed paintings. The virtuoso artist sometimes playfully signed a picture in the picture with \"C. Bruckner pinx.\". Curt", "score": "1.4795458" }, { "id": "26072223", "title": "Ernst", "text": "Ernst Anders, German painter ; Ernest August (disambiguation), multiple people ; Ernst Balz, German sculptor ; Ernst Stavro Blofeld, evil genius from the James Bond novels and films ; Ernst Boepple (1887–1950), German Nazi official and SS officer executed for war crimes ; Ernst Cassirer, German Jewish philosopher. ; Ernst Chain, German-born British biochemist ; Ernst Cohen, Dutch Jewish chemist known for his work on the allotropy of metals ; Ernst Gebauer, German painter ; Ernst Haeckel, German biologist and illustrator ; Ernst Happel, Austrian football (soccer) manager ; Ernst Reinhold von Hofmann, Russian geologist and mineralogist ; Ernst Jaakson, Estonian diplomat ; Ernst Jansz, Dutch musician and founding member of Doe Maar ; Ernst Jünger (1895-1998), German writer ; Ernst Kaltenbrunner (1903-1946), Austrian-German Nazi SS police ", "score": "1.5060899" }, { "id": "32736347", "title": "Ernst Eckstein", "text": " Ernst Eckstein (6 February 1845, Giessen, Grand Duchy of Hesse –18 November 1900) was a German humorist, novelist and poet.", "score": "1.4885664" }, { "id": "4843682", "title": "Ernst Hartmann", "text": " Ernst Hartmann studied medicine in Mannheim and Jena. During World War II he worked as a staff physician in the German army and later was briefly in American captivity. Subsequently he opened a medical practice in Eberbach on the river Neckar, where he remained more than 40 years as a practitioner. Besides his work as a doctor, in 1948, Ernst Hartmann occupied himself, together with his brother Robert, with geobiology and dowsing. Furthermore, he occupied himself with homeopathy and later also 'building biology' (German baubiologie). The Research Group for Geobiology (Dr. Hartmann e.V.), a registered association with the goal of promoting research and training in geobiology, was founded by him in 1961.", "score": "1.4868637" }, { "id": "3995469", "title": "Ernst Thomke", "text": " Ernst Thomke (born 21 April 1939 in Biel/Bienne Canton of Berne, on the Franco-German linguistic border), is a Swiss physician and watchmaker. First a trained mechanic, he acquired the Swiss federal maturity degree and pursued academic studies, while in employment.", "score": "1.4820933" }, { "id": "11002951", "title": "List of authors by name: E", "text": " • Gustav Ernst (born 1944, Austria, d/f) • Max Ernst (1891–1976, Germany/France, p) • Paul Ernst (1866–1933, Germany, f/d/nf) • Walter Ernsting (1920–2005, Germany/Austria, f), pseudonym Clark Darlton • Annette Mbaye d'Erneville (born 1926, Senegal, d) • Barbara Erskine (born 1944, England, f) • Thomas Erskine (1750–1823, Scotland/England, f) • Susan Ertz (1887–1985, England, f) • Andreas Eschbach (born 1959, Germany, f/ch) • Jens Jacob Eschels (1757–1842, Denmark, nf) • Wolfram von Eschenbach (c. 1160/1180 – c. 1220, Germany, p) • Ernst Wilhelm Eschmann (1904–1987, Germany, nf/d) • Edith Escombe (1866–1950, England, f) • Julio Escoto (born 1944, Honduras, f/nf) • Margaret Escott ", "score": "1.4625516" }, { "id": "26072221", "title": "Ernst", "text": "Adolf Ernst (1832–1899) German botanist known by the author abbreviation \"Ernst\" ; Alice Henson Ernst (1880-1980), American writer and historian ; Cornelia Ernst, German politician ; Edzard Ernst, German-British Professor of Complementary Medicine ; Emil Ernst, astronomer ; Ernie Ernst (1924/25–2013), former District Judge in Walker County, Texas ; Eugen Ernst (1864–1954), German politician ; Fabian Ernst, German soccer player ; Gustav Ernst, Austrian writer ; Heinrich Wilhelm Ernst, Moravian violinist and composer ; Jim Ernst, Canadian politician ; Jimmy Ernst, American painter, son of Max Ernst ; Joni Ernst, U.S. Senator from Iowa ; K.S. Ernst, American visual poet ; Ken Ernst, U.S. comics artist ; Karl Friedrich Paul Ernst, German writer (1866–1933) ", "score": "1.4545743" }, { "id": "15427188", "title": "Heinrich Hagenmeyer", "text": " Hagenmeyer was the son of a forester and studied theology in Heidelberg from 1852 to 1856. In 1859 he was appointed pastor and worked as such in Kälbertshausen. In 1866 he moved to Eberstadt and in 1871 to Großeicholzheim. From 1884 until his retirement he was pastor in Ziegelhausen. Hagenmeyer published key critical editions of original sources for the First Crusade, such as the Historia Hierosolymitana of Fulcher of Chartres and the collection of letters composed by the Crusaders. HIs editions are still used by Crusades historians to this day. Hagenmeyer is regarded amongst the group of nineteenth-century historians who \"set new scholarly standards in the discovery, appraisal and editing of old and new sources, thereby transforming both content and interpretation of the subject.\" For his contribution to Crusade research, he was awarded an honorary doctorate of philosophy by Heidelberg University.", "score": "1.4521798" }, { "id": "29273621", "title": "Bad Liebenwerda", "text": "Gotthard Fritzsche (1797-1863), theologian and founder of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Australia ; Ernst Theodor Echtermeyer (1805-1844), philosopher and philologist ; Ernst Eberhard (1843-1909), popular science writer ; Erich Müller (1897-1980), writer ", "score": "1.4485011" }, { "id": "32802869", "title": "Emil Erlenmeyer", "text": " Erlenmeyer was born in Wehen, Duchy of Nassau (today Taunusstein, Hesse, near Wiesbaden), in 1825, the son of a Protestant minister. He enrolled in the University of Giessen to study medicine, but after attending lectures of Justus von Liebig changed to chemistry. In the summer of 1846 he went to Heidelberg for one year, and studied physics, botany and mineralogy, returning to Giessen in 1847. After serving as assistant to H. Will and then to Carl Remigius Fresenius, Erlenmeyer decided to devote himself to pharmaceutical chemistry. For this purpose he studied in Nassau, where he passed the state pharmaceutical examination, and shortly afterwards acquired an apothecary's business, first at Katzenelnbogen and then in Wiesbaden. He became ", "score": "1.4483757" }, { "id": "1980521", "title": "Ernst Kuhl", "text": " Ernst Kuhl was born in Saarlouis. At the age of 18 he graduated from the gymnasium in Trier, and in 1865 he graduated the course of civil engineering in Karlsruhe. He worked for many years as a manager of a smelting works on the river Rhine, and worked as an engineer on a North German Lloyd steamer.", "score": "1.4452679" }, { "id": "1306786", "title": "Ernst Litfaß", "text": " Ernst Amandus Theodor Litfaß (or Litfass; ; 11 February 1816 &ndash; 27 December 1874) was a German printer and publisher. He invented the free-standing cylindrical advertising column which bears his name in German (Litfaßsäule).", "score": "1.4445875" }, { "id": "14723721", "title": "Ernst Ziller", "text": " Ernst Moritz Theodor Ziller (Ερνέστος Τσίλλερ, Ernestos Tsiller (22 June 1837 &ndash; 4 November 1923) was a German born university teacher and architect who later became a Greek national. In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, he was a major designer of royal and municipal buildings in Athens, Patras, and other Greek cities.", "score": "1.4416976" }, { "id": "25704423", "title": "August Heinrich Ferdinand Tegetmeyer", "text": " August Heinrich Ferdinand Tegetmeyer (14 March 1844 Leipzig &ndash; 31 May 1912) was a German illustrator and engraver who provided the images for a large number of publications.", "score": "1.4396014" }, { "id": "1145424", "title": "Elias von Steinmeyer", "text": " Elias von Steinmeyer (8 February 1848, in Nowawes, near Potsdam &ndash; 8 March 1922, in Erlangen) was a German philologist. He studied philology at the University of Berlin, and from 1870 worked as an assistant in the private state archives in Berlin. In 1873 he was named an associate professor at the University of Strasbourg, and in 1877 became a full professor of German philology at the University of Erlangen. From 1874 to 1890 he was the editor of the Zeitschrift für deutsches Altertum. He is best known for Die kleineren althochdeutschen Sprachdenkmaler (1916) and the Althochdeutsche Glossen (five volumes, 1879-1922, with Eduard Sievers). His correspondence with Robert Priebsch was edited and published by Priebsch's son-in-law August Closs. He was the author of numerous biographies in the Allgemeine Deutsche Biographie.", "score": "1.4378688" }, { "id": "25070883", "title": "Ernst von Hesse-Wartegg", "text": " Ernst von Hesse-Wartegg (21 February 1851, in or near Vienna, Austria – 17 May 1918, Tribschen, near Lucerne, Switzerland) was an Austrian – American writer and traveller. He was consul of Venezuela in Switzerland (1888–1918). He completed 29 books and close to 700 journal articles.", "score": "1.4365915" } ]
What is Debra Weeks's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists", "television producer", "TV producer", "producer", "Tv producer", "Series Producer", "Producer (television)", "Television executive producer" ]
occupation
Debra Weeks
3,885,333
63
[ { "id": "13936560", "title": "Debra Weeks", "text": " Debra Weeks is an American television producer, executive producer, director, and journalist. She is noted for her role in the development and direction of reality television.", "score": "1.7984878" }, { "id": "13936561", "title": "Debra Weeks", "text": " Weeks began her career as journalist in 1982 with a degree in Broadcast Journalism from California State University Northridge. She wrote copy and read the news on radio stations in southern California and Nevada. Weeks began in television as a weather girl at KOLO-TV in Reno, NV, and later worked in Texas and New Mexico as a television news reporter, anchor, producer and managing editor.", "score": "1.6671314" }, { "id": "13936562", "title": "Debra Weeks", "text": " Weeks returned to Hollywood as part of the startup team for Paramount Pictures tabloid television magazine series, Hard Copy. She ultimately became the series' Supervising Producer and Managing Editor, working with Peter Brennan and Burt Kearns. While at Hard Copy, Weeks covered and/or managed the teams reporting on entertainment as well as hard news stories, which included the 1993 child sexual abuse accusations against Michael Jackson, the Waco siege, the Northridge earthquake, the LA riots, and the 1993 Big Bayou Canot train wreck.", "score": "1.5856075" }, { "id": "13936565", "title": "Debra Weeks", "text": "Debra Weeks webradio interview ; Fox News interview on Most Daring series ; The Hollywood Reporter: Mark Cuban-Ryan Seacrest Channel Taps 'Hard Copy' Producer to Run Daily Live Show ", "score": "1.4057257" }, { "id": "3958304", "title": "List of Person of Interest characters", "text": " Denton L. Weeks (played by Cotter Smith) was the official who commissioned the development of the machine. He worked for the President for National Security Affairs (APNSA) and is Alicia Corwin's supervisor. He was one of the few people to know of the Machine's existence. He is in league with the Special Counsel. At an unspecified point in time, Weeks was appointed head of a task force on Privacy and Information, reporting directly to the Chief of Staff. Prior to that promotion, he had already been working in corporate law for a decade as a member of the White House legal team and a specialist ", "score": "1.3930749" }, { "id": null, "title": "Debra Weeks", "text": "Debra Weeks\n\nDebra Weeks is an American television producer, executive producer, director, and journalist. She is noted for her role in the development and direction of reality television.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Deborah Norville", "text": "Deborah Norville\n\nDeborah Anne Norville (born August 8, 1958) is an American television journalist and businesswoman. Norville is the anchor of \"Inside Edition\", a syndicated television news magazine, a position she has held since March 6, 1995. She markets and sells a line of yarns (\"Deborah Norville Collection\") for knit and crochet enthusiasts, manufactured by Premier Yarns. Previously, she was an anchor and correspondent for CBS News and earlier co-host of \"Today\" on NBC. Her book \"Thank You Power\" was a \"New York Times\" best-seller.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Debra Byrne", "text": "Debra Byrne\n\nDebra Anne Byrne (born 30 March 1957), formerly billed as Debbie Byrne, is an Australian pop singer, variety entertainer, theatre and TV actress and writer, director and choreographer of cabaret. From April 1971 to March 1975 she was a founding cast member of \"Young Talent Time\". She started her solo singing career with a cover version of \"He's a Rebel\" (March 1974), which peaked at No. 25 on the \"Go-Set\" Australian Singles chart. At the Logie Awards of 1974 she won Best Teenage Personality and followed with the in October – both ceremonies were sponsored by \"TV Week\". She repeated both wins in the following year.\n\nAs a stage actress Byrne appeared in the Australian musical theatre versions of \"Cats\" (July 1985 to mid-1987), \"Les Misérables\" (November 1987 to May 1988, December 1989 to June 1990) and \"Sunset Boulevard\" (October 1996 to June 1997). Her solo album, \"Caught in the Act\" (April 1991), peaked at No. 2 on the ARIA Albums Chart and was certified gold. In 2006 Byrne published her autobiography, \"Not Quite Ripe: A Memoir\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Debra Winger", "text": "Debra Winger\n\nDebra Lynn Winger (born May 16, 1955) is an American actress. She starred in the films \"An Officer and a Gentleman\" (1982), \"Terms of Endearment\" (1983), and \"Shadowlands\" (1993), each of which earned her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Actress. Winger won the National Society of Film Critics Award for Best Actress for \"Terms of Endearment\", and the Tokyo International Film Festival Award for Best Actress for \"A Dangerous Woman\" (1993). Her other film roles include \"Urban Cowboy\" (1980), \"Legal Eagles\" (1986), \"Black Widow\" (1987), \"Betrayed\" (1988), \"The Sheltering Sky\" (1990), \"Forget Paris\" (1995), and \"Rachel Getting Married\" (2008). In 2012, she made her Broadway debut in the original production of David Mamet's play \"The Anarchist\". In 2014, she received the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Transilvania International Film Festival.\n\nWinger starred as a series regular in the Netflix original television series \"The Ranch\" (2016–2020).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Deborah Meaden", "text": "Deborah Meaden\n\nDeborah Sonia Meaden (born 11 February 1959) is a British businesswoman and TV personality who ran a multimillion-pound family holiday business, before completing a management buyout. She is best known for her appearances as a 'Dragon' on the BBC business programme \"Dragons' Den\".", "score": null }, { "id": "8704196", "title": "Debra Marquart", "text": " Debra Marquart is an American poet and musician from the small town of Napoleon, North Dakota. Since 1992 she has been performing as singer-songwriter with the band The Bone People. After graduating with master's degrees from Moorhead State University and Iowa State University (ISU), she became an English professor at ISU, directing an MFA program in \"creative writing and environment\". In 2014, she taught writers' workshops in Bakken oil field communities most affected by hydraulic fracking, where \"many people ... are despairing &ndash; feeling that they have been declared an energy sacrifice zone.\"", "score": "1.3895636" }, { "id": "11126399", "title": "Debra Hilstrom", "text": " Debra J. Hilstrom (born June 21, 1968) is an American politician and former member of the Minnesota House of Representatives. A member of the Minnesota Democratic–Farmer–Labor Party (DFL), she represented District 40B, which included portions of the city of Brooklyn Center in Hennepin County in the Twin Cities metropolitan area. She was a candidate in the 2014 Minnesota Secretary of State election. She ran for Minnesota Attorney General in 2018, but lost the August 14 primary to Congressman Keith Ellison.", "score": "1.3845127" }, { "id": "13936564", "title": "Debra Weeks", "text": " In April 2012 \"AXS TV\", the newly formed partnership between HDNet, Ryan Seacrest, Anschutz Entertainment Group(AEG), and CAA tapped Debra Weeks as Executive Producer to develop and launch its live entertainment programming block, \"AXSLive\". The successful launch of the new programming block was described as \"the pop-culture equivalent of ESPN's SportsCenter\" and premiered in July 2012 on the newly rebranded AXS TV network. In 2014, Weeks joined Sean Combs' new Revolt (TV network) as a network Executive Producer.", "score": "1.3837976" }, { "id": "3393334", "title": "Sylvia Roberts", "text": " Sylvia Roberts (1933-2014) was an American lawyer known for legal work on behalf of patients at the East Louisiana State Hospital’s Forensic Unit, for the National Organization for Women’s (NOW) Legal Defense and Education Fund (LDEF), as an educator and advocate for the legal rights of women in Louisiana, and on the behalf of victims of domestic violence. Roberts is best known for representing Lorena Weeks in Weeks v. Southern Bell, the first legal victory in which the National Organization for Women used Title VII of the Civil Rights Act to fight gender-based discrimination. She served as NOW’s first Southern Regional Director and as president of the NOW Legal Defense and Education Fund (currently Legal Momentum) (1972-1974). Sylvia Roberts’ lifelong advocacy on behalf of the victims of mental illness, workplace discrimination, the legal system, and domestic abuse was exemplified through her tireless pursuit of legal justice and efforts to educate the public.", "score": "1.3762144" }, { "id": "4633264", "title": "Mary Elvira Weeks", "text": " In 1967, Weeks won the Dexter Award for Outstanding Achievement in the History of Chemistry from the American Chemical Society.", "score": "1.3723361" }, { "id": "25914880", "title": "Debra", "text": " police officer and author ; Debra Gillett, English actress ; Debra Gore (born 1967), British swimmer ; Debra Granik (born 1963), American independent film director ; Debra Green, British writer and speaker ; Debra Haffner (born 1954), ordained minister ; Debra Hamel (born 1964), American historian ; Debra Hand, American sculptor ; Debra Hayward, British film producer ; Debra Hill (1950 – 2005), American film producer and screenwriter ; Debra Hilstrom (born 1968), American politician ; Debra Holloway (1955 – 2011), U.S. Olympian in taekwondo ; Debra Humphris, English academic and nurse ; Debra Jensen (born 1958), American model ; Debra A. Kemp (1957 – 2015), American author ; Debra Killings ", "score": "1.3660738" }, { "id": "25739163", "title": "Lorena Weeks", "text": " Lorena W. Weeks (born 1929) was the plaintiff in an important sex discrimination case, Weeks v. Southern Bell (1969). She claimed that Southern Bell had violated her rights under the 1964 Civil Rights Act when they denied her application for promotion to a higher paying position because she was a woman. She was represented in the case by Sylvia Roberts, a National Organization for Women attorney. She lost the initial case but won in 1969 after several appeals.", "score": "1.361789" }, { "id": "28633243", "title": "Debra Entenman", "text": " Debra Jean Entenman (née Rivers, born November 27, 1961) is an American politician who is the member of the Washington House of Representatives from the 47th district in King County.", "score": "1.3351524" }, { "id": "25914877", "title": "Debra", "text": " Debra is a feminine given name. Debra may refer to:", "score": "1.3348985" }, { "id": "4042106", "title": "National Organization for Women", "text": " to higher paying positions within the company. Sylvia Roberts acted as her attorney, supporting Week's grievances with the accusation of the company's violation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Title VII is enabled to \"protect individuals against employment discrimination on the bases of race and color, as well as national origin, sex, and religion\". With this premise, Weeks, with the aid of Sylvia Roberts, succeeded in 1969 after making an appeal. The trial not only served as the triumph of National Organization of Women, but brought to life legislation made to the intentions of organizations, such as NOW.", "score": "1.332737" }, { "id": "32347703", "title": "Laurie Weeks (rugby union)", "text": " Laurie Weeks (born 5 April 1986, Sydney, Australia) is a former professional and national representative rugby union footballer. He played at tighthead prop for the Melbourne Rebels. On the 17 March 2017, in a game against the Chiefs, Weeks became the Rebels most capped player.", "score": "1.3263216" }, { "id": "25914878", "title": "Debra", "text": "Debra Adelaide (born 1958), Australian writer ; Debra Allbery (born 1957), American poet ; Debra Austin (born 1955), American ballerina ; Debra Berger (born 1957), American actress, artist and designer ; Debra Bermingham, American artist ; Debra Bloomfield (born 1952),American photographer ; Debra Bowen (born 1955), American politician, Secretary of State of California from 2007 to 2015 ; Debra M. Brown (born 1963), American judge ; Debra Burlingame (born 1954), American lawyer and political activist ; Debra Byrd, American vocalist ; Debra Byrne (born 1957), Australian pop singer, actress and entertainer ; Debra Cafaro (born 1957) American business executive ; Debra Chasnoff (1957 – 2017), documentary filmmaker and activist ; Debra Christofferson, ", "score": "1.3188624" }, { "id": "14948838", "title": "Debra Hayward", "text": " Debra Hayward (born 15 April 1964) is a British film producer. As Head of Film at Working Title Films, Hayward frequently served as an executive producer for the company's feature films, working alongside fellow Working Title executive Liza Chasin. After producing Les Misérables, she started her own production company, Monumental Pictures.", "score": "1.3166386" }, { "id": "27854627", "title": "Debra Lekanoff", "text": " Debra E. Lekanoff (born February 26, 1971) is a Democratic member of the Washington Legislature representing the State's 40th House district for position 1. She is a member of the Tlingit tribe and the second female tribal member to serve in the Washington House of Representatives after Lois Stratton.", "score": "1.3165505" }, { "id": "25914882", "title": "Debra", "text": " Debra McGee (born 1958), English television, radio and stage performer ; Debra McGrath (born 1954), Canadian actress and comedian ; Debra Milke (born 1964), American wrongfully convicted inmate ; Debra Monk (born 1949), American actress, singer, and writer ; Debra Moody (born 1956), American politician ; Debra Monroe, American writer ; Debra Mooney (born 1947), American actress ; Debra Mullins (born 1957), Australian judge ; Debra Nails (born 1950), American philosopher ; Debra Opri, American lawyer ; Debra Oswald (born 1959), Australian writer ; Debra Paget (born 1933), American actress ; Debra Pepler, Canadian psychologist ; Debra Peppers, American broadcaster ; Debra Phillips (born in 1958), Australian artist ; Debra Ponzek, ", "score": "1.3161302" } ]
What is Bedřich Feigl's occupation?
[ "graphic designer" ]
occupation
Bedřich Feigl
3,465,542
57
[ { "id": "10981638", "title": "Bedřich Feigl", "text": " Bedřich Feigl (also known as Friedrich Feigl; March 6, 1884 – 17 December 1965) was a Czech-Jewish painter, graphic designer and illustrator.", "score": "1.8798984" }, { "id": "10981639", "title": "Bedřich Feigl", "text": " Feigl studied at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts with Vlaho Bukovac and Františka Thieleho. In 1906, he travelled through Europe with Emil Filla and Antonín Procházka. In Berlin he became familiar with the art of Max Liebermann. In 1907 he attended the first exhibition in Prague Group Eight. Feigl lived for a long time in Berlin and New York. He fled Prague in 1939 and settled in London, with his wife, where he died in 1965. His works are placed in galleries around the world.", "score": "1.8137933" }, { "id": "31474672", "title": "Bedřich", "text": "Bedrich Benes (born 1967), computer scientist and a researcher in Computer Graphics ; Bedřich Bloudek, Czech military leader who participated in the Slovak Uprising in 1848 ; Bedřich Bridel (1619–1680), Czech baroque writer, poet, and missionary ; Bedřich Brunclík (born 1946), former Czech ice hockey player ; Bedřich Dvořák (1930–2018), Czechoslovak sprint canoeist ; Bedřich Feigl (1884–1965), Czech-Jewish painter, graphic designer and illustrator ; Bedřich Feuerstein (1892–1936), Czech architect, painter and essayist ; Bedrich Formánek (born 1933), Slovak chess composer ; Bedřich Fritta (1906–1944), Czech-Jewish artist and cartoonist ; Bedřich Geminder (1901–1952), Chief of the International Section of the Secretariat of Czechoslovak Communist Party ; Bedřich Golombek (1901–1961), Czech journalist and writer ; Bedřich Hamsa (born 1965), Czech former football player ; Bedřich ", "score": "1.5916234" }, { "id": "29101433", "title": "Herbert Feigl", "text": " The son of a trained weaver who became a textile designer, Feigl was born in Reichenberg (Liberec), Bohemia, into a Jewish (though not religious) family. He matriculated at the University of Vienna in 1922 and studied physics and philosophy under Moritz Schlick, Hans Hahn, Hans Thirring, and Karl Bühler. He became one of the members of the Vienna Circle in 1924 and would be one of the few Circle members (along with Schlick and Friedrich Waismann ) to have extensive conversations with Ludwig Wittgenstein and Karl Popper. Feigl received his doctorate at Vienna in 1927 for his dissertation Zufall und Gesetz: Versuch einer naturerkenntnistheoretischen Klarung des Wahrscheinlichkeits- und Induktionsproblems (Chance and Law: An Epistemological ", "score": "1.5661879" }, { "id": "12093525", "title": "Günther C. Feigl", "text": " Günther C. Feigl (born 1968 in Graz, Austria) is an Austrian neurosurgeon. Feigl is an internationally renowned expert in minimally invasive neurosurgery. His main areas of expertise are skull base surgery and neurooncology. He specializes in the surgery of gliomas, minimally invasive endoscopy-assisted microvascular decompression in trigeminal neuralgia (facial pain) and facial hemispasm (involuntary facial twitching) as well as the surgery of acoustic neuromas (tumors of the vestibular nerves), tumors of the pineal gland and meningiomas of the skull base. Furthermore, his specialties comprise treatment of pituitary adenomas, spinal cord tumours and metastases as well as the area of pediatric neurosurgery.", "score": "1.565816" }, { "id": null, "title": "Bedřich", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Czech male painters", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Antonín Procházka (painter)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Czechs", "text": "Czechs\n\nThe Czechs (, ; singular Czech, masculine: \"Čech\" , singular feminine: \"Češka\" ), or the Czech people (), are a West Slavic ethnic group and a nation native to the Czech Republic in Central Europe, who share a common ancestry, culture, history, and the Czech language.\n\nEthnic Czechs were called Bohemians in English until the early 20th century, referring to the former name of their country, Bohemia, which in turn was adapted from the late Iron Age tribe of Celtic Boii. During the Migration Period, West Slavic tribes settled in the area, \"assimilated the remaining Celtic and Germanic populations\", and formed a principality in the 9th century, which was initially part of Great Moravia, in form of Duchy of Bohemia and later Kingdom of Bohemia, the predecessors of the modern republic.\n\nThe Czech diaspora is found in notable numbers in the United States, Canada, Israel, Austria, Germany, Slovakia, Switzerland, Italy, the United Kingdom, Australia, France, Russia, Argentina, Romania and Brazil, among others.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by occupation ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "26920533", "title": "Fritz Feigl", "text": " Feigl was born and studied in Vienna, but owing to his military service in the First World War he had to interrupt his studies. He received his Ph.D. for work with Wilhelm Schlenk in 1920. After his habilitation in 1928 he became a Professor at the University of Vienna. He was forced to retire after the Nazi occupation of Austria in 1938. Feigl was able to get to Belgium and work there. After the occupation of Belgium he was imprisoned in a concentration camp, but was able to reach Portugal and from there Brazil in 1940. He worked at the University of Rio de Janeiro and became a Brazilian citizen in 1944.", "score": "1.5632677" }, { "id": "2454004", "title": "Frederick Feigl", "text": " Frederick Feigl (August 24, 1863 − 10 December 1933) was a German-American publisher and a military officer. He was the publisher of The Tammany Times (later renamed The Political Review), a weekly magazine which carried various departments such as social news and a women's section, but was primarily devoted to the defense of Tammany Hall. Feigl was born in Bethnal Green, London, to Austrian-German parents, He emigrated to the United States in 1871 as a German citizen but returned to England. He was likely the Frederick Feigl admitted to the Westminster Jews Free School in May 1875, when it was noted his previous school was ", "score": "1.558517" }, { "id": "31021963", "title": "Peter Feigl", "text": " Peter Feigl (born 30 November 1951) is an Austrian former professional tennis player. He was a quarterfinalist in the 1978 Australian Open, defeating Ken Rosewall in what would be Rosewall's final Grand Slam match. He reached a highest singles ranking of world No. 40 in May 1979.", "score": "1.5387318" }, { "id": "31884805", "title": "Erich Feigl", "text": " Erich Feigl (1931 – 27 January 2007) was an Austrian documentary film producer and author. He produced almost 60 documentaries, mostly for the Austrian ORF but some for BR (Bavarian), ZDF (German) and TRT (Turkish Radio Television) in co-production. He authored books about the Habsburgs, whose restoration he supported, and the historical truths about Armenians' unfounded genocide allegations, which he disputed until his death.", "score": "1.5291948" }, { "id": "12093527", "title": "Günther C. Feigl", "text": " Günther C. Feigl habilitated at the Eberhard Karl University in Tübingen and has equally acquired an associate professorship for neurosurgery. As Head of Skull Base Surgery at Katharinenhospital in Stuttgart, he specialized in minimally invasive neurosurgery and neuroendoscopy. Today, he is the chairman of the department of neurosurgery at Klinikum Bamberg. Besides his position as chairman, Feigl is the Director of the Brain Tumor Center Bamberg as well as the Director of the Skull Base Center Bamberg, which he both founded. He is also the Medical Director of Neuronetz Bamberg practice center. Due to his internationally recognized expertise in minimally invasive skull base surgery and neurooncology, Günther C. Feigl became an affiliate faculty member at the Houston Methodist Research Institute (HMRI) Neurosciences Research Program in March 2018 and Adjunct Professor of Neurosurgery at the Houston Methodist Hospital (IAM) in December 2019. Feigl is a member of the medical advisory board of the Acoustic Schwannoma Patient Support Group, the German Skull Base Society and the German Neurological Society. He is a founding member of the European Low Grad Glioma Network", "score": "1.5280398" }, { "id": "31884806", "title": "Erich Feigl", "text": " Erich Feigl was born in Vienna, Austria. He began writing while still a student, but soon switched over to documentary film-making, continuing his career at Austrian State Television (ORF). He toured the Middle and Near East and Western Asia extensively and produced many documentaries about these places and their cultures and religions (\"Journey to the Early Christian World\", \"Men and Myths\"). He worked with the Dalai Lama on various projects (\"Bardo\", \"Rebirth\"). Feigl became interested in Turkic cultures and history, especially (\"Kanuni Sultan\"). After 1984 he began writing about the Armenian Genocide, and he subsequently also focused his attention on Kurdish issues and the PKK guerrilla organization, which resulted in his book published under the title Die Kurden in 1995. He was one of the first authors and commentators ", "score": "1.5095477" }, { "id": "12093526", "title": "Günther C. Feigl", "text": " Günther C. Feigl began his medical education in the USA. After studying in Dallas, Houston and Graz and several years of brain tumor research at the Neuroscience Institute at Baylor College of Medicine in the Texas Medical Center in Houston, the largest medical center in the world, he was working on his thesis on radiosurgery in the treatment of pituitary tumors using the gamma-knife method. He did his neurosurgical training in Germany, where he trained at INI (International Neuroscience Institute) in Hannover with the worldwide renowned neurosurgeon and pioneer in the field of neurosurgery Madjid Samii. In Tübingen he trained with Marcos Tatagiba where he completed his residency in neurosurgery. Feigl got a Ph.D. from the Eberhard Karls University in Tübingen.", "score": "1.4980135" }, { "id": "29101432", "title": "Herbert Feigl", "text": " Herbert Feigl (December 14, 1902 – June 1, 1988) was an Austrian-American philosopher and an early member of the Vienna Circle. He coined the term \"nomological danglers\".", "score": "1.4835734" }, { "id": "26920532", "title": "Fritz Feigl", "text": " Fritz Feigl (15 May 1891 – 23 January 1971) was a Jewish Austrian-born chemist. He taught at the University of Brazil.", "score": "1.479871" }, { "id": "3486198", "title": "Jochen H.H. Ehrich", "text": " Jochen H.H. Ehrich (born 5 January 1946) is a German pediatric doctor in the fields of nephrology and tropical medicine, professor emeritus and Former Head of the Department of Paediatric Kidney, Liver and Metabolic Diseases at the Children’s Hospital, Hannover Medical School, in Hannover, Germany.", "score": "1.4673893" }, { "id": "31474673", "title": "Bedřich", "text": " (1821–1899), Czech painter, illustrator and art teacher ; Bedřich Hošek (born 1911), Czech middle-distance runner ; Bedřich Hrozný (1879–1952), Czech orientalist and linguist ; Jan Bedrich Kittl (born 1806), Czech composer ; Bedřich Köhler (born 1985), Czech professional ice hockey player ; Bedrich Loewy, birth name of Fritz Löhner-Beda (1883–1942), Austrian librettist, lyricist and writer ; Bedřich Moldan (born 1935), Czech ecologist, publicist and politician ; Bedřich Nikodém (1909–1970), male Czech international table tennis player, composer, lyricist and musician ; August Bedřich Piepenhagen (1791–1868), German landscape painter who spent most of his career in Prague ; Bedřich Pokorný (1904–1968), Czechoslovak secret service officer ; Bedřich Pola (born 1963), Czech entrepreneur ; Bedrich Posselt, Czechoslovakian bobsledder who competed in the mid-1930s ; Bedřich ", "score": "1.4523566" }, { "id": "31474674", "title": "Bedřich", "text": " (1855–1934), Czechoslovak mathematician ; Bedřich Procházka (rowing) (born 1909), Czech rower ; Bedřich Reicin (1911–1952), Czechoslovak army officer and politician ; Bedřich Ščerban (born 1964), Czech former professional ice hockey defenceman ; Bedřich Schejbal (born 1874), Bohemian fencer ; Bedřich Smetana (1824–1884), Czech composer ; Bedřich Šupčík (1898–1957), former Czechoslovak gymnast and Olympic champion ; Bedřich Tylšar (born 1939), Czech horn player and music pedagogue ; Bedřich Vygoda (born 1894), Czech sprinter ; Bedřich Wachsmann (1820–1897), German-speaking Czech painter, decorator and architect ; Bedřich Diviš Weber (1766–1842), Bohemian composer and musicologist, the first Director of the Prague Conservatory ; Bedrich Weiss (1919–1944), jazz musician and arranger ; Bedřich Antonín Wiedermann (1883–1951), Czech organist, composer, and teacher Bedřich or Bedrich may refer to: ", "score": "1.4365978" }, { "id": "3486199", "title": "Jochen H.H. Ehrich", "text": " Jochen H.H. Ehrich was born in Braunschweig, Germany. He studied medicine from 1965 to 1971 at the Freie Universität Berlin and at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland. He performed in 1971 to 1972 a postgraduate study at London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in London, UK and received the Diploma in Clinical Medicine of the Tropics.", "score": "1.4360378" }, { "id": "11495088", "title": "Bedřich Dlouhý", "text": " Bedřich Dlouhý's family moved from Pilsen to Most, and after the annexation of Sudetenland in 1938, settled in Prague. His father, formerly a newspaper editor, was arrested at the beginning of the German occupation and executed in 1941. In 1947 Bedřich Dlouhý became a trainee at Upak-Krutý ceramics manufacturer, before studying at the State Vocational Ceramics School (1949–1952), where he met Karel Nepraš. Dlouhý then studied painting in Miloslav Holý's studio at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague (1952–1957). In 1957 he was expelled for political reasons and sent to North Bohemia, where he worked as a labourer. A year later, at ", "score": "1.419301" }, { "id": "31884811", "title": "Erich Feigl", "text": "Austrian Cross of Honour for Science and Art (1990) ; Gold Medal of Honour of the Land of Vienna ; Silver Medal of the city of Vienna ; Gold Decoration for Services to the province of Lower Austria ; Knight of the Order of Saint Lazarus ; Knight of the Sacred Military Constantinian Order of Saint George ", "score": "1.419151" } ]
What is Edward Gunasekara's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Edward Gunasekara
3,996,035
99
[ { "id": "29586343", "title": "Edward Gunasekara", "text": " Edward Gunasekara is a Sri Lankan politician, a former member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka and a former government minister.", "score": "1.8841621" }, { "id": "9285526", "title": "Tudor Gunasekara", "text": " Tudor Gunasekara was born on 23 January 1935 to a well known family in Heiyantuduwa, Biyagama in Sri Lanka. He had his early education at Ananda College, Colombo. Gunasekara was the second son of William Gunasekara (also known as 'Heiyantuduwa Ralahami') and Eugine née Seneviratne. William Gunasekara was a wealthy landed proprietor and owned fourteen elephants. One of his elephants was Heiyantuduwa Raja, which carried the Relic of the tooth of the Buddha casket in the Dalada Perahera for several years after the demise of Maligawa Raja. Gunasekara has two brothers, Donald and Henry, as well as three elder sisters, Adeline, Chandra and Chithra. ", "score": "1.8313599" }, { "id": "9285525", "title": "Tudor Gunasekara", "text": " Ranasinghe Hettiarachchige Tudor Edward Ranasinghe Gunasekara (23 January 1935 – 29 August 2021), known as Tudor Gunasekara (Sinhala: ටියුඩර් ගුණසේකර), was a Sri Lankan politician and diplomat. He was a Member of Parliament, District Minister for Gampaha in President JR Jayawardene's government. Later, he served as the first Sri Lanka ambassador to Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary.", "score": "1.8003061" }, { "id": "30068202", "title": "Valentine Gunasekara", "text": " Valentine Gunasekara (born 31 January 1931) is a Sri Lankan architect who died in September 2017. He became influential in his country's architecture history in the post-independent period.", "score": "1.7925649" }, { "id": "14011882", "title": "Gunapala Rathnasekara", "text": " Basnayaka Yasarathnalage Gunapala Rathnasekara (born 7 December 1961) is a Sri Lankan academic, politician and Member of Parliament. Rathnasekara was born on 7 December 1961. He has a BSc degree from the University of Sri Jayewardenepura and a MCom degree from the Sri Krishnadevaraya University. He is a senior lecturer in the University of Sri Jayewardenepura's Department of Accounting. He is director of the Kurunegala Sipwin Private Tuition Institute. He is a member of Viyathmaga (Path of the Learned), a pro-Rajapaksa, nationalist group of academics, businesspeople and professionals. Rathnasekara contested the 2020 parliamentary election as a Sri Lanka People's Freedom Alliance electoral alliance candidate in Kurunegala District and was elected to the Parliament of Sri Lanka.", "score": "1.7562027" }, { "id": null, "title": "Tudor Gunasekara", "text": "Tudor Gunasekara\n\nRanasinghe Hettiarachchige Tudor Edward Ranasinghe Gunasekara (23 January 1935 – 29 August 2021), known as Tudor Gunasekara (Sinhala: ටියුඩර් ගුණසේකර), was a Sri Lankan politician and diplomat. He was a Member of Parliament, District Minister for Gampaha in President JR Jayawardene's government. Later, he served as the first Sri Lanka ambassador to Poland, Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Valentine Gunasekara", "text": "Valentine Gunasekara\n\nValentine Gunasekara (31 January 1931 - 2017) was a Sri Lankan architect. He became influential in his country's architecture history in the post-independent period.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Edward Corea", "text": "James Edward Corea\n\nGate Mudaliyar James Edward Corea was a Ceylonese colonial-era headman.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Charles Edgar Corea", "text": "Charles Edgar Corea\n\nCharles Edgar Corea was a politician and a prominent freedom fighter of Sri Lanka.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1952 New Year Honours", "text": "1952 New Year Honours\n\nThe New Year Honours 1952 were appointments by King George VI to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of the British Empire and Commonwealth. They were announced on 1 January 1952 for the British Empire, Australia, New Zealand, Ceylon, and Pakistan to celebrate the past year and mark the beginning of 1952.\n\nThe recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour, and arranged by honour, with classes (Knight, Knight Grand Cross, \"etc.\") and then divisions (Military, Civil, \"etc.\") as appropriate.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "29586379", "title": "D. E. W. Gunasekera", "text": " Gunasekera was born 4 March 1935 in Kivula in southern Ceylon. He was educated at Rahula College in Matara. After school he joined Vidyalankara University in the 1950s, graduating with a degree in economics. Gunasekera joined Ceylon Law College in the early 1970s but was expelled for attempting to cheat.", "score": "1.7492849" }, { "id": "163395", "title": "Gunasekera", "text": "Abraham Mendis Gunasekera (1869–1931), Ceylonese writer ; Basil Gunasekara (born 1929), Sri Lankan navy officer ; C. I. Gunasekera (1920–2010), Sri Lankan cricketer ; Churchill Gunasekara (1894–1969), Ceylonese cricketer ; D. E. W. Gunasekera (born 1935), Sri Lankan politician ; Deepal Gunasekara, Sri Lankan politician ; Earl Gunasekara (born 1960), Sri Lankan politician ; Edward Gunasekara, Sri Lankan politician ; Frank Gunasekera, Ceylonese politician ; H. M. Gunasekera, Sri Lankan broadcaster ; Hemal Gunasekara (born 1959), Sri Lankan politician ; Kapila Gunasekara, Sri Lankan academic ; Maiya Gunasekara, Sri Lankan physician and rugby player ; Pasan Gunasekera (1964–1995), Sri Lankan soldier ; R. M. Padma Udhaya Shantha Gunasekera, Sri Lankan politician ; Romesh Gunesekera (born 1954), British author ; Ruvindu Gunasekera (born 1991), Sri Lankan cricketer ; Tudor Gunasekara (born 1935), Sri Lankan politician and diplomat ; U. N. Gunasekera, Sri Lankan civil engineer ; Valentine Gunasekara (born 1931), Sri Lankan architect ; Victor Gunasekara (1921–1993), Ceylonese civil servant ; Yohan Goonasekera (born 1957), Sri Lankan cricketer ", "score": "1.725591" }, { "id": "9285527", "title": "Tudor Gunasekara", "text": " Gunasekara entered active politics in Sri Lanka during the late 1960s as the United National Party Chief Organiser for the Mahara electorate. In the 1970 General Elections, he contested from the United National Party but was defeated. Gunasekara once again contested the 1977 General Elections and was elected as Member of Parliament for Mahara. In 1978, he was appointed District Minister for Gampaha in President JR Jayawardene's government. He was subsequently appointed United National Party Chief Organiser for the Gampaha and Attanagalla Electorates. Consequently, Gunasekara is known to have held the position of chief organiser for the United National Party in three electorates at the same time. In early 1983 Gunasekara resigned as District Minister for Gampaha and as the member for Mahara.", "score": "1.7140057" }, { "id": "29586341", "title": "Earl Gunasekara", "text": " Earl Gunasekara is a Sri Lankan politician, a member of the Parliament of Sri Lanka and the Deputy Minister of Plantation Industries. He was a Member of Parliament elected from the District of Polonnaruwa representing the United National Party.", "score": "1.7106416" }, { "id": "244227", "title": "F. H. Gunasekara", "text": " F. H. Gunasekara was the 27th Surveyor General of Sri Lanka. He was appointed in 1966, succeeding J. C. Chanmugam, and held the office until 1967. He was succeeded by P. U. Ratnatunga.", "score": "1.7032654" }, { "id": "30068204", "title": "Valentine Gunasekara", "text": " Valentine Gunasekara began his architectural career as a partner in 1959 alongside the Sri Lankan architect Geoffrey Bawa in Edward, Reid and Begg (ER&B). In 1965, he won a Rockefeller grant and spent the whole of the following year touring the United States and personally meeting famous American architects such as Louis Kahn, Kevin Roche, Charles Eames, Richard Neutra, Paul Rudolph, Phillip Johnson, and Kevin Roche. He then set the goal to create a new architectural style for his country based on Modernism, thus becoming one of the country's boldest expressionist modernist architect. Owing to his conflicts with Geoffrey Bawa at ER&B, he withdrew from the practice in 1969 with eight others and commenced to set out on his own. Christopher de Saram joined his practice from 1969 to 1974. They collaborated on an array of projects, including the Tangalle Bay Beach Hotel in Tangalle, Southern Sri Lanka. Jayati Weerakoon became his lead structural engineer, and the two worked together in numerous complex projects. In the early 1980s, Valentine Gunasekara worked in Nigeria on government. He became a teacher in Wentworth College, a small private school in Boston, and later moved away and retired in 2002 in California.", "score": "1.70286" }, { "id": "2452947", "title": "Chandra Gunasekera", "text": " Handapangoda Mudalige Chandrapala Gunasekera (known as Chandra Gunasekera) (born 10 June 1922) is a Sri Lankan former politician who served as a Member of Parliament. He was the Deputy Minister of Culture and Social Services. Gunasekera first contested for a parliamentary seat at the 1st parliamentary election, held between August and September 1947, in the Attangalla electorate, representing the Lanka Sama Samaja Party. He was beaten by the United National Party candidate, Solomon West Ridgeway Dias Bandaranaike, 31,463 votes to 4,609 votes. At the 6th parliamentary election, held on 22 March 1965, Gunasekera ran in the Kottawa electorate. He failed to get elected and was defeated by the United National Party candidate, Mahabalage Don Henry Jayawardena, by 2060 votes. Gunasekera received ", "score": "1.7000641" }, { "id": "8537560", "title": "Victor Gunasekara", "text": " Major Victor Joseph Harold Gunasekera, CCS (1921 — 1993) was a former Ceylonese civil servant. The former Controller of Imports Exports, Government Agent of Kegalle and Secretary to the Board of Control for Cricket. A reservist, he was a Major in the Ceylon Artillery and was one of the accused of the attempted military coup of 1962. Educated at the Royal College, Colombo, where he played for the Royal–Thomian and at Ceylon University College. He joined the Ceylon Civil Service and went on to serve as Assistant Government Agent in Galle, Hambantota & Kandy and was the Assistant Secretary in ", "score": "1.6819264" }, { "id": "15892431", "title": "Kapila Gunasekara", "text": " Professor Kapila G. A. Gunasekara is a Sri Lankan academic. He was the first Vice Chancellor of the University of Vocational Technology (UNIVOTEC), Sri Lanka. A Professor of Agriculture, he was the Vice Chancellor of the University of Peradeniya from 2000 to 2006. Before serving as the vice chancellor of the Peradeniya University, he also served as the Dean of the Faculty of Agriculture. He was born in Galle District and received his school education at Mahinda College, Galle.", "score": "1.6767788" }, { "id": "14696932", "title": "Nadeeka Gunasekara", "text": " Nadeeka Gunasekara was born on 13 May 1958 in Kandy. Her father Stanley Gunasekara worked at Nawalapitiya post office. Her mother Thalatha Gunasekara was a school teacher and a popular film actress. When she was 3 year old, they moved to Charle's de Silva flats, Nawalapitiya. She started school with Udugoda Vidyalaya, then Uduheenthanna Senadhikara Vidyalaya. Due to her father being a post officer, they had to move to several cities, where Gunasekara then studied in Gampola. In 1973, she attended to Pushpadana Girls' College, Kandy and finally to Vishaka College, Bandarawela. She completed A/L from art stream in Mahamaya Girls' College, Kandy. She is a graduate of BA in Arts from the University of Kelaniya. She is married to businessman Suren Hapuarachchi and in 2004, the couple had one daughter, Thenuki Sehansa.", "score": "1.6755016" }, { "id": "13755093", "title": "Gunathilaka Rajapaksha", "text": " Rajapaksha Gedara Gunathilaka Rajapaksha (born 8 November 1957) is a Sri Lankan politician, former provincial councillor and Member of Parliament. Rajapaksha was born on 8 November 1957. He was a member of Poojapitiya Divisional Council and the Central Provincial Council. He contested the 2020 parliamentary election as a Sri Lanka People's Freedom Alliance electoral alliance candidate in Kandy District and was elected to the Parliament of Sri Lanka.", "score": "1.6683064" }, { "id": "3625235", "title": "Nanda Gunasinghe", "text": " Kaluarachchige Nandadasa Gunasinghe (15 March 1944 &ndash; 2 March 2006) was a Sri Lankan politician. A member of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, Gunasinghe represented the Sri Lankan parliament for Galle district from 1994 to 2001. Gunasinghe later entered the Southern Provincial Council as a Provincial Councillor. He also served as the Chairman of the Dhakshina Sanwardena Adhikariya (Southern Development Authority) and as a Director of the Water Board. Formerly a school teacher who joined the Sri Lanka Freedom Party in 1977, he subsequently became the chief organiser of the Habaraduwa electorate. Gunasinghe had his education at Vidyaloka College, Galle and Faculty of Arts, University of Colombo. He died on 2 March 2006 at the age of 62. His son Thisara is also involved in politics. He is currently working as a Habaraduwa chief organiser of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party.", "score": "1.6673441" }, { "id": "29586378", "title": "D. E. W. Gunasekera", "text": " Don Edwin Weerasinghe Gunasekera (born 4 March 1935) is a Sri Lankan politician, former Member of Parliament and former cabinet minister. He is the current leader of the Communist Party of Sri Lanka (CPSL), a member of the United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA).", "score": "1.6585174" }, { "id": "50292", "title": "C. I. Gunasekera", "text": " Conroy Ievers Gunasekera, sometimes spelt Gunasekara (14 July 1920 – 29 July 2010) was a Sri Lankan cricketer who played first-class cricket for Ceylon from 1949 to 1964, in the period before the country gained Test status. He captained Ceylon several times in the early 1960s.", "score": "1.655863" }, { "id": "12032881", "title": "Prishantha Gunawardena", "text": " In 1988, Prishantha participated for excavations in Aluthnuwara, near Anuradhapura, with his teacher prof. Senaka Bandaranayake, as a crew member. The crew also consists with well known Archaeologist, Prof. Robin Cunningham, where he completing his master's degree. The excavations underwent 3 years, and many new archaeological findings were found. After finishing degree, he acted as an assistant lecturer of archaeology in University of Kelaniya. After his marriage in 2000, he went Bradford University in England for completing his master's degree. His topic was \"development in Buddhist monasteries towards urbanization\". His consultant was his past friend, Prof. Robin Cunningham. He had to wait 8 years for completing his master's degree in 2008. In ", "score": "1.6508881" } ]
What is David M. Westcott's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
David M. Westcott
3,869,212
49
[ { "id": "30828715", "title": "David M. Westcott", "text": " Westcott was likely born in Cornwall, New York in 1769. He was the son of Justice Westcott and his wife Mary.", "score": "1.8045313" }, { "id": "30828714", "title": "David M. Westcott", "text": " Col. David Mandeville Westcott (ca. 1769 – April 21, 1841) was an American politician and newspaper editor from New York.", "score": "1.7648929" }, { "id": "14586203", "title": "Edward Noyes Westcott", "text": " Westcott is known best for his book David Harum, a novel set in upstate New York. When he was afflicted with chronic tuberculosis in 1895, he was forced to take an extended leave from work, and during that period he wrote David Harum. The manuscript was rejected by several publishers before it came to Ripley Hitchcock at D. Appleton & Company in December 1897. With Westcott's permission Ripley made a few minor changes to the book which subsequently became a bestseller.", "score": "1.6231372" }, { "id": "25929894", "title": "David Westcott", "text": " David Guy Westcott (born 14 May 1957 in London) is a former field hockey player, who won the bronze medal with the British squad at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Westcott also played cricket. He had studied at Brasenose College, Oxford. David Westcott is a retired barrister specialising in personal injury and clinical negligence. He was appointed as one of Her Majesty's Queen's Counsel in 2003. He is a member of Outer Temple Chambers..", "score": "1.6064095" }, { "id": "31543139", "title": "David Viscott", "text": " David Steven Viscott (May 24, 1938 – October 10, 1996) was an American psychiatrist, author, businessman, and media personality. He was a graduate of Dartmouth (1959), Tufts Medical School and taught at University Hospital in Boston. He started a private practice in psychiatry in 1968 and later moved to Los Angeles in 1979 where he was a professor of psychiatry at UCLA. He founded and managed the Viscott Center for Natural Therapy in Beverly Hills, Newport Beach and Pasadena, California.", "score": "1.6053249" }, { "id": null, "title": "David M. Westcott", "text": "David M. Westcott\n\nCol. David Mandeville Westcott (ca. 1769 – April 21, 1841) was an American politician and newspaper editor from New York.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "James Westcott", "text": "James Westcott\n\nJames Diament Westcott Jr. (May 10, 1802January 19, 1880) was an American politician of the Democratic Party who served as the first Class 3 United States Senator from Florida from 1845 to 1849.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Scott Westcott", "text": "Scott Westcott\n\nScott Westcott (born 25 September 1975) is an Australian runner. Born near Parkes, New South Wales, Westcott was an avid runner as a teenager, winning the 5000 m state championships. Westcott’s talent for the sport developed around the age of 10 after a terrifying incident whilst collecting eggs from the family chook pen. Westcott came face to face with a very cranky rooster who proceeded to chase Scott for around 25 terrifying kilometres, before the ordeal ended when the bird gave up the chase. Westcott revealed late in his career he often used flashbacks of the incident to improve his performances at big events. Westcott came fourth in the 2006 Commonwealth Games marathon with a time of 2:15:32. He ran a time of 2.11.36 in the Beppu international Marathon Championships in Japan.\n\nWestcott is a teacher by profession. In 2011 he was involved in a motorcycle crash that hindered his selection for the 2012 Olympics.<ref name=bio/> His best time in parkrun Australia is 14:23 on 5 October 2013. His time is the best in Australia for parkrun. For his 40th birthday in 2015, his family allowed him to enter the Berlin Marathon where he finished in an Olympic qualifying time. He was selected for the 2016 Olympics, his first Olympics, at the age of 40. Westcott ran a time of 2:22:19 at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games.<ref name=\"rio2016\"/>\n\nWestcott is married to Jessica and has three children, Noah, Finn and Frankie. His father, the most influential person in his sports career, died in 2014. Westcott has a degree in agriculture from the University of New England, but works as a sports administrator , administering sport.<ref name=bio/>\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Thomas Robert Malthus", "text": "Thomas Robert Malthus\n\nThomas Robert Malthus (; 13/14 February 1766 – 29 December 1834) was an English cleric, scholar and influential economist in the fields of political economy and demography.\n\nIn his 1798 book \"An Essay on the Principle of Population\", Malthus observed that an increase in a nation's food production improved the well-being of the population, but the improvement was temporary because it led to population growth, which in turn restored the original per capita production level. In other words, humans had a propensity to utilize abundance for population growth rather than for maintaining a high standard of living, a view that has become known as the \"Malthusian trap\" or the \"Malthusian spectre\". Populations had a tendency to grow until the lower class suffered hardship, want and greater susceptibility to war famine and disease, a pessimistic view that is sometimes referred to as a Malthusian catastrophe. Malthus wrote in opposition to the popular view in 18th-century Europe that saw society as improving and in principle as perfectible.\n\nMalthus saw population growth as inevitable whenever conditions improved, thereby precluding real progress towards a utopian society: \"The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man.\" As an Anglican cleric, he saw this situation as divinely imposed to teach virtuous behavior. Malthus wrote that \"the increase of population is necessarily limited by subsistence,\" \"population does invariably increase when the means of subsistence increase,\" and \"the superior power of population repress by moral restraint, vice, and misery.\"\n\nMalthus criticized the Poor Laws for leading to inflation rather than improving the well-being of the poor. He supported taxes on grain imports (the Corn Laws). His views became influential and controversial across economic, political, social and scientific thought. Pioneers of evolutionary biology read him, notably Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace. Malthus's failure to predict the Industrial Revolution was a frequent criticism of his theories.\n\nMalthus laid the \"...theoretical foundation of the conventional wisdom that has dominated the debate, both scientifically and ideologically,<ref>Daoud, Adel. (2010) \"Robbins and Malthus on scarcity, abundance, and sufficiency: The missing sociocultural element.\" American Journal of Economics and Sociology 69.4 (2010): 1206-1229.-Daoud citing Harvey, David. (1974). \"Population, Resources, and the Ideology of Science\".\nEconomic Geography 50(3): 256–277.</ref> on global hunger and famines for almost two centuries.\" He remains a much-debated writer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John von Neumann", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "10850672", "title": "Frank N. Westcott", "text": " Frank Nash Westcott (August 8, 1858 – 1915) was a reverend and writer. He was born in Syracuse, New York. He wrote two novels. His father, Amos Westcott, was an influential professor, dentist, dental college founder, and politician who served as an alderman and mayor of Syracuse. Frank N.Westcott became an ordained minister and served at the St. James Protestant Episcopal Church in Skaneateles, New York. His brother Edward Noyes Westcott was a banker and writer who authored the popular novel David Harum. Published posthumously in 1899, months after his death, it is set in Central New York. Struggling with sleeplessness, nervous trouble, and a broken arm, Frank Westcott committed suicide while in hospital in 1915.", "score": "1.5655138" }, { "id": "30828716", "title": "David M. Westcott", "text": " In 1789, he moved to Goshen, and became co-editor of The Goshen Repository, and Weekly Intelligencer, the first newspaper published in Goshen, founded in 1788 by David Mandeville. He was a member of the New York State Assembly, representing Orange County, in 22nd New York State Legislature from July 1, 1798 to June 30, 1799. Westcott later served as the County Clerk of Orange County from 1815 to 1819, and from 1821 to 1822. During the 51st New York State Legislature, he was again a member of the State Assembly, serving from January 1 to December 31, 1828. Beginning on January 1, 1831, Westcott was a member of the New York State Senate, representing the 2nd District, sitting in the 54th, 55th, 56th and 57th New York State Legislatures and serving until December 31, 1834.", "score": "1.556593" }, { "id": "28145097", "title": "Ed Westcott", "text": " James Edward Westcott (January 20, 1922 – March 29, 2019) was an American photographer who was noted for his work with the United States government in Oak Ridge, Tennessee, during the Manhattan Project and the Cold War. As one of the few people permitted to have a camera in the Oak Ridge area during the Manhattan Project, he created the main visual record of the construction and operation of the Oak Ridge production facilities and of civilian life in the enclosed community of Oak Ridge.", "score": "1.54176" }, { "id": "8130571", "title": "James Westcott", "text": " James Diament Westcott Jr. (May 10, 1802 – January 19, 1880) was an American politician of the Democratic Party who served as the first Class 3 United States Senator from Florida from 1845 to 1849.", "score": "1.5248563" }, { "id": "27779723", "title": "John Westcott (politician)", "text": " Westcott was not particularly interested in politics, despite the prominent positions of his family and his friends. Westcott was a member of the Whig Party until it collapsed in 1856, and then became a Know Nothing. After the Know Nothings collapsed in 1858, Westcott became an Independent Democrat. It was under this party that Westcott would challenge the incumbent U.S. representative, George Sydney Hawkins. Westcott believed that the Florida Democratic Party was corrupt, and wanted to abolish the state's convention system for selecting party nominees, as well as support frontier settlers with offers of cheap land. Despite his extreme popularity in Florida's frontierlands of East Florida and South Florida, as well as the support of Florida's Democratic governor, Madison S. Perry, due to a lack of party support, Westcott's campaign was unable to make inroads into West Florida, and was crushed in the general election, only receiving 37% of the vote in a two-person race.", "score": "1.504036" }, { "id": "27302914", "title": "Paul Westcott", "text": " Paul Westcott (born April 22) is a Business Development and Marketing Executive at political and consumer data powerhouse, L2. Formerly he was a senior digital editor for iHeartMedia. He is a frequent guest to talk about politics and political data siriusxm POTUS to discuss political data.", "score": "1.5028329" }, { "id": "25660722", "title": "Brooke Foss Westcott", "text": " Westcott was not a narrow specialist. He loved poetry, music and art. His literary sympathies were wide. He would never tire of praising Euripides, and studied the writings of Robert Browning. He was also said to be a talented draughtsman, and used often to say that if he had not taken orders he would have become an architect. He followed with delight the development of natural science studies at Cambridge. He spared no pains to be accurate, or to widen the basis of his thought. Thus he devoted one summer vacation to the careful analysis of Auguste Comte's Politique positive. He studied assiduously The Sacred ", "score": "1.49206" }, { "id": "8621765", "title": "Westcott (surname)", "text": "Brooke Foss Westcott (1825–1901), British bishop, biblical scholar and theologian ; Burton J. Westcott (1868–1926), American businessman based in Ohio ; Carl Westcott (born 1939), American businessman ; Carlia S. Westcott, American marine engineer ; Carrie Westcott (born 1969), American model and actress ; David Westcott (born 1957), British hockey player and cricketer ; David M. Westcott (ca 1769–1841), New York politician ; Dick Westcott (1927–2013), South African cricketer ; Duvie Westcott (born 1977), Canadian ice hockey player ; Frederic Westcott (died 1861), English botanist ; Frederick John Westcott, known as Fred Karno (1866–1941), British theatre impresario ; Genevieve Westcott (1955–2020), Canadian-born New Zealand ", "score": "1.4870596" }, { "id": "13475151", "title": "Tam David-West", "text": " David-West is the author of academic papers in virology that have appeared in scholarly journals such as Journal of Pathology and Bacteriology (1966), Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene (1973), Intervirology (1974), and Journal of Hygiene (1974). He also wrote the book Philosophical Essays: Reflections on the Good Life (1980), in which he describes himself as a follower of British analytic philosopher and social critic Bertrand Russell. David-West's lecture in philosophy “God, Nature and the Universe” (1981) was delivered at the University of Ibadan.", "score": "1.4831476" }, { "id": "8130603", "title": "James Westcott III", "text": " James Diament Westcott, III (May 1, 1838 or June 18, 1838 – April 29, 1887), also known as James Diament Westcott, Jr., was an American politician from the state of Florida who served as the 19th Justice of the Florida Supreme Court.", "score": "1.4819524" }, { "id": "10825901", "title": "John Ward Westcott", "text": " Westcott was born in the village of Warnersville on Lime Island, Michigan, on December 19, 1848. He was the son of shipbuilder David H. Westcott and his wife Mary Jane (Ward) Westcott, sister to Captain Eber Brock Ward. His father was 25 and his mother was 22 at the time of his birth. He had four brothers George, Edward, Charles, and David and two sisters Mary Jane and Susie who lived to maturity. The family moved shortly after his birth from Lime Island to the village of Newport, near Detroit, Michigan. Westcott went to public schools and received a grade ", "score": "1.4789188" }, { "id": "8130572", "title": "James Westcott", "text": " Westcott was born in Alexandria, DC where his father, James Sr., was transitioning from newspaper publisher to politician. James Jr.'s grandfather was a captain in the American Revolutionary War. When Westcott was young, his family moved to New Jersey where his father established a political career in the Assembly and as Secretary of State of New Jersey from 1830 to 1840. James Jr. married Rebecca Bacon Sibley on August 7, 1821. He studied law and was admitted to the bar while still in his early 20s. In 1830, he moved to the Florida Territory and was appointed territory secretary by Andrew Jackson. His duties sometimes included performing the duties of the governor when the governor was away &mdash; all while barely 30 years old.", "score": "1.4740256" }, { "id": "27779720", "title": "John Westcott (politician)", "text": " the Second Seminole War, Westcott settled into an simple life as one of Madison County's prominent citizens, founding the county's Masonic Lodge and becoming the county postmaster, as well as continuing to practice medicine. When Florida was admitted to the Union in 1845, Westcott was elected to the first Florida House of Representatives, and was one of the pioneers of Florida's educational system. He only served one term. In 1847, Westcott via his newly acquired friendship with Samuel J. Perry, another prominent citizen in Madison County and a deputy surveyor with the General Land Office, was himself granted a commission as a deputy surveyor. Westcott meticulously mapped Florida's Green Swamp, a task previously deemed impossible. Westcott also began working closely with the army after coming to the conclusion that the swamps, though inhospitable for human settlement, were the perfect hiding spots for Seminole war camps.", "score": "1.4715297" }, { "id": "7469154", "title": "David Bradshaw", "text": " David Bradshaw (born September 28, 1944) is an American artist based out of Cecilia, LA and E. Charleston, Vermont. He is a painter, sculptor, and printmaker.", "score": "1.4715025" }, { "id": "8130604", "title": "James Westcott III", "text": " Westcott was born in the city of Tallahassee in the Florida Territory on either May 1, 1838 or June 18, 1838. Westcott is the son of James Westcott, an early Florida politician who would later serve as its U.S. Senator. Although Westcott is the third in his family to share the name, he used the \"Jr.\" suffix rather than the \"III\" suffix throughout his life. Westcott studied at the West Florida Seminary.", "score": "1.4712256" } ]
What is J. Da Silva's occupation?
[ "cricket umpire", "umpire" ]
occupation
J. Da Silva
925,304
92
[ { "id": "30934195", "title": "Jamie Silva", "text": " James J. Silva (born December 14, 1984) is an American former college and professional football player who was a safety in the National Football League (NFL) for three seasons. He played college football for Boston College, and earned consensus All-American honors. He was signed by the Colts as an undrafted free agent in 2008.", "score": "1.5409241" }, { "id": "588754", "title": "John da Silva", "text": " Da Silva was born on 11 June 1934. He represented New Zealand in wrestling at the 1956 Olympics and at the 1958 British Empire and Commonwealth Games. In 1955 he held both the New Zealand Heavyweight Wrestling title and the Auckland Heavyweight Boxing title. He is of Portuguese, African, English and French Tahitian descent. Paul Silva, a competitive wood chopper, was his uncle. An amateur from 1953, he turned professional after the 1958 Commonwealth Games in Cardiff. He wrestled throughout New Zealand and around the world. He retired in 1977, and subsequently worked with disadvantaged youth. In the 1994 New Year Honours, he was awarded the Queen's Service Medal for community service. Until his death on 8 April 2021 at the age of 86, he lived on Great Barrier Island. He was the father of boxer Garth da Silva.", "score": "1.5297815" }, { "id": "26495805", "title": "John D'Silva", "text": " John D'Silva (born 20 February ) is an Indian Konkani actor and stage actor. In a short span of years he has achieved a landmark in the tiatr scene. John is the first tiatrist to enter the \"Limca Book of Records 2010\" for acting, writing, directing and producing 25 tiatrs having a double alphabet in their titles. He is credited with taking tiatr to greater heights and popularizing it throughout the world. And for achieving this great feat, he was congratulated in the Goa Legislative assembly.", "score": "1.517278" }, { "id": "25062045", "title": "Jay Silva", "text": " Jay Silva (born May 25, 1981) is an Angolan-born American mixed martial artist currently competing in the Heavyweight division. A professional competitor since 2008, Silva has also formerly competed for the UFC, Bellator, the MFC, KSW, and Tachi Palace Fights.", "score": "1.5169016" }, { "id": "4905416", "title": "Jo da Silva", "text": " Da Silva was born in Washington, D.C. to John Burke da Silva and Jennifer Jane da Silva. She studied engineering at the University of Cambridge where she was a student at Trinity College, Cambridge. She graduated in 1988 and then travelled, seeing the roles of engineers first-hand. She worked in central India on emergency management.", "score": "1.5100191" }, { "id": null, "title": "Joshua Da Silva", "text": "Joshua Da Silva\n\nJoshua Da Silva (born 19 June 1998) is a Trinidadian cricketer. He made his domestic debut in 2018 for Trinidad and Tobago, and his international debut for the West Indies cricket team in December 2020.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Josh Dasilva", "text": "Josh Dasilva\n\nPelenda Joshua Tunga Dasilva (born 23 October 1998) is an English professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for club Brentford. He is a graduate of the Arsenal Hale End Academy and was capped by England at youth level.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Howard da Silva", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Cristiano da Silva", "text": "Cristiano da Silva\n\nCristiano da Silva (; born 12 January 1987), sometimes known as just Cristiano, is a Brazilian football player for J2 League club V-Varen Nagasaki.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "9188256", "title": "Silva", "text": "Jay Dasilva ", "score": "1.4879367" }, { "id": "3919976", "title": "Joshua Da Silva", "text": " Da Silva is of Portuguese descent, with his ancestors hailing from Madeira. Both his mother and paternal grandmother were Portuguese Canadians, while his father is a Trinidadian. He was educated at Saint Mary's College in Port of Spain.", "score": "1.4835376" }, { "id": "30223622", "title": "Baboo Da Silva", "text": " Mauricio \"Baboo\" Da Silva (born November 28, 1967) is a Brazilian kyokushin kaikan full contact karate practitioner and former professional kickboxer and mixed martial artist. He is a professional coach and trainer of K-1 and MMA (Mixed Martial Arts), who has trained a number of world class fighters including Francisco Filho (martial artist), Glaube Feitosa, Andrews Nakahara, Ewerton Teixeira, Ray Sefo, Aleksandr Pitchkounov, Takumi Sato, Jan Soukup, Kou Tasei (aka Hong Tae Seong), Jan Nortje, Doug Viney, Mighty Mo (kickboxer) and Akebono Taro. From 1998 to 2004 he worked as the trainer and sparring partner for Francisco Filho. He lived in Tokyo, Japan from 2005 to December 2010 and trained fighters from the IKO1 Kyokushin - Team Ichigeki and other fighters from visiting teams at the Ichigeki Plaza. He fought in the K-1 PREMIUM 2003 Dynamite!! and also in the Ichigeki events in Japan.", "score": "1.4575233" }, { "id": "5190735", "title": "John da Silva Antao", "text": " John da Silva Antão (born March 1933 in Salreu, Estarreja, Portugal) is a priest in the Archdiocese of Newark, and a religious leader of the Portuguese-American community in New Jersey and a community leader in Elizabeth, NJ.", "score": "1.4563942" }, { "id": "29136028", "title": "David Silva (linguist)", "text": " David James Silva (born 1964) is an American linguist and university administrator. His phonetic, phonological, and sociolinguistic research has examined aspects of the voicing of consonants in Korean and of the vowels of the Portuguese dialect spoken in the Azores. ", "score": "1.456265" }, { "id": "7508569", "title": "José Lucas da Silva", "text": " From 1990 to 1993, Silva completed a marine and fisheries science training program at Sekolah Tinggi Ilmu Kelautan dan Perikanan in Jakarta, Indonesia. From 1993 to 1996, Silva was a technical officer in the Fisheries Office. From 1996 to 1998, he studied marine and fisheries science at the University of Brawijaya (UB) in Malang, Indonesia; he graduated with an engineering degree. From 1999 to 2001, he served as an officer at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) office in East Timor, and then, from 2001 to 2003, he studied at Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh, graduating with a Master of Science degree in Natural Resource Development and Protection. From 2003 to 2005, Silva worked as the National Program Officer of the Japan International Cooperation ", "score": "1.4475634" }, { "id": "27414441", "title": "Garth da Silva", "text": " Garth John da Silva (born 28 December 1973 in Wellington, New Zealand) is a boxer from New Zealand, who competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia. There he won his first round in the Heavyweight (-91 kg) division against Cathel O'Grady of Ireland, before losing to Serguei Dychkov of Belarus. In 1998 he won the bronze medal at the 1998 Commonwealth Games in Kuala Lumpur. He is the son of wrestler John da Silva.", "score": "1.4365567" }, { "id": "14590577", "title": "Anthony da Silva", "text": " After becoming a manager, Silva worked mainly in the lower leagues or amateur football. The exception to this was late into the 2015–16 season, when he went from assistant to interim at Académico de Viseu F.C. after Ricardo Chéu was dismissed by the second division club. In October 2019, Silva left Chaves' youths and joined his compatriot Toni Conceição's staff at the Cameroon national team, as a video analyst.", "score": "1.4320999" }, { "id": "2730774", "title": "João da Silva (boxer)", "text": " João da Silva (1 January 1946 &ndash; 12 March 1982) was a Brazilian boxer. He competed in the men's light welterweight event at the 1964 Summer Olympics. At the 1964 Summer Olympics, he defeated Chang Pin-cheng and Nadimi Ghasre Dashti, before losing to Eddie Blay.", "score": "1.4281845" }, { "id": "4721089", "title": "Israel da Silva", "text": "Notes ", "score": "1.4269724" }, { "id": "3919975", "title": "Joshua Da Silva", "text": " Joshua Da Silva (born 19 June 1998) is a Trinidadian cricketer. He made his domestic debut in 2018 for Trinidad and Tobago, and his international debut for the West Indies cricket team in December 2020.", "score": "1.4264294" }, { "id": "25040542", "title": "Jim Silva", "text": " James Wayne \"Jim\" Silva (born January 15, 1944) is a Republican United States politician who served in the California State Assembly. A native of Orange County, Silva earned his Bachelor of Arts in Business from San Jose State University and a master's degree from Chapman University. He was an economics teacher in the Garden Grove Unified School District from 1966 until 1994, when he was elected to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Silva holds a real estate broker's license. Silva served on the Huntington Beach City Council from 1988 until 1994, when he was elected to the Board of Supervisors. Silva was Mayor of Huntington Beach. Silva served three terms as a member of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, representing the second district from 1995 to 2006, when he was elected to the State Assembly. Silva is a former member of the Orange County Transportation Authority, Orange County Sanitation District, South Coast Air Quality Management District, and LAFCO. Silva and his wife, Connie, married in 1970. Their son Chad, born 1976, and their daughter, Donna, born 1978, are both officers in the United States Air Force.", "score": "1.4226637" }, { "id": "7508571", "title": "José Lucas da Silva", "text": " environmental advisor for the Pipeline Task Force team with responsibility for environmental and socio-economic issues related to the potential impact of the development of the oil industry on the south coast of East Timor. Between 2008 and 2013, Silva earned a PhD in environmental sciences majoring in marine biology at Heriot-Watt University. In 2014, he worked as a marine and fisheries expert, and in 2015 as an ecosystem specialist for a United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) project on shoreline protection. At the private João Saldanha University (JSU) in Dili, founded in 2015, Silva was a senior researcher and lecturer. From the establishment of the Faculty of Fisheries and Marine Biology at the National University of East Timor (UNTL) in 2017, Silva was its Director.", "score": "1.4198847" }, { "id": "9188255", "title": "Silva", "text": "Eduardo da Silva ", "score": "1.4141963" }, { "id": "7508570", "title": "José Lucas da Silva", "text": " (JICA) in East Timor with responsibility for the planning, implementation and monitoring of projects in the countryside and for the development of agriculture. Additionally, he was the coordinator of the trilateral cooperation between East Timor, Japan and the Philippines under the leadership of JICA for the development of alternative agricultural products. He also served as research coordinator for a study on water management in the region around the Northern Laclo River. In 2006 and 2007, Silva was responsible for the national census of 2010, for coordinating research on the assessment of population development, and for projects on gender equality, such as the law against domestic violence. Among other things, he worked with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). From May to September 2008, Silva ", "score": "1.412895" } ]
What is Carsten Carlsen's occupation?
[ "composer", "pianist" ]
occupation
Carsten Carlsen
832,142
93
[ { "id": "9240405", "title": "Carsten Carlsen", "text": " Carsten Marensius Carlsen was born in Oslo, Norway. His parents were Anton Carlsen (1862–1943) and Louise Larsen (1876–1957). In 1917, he married singer and actress Lalla Carlsen. He was educated at the Oslo Conservatory of Music from 1909 to 1913, where he studied with Gustav Fredrik Lange (1861–1939) and Per Winge (1858–1935). He was awarded a state composer scholarship to study in Paris from 1921 to 1923. He was appointed kapellmeister at the Chat Noir from 1914 to 1938. He worked at the National Theatre of Norway from 1938 to 1941 followed by the Carl Johan Theater from 1941 to 1945.", "score": "1.749937" }, { "id": "9240404", "title": "Carsten Carlsen", "text": " Carsten Marensius Carlsen (5 June 1892 &ndash; 28 August 1961) was a Norwegian pianist and composer.", "score": "1.6885543" }, { "id": "6691825", "title": "Michael Carlsen", "text": " Michael Carlsen (born 8 November 1963) is a Danish auto racing driver. Since its inaugural season in 1999 he has competed in the Danish Touring Car Championship. He is twice champion of the DTC in both 2000 and 2001 for his own Team Carlsen BP in a Peugeot 306. In his last full season in the DTC in 2008, raced in a Peugeot 407.", "score": "1.6113029" }, { "id": "25291244", "title": "1892 in Norwegian music", "text": "June ; 5 – Carsten Carlsen, pianist and composer (died 1961). ", "score": "1.5718153" }, { "id": "2886950", "title": "Øystein Carlsen", "text": " Øystein Carlsen (born 30 April 1973) is a Norwegian speed skater. He was born in Bærum, a grandson of Armand Carlsen, and represented the club Oslo SK. He competed in short track speed skating at the 1994 Winter Olympics.", "score": "1.568308" }, { "id": null, "title": "Carsten Carlsen", "text": "Carsten Carlsen\n\nCarsten Marensius Carlsen (5 June 1892 – 28 August 1961) was a Norwegian pianist and composer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Lalla Carlsen", "text": "Lalla Carlsen\n\nLalla Carlsen (née Haralda Petrea Christensen) (17 August 1889 – 23 March 1967) was a Norwegian singer and actress. She is regarded as one of the most legendary female revue artists in Norway.<ref name=nbl/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Magnus Carlsen", "text": "Magnus Carlsen\n\nSven Magnus Øen Carlsen (born 30 November 1990) is a Norwegian chess grandmaster who is the reigning five-time World Chess Champion, four-time World Rapid Chess Champion, and six-time World Blitz Chess Champion. Carlsen has held the position in the FIDE world chess rankings since 1 July 2011 and trails only Garry Kasparov in time spent as the highest-rated player in the world. His peak rating of 2882 is the highest in history. He also holds the record for the longest unbeaten streak at the elite level in classical chess.\n\nA chess prodigy, Carlsen finished first in the C group of the Corus chess tournament shortly after he turned 13 and earned the title of grandmaster a few months later. At 15, he won the Norwegian Chess Championship, and at 17 he finished joint first in the top group of Corus. He surpassed a rating of 2800 at 18, the youngest at the time to do so. In 2010, at 19, he reached in the FIDE world rankings, the youngest person ever to do so.\n\nCarlsen became World Chess Champion in 2013 by defeating Viswanathan Anand. He retained his title against Anand the following year and won both the 2014 World Rapid Championship and World Blitz Championship, becoming the first player to hold all three titles simultaneously, a feat which he repeated in 2019 and 2022. He defended his classical world title against Sergey Karjakin in 2016, against Fabiano Caruana in 2018, and against Ian Nepomniachtchi in 2021. Carlsen will not defend his title against Nepomniachtchi in 2023.\n\nKnown for his attacking style as a teenager, Carlsen has since developed into a universal player. He uses a variety of openings to make it harder for opponents to prepare against him and reduce the utility of pre-game computer analysis. He has stated the middlegame is his favourite part of the game as it \"comes down to pure chess\".<ref name=\"CNRU\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Botten Soot", "text": "Botten Soot\n\nBotten Soot (born Ingeborg Bergit Soot; 22 March 1895 – 21 May 1958) was a Norwegian actress, singer, and dancer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Norwegian male composers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "12468391", "title": "Carsten Carlberg", "text": " Carsten Carlberg (born December 13, 1963) is a German biochemist. He is professor of biochemistry at the University of Eastern Finland in Kuopio, Finland.", "score": "1.5641698" }, { "id": "27463952", "title": "Carsten Hansen", "text": " Carsten Mogens Hansen (born 10 January 1957) is a Danish Social Democrat politician. He has been a member of the Folketing&mdash;the parliament of Denmark&mdash;since 1998. He was formerly the Minister for the city, Housing and Rural Affairs in the Cabinet of Helle Thorning-Schmidt.", "score": "1.552062" }, { "id": "13781588", "title": "Jørgen Carling", "text": " Jørgen Carling (born 11 November 1974, in Oslo) is a Norwegian researcher specializing on international migration. He holds a PhD in Human Geography from the University of Oslo and is Research Professor of Migration and Transnationalism Studies. Carling has worked at the Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO) since 2002, where he has been Research Director since 2012.", "score": "1.5482954" }, { "id": "7945673", "title": "Carsten Bo Eriksen", "text": " Carsten Bo Eriksen (a.k.a. MBD73) is a prize-winning and award-nominated composer and artist. He was educated at the Royal Academy of Music as a composer (1997-2003), pupil of Professor Ib Nørholm, Ivar Frounberg and Hans Abrahamsen. As a painter he is self-taught. He had his debut from the extended studies program in composition in 2003. Furthermore, he has studied at Berklee College of Music, Massachusetts, US. And has studied the Balinese gamelan music in Ubud, Bali, Indonesia, with the musician Pak Tama. In 2004 he was granted by the Danish Arts Foundation with a three-year working grant.", "score": "1.5323107" }, { "id": "15891753", "title": "Henning Carlsen", "text": " Carlsen was born on 4 June 1927 in Aalborg, Denmark. In 1948, Carlsen became an assistant director at Minerva Film where he received on-the-job training. He worked at Minerva until 1953 when he shifted to Nordisk Film.", "score": "1.5289373" }, { "id": "26418346", "title": "1734 in Norway", "text": "8 January - Niels Carlsen, shipowner and timber merchant (died 1809). ", "score": "1.5191652" }, { "id": "30069683", "title": "Carl Jeppesen", "text": " Carl Jeppesen (16 March 1858 &ndash; 26 January 1930) was a Danish-born Norwegian worker, newspaper editor and politician. He edited the newspaper Social-Demokraten from 1887 to 1892, and from 1906 to 1912. He was among the founders of the Norwegian Labour Party, and served as chairman for two periods, from 1890 to 1892, and from 1894 to 1897. He was Mayor of Kristiania from 1917 to 1919.", "score": "1.5113883" }, { "id": "3629167", "title": "Carl E. Paulsen", "text": " Carl Edvard Alfonso Paulsen (July 31, 1896 – November 11, 1973) was a Norwegian sculptor.", "score": "1.5094612" }, { "id": "15293167", "title": "Lalla Carlsen", "text": " Lalla Carlsen was born in Svelvik as the daughter of shipmaster Carl Alfred Christensen and Laura Nilsson. The family moved to Christiania (now Olso) when she was ten years old. She married composer, pianist and kapellmeister Carsten Carlsen (1892 –1961) in 1917 and was known by the stage name Lalla Carlsen. Their daughter Gjertrud Carlsen (1919–2007) was also a pianist on Chat Noir, wrote several children's songs and was the mother of NRK media personality Vibeke Sæther (born 1943). Their son Arne-Carsten Carlsen (born 1922) became an author, journalist and editor at Aftenposten.", "score": "1.509129" }, { "id": "15776139", "title": "Reidar Carlsen", "text": " Reidar Carlsen (1 July 1908 – 2 May 1987) was a Norwegian politician for the Labour Party. Reidar Carlsen was born in Bodin in Nordland county, Norway. He studied at the National School of Forestry (Skogskolen) in the community of Steinkjer (1928–1929). He was Member of Parliament of Norway from 1945 to 1961. He was Minister of Trade 1945–1946, and Minister of Fisheries 1946–1951. He served as Director of the Regional Development Fund 1961–78.", "score": "1.5045635" }, { "id": "6119757", "title": "Carlsen", "text": "Agnete Carlsen (born 1971), Norwegian footballer, world champion and Olympic medalist ; Audun Carlsen, Norwegian person involved in an incident with the recording artist Boy George in 2007 ; Christian Thomsen Carl, also referred to as Carlsen (1676-1713), Danish navy officer ; Dale Carlsen, American businessman ; Dines Carlsen (1901–1966), American painter ; Emil Carlsen (1853–1932), American painter ; Eric Carlsén (born 1982), Swedish curler ; Franziska Carlsen (1817–1876), Danish writer ; Gary Carlsen (born 1945), American discus thrower ; Henrik Carlsen (born 1959), Danish composer ; Henrik Kurt Carlsen (1914 ? - 1989), Danish sea captain ; Kenneth Carlsen (born 1973), Danish tennis player ; Kirsten Carlsen (born 1938), Danish cross-country skier ; Magnus Carlsen (born 1990), Norwegian chess grandmaster and World Champion ; Nils Carlsén (born 1985), Swedish curler ; Olav Sigurd Carlsen (1930–2013), Norwegian politician ; Per Carlsén (born 1960), Swedish curler ; Reidar Carlsen (1908–1987), Norwegian politician Carlsen is a Danish-Norwegian patronymic surname meaning \"son of Carl\". The form Karlsen is cognate. The parallel Swedish forms are Carlsson and Karlsson. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5039713" }, { "id": "28726892", "title": "Carsten Thomassen (journalist)", "text": " Carsten Thomassen (15 May 1969 – 14 January 2008) was a Norwegian journalist, political commentator and war correspondent for the Norwegian daily newspaper Dagbladet. He had earlier covered the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake from Thailand and Indonesia. He was killed in the 2008 Kabul Serena Hotel attack in Kabul, Afghanistan.", "score": "1.5034137" }, { "id": "2567512", "title": "Henrik Carlsen", "text": " For the Danish sea captain, see Henrik Kurt Carlsen Henrik Carlsen (born 30 November 1959) is a Danish composer, record producer, singer, and keyboardist. Carlsen was born in Copenhagen, Frederiksberg and grew up in Brøndby. He was a founding member of Street Beat in 1982 and led it until it was disbanded in 1993. As a composer, he has written or co-written pop-songs like \"Ring A Ling\" (Tiggy), \"Diddley-Dee\" (Cartoons), \"Easy Come Easy Go\" (Los Umbrellos), and worked as producer or re-mixer with Barcode Brothers, E-Type, Blå Øjne and many more. He was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2001. He retired from the music business and worked as a school teacher until 2016. In 2016, he returned to music and released his first solo album \"Street Beat Revisited\". The album was a homage to his former band Street Beat, and he played all instruments himself recording the entire album in his own bedroom. In November 2019, Carlsen released the instrumental album \"WXYZ\", again composing, arranging, performing, and producing all music by himself in his home studio.", "score": "1.5030134" }, { "id": "5665528", "title": "Finn Carling", "text": " He was born in Oslo, Norway. He took artium in 1945 and studied psychology at the University of Oslo from 1945-49. He followed with a course of study of sociology, history and literature at Howard University in Washington, D.C. during 1957-58. He made his literary debut in 1949 with Broen (two short stories and a one-act play). He had authorship of several genres, and became a key figure in Norwegian post-war literature. Carling had innate cerebral palsy. He described his childhood and adolescence with this disability in the autobiographical novel Kilden og muren (1958). He died during 2004 and was buried at Voksen kirkegård in Oslo.", "score": "1.4981619" }, { "id": "13680654", "title": "Carsten Hopstock", "text": " Hopstock was born in Kragerø in Vestfold og Telemark county, Norway. He was the son of pharmacist Frantz Philip Hopstock (1891–1977) and Lilly Haanshus (1887–1982). He graduated from the University of Oslo with the mag.art. degree (PhD equivalent) in 1953, majoring in art history and minoring in history and archaeology. In 1958 Hopstock married painter and writer Kirsti Marianne Nygård-Nilssen, daughter of Arne Nygård-Nilssen and Maja Refsum. He died in January 2014. Hopstock's professional career began as early as 1945 with a position as curator at the newly established Berg-Kragerø Museum at Kragerø. In 1954 he was hired as a curator at the Norwegian Museum of Cultural ", "score": "1.4951622" } ]
What is Fritz Goos's occupation?
[ "astronomer", "physicist" ]
occupation
Fritz Goos
610,662
50
[ { "id": "709168", "title": "Fritz Goos", "text": " Goos attended the Johanneum Gymnasium in Hamburg, from where he graduated with a high school diploma in March 1902. Until April 1903 he then worked in the machine factory Wimmel & Landgraf in Hamburg. In October 1903 he began to study mathematics and science at the Königlichen Technischen Hochschule (Royal Institute of Technology, now Technical University of Berlin) in Berlin. In March 1905 he joined the University of Bonn in the summer semester to study astronomy and mathematics. In the following winter semester, he continued his studies in Berlin, but in April 1906 went back to Bonn, where he earned a doctorate degree in astronomy in 1908. After graduating, he became an assistant at ", "score": "1.7004147" }, { "id": "709167", "title": "Fritz Goos", "text": " Hermann Fritz Gustav Goos (11 January 1883 – 18 May 1968) was a German physicist and astronomer.", "score": "1.6993204" }, { "id": "709169", "title": "Fritz Goos", "text": " Observatory, and in 1909 he became an assistant at the Hamburg Observatory. From 1911 he worked at the Physical State Institute (founded in 1885 as the Physical State Laboratory) in Hamburg, where he worked as an assistant professor (Wissenschaftlicher Rat) until 1948. As an adjunct professor at the University of Hamburg, Goos worked in the area of optical spectroscopy. He investigated the emission and absorption properties of various objects such as the electric arc or thin metal layers (of metals such as silver and gold) in the optical, infrared and ultraviolet spectral ranges. At the end of 1912, he discovered a systematic dependence of the wavelengths in the spectrum of an arc on ", "score": "1.586215" }, { "id": "14190655", "title": "Goos (name)", "text": "Surname ; Abraham Goos (c.1590–1643), Dutch cartographer and publisher, father of Pieter Goos ; August Hermann Ferdinand Carl Goos (1835–1917), Danish lawyer, professor and Minister of Iceland ; Carl Andreas August Goos (1797–1855), German-Danish painter ; Chris Goos (born 1981), American soccer player ; (born 1989), Belgian volleyball player ; Fritz Goos (1883–1968), German physicist and astronomer a.o. known for the Goos–Hänchen effect ; Marc Goos (born 1990), Dutch racing cyclist ; Maria Goos (born 1956), Dutch playwright and screenwriter ; Merrilyn Goos, Australian mathematician ; Michelle Goos (born 1989), Dutch handball player ; Pieter Goos (1616–1675), Dutch cartographer, copperplate engraver, publisher and bookseller ; Sofie Goos (born 1980), Belgian triathlete ; Given name ; Goos Meeuwsen (born 1982), Dutch circus performer Goos is a Dutch and Low German masculine given name, a short form of Goswin, as well as a patronymic surname (\"son of Goos\"). ", "score": "1.5443573" }, { "id": "25107368", "title": "Carl Andreas August Goos", "text": " Carl Andreas August Goos (6 August 1797, Schleswig - 12 July 1855, Schleswig) was a German-Danish painter working in history painting, genre painting and portrait painting.", "score": "1.5281568" }, { "id": null, "title": "Fritz Goos", "text": "Fritz Goos\n\nHermann Fritz Gustav Goos (11 January 1883 – 18 May 1968) was a German physicist and astronomer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Hilda Hänchen", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Top Gun: Maverick", "text": "Top Gun: Maverick\n\nTop Gun: Maverick is a 2022 American action drama film directed by Joseph Kosinski and written by Ehren Kruger, Eric Warren Singer, and Christopher McQuarrie from a story by Peter Craig and Justin Marks. The film is a sequel to the 1986 film \"Top Gun.\" Tom Cruise reprises his starring role as the naval aviator Maverick. It was based on the characters of the original film created by Jim Cash and Jack Epps Jr. The film also stars Val Kilmer, Miles Teller, Jennifer Connelly, Jon Hamm, Glen Powell, Lewis Pullman, and Ed Harris. In the film, Maverick confronts his past while training a group of younger Top Gun graduates, including the son of his deceased best friend, for a dangerous mission.\n\nDevelopment on a \"Top Gun\" sequel was announced in 2010 by Paramount Pictures. Cruise, along with producer Jerry Bruckheimer and director Tony Scott, were asked to return. Craig wrote a draft of the screenplay in 2012, but the project stalled when Scott died later that year. The film was later dedicated to Scott's memory. Production resumed in 2017 after Kosinski was hired to direct. Principal photography which involved the use of IMAX-certified 6K full-frame cameras, took place from May 2018 to April 2019 in California, Washington, and Maryland. An initial release date was scheduled for July 12, 2019, but it was delayed several times due to the complex action sequences and the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, several streaming companies attempted to purchase the streaming rights to the film from Paramount, but all offers were declined on the orders of Cruise, who insisted the film be released exclusively in theaters.<ref name=\"deadlineaug29\" />\n\n\"Top Gun: Maverick\" premiered at CinemaCon on April 28, 2022, and was theatrically released by Paramount Pictures in the United States on May 27, 2022, in IMAX, 4DX, ScreenX, and Dolby Cinema. The film was acclaimed by critics, with many calling it better than the original. It won Best Film from the National Board of Review, and was also named one of the top ten films of 2022 by the American Film Institute. The film also received , including nominations for the Golden Globe Award for Best Motion Picture - Drama and the Critics' Choice Movie Award for Best Picture. It grossed $1.488 billion worldwide, becoming the highest-grossing film of 2022, the second film released since the COVID-19 pandemic to gross $1 billion, and the highest-grossing film of Cruise's career.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of people who disappeared mysteriously: 1910–1990", "text": "List of people who disappeared mysteriously: 1910–1990\n\nThis is a list of people who disappeared mysteriously: 1910–1990 or whose deaths or exact circumstances thereof are not substantiated. Many people who disappear end up declared presumed dead and some of these people were possibly subjected to forced disappearance.\n\nThis list is a general catch-all; for specialty lists, see Lists of people who disappeared.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Mighty Mouse", "text": "Mighty Mouse\n\nMighty Mouse is an American animated anthropomorphic superhero mouse character created by the Terrytoons studio for 20th Century Fox. The character was originally called Super Mouse, and made his debut in the 1942 short \"The Mouse of Tomorrow\". The name was changed to Mighty Mouse in his eighth film, 1944's \"The Wreck of the Hesperus\", and the character went on to star in 80 theatrical shorts, concluding in 1961 with \"Cat Alarm\".\n\nIn 1955, \"Mighty Mouse Playhouse\" debuted as a Saturday morning cartoon show on the CBS television network, which popularized the character far more than the original theatrical run. The show lasted until 1967. Filmation revived the character in \"The New Adventures of Mighty Mouse and Heckle & Jeckle\", which ran from 1979 to 1980, and animation director Ralph Bakshi revived the concept again in \"\", from 1987 to 1988.\n\nMighty Mouse also appeared in comic books by several publishers, including his own series, \"Mighty Mouse\" and \"The Adventures of Mighty Mouse\", which ran from 1946 to 1968.\n\nMighty Mouse is known for his theme song, \"Mighty Mouse Theme (Here I Come to Save the Day)\", written by composer Marshall Barer.", "score": null }, { "id": "709170", "title": "Fritz Goos", "text": " length and its electrical parameters such as the current used. In the spring of 1913, he was able to confirm these observations in the better-equipped laboratory of Heinrich Kayser in Bonn. Goos also investigated the effect of light on phosphors and worked on the detection of light by a microphotometer. One of Goos' best known works is the experimental evidence of displacement of a totally reflected light beam, work he did together with his doctoral student Hilda Hänchen (later Hilda Lindberg-Hänchen). This phenomenon is called the Goos-Hänchen effect. In 1933 Goos signed the Vow of allegiance of the Professors of the German Universities and High-Schools to Adolf Hitler and the National Socialistic State.", "score": "1.5143316" }, { "id": "1623400", "title": "Marc Goos", "text": " Marc Goos (born 30 November 1990) is a Dutch racing cyclist who rode most recently for the UCI ProTour team,. He competed in the 2014 Giro d'Italia and finished in 35th position.", "score": "1.4862702" }, { "id": "14302285", "title": "Goos", "text": " Goos is a commune in the Landes department in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in southwestern France. Its main source of income is tourism due to the local scenery.", "score": "1.4726813" }, { "id": "8915762", "title": "John J. Goossens", "text": " After his secondary education at the Collège Saint Michel in Brussels, he obtained a licentiate, in trade - and financial sciences from the Louvain School of Management at the Université catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain) in 1968. In 1971, he obtained a Master of Business Administration at the Columbia University in New York. He was a member of \"Up with People\".", "score": "1.469224" }, { "id": "7844426", "title": "Jan Goossen", "text": " Jan Goossen (9 October 1937 – 1 January 2005) was a Dutch sculptor. Goossen was born in Maracaibo to Dutch parents. He studied at the Rietveld Academy in Amsterdam (1956–1961), and earned a bachelor's degree in architecture at Heald College in San Francisco, USA (1965–1967). He also received several stipends to travel abroad (i.e, Maison Descartes Paris 1961–1962, finalist Zellerbach competition San Francisco 1965, Stipendium C.R.M. 1973, and a travel grant in 1978). In his training period, he specialized as a sculptor, designer and draftsman. Goossen’s work can be defined as non-figurative, geometric and abstract, with a focus on people ", "score": "1.4551892" }, { "id": "8988867", "title": "Marco Fritz", "text": " Fritz is a banker and lives in Korb. His hobbies include sports and music.", "score": "1.4465058" }, { "id": "27803252", "title": "Goossens", "text": "Ben Goossens (b. 1985), Belgian ad agency art director and photomontage artist ; (b. 1953), Belgian actor and comedian ; Colette Goossens (b. 1942), Belgian swimmer ; Daniel Goossens, (b. 1954), French cartoonist ; Dennis Goossens (b. 1993), Belgian gymnast ; Ester Goossens (b. 1972), Dutch middle-distance runner ; Eugène Goossens, père (1845–1906), Belgian conductor ; Eugène Goossens, fils (1867–1958), French conductor and violinist, son of Eugène Goossens, père ; Eugene Aynsley Goossens (1893–1962), English conductor and composer, son of Eugène Goossens, fils ; (b. 1930), Belgian dialectologist and philologist ; Jan Goossens (b. 1958), Dutch-born American indoor soccer player ; Jean-Maurice Goossens (1892–1965), Belgian ice hockey player ; John Goossens (b. 1988), Dutch footballer ; John J. Goossens (1944–2002), Belgian businessman ; Kris ", "score": "1.4317527" }, { "id": "27803254", "title": "Goossen", "text": "Duane Goossen, American politician ; Eugene Goossen (1921–1997), American art critic and art historian ; Greg Goossen (1945–2011), American baseball player ; Hugo Goossen (born 1960s), Surinamese swimmer ; Jan Goossen (1937–2005), Dutch sculptor ; Jeananne Goossen (born 1985), Canadian actress ; Matthias Goossen (born 1992), Canadian football player ; Nicholaus Goossen (born 1978), American director and photographer ; Pol Goossen (orn 1949), Flemish film and television actor ; Steve Goossen (born 1968), Dutch footballer ; As a given name ; Goossen van der Weyden (ca. 1465– aft. 1538), Flemish painter Goossen is a Dutch surname, meaning \"son of Goos/Goossen\" (\"Goswin\"). Notable people with this name include: ", "score": "1.4314772" }, { "id": "6371323", "title": "Roland Gööck", "text": " Roland Gööck was born on 29 September 1923 in Felchta in Thuringia as the son of a priest. His ancestors bore the surname Jöök and came from the Baltic states. Gööck's first book, the utopian crime thriller, Corix ist dagegen, appeared in 1948 under the pseudonym of Peter Roland. From 1954 to 1962 Gööck was Bertelsmann's chief press officer. In the late 1950s, he published new editions of the works of Jules Verne (Sigbert Mohn, Vier-Falken-) and Robinson Crusoe (Sigbert Mohn , Bertelsmann Lesering) and, in 1958, worked for Bertelsmann on a biography of Zarah Leander after the series of the same name in the Bild newspaper by Max Pierre Schaeffer. In the early 1960s, followed editions by Karl-May-Büchern for Bertelsmann, Mosaik (Hamburg), ", "score": "1.418774" }, { "id": "27290651", "title": "Stephen Fritz", "text": " Fritz is a registered indigenous guide, his area of expertise stretches across the mountains between Kommetjie and Ocean View, including Peers Cave and the Elephant Eye. His guided tours include visits to sacred Khoi sites in the Western Cape and the Piketberg.", "score": "1.4145031" }, { "id": "15437826", "title": "Fritz Mackensen", "text": " Fritz Mackensen (born 8 April 1866 in Greene, near Kreiensen, Duchy of Brunswick &ndash; 12 May 1953 in Bremen) was a German painter of the Düsseldorf school of painting and Art Nouveau. He was a friend of Otto Modersohn and Hans am Ende, and was one of the co-founders of the artists' colony at Worpswede. From 1933 to 1935 he was head of the Nordische Kunsthochschule in Bremen (today's University of the Arts Bremen). In 1937 he became a member of the Nazi Party. He was buried in the Worpswede Cemetery.", "score": "1.40467" }, { "id": "214895", "title": "Fritz Walter Paul Friedrichs", "text": " Fritz Walter Paul Friedrichs (28. July 1885, Stützerbach – 1958) (also published as Fritz Friedrichs) was a German chemist. Fritz, was a son of Ferdinand and Olga Friedrichs, born Reinhardt. He is the inventor of the spiral cold finger-type condenser, now most commonly known as a Friedrichs condenser, which he described in a 1912 article published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Friedrichs was instrumental in the standardization of chemical apparatus in Europe.", "score": "1.4021134" }, { "id": "11317416", "title": "Emanuel Fritz", "text": " Emanuel Fritz (1886-1988) was an American forestry specialist. He worked in the field of California forestry for over 70 years. Upon his death, Fritz was the oldest professor in the history of the University of California. Fritz was known as \"Mr. Redwood,\" in academic and conservation circles.", "score": "1.4007299" }, { "id": "31164369", "title": "John Goossens", "text": " John Goossens (born 25 July 1988) is a Dutch professional footballer who plays as a midfielder for ADO Den Haag in the Eredivisie.", "score": "1.4003023" }, { "id": "8915765", "title": "John J. Goossens", "text": "John J. Goossens ", "score": "1.3917444" } ]
What is Alexander Gadolin's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Alexander Gadolin
1,693,978
41
[ { "id": "31736832", "title": "Gadolin", "text": "Alexander Gadolin, Finnish jurist ; Johan Gadolin, Finnish chemist ; Jakob Gadolin, Finnish Lutheran bishop and Johan Gadolin's father Gadolin is a Finnish noble family. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5274284" }, { "id": "10951336", "title": "Alexander Mikhailovich Kozulin", "text": " providing stars and event management services, as well as First Line travel providing luxury travel and life style service facilities to its clients which include the Alfa Group (RU), Renova Group (RU), Access Industries, PrivatBank (UA), Volkswagen, and others. Since 2013, in addition to his activity in the Event and Lifestyle Business, his interest in the Arts developed, as he began to take an interest in providing selected art to his key clientele, but also helping gifted contemporary Artists in developing their careers and finding new markets. Kozulin has established relations with eminent collectors and gallery owners, Museum curators, Experts, art restorers ", "score": "1.5218439" }, { "id": "3798001", "title": "Alexander F. Gavrilov", "text": " Alexander Feliksovich Gavrilov (Алекса́ндр Фе́ликсович Гаври́лов, born 3 December 1970 in Moscow) is a Russian literary critic and editor. He was editor-in-chief of the Книжное обозрение Book Review from 2000 to 2010. He was a finalist in the Young Creative Entrepreneur program of the British Council.", "score": "1.5204152" }, { "id": "10951333", "title": "Alexander Mikhailovich Kozulin", "text": "\"Geld ist nicht wichtig, aber schön muss sie sein …,\" 1984 ; \"Schöne Frauen kosten Geld …,\" 1985 ; \"Ursula oh-la-la …,\" 1985 \"Chez Alex Piano Bar,\" 1984 ; \"Mix on the street,\" 1992 ; \"Unpublished,\" 1994 The CD \"Ancient Echoes\" became # 11 on the Billboard music chart in the US in 1994. (Choir Academy under the conduction of Alexander Sedov.) ; Charity action Tzar's Ball helping highly gifted children from impoverished families in Russia. Alexander acts as a producer, concept creator, director, strategist and organizer. ; Alexander is one of the creators of the Gauklerfest in Germany, a festival of street art in Berlin, which is still taking place annually. The first festival was held in 1984. ; Stars for Kids / A merry Christmas In 1992, Alexander Kozulin is included in the Who Is Who book in Germany (1992, Volume 2). Among his major achievements, the following can be highlighted: Music Singles Music Albums and CDs As a producer", "score": "1.5049324" }, { "id": "31736793", "title": "Johan Gadolin", "text": " Johan Gadolin (5 June 176015 August 1852) was a Finnish chemist, physicist and mineralogist. Gadolin discovered a \"new earth\" containing the first rare-earth compound yttrium, which was later determined to be a chemical element. He is also considered the founder of Finnish chemistry research, as the second holder of the Chair of Chemistry at the Royal Academy of Turku (or Åbo Kungliga Akademi). Gadolin was ennobled for his achievements and awarded the Order of Saint Vladimir and the Order of Saint Anna.", "score": "1.5046688" }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Finnish legal scholars", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Meanings of minor planet names: 2001–3000", "text": "Meanings of minor planet names: 2001–3000\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Justus von Liebig", "text": "Justus von Liebig\n\nJustus Freiherr von Liebig (12 May 1803 – 20 April 1873) was a German scientist who made major contributions to agricultural and biological chemistry, and is considered one of the principal founders of organic chemistry. As a professor at the University of Giessen, he devised the modern laboratory-oriented teaching method, and for such innovations, he is regarded as one of the greatest chemistry teachers of all time. He has been described as the \"father of the fertilizer industry\" for his emphasis on nitrogen and trace minerals as essential plant nutrients, and his formulation of the law of the minimum, which described how plant growth relied on the scarcest nutrient resource, rather than the total amount of resources available. He also developed a manufacturing process for beef extracts, and with his consent a company, called Liebig Extract of Meat Company, was founded to exploit the concept; it later introduced the Oxo brand beef bouillon cube. He popularized an earlier invention for condensing vapors, which came to be known as the Liebig condenser.<ref name=Cansler/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of minor planets named after people", "text": "List of minor planets named after people\n\nThis is a list of minor planets named after people, both real and fictional.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of eponyms (A–K)", "text": "List of eponyms (A–K)\n\nAn eponym is a person (real or fictitious) from whom something is said to take its name. The word is back-formed from \"eponymous\", from the Greek \"eponymos\" meaning \"giving name\".\n\nHere is a list of eponyms:\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "31736795", "title": "Johan Gadolin", "text": " Gadolin was fluent in Latin, Finnish, Russian, German, English and French in addition to his native Swedish. He was a candidate for the chair of chemistry at Uppsala in 1784, but Johann Afzelius was selected instead. Gadolin became an extraordinary professor at Åbo in 1785 (an unpaid position). Beginning in 1786, he made a chemical \"grand tour\" of Europe, visiting universities and mines in various countries. He worked with Lorenz Crell, editor of the journal Chemische Annalen in Germany, and with Adair Crawford and Richard Kirwan in Ireland. Gadolin was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences in 1790. Gadolin became the ordinary professor of chemistry at the Royal Academy of Turku in 1797, after the death of Pehr Adrian Gadd. He retained the position until his retirement in 1822. He was one of the first chemists who gave laboratory exercises to students. He even allowed the students to use his private laboratory.", "score": "1.4996817" }, { "id": "11336007", "title": "Alexander Gabyshev", "text": " Alexander Prokopievich Gabyshev (born 1968) is a Yakut shaman and anti-Putin political dissident. After being arrested and sentenced to involuntary confinement in a psychiatric hospital multiple times, his case has sparked condemnation of the political abuse of psychiatry in Russia.", "score": "1.4928288" }, { "id": "31736800", "title": "Johan Gadolin", "text": " Gadolin was knighted and is registered under number 245 in the Finnish House of Nobility. He was also awarded the Order of Saint Vladimir and the Order of Saint Anna. His heraldic device was: \"Argent, on a bend Azure with two mullets Or between a rose Gules and crystals Proper.\"", "score": "1.4791822" }, { "id": "30671889", "title": "Jakob Gadolin", "text": " Jakob Gadolin (24 October 1719 – 26 September 1802) was a Swedish Lutheran bishop, professor of physics and theology, politician and statesman. Gadolin\twas born in Strängnäs, Sweden. In 1736, he studied at The Royal Academy of Turku (which later became the University of Turku). In 1745 he became Master of Philosophy and Professor of Mathematics. He became accomplished in numerous fields such as philosophy and mathematics and from 1753 was a Professor of Physics and in 1762 Professor of Theology. In 1788, he succeeded Jakob Haartman as the Bishop of the Archdiocese of Turku which was then a diocese of the Church of Sweden. He held this position until his death in 1802. He served as a representative of the clergy in the Diocese of Turku in the Swedish Riksdag of the Estates 1755–56, 1760–62 and 1771–72. In 1751, Gadolin was elected a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. Jakob Gadolin was married to Elisabet Browallia (1737-1793) and was the father of the noted chemist, Johan Gadolin.", "score": "1.4764912" }, { "id": "644394", "title": "Alexander Kashlinsky", "text": " Alexander (Sasha) Kashlinsky (born 1957 in Riga) is an astronomer and cosmologist working at NASA Goddard-Space-Flight-Center, known for work on dark flow and the cosmic infrared background. Kashlinsky has been interviewed by Morgan Freeman in season 2 of Through the Wormhole.", "score": "1.4674957" }, { "id": "8275051", "title": "Alexander Gorodnitsky", "text": " Alexander Moiseevich Gorodnitsky (born March 20, 1933) is a well-known Soviet and Russian Jewish bard and poet. Professionally, he is a geologist and oceanographer. He is a member of the Russian Academy of Natural Sciences.", "score": "1.4614756" }, { "id": "9924304", "title": "Alexander Gavrilov (figure skater)", "text": " Alexander Yevgenyevich Gavrilov (Александр Евгеньевич Гаврилов; born December 5, 1943) is a Russian pair skater who competed internationally for the Soviet Union. With partner Tatiana Zhuk, he is the World bronze medalist and the 1963 & 1964 European bronze medalist. They placed 5th at the 1964 Winter Olympics. He also competed one season with Tamara Moskvina, winning the 1965 Soviet Championships.", "score": "1.4584632" }, { "id": "14286466", "title": "Alexander Borisovich Mindlin", "text": " Alexander Borisovich Mindlin (Александр Борисович Миндлин, 14 May 1929 – 11 October 2019) was a Russian engineer and author.", "score": "1.4584044" }, { "id": "11972319", "title": "Alexander Zeitlin", "text": " Alexander Zeitlin was born in Russia 28 August 1900 in Russia and died April 19, 1998, in White Plains, Westchester, New York.", "score": "1.4554927" }, { "id": "10951326", "title": "Alexander Mikhailovich Kozulin", "text": " Alexander \"Alex\" Kozulin (born Dulfan) (Алекса́ндр Козу́лин (Дульфан)) born on 24 November 1958 in Novoselytsia, Ukraine, USSR of Jewish parentage. Kozulin is actively involved in social work and charity. His showmanship, business and creative work have received worldwide recognition specifically in Europe, Russia and the USA. He is fluent in five languages.", "score": "1.4554204" }, { "id": "14803514", "title": "Alexandre Remi", "text": " Alexander Gavrilovich Remy Реми, Александр Гаврилович (30.08.1809-27.09.1871) was a Russian mayor-general, brother officer of Russian poet Mikhail Lermontov. Alexander Remy was born in 1809 in the city of Saint Petersburg into a Russian noble family Remy (family) of Swiss descent. The ancestor of Remy came to Russia in 1787, when the officer Jean-Gabriel Remy entered the Engineering Corps in Saint Petersburg. Remy began his military service in cavalry in 1826. Until 1835 he served at the 1st Bugsk uhlan regiment, later captain of cavalry at the Uhlan Regiment in Saint Petersburg, brother officer of Mikhail Lermontov. Alexander Remy was appointed officer for special commissions at the headquarters of General Khomutov at Don Cossack Voisko and was promoted to the rank of ", "score": "1.4553502" }, { "id": "9014037", "title": "Alexander Buturlin", "text": " Count Aleksander Borisovich Buturlin (Russian, in full: граф Александр Борисович Бутурлин; 1694 – 1767) was a Russian general and courtier whose career was much furthered by his good looks and personal affection of Empress Elizabeth. Buturlin came from the most senior Ratshid family, whose members had been prominent as boyars and voevods since the 12th century. His father, who served as the Captain of the Leub Guard, sent him to the newly established naval academy, where Alexander studied navigation, fencing, and foreign languages for four years. He graduated from the academy in 1720 and was employed by Peter the Great as his orderly and confidant, especially on several secretive missions during the Persian Expedition. In due time he was promoted Chamberlain and attached to the \"junior court\" of Tsesarevna Elizaveta ", "score": "1.4522549" }, { "id": "4131148", "title": "Alexander Ivashkevich", "text": " Alexander Ivashkevich (alternately spelled as Aleksandr Ivaškevitš in Estonia, and as Aleksander Ivashkevich; Александр Ивашкевич) (born April 27, 1960) is a professional theater and movie actor and a tap dancer.", "score": "1.4518604" }, { "id": "16423454", "title": "Alexander Radó", "text": " Alexander Radó (5 November 1899, Újpest, near Budapest – 20 August 1981, Budapest), also: Alex, Alexander Radolfi, Sándor Kálmán Reich or Alexander Rado, was a Hungarian cartographer and a Soviet military intelligence agent in World War II. Radó (codename \"DORA\") was also a member of the resistance (Widerstandskämpfer) to Nazi Germany, devoted to the service of the so-called Red Orchestra, the Soviet espionage and spy network to Western Europe between 1933 and 1945. There he was the head of the Switzerland resistance group Red Three, one of the most efficient residents of the Red Orchestra.", "score": "1.4501288" }, { "id": "31736796", "title": "Johan Gadolin", "text": " Gadolin made contributions in a variety of areas. Although he never visited France, he became a proponent of Antoine Lavoisier's theory of combustion. Gadolin's Inledning till Chemien (1798) was the first chemistry textbook in the Nordic countries that questioned the theory of phlogiston and discussed the role of oxygen in combustion in a modern way.", "score": "1.4478347" } ]
What is Levi P. Powers's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Levi P. Powers
1,369,273
34
[ { "id": "28660186", "title": "Levi P. Powers", "text": " Levi Parsons Powers (May 9, 1828 &ndash; September 24, 1888) was an American politician and lawyer. Born in Marshfield, Vermont, Powers moved to Grand Rapids, Wisconsin in 1853, where he worked in logging and studied law. Powers was admitted to the Wisconsin Bar in 1853. Powers became the political editor of the Grand Rapids Tribune when it was established in 1873. He served as county clerk and as county judge. Powers served in the Wisconsin State Assembly in 1863. He died in Wisconsin Rapids, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.673528" }, { "id": "9496209", "title": "Levi Sutton", "text": " .", "score": "1.4629881" }, { "id": "2389627", "title": "James Powers (New York politician)", "text": "The New York Civil List compiled by Franklin Benjamin Hough (pages 58, 131f, 144, 190, 198 and 298; Weed, Parsons and Co., 1858) ", "score": "1.4342911" }, { "id": "5489663", "title": "James E. Powers", "text": " James E. Powers (born May 30, 1931) is an American politician from New York.", "score": "1.3961633" }, { "id": "9873266", "title": "John Robert Powers", "text": " Virginia Burton (1902–1972). According to this record she was the daughter of William Burton and Helen Vleit. John Robert Powers and his wife Alice are buried together in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California. Discrepancies occur regarding his date of birth (1892 appears on his gravestone as well as the US Federal Census record of 1900), but in his World War I draft registration card dated 6/5/17 in New York City he self-reports his birthday as September 14, 1895. His address on that date was 250 West 43rd, New York City, and his occupation is Actor. He is employed at Fort Lee Ferry. He has brown eyes, brown hair, is 5' 11\" tall and of slender build.", "score": "1.383414" }, { "id": null, "title": "Bartholomew Ringle", "text": "Bartholomew Ringle\n\nBartholomew Ringle (October 16, 1814October 27, 1881) was a German American immigrant, lawyer, and Wisconsin pioneer. He was instrumental in organizing many of the towns of Marathon County, Wisconsin. He was the fifth mayor of Wausau, Wisconsin, represented Marathon County for five terms in the Wisconsin State Assembly, and served nearly 18 years as county judge. His son and grandson also served in the Wisconsin Legislature.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Levi Strauss", "text": "Levi Strauss\n\nLevi Strauss (; born Löb Strauß ; February 26, 1829 – September 26, 1902) was a German-born American businessman who founded the first company to manufacture blue jeans. His firm of Levi Strauss & Co. (Levi's) began in 1853 in San Francisco, California.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Éliphas Lévi", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Benjamin Harrison", "text": "Benjamin Harrison\n\nBenjamin Harrison (August 20, 1833March 13, 1901) was an American lawyer and politician who served as the 23rd president of the United States from 1889 to 1893. He was a member of the Harrison family of Virginia–a grandson of the ninth president, William Henry Harrison, and a great-grandson of Benjamin Harrison V, a Founding Father.\n\nHarrison was born on a farm by the Ohio River and graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. After moving to Indianapolis, he established himself as a prominent local attorney, Presbyterian church leader, and politician in Indiana. During the American Civil War, he served in the Union Army as a colonel, and was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as a brevet brigadier general of volunteers in 1865. Harrison unsuccessfully ran for governor of Indiana in 1876. The Indiana General Assembly elected Harrison to a six-year term in the Senate, where he served from 1881 to 1887.\n\nA Republican, Harrison was elected to the presidency in 1888, defeating the Democratic incumbent Grover Cleveland in the Electoral College despite losing the popular vote. Hallmarks of Harrison's administration included unprecedented economic legislation, including the McKinley Tariff, which imposed historic protective trade rates, and the Sherman Antitrust Act. Harrison also facilitated the creation of the national forest reserves through an amendment to the Land Revision Act of 1891. During his administration six western states were admitted to the Union. In addition, Harrison substantially strengthened and modernized the U.S. Navy and conducted an active foreign policy, but his proposals to secure federal education funding as well as voting rights enforcement for African Americans were unsuccessful.\n\nDue in large part to surplus revenues from the tariffs, federal spending reached one billion dollars for the first time during his term. The spending issue in part led to the defeat of the Republicans in the 1890 midterm elections. Cleveland defeated Harrison for reelection in 1892, due to the growing unpopularity of high tariffs and high federal spending. He returned to private life and his law practice in Indianapolis. In 1899 he represented Venezuela in its British Guiana boundary dispute with Great Britain. Harrison traveled to the court in Paris as part of the case and after a brief stay returned to Indianapolis. He died at his home in Indianapolis in 1901 of complications from influenza. Many have praised Harrison's commitment to African Americans' voting rights, but scholars and historians generally regard his administration as below average. They rank him in the bottom half among U.S. presidents.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Levi Woodbury", "text": "Levi Woodbury\n\nLevi Woodbury (December 22, 1789September 4, 1851) was an American attorney, jurist, and Democratic politician from New Hampshire. During a four-decade career in public office, Woodbury served as Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, a United States Senator, the ninth governor of New Hampshire, and cabinet member in the Andrew Jackson and Martin Van Buren administrations. He was promoted as a candidate for the Democratic nomination for President of the United States in 1848.\n\nBorn in Francestown, New Hampshire, he established a legal practice in Francestown in 1812. After serving in the New Hampshire Senate, he was appointed to the New Hampshire Supreme Court in 1817. He served as Governor of New Hampshire from 1823 to 1824 and represented New Hampshire in the Senate from 1825 to 1831, becoming affiliated with the Democratic Party of Andrew Jackson. He served as the United States Secretary of the Navy under President Jackson and as the United States Secretary of the Treasury under Jackson and President Martin Van Buren.\n\nHe served another term representing New Hampshire in the Senate from 1841 to 1845, when he accepted President James K. Polk's appointment to the Supreme Court. Woodbury was the first Justice to have attended law school. He received significant support for the presidential nomination at the 1848 Democratic National Convention, particularly among New England delegates, but the nomination went to Lewis Cass of Michigan. Woodbury served on the court until his death in 1851. Woodbury died of an inflammatory tumor in the stomach.", "score": null }, { "id": "9487559", "title": "Asahel Lynde Powers", "text": " Asahel Lynde Powers (February 28, 1813 – 1843) was an American painter active in New England. Powers was born in Springfield, Vermont, and began his career as an itinerant artist at an early age. At 18 years old, Powers was already well-known. The first portrait attributed to him is of Dr. Joel Green from Rutland, Vermont, dated 1831, now on display in the Springfield Art and Historical Society. Like many contemporary paintings, Powers' early works were oil on wood panel. During the 1830s, Powers traveled through Vermont, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire. From 1839-1841 he worked in New York's Clinton and Franklin counties. In the early 1840s, he moved to Olney, Illinois. There are no known works from his time in Illinois, where he died in 1843.", "score": "1.3809664" }, { "id": "30371753", "title": "Millard Powers", "text": " Powers has taken a role in the following works:", "score": "1.3765216" }, { "id": "26799968", "title": "Levi Wright", "text": " Source:", "score": "1.3738782" }, { "id": "9915256", "title": "Francis Gary Powers", "text": " Powers was born August 17, 1929, in Jenkins, Kentucky, the son of Oliver Winfield Powers (1904–1970), a coal miner, and his wife Ida Melinda Powers (1905–1991). His family eventually moved to Pound, Virginia, just across the state border. He was the second born and only male of six children. His family lived in a mining town, and because of the hardships associated with living in such a town, his father wanted Powers to become a physician. He hoped his son would achieve the higher earnings of such a profession and felt that this would involve less hardships than any job in his hometown.", "score": "1.3665211" }, { "id": "1909608", "title": "Francis Powers (actor)", "text": " Francis Powers (June 4, 1865 Virginia – May 10, 1940 Santa Monica, California) was a silent film actor, screenwriter, and director from the United States.", "score": "1.3625305" }, { "id": "3673550", "title": "James T. Powers (actor)", "text": " James T. Powers (born James T. McGovern; April 26, 1862– February 10, 1943), was an American stage actor, vocalist, and lyricist.", "score": "1.3535919" }, { "id": "11960678", "title": "Joseph Withers Power", "text": " Power was a Democrat, member of the Episcopal Church, Freemason, Odd Fellow, and a Knight of Pythias. Power married Eva Truly in 1896. They had three children, Dorothy, Mary, and Joe.", "score": "1.3497051" }, { "id": "13107741", "title": "Powers (name)", "text": " 1961), American actress, amateur bodybuilder and firefighter ; Leo J. Powers (1909–1967), US Army soldier and a recipient of the Medal of Honor ; Levi P. Powers (1828-1888), Wisconsin legislator and judge ; Lewis J. Powers (1837–1915), Massachusetts businessman and politician ; Llewellyn Powers (1836–1908), Governor of Maine, US Representative from Maine ; Mala Powers (1931–2007), American film actress and television guest actress ; Mike Powers (disambiguation) ; Millard Powers (born 1965), American musician, songwriter, record producer and recording engineer ; Millard Powers Fillmore (1828–1889), son of US President Millard Fillmore ; Oswald A. Powers (1915–1942), US Navy officer and Navy Cross recipient ; PJ Powers (born 1960), a ", "score": "1.3486302" }, { "id": "3509282", "title": "Pomeroy Wills Powers", "text": " Pomeroy Wells Powers, known as P.W. Powers, (1852–1916) was an attorney and property developer in Kansas City, Kansas, and Los Angeles, California, where he was president of the City Council in 1900–02.", "score": "1.3478528" }, { "id": "8717047", "title": "Phil Powers (baseball)", "text": " Philip J. Powers (July 26, 1854 – December 22, 1914) was a major league baseball catcher from 1878 to 1885. He was used mostly as a backup for five different teams in the National League and American Association.", "score": "1.3461317" }, { "id": "30295686", "title": "Levi Coffin", "text": " Levi Coffin (October 28, 1798 – September 16, 1877) was an American Quaker, Republican, abolitionist, farmer, businessman and humanitarian. An active leader of the Underground Railroad in Indiana and Ohio, some unofficially called Coffin the \"President of the Underground Railroad,\" estimating that three thousand fugitive slaves passed through his care. The Coffin home in Fountain City, Wayne County, Indiana, is now a museum, sometimes called the Underground Railroad's \"Grand Central Station\". Born near what became Greensboro, North Carolina, Coffin was exposed to and came to oppose slavery as a child. His family immigrated to Indiana in 1826, avoiding slaveholders' increasing persecution of Quakers, whose faith did not permit them to own slaves and who assisted fugitives. In Indiana, Coffin settled near the National ", "score": "1.3383913" }, { "id": "5831566", "title": "Melvin Lane Powers", "text": " Powers was born in 1942 in Birmingham, Alabama to Garrett \"Ace\" and Elizabeth Powers. He served in the United States Navy and worked in a number of jobs before he was convicted of a con job in Pontiac, Michigan and sentenced to serve 90 days in jail. He moved to Houston in 1961 while he was on probation. His mother suggested that he make contact with her sister, Candy Mossler, who lived there with her husband, who owned a number of financial companies.", "score": "1.3361274" }, { "id": "9665671", "title": "Jim Powers (baseball)", "text": " James T. Powers (1868 – after 1890) was a 19th-century Major League Baseball player who was a pitcher for the 1890 Brooklyn Gladiators in the American Association.", "score": "1.3305261" }, { "id": "9834621", "title": "William T. Powers (industrialist)", "text": " Powers was born in Bristol, New Hampshire on July 8, 1820. His parents, Jonathan and Anna (Kendall) Powers, were natives of Groton and Hebron, New Hampshire. In 1826, the family moved to Lansingburgh, New York, where he was educated in public schools. When he was 18, learned the trade of cabinet maker. He early showed aptness and skill at machine work, a faculty which ever after proved useful and profitable to him.", "score": "1.3304638" }, { "id": "12730639", "title": "Albert Theodore Powers", "text": " Powers holds a Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) degree from the University of Denver; a Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) degree from Imperial College London; a Juris Doctor (J.D.) degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School; and a Master of Laws (LL.M.) in Taxation degree from the New York University Law School.", "score": "1.3289868" } ]
What is John Strange's occupation?
[ "diplomat" ]
occupation
John Strange (diplomat)
4,736,716
72
[ { "id": "193674", "title": "John Strange (cricketer)", "text": " John Strange (1818 – 6 September 1840) was an English first-class cricketer. The son of John Strange senior, he was born in 1818 at St John's Wood. He was educated at Winchester College. Strange later played first-class cricket for the Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) from 1836–39, making eleven appearances. Playing primarily as a bowler, he took 32 wickets in his eleven matches and twice took a five wicket haul. In addition to playing for the MCC, Strange also made two first-clas appearances for the Gentlemen in the Gentlemen v Players fixtures of 1836 and 1838 at Lord's, taking four wickets. Strange died at Paris in September 1840.", "score": "1.6890528" }, { "id": "4561433", "title": "John Strange (diplomat)", "text": " John Strange (1732–1799) was an English diplomat and author.", "score": "1.6338315" }, { "id": "7353419", "title": "John Strange (Wisconsin politician)", "text": " Strange was born in Oakfield, Wisconsin on June 27, 1852. As a boy, he attended the district schools part of the year and worked in various woodenware factories for part of the year.", "score": "1.6132648" }, { "id": "11447258", "title": "John Strange (English politician)", "text": " on 28 January 1737, and was made a Member of Parliament for West Looe to allow him to take his position. After the death of the Master of the Rolls Joseph Jekyll on 19 August 1738, Strange was invited to succeed him, but declined the offer. He became Recorder of London in November 1739, and on 12 May 1740 he was knighted, along with Dudley Ryder, the Attorney General for England and Wales. He resigned as Member of Parliament for West Looe in 1741, but was reelected for Totnes in a by-election in 1742. In December 1742 he resigned as Recorder of London and Solicitor General, ", "score": "1.6014841" }, { "id": "14606274", "title": "Johnny Strange", "text": " Johnny Strange (born 6 December 1988), nicknamed \"the man with ears of steel\", is an English world record breaking performance artist, producer and street performer based in London, England. He is known for performing daredevil stunts with a comedic twist.", "score": "1.5898904" }, { "id": null, "title": "John Strange Jocelyn, 5th Earl of Roden", "text": "John Strange Jocelyn, 5th Earl of Roden\n\nJohn Strange Jocelyn, 5th Earl of Roden (5 June 1823 – 3 July 1897), was an Anglo-Irish soldier and representative peer. He was the son of Robert Jocelyn, 3rd Earl of Roden, and inherited the title after the death of his nephew Robert Jocelyn, 4th Earl of Roden, in 1880.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Strange Winter", "text": "John Strange Winter\n\nHenrietta Eliza Vaughan Stannard (née Palmer; 1856–1911) writing under the pseudonym of John Strange Winter, was a British novelist. She was founding president of the Writers' Club in 1892, and president of the Society of Women Journalists in 1901 to 1903.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jack Churchill (1880–1947)", "text": "Jack Churchill (1880–1947)\n\nMajor John Strange Spencer-Churchill (4 February 1880 – 23 February 1947), known as Jack Churchill, was the younger son of Lord Randolph Churchill and his wife Jennie, and the brother of former Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Sir Winston Churchill.<ref name=\"Roberts2007\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury", "text": "John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury\n\nJohn Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, 1st Earl of Waterford, 7th Baron Talbot, KG (c. 138717 July 1453), known as \"Old Talbot\", was an English nobleman and a noted military commander during the Hundred Years' War. He was the most renowned in England and most feared in France of the English captains in the last stages of the conflict. Known as a tough, cruel, and quarrelsome man, Talbot distinguished himself militarily in a time of decline for the English. Called the \"English Achilles\" and the \"Terror of the French\", he is lavishly praised in the plays of Shakespeare. The manner of his death, leading an ill-advised charge against field artillery, has come to symbolize the passing of the age of chivalry. He also held the subsidiary titles of 10th Baron Strange of Blackmere and 6th Baron Furnivall \"jure uxoris\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Glenn Strange", "text": "Glenn Strange\n\nGeorge Glenn Strange (August 16, 1899 – September 20, 1973) was an American actor who mostly appeared in Western films and was billed as Glenn Strange. He is best remembered for playing Frankenstein's monster in three Universal films during the 1940s and for his role as Sam Noonan, the bartender on CBS's \"Gunsmoke\" television series.", "score": null }, { "id": "7353421", "title": "John Strange (Wisconsin politician)", "text": " Strange died unexpectedly on May 28, 1923 in Neenah, Wisconsin when he dropped dead while giving a speech at a Rotary dinner. He is interred at Oak Hill Cemetery, Neenah, Wisconsin.", "score": "1.5801995" }, { "id": "13085369", "title": "John Strange (Upper Canada politician)", "text": " John Strange (September 2, 1788 &ndash; October 14, 1840) was a merchant and political figure in Upper Canada. He was born in East Kilbride, Scotland in 1788 and emigrated with several siblings around 1805. He served during the War of 1812 as a volunteer in the Canadian Militia, being a Lieutenant of the first Regiment of the Royal Lanarkshire Light Infantry Militia. He was present at the Battle of Lundy's Lane and at Fort Erie. At the close of the war, John settled in Kingston and became Major in the First Regiment of the Frontenac Militia. In 1818, he married Mary McGill in Albany, New York (sister of his brother Maxwell's wife Elizabeth). John built a limestone house in Kingston between 1824 and 1826 that served as the family home at the site of ", "score": "1.5483131" }, { "id": "11447257", "title": "John Strange (English politician)", "text": " He was born to another John Strange of Fleet Street, London and his second wife, Mary Plaistowe. He studied Law at the Middle Temple on 11 July 1712 before starting a pupillage at the chambers of Charles Salkeld, who trained (among others) Lord Hardwicke. He was called to the Bar on 27 October 1718. In 1735 he bought the lease of Leyton Grange House in Leyton, then in Essex. In 1725 he represented Lord Macclesfield at his impeachment, and he was made a King's Counsel on 9 February 1736. The same year, he became a Bencher of Middle Temple. He was appointed Solicitor General for England and ", "score": "1.5458136" }, { "id": "4561437", "title": "John Strange (diplomat)", "text": " a Curious Giant's Causeway newly discovered in the Euganean Hills, near Padua\" (1775, lxv. 4, 418); an Italian version appeared at Milan, 1778, 4to; and \"An Account of the Tides in the Adriatic\" (vol. lxvii.). Several of his papers were also printed in the Opuscoli scelti sulle scienze (1778, &c.); and his geological papers appeared in Weber's Mineralogische Beschreibungen (Berne, 1792). Meanwhile, in November 1773 he was appointed British resident at Venice, where his official duties left leisure for the pursuit of his antiquarian studies. He resigned his diplomatic post in 1788, and settled at Ridge, near Barnet. But he paid several further visits to Italy in connection with the transportation of ", "score": "1.5426908" }, { "id": "4561434", "title": "John Strange (diplomat)", "text": " He was the second and only surviving son of Sir John Strange, by his wife Susan, eldest daughter of Edward Strong of Greenwich, was born at Barnet in 1732, and educated privately and at Clare Hall, Cambridge (he was admitted a fellow-commoner 11 Oct. 1753), whence he graduated B.A. in 1753, and M.A. in 1755. On his father's death he saw through the press the volume of Reports published in 1755. He was left very well off, and upon leaving Cambridge travelled extensively in the south of France and Italy. Developing a taste for science and archaeology, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society on 10 April, and admitted to the ", "score": "1.5313044" }, { "id": "7353418", "title": "John Strange (Wisconsin politician)", "text": " John Strange (June 27, 1852 &ndash; May 28, 1923) was an American politician and businessman and served as the 21st Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin.", "score": "1.5287161" }, { "id": "11447256", "title": "John Strange (English politician)", "text": " Sir John Strange (1696 – 18 May 1754) was a British politician and judge.", "score": "1.5279688" }, { "id": "4561436", "title": "John Strange (diplomat)", "text": " vi.), a district then little known to Western Europe. In addition to further communications to the Archæologia, Strange contributed a number of papers to the Philosophical Transactions, the most important being \"An Account of the Origin of Natural Paper found near Cortona in Tuscany\" (vol. lix.). This was translated into Italian, and considerably expanded in \"Lettera sopra l'origine della carta naturale di Cortona\" (Pisa, 1764, and again, enlarged, 1765); \"An Account of some Specimens of Sponges from Italy\" (March 1770, lx. 177, with several plates from his drawings). This appeared in Italian as \"Lettera del Signor Giovanni Strange, contenente la descrizione di alcune spugne\" (ap. Olivi, Zoologica Adriatica, 1792, 4to); \"An Account ", "score": "1.5145402" }, { "id": "29518978", "title": "List of Marvel 1602 characters", "text": " protecting the realm from threats both inside and out, Walsingham himself got into debt employing agents who have been described as \"spies on a shoestring\" budget. ; Doctor Stephen Strange - The Queen's physician who is also an alchemist and magician. Strange's interests and skills mirror some of those of the Queen's contemporary John Dee, a mathematician, astrologer, and geographer who was also interested in conjuring. Strange works from his mansion in the then-village of Greenwich outside London (a play on the \"real\" Doctor Strange's mansion in Greenwich Village, New York City). ; Peter Parquagh - Sir Nicholas' apprentice. He is ", "score": "1.5107763" }, { "id": "14606275", "title": "Johnny Strange", "text": " Johnny Strange began his career as an amateur escapologist after studying the works of Harry Houdini. He began picking handcuffs and escaping from straight jackets, padlocks and chains; this led to him becoming fascinated with Victorian sideshows and freak shows. He has since studied various skills such as juggling running chainsaws, target whip cracking, lifting weights attached to his ear piercings, sharpshooting and prop manipulation as well as classic sideshow and fakir stunts such as sword swallowing, the human blockhead, walking across broken glass, fire eating and breathing, eating broken glass and the bed of nails. Other stunts and variations include swallowing a magnet then retrieving it by swallowing a sword, swallowing a 2000v glass neon tube, multiple chainsaw stunts and target whip cracking routines. Johnny Strange has been featured in publications such as Ripley's Believe It or Not! and Guinness World Records as well as appearing on many radio and TV programs.", "score": "1.5100359" }, { "id": "4692668", "title": "Peter Hooten", "text": " John Peter Hooten (born November 29, 1950) is an American actor. He is best known for playing the title character in the television film Dr. Strange (1978).", "score": "1.503274" }, { "id": "11447260", "title": "John Strange (English politician)", "text": " On 14 May 1722 he married Susannah Strong, eldest daughter of Edward Strong the Younger sculptor and mason of St Paul's Cathedral. They had two sons and nine daughters. This included John Strange.", "score": "1.5020517" }, { "id": "11447259", "title": "John Strange (English politician)", "text": " ill-health, and also limited his practice as a barrister to the Court of King's Bench. In 1750 Lord Hardwicke convinced him to become Master of the Rolls, and he took his position on 11 January. On 17 March he was made a Privy Councillor. He served as master of the Rolls for four years until his death on 18 May 1754. After his death, his son John Strange, who had inherited (and sold) Grange House, published his father's court reports. He was buried in the Rolls Chapel, as was his successor Sir Thomas Clarke. His epitaph is Here lies an honest lawyer, and that is Strange.", "score": "1.4985958" }, { "id": "30079653", "title": "Strange (surname)", "text": " English footballer ; Frederick Strange (–1854) English natural history collector, active until death in Australia. ; Frederick William Strange (1844–1897), English-born physician, surgeon and politician in Ontario, Canada ; Frederick William Strange (rower) (1853–1889), Englishman who promoted competitive outdoor sports in Japan ; Glenn Strange (1899–1973), American actor ; Graham Strange (born 1968), Bermudian cricketer ; Helena Pedersdatter Strange (c. 1200–1255), queen consort of Sweden, spouse of King Canute II ; Ian Strange (1934–2018), British-born Falkland Islands writer and naturalist ; Jason Strange (born 1973), Welsh rugby union player ; John Strange (disambiguation), a list of people named John or Johnny ; Llewellyn Strange (1892–1973), a police chief and politician in Newfoundland ", "score": "1.4854883" }, { "id": "4561435", "title": "John Strange (diplomat)", "text": " Society on 24 April 1766. Shortly afterwards he was elected F.S.A., and as the result of a summer spent in South Wales in 1768, he contributed to the first number of the Archæologia \"An Account of Roman Remains in and near the City of Brecknock\". In 1771 he made an archaeological tour in the north of Italy. At Padua he formed the acquaintance of the Alberto Fortis, who had recently returned from an exploration of Zara, Spalato, and other towns upon the Dalmatian coast, and from information supplied by him he made several communications to the Society of Antiquaries upon the Roman inscriptions and antiquities of Dalmatia and Istria (see Archæologia, iii. v. ", "score": "1.4652417" } ]
What is Walter de la Pole's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Walter de la Pole
1,074,965
91
[ { "id": "30453669", "title": "Walter de la Pole", "text": " Sir Walter de la Pole (November 1371 – 1434), of Dernford in Sawston, Cambridgeshire, was an English politician.", "score": "1.6701202" }, { "id": "30453671", "title": "Walter de la Pole", "text": " He was a Member (MP) of the Parliament of England for Cambridgeshire in 1411, November 1414, 1417, May 1421, 1422, 1423 and 1427.", "score": "1.6256573" }, { "id": "30453670", "title": "Walter de la Pole", "text": " Walter was the son and heir of the MP Sir Edmund de la Pole and his second wife.", "score": "1.5717256" }, { "id": "13211696", "title": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)", "text": " guardian; much of his property passed to the brothers after his heir Alicia died in 1340 with no descendants. Fryde states that neither his father's name nor his father's occupation are accurately known. proposes that Wiliam's father was Sir William de la Pole of Powysland (d.1305), fourth son of Sir Griffin de la Pole, suggests that the brothers' parents may have been Sir Lewis (Llywelyn) de la Pole (d.1294) and his wife Sibilla, and their grandfather Sir Griffin de la Pole of London. Circumstantial evidence for a more knightly and less mercantile background is provided by the brothers' tutelage under important merchants and subsequent rapid rise, which included close links to the crown.", "score": "1.5716931" }, { "id": "13211692", "title": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)", "text": " Sir William de la Pole (died 21 June 1366) was a wealthy wool merchant from Kingston upon Hull in Yorkshire, England, who became a royal moneylender and briefly served as Chief Baron of the Exchequer. He founded the de la Pole family, Earls of Lincoln, Earls of Suffolk and Dukes of Suffolk, which by his mercantile and financial prowess he raised from relative obscurity to one of the primary families of the realm in a single generation. At the end of the 14th century he was described in the 'Chronicle of Melsa' as \"second to no other merchant of England\" (nulli Angligenae mercatori postea secundus fuit). He was the founder of the Charterhouse Monastery, Kingston upon Hull.", "score": "1.560502" }, { "id": null, "title": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)", "text": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)\n\nSir William de la Pole (died 21 June 1366) was a wealthy wool merchant from Kingston upon Hull in Yorkshire, England, who became a royal moneylender and briefly served as Chief Baron of the Exchequer. He founded the \"de la Pole\" family, Earls of Lincoln, Earls of Suffolk and Dukes of Suffolk, which by his mercantile and financial prowess he raised from relative obscurity to one of the primary families of the realm in a single generation. At the end of the 14th century he was described in the 'Chronicle of Melsa' as \"second to no other merchant of England\" (\"nulli Angligenae mercatori postea secundus fuit\"). He was the founder of the Charterhouse Monastery, Kingston upon Hull.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk", "text": "William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk\n\nWilliam de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk, (16 October 1396 – 2 May 1450), nicknamed Jackanapes, was an English magnate, statesman, and military commander during the Hundred Years' War. He became a favourite of the weak king Henry VI of England, and consequently a leading figure in the English government where he became associated with many of the royal government's failures of the time, particularly on the war in France. Suffolk also appears prominently in Shakespeare's \"Henry VI\", parts 1 and 2.\n\nHe fought in the Hundred Years' War and participated in campaigns of Henry V, and then continued to serve in France for King Henry VI. He was one of the English commanders at the failed Siege of Orléans. He favoured a diplomatic rather than military solution to the deteriorating situation in France, a stance which would later resonate well with King Henry VI.\n\nSuffolk became a dominant figure in the government, and was at the forefront of the main policies conducted during the period. He played a central role in organizing the Treaty of Tours (1444), and arranged the king's marriage to Margaret of Anjou. At the end of Suffolk's political career, he was accused of maladministration by many and forced into exile. At sea on his way out, he was caught by an angry mob, subjected to a mock trial, and beheaded.\n\nHis estates were forfeited to the crown but later restored to his only son, John. His political successor was the Duke of Somerset.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Walter de la Pole", "text": "Walter de la Pole\n\nSir Walter de la Pole (November 1371 – 1434), of Dernford in Sawston, Cambridgeshire, was an English politician.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk", "text": "John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk\n\nJohn de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk, KG (27 September 1442 – 14–21 May 1492), was a major magnate in 15th-century England. He was the son of William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk, and Alice Chaucer, the daughter of Thomas Chaucer (thus making John the great-grandson of the poet Geoffrey Chaucer). His youth was blighted, in 1450, by the political fall and subsequent murder of his father, who had been a favourite of the king, Henry VI, but was increasingly distrusted by the rest of the nobility. Although the first duke of Suffolk had made himself rich through trade and – particularly – royal grants, this source of income dried up on his death, so John de la Pole was among the poorest of English dukes on his accession to the title in 1463. This was a circumstance which John felt acutely; on more than one occasion, he refused to come to London due to his impoverishment being such that he could not afford the costs of maintaining a retinue.\n\nAs a youth, John de la Pole married twice; his first marriage was annulled, but his second marriage, to Elizabeth of York, made him the brother-in-law of two kings, Edward IV and Richard III. It brought him eleven children, the eldest of whom, John, would eventually be named heir to Richard III in 1484 and die in battle in the Yorkist cause. John de la Pole, though, generally managed to steer clear of involvement in the tumultuous events of the Wars of the Roses. Although he was politically aligned to the House of York by virtue of his marriage, he avoided participating in the battles of the 1450s, not taking up arms until Edward IV had claimed the throne. De la Pole appears to have spent much of this period, in fact, feuding with his East Anglian neighbours, the Paston family over an inheritance – even interfering in parliamentary elections, for example, in an attempt to gain the upper hand.\n\nSuffolk did not receive major grants from Edward IV either, although de la Pole continued to support him in arms when necessary, and when Edward lost his throne in 1470, Suffolk was not trusted by the new Lancastrian regime. Suffolk fought for Edward at the battles of Barnet and Tewkesbury but did not join Edward's inner circle during his second reign. He seems to have acquiesced in the accession of Richard III in 1483, but, unlike his son, was not present for Richard III's defeat at the Battle of Bosworth two years later. Henry VII does not seem to have held Suffolk's son's treason against the duke, and even seems to have protected him from the former's attainder. John de la Pole died in 1492 and was buried at Wingfield Church, Suffolk.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Edward Tudor-Pole", "text": "Edward Tudor-Pole\n\nEdward Felix Tudor-Pole (also known as Edward Tenpole, though he introduced himself as \"Ed\" on several episodes of \"The Crystal Maze\"; born 6 December 1955) is an English musician, television presenter and actor.\n\nOriginally gaining fame in the United Kingdom in the late 1970s as the lead singer of the punk rock band Tenpole Tudor, Tudor-Pole began an acting career following the group's split in 1982. Outside of his music career Tudor-Pole is probably best known in the UK as the presenter of the game show \"The Crystal Maze\" from 1993 to 1995 and in the US for his roles as Enaros in the 1997 fantasy film \"Kull the Conqueror\" and Mr Borgin in the Harry Potter film series.", "score": null }, { "id": "31511770", "title": "Sir John de la Pole, 6th Baronet", "text": " to the national defence against the dangers of a threatened invasion. He rebuilt the dilapidated mansion of his forefathers and delighted to reside in the place of his nativity where with manners frank and courteous and sincere he received his friends with liberal hospitality, and relieved the indigent with unbounded charity. In the relations of private and domestic life he discharged the duties and exemplified the character of a faithful and tender husband the affectionate parent, the zealous friend and benevolent neighbour, the useful citizen and the pious Christian. A marble mural monument in his memory exists in Shute Church, signed \"P.Rouw sculp. London\", by Peter Rouw. It consists of an inscribed tablet flanked on either side by a fasces supporting an entablature on top of which, above his coat of arms, is a classical oil-lamp with flame: ", "score": "1.5596263" }, { "id": "11693868", "title": "Michael de la Pole, 1st Earl of Suffolk", "text": " Michael de la Pole, 1st Earl of Suffolk, 1st Baron de la Pole, (c. 1330 – 5 September 1389) of Wingfield Castle in Suffolk, was an English financier and Lord Chancellor of England. His contemporary Froissart portrays de la Pole as a devious and ineffectual counsellor who dissuaded King Richard II from pursuing a certain victory against French and Scottish forces in Cumberland and fomented undue suspicion of that king's uncle John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster.", "score": "1.5581806" }, { "id": "13211693", "title": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)", "text": " William de la Pole is generally held to be the second eldest of three brothers; he had an elder brother and associate Richard de la Pole (died 1345) who was also a merchant, and a younger brother, John. His date of birth has been estimated from 1290 to 1295 or possibly earlier. There is much confusion and differing opinion on William's parentage, though a father William, of either Ravenser or Hull, is referred to in a number of sources. Historical research may have been muddled by the presence of more than one William de la Pole in Hull in the first half of the 14th century, but a younger one was the son of ", "score": "1.554347" }, { "id": "31511758", "title": "Sir John de la Pole, 6th Baronet", "text": " He was educated at Blundell's School in Tiverton and appointed High Sheriff of Devon for 1782. He represented the constituency of West Looe in Parliament from 1790 to 1796. He was listed as hostile to the repeal of the Test Act in 1791.", "score": "1.5527264" }, { "id": "13211706", "title": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)", "text": "; 2nd edition, 1886 ; , via wikisource ; 2nd edition, 1886 ; , via wikisource ; 2nd edition, 1886 ; , via wikisource ", "score": "1.5366951" }, { "id": "31511756", "title": "Sir John de la Pole, 6th Baronet", "text": " Sir John William de la Pole, 6th Baronet (26 June 1757 – 30 November 1799) of Shute in the parish of Colyton, Devon, was a Member of Parliament for the rotten borough of West Looe. In 1791 he published, under the title Collections Towards a Description of the County of Devon, the researches on the history and genealogy of Devonshire made by his ancestor the antiquary Sir William Pole (d.1635), which he did not publish in his lifetime and which were enlarged by his son Sir John Pole, 1st Baronet, but which were partly destroyed during the Civil War at Colcombe Castle.", "score": "1.5275161" }, { "id": "12234202", "title": "Edmund de la Pole (Captain of Calais)", "text": " Sir Edmund de la Pole (died 1419) was an English knight and Captain of Calais. He was the second son of Sir William de la Pole of Hull and younger brother of Michael de la Pole, 1st Earl of Suffolk. He was Captain of Calais castle and controller of the town from 1384 to 1388. He served as High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire for 1389 and a JP from 1390. He was knight of the shire (MP) for Buckinghamshire in 1376 and 1383 and Cambridgeshire in 1395. By his first wife Elizabeth de Haudlo, daughter of Richard de Haudlo and sister of Edmund de Haudlo of Boarstall, Buckinghamshire, and of Hadlow, Kent, he had Elizabeth de la Pole (14 July 1362 – 14 December 1403), who married Sir Ingram Bruyn of South Ockendon, Essex (Titchfield, Hampshire, 6 December 1353 – 12 August 1400, buried South Ockendon, Essex), grandson of Maurice le Brun, 1st Baron Brun. His second wife was Maud, daughter of John Lovett, with whom he had a son, Walter, who became Constable of Ireland. He died on 3 August 1419 at his seat at Boarstall, Buckinghamshire.", "score": "1.5163064" }, { "id": "31511757", "title": "Sir John de la Pole, 6th Baronet", "text": " He was born on 26 June 1757, the son of Sir John Pole, 5th Baronet (c.1733–1760) by his first wife Elizabeth Mills (d.1758), daughter and co-heiress of John Mills, a banker and planter of St. Kitts, West Indies and Woodford, Essex. Thus he lost both his parents when a small infant, his mother when he was aged 1 and his 27-year-old father at the age of 3. He assumed the surname of de la Pole by royal sign manual.", "score": "1.5142444" }, { "id": "31511769", "title": "Sir John de la Pole, 6th Baronet", "text": "Sacred to the memory of Sir John William de la Pole Baronet of Shute House in the county of Devon, Lieut. Colonel of the Royal East Devon Cavalry, who departed this life on the 30th November 1799 in the 42nd year of his age. He was endowed with brilliant and vigorous talents which were cultivated with great care and improvement in the colleges of Winton and Corpus Christi in Oxon. Impressed with a deep sense of loyalty for his sovereign and an ardent attachment to the constitution of his country he strictly maintained justice and peace and good order within the sphere of his influence and authority, in emulation of his great ancestor who in reward of his military services obtained an hereditary title for his family from the hands of King Charles the First. He excited his ", "score": "1.4917355" }, { "id": "1340599", "title": "William de la Pole, 1st Duke of Suffolk", "text": " William de la Pole was born in Cotton, Suffolk, the second son of Michael de la Pole, 2nd Earl of Suffolk by his wife Katherine de Stafford, daughter of Hugh de Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford, KG, and Philippa de Beauchamp. Almost continually engaged in the wars in France, he was seriously wounded during the Siege of Harfleur (1415), where his father died from dysentery. Later that year his older brother Michael, 3rd Earl of Suffolk, was killed at the Battle of Agincourt, and William succeeded as 4th Earl. He served in all the later French campaigns of the reign of Henry V, and in spite ", "score": "1.4708611" }, { "id": "13211701", "title": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)", "text": " The same year De la Pole achieved the rank of Knight Banneret, and on 26 September 1339 he was made Baron of the Exchequer. In 1340 William and Richard de la Pole, as well as Sir John de Pulteney, were arrested. He was charged in relation to the failure of the English Wool Company, and De la Pole was incarcerated at Devizes Castle and his lands seized; the charge was annulled in 1344. Between 1343 and 1345 he returned to organising the financing of the king's wars through the foundation of a new company. During a period of peace in the 1350s, the king renewed the wool smuggling ", "score": "1.4685023" }, { "id": "1096290", "title": "Pole baronets", "text": " of de-la-Pole, which his successor discontinued. The eighth Baronet assumed in 1838 the surname of Reeve-de-la-Pole but later discontinued it. The tenth Baronet resumed the use of the surname of de-la-Pole. The eleventh Baronet was High Sheriff of Devon in 1917. The twelfth Baronet, who succeeded his kinsman in 1926, was the son of Lieutenant-General Sir Reginald Pole-Carew, eldest son of William Henry Pole-Carew, third son of the Right Honourable Reginald Pole-Carew, Member of Parliament for Lostwithiel (who assumed the additional surname of Carew), elder son of Reginald Pole, son of Reverend Carolus Pole, third son of the third Baronet, by his wife Sarah Rashleigh, daughter of Jonathan Rashleigh (1642–1702), of Menabilly, Cornwall, Sheriff of ", "score": "1.4680917" }, { "id": "13211694", "title": "William de la Pole (Chief Baron of the Exchequer)", "text": " brother Richard, therefore William's nephew. found no documentary evidence for a man named William de la Pole in either Hull or Ravenser prior to Richard and William, and on the two brothers he stated: \"Neither their parentage nor place of origin seem to have been revealed by the brothers and these remain unsolved mysteries.\" Several Victorian era sources make the statement that his father was called William de la Pole, as do the 17th century historians William Dugdale and William Camden. notes that the description of the father's status is subject to contradiction by historians; in some sources he is described as a merchant, in others as a knight. A link to a William ", "score": "1.4671392" }, { "id": "31511760", "title": "Sir John de la Pole, 6th Baronet", "text": " Sir John Carew-Pole of Antony House in Cornwall, descended from Carolus Pole, the younger brother of the 4th Baronet. In 1926 to meet the heavy death duties the house was let and its contents were sold at auction. It became a girls' school between 1933 and 1974, and was then turned together with its stables and wings into eight separate apartments. The main block, converted into two vertically divided residences is in 2012 again a single residence. old Shute House was retained by Sir John Carew-Pole until 1955 when he gave it to the National Trust on the proviso that members of his wider family would remain tenants, which they did until 2008.", "score": "1.4607053" }, { "id": "12339758", "title": "John de la Pole, 1st Earl of Lincoln", "text": " John de la Pole, 1st Earl of Lincoln (c. 1460 – 16 June 1487) was a leading figure in the Yorkist aristocracy during the Wars of the Roses. After the death of his uncle Richard III, de la Pole was reconciled with the new Tudor regime, but two years later he organised a major Yorkist rebellion. He sought to place Lambert Simnel on the throne, claiming that Simnel was in fact his cousin Edward, Earl of Warwick. Whether or not de la Pole intended to take the throne for himself if he were successful is not known, but has been widely suspected by historians. He was defeated and killed at the Battle of Stoke in 1487.", "score": "1.4596636" } ]
What is Kyaw Swe's occupation?
[ "film director", "movie director", "director", "motion picture director", "actor", "actress", "actors", "actresses" ]
occupation
Kyaw Swe (actor)
4,895,544
97
[ { "id": "3259638", "title": "Kyaw Swe (politician)", "text": " Kyaw Swe was born in Myaing, Magway Region, Myanmar on 1 December 1960. He graduated with B.A (Myanmar). His former work is School teacher.", "score": "1.9203317" }, { "id": "3259637", "title": "Kyaw Swe (politician)", "text": " Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ; born 1 December 1979) is a Burmese politician who currently serves as a House of Nationalities member of parliament for Magway Region No. 11 constituency. He is a member of the National League for Democracy.", "score": "1.9011418" }, { "id": "13490102", "title": "Kyaw Swe (minister)", "text": " Kyaw Swe was born on 27 November 1959 to Mya Soe and Daw Kyi in Thepyintaw, Kyaukpadaung Township, Mandalay Division (now Mandalay Region, Myanmar).", "score": "1.8390934" }, { "id": "3259639", "title": "Kyaw Swe (politician)", "text": " He is a member of the National League for Democracy Party politician. In the 2015 Myanmar general election, he was elected as Amyotha Hluttaw representative from Magway Region No. 11 parliamentary constituency.", "score": "1.8347538" }, { "id": "2548609", "title": "Kyaw Tint Swe", "text": " Kyaw Tint Swe joined the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1968 and served in various positions in the embassies of Myanmar in Israel, Malaysia, Germany, Thailand and Japan. From 1990 to 1993, and from 1997 to 2001, he served as Secretary of Myanmar’s National Commission for Environmental Affairs. He also served as Chairman of the Senior Officials for the Environment for the Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN), From 2001 to 2010, he served as the Ambassador of Myanmar to the United Nations. He also served as Vice-Chairman of the Myanmar National Human Rights Commission from 2011 to 2013. In 2013, he worked closely with Aung San Suu Kyi on the Letpadaung Copper Mine Investigation Commission.", "score": "1.7617055" }, { "id": null, "title": "Kyaw Swe (politician)", "text": "Kyaw Swe (politician)\n\nKyaw Swe (; born 1 December 1979) is a Burmese politician who currently serves as a House of Nationalities member of parliament for Magway Region No. 11 constituency. He is a member of the National League for Democracy.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kyaw Tint Swe", "text": "Kyaw Tint Swe\n\nKyaw Tint Swe (; born 19 March 1945) is a Burmese politician and former Minister for the Office of the State Counsellor of Myanmar.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Myint Swe (writer)", "text": "Myint Swe (writer)\n\nMyint Swe (, ; 25 July 1912 – 21 September 1978) was a Burmese physician and writer. He is known for his first book and memoir, \"The Japanese Era Rangoon General Hospital\", which chronicles the events at the only hospital in Yangon (Rangoon) open to non-Japanese during the Japanese occupation of Burma. It was a bestseller, and won the Burma National Literature Award, 2nd Prize for 1967. He published three more books though none achieved the first book's success.\n\nPrior to his literary career, the Mandalay-born Myint Swe had led a private practice in Yangon since 1952. He served as a principal physician with the title of \"Mahabhisaka\" at the Sixth Buddhist Council (1954–56), and regularly volunteered at the main hospital for monks until 1976. For his services to the country, Myint Swe was awarded the title of Wunna Kyawhtin, and the Order of Independence (Third Class) by the Burmese government.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kyaw Swe (actor)", "text": "Kyaw Swe (actor)\n\nKyaw Swe (, ; 10 February 1924 – 15 August 1982) was a Burmese actor and film director.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kyaw Swe (minister)", "text": "Kyaw Swe (minister)\n\nLt. General Kyaw Swe (, ) is the former Minister of Home Affairs of Myanmar, in office from 2016 to 2020. Previously, he served as Commander of South-west Command in Pathein, Ayeyarwady Region.", "score": null }, { "id": "29312437", "title": "Kyaw Swe (actor)", "text": " Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ, ; 10 February 1924 – 15 August 1982) was a Burmese actor and film director.", "score": "1.7532425" }, { "id": "2548608", "title": "Kyaw Tint Swe", "text": " Kyaw Tint Swe (ကျော်တင့်ဆွေ; born 19 March 1945 ) is a Burmese politician and former Minister for the Office of the State Counsellor of Myanmar.", "score": "1.7518752" }, { "id": "29312438", "title": "Kyaw Swe (actor)", "text": " Kyaw Swe was born Maw Ni in 1924 in Yangon to U Ba Nit and Daw Ohn Sein. He attended the St. John's High School, and during World War II he was chief of law in Bago. He joined BDA during the war. He entered into film around 1945. He became a film actor, changing his name to Kyaw Swe, and appeared in the film Saw Ya San Sha, a silent film, directed by Ba Shin. It was produced by the British-Burma Film company (later, \"Nyunt Myanmar\" ). He moved to the A-One Film Company and he starred in the films of \"Bogyoke\", \"Ta Thwe Ta Mya\", and \"Ahtauttaw\" and \"Chit Ye Baw\" directed by Chin Sein (Shwe Nyar Maung). He also starred in \"Bo Aung Din\" and \"Thar Bo Aung Din\" directed by ", "score": "1.7291453" }, { "id": "13490101", "title": "Kyaw Swe (minister)", "text": " Lt. General Kyaw Swe (ကျော်ဆွေ, ) is the former Minister of Home Affairs of Myanmar, in office from 2016 to 2020. Previously, he served as Commander of South-west Command in Pathein, Ayeyarwady Region.", "score": "1.7278459" }, { "id": "8712216", "title": "Hla Myint Swe (artist)", "text": " Hla Myint Swe (လှမြင့်ဆွေ ; born 1948) is an artist, photographer and author from Myanmar. He was born in Bamaw, Kachin State, Myanmar in 1948. He attended the Defence Services Academy, Pyin Oo Lwin and after graduating served in various positions as an army officer. As of 2010, he was head of the Public Relations and Information Department of the Yangon City Development Committee.", "score": "1.7145084" }, { "id": "9351178", "title": "Kyaw Kyaw", "text": " He was born on 7 July 1950 in Mrauk U, Rakhine State, Burma(Myanmar). He graduated with B.A(L.L.B) from Yangon University. His previous job is a lawyer.", "score": "1.6928955" }, { "id": "2262020", "title": "Nanda Kyaw Swa", "text": " Nanda Kyaw Swa (နန္ဒကျော်စွာ) was the Deputy Speaker of the Pyithu Hluttaw, the lower house of Burma's parliament, the Pyidaungsu Hluttaw. He was elected to the post from 31 January 2011 to 29 January 2016. He was also chair of the Rights Committee in the Lower House (2011–16). His father Tin Pe, is a retired Brigadier General.", "score": "1.692842" }, { "id": "11186565", "title": "Hla Swe", "text": " Hla Swe joined the Myanmar Army in 1978 and most of his 25 years of service was spent fighting armed ethnic groups in border areas. In 2003, he took up an administrative role for the State Peace and Development Council military government in Gangaw Township, Magwe Region. In 2006, he was retired as a lieutenant colonel in Myanmar Army and took up the post of director of Myanmar Radio and Television.", "score": "1.6857879" }, { "id": "6335185", "title": "Myint Swe (born 1965)", "text": " Myint Swe (born 18 March 1965) is a Burmese politician and military officer who currently serves as a military representative for Amyotha Hluttaw. He is a member of Amyotha Hluttaw Women and Children's Rights Committee.", "score": "1.683677" }, { "id": "14002650", "title": "Kyaw Soe", "text": " Kyaw Soe (ကျော်စိုး; born on 16 October 1944 ) is a former Deputy Minister for Science and Technology, after his appointment on 15 November 2004. He was previously the Director General of Department of Technical and Vocational Education.", "score": "1.6801727" }, { "id": "2262196", "title": "Kyaw Swa Khaing", "text": " Kyaw Swa Khaing (ကျော်စွာခိုင်, variously spelt Kyaw Swar Khaing, Kyaw Swar Khine) was the Minister of the President's Office of Myanmar (Burma) and a former Deputy Minister for Industry-2. He held the rank of Major General before resigning his military post to compete in the 2010 Burmese general election.", "score": "1.6799576" }, { "id": "9033707", "title": "Soe Kyaw Kyaw", "text": " Soe Kyaw Kyaw (စိုးကျော်ကျော်; born 16 February 1991) is a footballer from Burma, and a striker for the Myanmar national football team and Ayeyawady United. He currently plays for Ayeyawady United in Myanmar National League.", "score": "1.6731079" }, { "id": "29312440", "title": "Kyaw Swe (actor)", "text": "Saw Ya San Sha ; Bogyoke ; Ta Thwe Ta Mya ; Ahtauktaw ; Chit Ye Baw ; Son Bo Aung Din ; The Hsaung Hayman ; Phyay Yort Khway ; Min aung Min Naung ; Hpuza Nit Khine ; Pale Myetyay ; Chit Myitta ; Ma chu tar the ; the myat tar lane ; Sane ; Mwe Mwe chin Che Myin ; Thamudaya Thanyawzin (feat his own daughter) ; Poan Pamar ; Ta Char Gabar Ka Chitthu Ye Sein-ta-yit Mya-ta-yit ิิิ่*Kya-nor Ne Ko Ba Kyaw", "score": "1.6726155" }, { "id": "3462745", "title": "Kyaw Kyaw Win", "text": " Kyaw Kyaw Win born on 10 December 1978 in Pauktaw Township, Rakhine State, Myanmar. He graduated with B.A (L.L.B) from distance education at Sittwe University. He worked Senior lawyer in the Maungdaw Township.", "score": "1.6543381" }, { "id": "26056617", "title": "Kyaw Tin", "text": " Kyaw Tin was born on 31 October 1955 in Wuntho of Sagaing Division. He graduated with a masters degree with Mathematics from Yangon University and earned his post-graduate diploma in environmental management from Dresden University of Technology in Germany.", "score": "1.6522865" } ]
What is Paul Caillaud's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Paul Caillaud
2,562,576
35
[ { "id": "1437914", "title": "Christian Paul (politician)", "text": "Deputy for Nièvre in the National Assembly, 3rd constituency from 1997 until its abolition in 2012, then the 2nd, which took over most of the 3rds territory from 2012 to 2017. He was defeated in the 2nd round of the 2017 election by REM's Patrice Perrot. ; President of the Parc Régional du Morvan in Morvan, France. ", "score": "1.4979748" }, { "id": "28703019", "title": "Gilles Saint-Paul", "text": " Gilles Saint-Paul (born 8 February 1963) is a French economist at the Toulouse 1 University Social Sciences. He also is a scientific advisor to the Economic Studies Directorate at the French Ministry of the Environment. His main interests include the political economy of unemployment and how information technology affects wage inequality.", "score": "1.4883556" }, { "id": "10644653", "title": "Pierre Paul-Hus", "text": " Paul-Hus is a military officer (Reserve) and a graduate of the Canadian Army Command and Staff College in Kingston, Ontario and the Ecole Militaire in Paris, where he also taught. In 1987, when Paul-Hus graduated from high school, he enlisted and joined the Régiment de la Chaudière, reserve unit of the Canadian Armed Forces. During the 22 years of his military service, he has conducted two operational missions: one in Goose Bay, Labrador, under the aegis of NATO, and the second in Cyprus to the United Nations. He retired in 2009 at the rank of lieutenant-colonel.", "score": "1.4798856" }, { "id": "25266969", "title": "Paul P.", "text": " Paul P. (born 1977) is a Canadian artist known primarily for his work as an oil painter. He explores topics including identity, beauty, gender and history.", "score": "1.4763622" }, { "id": "7154422", "title": "Paul Molac", "text": " Paul Molac (born 21 May 1962) is a French politician who has been serving as a member of the French National Assembly since the 2012 elections, representing Morbihan's 4th constituency. In the 2017 elections, he was one of only four deputies who were elected in the first round.", "score": "1.4676204" }, { "id": null, "title": "Paul Caillaud", "text": "Paul Caillaud\n\nPaul Caillaud (14 September 1917 in La Copechagnière – 15 August 2008) was a French pharmacist and politician. He represented the Independent Republicans (from 1962 to 1978) and the Union for French Democracy (from 1978 to 1981) in the National Assembly. He was the mayor of La Roche-sur-Yon from 1961 to 1977.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jacques Auxiette", "text": "Jacques Auxiette\n\nJacques Auxiette (3 December 1940 – 10 December 2021) was a French politician, and was the Regional Council President for the Pays de la Loire region in France. Auxiette was president between 2004 and 2015, and was re-elected to the office in the March 2010 council elections. He was a member of the Socialist Party.\n\nHe was one of the strongest opponents of the reunification of Loire-Atlantique to its historical region, Brittany.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Élisa Mercœur", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Deputies of the 6th National Assembly of the French Fifth ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment", "text": "2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment\n\nThe 2nd Foreign Parachute Regiment () is the only airborne regiment of the Foreign Legion in the French Army. It is one of the four infantry regiments of the 11th Parachute Brigade and part of the spearhead of the French rapid reaction force.\n\nSince the regiment's arrival from Algeria in 1967, it has been stationed at Camp Raffalli near the town of Calvi on the island of Corsica, south of mainland France. The regiment is also equipped with Véhicule de l'Avant Blindé (VAB).", "score": null }, { "id": "1618315", "title": "Paul Caica", "text": " Paul Caica (born 1957) is an Australian politician, representing the South Australian Branch of the Australian Labor Party. He represented the South Australian House of Assembly seat of Colton from the 2002 election until his retirement in 2018. He served in the state ministry from 2006 to 2013 under both Mike Rann and Jay Weatherill.", "score": "1.4644033" }, { "id": "31587954", "title": "Paul Meilhat", "text": " Paul Meilhat, born on 17th May 1982, is a French sailor and navigator. He was a high level 49er dinghy sailor with Olympic aspirations before moving into offshore sailing. From 2015 to the end of 2018 he was skipper of the IMOCA 60 - SMA and he competed in the Vendee Globe.", "score": "1.4633862" }, { "id": "26529514", "title": "Paul Néaoutyine", "text": " Paul Néaoutyine (born October 12, 1951 in Poindimié) is a New Caledonian politician. A Kanak of the Saint-Michel tribe, he has been president of the North Province of New Caledonia since 1999. He is a supporter of New Caledonian independence.", "score": "1.455955" }, { "id": "27286925", "title": "Michel Caillaud", "text": " Michel Caillaud (born 10 April 1957) is a French chess problemist. In 1993 Caillaud gained the title Grandmaster of the FIDE for Chess Compositions. He was with 36 years of age the youngest GM for Chess Compositions. He has 200.92 points in FIDE Albums. Caillaud twice won the World Chess Solving Championship: 1987 in Graz and 2000 in Pula. In 2002 Caillaud gained the title International Solving Grandmaster.", "score": "1.452282" }, { "id": "9544426", "title": "Romain Perraud", "text": " Romain Paul Jean-Michel Perraud (born 22 September 1997) is a French professional footballer who plays as a left-back for Premier League club Southampton. He previously played for Nice and Brest.", "score": "1.448695" }, { "id": "856437", "title": "Paul-Marie Coûteaux", "text": " Paul-Marie Coûteaux was born on 31 July 1956. He graduated from the École nationale d'administration. In a Gay nightclub, Couteaux discovered Gaullism.", "score": "1.4470627" }, { "id": "717575", "title": "Xavier Paul", "text": " Xavier Brooks Paul Jr. (born February 25, 1985) is an American former professional baseball outfielder. He played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the Los Angeles Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates, Cincinnati Reds and Arizona Diamondbacks.", "score": "1.4452137" }, { "id": "1680513", "title": "Paul Robichaud", "text": " Paul Robichaud (born May 6, 1964 in Tracadie, New Brunswick) is a politician in the province of New Brunswick, Canada. He studied at the Shippagan, New Brunswick campus of the University of Moncton. A member of the Progressive Conservative Party since 1985, he first ran for office in the 1995 but was defeated. He served from then until the next election as a Francophone organizer for the PC Party and ran again in 1999 when he was successful becoming the member of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick for Lamèque-Shippagan-Miscou. He was re-elected in 2003, 2006 and 2010. He joined the cabinet first as Minister of Fisheries & Aquaculture and then became minister of the enlarged Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Aquaculture. In a cabinet shuffle in 2001 he became Minister of Tourism & Parks a post he maintained until after the 2003 election when he took over the post of transportation. He left the cabinet in 2006 as the Liberals won that year's election and formed the government.", "score": "1.4441402" }, { "id": "1437913", "title": "Christian Paul (politician)", "text": " Christian Paul (born 23 March 1960 in Clermont-Ferrand, Puy-de-Dôme) is a French Socialist politician. He was one of the founding members of the Nouveau Parti Socialiste (New Socialist Party). Along with Arnaud Montebourg, he left this party to create a new movement within the Socialist party called \"Rénover Maintenant\" (\"Renew Now\").", "score": "1.4422934" }, { "id": "6749012", "title": "Paul Cairney", "text": " Paul Cairney (born 29 August 1987) is a Scottish footballer, who plays as a midfielder for Albion Rovers. Cairney has previously played for Queen's Park, Partick Thistle, Hibernian, Kilmarnock, Stranraer, Ayr United and Peterhead.", "score": "1.4378057" }, { "id": "28780449", "title": "Paul-Jean Hérault", "text": " Paul-Jean Hérault, pseudonym of Michel Rigaud (22 September 1934 – 26 October 2020), was a French writer and journalist.", "score": "1.4340279" }, { "id": "13518726", "title": "Paul Guay", "text": " Paul Francois Guay (born September 2, 1963, in Providence, Rhode Island) is a retired American professional ice hockey player. He is now an assistant coach for his high school's hockey team and is a captain in the Pawtucket Fire Department.", "score": "1.4326563" }, { "id": "32271771", "title": "Paul Courant", "text": " Paul N. Courant (born January 5, 1948) is an American economist who is an expert in public goods. His recent research focuses on the economics of universities, the economics of libraries and archives, and the impact of new information technologies on the scholarly publishing system.", "score": "1.4240656" }, { "id": "6841842", "title": "Roland Caillaux", "text": " Roland Raymond Ferdinand Caillaud (January 5, 1905 – December 3, 1977) – known professionally as Roland Caillaux, and sometimes using the pseudonym Roland Caipland – was a French actor and artist. He is known for acting in several French films in the 1920s and 1930s, and for producing and publishing homoerotic illustrations in the mid 20th century.", "score": "1.4200356" }, { "id": "5470680", "title": "Paul Amar", "text": " Paul Amar (born 11 January 1950) is a French journalist and television presenter.", "score": "1.4195133" } ]
What is Bridie O'Flaherty's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Bridie O'Flaherty
6,406,481
65
[ { "id": "11783946", "title": "Erin O'Flaherty", "text": " Erin O'Flaherty is originally from Florence, South Carolina. O'Flaherty came out as gay when she was 18. She attended the University of Central Florida, where she graduated with a bachelor's degree in accounting. During an interview at UCF, O'Flaherty's dream job was to be a cashier as a child. She loved balancing her grandmother's checkbook every Sunday and was fascinated with the transaction process. As her strength for rules, organization, and numbers increased with her entrepreneurial drive, her dream of owning or operating a small business was created. She currently lives in Chesterfield, Missouri as an owner of a boutique called Rachel's Grove. She enjoys world traveling, kayaking to see wildlife in Wekiwa Springs, and playing soccer. She also enjoys singing, which contributes to her talent in pageants. In 2018, a short documentary was made about her life story called \"Crowning Change\" that premiered to audiences at film festivals around the world.", "score": "1.6317952" }, { "id": "10371284", "title": "James A. O'Flaherty", "text": " James A. O'Flaherty (July 26, 1942 &ndash; July 20, 2001) was an Irish folk musician who lived in the Dallas, Texas area. He was born in Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland, moving to Texas at 29. He raised a family of ten children in Corinth, Texas, and died on July 20, 2001. The O'Flaherty Irish folk Music Retreat' was established in late 2004 in his name. The first retreat was featured in the Dallas Morning News. The retreat attendance was more than twice the expected attendance and supported by a guest performer from Ireland, Seamus Connolly. O'Flaherty is the father of film director and award-winning video game veteran Jerry O'Flaherty.", "score": "1.5903633" }, { "id": "9245592", "title": "Becky Flaherty", "text": " Rebecca \"Becky\" Flaherty (born 6 March 1998) is a professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for FA Women's National League North club Huddersfield Town Women and the Northern Ireland national team.", "score": "1.5772748" }, { "id": "1110848", "title": "Paddy O'Flaherty (Gaelic footballer)", "text": " Paddy O'Flaherty (born 1933) is an Irish retired Gaelic footballer who played for club side Beann Eadair and at inter-county level with the Dublin senior football team.", "score": "1.5577056" }, { "id": "25393012", "title": "Eva O'Flaherty", "text": " In 1910 O'Flaherty moved to Achill where she opened St Colman’s Knitting Industries. These were based in Dooagh and provided local employment for women of the area for fifty years. She also was part of the founding of Scoil Acla with Darrell Figgis, Colm O’Loughlainn and Anita McMahon. Unlike other founders of Scoil Acla, O'Flaherty stayed living on the island the rest of her life. Figgis was leader of the Irish Volunteers in Achill in April 1916. She was connected to other well known members of Ireland's nationalist movement. Family relations meant she knew Kathleen Clarke. By 1914 O'Flaherty was a member of Cumann na mBan with Louise Gavan Duffy. During the Easter Rising she was part of the group known as basket women carrying messages through the city by bicycle. She ", "score": "1.5449779" }, { "id": "18939628", "title": "Colm O'Flaherty", "text": "Colm O'Flaherty Colm O'Flaherty (born 1950) is an Irish retired Gaelic footballer who played for the Tipperary and Leitrim senior teams. Born in Cahir, County Tipperary, O'Flaherty first arrived on the inter-county scene at the age of fifteen when he first linked up with the Tipperary minor team before later joining the under-21 side. He joined the Tipperary senior panel during the 1970 championship. O'Flaherty subsequently became a regular member of the starting fifteen. At club level O'Flaherty is a one-time championship medallist with Fr. Griffin's. He played the majority of his club football with Cahir. O'Flaherty retired from inter-county", "score": "1.5777123" }, { "id": "14062981", "title": "Terry O'Flaherty", "text": "sculpture of Oscar Wilde and Eduard Wilde was unveiled in the city. Terry O'Flaherty Terry O'Flaherty is a former Mayor of Galway. A daughter of a previous Mayor, Bridie O'Flaherty, she was guest at the 2004 St. Patrick's Day Parade in Seattle.. She was first elected to Galway City Council in 1999 as a member of the Progressive Democrats. She resigned from the party on the 21st October 2008 over the issue of means testing medical cards for over 70s introduced in that years Budget and was re-elected as an Independent in 2009 in the Galway City East local electoral", "score": "1.5730572" }, { "id": "11031131", "title": "James A. O'Flaherty", "text": "video game veteran Jerry O'Flaherty. James A. O'Flaherty James A. O'Flaherty was an Irish folk musician who lived in the Dallas, Texas area. He was born in Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland, moving to Texas at 29. He raised a family of ten children in Corinth, Texas, and died on July 20, 2001. The 'O'Flaherty Irish folk Music Retreat' was established in late 2004 in his name. The first retreat was featured in the Dallas Morning News. The retreat attendance was more than twice the expected attendance and supported by a guest performer from Ireland, Seamus Connolly. O'Flaherty is the father", "score": "1.5677403" }, { "id": "18939629", "title": "Colm O'Flaherty", "text": "football following the conclusion of the 1980 championship. In retirement from playing O'Flaherty became involved in team management and coaching. He has served as a selector, coach and manager with the Tipperary minor, under-21 and senior teams in both Gaelic football and hurling. Colm O'Flaherty Colm O'Flaherty (born 1950) is an Irish retired Gaelic footballer who played for the Tipperary and Leitrim senior teams. Born in Cahir, County Tipperary, O'Flaherty first arrived on the inter-county scene at the age of fifteen when he first linked up with the Tipperary minor team before later joining the under-21 side. He joined the", "score": "1.5623477" }, { "id": "11031130", "title": "James A. O'Flaherty", "text": "James A. O'Flaherty James A. O'Flaherty was an Irish folk musician who lived in the Dallas, Texas area. He was born in Listowel, County Kerry, Ireland, moving to Texas at 29. He raised a family of ten children in Corinth, Texas, and died on July 20, 2001. The 'O'Flaherty Irish folk Music Retreat' was established in late 2004 in his name. The first retreat was featured in the Dallas Morning News. The retreat attendance was more than twice the expected attendance and supported by a guest performer from Ireland, Seamus Connolly. O'Flaherty is the father of film director and award-winning", "score": "1.5582361" }, { "id": "27768844", "title": "Kerry O'Flaherty", "text": " Kerry O'Flaherty was born 15 July 1981 in Newtownards. She runs for Newcastle AC. O'Flaherty completed a sports science degree and studied physical education at Ulster University. She began competitively training in 2009. She had hoped to qualify for the 2012 Summer Olympics in London but was plagued by an Achilles injury. She improved on her Northern Ireland 3000m steeplechase record at the 2014 International Flanders Athletics Meeting in Oordegem with a time of 9:52.94, finishing fifth. She was injured at the same event the previous year and missed most of the season due to a faulty water barrier. Her time qualified her for the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. She qualified for the 2015 World Championships and the 2016 Summer Olympics ", "score": "1.5423803" }, { "id": "27768843", "title": "Kerry O'Flaherty", "text": " Kerry O'Flaherty (born 15 July 1981) is an Irish runner competing primarily in the 3000 metres steeplechase. She competed at the 2015 World Championships in Beijing without qualifying for the final. O'Flaherty competed in the 2016 Olympic Games. She has also competed at two European Championships and one European Indoor Championships.", "score": "1.5368345" }, { "id": "9528725", "title": "Ó Flaithbheartaigh", "text": " (Liam Ó Flaithearta 28 Aug 1896 – 7 Sep 1984) novelist and short story writer. ; Monsignor Hugh O'Flaherty, The Scarlet Pimpernel of the Vatican. ; Colman O'Flaherty, recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross. ; Michael O'Flaherty, Director of the European Union Fundamental Rights Agency, human rights lawyer. ; Tom Sailí Ó Flaithearta, actor. ; Patrick O'Flaherty, Mayor of Galway 1964–1965 and 1973–1975. ; Bridie O'Flaherty, Mayor of Galway 1980–1981 and 1985–1986. ; Terry O'Flaherty, Mayor of Galway 2003–2004. ; Maire Eilis Ní Fhlaithearta, actress and former model. ; Fionnuala Ní Fhlatharta, actress, Ros na Rún. ; Eric O'Flaherty, American baseball player ; Jake O'Flaherty, New Zealand Rugby Commentator ", "score": "1.5352913" }, { "id": "7628892", "title": "Mary Flaherty (politician)", "text": " Mary Flaherty (born 17 May 1953) is a former Irish Fine Gael politician who served as Minister of State for Poverty and the Family from 1981 to 1982. She served a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Dublin North-West constituency from 1981 to 1997. Flaherty was elected to the Dáil on her first attempt, at the 1981 general election, as a Fine Gael candidate in the Dublin North-West constituency. That election saw Fine Gael return to power in a coalition government with the Labour Party, and on her first day in the Dáil Taoiseach Garret FitzGerald appointed Flaherty as Minister of State at the Department of Social Welfare. This was a junior post under Minister Eileen Desmond, but because Desmond's health was poor Flaherty often found herself bearing much of the responsibility for the department. The government collapsed ", "score": "1.532287" }, { "id": "2131326", "title": "Stephen O'Flaherty", "text": " Stephen O'Flaherty (born April 4, 1970) is an Irish slalom canoer who competed in the early to mid-1990s. He finished 25th in the C-1 event at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta.", "score": "1.517618" }, { "id": "6421197", "title": "Gilly Flaherty", "text": " Gilly Louise Scarlett Flaherty (born 24 August 1991) is an English footballer who plays for FA WSL club West Ham United. Flaherty is a former Arsenal Ladies player who began her career in Millwall Lionesses' youth teams. She usually plays in the centre back position and represented England at youth level before making her senior debut in October 2015.", "score": "1.5175946" }, { "id": "15074162", "title": "Eugene O'Flaherty", "text": " Eugene L. O'Flaherty (born July 20, 1968) is an American lawyer and politician who served in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and as Corporation Counsel of Boston. He was first elected to the House in 1996 He resigned effective January 31, 2014 to take a position as chief legal counsel for Boston mayor Marty Walsh and the City of Boston. He served as corporation counsel throughout Walsh's term and resigned after Walsh was nominated to become United States Secretary of Labor. In April 2021 he joined the law firm of Sullivan & Worcester.", "score": "1.515646" }, { "id": "2898974", "title": "Joe Flaherty (politician)", "text": " Joe Flaherty is an Irish Fianna Fáil politician who has been a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Longford–Westmeath constituency since the 2020 general election.", "score": "1.5110874" }, { "id": "30585609", "title": "Morgan O'Flaherty", "text": " Morgan O'Flaherty is a Gaelic footballer for Kildare. He plays Gaelic football for his local club Carbury and has been a member of the Kildare senior team since 2008. His younger brother Eoghan is also a member of the senior team.", "score": "1.4997125" }, { "id": "30959432", "title": "Eoghan O'Flaherty", "text": " Eoghan O'Flaherty is a Gaelic footballer from Kildare. He plays club football for his local Carbury and has been a member of the Kildare senior squad since 2009. His older brother Morgan is also a member of the team. Eoin was part of the Kildare under 21 team that lost the All Ireland Under 21 final in 2008.", "score": "1.4976063" }, { "id": "31432668", "title": "Liam O'Flaherty", "text": " Liam O'Flaherty (Irish: Liam Ó Flaithearta; 28 August 1896 – 7 September 1984) was an Irish novelist and short-story writer, and one of the foremost socialist writers in the first part of the 20th century, writing about the common people's experience and from their perspective. Liam O'Flaherty served on the Western Front as a soldier in the Irish Guards from 1916 and was badly injured in 1917. After the war, he was a founding member of the Communist Party of Ireland. His brother Tom Maidhc O'Flaherty (also a writer) was also involved in radical politics and their father, Maidhc Ó Flaithearta, before them. A native Irish-speaker from the Gaeltacht, O'Flaherty wrote almost exclusively in English, except for a play, a notable collection of short stories and some poems in the Irish language.", "score": "1.4920925" }, { "id": "29344785", "title": "Kevin Flaherty", "text": " Kevin Frederick Flaherty (born 17 September 1939) is a former English cricketer. Flaherty was a right-handed batsman who bowled right-arm off break. He was born at Birmingham, Warwickshire. Flaherty made a single first-class appearance for Warwickshire against Cambridge University at Edgbaston in 1969. He wasn't required to bat in the match. With the ball, he took the wicket of Dudley Owen-Thomas in Cambridge University's first-innings, finishing with figures of 1/69 from 27 overs. In their second-innings, he took the wickets of Roger Knight, Bob Short and Jamie McDowall to finish with figures of 3/38 from 9 overs. Warwickshire won the match by the narrow margin of 17 runs. This was his only major appearance for Warwickshire.", "score": "1.4919308" }, { "id": "15457030", "title": "Tom O'Flaherty (rugby union)", "text": " Tom O'Flaherty (born 21 July 1994) is an English rugby union player who plays for Premiership Rugby Exeter Chiefs as a winger. O’Flaherty started playing rugby at Old Alleynians in a highly successful minis side, before going on to play for Dulwich College winning the Daily Mail Trophy twice and then briefly Blackheath before moving to study at Cardiff University where he played for Cardiff RFC towards the end of 2013 and scored four tries in four appearances. A move to Bridgend Ravens followed where he scored 18 tries in 25 appearances in the 2014–15 season. That campaign culminated in the Ravens lifting the SWALEC Cup with O’Flaherty scoring the match-winning try against Pontypridd RFC in the ", "score": "1.4916052" }, { "id": "14806480", "title": "Tom Maidhc O'Flaherty", "text": " Tom Maidhc O'Flaherty was born at Gort na gCapall in 1889, Inishmore, an island off the west coast of Ireland. His parents were Maidhc Ó Flaithearta, a well-known Irish nationalist, and Maggie Ganley. His brother was Liam O'Flaherty. His family, descendants of the Ó Flaithbertaigh family of Connemara, were not well off. The Irish language was widely spoken in the area, and the O'Flahertys spoke both English and Irish from the Gaeltacht. His sister was Bríd Ní Fhlatharta. O’Flaherty's education was subsidized by Roger Casement, the British diplomat who exposed slavery in the rubber collection zones of the Belgian Congo and the Putomayo an area in between Peru and Colombia and was later executed in 1916 for his part in the 1916 Rising.", "score": "1.4867152" }, { "id": "32273899", "title": "Larry Flaherty", "text": " Laurence \"Larry\" Flaherty (26 May 1882 – 5 January 1979) was an Irish sportsperson. He played hurling with his local club Blackrock and was a member of the Cork senior inter-county team from 1903 until 1915. Flaherty won an All-Ireland winners' medal and two Munster winners' medals with Cork. At the time of his death he was the oldest surviving All-Ireland medal winner.", "score": "1.4838092" } ]
What is Ivan Kulichenko's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Ivan Kulichenko
1,557,995
57
[ { "id": "15529814", "title": "Ivan Kulichenko", "text": " Ivan Ivanovych Kulichenko (Іван Іванович Куліченко; born on 7 July 1955, Dnipropetrovsk, Ukrainian SSR, USSR) is a Ukrainian politician who was from 2014 until 2019 People's Deputy of Ukraine; prior to this he was Mayor of Dnipropetrovsk for 15 years.", "score": "1.8786705" }, { "id": "15529815", "title": "Ivan Kulichenko", "text": " In 1977 Kulichenko graduated from the Dnipropetrovsk Institute of Civil Engineering. In 1979, after his conscription in the Armed Forces of the USSR, he became a civil servant in the urban planning department of the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast. In 1986 Kulichenko was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Planning Commission of the Dnipropetrovsk City Council. Four years later he was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Executive Committee of Dnipropetrovsk. Kulichenko became the First Deputy Mayor of Dnipropetrovsk (city) in 1994. In 1999 Kulichenko became acting Mayor of Dnipropetrovsk. Since then he was (re-)elected Mayor four times, in 2000, in 2002, in 2006 and in 2010. In 2010 he was re-elected with 40,1% as a candidate of Party of Regions. His nearest opponent, Svyatoslav Oliynyk of Ukraine of the Future, received 16.1%. On 22 February 2014 Kulichenko left Party of Regions \"for peace ", "score": "1.6712155" }, { "id": "28396505", "title": "Andrei Kureichik", "text": "Occupation. Mysteries (2003, Schneider) ; Dunechka (2005, the author of the play) ; Love-Carrot (2007, art critic) ", "score": "1.6491785" }, { "id": "15529816", "title": "Ivan Kulichenko", "text": " the city\". Earlier that day locals, while picketing the city council, had demanded his departure of Party of Regions. 22 February 2014 was also the day that Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych and the Party of Region's lead Second Azarov Government were ousted out of office, after the months long Euromaidan-demonstrations had accumulated into the 2014 Euromaidan regional state administration occupations and deadly violence in Kyiv. In the 2014 parliamentary election Kulichenko won a constituency seat in constituency number 28 situated in Dnipropetrovsk as a candidate of Petro Poroshenko Bloc with 33.5% of the votes. He resigned as mayor on 21 November 2014. Kulichenko was not re-elected in the 2019 Ukrainian parliamentary election, as an independent candidate he failed this time to win a seat in constituency number 28. This time 13.49% of the voters of the constituency voted for him.", "score": "1.5995978" }, { "id": "10758888", "title": "Ivan Kulyk", "text": " Ivan Yulianovych Kulyk (Іван Юліанович Кулік; born Izrail Yudelevich Kulik; January 14, 1897 – October 10, 1937) was a Ukrainian poet, writer, translator, diplomat and Communist Party activist. He also wrote under the names \"R. Rolinato\" and \"Vasyl Rolenko\".", "score": "1.5707002" }, { "id": null, "title": "Ivan Kulichenko", "text": "Ivan Kulichenko\n\nIvan Ivanovych Kulichenko (; born on 7 July 1955, Dnipropetrovsk, Ukrainian SSR, USSR) is a Ukrainian politician who was from 2014 until 2019 People's Deputy of Ukraine; prior to this he was Mayor of Dnipropetrovsk for 15 years.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Yevhen Kucherevskyi", "text": "Yevhen Kucherevskyi\n\nYevhen Mefodiyovych Kucherevskyi (, ) (6 August 1941 – 26 August 2006) was a Ukrainian football coach. He is most famous for his spells managing Dnipro Dnipropetrovsk, which, under his helm, won the Soviet Championship in 1988, took 2nd place twice in 1987 and 1989, as well as the USSR Cup in 1989. Dnipro's recent success in the first half of the 2000s is mostly attributed to his coaching as well.\n\nOn 26 August 2006, Kucherevskyi's Mercedes-Benz suffered a head-on collision with a KAMAZ truck. The much respected coach died an hour and half later in a hospital, without regaining consciousness.\n\nUpon Kucherevskyi's funeral, the Dnipropetrovsk mayor, Ivan Kulichenko, announced the plan to name one of the city streets to the celebrated coach.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Dnipro", "text": "Dnipro\n\nDnipro, previously called Dnipropetrovsk from 1926 until May 2016, is Ukraine's fourth-largest city, with about one million inhabitants. It is located in the eastern part of Ukraine, southeast of the Ukrainian capital Kyiv on the Dnieper River, after which its Ukrainian language name (Dnipro) it is named. Dnipro is the administrative centre of the Dnipropetrovsk Oblast. It hosts the administration of Dnipro urban hromada. The population of Dnipro is \n\nArcheological evidence suggests the site of the present city was settled by Cossack communities from at least 1524. The town, named Yekaterinoslav (\"the glory of Catherine\"),<ref name=\"Cybriwsky History of the Dnipro\"/> was established by decree of the Russian Empress Catherine the Great in 1787 as the administrative center of Novorossiya. From the end of the nineteenth century, the town attracted foreign capital and an international, multi-ethnic, workforce exploiting Kryvbas iron ore and Donbas coal.\n\nRenamed \"Dnipropetrovsk\" in 1926 after the Ukrainian Communist Party leader Grigory Petrovsky, it became a focus for the Stalin-era commitment to the rapid development of heavy industry. After the Second World War, this included nuclear, arms, and space industries whose strategic importance led to Dnipropetrovsk's designation as a \"closed city\".\n\nFollowing the Euromaidan events of 2014, the city shifted politically away from parties and political figures supportive of continued close ties to Russia, and toward those wishing to celebrate the achievement in 1991 of Ukrainian national statehood and to develop relations with the European Union and the West. The change has been reflected by the removal of Soviet-era symbols including, from May 2016, \"Petrovsk\" from the name of city.\n\nFollowing the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Dnipro rapidly developed as a logistical hub for humanitarian aid and a reception point for people fleeing the various battle fronts.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election", "text": "2014 Ukrainian parliamentary election\n\nSnap elections to the Verkhovna Rada took place on 26 October 2014.\n\nPetro Poroshenko, the President of Ukraine, had pressed for early parliamentary elections since his victory in the presidential election in May. The July breakup of the ruling coalition gave him the right to dissolve the parliament, so on 25 August 2014 he announced the early election.\n\nThe voting was not provided in the annexed Autonomous Republic of Crimea and Sevastopol. The voting also did not reach significant parts of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts because of the ongoing war in Donbas. Because of this, 27 out of the 450 seats in the 8th Verkhovna Rada remained unfilled.\n\nThis election can be called a realignment. Ruling from 2010 to 2014, and taking one of the top 2 spots in elections since 2006, the Party of Regions did not participate in this election, while its informal successor Opposition Bloc showed only a modest result with 9.43% of the vote. For the first time since Ukrainian independence, the Communist Party of Ukraine gained no parliamentary representation. Four newly created parties got the highest support in this election: Petro Poroshenko Bloc (formed in July 2014 by Poroshenko's supporters), People's Front (split from Fatherland in August 2014), Self Reliance (registered in 2012) and Opposition Bloc (formed in September 2014 by a group of the former Party of Regions members).\n\nSince the parallel voting system was used, the allocation of seats is not proportional. For example, the winner in party-list voting (22.12%) People's Front got second faction with 82 seats, while Petro Poroshenko Bloc took 123 seats with 21.82% of votes.\n\nThe work of the new parliament started on 27 November 2014. On the same day, five factions formed the \"European Ukraine\" coalition: Petro Poroshenko Bloc, People's Front, Self Reliance, Radical Party and Fatherland. On 2 December the second Yatsenyuk government was approved.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Mykola Shvets", "text": "Mykola Shvets\n\nMykola Antonovich Shvets ( born September 6, 1955, Piatykhatky) is a Ukrainian politician.\n\nFrom 1999 to August 2003 he was the head of the Dnipropetrovsk Regional State Administration, appointed by decree of the President of Ukraine dated April 27, 1999.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "30668061", "title": "Sergei Kulichenko", "text": " Sergei Valeryevich Kulichenko (Серге́й Валерьевич Куличенко; born February 3, 1978) is a retired Russian professional footballer.", "score": "1.565359" }, { "id": "7864448", "title": "Ivan Kulakov", "text": " Ivan Yuryevich Kulakov (Ива́н Ю́рьевич Кулако́в; born July 15, 1967) is a Russian geophysicist and artist. Kulakov was born in Novosibirsk in Siberia. During his childhood Ivan visited the lectures his father Professor Yury Kulakov conducted on both classical and contemporary art. The museums of the former Soviet Union, along with the paintings and photographs his father showed him, have had a significant influence on Kulakov's art. Today he says that these lectures were much more important to his development as an artist than any school of arts or university could have been. The symbiosis of his scientific career and art career has allowed Kulakov to exhibit in many countries.", "score": "1.5502094" }, { "id": "29006287", "title": "Ivan Kubrakov", "text": " He was born on 5 May 1975 in Malinovka, Kastsyukovichy District, Mogilev Region. Graduated from the Minsk Special Secondary School of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and the Ministry of the Interior Academy of the Republic of Belarus.", "score": "1.4772742" }, { "id": "32919392", "title": "Sergey Kurginyan", "text": " of Russia in the modern world. Since August 2011 he is co-host (along with Nicholas Svanidze) of the project \"The historical process\" on TV \"Russia.\" Kurginyan wrote many political books such as \"Field of the response action\", \"Russian question\", \"Post-restructing\", \"Seventh Scenario\",\"Weakness of power\", \"Swing\", \"Esau and Jacob\", \"Theory and practice of political games\", \"Radical Islam\", \"Political Tsunami\". In July 2014, during the war in Donbass, Kurginyan accused Igor Girkin (Strelkov) of surrendering Sloviansk and not keeping his oath to die in Sloviansk. Kurginyan believes that surrendering Sloviansk is a war crime, and Strelkov should be responsible for that. Donbass insurgent Pavel Gubarev whacked ", "score": "1.4519413" }, { "id": "29006286", "title": "Ivan Kubrakov", "text": " Ivan Vladimirovich Kubrakov (Іван Уладзіміравіч Кубракоў, Russian: Иван Владимирович Кубраков; born 5 May 1975) is a Belarusian politician who has been the Minister of Internal Affairs of the Republic of Belarus since 29 October 2020.", "score": "1.4446714" }, { "id": "27806895", "title": "Ivan Savenko", "text": " Ivan Grigorievich Savenko (Ива́н Григо́рьевич Саве́нко; January 17, 1924, Varvarovka, Chernigov Province, Ukrainian SSR, USSR &ndash; 1987, Leningrad, USSR) was a Soviet painter, Honored Artist of the RSFSR, lived and worked in Leningrad, regarded as one of representatives of the Leningrad school of painting, most famous for his landscape paintings.", "score": "1.443201" }, { "id": "12956769", "title": "Ivan Kyrylenko", "text": " Ivan Hryhorovych Kyrylenko (Іван Григорович Кириленко; born on October 2, 1956 in Berestove (Zaporizhia Oblast), Ukrainian SSR) is a Ukrainian politician and from 2007 till December 2011 faction leader of Yulia Tymoshenko Bloc in the Ukrainian Parliament.", "score": "1.4424974" }, { "id": "32034762", "title": "Yuri Kuryanovich", "text": " teacher, writer Peter Franco (1890 - 1941), who has devoted a separate book «Petro Franko. Aviator, chemist, writer» (2019). Author of the collections of prose «He and She» (1996), «Urban Elegy» (2007), popular science books «Stories of old Lošyca» (2005), «Belarusian Criminal Investigation» (2018), «Old Lošyca» (2018), «Turaŭ ancient and modern» (2019). Held 12 personal exhibitions of painting (oil, canvas), organized under the title «Variations on the age-old», and a series of photo exhibitions («Landscapes of the Belarusian Palestine», «Memories of Childhood», «Breath of the Carpathians»). Pictures are stored in the art gallery Puсhаvičy Local History Museum (Marjina Horka, Belarus), Lviv National Literary-Memorial Museum of Ivan Franko (Lviv, Ukraine), Literary-Memorial Museum of Ivan Franko in the village Kryvorivnia (Verchovina district, Ivano-Frankivsk region), in private collections.", "score": "1.440727" }, { "id": "29942620", "title": "Aleksandr Dulichenko", "text": " Aleksandr Dmitrievich Dulichenko (alternatively Alexander Duličenko; Александр Дмитриевич Дуличенко) (born 1941) is a Russian-Estonian Esperantist, linguist, and an expert in Slavic microlanguages currently living in Estonia. He is a professor at the University of Tartu in Tartu, where he is the head of the department of Slavic studies. Dulichenko was born in Krasnodar. He is the editor of Interlinguistica Tartuensis, a journal on interlinguistics published by the University of Tartu that published seven volumes from 1982 to 1990 recording the proceedings of colloquia at Tartu; in 2006, an eighth volume was published. A festschrift in Dulichenko's honor was organized in 2006; Humphrey Tonkin calls this volume a \"particularly important addition to the literature\" of interlinguistics and Esperanto studies.", "score": "1.4405537" }, { "id": "28603892", "title": "Ivan Kuchuhura-Kucherenko", "text": " Ivan Iovych Kuchuhura-Kucherenko (Іван Іович Кучугура-Кучеренко; July 7, 1878 &ndash; November 24, 1937) was a Ukrainian minstrel (kobzar) and one of the most influential kobzars of the early 20th century. For his artistry he was awarded the title \"People's artist of Ukraine\" in 1919 and later \"People's Artist of the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic\" in 1926.", "score": "1.4398639" }, { "id": "5552691", "title": "Mykola Tomenko", "text": " analysis).\" During his student years, after initially being a Komsomol activist, Tomenko later became the initiator of the local Komsomol organization's dissolution. Tomenko began his professional career in 1992 at the Institute of National Operation and Self-government as the Head of the Political Science Department. Between 1992-1998 he was the vice-president of the Foundation \"The Ukrainian Outlook\", the director of the Institute of Post-communism Society and the Institute of Politics (listed are non-governmental politics research organizations). At the same time he continued lecturing history and political science courses at Kyiv universities, finally becoming the Head of the Politology department in the National University \"Kyiv-Mohyla Academy\".", "score": "1.4350085" }, { "id": "30668062", "title": "Sergei Kulichenko", "text": "Russian Third League Zone 3 top scorer: 1997 (21 goals). ", "score": "1.4295175" }, { "id": "7370989", "title": "Volodymyr Kupchak", "text": " Volodymyr Kupchak was born April 7, 1978 in Ivano-Frankivsk. From 1995–2000 he studied at the Ivano-Frankivsk National Technical University of Oil and Gas and obtained a degree as master of economics of oil and gas. He attended the same school in 2008–2010 and attained the same designation as Engineer of pipelines. In 2007 he completed postgraduate studies at the Vasyl Stefanyk Subcarpathian National University, obtaining a degree in demography, labor economics, social and economic policies. His Ph.D. is in economics. His dissertation topic was \"The formation of tariffs for gas distribution companies\".", "score": "1.4277978" }, { "id": "26395970", "title": "Ivan Kulesh", "text": " An orphan since 6 months old (his mother died shortly after birth, and never knew his father), Kulesh was brought up in an orphanage with his brother and sister. He graduated from the 9th grade school, and at age 18, was convicted of theft. After his release, Ivan was engaged in temporary part-time work for his neighbors, worked for a while at an autoservice station and at a construction site, as well as picking berries and mushrooms. Officially, he was registered in the Baranovichy District, but lived in the Lida District. Kulesh's common-law wife described him as a man who often drank, but was rarely prone to outbursts of ", "score": "1.4271817" }, { "id": "5192812", "title": "Ivan Kuzmin", "text": " Ivan Kuzmin (born 1962) is a Russian ski-orienteering competitor and world champion. He received a gold medal in the short distance at the 1994 World Ski Orienteering Championships in Val di Non, shared with Nicolo Corradini.", "score": "1.4255955" } ]
What is Giuseppe Demachi's occupation?
[ "composer" ]
occupation
Giuseppe Demachi
719,085
77
[ { "id": "28150608", "title": "Giuseppe Demachi", "text": " Giuseppe Demachi (9 June 1732 &ndash; 1791 or after) was a composer born in Alessandria, Italy. He served as a leading violinist in the city of his birth and later in the city of Geneva with the Concerto di Ginevra of the Societé de Musique. He also served in the employ of one Count Sannazzaro in the 1760s and 1770s at Casale Monferrato. Not much is known about his life or death. Other than the records of his birth in 1732, his next known appearance in history is in 1763 when he was listed as playing in Alessandria's orchestra. After 1777 he again falls into obscurity until his last verifiable appearance during some concerts in London in 1791. The date of his death is not known, but is believed to have been shortly after his performances in London. Demachi is listed as a composer of a significant number of works, including four symphonie concertante, eighteen duo sonatas, fifty-six trio sonatas, a pair of orchestral overtures and six string quartets listed as \"for orchestra.\" One of his most famous works is the symphony Le campane di Roma (The Bells of Rome).", "score": "1.8673975" }, { "id": "7002411", "title": "Giuseppe Recchi", "text": " Giuseppe Recchi (born 1964) is an Italian owner of several companies and firm manager. In January 2018 he became CEO of Affidea Group BV.", "score": "1.5474818" }, { "id": "26962634", "title": "Francesco Flachi", "text": " Francesco Flachi (born 8 April 1975) is an Italian former professional footballer who played as a striker. During an 18-year professional career in which he amassed Serie A totals of 137 games and 42 goals, he played mainly with Sampdoria. He was also suspended twice for doping.", "score": "1.5107661" }, { "id": "2375694", "title": "Giuseppe Iachini", "text": " Giuseppe Iachini (born 7 May 1964) is an Italian professional football manager and former player who is currently managing Serie B club Parma. He played as a midfielder.", "score": "1.4931328" }, { "id": "16548705", "title": "Giuseppe de Samuele Cagnazzi", "text": "Ispettore dei dazi indiretti of the Kingdom of Naples (1807-?) ; Direttore dei dazi indiretti of the Kingdom of Naples ; Director of the fabbrica della grande economia dei tabacchi of the Kingdom of Naples ; Victor Hugo's math teacher ", "score": "1.4922267" }, { "id": null, "title": "House of Medici", "text": "House of Medici\n\nThe House of Medici ( , ) was an Italian banking family and political dynasty that first began to gather prominence under Cosimo de' Medici, in the Republic of Florence during the first half of the 15th century. The family originated in the Mugello region of Tuscany, and prospered gradually until it was able to fund the Medici Bank. This bank was the largest in Europe during the 15th century and facilitated the Medicis' rise to political power in Florence, although they officially remained citizens rather than monarchs until the 16th century.\n\nThe Medici produced four popes of the Catholic Church—Pope Leo X (1513–1521), Pope Clement VII (1523–1534), Pope Pius IV (1559–1565) and Pope Leo XI (1605)—and two queens of France—Catherine de' Medici (1547–1559) and Marie de' Medici (1600–1610). In 1532, the family acquired the hereditary title Duke of Florence. In 1569, the duchy was elevated to the Grand Duchy of Tuscany after territorial expansion. The Medici ruled the Grand Duchy from its inception until 1737, with the death of Gian Gastone de' Medici. The grand duchy witnessed degrees of economic growth under the early grand dukes, but was bankrupt by the time of Cosimo III de' Medici (r. 1670–1723).\n\nThe Medicis' wealth and influence was initially derived from the textile trade guided by the wool guild of Florence, the \"Arte della Lana\". Like other families ruling in Italian , the Medici dominated their city's government, were able to bring Florence under their family's power, and created an environment in which art and humanism flourished. They and other families of Italy inspired the Italian Renaissance, such as the Visconti and Sforza in Milan, the Este in Ferrara, the Borgia in Rome, and the Gonzaga in Mantua.\n\nThe Medici Bank, from when it was created in 1397 to its fall in 1494, was one of the most prosperous and respected institutions in Europe, and the Medici family was considered the wealthiest in Europe for a time. From this base, they acquired political power initially in Florence and later in wider Italy and Europe. They were among the earliest businesses to use the general ledger system of accounting through the development of the double-entry bookkeeping system for tracking credits and debits.\n\nThe Medici family have claimed to have funded the invention of the piano and opera, financed the construction of Saint Peter's Basilica and Santa Maria del Fiore, and were patrons of Brunelleschi, Botticelli, Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, Raphael, Machiavelli, Galileo and Francesco Redi among many others in the arts and sciences. They were also protagonists of the counter-reformation, from the beginning of the reformation through the Council of Trent and the French wars of religion.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "June 9", "text": "June 9\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:People from Alessandria", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "IgG4-related disease", "text": "IgG4-related disease\n\nIgG4-related disease (IgG4-RD), formerly known as IgG4-related systemic disease, is a chronic inflammatory condition characterized by tissue infiltration with lymphocytes and IgG4-secreting plasma cells, various degrees of fibrosis (scarring) and a usually prompt response to oral steroids. In approximately 51–70% of people with this disease, \"serum\" IgG4 concentrations are elevated during an acute phase.<ref name=\"pmid25988916\" /><ref name=\"pmid22736240\" /><ref name=\"pmid22596100\" />\n\nIt is a relapsing-remitting disease associated with a tendency to mass forming, tissue-destructive lesions in multiple sites, with a characteristic histopathological appearance in whichever site is involved. Inflammation and the deposition of connective tissue in affected anatomical sites can lead to organ dysfunction, organ failure, or even death if not treated.<ref name=\"pmid25809420\" />\n\nEarly detection is important to avoid organ damage and potentially serious complications.<ref name=\"pmid25481618\" /> Treatment is recommended in all symptomatic cases of IgG4-RD and also in asymptomatic IgG4-RD involving certain anatomical sites.<ref name=\"pmid25809420\" /><ref name=\"GeneralRheumatology50768\" />", "score": null }, { "id": "20270550", "title": "Vincenzo DeMaria", "text": "the Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada issued a deportation order for DeMaria. Vincenzo DeMaria Vincenzo \"Jimmy\" DeMaria (born 1954) is an Italian-Canadian mob boss and businessman originally from Calabria, Italy now based in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. DeMaria was named in a 2010 Italian police report as one of the top GTA leaders in the 'Ndrangheta's Siderno Group. He also has a seat on the Camera di Controllo. DeMaria was born in Siderno, Calabria, Italy in 1954, and immigrated to Canada with his family in January 1955 at nine months old. On September 20, 1982, DeMaria was convicted of second-degree", "score": "1.5413146" }, { "id": "7100621", "title": "Franco Di Giuseppe", "text": " Cosimo Damiano Francesco Di Giuseppe (1 December 1941 – 26 September 2021) was an Italian politician. Di Giuseppe was born in Foggia on 1 December 1941. When he was 13, he became a member of Young Italy, the youth wing of the Italian Social Movement. Di Giuseppe was elected to the Apricena municipal council at the age of 21. He joined Christian Democracy and grew close to Vincenzo Russo, remaining affiliated with the party throughout his service on the Chamber of Deputies from 1992 to 1994. Di Giuseppe later joined Brothers of Italy and served as a provincial coordinator of that party. He resigned his party positions in 2020 and retired from politics. Di Giuseppe was injured in a traffic collision on 27 July 2021, that killed his brother Egidio. He died of his injuries at a hospital in Chieti on 26 September 2021.", "score": "1.4851599" }, { "id": "29836935", "title": "Giuseppe De'Longhi", "text": " He was born in Treviso, Italy, on 24 April 1939. He graduated from Ca' Foscari University of Venice.", "score": "1.4838009" }, { "id": "13331543", "title": "Giuseppe Vaccarini", "text": " Giuseppe Vaccarini obtained the high level degree diploma of « Hotel Technicien Activities » and the professional diplomas in « Restaurant skills and Cook » At the beginning of his career he starts different work experiences which the most significant were those as Sommelier and then Restaurant Manager of « Gualtiero Marchesi » in Milan, from 1978 to 1983, and the one as General Manager of the Locanda dell'Amorosa in Sinalunga, province of Siena. After these he had new experiences in Venice at the « La Regina » restaurant, back in Milan at the Russian restaurant-bistrot \"Yar\" and in Son ", "score": "1.4782188" }, { "id": "15258382", "title": "Giuseppe Rizzo (priest)", "text": " the young. The association aimed at educating to an open and practical life as a Christian, studying and promoting the activities of Azione Cattolica, useful for the country according to the principles of Christian Democracy, willed by the Pope. Following his election as a town councilor, he served as a mediator of peace between opposing parties; he trained people to vote freely and disinterestedly and worked for the moralisation of the town administration. Don Rizzo's life was never an easy one: he engaged himself as a banker, journalist, town councilor, and, obviously, a priest. His activism was not well regarded by the conservatives ", "score": "1.4760914" }, { "id": "7002417", "title": "Giuseppe Recchi", "text": " Giuseppe Recchi is married and has three children. Keen on sports, he is an amateur participant in sailing and motorcycling competitions. He has participated in several national and international competitions, such as Morocco Rally race in 2013.", "score": "1.4599202" }, { "id": "8248601", "title": "Giuseppe Galasso", "text": " He was born in Naples in 1929: the son of a glass craftsman, he had lost his mother in 1941 and had done a little bit of everything, even the kitchen boy and the porter, to help run the family. He first took the master's qualification, in 1946, at the Pasquale Villari school, then the year after his high school diploma at Umberto high school, as a private owner\".", "score": "1.4590409" }, { "id": "30982260", "title": "Michele Cachia", "text": " Michele Cachia (Mikiel Cachia; 30 September 1760 – 24 January 1839) was a Maltese architect and military engineer. He is also known for his role during the Maltese uprising of 1798–1800.", "score": "1.4587748" }, { "id": "28774974", "title": "Giuseppe Astarita", "text": " Giuseppe Astarita (Naples, 1707 &ndash; Naples, 1775) was an Italian architect and engineer of the late-Baroque or Rococo period. He was a pupil of Domenico Antonio Vaccaro and collaborated with Ferdinando Sanfelice; his style is influenced by Guarino Guarini. He worked on the following buildings, sometimes in work of reconstruction.", "score": "1.4579372" }, { "id": "6911531", "title": "Demetrio Capuzzimati", "text": " Demetrio Capuzzimati (Albanian: Dhimiter Këpucmadhi) (c. 1480 – February 15, 1557, San Marzano di San Giuseppe ) was an Albanian Stradiot captain in Apulia, then part of the Kingdom of Naples, and was the son of a soldier who had fought with Scanderbeg. He was also the Baron of San Marino.", "score": "1.4569546" }, { "id": "2375695", "title": "Giuseppe Iachini", "text": " Iachini was born in Ascoli Piceno. He started his playing career at Ascoli, and made his Serie A and professional debut during the 1981–82 season, at the age of 17. He played for Ascoli until 1987, when he signed for Verona. In 1989, Iachini moved to Fiorentina and played five seasons with the viola, four of them in Serie A. From 1994 to 1996 he played for Palermo of Serie B. After a single Serie B season with Ravenna, in 1997 Iachini transferred to Venezia, where he played for three years, two of them in Serie A. He retired in 2001, after a Serie C1 season with Alessandria. As a player, he represented the Italy Olympic side at the 1988 Summer Olympics at international level, where they finished in fourth place.", "score": "1.4556047" }, { "id": "4247369", "title": "Giuseppe Recco", "text": " Giuseppe Recco (1634 &ndash; 29 May 1695) was an Italian painter in the Baroque style. He specialized in a variety of still lifes.", "score": "1.4527838" }, { "id": "12549448", "title": "Giuseppe Colucci (antiquarian)", "text": " Giuseppe Colucci (born Penna San Giovanni, 19 March 1752 - died Fermo, 16 March 1809) was a prolific regional historian of the Marche and writer on the antiquities of central Italy; his works include Antichità Picene in 30 volumes, and Antichità Ascolane.", "score": "1.4512916" }, { "id": "3057937", "title": "Giuseppe Patricolo", "text": " Giuseppe Patricolo (1834 – 1905) was an Italian architect and engineer, best known for restoring many of the medieval, including Norman architecture, buildings in and near his native Palermo in Sicily. In 1866, he was named professor of descriptive geometry at the University of Palermo, and in 1875, professor of design and architecture. From 1884 to his death, he served as artistic director of the monuments, and director of the Royal office for the conservation of monuments of Sicily. Among the structure, in which he was involved in the restoration are the church of San Francesco d'Assisi, San Cataldo, Santo Spirito, San Giovanni degli Eremiti, and the Santa Maria dell'Ammiraglio in Palermo; as well as the Norman church of the Santissima Trinità di Delia in Castelvetrano. His son, Achille Patricolo, also an architect; born in Palermo; was a curator at the Islamic Museum in Cairo till 1922. As an antiquarian, he sold pottery to the British Museum in 1921.", "score": "1.4509475" }, { "id": "15948703", "title": "Nicola De Maria", "text": " De Maria earned a master's degree in medicine but then in 1977 he executed his first wall painting in Milan. In the same year of 1977 DeMaria exhibited at the Paris Biennale. He is most often associated with the art group termed the Transavanguardia, a movement named and first exhibited by the Italian art critic and curator Achille Bonito Oliva at the \"Aperto 80\" section of the 39th Venice Biennale in 1980. Along with De Maria the principal transavantgarde artists were; Sandro Chia, Francesco Clemente, Enzo Cucchi, Nino Longobardi, Luigi Ontani, and Mimmo Paladino.", "score": "1.448773" }, { "id": "28072766", "title": "Giuseppe Frazzetto", "text": " Giuseppe Frazzetto (born in 1955 in Catania, Italy) is an art critic, philosopher and Professor of History of Art. He teaches History of Contemporary Art, History of New Media, History and Theory of Videogame at the Accademia di Belle Arti of Catania.", "score": "1.4484115" } ]
What is E. David Redwine's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
E. David Redwine
3,970,041
57
[ { "id": "2823968", "title": "E. David Redwine", "text": " Edward David Redwine (born September 12, 1947) is a North Carolina politician. He served in the North Carolina House of Representatives for almost 20 years and is a candidate in 2010 for the North Carolina Senate seat being vacated by R.C. Soles. Redwine is a member of the board of trustees for East Carolina University, his alma mater, and he is a member of the board of directors for the North Carolina Turnpike Authority.", "score": "1.8454274" }, { "id": "6276476", "title": "David Peace", "text": " David Peace (born 1967) is an English writer. Best known for his UK-set novels Red Riding Quartet (1999–2002), GB84 (2004), The Damned Utd (2006), and Red or Dead (2013), Peace was named one of the Best of Young British Novelists by Granta in their 2003 list.", "score": "1.4652827" }, { "id": "13290531", "title": "Jarvis Redwine", "text": " Jarvis John Redwine (born May 16, 1957) is a former American college and professional football player, a running back in the National Football League (NFL) for three seasons during the 1980s. Redwine played college football for the University of Nebraska, and earned All-American honors. He was selected in the second round of the 1981 NFL Draft, and played professionally for the NFL's Minnesota Vikings 1981 to 1983. Born in Los Angeles, California, Redwine played high school football at Inglewood High School. He played college football at Oregon State in 1976 and 1977, then transferred to the University of Nebraska, where he played for head coach Tom Osborne. His first Cornhusker season's performance as a junior in 1979 earned him Osborne's endorsement as Nebraska's best chance at a Heisman Trophy winner since Johnny Rodgers in 1972. Redwine suffered a broken rib midway through his senior season in 1980 and fell back in the Heisman race, in which he finished seventh. Even so, he was the first Cornhusker to rush for 1,000 yards in consecutive seasons, gaining 1,119.", "score": "1.4591076" }, { "id": "12203907", "title": "Edward Redd", "text": " Redd was raised in Murray, Utah. He was educated in the Granite School District, participating in science and music and excelling in auto mechanics. He started his own business doing custom plowing at the age of 11 continuing until leaving on a mission for the LDS church at the age of 19. After serving a mission to Southern Brazil, he continued his education at Brigham Young University, earning a degree in chemistry and graduating with honors. After earning his undergraduate degree, Redd earned a medical degree at the University of Utah School of Medicine. He completed his internship and residency in internal medicine at Oregon Health & Science University.", "score": "1.4530711" }, { "id": "32670125", "title": "David Redfearn", "text": " David Redfearn's birth was registered in Dewsbury district, West Riding of Yorkshire, England.", "score": "1.4460571" }, { "id": null, "title": "Mike Redwine", "text": "Mike Redwine\n\nMike Redwine (born May 19, 1964) is a former college football coach. He served as the head football coach at MidAmerica Nazarene University in Olathe, Kansas from 1991 to 2000 and Howard Payne University in Brownwood, Texas from 2005 to 2007, compiling career college football coaching record of 66–69–2.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Damon Arnette", "text": "Damon Arnette\n\nDamon Arnette (born September 2, 1996) is an American football cornerback who is a free agent, and an American rapper. He played college football at Ohio State and was drafted by the Las Vegas Raiders in the first round of the 2020 NFL Draft.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "The Social Network", "text": "The Social Network\n\nThe Social Network is a 2010 American biographical drama film directed by David Fincher and written by Aaron Sorkin, based on the 2009 book \"The Accidental Billionaires\" by Ben Mezrich. It portrays the founding of social networking website Facebook. It stars Jesse Eisenberg as the Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, with Andrew Garfield as Eduardo Saverin, Justin Timberlake as Sean Parker, Armie Hammer as Cameron and Tyler Winklevoss, and Max Minghella as Divya Narendra. Neither Zuckerberg nor any other Facebook staff were involved with the project, although Saverin was a consultant for Mezrich's book.\n\nProduction began when Sorkin signed to write it. Principal photography began that same year in October in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and lasted until November. Additional scenes were shot in California, in the cities of Los Angeles and Pasadena, as a portion of the film Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross of Nine Inch Nails composed the film's score, which was released on September 28, 2010.\n\nThe film premiered at the New York Film Festival on September 24, 2010, and was released theatrically in the United States on October 1, by Sony Pictures Releasing. A major critical and commercial success, the film grossed $224 million on a $40 million budget and was widely acclaimed by critics. It was named one of the best films of the year by 78 critics, and named the best by 22 critics, the most of any film that year. It was also chosen by the National Board of Review as the best film of 2010. At the 83rd Academy Awards, it received eight nominations, including for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actor for Eisenberg, and won for Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Original Score, and Best Film Editing. It also received awards for Best Motion Picture – Drama, Best Director, Best Screenplay, and Best Original Score at the 68th Golden Globe Awards.\n\n\"The Social Network\" has maintained a strong reputation since its initial release, and is commonly cited by critics as one of the best films of the 2010s and 21st century. The Writers Guild of America ranked Sorkin's screenplay the third greatest of the 21st century. While no official sequel has been announced, Sorkin has publicly expressed interest and willingness to write a screenplay for one should Fincher return to direct.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bob Lilly", "text": "Bob Lilly\n\nRobert Lewis Lilly (born July 26, 1939), nicknamed \"Mr. Cowboy\", is an American former professional football player who was a defensive tackle. After playing college football for the TCU Horned Frogs, he played for the Dallas Cowboys of the National Football League (NFL) for fourteen seasons. Lilly was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980 and the College Football Hall of Fame in 1981.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "North Texas Mean Green football statistical leaders", "text": "North Texas Mean Green football statistical leaders\n\nThe North Texas Mean Green football statistical leaders are individual statistical leaders of the North Texas Mean Green football program in various categories, including passing, rushing, receiving, total offense, defensive stats, and kicking. Within those areas, the lists identify single-game, single-season, and career leaders. The Mean Green represent the University of North Texas in the NCAA Division I FBS Conference USA through the 2022 season, after which UNT will join the American Athletic Conference.\n\nAlthough North Texas began competing in intercollegiate football in 1913,<ref name=\"MG\" /> the school's official record book considers the \"modern era\" to have begun in 1950. Records from before this year are often incomplete and inconsistent, and they are generally not included in these lists.\n\nThese lists are dominated by more recent players for several reasons:", "score": null }, { "id": "27735999", "title": "David A. Hounshell", "text": " Hounshell is from New Mexico. Hounshell studied electrical engineering at Southern Methodist University, receiving a B.S. in 1972. He then changed fields and enrolled in the University of Delaware's history program earning a M.S. in 1975. He continued his studies at Delaware completing his Ph.D. in 1978.", "score": "1.4453338" }, { "id": "1066616", "title": "David McEnery", "text": " Red River Dave McEnery (born David Largus McEnery) (December 15, 1914 – January 15, 2002) was an American artist, musician, and writer of topical songs. He was born in San Antonio, Texas, United States. He got the nickname \"Red River Dave\" because he enjoyed singing \"Red River Valley\" in high school. He was the leader of The Swift Cowboys.", "score": "1.4421649" }, { "id": "32292053", "title": "David Eick", "text": " Eick graduated from the University of Redlands in 1990 with a B.A. in political science and a minor in business administration.", "score": "1.4330046" }, { "id": "2177731", "title": "David Redick", "text": " David Jermah Redick (5 July 1753 – 28 September 1805) was a Pennsylvania surveyor, lawyer, politician, and the 9th Vice-President of Pennsylvania.", "score": "1.427892" }, { "id": "32715124", "title": "David Redl", "text": " David John Redl (born February 1, 1981) is an American lawyer and government official who was serving as the Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information at the United States Department of Commerce. Prior to assuming this role, he was the chief counsel at the United States House Committee on Energy and Commerce. Redl previously served as director of regulatory affairs at CTIA, the largest wireless industry trade group in the United States. In 2017, The Hill included Redl on its list of \"16 people to watch in tech\".", "score": "1.4276125" }, { "id": "12234431", "title": "David Meckler", "text": " David Meckler (born July 9, 1987) is an American former professional ice hockey player. He last played for EHC Red Bull München in the Deutsche Eishockey Liga (DEL). He was selected by the Los Angeles Kings in the 5th round (134th overall) of the 2006 NHL Entry Draft.", "score": "1.425277" }, { "id": "14515026", "title": "David Ervine", "text": " Ervine was a Protestant and identified himself as both Irish and British. An Ulster unionist, he once exclaimed \"why can't I be an Irish citizen of the UK?\". Ervine remarked “I am profoundly both British and Irish and those who have to deal with me have to take me on those terms.\"", "score": "1.4243727" }, { "id": "12482512", "title": "Sheldrick Redwine", "text": " Sheldrick Redwine (born November 6, 1996) is an American football safety for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at the University of Miami and was drafted in 2019 by the Cleveland Browns.", "score": "1.4240415" }, { "id": "28122237", "title": "Ed Olwine", "text": " Edward R. Olwine (born May 28, 1958) is a retired Major League Baseball pitcher. He played during three seasons at the major league level for the Atlanta Braves.", "score": "1.4238875" }, { "id": "6995397", "title": "David Redmond", "text": " David Redmond (born 19 September 1987) is an Irish hurler. His league and championship career with the Wexford senior team lasted eleven seasons from 2007 until 2017. Born in The Ballagh, County Wexford, Redmond first played competitive hurling and Gaelic football at juvenile and underage levels with Oulart-the Ballagh. After much success in these grades he later joined the club's senior team. Since then he has won one Leinster medal and eight county senior championship medal. Redmond made his debut on the inter-county scene at the age of seventeen when he was selected for the Wexford minor team. His sole season with the minor team ended without success. Redmond subsequently enjoyed an unsuccessful period with the Wexford under-21 team, however, his tenure with the intermediate team yielded an All-Ireland medal in 2007. By this stage he had also joined the Wexford senior team, making his debut during the 2008 league. Over the course of the next decade Redmond proved to be one of the team's most versatile players, having lined out in defence, midfield and in attack. He played his last game for Wexford in July 2017 and announced his retirement from inter-county hurling on 17 January 2018.", "score": "1.417375" }, { "id": "12878258", "title": "David Green (entrepreneur)", "text": " David Green (born November 13, 1941) is an American businessman and the founder of Hobby Lobby, a chain of arts and crafts stores. He is a major financial supporter of Evangelical organizations in the United States and funded the Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C.", "score": "1.4129924" }, { "id": "2177732", "title": "David Redick", "text": " Redick was born in Galway, Ireland, and after coming to America made his home for several years in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Redick was a veteran of the American Revolutionary War and was in the 1st Brigade Georgia Militia. He read law and was admitted to the bar in 1782. Redick was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 1789.", "score": "1.4011183" }, { "id": "13778039", "title": "David E. Sellers", "text": " David E. Sellers (born David Edward Sellers, September 7, 1938) is an American architect based in Vermont known for using an improvisational approach to modern architecture which eventually led to what is known as design/build. His work focuses on designing and building with nature, with special emphasis on custom craftsmanship and a preference for sustainability. His work in town and community planning has received national recognition for pedestrian and human-scaled settlement patterns.", "score": "1.3987341" }, { "id": "31308188", "title": "David Harris Ebenbach", "text": " Ebenbach was born and raised in Philadelphia. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin–Madison with a Ph.D. in Psychology, and from Vermont College with an MFA. He was a visiting professor at Earlham College, living in Ohio. He currently teaches creative writing at Georgetown University, where he works in the Center for Jewish Civilization, and promotes student-centered teaching at the Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship.", "score": "1.3985419" }, { "id": "4916986", "title": "David B. Hooten", "text": " David Benjimen Hooten (born December 31, 1962) is a Grammy and Emmy nominated musician, restaurateur, and candidate for the Oklahoma Legislature as a Democrat and as a Republican before being elected to county office in 2016.", "score": "1.3966575" } ]
What is Kyriakos Mavronikolas's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Kyriakos Mavronikolas
819,155
57
[ { "id": "1868046", "title": "Kyriakos Mavronikolas", "text": " Kyriakos Mavronikolas (born 25 January 1955) is a Cypriot Movement for Social Democracy politician. He served as the Cypriot Minister of Defence from 2003 to 2006, and he sat as a Member of the European Parliament for Cyprus from 2009 to 2012, when he vacated his seat and was replaced by Sophocles Sophocleous. Mavronikolas is a graduate of the University of Athens faculty of medicine, and outside politics he works as an ophthalmologist.", "score": "2.0829556" }, { "id": "4400114", "title": "Stavros V. Kyriakides", "text": " Stavros V. Kyriakides (Σταύρος Β. Κυριακίδης; born 18 October 1971) is a Cypriot businessman and a cultural manager; Managing Director of Kyriakides Piano Gallery (SVK PIANOTECH LTD), President of Avantgarde Cultural Foundation and President of the Cultural Institute.", "score": "1.6002415" }, { "id": "30145086", "title": "List of University of Athens alumni", "text": "Kyriakos Mavronikolas (b. 1955), Cypriot Minister of Defence (2003–2006) ; Sotos Zackheos (b. 1950), Special Envoy of the President of Cyprus to Russia (since 2013) ", "score": "1.5872099" }, { "id": "4400115", "title": "Stavros V. Kyriakides", "text": " Kyriakides holds a Masters of Arts degree (MA) in \"Cultural Policy and Development\" with distinction. He has studied “Stringed Keyboard Instrument Technology” in Edinburgh, Scotland, and “Piano Technology” in two different establishments of the USA. He attended the famed C.F.Theodore Steinway School for Concert Technicians in Hamburg, Germany, and holds the prestigious “Steinway Concert Technician” title. Kyriakides is an individual member of the International Association of Piano Builders and Technicians (to which members are national associations and only on rare occasions individuals are allowed to join) and has been an associate member of the Piano Tuners Association (UK) and the Piano Technicians Guild (USA).", "score": "1.5732251" }, { "id": "25260932", "title": "Kyriakos Pittakis", "text": " Kyriakos S. Pittakis or Pittakys (1798–1863) was a Greek archaeologist from Athens. As a youth he fought in the Greek War of Independence against the Ottoman Empire, besieging the Ottoman troops in the Acropolis; according to a dubious and probably fictitious anecdote, he is said to have sent bullets to the opposing army, in hopes to save the Parthenon the Ottoman had started to demolish in order to recover the lead clamps which they intended to use for bullets. In 1824, he left for Corfu, where he studied in the Ionian Academy. After independence, Pittakis became Greece's first General Keeper of Antiquities. From 1837 to 1840, Pittakis supervised the reassembly of the Erechtheion. Though well-intentioned, his ignorance drew criticism from architecture historians and archaeologists. Kyriakos Pittakis campaigned to collect epigraphical material in Athens, gathering inscriptions in the church of Megali Panagia, the Theseum, the Stoa of Hadrian and the Tower of the Winds. Such preservationary efforts have been considered significant contributions to Greek archaeology. He also carried out the first excavations at Mycenae in 1841. He restored the Lion Gate.", "score": "1.563468" }, { "id": null, "title": "Kyriakos Mavronikolas", "text": "Kyriakos Mavronikolas\n\nKyriakos Mavronikolas (born 25 January 1955) is a Cypriot Movement for Social Democracy politician. He served as the Cypriot Minister of Defence from 2003 to 2006, and he sat as a Member of the European Parliament for Cyprus from 2009 to 2012, when he vacated his seat and was replaced by Sophocles Sophocleous. Mavronikolas is a graduate of the University of Athens faculty of medicine, and outside politics he works as an ophthalmologist.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "National and Kapodistrian University of Athens", "text": "National and Kapodistrian University of Athens\n\nThe National and Kapodistrian University of Athens (NKUA; , \"Ethnikó ke Kapodistriakó Panepistímio Athinón\"), usually referred to simply as the University of Athens (UoA), is a public university in Athens, Greece.\n\nIt has been in continuous operation since its establishment in 1837 and is the oldest higher education institution of the modern Greek state and the first contemporary university in both the Balkan Peninsula and the Eastern Mediterranean.\n\nThe National and Kapodistrian University of Athens is an integral part of the modern Greek academic and intellectual tradition.", "score": null }, { "id": "18142710", "title": "Stavros V. Kyriakides", "text": "Stavros V. Kyriakides Stavros V. Kyriakides (; born 18 October 1971) is a Cypriot businessman and a cultural activist; Managing Director of Kyriakides Piano Gallery (SVK PIANOTECH LTD) and, among others, President of the Avantgarde Cultural Foundation. Kyriakides has studied “Stringed Keyboard Instrument Technology” in Edinburgh, Scotland and “Piano Technology” in two different establishments of the USA. He attended the famed C.F.Theodore Steinway School for Concert Technicians in Hamburg, Germany and holds the prestigious “Steinway Concert Technician” title. In October 1993, Kyriakides founded the piano firm SVK PIANOTECH LTD; a private limited company of which he held 90% of the", "score": "1.5441778" }, { "id": "18786962", "title": "Yannis Sakellarakis", "text": "Yannis Sakellarakis Sakellarakis studied archaeology at the University of Athens (Dept of History and Archaeology) and later pursued graduate studies at the University of Heidelberg, where he was awarded a doctorate in 1969. Sakellarakis taught at the Universities of Heidelberg, Hamburg and Athens. He served as the curator (1963-68) and then director (1980-87) of Heraklion Archaeological Museum in Crete and curator (1970-80) and later deputy director (1987-94) of the National Archaeological Museum in Athens. He excavated sites at Archanes, Kythira and Mount Ida. Sakellarakis attracted international attention in 1979, when, while excavating the hill of Anemospilia in Archanes with his", "score": "1.543768" }, { "id": "16364943", "title": "Kyriakos D. Kassis", "text": "Leleges, Havana, Myrmidons, Minoans, Arkadians etc.). Kassis work, although being much influential, is at the same time until today the object of many a bad imitation and even plagiarism, since many draw information and entire units of research from his work and presenting them as their own, even doing so in doctoral theses in Greece and abroad, without even referencing him as source. Kyriakos D. Kassis Kyriakos Kassis (born March 1946) is a Greek poet, and painter. He studied at the Legal Faculty of the University of Athens, in the department of Law, Political and Economic studies and in the", "score": "1.5410618" }, { "id": "1278948", "title": "Mavronoros, Ioannina", "text": " Mavronoros (Μαυρονόρος) is a village and a community of the Pogoni municipality. Before the 2011 local government reform it was a part of the municipality of Ano Kalamas, of which it was a municipal district. The 2011 census recorded 85 residents in the village. The community of Mavronoros covers an area of 5.805 km2. Mavronoros is among the of villages of Epirus that display a distinct tradition in polyphonic singing. Today most of the local inhabitants live in the Greek urban centers as well as abroad. Some of them return to Mavronoros during the holiday seasons. In terms of folk music and dancing the village is known for its own style which is different from the typical \"Parakalamos style\" performed in the Pogoni region. As such, although administratively part of the municipality of Pogoni, Mavronoros and its inhabitants are regarded by certain performers in Pogoni as connected to Cham Albanians.", "score": "1.5593276" }, { "id": "4400120", "title": "Stavros V. Kyriakides", "text": " He is well known in Cyprus for his extravagant and original ideas which he always implements. In 2017, Kyriakides strongly supported Paphos; European Capital of Culture 2017, by contributing to its cultural program with a number of unique events including a two-piano recital with Vladimir and Vovka Ashkenazy at the Ancient Odeon and the world-premiere of a work commissioned from renowned Cypriot composer Savvas Savva for piano, keyboards, percussion and voice under the title \"From Mycenae to Paphos\" especially for the occasion and staged at the idyllic location of the Coral Bay Peninsula where the Museum of Mycenaean Settlement commemorates the arrival of the Achaean Greeks to Cyprus. Kyriakides has displayed rich social and ", "score": "1.5542674" }, { "id": "4400122", "title": "Stavros V. Kyriakides", "text": " Managing Director of Kyriakides Piano Gallery (SVK PIANOTECH LTD) President of Avantgarde Cultural Foundation President of the Cultural Institute (Ινστιτούτο Πολιτισμού)", "score": "1.5400826" }, { "id": "7598727", "title": "Kyriakos (disambiguation)", "text": "Kyriakos of Makuria, ruler of the Nubian kingdom of Makuria in 8th century ; Kyriakos Mavronikolas (born 1955), Cypriot politician and government minister ; Kyriakos Mitsotakis (born 1968), Greek politician and Prime Minister of Greece ; Kyriakos Onisiforou (born 1951), Cypriot-born Greek sprinter ; Kyriakos Papachronis (born 1960), also known as the \"Ogre of Drama\" (ο δράκος της Δράμας), a Greek serial killer ; Kyriakos Papadopoulos (born 1992), Greek footballer ; Kyriakos Pittakis (1798–1863), Greek archaeologist ; Kyriakos Tamvakis (born 1950), Greek theoretical physicist ; Kyriakos Velopoulos (born 1965), Greek politician and MP Anastasios Kyriakos (born 1978), Greek footballer ; Diomidis Kyriakos, a Greek vice-admiral who was killed in the siege of Messolonghi Saint Kyriakos the Anchorite (or Cyriacus the Anchorite also known as 'Cyriacus the Hermit') is a Christian saint. Kyriakos (in Greek Κυριάκος) is also a given name and may refer to: Kyriakos is also a surname and may refer to: ", "score": "1.5399444" }, { "id": "1202105", "title": "Chris Kyriakakis", "text": " Together with Prof. Sharon Gerstel (UCLA), Kyriakakis is part of an interdisciplinary group that is studying the role of acoustics in Byzantine churches. In 2017 he organized a virtual 8th century performance in Byzantium 2.0: Acoustic Time Travel", "score": "1.5398793" }, { "id": "29893676", "title": "Makarios III", "text": " Michael Christodoulou Mouskos was born in Panayia village in the Paphos District. In 1926, aged 13, he was admitted to Kykkos Monastery as a novice. At age 20 he was sent to the Pancyprian Gymnasium in Nicosia where he completed his secondary education in 1936. He spent the difficult years of World War II studying theology and law at the University of Athens, graduating in 1942. He took up the duties of a priest in the Cypriot Orthodox Church while sustaining an interest in academic theology; he received a World Council of Churches scholarship to undertake further study at Boston University in Massachusetts. In 1948, while still studying at Boston, he was elected Bishop of Kition against his will. Mouskos adopted the clerical name Makarios and returned to Cyprus. Like many public figures in the Greek Cypriot community in Cyprus, in the 1940s and 1950s he was an active supporter of enosis, the union of Cyprus with Greece.", "score": "1.5369735" }, { "id": "10513909", "title": "Pavlos Kyriakidis", "text": " Pavlos Kyriakidis (Παύλος Κυριακίδης, born 3 September 1991) is a Greek professional footballer who plays as a right back for Super League 2 club Niki Volos. He has played football for Megas Alexandros Irakleia, Kozani, Paniliakos, Zakynthos and Iraklis.", "score": "1.5366707" }, { "id": "30373811", "title": "Neoklis Kyriazis", "text": " Kyriazis was a member of the National Council of Cyprus. As a member of the St Lazarus Committee he founded the Museum of St Lazarus church in Larnaca. One of his greatest achievements was the salvage and subsequent publication of many historical details concerning Cyprus through the ages. He started publishing articles on this subject from 1909, and over a period of 47 years he published several books and over 370 articles and studies. He participated in the publication of the monumental ‘Cyprus Chronicles’ (Kypriaka Chronica) a scientific/historical magazine (1923–1937) consisting of 4200 pages. These Chronicles were under the auspices of a four-member committee (the Bishop of Kition Nikodemos Mylonas, prof. Ioannis Sykoutris, Loukis Z Pieridis, and Neoklis Kyriazis), and covered every aspect of the history of Cyprus from the ancient times through to the Turkish and subsequently British occupation. Kyriazis was the only, or nearly only, author of this periodical from 1929–1937.", "score": "1.5281782" }, { "id": "25370231", "title": "Kyriakos Velopoulos", "text": " He was born in West Germany and grew up in Thessaloniki, Greece. After his graduation from Dendropotamos high school, he studied journalism at the Center of Liberal Philosophical Social Studies (a private educational institution) in Thessaloniki under a scholarship and graduated from there in 1990. He earned a bachelor's degree on Greek civilization studies from the Open University of Cyprus in 2013 and a master's degree in journalism from the same university in 2016. During his compulsory military service in the Hellenic Army, he served as an officer on the islands of North-Eastern Aegean Sea, and the Greek mainland. He is a member of the Academy of the Greek language in Germany and a member of the Union of Writers of Northern Greece. He was a member of ONNED, the youth organisation of New Democracy (ND) until 1988 and ideologically defines himself as belonging to the \"patriotic ND\".", "score": "1.523241" }, { "id": "4400117", "title": "Stavros V. Kyriakides", "text": " Kyriakides has always been active in the cultural life of the island. He served as member of the Board of Directors to numerous non-profitable foundations. Among others, he served as Vice Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Cyprus Theatre Organization (ΘΟΚ / Θεατρικός Οργανισμός Κύπρου) and as Secretary-General, member of the Board of Directors, of the Cyprus Symphony Orchestra (Συμφωνική Ορχήστρα Κύπρου). He has participated in a number of fora and he was appointed in numerous juries and/or committees, such as the Madame Figaro Women of the Year Awards (Cyprus) and the Competition for Creative Communication of the PIO (Press and Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus). Kyriakides is the founder ", "score": "1.521446" }, { "id": "28522581", "title": "Miltiadis Papanikolaou", "text": " Miltiadis Papanikolaou (Μιλτιάδης Παπανικολάου), (born in the 1940s in Grevena, northern Greece), also known as Papanicolaou, is a Full Professor of History of Arts at the Philosophy department of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. Papanikolaou was, from its inception in 1997 and until 2006, the Director of the State Museum of Contemporary Arts (SMCA) in Thessaloniki, Greece. During his position at the SMCA, Papanikolaou was the supervisor of the renowned Costakis collection, part of which is exposed at the Museum. He studied in universities in both Greece and Germany and published numerous books and reviews on contemporary art issues. He represented Greece in many international congresses and exhibitions in all over the world. Miltiadis Papanikolaou was a candidate for the position of Vice-Chancellor during the internal elections at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in 2006.", "score": "1.5193461" }, { "id": "10365185", "title": "Archimandrite Kyprianos", "text": " Archimandrite Kyprianos (1735 – 1803 est.) was a cleric, historian, poet, and publishing editor. He was one of the major Greek Cypriot intellectuals and clerics of the 18th century. He was born in the village of Kilani in the Limassol District. He started his career in the church as a deacon in the Cypriot Archbishopric. Later on as an Archimandrite he studied in Venice. While in Venice in 1780, he edited and wrote the introduction to Theophilos Korydaleus' treatise on Aristotle's On Generation and Corruption a work sponsored by Archbishop Chrysanthos and the Pafos bishop, Panaretos. In Venice, he also worked on correcting books published in the Greek language. He furthered his studies in Padova, and from 1794 to 1798, he was a senior cleric in the Greek Orthodox church of Trieste. His most notable work is considered to be the Chronological history of Cyprus published in Venice in 1788. This book was subsequently published in four different editions.", "score": "1.5180879" }, { "id": "1764186", "title": "Marios Sakellariou", "text": " Born in Katerini, Sakellariou started playing basketball with Pierikos Archelaos, where he stayed until 2014. He then moved to Iraklio, and the next season, he moved to Psychiko of the Greek A2 League. With Psychiko, he played for two seasons, being a role player for the team. On September 19, 2017, Sakellariou joined Kymis of the Greek Basket League.", "score": "1.5045748" }, { "id": "28650335", "title": "Michalis Violaris", "text": " Michalis Kyriakou (Μιχάλης Κυριάκου), known by his stage-name Michalis Violaris (Μιχάλης Βιολάρης) (born 9 January 1944 Agia Varvara, Nicosia Cyprus), is a popular singer and composer of modern Greek and Cypriot music. He is also a pioneer responsible for popularising in Greece Cypriot songs sung in the Cypriot dialect. His song \"Ta Ryalia\" (also \"Ta Rialia\") sung in Cypriot Greek became a hit in the top-10 of Greece in 1973.", "score": "1.5038108" }, { "id": "3886334", "title": "Kyriacos A. Athanasiou", "text": " Kyriacos A. Athanasiou (born 1960) is a Cypriot-American bioengineer who has contributed significantly to both academic advancements as well as high-technology industries. He is currently a Distinguished Professor at the University of California, Irvine. He joined UCI from the University of California, Davis where he also served as the Chair of the Biomedical Engineering department. Before joining the University of California in 2009, he was the Karl F. Hasselmann Professor at Rice University. He has published hundreds of scientific articles detailing structure-function relationships and tissue engineering approaches for articular cartilage, the knee meniscus, and the temporomandibular joint.", "score": "1.5037832" } ]
What is John Blake, Jr.'s occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
John Blake Jr. (politician)
1,136,027
95
[ { "id": "7225408", "title": "John Blake Jr.", "text": " For the American politician, see John Blake Jr. (politician). John Edward Blake Jr. (July 3, 1947 – August 15, 2014) was an American jazz violinist from South Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States. He performed most prominently as a sideman in groups led by Grover Washington Jr. (in the late 1970s) and McCoy Tyner (in the early 1980s), as well as led his own groups. He died on August 15, 2014 from complications of multiple myeloma.", "score": "1.7003515" }, { "id": "14604624", "title": "John Blake Jr. (politician)", "text": " John Blake Jr. (December 5, 1762 – January 13, 1826) was an American lawyer and politician and a U. S. Representative from New York.", "score": "1.6859094" }, { "id": "9148074", "title": "John L. Blake", "text": " Blake was born in Boston, Massachusetts, on March 25, 1831. He received a classical education and moved to Orange, New Jersey, in 1846. He studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1852 and commenced practice in Orange. He was a member of the New Jersey General Assembly in 1857 and was a delegate to the 1876 Republican National Convention.", "score": "1.6147194" }, { "id": "9148073", "title": "John L. Blake", "text": " John Lauris Blake (March 25, 1831, in Boston, Massachusetts &ndash; October 10, 1899, in West Orange, New Jersey) was an American Republican Party politician who represented New Jersey's 6th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives from 1879 to 1881.", "score": "1.606554" }, { "id": "9148628", "title": "John Lauris Blake", "text": " John Lauris Blake (December 21, 1788 – July 6, 1857) was an American clergyman and bestselling author. He is best known as the author of the General Biographical Dictionary.", "score": "1.5907867" }, { "id": null, "title": "Wesley Blake", "text": "Wesley Blake\n\nCory James Weston (born September 4, 1987) is an American professional wrestler currently working on the independent circuit under the ring name Westin Blake. He is best known for his time in WWE, where he performed under the ring name Wesley Blake.\n\nWeston debuted in 2011 under his real name on the Florida independent circuit, most notably for Dory Funk Jr.'s Funking Conservatory. He signed with WWE in 2013, portraying a cowboy gimmick in NXT during his first year. He later formed a tag team with Buddy Murphy, and the two, managed by Alexa Bliss, won the NXT Tag Team Championship once. After several years, he formed a stable with Jaxson Ryker and Steve Cutler called The Forgotten Sons. In 2020, the stable began working on SmackDown. He was released from WWE on April 15, 2021. Soon after, he announced on his social media that his new ring name would be Westin Blake.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Seward Johnson II", "text": "John Seward Johnson II\n\nJohn Seward Johnson II (April 16, 1930 – March 10, 2020), also known as J. Seward Johnson Jr. and Seward Johnson, was an American artist known for \"trompe-l'œil\" painted bronze statues. He was a grandson of Robert Wood Johnson I, the co-founder of Johnson & Johnson, and of Colonel Thomas Melville Dill of Bermuda.\n\nHe designed life-size bronze statues that were castings of living people, depicting them engaged in day-to-day activities. A large staff of technicians did the fabrication of the works he designed. Computers and digital technology often were used in the manufacturing process. Sometimes the manufacture was contracted in China. He was the founder of Grounds For Sculpture, a sculpture park and museum located in Hamilton Township, Mercer County, New Jersey.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom", "text": "March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom\n\nThe March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, also known as simply the March on Washington or The Great March on Washington, was held in Washington, D.C., on August 28, 1963. The purpose of the march was to advocate for the civil and economic rights of African Americans. At the march, final speaker Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., standing in front of the Lincoln Memorial, delivered his historic \"I Have a Dream\" speech in which he called for an end to racism.\n\nThe march was organized by A. Philip Randolph and Bayard Rustin, who built an alliance of civil rights, labor, and religious organizations Observers estimated that 75–80% of the marchers were black. The march was one of the largest political rallies for human rights in United States history. Walter Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers, was the most integral and highest-ranking white organizer of the march.\n\nThe march is credited with helping to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It preceded the Selma Voting Rights Movement, when national media coverage contributed to passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that same year.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Black (Days of Our Lives)", "text": "John Black (Days of Our Lives)\n\nJohn Black is a fictional character from \"Days of Our Lives\", an American soap opera on the NBC network. He has been played by actor Drake Hogestyn since 1986, with a break in between from January 2009 to September 2011. John was created by script writers Sheri Anderson, Thom Racina and Leah Laiman as The Pawn in 1985 and introduced by executive producers Betty Corday and Al Rabin. John becomes one of the series' most popular characters when he is revealed to be the presumed dead Roman Brady (Wayne Northrop) with plastic surgery and amnesia. However, Northrop's return in 1991 led to Hogestyn's Roman being retconned into the entirely separate character of John Black, which also establishes the supercouple pairing of John and Marlena, due to John's affair with Roman's wife, Marlena Evans (Deidre Hall). Hogestyn was attributed with helping the series out of its ratings slump in the 1980s. He was often featured in soap opera magazines, such as \"Soap Opera Digest\" and \"Soap Opera Weekly\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Martin Luther King Jr.", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "7225412", "title": "John Blake (soldier)", "text": " John Young Filmore Blake, also known as John Y.F. Blake and J.Y.F. Blake was an Irish-American soldier and writer. He was born October 6, 1856, in Bolivar, Missouri in the United States, and died January 24, 1907, in New York City. Blake served as a foreign volunteer for the Boers of the South African Republic during the Second Boer War.", "score": "1.5878427" }, { "id": "10541494", "title": "John Frederick Blake", "text": " John Frederick Blake (3 April 1839 – 7 July 1906) was a British geologist and Anglican clergyman. Blake received B.A. 1862 and M.A. 1865 from Caius College, Cambridge. He was ordained a deacon in 1862 and a priest in 1863. He was curate of Lenton, Nottinghamshire, from 1862 to 1864 and curate of St Mary's, Bryanston Square, London, from 1864 to 1865. He was Professor of Natural Science at University College, Nottingham, from 1881 to 1888. In 1895 he went to India to arrange the Baroda Museum. He married in 1866 and was survived by three sons and a daughter.", "score": "1.5875595" }, { "id": "9148629", "title": "John Lauris Blake", "text": " He was born on 21 December 1788 in Northwood, New Hampshire. During his adolescence he practiced cabinet making and at the same time prepared himself for college. He graduated from Brown University in 1812, and was licensed as a Congregational minister in 1813. Blake was the founder of the Ladies' Magazine, headmaster of the Cornhill School for Young Ladies, and served on the committee of Boston public schools. Blake was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1815. A significant number original 19th century copies of works authored by Blake are held in the collections of the AAS.", "score": "1.5726371" }, { "id": "31928590", "title": "John Blake (journalist)", "text": " John Blake (born 6 November 1948) is an English publisher and former journalist.", "score": "1.5689964" }, { "id": "14604625", "title": "John Blake Jr. (politician)", "text": " Born in Ulster County in the Province of New York, Blake attended the public schools and during the Revolutionary War Blake served in the New York State Militia. He married Elsie Eager and they had six children, Margaret, Ann, William, Sarah, Fanny, and Elsie.", "score": "1.5631578" }, { "id": "8204364", "title": "John Thomas Blake", "text": " John Thomas Blake (4 April 1853&ndash;26 November 1940) was a New Zealand surveyor, interpreter, land agent, historian, racehorse owner and trainer. Of Māori descent, he identified with the Taranaki iwi. He was born in Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand on 4 April 1853.", "score": "1.5533552" }, { "id": "13406755", "title": "Robert O. Blake Jr.", "text": " Blake earned a B.A. from Harvard College in 1980 and an M.A. in international relations from Johns Hopkins University's School of Advanced International Studies (SAIS) in 1984. He is married to Sofia Blake. They have three daughters.", "score": "1.5436563" }, { "id": "31928591", "title": "John Blake (journalist)", "text": " Blake was one of four siblings born to a nurse and a soldier who fought in both world wars, ultimately becoming a major. His father suffered a significant financial setback by the time his son was ten. Blake left school at the age of 17 and gained employment at the Hackney Gazette. Further jobs at an evening newspaper in Luton and a news agency followed. Beginning as a pop columnist for the London Evening News in the early 1970s, his journalism developed into a column titled \"Ad Lib\", a gossip column and lifestyle guide. It survived the merger of the Evening News with the Evening Standard. In 1976, he co-wrote the book Up and Down with the Rolling Stones, the memoirs of 'Spanish ", "score": "1.5363016" }, { "id": "28307974", "title": "John Blake (American football)", "text": " John Fitzgerald Blake (March 6, 1961 – July 23, 2020) was an American college and professional football coach. He played college football as a nose guard for the Oklahoma Sooners. He served as the head coach of the Sooners from 1996 to 1998.", "score": "1.5362148" }, { "id": "14604627", "title": "John Blake Jr. (politician)", "text": " Blake died in Montgomery, Orange County, New York. He is interred at Berea Churchyard, near Newburgh, New York.", "score": "1.527479" }, { "id": "10052822", "title": "Larry J. Blake", "text": " Larry J. Blake (April 24, 1914 – May 25, 1982) was an American actor.", "score": "1.5228202" }, { "id": "2530897", "title": "John Bradby Blake", "text": " John Bradby Blake was the son of Captain John Blake (b. 1713) and his wife Mary. John Blake, like his father (John Bradby Blake's grandfather), was a ship's captain. At the age of 20, he sailed for southeast Asia with the East India Company ship the Halifax, serving as second mate. John Blake sailed with the Halifax again on the ship's next voyage; this voyage was his first as a captain. Through voyages with the East India Company and through command of private vessels in Asia, Captain Blake became a wealthy man. From the 1760s he was also manager of a business transporting fresh fish to a ", "score": "1.521373" }, { "id": "10711291", "title": "Korban Blake", "text": " Blake is a multimedia artist, painter and photographer, and describes the work as outsider art. Blake shows art work in exhibitions locally in the Norfolk and Suffolk areas.", "score": "1.5119786" }, { "id": "26983541", "title": "Thomas Blake (minister)", "text": " Blake was a native of Staffordshire. He matriculated at Christ Church, Oxford, on 25 October 1616, aged nineteen, or perhaps in his nineteenth year. The uncertainty gives a birth date somewhere between 1596 and 1598. He proceeded to BA on 5 May 1620 and M. A. on 21 February 1623.", "score": "1.5067973" }, { "id": "11314855", "title": "Roy Blake Sr.", "text": " Roy Morris Blake Sr. (March 29, 1928 – March 4, 2017) was a Texas politician and businessman from Nacogdoches, Texas. He served in the Texas House of Representatives from the 4th District. He also served in the Texas Senate from the 3rd district, he was also president pro tempore of the Texas Senate in the Seventieth Texas Legislature.", "score": "1.5067503" } ]
What is Mami Matsui's occupation?
[ "seiyū", "Japanese voice actress", "seiyuu", "seiyu", "Japanese voice actor" ]
occupation
Mami Matsui
2,492,953
67
[ { "id": "4940456", "title": "Mami Matsui", "text": " Mami Matsui (松井摩味) is a Japanese voice actress affiliated with Aoni Production. She is also credited as Mami.", "score": "1.7326801" }, { "id": "4753344", "title": "Fuyuko Matsui", "text": " Fuyuko Matsui (松井冬子) is a female contemporary Japanese artist, specialized in Nihonga paintings. She is known for her \"new Kusozu\" series. Matsui has been making her works based on her psychoanalysis results, putting heavy weight on her feelings and interests in violence, experience of loss, repression, stress, and trauma. Through the process of self-investigation, she found her works universal to all living beings—life and death, sex, self-love, self-mutilation, self and the other, this world and the next, desire and passions.", "score": "1.5208583" }, { "id": "31356430", "title": "Mami Matsuyama", "text": " Mami Matsuyama (松山 まみ) is a Japanese idol, singer, and actress. She has released a number of DVDs. She is best known for her role as Remi Freedle in Chousei Kantai Sazer-X. Matsuyama cosplayed as Mao Ran, a character in a video game titled Fighting Beauty Wulong. In 2006, she portrayed Shiori in Gal Circle. In 2007, Matsuyama released her debut single entitled \"Matataku Mami: Mitsumete Hoshii\". She also starred in the television drama Body Conscious Cop in that year.", "score": "1.5029659" }, { "id": "4753347", "title": "Fuyuko Matsui", "text": " Matsui earned her Bachelor of Fine Arts (B.F.A.) in Painting from Joshibi Junior College of Art and Design in 1994. In 2002 and 2004, she earned her bachelor's and master's degree of fine arts in Japanese Painting from Tokyo University of the Arts. Later in 2007, Matsui obtained her Doctoral Degree (PhD) in Japanese Painting with her doctoral dissertation \"The Inescapable Awakening to Pain, Through Visual Perception via the Sensory Nerves.\"", "score": "1.4965537" }, { "id": "13165603", "title": "Erina Matsui", "text": " Matsui was born in 1984 in Okayama, Japan where she grew up. As a student, she studied oil painting and went on to win the Shell Art Award in 2004. Her education also led her to study abroad in Finland as an exchange student at the University of Art & Design Helsinki in 2006. She graduated in 2008 with a B.F.A. from Tama Art University in Tokyo, and completed her M.A. in 2010 at the Tokyo University of the Arts. She continued her education in 2012 by fulfilling an artist residency at the Kunstlerhaus Bethanien in Germany, having been sponsored as a fellow for Japan's Agency of Cultural Affairs Overseas Training Program.", "score": "1.4885256" }, { "id": null, "title": "Hand Maid May", "text": "Hand Maid May", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Kerberos Saga characters", "text": "List of Kerberos Saga characters\n\nThis is a character guide to the radio drama, film, manga and anime works \"Kerberos saga\" (ケルベロス・サーガ, \"keruberosu saga\"). Characters are sorted by organizations or groups according to the original works. The English adaptation equivalents are mentioned when available.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Miss Nippon", "text": "Miss Nippon", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Anna Carlsson", "text": "Anna Carlsson\n\nAnna Carlsson (born August 24, 1973) is a German voice actress from Frankfurt am Main. She voices in the German-language dubs of a number of animation and anime productions including \"Kim Possible\". \"The Little Mermaid\", \"\", \"Cardcaptor Sakura\", \"Dr. Slump\" and \"Dragon Ball\". In live-action dubbing she voiced in \"Desperate Housewives\", \"Angel\" and \"Samantha Who?\". She is the dub voice for Eva Longoria, Piper Perabo, Zooey Deschanel, and Amy Smart on a number of films and shows.<ref name=\"resume\"/> She is fluent in the languages of German, English and Swedish.<ref name=\"resume\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Chiaki Omigawa", "text": "Chiaki Omigawa", "score": null }, { "id": "8813382", "title": "Kathy Matsui", "text": " Matsui's parents were Japanese Christians who immigrated from Nara Prefecture in Japan to the United States in the early 1960s. She was born in California in 1965, where her parents ran a commercial flower nursery in Salinas Valley. She has three siblings, Teresa, William, and Paul. Growing up, she worked in the family business while attending school and taking Japanese classes on Saturdays. Matsui is a 1982 graduate of Gonzales High School. A small rural school district at the time served Gonzales, CA; Soledad, CA; Chualar, CA and the surrounding ranches and farm in central Salinas Valley. Matsui earned degrees in social studies from Harvard University and international affairs ", "score": "1.4660245" }, { "id": "27130303", "title": "Mami (given name)", "text": " born 1960), Japanese actress ; Mami Matsuyama (松山 まみ; born 1988), Japanese idol and cosplayer ; Mami Mizutori (born 1960), Japanese diplomat ; Mami Naito (内藤 真実; born 1986), Japanese badminton player ; Mami Nakamura (中村 麻美; born 1979), Japanese actress ; Mami Nomura (野村 真美; born 1964), Japanese actress ; Mami Sasazaki (笹崎まみ), Japanese lead guitarist of SCANDAL ; Mami Sato, Japanese bassist of the American rock band, The Warlocks ; Mami Shimamoto (嶋本 麻美; born 1987), Japanese weightlifter ; Mami Shindo-Honma (進藤-本間 真美), Japanese biathlete ; Mami Yamaguchi (山口 麻美; born 1986), Japanese soccer player ; Mami Yamasaki (山崎 真実; born 1985), Japanese gravure idol ; Mami Yoshida (吉田 真未; born 1986), Japanese volleyball player ", "score": "1.4651945" }, { "id": "25894949", "title": "Yayori Matsui", "text": " Matsui was born in Kyoto, Japan, to a family of Christian ministers. Her family moved to Tokyo where her parents founded the Yamate Christian Church and raised their six children. Unable to graduate from high school due to a severe case of tuberculosis, she was nonetheless admitted to the Department of British and American Studies at the Tokyo University of Foreign Studies. Matsui was introduced to the feminist movement while on a trip to the United States and Europe during her junior year in college. In their work Gender in Modern East Asia, Barbara Molony, Janet Theiss, and Hyaeweol Choi state that she experienced revulsion ", "score": "1.4622043" }, { "id": "3237284", "title": "Michiko Matsumoto", "text": " Michiko Matsumoto was born in Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan, in 1950, and in 1974 graduated from Hosei University (Tokyo). She is currently based in Tokyo. The artist's early work of the 1980s included several series of portraits of artists living in various countries and the principal dancers of major dance companies. She has published 13 books of photography. Her works are in the collections of a number of museums internationally.", "score": "1.4529037" }, { "id": "31356433", "title": "Mami Matsuyama", "text": "\"Matataku Mami: Mitsumete Hoshii\" (2007) ", "score": "1.4496377" }, { "id": "32814170", "title": "Matsuri Akino", "text": " Matsuri Akino (秋乃 茉莉), is a Japanese manga artist from Mitaka, Tokyo, now a resident of Yokohama. Her work is a mix of the fantasy, mystery, and horror genres. Her self-portrait is usually a kappa, sometimes with braids or an odango hairstyle.", "score": "1.4492652" }, { "id": "26580602", "title": "Akiko Matsuo", "text": " Matsuo was born in Saga Prefecture. She studied mathematics for her undergraduate degree at Tsuda University and became interested in computational fluid dynamics during her postgraduate studies in aeronautical engineering at Nagoya University. After graduating, she worked at a research institute that specialised in supercomputers, and completed further study at Princeton University in the United States. She is a member of the Aircraft and Railway Accident Investigation Commission of the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transportation.", "score": "1.4368455" }, { "id": "4218392", "title": "Mamiko Matsumoto", "text": " Mamiko Matsumoto (born 9 October 1997) is a Japanese professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for WE League club MyNavi Sendai.", "score": "1.4358947" }, { "id": "8813381", "title": "Kathy Matsui", "text": " Kathy M. Matsui (キャシー・松井, born 1965) is a General Partner of Japan's first ESG-focused global venture capital fund, MPower Partners. She is a former vice chair and chief Japan strategist for global investment bank Goldman Sachs. She was born in California in 1965. She was credited by Shinzō Abe, prime minister of Japan, with having coined the term \"womenomics\". She is a graduate of Harvard University and survived breast cancer in 2001. She is a TEDx speaker.", "score": "1.435267" }, { "id": "13377493", "title": "Rena Matsui", "text": " Rena Matsui (松井 玲奈) is a Japanese actress, singer, novelist, YouTuber and former member of the Japanese idol girl groups SKE48 and Nogizaka46. As a member of the former, she also participated in the main lineup of AKB48's singles. As an actress, she has played roles in numerous films and television series, including Kamen Rider Build the Movie: Be the One and the 99th NHK asadora Manpuku.", "score": "1.4293394" }, { "id": "13165602", "title": "Erina Matsui", "text": " Erina Matsui (松井 えり菜) is a contemporary Japanese artist. She is known for her surreal self-portraits, mostly done as oil paintings. Her work has been praised for its jarring visual impact as it defies normal representations of childhood being cute and innocent.", "score": "1.4253843" }, { "id": "5198846", "title": "Naoko Matsui", "text": " Naoko Matsui (松井 菜桜子) is a Japanese voice actress and narrator from Hakodate, Hokkaido. Matsui was a member of Production Baobab for 20 years before becoming a freelancer. She is also a voice acting instructor. Matsui is most notable for the roles of Uru Chie in High School! Kimengumi, Rem Ayanokōji in Dream Hunter Rem, Katsumi Liqueur in Silent Möbius, Chiyoko Wato in The Three-Eyed One, Runrun in Mahōjin Guru Guru, Rabby in Gall Force Eternal Story, Roux Louka in Mobile Suit Gundam ZZ, Dorothy Catalonia in Mobile Suit Gundam Wing, Azusa Shiratori in Ranma ½, Miyako Todaiji in Kamikaze Kaito Jeanne, and Sonoko Suzuki in Detective Conan. Matsui lives in Tokyo. She was once married to fellow voice actor Kenyu Horiuchi but they divorced. Besides voice acting, Matsui is also a theatre actress and co-leader of a theatre group. At a younger age, she wanted to become a musical theatre actress.", "score": "1.4236416" }, { "id": "8813384", "title": "Kathy Matsui", "text": " to Japan's economic stagnation than increasing immigration or the birthrate. At the time, 56.7% of working-age women participated in the workforce in Japan, where women's status and opportunities have ranked low compared to most other nations. She likened such low participation to \"running a marathon with one leg\". In 2001, Matsui was diagnosed with breast cancer. She returned to California for chemotherapy and recuperation. She wore a wig when she returned to Goldman Sachs eight months later. Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe incorporated Matsui's womenomics research into his Abenomics economic reforms announced in 2012. On 1 January 2015 she was appointed a vice chair of Goldman Sachs Japan.", "score": "1.422529" }, { "id": "12107171", "title": "Doris Matsui", "text": " Doris Okada Matsui (born Doris Kazue Okada; September 25, 1944) is an American politician from the Democratic Party, serving since 2005 in the House of Representatives. She represents (until 2013 numbered the 5th district), covering the city of Sacramento and its suburbs. Following the death of her husband Bob Matsui on January 1, 2005, she was elected as his replacement and took the oath of office on March 10, 2005. As of September 2021, Matsui is the only current example of widow's succession (though Representative Julia Letlow's husband, Luke, was elected to the seat, Louisiana's 5th, but died of COVID-19 days before he would have assumed office ) as well as the most recent successful case of it.", "score": "1.4184008" }, { "id": "31664553", "title": "Rumi Matsui", "text": " Rumi Matsui (松井るみ, born in Osaka, Japan) is a Japanese set designer and scenographer based in Tokyo. She is the president of Centreline Associates.", "score": "1.417001" } ]
What is Marie-France Mignal's occupation?
[ "actor", "actress", "actors", "actresses" ]
occupation
Marie-France Mignal
2,499,057
83
[ { "id": "8955911", "title": "Marie-France Mignal", "text": " Marie-France Mignal (born 3 April 1940), is a French actress. She is the co-director of the Théâtre Saint-Georges, with France Delahalle. She is known for her work in television, cinema (Weekend at Dunkirk, The Two Orphans), and in adverts.", "score": "1.8764176" }, { "id": "14384377", "title": "Aline Marie Raynal", "text": " Aline Marie Raynal (born 1937) is a French botanist and botanical illustrator noted for studying the taxonomy of parasitic and aquatic tropical plants, as well as plants of the Sahel desert. She was professor of botany at the Muséum National d´Histoire Naturelle de Paris. In 1995, her work was honored by the Institut de France. The minor planet 8651 Alineraynal was named in her honor.", "score": "1.6095238" }, { "id": "31802703", "title": "Marie-Hélène Mathieu", "text": " Marie-Hélène Mathieu (born 4 July 1929) is a French disability rights activist. She is co-founder of the international movement Faith and Light; with Jean Vanier, she has dedicated her life’s work to people with disabilities and to their families and friends. Through her testimonies, Marie-Hélène Mathieu continues to be involved in the lives of these support structures that she has created, in order to ensure that the person with a disability, irrespective of the severity, finds their unique, rightful place in society.", "score": "1.551125" }, { "id": "13168467", "title": "Marie-Sœurette Mathieu", "text": " Marie-Sœurette Mathieu (born August 10, 1949 in Port-au-Prince) is a Haitian sociologist, teacher and writer who lives currently in Quebec. She is also a painter. She left her native land in 1970 and went first to the United States and later to Quebec. She studied sociology and education at the UQAM, and she is a member of UNEQ and the Société littéraire de Laval, French organisation in Laval, Québec.", "score": "1.532668" }, { "id": "27286192", "title": "Marie-Thérèse Letablier", "text": " Marie-Thérèse Letablier (born 4 January 1947), is a French sociologist. Her major sociological works concern work, family and gender issues. She is Research director in the French National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS) and a senior research fellow in the Paris Centre d’Economie de la Sorbonne (CES). Marie Thérèse Letablier is a member of the Executing Committee of the European Sociological Association (or ESA), an association aimed to facilitate sociological research, teaching and communication on European issues, and to build networks between European sociologists. As a woman who has grown up during the seventies, she has developed research interests concerning family and gender issues. They have been mainly studied in a European comparative perspective. She has participated in several European research networks: on Families and Family Policies (for Sweden and France), on Gender and Employment (for Germany and France), on Social practices and Social Policies with regard to working and mothering, and on Childcare services.", "score": "1.5269871" }, { "id": null, "title": "Children of the Century", "text": "Children of the Century\n\nChildren of the Century () is a 1999 French film based on the true tale of the tumultuous love affair between two French literary icons of the 19th century, novelist George Sand (Juliette Binoche) and poet Alfred de Musset (Benoît Magimel).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:French theatre directors", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Prix du Brigadier", "text": "Prix du Brigadier\n\nThe Prix du Brigadier, established in 1960 by the (ART), is an award given to a personality from the world of theater.\n\nThe dramatist Jean Anouilh, having rejected all official honors, declared that in his opinion, the only worthwhile reward was the \"Prix du Brigadier\" which had been granted to him in 1971. Three other authors have also received this award: Françoise Sagan in 1960; Eugène Ionesco in 1966; and Florian Zeller in 2014.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Josephine, Guardian Angel", "text": "Josephine, Guardian Angel\n\nJosephine, Guardian Angel (Joséphine, ange gardien) is a French television series. It has been aired since 1997 on TF1 (France).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:French theatre directors", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "1948629", "title": "Marie-Hélène Lafon", "text": " Marie-Hélène Lafon (born 1962) is a French educator and award-winning writer. She was born in Aurillac in the Cantal department and grew up on the family farm there. She was educated at a religious boarding school in Saint-Flour and, after moving to Paris in 1980, continued her studies at the Sorbonne. She took her agrégation de grammaire in 1987, going on to teach classical literature. Lafon only began writing when she was 34, publishing her first novel Le soir du chien in 2001.", "score": "1.5157342" }, { "id": "3376690", "title": "Marie-France Lalonde", "text": " Marie-France Lalonde (born c. 1971) is a Franco-Ontarian politician in Ontario, Canada who has served as the Member of Parliament (MP) for the riding of Orléans as a member of the Liberal Party of Canada since 2019. She also served as the Liberal Member of Provincial Parliament (MPP) for the provincial riding of Orléans from 2014 until 2019, when she resigned her seat to run federally. She then won in her riding with 54 percent of the vote. In January 2017, she was appointed as Minister of Community Safety and Correctional Services. In July 2017, she was appointed as the first Minister of Francophone Affairs. She served in those roles until the end of the government of Kathleen Wynne. She previously served as Minister of Government and Consumer Services and as Minister Responsible for Francophone Affairs in the cabinet of Kathleen Wynne.", "score": "1.5112646" }, { "id": "863626", "title": "Marie-Claude Felton", "text": " Marie-Claude Felton (born 1981), is a French-Canadian writer, teacher and historian who specializes in 18th-century France. Her book, Maîtres de leurs ouvrages: l’édition à compte d’auteur à Paris au XVIIIe siècle, made significant contributions to the understanding of publishing practices and the myriad issues relating to changing conceptions of literary property.", "score": "1.5075754" }, { "id": "983569", "title": "Marie France", "text": " Marie-France Garcia (born 9 February 1946 in Oran) is a French singer and actress. She is transsexual and a Parisian pop icon of the 1970s.", "score": "1.506535" }, { "id": "29741866", "title": "Marie-Christine Vergiat", "text": " Marie-Christine Vergiat (born 1956 in Roanne, Loire) is a community organizations' activist and a French politician. As of June 2009, she is a Member of the European Parliament representing the Left Front. She is the companion of Jean-Pierre Dubois, president of the French Human Rights League, with whom she has a son. She is the leader of the organization in the Seine-Saint-Denis department outside of Paris.", "score": "1.5003765" }, { "id": "24954163", "title": "Marie-George Buffet", "text": " Governmental function Minister of Youth and Sports : 1997-2002. Electoral mandates National Assembly of France Member of the National Assembly of France for Seine-Saint-Denis : Elected in 1997, but she became minister in June / And since 2002. Elected in 1997, reelected in 2002, 2007, 2012. Regional Council Regional councillor of Ile-de-France : 1998-2002 (Resignation). Municipal Council Deputy-mayor of Chatenay-Malabry : 1977-1983. Municipal councillor of Le Blanc-Mesnil : Since 2001. Reelected in 2008. Political functions National Secretary (Leader) of the French Communist Party : 2001-2010.", "score": "1.4956236" }, { "id": "31954422", "title": "Marie-Jo Bonnet", "text": " Marie-Josèphe Bonnet (born 1949 in Deauville) is a French specialist in the history of women, history of art, and history of lesbians. She has also published books in the history of the French resistance and occupation.", "score": "1.4919362" }, { "id": "31660503", "title": "Marie-France Stirbois", "text": " Marie-France Stirbois (born Marie-France Charles on 11 November 1944 in Paris, died 17 April 2006 in Nice of cancer) was a French National Front politician, representing Dreux from 1989 to 1993, and a Member of the European Parliament from 1994 to 1999 and from 2003 to 2004. An old militant of the National Front, Marie-France Stirbois marked French political life by achieving (with her husband Jean-Pierre Stirbois) the first electoral success of the French National Front in 1983 in Dreux. Between 1989 and 1993, she was the only National Front member to sit on the National Assembly, after the Yann Piat camp had defected. She is buried in Montparnasse Cemetery in Paris.", "score": "1.4903443" }, { "id": "7868144", "title": "Marie-Ange Magne", "text": " Marie-Ange Magne is a French politician representing La République En Marche! She was elected to the French National Assembly on 18 June 2017, representing the department of Haute-Vienne.", "score": "1.4851334" }, { "id": "31660507", "title": "Marie-France Stirbois", "text": " Marie-France was twice sanctioned by National Front institutions and suspended from her duties in the party's political bureau.", "score": "1.4776677" }, { "id": "9583529", "title": "Marie-Zélia Lafont", "text": " Marie-Zélia Lafont (born 9 January 1987) is a French slalom canoeist who has competed at the international level since 2003. She won two medals in the K1 team event at the ICF Canoe Slalom World Championships with a gold in 2018 and a bronze in 2015. She also won two golds and three bronzes at the European Championships. Lafont participated in two Olympic Games. She finished in 16th place in the K1 event at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro and 14th in the K1 event at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.", "score": "1.4769721" }, { "id": "6589826", "title": "Marie-Line Reynaud", "text": " Marie-Line Reynaud (born 17 July 1954 in Barbezieux-Saint-Hilaire, Charente) is a French politician who was a deputy to the National Assembly of France for the second division of Charente départment. She was first elected in 1997, lost her seat in 2002, regained it in 2007, then lost it again in 2017. Between her terms she served as a Member of the European Parliament for the west of France from 2004 to 2007. Reynaud is a member of the Socialist Party, and sat with the Party of European Socialists in the European Parliament. She was a member of the Parliament's Committee on Constitutional Affairs and its Committee on Women's Rights and Gender Equality. She was also a substitute for the Committee on Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs, a member of the delegation for relations with the Gulf States, including Yemen, and a substitute for the delegation for relations with the Korean Peninsula.", "score": "1.4764452" }, { "id": "29871192", "title": "Marie-Jo Zimmermann", "text": " Marie-Jo Zimmermann (born 29 April 1951) is a French politician who was a Member of Parliament, for the Union for a Popular Movement (UMP) party, between 1998 and 2017. She represented Moselle's 3rd constituency. She was born in the town of Creutzwald, in Moselle. In 1998, she was elected to represent Moselle in the French National Assembly, and was re-elected for the same constituency in 2002, 2007 and 2012. She has been the president of the Assembly's group on women's rights, and has been sitting on the commission for Cultural Affairs. She failed to be re-elected in 2017. From 1998 to 2001, she was also a member of the regional council for Lorraine, and from 1989 to 2002, she served as a member of the town council for Metz.", "score": "1.4757891" }, { "id": "32055093", "title": "Marie-Laure Ryan", "text": " Marie-Laure Ryan is an independent literary scholar and critic. She has written several books and articles on narratology, fiction, and cyberculture and has been awarded several times for her work. She attended the University of Geneva to study literature as an undergraduate, before moving to the United States in 1968. attending graduate school at the University of Utah, where she received her M.A. in Linguistics and German, alongside a Ph.D in French. She later obtained a Bachelor's degree in Computer Science from the University of California San Diego. She has worked as a consultant and software engineer and has published over fifty articles, translated ", "score": "1.4650269" }, { "id": "623738", "title": "Marie-France Morin", "text": " Marie-France Morin (born March 22, 1976) from Gloucester, Ontario is a former member of the Canadian national women's hockey team. She also competed with the Ottawa Raiders in the National Women's Hockey League.", "score": "1.4628983" } ]
What is Andreas Rüdiger's occupation?
[ "philosopher" ]
occupation
Andreas Rüdiger
3,073,609
66
[ { "id": "30271392", "title": "Andreas Rüdiger", "text": " Johannes Andreas Rüdiger (1 November 1673 – 6 June 1731) was a German philosopher and physicist.", "score": "1.5393553" }, { "id": "3017058", "title": "Antonio Rüdiger", "text": " Antonio Rüdiger (born 3 March 1993) is a German professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for club Chelsea and the Germany national team. Rüdiger began his career at VfB Stuttgart, representing their reserves in 3. Liga and the first team in the Bundesliga. In 2015 he joined Roma, initially on loan and a year later for a €9 million fee. He was signed by Chelsea in 2017 for an estimated £27 million, where he won the FA Cup in his first season, followed by the UEFA Europa League in his second season, and the UEFA Champions League in 2021. He made his international debut for Germany in March 2014. He was forced to miss UEFA Euro 2016 due to an injury suffered earlier in the season but he was part of the squad that won the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup. He kept his spot in the squad for the 2018 World Cup, and later also took part at UEFA Euro 2020.", "score": "1.5218272" }, { "id": "30913876", "title": "Rüdiger", "text": "Antonio Rüdiger (b. 1993), German footballer ; Prince Rüdiger of Saxony (b. 1953), German prince ; Rüdiger Abramczik (b. 1956), German footballer ; Maria Rüdiger-Belyaeva mother of John Shalikashvili ; Rüdiger Gamm (b. 1971), German \"mental calculator\" ; Rüdiger von der Goltz (1865-1945), German army general during the First World War, one of the principal commanders of Finnish Civil War, Latvian War of Independence, Battle of Cēsis (1919) and Estonian War of Independence ; Rüdiger Haas (b. 1969), German tennis player ; Rüdiger Heining (b. 1968), German agrarscientist and economist ; Rüdiger Nehberg (1935-2020), German human rights activist, author and survival expert ; Rüdiger Overmans, (born 1954), German historian specialized in World War II ; Rüdiger Safranski (b. 1945), German philosopher and author. ; Rüdiger Schleicher (1895-1945), German resistance fighter ; Ernst Rüdiger von Starhemberg (1638–1701), Austrian politician, military general and chief of Vienna, one of the principal commanders of Battle of Vienna ; Ernst Rüdiger Starhemberg (1899-1956), Austrian nationalist and politician who helped introduce austrofascism and install a clerico-fascist dictatorship in Austria, chancellor of Federal State of Austria ; Rüdiger Vogler (b. 1942), German film actor ", "score": "1.5155795" }, { "id": "16123854", "title": "Die Bergretter", "text": " Rudi (played by Michael Pascher) is a repairman at the heliport Christophorus 14. Emilie Hofer (played by Stefanie von Poser) is a friend of the whole team and especially Tobias Herbrechter whom she marries in series seven. She has two children and a farm which she manages with the help of Andreas Marthaler after the death of her first husband Stefan Hofer. Later she takes in Andreas' father Franz Marthaler and transforms the farm into a pension and in series seven invites Markus Kofler to stay as well even though her husband Tobias is still at loggerheads with him. She is strong, independent, cares deeply for her family and friends and lives ", "score": "1.513342" }, { "id": "7901042", "title": "Andreas Rebers", "text": " Andreas Rebers (born 7 January 1958) is a Kabarett artist, author and musician from Munich. His shows often incorporate performances on the accordion or the piano.", "score": "1.5064107" }, { "id": null, "title": "Wolf Rüdiger Hess", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Andreas Christensen", "text": "Andreas Christensen\n\nAndreas Bødtker Christensen (born 10 April 1996) is a Danish professional footballer who plays as a centre-back for La Liga club Barcelona and the Denmark national team.\n\nChristensen began his career at Skjold Birkerød and later joined Brøndby. He joined Chelsea at the age of 15 in February 2012, making his professional debut in October 2014. From 2015 to 2017, he was loaned to Bundesliga club Borussia Mönchengladbach, where he made 82 appearances and scored 7 goals.\n\nChristensen made his full international debut for Denmark in June 2015, and represented the nation at the 2018 FIFA World Cup, UEFA Euro 2020 and the 2022 World Cup.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Rüdiger Kuhlbrodt", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Rüdiger Kruse", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Thomas Tuchel", "text": "Thomas Tuchel\n\nThomas Tuchel (; born 29 August 1973) is a German professional football manager and former player who last managed Premier League club Chelsea. \nBorn in Krumbach, Tuchel retired at age 25 after a chronic knee cartilage injury; in 2000, he began his coaching career as a youth coach at VfB Stuttgart, and in 2009, after a one-year period at FC Augsburg II, he was hired by Mainz 05. He departed Mainz in 2014 and was appointed at fellow Bundesliga club Borussia Dortmund in 2015, where he won the DFB-Pokal before being dismissed in 2017. He was hired by French club Paris Saint-Germain in 2018, where he won two league titles, including a domestic quadruple in his second season, and guided the club to its first UEFA Champions League final before being dismissed in 2020.\n\nTuchel was appointed by Chelsea in 2021 and won the Champions League in his debut season. He was dismissed as manager in September 2022.", "score": null }, { "id": "10122005", "title": "Rüdiger Sünner", "text": " 1970 Abitur From 1972 to 1985 he studied music, music science, German and philosophy. Beside being a musician in different Pop groups and training activity as flutist. In 1985 he graduated in the art and philosophy of Theodor Ludwig Wiesengrund Adorno and Friedrich Wilhelm Nietzsche. From 1986-1991 he studied at the German film and television academy in Berlin (DFFB). Since 1991 he has operated as author, film producer and musician in Berlin.", "score": "1.5063127" }, { "id": "6901355", "title": "Rüdiger Krech", "text": " Rüdiger Krech (born 9 June 1964) is a German public health expert who currently works as a senior official at the World Health Organization (WHO). An advocate for universal health coverage, social determinants of health, Health in All Policies and social protection, he is the Director of Health Systems and Innovation at the Office of the Assistant Director-General at the organization.", "score": "1.4804664" }, { "id": "2947124", "title": "Andreas Roller", "text": " Andreas Leonhard Roller (Russian: Андреас Леонгард Роллер, also known as \"Андрей Адамович Роллер\"; 8 January 1805, Regensburg – 20 June 1891, St. Petersburg) was a German-born Russian landscape painter and theatrical set designer, who served as a Professor at the Imperial Academy of Arts.", "score": "1.4761386" }, { "id": "25622276", "title": "Andreas Mand", "text": " Andreas Mand was born in Duisburg, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany as the son of a parson. After elementary school he attended the Fichte- Gymnasium Krefeld. Then he studied at the University of Osnabrück and attained the Magister degree in Media Studies. Later he lived for a while in Berlin and Duisburg. Several years he has been working as a stay at home father, and only wrote in his leisure, while his wife works outside of the home. Sometimes, the role of stay-at-home dad was difficult for him, because in Germany, this practice is less common. Today, Andreas Mand is working and living in Minden, North Rhine-Westphalia (Germany).", "score": "1.4743187" }, { "id": "25770948", "title": "Andreas Vogler", "text": " Andreas Vogler (born January 15, 1964) is a Swiss architect, designer and artist. He is founder and director of the architecture and design firm, Andreas Vogler Studio.", "score": "1.4710865" }, { "id": "2129486", "title": "Rüdiger Bieler", "text": " Rüdiger Bieler (born 1955 in Hamburg, Germany) is a German-American biologist whose primary scientific field of study is malacology, the study of mollusks.", "score": "1.4687924" }, { "id": "4629490", "title": "Rüdiger Vogler", "text": " Rüdiger Vogler (born 14 May 1942 in Warthausen, near Biberach an der Riß) is a German film and stage actor.", "score": "1.4665358" }, { "id": "15519876", "title": "Rüdiger Frank", "text": " Rüdiger Frank (born 1969) is a German economist and expert on North Korea and East Asia. He currently lives and works in Vienna, Austria, as a tenured full professor of East Asian economy and society at the University of Vienna. Frank also serves as the head of the Department of East Asian Studies in Vienna and is an adjunct professor at Korea University and at the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul. Frank's main areas of research are socialist transformation in East Asia and Europe, with a focus on North Korea, state-business relations in East Asia, and regional integration in East Asia. Frank received an MA in Korean studies, economics, and international relations at Humboldt University of Berlin and a PhD in economics from Mercator-University in Duisburg. Prior to his appointment as professor of East Asian economy and society at the University of Vienna, he taught at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs in New York from 2002 to 2003.", "score": "1.4637401" }, { "id": "13000097", "title": "Andreas Walsperger", "text": " Andreas Walsperger (born c. 1415 in Radkersburg; date of death unknown) was a German cartographer of the 15th century. The son of a carpenter, he became a Benedictine monk at St. Peter's in Salzburg in 1434. He left the monastery in 1442. Little more is known about him except that in 1448/9 he created his map in Konstanz.", "score": "1.4616017" }, { "id": "28635307", "title": "Rüdiger Fahlenbrach", "text": " Rüdiger Fahlenbrach (born 1974 in Essen, Germany) is a German economist specialised in finance. He is a professor of finance at EPFL (École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne) and holds the Swiss Finance Institute Senior Research Chair.", "score": "1.4611013" }, { "id": "403217", "title": "Andreas Schleicher", "text": " Andreas Schleicher (born 7 July 1964 in Wandsbeck) is a German-born mathematician, statistician and researcher in the field of education. He is the Division Head and coordinator of the OECD Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) and the OECD Indicators of Education Systems programme (INES).", "score": "1.4576921" }, { "id": "32343509", "title": "Rüdiger Hacker", "text": " Rüdiger Hacker (born 1941) is a German actor, radio play narrator and director. Rüdiger Hacker is one of the founding members of the Hall Schaubühne am Ufer in Berlin. He had theatrical engagements at Munich's Volkstheater, the Munich Kammerspiele, the Thalia Theater in Hamburg, Düsseldorf Schauspielhaus and the Salzburg Festival. Today Rüdiger Hacker is an ensemble member at the National Theater in Mannheim. In the years 1980 to 1987 he directed in theaters in the city of Bern and Basel, the Thalia Theater and the Bavarian State Theater in Munich, where he now teaches. Along with six other members he founded the New Munich Drama School in 1988, where he was chairman until 1999. Rüdiger Hacker now lives in Munich.", "score": "1.4565485" }, { "id": "5529656", "title": "Ruediger Heining", "text": " with responsibility for the implementation of the Leonardo-da-Vinci project (Germany, Slovakia, Romania). Since 2010 he has also been active as an expert for the World Bank (Washington) where he is involved in a project „Quality Management and Customer Orientation in Agricultural Administration“. Following a number of foreign postings in connection with EU Twinning Projects, he was active at the UNDP in Georgia where worked as a diplomat and Project Manager in setting up a vocational training system. In March 2017 Ruediger Heining took over the management of DEULA Baden-Wuerttemberg and in 2018 became the Vice-President of the federal association DEULA e.V. He is also a member of the supervisory body of the German-Romanian Centre for Specialist Training and Continuing Education in Voiteg (Romania).", "score": "1.4554543" }, { "id": "13892519", "title": "Karlheinz Rüdisser", "text": " Karlheinz Rüdisser (born 25 February 1955, Bregenz, Austria) is an Austrian politician for the Austrian People's Party (ÖVP), who, since December 2011, is the state administrator of Vorarlberg. He is married and lives with his wife and a daughter and two sons in Lauterach.", "score": "1.4552293" }, { "id": "10122004", "title": "Rüdiger Sünner", "text": " Rüdiger Sünner, born 1953 in Köln on the Rhine, is a German author and documentary film maker, most notable for his book and his documentary on the Schwarze Sonne.", "score": "1.4544215" } ]
What is Robert Lewis's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Robert Lewis (MP)
5,604,342
64
[ { "id": "33110266", "title": "Robert G. Lewis", "text": " Robert Grier Lewis (born December 5, 1916 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, died January 6, 2011 in Ormond-by-the-Sea, Florida) was an American photographer, editor and author in the field of railways.", "score": "1.7298937" }, { "id": "11981994", "title": "Robert Kennedy Lewis", "text": " Robert Kennedy Lewis is a St Lucian Politician representing the Saint Lucia Labour Party. He was elected to the House of Assembly of Saint Lucia following the election of 11 December 2006 as the member of parliament for Castries South. Previous to his election Dr Lewis was Supervisor and Examiner of National Examinations in Mathematics from 1992 to 2006. In January 2005 he received a Phd in Mathematics from the University of Otago.", "score": "1.7013545" }, { "id": "1622881", "title": "George Robert Lewis", "text": " Attribution", "score": "1.6558563" }, { "id": "32931058", "title": "B. Robert Lewis", "text": " Bert Robert Lewis, Sr. (November 11, 1931 &ndash; April 24, 1979) was an American veterinarian and politician. Lewis was born in Hutchinson, Kansas and was an African-American. He received his degrees in animal husbandry in 1953, biological science in 1958, and in veterinarian medicine in 1960 from Kansas State University. Lewis served in the United States Army during the Korean War. In 1962, Lewis moved to St. Louis Park, Minnesota and was a veterinarian. Lewis served on the St. Louis Park School Board from 1967 to 1971 and on the Minnesota Board of Education. Lewis served in the Minnesota Senate from 1973 until his death in 1979 and was a Democrat. He died from a heart attack at his home in Golden Valley, Minnesota. His body laid in state at the Minnesota State Capitol.", "score": "1.6426228" }, { "id": "14716321", "title": "Robert Lewis (journalist)", "text": " Robert Lewis (born August 19, 1943) is a Canadian journalist, author and media executive who served as editor-in-chief of Maclean's Magazine. In 2018 Dundurn Press published his book, Power, Prime Ministers and the Press: The Battle for Truth on Parliament Hill, a history of the Canadian Parliamentary press gallery (Dundurn Press, October 2018). In 2019 it was selected for the long list of the Taylor Prize for literary non-fiction. The book is based on interviews and archival research about the interplay between reporters and Canada's 23 prime ministers. Lewis is a former editor-in-chief of Maclean's newsmagazine (1993–2000) and was a member of the Parliamentary Press Gallery for more than a decade. After graduating with an English degree from Loyola College in 1964, Lewis worked as a reporter for The Montreal Star. He was bureau chief for Time Magazine in ", "score": "1.6418583" }, { "id": null, "title": "John Lewis", "text": "John Lewis\n\nJohn Robert Lewis (February 21, 1940 – July 17, 2020) was an American politician and civil rights activist who served in the United States House of Representatives for from 1987 until his death in 2020. He participated in the 1960 Nashville sit-ins, the Freedom Rides, was the chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) from 1963 to 1966, and was one of the \"Big Six\" leaders of groups who organized the 1963 March on Washington. Fulfilling many key roles in the civil rights movement and its actions to end legalized racial segregation in the United States, in 1965 Lewis led the first of three Selma to Montgomery marches across the Edmund Pettus Bridge where, in an incident which became known as Bloody Sunday, state troopers and police attacked Lewis and the other marchers.\n\nA member of the Democratic Party, Lewis was first elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1986 and served 17 terms. The district he represented included most of Atlanta. Due to his length of service, he became the dean of the Georgia congressional delegation. Lewis was one of the leaders of the Democratic Party in the House, serving from 1991 as a chief deputy whip and from 2003 as a senior chief deputy whip. He received many honorary degrees and awards, including the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Louis Stevenson", "text": "Robert Louis Stevenson\n\nRobert Louis Stevenson (born Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson; 13 November 1850 – 3 December 1894) was a Scottish novelist, essayist, poet, and travel writer. He is best known for works such as \"Treasure Island\", \"Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde\", \"Kidnapped\" and \"A Child's Garden of Verses\".\n\nBorn and educated in Edinburgh, Stevenson suffered from serious bronchial trouble for much of his life, but continued to write prolifically and travel widely in defiance of his poor health. As a young man, he mixed in London literary circles, receiving encouragement from Andrew Lang, Edmund Gosse, Leslie Stephen and W. E. Henley, the last of whom may have provided the model for Long John Silver in \"Treasure Island\". In 1890, he settled in Samoa where, alarmed at increasing European and American influence in the South Sea islands, his writing turned away from romance and adventure fiction toward a darker realism. He died of a stroke in his island home in 1894 at age 44.<ref name=\":0\" />\n\nA celebrity in his lifetime, Stevenson's critical reputation has fluctuated since his death, though today his works are held in general acclaim. In 2018 he was ranked, just behind Charles Dickens, as the 26th-most-translated author in the world.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Lewis Dabney", "text": "Robert Lewis Dabney\n\nRobert Lewis Dabney (March 5, 1820 – January 3, 1898) was an American Christian theologian, Southern Presbyterian pastor, Confederate States Army chaplain, and architect. He was also chief of staff and biographer to Stonewall Jackson. His biography of Jackson remains in print today.\n\nDabney and James Henley Thornwell were two of Southern Presbyterianism's most influential scholars. They were both Calvinist, Old School Presbyterians, and social conservatives. Some conservative Presbyterians, particularly within the Presbyterian Church in America and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church, still value their theological writings, although some within these churches have repudiated Dabney's and Thornwell's beliefs on race and support of antebellum slavery.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert Lewis (director)", "text": "Robert Lewis (director)\n\nRobert Lewis (March 16, 1909 – November 23, 1997) was an American actor, director, teacher, author and founder of the influential Actors Studio in New York in 1947.\n\nIn addition to his accomplishments on Broadway and in Hollywood, Lewis' greatest and longest lasting contribution to American theater may be the role he played as one of the foremost acting and directing teachers of his day. He was an early proponent of the Stanislavski System of acting technique and a founding member of New York's revolutionary Group Theatre in the 1930s. In the 1970s, he was the Head of the Yale School of Drama Acting and Directing Departments.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Robert A. Lewis", "text": "Robert A. Lewis\n\nRobert Alvin Lewis (October 18, 1917 – June 18, 1983) was a United States Army Air Forces officer serving in the Pacific Theatre during World War II. He was the co-pilot and aircraft commander of the \"Enola Gay\", the B-29 Superfortress bomber which dropped the atomic bomb Little Boy on the Japanese city of Hiroshima on 6 August 1945.", "score": null }, { "id": "3806546", "title": "Robert Jacob Lewis", "text": " Robert Jacob Lewis (December 30, 1864 – July 24, 1933) was a Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania. Robert J. Lewis was born in Dover, Pennsylvania. He attended the public schools of York, Pennsylvania and graduated from the high school in 1883. He taught in the public schools until September 1889. He graduated from the law department of Yale University in 1891 and was admitted to the New Haven, Connecticut, bar in June 1891 and to the bar of York County, Pennsylvania, August 1891. He commenced practice in York. He was elected school controller of York in 1893 and reelected in 1897 and 1903. He was elected city solicitor in 1895. He was an unsuccessful candidate for election in 1898. Lewis was elected as a Republican to the Fifty-seventh Congress. He declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1902. He returned to the practice of law, and died in Camden, Arkansas, in 1933. He remains were cremated and the ashes placed in the Iris Columbarium Mausoleum in St. Louis, Missouri.", "score": "1.6403302" }, { "id": "3806547", "title": "Robert Jacob Lewis", "text": "The Political Graveyard ", "score": "1.6367359" }, { "id": "1622878", "title": "George Robert Lewis", "text": " George Robert Lewis (1782–1871) was a versatile English painter of landscapes and portraits.", "score": "1.6292566" }, { "id": "13125825", "title": "Robert Benjamin Lewis", "text": " Robert Benjamin Lewis (1802 - February 1858) was an African and Native American author, best known for writing Light and Truth. He also was an entrepreneur, successfully marketing hair oil and other commodities, and also held three United States patents.", "score": "1.617549" }, { "id": "13125832", "title": "Robert Benjamin Lewis", "text": " Known as a \"jack-of-all-trades,\" Lewis made his living by engaging in a variety of odd jobs. At various times in his life, he was a sailor, ship's cook and steward, whitewasher, and day laborer. Robert Benjamin Lewis held three United States patents, making him one of the few nineteenth century African American inventors who were able to patent their inventions or improvements to existing manufacturing processes. In his application for a United States Patent dated April 11, 1836, Lewis stated that \"I, Robert Benjamin Lewis of Hallowell, in the county of Kennebec, and state of Maine, have invented a new and useful machine ", "score": "1.6163545" }, { "id": "14352582", "title": "Robert Q. Lewis", "text": " Lewis was born Robert Goldberg in Manhattan to Jewish immigrants from Imperial Russia. At age ten he set up a microphone and record player at home and became the family's disc jockey.", "score": "1.6120706" }, { "id": "227474", "title": "Robert E. Lewis", "text": " Robert E. Lewis (April 3, 1857 – July 31, 1941) was a United States Circuit Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit and the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit and previously was a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Colorado.", "score": "1.6059296" }, { "id": "14352581", "title": "Robert Q. Lewis", "text": " Robert Q. Lewis (born Robert Goldberg; April 25, 1921 &ndash; December 11, 1991) was an American radio and television personality, game show host, and actor. Lewis added the middle initial \"Q\" to his name accidentally on the air in 1942, when he responded to a reference to radio comedian F. Chase Taylor's character, Colonel Lemuel Q. Stoopnagle, by saying, \"and this is Robert Q. Lewis.\" He subsequently decided to retain the initial, telling interviewers that it stood for \"Quizzical.\" Lewis is perhaps best known for his game show participation, having been the first host of The Name's the Same, and regularly appearing on other Goodson-Todman panel shows. He also hosted and appeared on a multitude of television shows of the 1940s through the 1970s. His most distinguishing feature was his horn-rimmed glasses, to the point that the title card for his second Robert Q. Lewis Show featured a pair of such glasses as a logo, and they were mentioned in the title of his lecture. As a frequent guest panelist on What's My Line?, Lewis's blindfold featured a sketched pair of glasses.", "score": "1.579767" }, { "id": "2018435", "title": "Dale Lewis (ice hockey)", "text": " Robert Dale Lewis (born July 28, 1952) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey player. He played eight games in the National Hockey League with the New York Rangers during the 1975–76 NHL season.", "score": "1.5517614" }, { "id": "29579392", "title": "Allan Lewis (rugby union)", "text": " Robert Allan Lewis (born 7 October 1942) is a former international rugby union player. He was capped six times by Wales as a scrum-half between 1966 and 1967. He was selected for the 1966 British Lions tour to Australia and New Zealand, and played in the last three internationals against the All Blacks. He also toured South Africa with Wales in 1964. He played club rugby for Abertillery and Newport.", "score": "1.5481286" }, { "id": "4903862", "title": "Robert F. R. Lewis", "text": " Captain (United States)#U.S. NavCaptain Robert F. R. Lewis (30 January 1826 – 23 February 1881) was an officer in the United States Navy. He participated in the Paraguay Expedition, fought in the Mexican War and American Civil War, and served briefly as commander of the Asiatic Squadron.", "score": "1.5460534" }, { "id": "33110267", "title": "Robert G. Lewis", "text": " After completing his high school education in Germantown, Pennsylvania, he began a job with the Pennsylvania Railroad (PRR) on August 8, 1934. From April 15, 1940 to January 15, 1941 he worked for the Bessemer and Lake Erie Railroad. From 1941 to 1942 he returned to work in the freight transport division of the Pennsylvania Railroad in Cleveland and Akron. After his military service in the US Navy from 1942 to 1946, he was again employed by the Pennsylvania Railroad. In 1947, Lewis joined Railway Age in Chicago as assistant editor, before later rising became an editor for the magazine's transport division. In 1950 he became head of sales ", "score": "1.5377645" }, { "id": "13125829", "title": "Robert Benjamin Lewis", "text": " in 1809, and it is known that Robert Benjamin Lewis lived at times in the cities of Portland, Augusta, and Hallowell, Maine. After some years in school, Lewis appears to have gone to sea, as many did during that time. His daughter stated that Lewis served in the War of 1812, probably as a cabin boy on a privateer. However, according to newspaper accounts, he wanted to become a missionary to Africa and preach the Gospel to the indigenous people. He may have been helped by the Maine Missionary Society of Hallowell. This group of Congregationalist ministers and laypeople had ", "score": "1.5345525" }, { "id": "14716322", "title": "Robert Lewis (journalist)", "text": " (1967–1969), a correspondent in Ottawa (1969–1971) and Boston (1971–1972) and bureau chief in Toronto (1972–1975). In 1975, Lewis became bureau chief for Maclean's in Ottawa, then Maclean's managing editor in 1982, and editor-in-chief from 1993 to the end of 2000. Lewis was responsible for the launch of the annual university rankings feature and led the team that moved Maclean's into online publishing. In 2001, Lewis joined Rogers Media Incorporated as vice president of content development. Since his retirement in 2008, Lewis has worked as a freelance editor and media consultant. Lewis was a member of York University's Board of Governors. Lewis is also a founding member of the Canadian Journalism Foundation and served as chair of the board of directors. A native of Waterloo, Quebec, he and Sally O'Neill, whom he married in 1967, now live in Toronto.", "score": "1.5181184" }, { "id": "3135802", "title": "Robert Hall Lewis", "text": " Robert Hall Lewis (April 22, 1926 &ndash; March 22, 1996) was an American composer, conductor, and trumpet player who taught at Goucher College (1958 &ndash; 1995) and Peabody Conservatory (1958 &ndash; 1995), both in Baltimore, Maryland. His works were performed widely, by such ensembles as the American Composers Orchestra, Baltimore Symphony Orchestra, Boston Symphony Orchestra, Group for Contemporary Music, Gruppe Neue Musik, London Sinfonietta, London Symphony Orchestra, Parnassus, and the Philharmonia Orchestra, and many have been recorded commercially, often with the composer conducting. Lewis received BM (1949), MM (1951), and PhD (1964) degrees in composition from the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, New York, where his principal teacher was Bernard Rogers. He also studied composition privately during the 1950s with Nadia Boulanger (in Paris) and Hans Erich Apostel (in Vienna), and conducting with Pierre Monteux. His style is atonal and textural in orientation. His music is filled with arresting timbral combinations and projects its often densely complex rhythmic structures with the utmost clarity.", "score": "1.5120299" } ]
What is Guillem Ramon de Gironella's occupation?
[ "troubadour" ]
occupation
Guillem Ramon de Gironella
2,827,342
63
[ { "id": "4738394", "title": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella", "text": "Cor es de bos aips complida ; deu esser enantida ; sa valors, s'ap si m'acueill; ; enquer n'er meils que d'Enida ; can Erecs l'ac enrequida, ; quar mais la tem e l'am meils. Guillem Ramon de Gironella was a late thirteenth-century Catalan troubadour. His poetry, while difficult, is highly original and praised for its beauty. Guillem Ramon was from Gironella in the Berguedà. There are many persons carrying the name \"Ramon de Gironella\" in twelfth- and thirteenth-century documents, but no others named \"Guillem Ramon\". The troubadour has been identified with a person bearing the initials \"G.R.\" marked on a tomb in the monastery of Sant Daniel de Girona and ", "score": "1.8428282" }, { "id": "4738397", "title": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella", "text": " (lord of Gironella), but Guillem Ramon was not the feudal lord of Gironella nor even a nobleman, but a cleric. Whether Cerverí was confused or Guillem Ramon only took up his clerical career late in life is not known. In two of his cansos&mdash;\"Gen m'apareill\" and \"La clara lutz del bel jorn\"&mdash;Guillem Ramon celebrates a person by the senhal (or nickname) Sobreluenh (\"Over-a-distance\"), but whether this is his lady or a friend, like the viscount of Cardona or Cabrera is debated. Ramon Guillem was familiar with the poem Erec and Enide of Chrétien de Troyes, as he makes known in \"Gen m'apareill\": He also wrote the canso \"Pos l'amors r'ensen\".", "score": "1.7914598" }, { "id": "4738395", "title": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella", "text": " next to the tomb of his mother, Brunissendis de Gerundella. If this identification is correct, then Guillem Ramon was the canon Guillelmus Raimundi de Gerundella whose death is recorded in monastic records on 8 July of an unknown year. All of Guillem Ramon's surviving poetry, four works in total, is preserved in a single chansonnier, three cansos under the full name Guilem Raimon de Gironela and one partimen with the jongleur Pouzet under the name Guilem Raimon. Towards the end of this piece, \"Del joi d'amor agradiu\", Guillem suggests submitting it to the judgement of la de Palau (\"[she] of Palau\"), but the lady and the Palau to which this ", "score": "1.716927" }, { "id": "4738398", "title": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella", "text": "Riquer, Martín de. Los trovadores: historia literaria y textos. 3 vol. Barcelona: Planeta, 1975. ", "score": "1.6809759" }, { "id": "4738396", "title": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella", "text": " are not securely identifiable. The contemporary Catalan troubadour Cerverí de Girona, in his Recepta de xarob, wrote (between 1260 and 1285): E si Na Guyllamona (or Guillemona) ''/ lay a Palau, vos dona / un pauc de cuyndia. . . . The lady Guillemona may be the la de Palau of Guillem Ramon's partimen''. If so, this would establish a link between the obscure Guillem Ramon and the famous Cerverí, putting the former in better context. One further reference from Cerverí, however, throws the identification of Guillem Ramon the troubadour with the canon into doubt. Cerverí, in his Testament (1274), says that En Poncet is grateful to the don de ", "score": "1.6518197" }, { "id": null, "title": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella", "text": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella\n\nGuillem Ramon de Gironella was a late thirteenth-century Catalan troubadour. His poetry, while difficult, is highly original and praised for its beauty.\n\nGuillem Ramon was from Gironella in the Berguedà. There are many persons carrying the name \"Ramon de Gironella\" in twelfth- and thirteenth-century documents, but no others named \"Guillem Ramon\". The troubadour has been identified with a person bearing the initials \"G.R.\" marked on a tomb in the monastery of Sant Daniel de Girona and lying next to the tomb of his mother, Brunissendis de Gerundella. If this identification is correct, then Guillem Ramon was the canon \"Guillelmus Raimundi de Gerundella\" whose death is recorded in monastic records on 8 July of an unknown year.\n\nAll of Guillem Ramon's surviving poetry, four works in total, is preserved in a single chansonnier, three \"cansos\" under the full name \"Guilem Raimon de Gironela\" and one \"partimen\" with the jongleur Pouzet under the name \"Guilem Raimon\". Towards the end of this piece, \"Del joi d'amor agradiu\", Guillem suggests submitting it to the judgement of \"la de Palau\" (\"[she] of Palau\"), but the lady and the Palau to which this refers are not securely identifiable. The contemporary Catalan troubadour Cerverí de Girona, in his \"Recepta de xarob\", wrote (between 1260 and 1285): \"E si Na Guyllamona\" (or \"Guillemona\") \"/ lay a Palau, vos dona / un pauc de cuyndia. . . .\" The lady Guillemona may be the \"la de Palau\" of Guillem Ramon's \"partimen\". If so, this would establish a link between the obscure Guillem Ramon and the famous Cerverí, putting the former in better context.\n\nOne further reference from Cerverí, however, throws the identification of Guillem Ramon the troubadour with the canon into doubt. Cerverí, in his \"Testament\" (1274), says that \"En Poncet\" is grateful to the \"don de Gironella\" (lord of Gironella), but Guillem Ramon was not the feudal lord of Gironella nor even a nobleman, but a cleric. Whether Cerverí was confused or Guillem Ramon only took up his clerical career late in life is not known.\n\nIn two of his \"cansos\"—\"Gen m'apareill\" and \"La clara lutz del bel jorn\"—Guillem Ramon celebrates a person by the \"senhal\" (or nickname) \"Sobreluenh\" (\"Over-a-distance\"), but whether this is his lady or a friend, like the viscount of Cardona or Cabrera is debated. Ramon Guillem was familiar with the poem \"Erec and Enide\" of Chrétien de Troyes, as he makes known in \"Gen m'apareill\":\nHe also wrote the \"canso\" \"Pos l'amors r'ensen\".\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Troubadour", "text": "Troubadour\n\nA troubadour (, ; ) was a composer and performer of Old Occitan lyric poetry during the High Middle Ages (1100–1350). Since the word \"troubadour\" is etymologically masculine, a female troubadour is usually called a \"trobairitz\".\n\nThe troubadour school or tradition began in the late 11th century in Occitania, but it subsequently spread to the Italian and Iberian Peninsulas. Under the influence of the troubadours, related movements sprang up throughout Europe: the Minnesang in Germany, \"trovadorismo\" in Galicia and Portugal, and that of the trouvères in northern France. Dante Alighieri in his \"De vulgari eloquentia\" defined the troubadour lyric as \"fictio rethorica musicaque poita\": rhetorical, musical, and poetical fiction. After the \"classical\" period around the turn of the 13th century and a mid-century resurgence, the art of the troubadours declined in the 14th century and around the time of the Black Death (1348) it died out.\n\nThe texts of troubadour songs deal mainly with themes of chivalry and courtly love. Most were metaphysical, intellectual, and formulaic. Many were humorous or vulgar satires. Works can be grouped into three styles: the \"trobar leu\" (light), \"trobar ric\" (rich), and \"trobar clus\" (closed). Likewise there were many genres, the most popular being the \"canso\", but \"sirventes\" and \"tensos\" were especially popular in the post-classical period.", "score": null }, { "id": "20630095", "title": "Erasmo Janer Gironella", "text": "Erasmo Janer Gironella José Erasmo Janer Gironella (1833-1911) was a Spanish entrepreneur and politician. As a businessman he is considered a member of the textile-industry-related Catalan bourgeoisie, which enjoyed peak of its power in the mid-19th century; Janer represented this group during its declining phase. Politically he earned his name as a Carlist and headed the Catalan branch of the party between 1902 and 1910. Some scholars consider the Janer family past an illustration of social history in Catalonia, its rise and decline demonstrating patterns of change within the local ruling strata. Erasmo's paternal grandfather Domingo Janer Sunyer (1762-1807) was", "score": "1.5344801" }, { "id": "12167436", "title": "Ramon d'Abella", "text": "jurisdiction, both high and low, for 16,500 Aragonese \"sous\" from John I. From 1395 to 1397 and again from 1398 to 1401 he served as governor of the Kingdom of Majorca. His lieutenant was Berenguer de Montagut. Ramon d'Abella Ramon d'Abella (fl. 1389–1401) was a Catalan military leader and royal councillor under John I and Martin of the Crown of Aragon. During the \"guerra dels armanyaguesos\" in 1389, Ramon led a regiment of cavalry in the area around Torroella de Montgrí and Palafrugell. The young poet Guillem de Masdovelles fought under Ramon in these campaigns against Bernard VII of Armagnac", "score": "1.5312586" }, { "id": "11521504", "title": "Guillem Ramon de Gironella", "text": "Cerverí de Girona, in his \"Recepta de xarob\", wrote (between 1260 and 1285): \"E si Na Guyllamona\" (or \"Guillemona\") \"/ lay a Palau, vos dona / un pauc de cuyndia. . . .\" The lady Guillemona may be the \"la de Palau\" of Guillem Ramon's \"partimen\". If so, this would establish a link between the obscure Guillem Ramon and the famous Cerverí, putting the former in better context. One further reference from Cerverí, however, throws the identification of Guillem Ramon the troubadour with the canon into doubt. Cerverí, in his \"Testament\" (1274), says that \"En Poncet\" is grateful to the", "score": "1.5279825" }, { "id": "4422991", "title": "Gironella", "text": "Vicenç Navarro ", "score": "1.5479878" }, { "id": "31550236", "title": "Guilhem de Berguedan", "text": " and fiefs were confiscated and he was consequently exiled from Catalonia and is not heard of again for seven years. During his exile he befriended one Arnau de Castellbò and gathered around himself a small group of loyal supporters. It was probably during this period of exile that he made his pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela. Guillem's career in Catalonia picks up again in the 1180s. By his father's will of 1183 Guillem stood to inherit the castles of Madrona (known as Castell Berguedà), Casserres, Puig-reig, Espinalbet, and Montmajor the fief held from Huguet de Mataplana. Through some poems of Bertran de Born, a friend and fellow troubadour, we know that ", "score": "1.5018895" }, { "id": "29442781", "title": "Guillem de Ribes", "text": " Guillem de Ribes (c. 1140 – c. 1220) was a Catalan nobleman and troubadour, that is, a composer of music and lyric verse in the Old Occitan language. None of his works survive and he is known as a troubadour only from a single reference to him in a song by another troubadour Guillem was the son of Arnau de Ribes and younger brother of Ponç I de Ribes. The family were vassals of the Bishop of Barcelona. His father, a warrior, left the administration of the family castle, Sant Pere de Ribes, in the hands of his younger brother, Ramon I, for long periods and it was Ramon who inherited it after Arnau's ", "score": "1.5006981" }, { "id": "7714474", "title": "Guillem de Masdovelles", "text": " Guillem de Masdovelles (fl. 1389&ndash;1438) was a Catalan soldier, courtier, politician, and poet. His family came from the Penedès, but he was active in Barcelona, where he became a civic leader. His fifteen poems are preserved alongside the work of his nephew, Joan Berenguer, in a chansonnier compiled by Joan around 1470, the Cançoner dels Masdovelles. Guillem exchanged some poetry with his nephew, who also translated some of Guillem's Occitan pieces into the Catalan language. Guillem also participated in at least three public poetry contests. ", "score": "1.492914" }, { "id": "7714478", "title": "Guillem de Masdovelles", "text": " Guillem adapted the genre of the comiat, typically a song for \"dismissing\" a mistress, and set it to the purpose of separating himself from the service of Guerau de Cervelló, whom he describes as governador de moltes gens e pobles (meaning governor of Catalonia). Though he has performed many tasks for the aging governor, Guillem lists several wrongs that Guerau has done to his family. Many of these are impossible to understand precisely, though they would present an interesting historical commentary if they could be. It appears that Guillem was with Guerau in Sicily when the latter came to the aid of Castrogiovanni during the siege of Catania. Guerau died in 1405. Guillem was also the author of three maldits, songs \"cursing\" women who ", "score": "1.471635" }, { "id": "28885160", "title": "House of Montcada", "text": " The House of Moncada was started by Guillem I de Muntanyola or de Vacarisses (b. ? - d. 1040). He was the son of Sunifred, the Vescomte de Girona (Viscount of Girona) who was granted the castle and lands of Montcada in Montcada i Reixac, Barcelona. Guillem I took the name Guillem I de Montcada in accordance with proper naming traditions upon being granted a landed title. Guillem I married Adelaida de Claramunt (b. 1000 - d. 1063). Their first child, Ramon I de Montcada, II Senyor del Castell de Montcada was appointed the office of Senescal of Barcelona and Catalonia. Their second son, Bernat I de Montcada became the Ardiaca (Archdeacon) of Barcelona. The third ", "score": "1.4637676" }, { "id": "29885495", "title": "Guillem d'Agulló", "text": " Guillem d'Agulló (1310s-1393) was a Spanish nobleman, Abbot of Poblet, he was the man who was commissioned by Pedro IV for reforms, building projects and construction of royal tombs in Monastery of Poblet.", "score": "1.4570445" }, { "id": "28884714", "title": "Ramon I de Montcada", "text": " Ramon I de Montcada was the son of Guillem Ramon I de Montcada and his wife, Beatriu de Montcada. The House of Montcada was a noble household that would rise to significant prominence in the coming generations in service to the Crown of Aragon.", "score": "1.4564173" }, { "id": "31550234", "title": "Guilhem de Berguedan", "text": " Guillem de Berguedà (c.1130&ndash;1195/6; fl.1138&ndash;1192), or Guilhem de Berguedan in Occitan, was a Catalan troubadour and viscount of Berguedà. He was the most prolific Catalan poet of the twelfth century, though he composed in Occitan, and thirty-one of his poems survive. Most are sirventes, \"typically violent and obscene, reflecting his character and turbulent life,\" but there are a few cansos. Most of what is known about him derives from his vida and his songs. The viscounty of Berguedà was a fief of the County of Cerdagne and the first mention of its dates to the tenth century. In 1131 Guillem's father (also Guillem) appears for the first time in a document as ", "score": "1.4549344" }, { "id": "29885496", "title": "Guillem d'Agulló", "text": " Born in Catalonia, Guillem d'Agulló was appointed Abbot of Poblet by Peter of Aragon. Agullo, built fortified towers, and everything concerning the defense of the Abbey.", "score": "1.4438319" }, { "id": "28907106", "title": "Guillem Agel i Barrière", "text": " Guillem Agel i Barrière was a leading Catalan printer and publisher born in Thuir, Roussillon, France (formerly North Catalonia) in 1753. He died in 1832. During the years prior to the French Revolution, Agel i Barrière promoted the development of theater for the benefit of the Church of Thuir. The continuity of these productions attracted the most important playwrights of Roussillon to the city (the so-called[Group of Thuir). In addition, the interest of Agel i Barrière for theater led him to collect scripts that were circulating, some of which he printed, for example in the case of the Catalan translation of Racine's tragedy Esther (1792). He also collected Catalan translations of French plays that had been translated by the members of the Group: Zaira by Voltaire, Atalia by Racine and Corneille’s Polyeucte, as well as original plays from these same authors. Additionally, Agel i Barrière was the author of a rhetorical treatise entitled Poésies ad usum Guillelmi Barrière, which is now kept at the manuscript archives of the Department of Pyrenees-Orientales in Perpignan, France. <Diccionari de la Literatura Catalana, 2008>", "score": "1.432361" }, { "id": "7714475", "title": "Guillem de Masdovelles", "text": " Guillem is first attested in 1389, when he wrote a sirventesch during the guerra dels armanyaguesos, war against the Armagnacs. He dedicated the piece to Ramon d'Abella, commander of the cavalry company with which he was fighting at the time. Late in 1389 the count of Armagnac, John III, invaded northern Catalonia from across the Pyrenees in an attempt to seize the Kingdom of Majorca, which he claimed. Guillem wrote his sirventes before actual fighting had begun. His company was active in the area around Torroella de Montgrí and Palafrugell. John III's second son, Bernard VII, already Count of Charolais, de Xerolès lo comte in Guillem's words, led a regiment of Armagnac knights into Catalonia, and it is rumours of these that Guillem is writing ", "score": "1.4314802" }, { "id": "31550235", "title": "Guilhem de Berguedan", "text": " homage to Huguet de Mataplana, from he held a fief. It is not until 1138 that the troubadour Guillem first appears in documents, as a child at the side of his father. Later writings indicate that he had three younger brothers, Raymond, Berengar, and Bernard. Some sirventes mention an imprisonment sometime before 1175, but in that year Guillem's adult career as a troubadour commenced. In several sirventes Guillem had insulted and humiliated Ramon Folc, the viscount of Cardona, thus earning Ramon's enmity. The influential viscount of Cardona then sought to turn Alfonso II and his court against the troubadour, but on 3 March 1175 Guillem dishonorably attacked and killed Ramon. His ", "score": "1.4303355" }, { "id": "32156114", "title": "José María Gironella", "text": " José María Gironella Pous (31 December 1917 in Darnius &ndash; 3 January 2003 in Arenys de Mar) was a Spanish author best known for his fictional work The Cypresses Believe in God (Los cipreses creen en Dios), which was published in Spain in 1953 and translated into English in 1955 by Harriet de Onís (1899-1969), a translator who usually specialized in Latin-American fiction.", "score": "1.4272759" }, { "id": "28884715", "title": "Ramon I de Montcada", "text": " Ramon I de Montcada's earliest appointment was that of Seneschal of Barcelona from 1173 to 1181. It appears that his father, Guillem Ramon I de Montcada held the title immediately before Ramon I until his death in 1173 making the transfer hereditary. Ramon I later served as a diplomat in the courts of Raymond VI of Toulouse, Alfonso VIII of Castile, Ferdinand II of León and Alfonso IX of León. He was involved in diplomacy with the Byzantine Emperor and also managed a failed marriage agreement between the Count of Provence, Ramon Berenguer III and Eudokia Komnene. While he was in Constantinople, he commissioned a translation of the liturgy of John Chrysostom from Leo Tuscus.", "score": "1.421978" } ]
What is Alan Mauritz Swanson's occupation?
[ "composer" ]
occupation
Alan Mauritz Swanson
1,542,205
55
[ { "id": "25320650", "title": "Don R. Swanson", "text": " Don R. Swanson (October 10, 1924 – November 18, 2012) was an American information scientist, most known for his work in literature-based discovery in the biomedical domain. His particular method has been used as a model for further work, and is often referred to as Swanson linking. He was an investigator in the Arrowsmith System project, which seeks to determine meaningful links between Medline articles to identify previously undiscovered public knowledge. He had been professor emeritus of the University of Chicago since 1996, and remained active in a post-retirement appointment until his health began to decline in 2009. Swanson received his B.S. in ", "score": "1.5740341" }, { "id": "11935146", "title": "Robert A. Swanson", "text": " Robert S. Swanson was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1947 to Arthur J. Swanson and Arline Baker Swanson. Arthur Swanson was an airplane electrical maintenance crew leader, and worked in shifts. According to Swanson, he was taught from an early age that his generation would do better than the last generation of his family. It was because of this that his family wanted him to be the first to obtain a college degree. His family was particularly interested in the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Much to his family's pride, Swanson was accepted into MIT in 1965. Even though he was majoring in chemistry, he realized later during his undergraduate education that he preferred working with people, rather than in research. What follows is an excerpt from a 1996 interview that describes ", "score": "1.5369338" }, { "id": "13866927", "title": "Sandré Swanson", "text": " Swanson was born in Oakland, California. He earned an associate's degree in psychology from Laney College and a Bachelor of Arts degree in psychology from San Francisco State University.", "score": "1.5204238" }, { "id": "10899898", "title": "Arthur Swanson", "text": " Arthur R. Swanson (May 28, 1926 &ndash; October 29, 2010) was an American businessman and politician. Swanson was born in Chicago's Roseland neighborhood and attended Chicago public schools. Swanson went to the Morgan Park Junior College. He then served in the United States Army as a paratrooper during World War II in the Pacific. Swanson was involved in the real estate business in Chicago. In the 1962 general election, Swanson defeated Democratic incumbent Robert Maher in a close race. He served as a Republican in the Illinois Senate from 1963 to 1971 from the 28th district. The 28th district, located on the southwest side of Chicago, included all or parts of Mount ", "score": "1.5118779" }, { "id": "10053793", "title": "Dick Swanson", "text": " Dick L. Swanson (born 1934) is an American photographer and a war photographer with numerous images published in the United States.", "score": "1.4914674" }, { "id": null, "title": "Rod Stewart", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Joe Biden 2020 presidential campaign endorsements ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of Jewish atheists and agnostics", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "China–United States trade war", "text": "China–United States trade war\n\nThe China–United States trade war () is an ongoing economic conflict between the People's Republic of China and the United States of America. In January 2018, U.S. President Donald Trump began setting tariffs and other trade barriers on China with the goal of forcing it to make changes to what the U.S. says are longstanding unfair trade practices and intellectual property theft. The Trump administration stated that these practices may contribute to the U.S.–China trade deficit, and that the Chinese government requires transfer of American technology to China. In response to US trade measures, the Chinese government accused the Trump administration of engaging in nationalist protectionism and took retaliatory action. After the trade war escalated through 2019, in January 2020 the two sides reached a tense phase one agreement; it expired in December 2021 with China failing by a wide margin to reach its targets for U.S. imports to China. By the end of the Trump presidency, the trade war was widely characterized as a failure.<ref name=\"Fajgelbaum\"/><ref>Multiple sources:", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of University of Pennsylvania people", "text": "List of University of Pennsylvania people\n\nThis is a working list of notable faculty, alumni and scholars of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, United States.\n", "score": null }, { "id": "25927104", "title": "Ray Swanson", "text": " Swanson began his career as an engineer in California, and he opened a gallery in Oak Glen, San Bernardino County, California in the 1960s. In 1973, he left California to establish the Christian Academy of Prescott in Prescott, Arizona in 1973. He later moved to Carefree, Arizona, where he opened a studio. Swanson became a professional painter of the American West, especially Native Americans. His paintings depicted the lives of the Hopi, Zuni and Navajo tribes. He often painted on the Navajo Nation reservation. Swanson's paintings were not caricatures of Native Americans but realistic depictions, and they were thus \"positively received by the Indian community.\" Swanson was a member of the Cowboy Artists of America from 1986 to 2004. He won a gold medal from the National Academy of Western Art in 1975. His work was added to the collection of the Phippen Museum in Prescott.", "score": "1.4906634" }, { "id": "3800577", "title": "Richard A. Swanson", "text": " Swanson was born in 1942. He received a B.A. at The College of New Jersey in 1964 and a M.A. in 1966. In 1968 he received an Ed.D. from the University of Illinois. Swanson has worked at the University of Minnesota from 1979 until 2005, and since 2005 as professor emeritus of Human Resource Development and Adult Education at the University of Minnesota in St. Paul. He is also professor emeritus at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Since 2006 Swanson is a Distinguished Research Professor of Human Resource Development and the Sam Lindsey Chair at the College of Business and Technology at the University of Texas at Tyler. Swanson has been organizationally active for a long time. In 1968 he initiated and directed an effort by the Department of Industrial Education in recruiting disadvantaged undergraduates from Ohio's center ", "score": "1.4767337" }, { "id": "25320651", "title": "Don R. Swanson", "text": " at Caltech, Pasadena, California in 1945, followed by an M.A at Rice Institute, Houston, Texas, two years later, and then a PhD in Theoretical Physics from the University of California at Berkeley in 1952. He worked as a physicist at various laboratories until 1963, when he was made a professor and served as dean of the Graduate School of Library Science at the University of Chicago until 1972 and again from 1977 to 1979 and 1987 to 1989. In 2000, he was awarded the ASIST Award of Merit, the highest honor of the society, for his \"lifetime achievements in research and scholarship.\"", "score": "1.4746132" }, { "id": "2377709", "title": "Marc Swanson", "text": " Marc Swanson (born in New Britain, Connecticut, United States) is an artist based in Brooklyn.", "score": "1.4722421" }, { "id": "30539645", "title": "John August Swanson", "text": " John August Swanson (January 11, 1938 &ndash; September 23, 2021) was an American visual artist who worked primarily in the medium of serigraphy, as well as oil, watercolor, acrylic, mixed media, lithography, and etching. Swanson studied with Corita Kent at Immaculate Heart College. He was the recipient of a Doctor of Humane Letters degree honoris causa from California Lutheran University. He collaborated on a number of books.", "score": "1.4702401" }, { "id": "7369967", "title": "Swanson (surname)", "text": " Dansby Swanson (born 1994), American baseball player ; David Swanson, American journalist and Democratic activist ; Don R. Swanson (1924–2012), American information scientist ; Donald Swanson (1848–1924), London police officer, charged with investigating the Whitechapel murders ; Duane Swanson (1913–2000), American basketball player ; E. Burton Swanson (born ca 1940), American computer scientist ; Eric Swanson, American attorney ; Erik Swanson (born 1993), American baseball player ; Evar Swanson (1902–1973), American baseball and football player ; Frank J. Swanson (1865-1941), American politician ; G. A. Swanson (1939–2009), American organizational theorist ; Gloria Swanson (1899–1983), American actress ; Howard Swanson (1907–1978), American composer ; Irena Swanson, Yugoslav-born American mathematician ; Jackie Swanson (born 1963), American ", "score": "1.4630299" }, { "id": "3947780", "title": "Dansby Swanson", "text": " James Dansby Swanson (born February 11, 1994) is an American professional baseball shortstop for the Atlanta Braves of Major League Baseball (MLB). Swanson attended Vanderbilt University, and played college baseball for the Vanderbilt Commodores. The Arizona Diamondbacks selected him first overall in the 2015 Major League Baseball draft, and traded him to the Braves during the 2015–16 offseason. He made his MLB debut in 2016.", "score": "1.4613979" }, { "id": "13450241", "title": "Joshua Swanson", "text": " Swanson went to Westmont College for training in the theater arts under John H. Cochran, a former department chair and professor at the Yale School of Drama, and John Blondell, full professor and founder of Lit Moon Theatre Company of Santa Barbara.", "score": "1.4539677" }, { "id": "1701187", "title": "Eric Swanson", "text": " Eric J. Swanson is an American lawyer who worked at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and dated and eventually married the niece of Bernard Madoff while the SEC was investigating Madoff's investment firm for what was eventually revealed to be a massive Ponzi scheme. Swanson is currently the Senior Vice President, General Counsel, and Secretary of BATS Global Markets, the third-largest stock exchange in the United States. Swanson worked at the Securities and Exchange Commission as a lawyer from 1996 to 2006, rising to the level of Assistant Director of the Office of Compliance Inspections and Examinations. Subsequently, he worked at Ameriprise Financial as Vice President of Regulatory Strategy. Swanson is married to Shana Madoff, who worked at the firm of her uncle Bernard Madoff as a rules and compliance officer and attorney until it was closed when the multibillion-dollar Madoff investment scandal was uncovered. Swanson met Shana Madoff originally when he was conducting an inadequate SEC examination of whether Bernie Madoff's firm was front running customer trades from the market making unit&mdash;completely missing the multi-billion dollar Ponzi scheme that Shana's own cousins (Bernie's sons) would expose to the SEC in December 2008.", "score": "1.4533285" }, { "id": "12179268", "title": "Steven Swanson", "text": " Steven Roy Swanson (born December 3, 1960 in Syracuse, New York) is an American engineer and retired NASA astronaut. Swanson has flown two shuttle flights, STS-117 and STS-119, and one Soyuz flight, TMA-12M. All of the flights were to the International Space Station. He has logged over 195 days in space and completed five spacewalks totaling 28 hours and 5 minutes. Swanson has served in other roles at NASA, such as a CAPCOM for both International Space Station and Space Shuttle missions. His awards and honors include the NASA Exceptional Achievement Medal and the JSC Certificate of Accommodation. Prior to becoming a NASA astronaut, Swanson worked for GTE in Phoenix, Arizona, as a software engineer. He is married and has three children.", "score": "1.4509361" }, { "id": "4377559", "title": "Jeffrey Swanson", "text": " Swanson received his B.A. from Westmont College in sociology in 1979. He later received his M.A. and Ph.D. from Yale University in 1980 and 1985, respectively. His PhD was in sociology and his dissertation was entitled \"The Moral Career of the Missionary,\" later published by Oxford University Press as a book titled \"Echoes of the Call: Identity and Ideology among American Missionaries in Ecuador.\"", "score": "1.450139" }, { "id": "363985", "title": "H. Lee Swanson", "text": " H. Lee Swanson is a Distinguished Professor in the Graduate School of Education at the University of California, Riverside. He is currently the editor of the Journal of Learning Disabilities and is the author of numerous academic publications in the areas of working memory, learning disabilities, cognition, intelligence, and achievement. Between 1976 and 2011, he authored or contributed to over 224 academic books and articles, including The Handbook of Learning Disabilities and his contributions to the National Center for Learning Disabilities, making him an influential researcher in the field of education. Swanson earned his B.A. in sociology/psychology from Westmont College (California), his M.A. in educational psychology from California State University (Los Angeles), and his Ph.D. in educational psychology from the University of New Mexico. He also completed post-doctoral work at the University of California, Los Angeles.", "score": "1.4416678" }, { "id": "2377711", "title": "Marc Swanson", "text": " work was the subject of a one-person exhibition at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, at Cornell University, in 2008, and the accompanying catalogue was published in 2009, with an essay by Bill Arning. His work has been included in group exhibitions at P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Miami Art Museum; and the Saatchi Gallery, London. Marc Swanson grew up the son of a former Marine and avid hunter in small-town New England. He then moved to San Francisco in the early 1990s, and became involved in the city's gay counterculture and club scene. He did not feel totally at ", "score": "1.4385629" }, { "id": "25428664", "title": "Brian Swanson", "text": " Brian Swanson (born March 24, 1976) is an American former professional ice hockey player who played in the National Hockey League for the Edmonton Oilers and Atlanta Thrashers.", "score": "1.4359593" }, { "id": "10016463", "title": "Cult of Glory", "text": " Swanson ( Douglas Jules Swanson; born 1953) is, as of 2021, a Research Assistant Professor in the English Department at the University of Pittsburgh. He has taught journalism at Southern Methodist University, the University of North Texas, and the University of Texas at Austin. And, he has worked for The Dallas Morning News where he did investigative work.", "score": "1.4358637" } ]
What is Harvey William Burk's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Harvey William Burk
4,346,605
52
[ { "id": "1995400", "title": "Harvey William Burk", "text": " Harvey William Burk (1822 in Darlington Township, Upper Canada – October 13, 1907) was a politician and farmer. Burk was educated in Darlington Township. He was married twice: to Roley Williams in 1848 and to Susan Armour in 1859. He operated a farm near Bowmanville. Burk served on the township council and was reeve from 1873 to 1874. He was elected to the House of Commons of Canada as a Member the Liberal Party to represent Durham West in 1874. He won a landslide victory in 1878. Burk resigned October 18, 1879 to allow Edward Blake to be elected. His daughter Mary Emily married Sam Hughes.", "score": "1.9164525" }, { "id": "32023054", "title": "Harvey A. Surface", "text": " Harvey Adam Surface (July 25, 1867 – July 18, 1941) was an American zoologist. He was for 15 years Economic Zoologist for the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture, and later served three terms in the state legislature. Born in Waynesville, Ohio to a prominent farming family, he graduated from Ohio State University in 1891, and earned a M.S. the following year. After teaching at University of the Pacific and Cornell, he became Professor of Zoology at Pennsylvania State College (1900–1907), and Professor of Biology at Susquehanna University (1920–1930). His work focused on the wildlife and plants of Pennsylvania. He was ornithological editor of American Gardening, nature study editor of Popular Educator, member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, Pennsylvania Academy of Science, and Pennsylvania Audubon Society, and was president of the Pennsylvania Beekeeper’s Association for 18 years. In 1931 he was elected to the Pennsylvania House of Representatives as Representative from Snyder County, where he served until 1936.", "score": "1.5800924" }, { "id": "1772064", "title": "André Harvey (sculptor)", "text": " William André Harvey (October 9, 1941 – February 6, 2018) was an American sculptor whose realistic and contemporary works are primarily cast in bronze using the lost wax method. Harvey also worked in granite, collage, painting, and produced intricate sculptural jewelry cast in gold. He worked in the Brandywine Valley, in Rockland near Wilmington, Delaware.", "score": "1.5299459" }, { "id": "15590315", "title": "William Harvey (1754–1779)", "text": " William Harvey (1754–1779) was a British politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1775 to 1779. Harvey was the eldest son of William Harvey of Rolls Park, Essex, and his wife Emma Skynner, daughter of Stephen Skynner of Walthamstow, Essex, and was born on 10 September 1754. He was admitted at Trinity College, Cambridge on 3 November 1771. Harvey was abroad when he was approved unanimously at a county meeting and was then returned unopposed as Member of Parliament for Essex at a by-election on 28 November 1775. In Parliament, he only voted once and is not known to have spoken. Harvey died unmarried on 24 April 1779 and was buried at Hempstead, Essex. His estates passed to his brother Eliab Harvey.", "score": "1.5142115" }, { "id": "28801664", "title": "William Henry Harvey", "text": " George Clifton (1823–1913) Mr G. Clifton is mentioned in Harvey's Memoirs, as the Superintendent of the Water Police in Perth, West Australia whose boat Harvey used when collecting in Fremantle (Blackler, 1977). Some of his specimens are in the Ulster Museum Herbarium: BEL: F2195; F2196 from \"W.Australia.\" Ronald Campbell Gunn (1808–1881) Harvey's specimens in the Ulster Museum are from George Town. The handwriting has been determined by Dr H. B. S. Womersley (1980): F2256; F2242; F2083; F2081 and others. Harvey was an honorary M.D. of Dublin University (1844) and F.R.S. (1858). His portrait is in the National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin.", "score": "1.513202" }, { "id": null, "title": "Harvey William Burk", "text": "Harvey William Burk\n\nHarvey William Burk (1822 in Darlington Township, Upper Canada – October 13, 1907) was a politician and farmer.\n\nBurk was educated in Darlington Township. He was married twice: to Roley Williams in 1848 and to Susan Armour in 1859. He operated a farm near Bowmanville. Burk served on the township council and was reeve from 1873 to 1874. He was elected to the House of Commons of Canada as a Member the Liberal Party to represent Durham West in 1874. He won a landslide victory in 1878. Burk resigned October 18, 1879 to allow Edward Blake to be elected.<ref name=\"johnson\"/>\n\nHis daughter Mary Emily married Sam Hughes.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Edmund Burke", "text": "Edmund Burke\n\nEdmund Burke (; 12 January <nowiki>[</nowiki>NS<nowiki>]</nowiki> 1729 – 9 July 1797) was an Anglo-Irish statesman, economist, and philosopher. Born in Dublin, Burke served as a member of Parliament (MP) between 1766 and 1794 in the House of Commons of Great Britain with the Whig Party.\n\nBurke was a proponent of underpinning virtues with manners in society and of the importance of religious institutions for the moral stability and good of the state. These views were expressed in his \"A Vindication of Natural Society\". He criticised the actions of the British government towards the American colonies, including its taxation policies. Burke also supported the rights of the colonists to resist metropolitan authority, although he opposed the attempt to achieve independence. He is remembered for his support for Catholic emancipation, the impeachment of Warren Hastings from the East India Company, and his staunch opposition to the French Revolution.\n\nIn his \"Reflections on the Revolution in France\", Burke asserted that the revolution was destroying the fabric of good society and traditional institutions of state and society and condemned the persecution of the Catholic Church that resulted from it. This led to his becoming the leading figure within the conservative faction of the Whig Party which he dubbed the Old Whigs as opposed to the pro–French Revolution New Whigs led by Charles James Fox.\n\nIn the 19th century, Burke was praised by both conservatives and liberals. Subsequently, in the 20th century, he became widely regarded, especially in the United States, as the philosophical founder of conservatism.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Harvey Mansfield", "text": "Harvey Mansfield\n\nHarvey Claflin Mansfield Jr. (born March 21, 1932) is an American political philosopher. He is the William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor of Government at Harvard University, where he has taught since 1962. He has held Guggenheim and NEH Fellowships and has been a Fellow at the National Humanities Center; he also received the National Humanities Medal in 2004 and delivered the Jefferson Lecture in 2007. He is a Carol G. Simon Senior Fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution. He is notable for his generally conservative stance on political issues in his writings.\n\nMansfield is the author and co-translator of studies of and/or by major political philosophers such as Aristotle, Edmund Burke, Niccolò Machiavelli, Alexis de Tocqueville, and Thomas Hobbes, of Constitutional government, and of \"Manliness\" (2006). In interviews Mansfield has acknowledged the work of Leo Strauss as the key modern influence on his own political philosophy.\n\nHis notable former students include: Mark Blitz, James Ceaser, Tom Cotton, Andrew Sullivan, Charles R. Kesler, Alan Keyes, William Kristol, Clifford Orwin, Paul Cantor, Delba Winthrop, Mark Lilla, Francis Fukuyama, Sharon Krause, Bruno Maçães, and Shen Tong.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tarana Burke", "text": "Tarana Burke\n\nTarana Burke (born September 12, 1973) is an American activist from The Bronx, New York, who started the MeToo movement. In 2006, Burke began using MeToo to help other women with similar experiences to stand up for themselves. Over a decade later, in 2017, #MeToo became a viral hashtag when Alyssa Milano and other women began using it to tweet about the Harvey Weinstein sexual abuse cases. The phrase and hashtag quickly developed into a broad-based, and eventually international movement.\n\n\"Time\" named Burke, among a group of other prominent activists dubbed \"the silence breakers\", as the \"Time\" Person of the Year for 2017. Burke presents at public speaking events across the country and is currently Senior Director at Girls for Gender Equity in Brooklyn.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Edward Blake", "text": "Edward Blake\n\nDominick Edward Blake (October 13, 1833 – March 1, 1912), known as Edward Blake, was the second premier of Ontario, from 1871 to 1872 and leader of the Liberal Party of Canada from 1880 to 1887. He is one of only three federal permanent Liberal leaders never to become Prime Minister of Canada, the others being Stéphane Dion and the latter's immediate successor Michael Ignatieff. He may be said to have served in the national politics of what developed as the affairs of three nationalities: Canadian, British, and Irish. Blake was also the founder, in 1856, of the Canadian law firm now known as Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP.", "score": null }, { "id": "32235337", "title": "Edward A. Burke", "text": " Burke, by his own account, was of Irish descent and born in Louisville, Kentucky. He used the name \"Burk\" until after the Civil War. Burk's initial career started with the railroads. At the age of thirteen he was employed as a railroad telegraph operator in Urbana, Illinois. By the age of seventeen, he had been promoted to a division superintendent. The outbreak of the Civil War found Burke working for a railroad in Texas. On October 7, 1861 he was commissioned as a Confederate officer into Debray's Mounted Battalion. His knowledge of transportation logistics gained through his years of railroad experience resulted in his temporary transfer to Texas' Office of Field Transportation in March 1863. By December of that year the transfer was permanent. Major E.A. Burk commanded the Houston Battalion, Texas Infantry of ", "score": "1.5130488" }, { "id": "32977548", "title": "Mack Burk", "text": " Mack Edwin Burk (born April 21, 1935) is an American former professional baseball catcher, who played in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the and Philadelphia Phillies. Of his 16 big league game appearances, 13 were as a pinch runner, two as a pinch hitter, and only one inning as a catcher. Burk stood 6 ft tall, weighed 180 lb and threw and batted right-handed. He attended the University of Texas at Austin and signed a $40,000 bonus contract with the Phillies in September 1955. Under the rules of the day, a \"bonus baby\" such as Burk was compelled to spend his first two years as a professional baseball player on a Major League roster. In his pro debut, on May ", "score": "1.5105791" }, { "id": "4189837", "title": "William R. Harvey", "text": " William Robert Harvey (born January 29, 1941, Brewton, Alabama) is an American educator, academic administrator, and businessman who has served as president of Hampton University since 1978. He is the longest serving president in the school's history. Harvey became the first African-American owner in the soft drink bottling industry when he and his wife, Norma Baker Harvey, purchased a Pepsi-Cola Bottling Company franchise together in 1986. On December 15, 2020, He announced his plans to retire as President of Hampton University by June 2022.", "score": "1.5104837" }, { "id": "552397", "title": "Burk (name)", "text": "Burk Uzzle (born 1938), American photojournalist ", "score": "1.4993978" }, { "id": "9522428", "title": "William Harvey Brown", "text": " William Harvey Brown (August 22, 1862April 5, 1913) was an American naturalist who later settled in Rhodesia. Whilst studying at the University of Kansas Brown volunteered with the National Museum of Natural History and took part in collecting expeditions in the US. While employed by the Smithsonian Institution he took part in an expedition to the Belgian Congo to observe the Solar eclipse of December 22, 1889. Brown collected a wide variety of specimens for the national museum and, as a result, became known as \"Curio Brown\". Brown remained in South Africa after the expedition and joined the British South Africa Company's 1890 Pioneer Column expedition that annexed Mashonaland. He afterwards fought in the First Matabele War and was awarded significant tracts of land in Rhodesia. Brown was wounded during the 1896-97 rebellion in Mashonaland and returned briefly to the US where he published a book about his experiences. Brown returned to Rhodesia and was elected to the Salisbury city council, including a period as mayor, and to the Southern Rhodesian Legislative Council.", "score": "1.489815" }, { "id": "8102258", "title": "Nathaniel Burwell Harvey House", "text": " Nathaniel Burwell Harvey House was a historic home located near Dublin, Pulaski County, Virginia. It was built in 1909–1910, and was a 2 1/2-story, three bay, Colonial Revival style brick dwelling on a limestone basement. It had a rear brick ell and hipped roof with dormers. The front facade featured a one-story porch with six Tuscan order columns. The interior had decorative stenciling by artist James D. Chapman. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1986; it was delisted in 2001.", "score": "1.4851635" }, { "id": "5398780", "title": "1895 in architecture", "text": "William Alexander Harvey, aged 20, is appointed architect for the newly laid-out model village of Bournville in Birmingham, England. ", "score": "1.4819471" }, { "id": "28640279", "title": "William West Harvey", "text": " William West Harvey (November 21, 1869 – September 27, 1958 ) was a member of the Kansas House of Representatives and an Associate Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court from January 8, 1923 to January 8, 1945, and Chief Justice from January 8, 1945 to March 1, 1956. In 1906 he set up his own practice in Ashland, Kansas and in the same year became the Clark County attorney for one term. He then went on to be the representative for Clark County starting in 1917 for three terms, including being elected speaker of the house in his third term. June 17, 1921 he was made Assistant Attorney General, he was the third member of his family to hold the position. Harvey stood for the supreme court in 1922 against the incumbent Judson S. ", "score": "1.4819391" }, { "id": "33071537", "title": "Oliver Harvey (labor organizer)", "text": " The son of a land-owning farmer, Oliver Harvey grew up in Franklinton, North Carolina, which was at the time dominated by the textile and tobacco industries. When his father lost his land in 1933, Harvey moved to Durham, NC to find employment and worked a series of temporary jobs. In 1936, he took a job at the American Tobacco Company, which was in the process of unionizing. Refusing to join the union on account of its policy of segregation, Harvey was soon fired. He subsequently worked as an assistant at Watts Hospital, and in 1943 began a job at the Krueger Bottling Company, which had been hiring African Americans because of the wartime labor shortage, and which had a segregated union. Harvey helped initiate a strike in favor of desegregation, garnering the support of the company's white employees.", "score": "1.4797356" }, { "id": "6925606", "title": "Augustus William Harvey", "text": " Augustus William Harvey (May 31, 1839 &ndash; February 7, 1903) was an industrialist and politician in Newfoundland. He served in the Legislative Council of Newfoundland from 1870 to 1895 and represented Harbour Grace in the Newfoundland House of Assembly from 1900 to 1904 as a Liberal. He was born in Bermuda and was educated at the University of Pennsylvania. Harvey came to Newfoundland in 1853. In 1861, he joined Dunscombe, Harvey and Company, later known as Harvey and Company; his uncle Eugenius Harvey was part owner of the firm. When his uncle left, he became managing partner. Originally a fishery supply business, the company expanded into mining, lumber and manufacturing. He was also ", "score": "1.4756635" }, { "id": "5981546", "title": "William Bruce Harvey", "text": " Harvey was elected councillor for West Ferris Township, Ontario and served for 4 years before he entered the provincial political arena. He was elected as a Progressive Conservative MPP on June 7, 1948 and served the majority of his office in the government of Leslie Frost. He was appointed Vice Chairman of the Ontario Northland Transportation Commission in 1949 as well as Industrial Commissioner for Northern Ontario. The city of North Bay named Harvey Street and Harvey Street School in his honour. Harvey was re-elected to the provincial legislature in 1951 and served until his death on March 1, 1954.", "score": "1.4648864" }, { "id": "12159460", "title": "William F. Harvey", "text": " William F. Harvey was an American law professor who was the Carl M. Gray Professor Emeritus of Advocacy at Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law in Indianapolis, IN. Harvey earned a bachelor's degree in 1954 from the University of Missouri and a juris doctor degree in 1959 from Georgetown University Law Center. He earned an LLM from Georgetown in 1961. Harvey was the Chair of the National Board of the Legal Services Corporation under U.S. President Ronald Reagan. Harvey succeeded Hillary Rodham (a Carter appointee) in 1982 after the expiration of her term, after being elected by fellow nominees on March 6, 1982. In 1985, President Ronald Reagan nominated Harvey to a seat on the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit. His nomination was blocked by Democrats, however, and he never was confirmed. Harvey withdrew his nomination in October 1985, and the White House never renominated him.", "score": "1.4638218" }, { "id": "16311231", "title": "Amanda Burk", "text": " Amanda Burk is an artist from Ontario who specializes in drawing. Burk is currently an Associate Professor at Nipissing University in the Department of Fine and Performing Arts.", "score": "1.4598541" }, { "id": "8830373", "title": "Willis Burks II", "text": " Willis Burks II (October 25, 1935 – November 21, 2010), sometimes credited as Willis Burks or Willis Burks, Jr., was an American television, film, stage and voice actor whose acting career spanned more than thirty years. Burks was born in Birmingham, Alabama, on October 25, 1935. He served in the United States Air Force before pursuing a professional acting career. Burks lived in both Chicago and New York City before settling in Los Angeles, where he resided until his death in 2010. Burks' awards included the AUDELCO for best actor in the theatrical production of Saint Lucy's Eyes. Additionally, Burks' performance in the August Wilson play, Jitney, won him several awards, including a Drama Desk Award, ", "score": "1.4581541" }, { "id": "3871885", "title": "Leon F. Harvey", "text": " Leon F. Harvey (October 20, 1837 – November 19, 1912) was an American entomologist, physician, and dentist. He was a founding member of the Buffalo Society of Natural Sciences, serving as its first treasurer and later as its president.", "score": "1.4558961" } ]
What is Jörg A. Eggers's occupation?
[ "film director", "movie director", "director", "motion picture director", "screenwriter", "scenarist", "writer", "screen writer", "script writer", "scriptwriter" ]
occupation
Jörg A. Eggers
283,289
56
[ { "id": "28182397", "title": "Carsten Eggers", "text": " The son of the impressionist painter Richard Eggers, Carsten Eggers was born in Stade, in Lower Saxony, and grew up in the town of Jork in the Altes Land region, an area of reclaimed marshland on the Elbe downstream from Hamburg. Deciding against an academic career he studied all aspects of painting with his father, an accomplished artist who in 1975 was awarded the Knight's Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (Bundesverdienstkreuz am Bande) for his life's work. At the age of only 17, Carsten Eggers designed the coat of arms of the municipality of Jork. In ", "score": "1.5375357" }, { "id": "28182398", "title": "Carsten Eggers", "text": " he had his first exhibition of paintings, in his home town of Jork, together with his father. After 1980 he turned to sculpture, studying under Professor Franz Rotter in Cuxhaven, and from 1983 he studied Sculpture under Karl Heinz Türk at the Freie Kunstakademie (Free Art Academy) in Nürtingen. Defying the usual conventions, Eggers kept himself to himself, shunned the arts \"establishment\", and was not a member of any artists' associations. Since 1991 Carsten Eggers has lived and worked at a former farm in Nottensdorf in the rural district of Stade. Eggers died aged 64 on 29 September 2021 in hospital in Hamburg.", "score": "1.4698651" }, { "id": "6995296", "title": "Melvin A. Eggers", "text": " Eggers was born February 21, 1916, in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and earned bachelor's and master's degrees in economics from Indiana University in 1940 and 1941, respectively. He served in the Navy as a Japanese-language officer during World War II and was discharged as a Lieutenant in 1946. Eggers had begun graduate work at the University of Chicago before the war, and continued it at Yale University after the war ended.", "score": "1.4654328" }, { "id": "7818169", "title": "William D. Eggers", "text": " William Daniel Eggers (born 1967) is an American writer, researcher, policy analyst, and government and management consultant. Eggers has worked in government reform for more than two decades.", "score": "1.4632428" }, { "id": "6642967", "title": "Jeff Eggers", "text": " Eggers has an M.A. from Oxford University and a B.S. from the United States Naval Academy.", "score": "1.462703" }, { "id": null, "title": "Jörg A. Eggers", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "George W. Bush", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by occupation ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Baroque sculpture", "text": "Baroque sculpture\n\nBaroque sculpture is the sculpture associated with the Baroque style of the period between the early 17th and mid 18th centuries. In Baroque sculpture, groups of figures assumed new importance, and there was a dynamic movement and energy of human forms—they spiralled around an empty central vortex, or reached outwards into the surrounding space. Baroque sculpture often had multiple ideal viewing angles, and reflected a general continuation of the Renaissance move away from the relief to sculpture created in the round, and designed to be placed in the middle of a large space—elaborate fountains such as Gian Lorenzo Bernini‘s Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi (Rome, 1651), or those in the Gardens of Versailles were a Baroque speciality. The Baroque style was perfectly suited to sculpture, with Bernini the dominating figure of the age in works such as \"The Ecstasy of St Theresa\" (1647–1652). Much Baroque sculpture added extra-sculptural elements, for example, concealed lighting, or water fountains, or fused sculpture and architecture to create a transformative experience for the viewer. Artists saw themselves as in the classical tradition, but admired Hellenistic and later Roman sculpture, rather than that of the more \"Classical\" periods as they are seen today.\n\nBaroque sculpture followed Renaissance and Mannerist sculpture and was succeeded by Rococo and Neoclassical Sculpture. Rome was the earliest centre where the style was formed. The style spread to the rest of Europe, and especially France gave a new direction in the late 17th century. Eventually it spread beyond Europe to the colonial possessions of the European powers, especially in Latin America and the Philippines.\n\nThe Protestant Reformation had brought an almost total stop to religious sculpture in much of Northern Europe, and though secular sculpture, especially for portrait busts and tomb monuments, continued, the Dutch Golden Age has no significant sculptural component outside goldsmithing. Partly in direct reaction, sculpture was as prominent in Catholicism as in the late Middle Ages. The Catholic Southern Netherlands saw a flourishing of Baroque sculpture starting from the second half of the 17th century with many local workshops producing a wide range of Baroque sculpture including church furniture, funeral monuments and small-scale sculptures executed in ivory and durable woods such as boxwood. Flemish sculptors would play a prominent role in spreading the Baroque idiom abroad including in the Dutch Republic, Italy, England, Sweden and France.\n\nIn the 18th century much sculpture continued on Baroque lines—the Trevi Fountain was only completed in 1762. The Rococo style was better suited to smaller works.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:German male sculptors", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "32461633", "title": "Wolfgang Jörg", "text": " Wolfgang Jörg (born 1963) is a German politician, representative of the Social Democratic Party. He is a member of parliament in the federal state of North Rhine-Westphalia.", "score": "1.4591044" }, { "id": "25217647", "title": "Karl Eggers", "text": " He was the fifth of eight children born to Christian Friedrich Eggers (1788–1858), a building materials dealer. After completing his primary education, he studied jurisprudence, beginning in 1846 at the University of Leipzig then, in 1847, in Berlin. He passed the bar exam in 1850 and returned to Rostock. He was, however, denied habilitation by the Mecklenburg Ministry of Education. After receiving his Doctorate in law, he worked as a lawyer and Gerichtspräsident (Chief Judge). In 1854, he was elected to the Rostock Stadtrat (City Council). Two years later, he became seriously ill and resigned all of his positions for a curative stay in Italy. While there, ", "score": "1.4537745" }, { "id": "14652882", "title": "Hohenems", "text": " 2004-2015: Richard Amann since December 2015: Dieter Egger (born 1969)", "score": "1.4475462" }, { "id": "11356967", "title": "Jörg Meyer-Stamer", "text": " He was born as Jörg Meyer, but he changed his surname to Meyer-Stamer during his early adulthood. He completed a masters degree (Diplom-Politologue) in Political Science at the University of Hamburg between 1979-1986. He completed a doctoral degree in 1995 at the University of Hamburg, Faculty of Social Sciences. Jörg was fluent in German, English, Portuguese and Spanish.", "score": "1.4468836" }, { "id": "434888", "title": "Peter Egger", "text": " Peter H. Egger (born in Steyr in 1969) is an Austrian economist who currently works as Professor of Applied Economics at the ETH Zurich. His research areas are industrial economics, innovation and international competition. In 2011, his contributions to economic research were awarded the Gossen Prize.", "score": "1.4454153" }, { "id": "28384870", "title": "Wolfgang Egger", "text": " Wolfgang Josef Egger (born 13 February 1963) is a car designer from Germany, a former Audi Group head designer, and currently a BYD Group head designer.", "score": "1.4448913" }, { "id": "33080756", "title": "Henrik Franz Alexander von Eggers", "text": " After studies at the gymnasium in Odense he entered the Danish army as subaltern in 1864 and fought in the Danish-German war. At the end of 1864 he joined the Imperial Mexican Volunteer Corps Österreichisches Freiwilligenkorps in Mexiko and fell into captivity of the Mexican Republicans at the end of the month-long siege of Oaxaca. He was freed in 1867, rejoined the Danish army as lieutenant and had himself posted in the Danish Antilles, where he served until his retirement, as captain, in 1885. In 1873 he married Mathilde Camilla Stakemann. His retirement from the army marked the beginning of his career as botanist. He studied and published the flora of St. Croix, St. John, ", "score": "1.4448197" }, { "id": "11356970", "title": "Jörg Meyer-Stamer", "text": " a project with the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex on the impact of global value chains on local clusters. But Jörg felt constrained by the demands of the academic and research world, and in 2001 he ventured out as a freelance consultant. He maintained his links to his previous research networks but focused more on capacity building and method development in the developing world. In 2003, he was a founding partner of the consultancy firm Mesopartner. Although he became a consultant, he continued to publish academic and research papers. As a consultant, his attention shifted more towards capacity building on experts and decision-makers in developing countries, especially on topics like local economic development, cluster promotion and innovation systems promotion.", "score": "1.4434195" }, { "id": "13612537", "title": "Jörg Stohler", "text": " Stohler did his apprenticeship as a construction mechanic. He worked in the local chemical industry, but since 2005 he is retired. Stohler is married and has two grown up children.", "score": "1.4392488" }, { "id": "28188018", "title": "Reinhold Hilbers", "text": " After training in the wholesale and export business, he undertook military service in the Bundeswehr. Then, he studied economics at the Osnabrück University of Applied Sciences. Between 1993 and 1999, he worked at a local bank. From 1999 he served as managing director of Lebenshilfe Nordhorn GmbH.", "score": "1.437816" }, { "id": "28182396", "title": "Carsten Eggers", "text": " Carsten Eggers (18 May 1957 – 29 September 2021) was a German sculptor and painter. There are about 20 realistic bronze sculptures of his in northern Germany and the Netherlands. His best-known works are a bronze bust of Rudi Carrell and a larger-than-life monument of boxing legend Max Schmeling.", "score": "1.4375432" }, { "id": "434889", "title": "Peter Egger", "text": " A native of Steyr, Austria, Peter H. Egger earned a master's degree and Ph.D. in economics from the University of Linz in 1996 and 2001. During his studies, he worked as a researcher at the Vienna Institute for Comparative Economic Studies (1996–97) and at the Austrian Institute of Economic Research (1997-2001). In 2001, he also habilitated at the University of Innsbruck, where he then began working as assistant professor (2001–02) and later as associate professor (2002–04). After a brief visiting appointment at the University of Notre Dame (2003–04), he became Professor of Economics at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (2004–09), where he intermittedly led the ifo Institute's Department of Environmental, Regional and Transport Economics (2004–08) and Department of Foreign Direct Investment and International Trade (2008–09). Since 2009, Egger has been Professor of Applied Economics at the Konjunkturforschungsstelle (KOF) - the Swiss Institute for Business Cycle Research - of the ETH Zurich, where he leads the Division \"Structural Change and Innovation\". In addition to his academic positions, Egger maintains affiliations with the Centre for Economic Policy Research (CEPR), CESifo, and the Austrian Institute of Economic Research (WIFO).", "score": "1.4370078" }, { "id": "4371877", "title": "Dave Eggers", "text": " Dave Eggers (born March 12, 1970) is an American writer, editor, and publisher. He wrote the best-selling memoir A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius. Eggers is also the founder of Timothy McSweeney's Quarterly Concern, a literary journal, a co-founder of the literacy project 826 Valencia and the human rights nonprofit Voice of Witness, and the founder of ScholarMatch, a program that matches donors with students needing funds for college tuition. His writing has appeared in several magazines.", "score": "1.4366874" }, { "id": "5431344", "title": "Claus-Erich Boetzkes", "text": " Born in Memmingen, Bavaria, Boetzkes studied communication science, political science, sociology and economics at the Ludwig Maximilians University in Munich. In 2007 he did his doctorate at the TU Ilmenau on the subject of Organisation als Nachrichtenfaktor (Organization as a News Factor). Today he is also a lecturer at this university. Due to his teaching activities and his academic achievements, he was appointed honorary professor in 2011. There he is researching, among other things, with the help of the eye tracking technique eye tracking on the retention and understanding performance of viewers of TV news. In 2019, he published a study on ", "score": "1.4317319" }, { "id": "31726289", "title": "Mathias Bröckers", "text": " According to his own statements, Bröckers was active in his youth as an altar boy, choirboy, footballer, and boy scout, among other things. In 1973, he graduated from the humanistic grammar school Tilemannschule in Limburg. After graduating from high school, Bröckers moved to West Berlin to avoid his draft. That same year, he began studying at the FU Berlin literary studies, linguistics and political science with German and Politics for the teaching profession. To finance his studies, he obtained a passenger transport license in 1976 and joined Berlin's first cab collective. He graduated in 1980 as a senior high school teacher of German and Politics. ", "score": "1.4316139" } ]
What is Petru Vlah's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Petru Vlah
5,436,371
45
[ { "id": "1483938", "title": "Petru Vlah", "text": " Petru Vlah (born July 13, 1970) is a politician from Moldova. He has been a member of the Parliament of Moldova since 2010.", "score": "1.9896626" }, { "id": "30182176", "title": "Vlah", "text": "Irina Vlah (born 1974), Moldovan politician ; Petru Vlah (born 1970), Moldovan politician Vlah is a surname, a reference to Vlachs. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.7996486" }, { "id": "11573550", "title": "Irina Vlah", "text": " Irina Vlah (born 26 February 1974, in Comrat, Moldavian SSR, Soviet Union) is a Moldovan politician. She served as member of the Parliament of the Republic of Moldova from 2005 to 2009 and from 2014 to 2015. Since 15 April 2015 she has been the Governor (Başkan) of the Autonomous Territorial Unit of Gagauzia (Gagauz Yeri). According to the polls made in 2019 related to the most popular politicians of the Republic of Moldova, Irina Vlah is on the 9th position among the top of politicians in which Moldovans have the highest trust.", "score": "1.5226948" }, { "id": "10277501", "title": "Petre Popeangă", "text": " Petre Popeangă (born 19 May 1944, Lelești, Gorj County) is a Romanian politician and Member of the European Parliament. He is a member of the Greater Romania Party. He became a delegate MEP on 1 January 2007 with the accession of Romania to the European Union. Until November 14, 2007 he was a member of the Identity, Tradition, Sovereignty group.", "score": "1.4990485" }, { "id": "29253307", "title": "Petre Strihan", "text": " served as accountant at a worksite in Titu, tutor at a worker cooperative, ticket inspector at Zoo Băneasa, laborer at a chemical plant, archivist and machine operator at another cooperative. From 1964 to 1968, he was documentarian at Bucharest's Nicolae Iorga History Institute, rising to scientific researcher from 1968 to 1970. Strihan's first published work appeared in Flacăra in 1922, while his first book was the 1929 Penumbre. Between 1922 and 1929, he formed part of the Sburătorul literary circle. During the interwar period, his writings appeared in Adevărul literar, Convorbiri Literare, Viața literară, Universul literar and Slove. After 1964, he wrote for Luceafărul, Gazeta literară and România Literară. His late works, delicate and naive, appeared in Poezii (1968), Moara albastră (1978) and Lumini târzii (1984).", "score": "1.4950483" }, { "id": null, "title": "Flag of Gagauzia", "text": "Flag of Gagauzia\n\nThe flag of Gagauzia (, , ) has served as an official symbol of the Gagauz Territorial Unit since 1995, and is recognized as a regional symbol by Moldova. Popularly known as the \"Sky Flag\", it is a triband of blue-white-red, with a wider blue stripe, charged with three yellow stars arranged in triangular pattern. The overall symbolism is debated, but the stars may represent the three Gagauz municipalities within Moldova. The tricolor is reminiscent of the Russian flag, which is also popular in Gagauzia; the issue has created friction between Gagauz and Moldovan politicians.\n\nBefore their mass migration into Bessarabia and the Budjak, Gagauz people were associated with several polities—including the Despotate of Dobruja—which, according to Gagauz tradition, had a rooster flag. The emergence of Gagauz nationalism dates back to the 1860s, when the Gagauz and the Bessarabian Bulgarians rejected both Tsarist autocracy and Romanian nationalism. A Gagauz quasi-state, the \"Comrat Republic\", was formed during the Russian Revolution of 1905, but its leaders only used the generic red flag, publicizing their loyalty toward the All-Russian Peasant Union. Separate symbols for the Gagauz and their territory are comparatively new, first emerging as marks of the resistance to Russification in the Soviet Union. Several ethnic and semi-official flags were recorded for Gagauz separatists during the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, generally featuring the grey wolf (). \n\nThe unrecognized Gagauz Republic adopted wolf symbolism in various forms; the device was featured on its official flag, which reportedly existed in only one copy. Despite their initial popularity, grey-wolf flags were tainted by controversy, being read as references to Pan-Turkism and the eponymous far-right group. They fell out of use in 2000–2010, but reemerged as popular in the following decade. In 2017, Governor Irina Vlah proposed the introduction of a flag bearing the wolf's head in red as a \"historical flag\" with official status. If adopted, this resolution would not replace the \"Sky Flag\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:People of Moldova - Wikimedia Commons", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Maia Sandu", "text": "Maia Sandu\n\nMaia Sandu (; born 24 May 1972) is a Moldovan politician who has been the President of Moldova since 24 December 2020. She is the former leader of the Party of Action and Solidarity (PAS) and former Prime Minister of Moldova from 8 June 2019 until 14 November 2019. On 12 November 2019, Sandu's government collapsed after a vote of no-confidence, with 63 (deputies from PSRM and PDM) of the 101 MPs having voted on the motion submitted by the PSRM. Sandu was Minister of Education from 2012 to 2015 and member of the Parliament of Moldova from 2014 to 2015, and again in 2019.\n\nShe was selected as the joint candidate of the pro-European PPDA and PAS parties for president of Moldova in the 2016 election. However, she was defeated in the subsequent runoff by the pro-Russian PSRM candidate, Igor Dodon, losing the popular vote by a margin of 48% to 52%. In a rematch between Dodon and Sandu in the 2020 election, she won the subsequent runoff, 58% to 42%, defeating Dodon. She is the first female president of Moldova.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Romanians", "text": "Romanians\n\nThe Romanians (, ; dated exonym \"Vlachs\") are a Romance-speaking ethnic group. Sharing a common Romanian culture and ancestry, and speaking the Romanian language, they live primarily in Romania and Moldova. The 2011 Romanian census found that just under 89% of Romania's citizens identified themselves as ethnic Romanians.\n\nIn one interpretation of the 1989 census results in Moldova, the majority of Moldovans were counted as ethnic Romanians. Romanians also form an ethnic minority in several nearby countries of Central and Eastern Europe.\n\nEstimates of the number of Romanian people worldwide vary from 24 to 30 million, in part depending on whether the definition of the term \"Romanian\" includes natives of both Romania and Moldova, their respective diasporas, and native speakers of both Romanian and other Balkan Romance languages. Other speakers of the latter languages are the Aromanians, the Megleno-Romanians, and the Istro-Romanians, which may be considered Romanian subgroups or separated yet related ethnicities.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gagauzia", "text": "Gagauzia\n\nGagauzia or Gagauz-Yeri, officially the Autonomous Territorial Unit of Gagauzia (ATUG), is an autonomous territorial unit of Moldova. Its autonomy is ethnically motivated by the predominance in the region of the Gagauz people, who are primarily Orthodox Turkic-speaking people.\n\nAt the end of World War I, all of the territory of Gagauzia became part of the Kingdom of Romania, before being carved up into the Soviet Union in June 1940. From 1941 to 1944 it was again part of Romania, after which it was incorporated into the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic. As the Soviet Union began to disintegrate, Gagauzia declared independence in 1990 as the Gagauz Republic, but was integrated into Moldova in 1994.\n\n\"Gagauz Yeri\" literally means \"place of the Gagauz\".", "score": null }, { "id": "32999337", "title": "Valeriu Vlas", "text": " Valeriu Vlas (born 6 August 1971 in Călărași) is a retired Moldovan long-distance runner who specialized in the marathon. His personal best time is 2:17:32 hours. His career highlight was a 35th place at the 1999 World Championships. He also competed at the Olympic Games in 1996 and 2000 without reaching the final.", "score": "1.4822243" }, { "id": "13001179", "title": "Petre V. Haneș", "text": " Petre V. Haneș (November 6, 1879&ndash;April 17, 1966) was a Romanian literary historian. Born in Călărași, his parents were Vasile Haneș and his wife Maria (née Leca). He attended Matei Basarab High School in Bucharest, followed by the literature faculty of Bucharest University. Later, in 1920, he received a doctorate from the same institution. After university, Haneș became a Romanian-language teacher at three schools in the capital city: Matei Basarab, Mihai Viteazul High School and the pedagogical seminary. He offered free courses at the literature faculty as well. Within the educational system, he served as school inspector and was a permanent member of the ", "score": "1.4721779" }, { "id": "11909702", "title": "Petru Th. Missir", "text": " '''Petru Th. Missir''' (October 8, 1856–June 10, 1929) was a Romanian literary critic, journalist and jurist. Born in Roman into a family of ethnic Armenian merchants, he graduated from Iași's National College in 1873. While a student at the University of Vienna's law faculty, he entered and became secretary of the România jună society. He later studied law at Berlin University, where he earned a doctorate in 1879. A member of Junimea, he also served as the organization's attorney; he was both a lifelong friend to Ion Luca Caragiale and close to Titu Maiorescu and Petre P. Carp. After working as a magistrate in Iași from 1880 to 1884, he taught both natural and international ", "score": "1.4719987" }, { "id": "26532886", "title": "Adriean Videanu", "text": " Mr. Videanu has finished near Bucharest ... Adriean Videanu is, indeed, a very rich man and he was very rich before he became mayor general of the Capital. He is a prosperous businessman who works in a field with great weight, both literally and figuratively: the exploitation and sale of marble and tiles. I don't know if you can get rich by selling pretzels, but surely marble has great potential ... What should really interest us at Adriean Videanu and all people of his financial caliber are completely different things. First of all, we should be interested in whether every penny of his wealth ", "score": "1.4709978" }, { "id": "27776467", "title": "Petre Bejan", "text": " Born in Ploiești, Bejan was descended from a family of educators from Monor village in Transylvania’s Bistrița-Năsăud County. His father Nicolae Francisc, harassed by the Austro-Hungarian authorities, left for the Romanian Old Kingdom, settling as a German teacher in Ploiești in 1892. The following year, he married Elena Drăgulinescu, a teacher from Vălenii de Munte, naming their son after his political role model Petre P. Carp. He died in 1901 at age 38, while in front of his class. Petre attended Saints Peter and Paul High School. He then enrolled in the National School of Bridges and Highways, taking an engineering degree in 1920. He worked in the local oil industry in various white-collar jobs: head of works at Societatea Columbia, director at Societatea Forage Le Moine, president of the board at Creditul Carbonifer.", "score": "1.4605904" }, { "id": "27355914", "title": "Andro Vlahušić", "text": " Andro Vlahušić (born 17 May 1960) is a Croatian physician and politician. A member of the Croatian People's Party (HNS), Vlahušić was a member of the Croatian Parliament (2000–2001) and Minister of Health in the second cabinet of Prime Minister Ivica Račan (2001–2003). From 2009 to 2017 he served as Mayor of Dubrovnik.", "score": "1.4582851" }, { "id": "14708077", "title": "Petru-Alexandru Luncanu", "text": " Petru-Alexandru Luncanu (born 7 May 1989) is a Romanian professional tennis player playing on the ITF Men's Circuit and the ATP Challenger Tour and current member of the Romania Davis Cup Team. On November 2, 2009, he reached his highest ATP singles ranking of 304 whilst his highest doubles ranking was 286 achieved on November 2, 2015.", "score": "1.4514725" }, { "id": "3723444", "title": "Doru Viorel Ursu", "text": " Doru Viorel Ursu (born March 1, 1953) is a Romanian politician and lawyer. A member of the National Salvation Front (FSN), he was Minister of the Interior in the Petre Roman cabinets, carrying his mandate between the Mineriads of 1990 and 1991.", "score": "1.4512923" }, { "id": "30925354", "title": "Petri Mór", "text": " Petri Mór (11 July 1863 &ndash; 2 March 1945) was a teacher, school inspector and author in Transylvania. His masterwork is Szilágy vármegye monographiája (I-IV, Budapest, 1901&ndash;1904).", "score": "1.4437857" }, { "id": "31343843", "title": "Cristian Petrescu", "text": " Cristian Petrescu (born March 31, 1971) is a Romanian politician, president of the Bucharest Branch of the People's Movement Party. Born in Bucharest, he is a 2004 graduate of the Ecological University of Bucharest, where he earned a degree in physical education and sport. A member of the Democratic Liberal Party, he sat in a Bucharest seat in the Romanian Chamber of Deputies from 2008 to 2012. From February to April 2012, in the government of Mihai-Răzvan Ungureanu, he served as Minister of Regional Development and Tourism. He ran unsuccessfully for mayor of the Sector 3, Bucharest, during the 2016 local elections.", "score": "1.443721" }, { "id": "10322326", "title": "Petru Lucinschi", "text": " Petru Lucinschi was born on 27 January 1941 in Rădulenii Vechi village, Soroca County, Kingdom of Romania (now Florești district). Lucinschi carries a transcribed version of the Polish surname Łuczyński, but has never publicly identified with a Polish heritage. In 1962, he graduated from Chisinau State University. During his studies, he was the secretary of the local Komsomol. From 1963 to 1964, he was engaged in Komsomol work in the Soviet Army. He has a PhD in Philosophy (1977) from the Russian Academy of Sciences in Moscow.", "score": "1.4428372" }, { "id": "10358378", "title": "Sorin Paliga", "text": " Sorin Paliga (born Viorel-Sorin Paliga on June 21, 1956 in Braniștea, Dâmbovița County, Romania) is a Romanian linguist and politician. He is a university professor at the University of Bucharest. As a politician, he was the former mayor of Sector 3 of Bucharest from June 1996 to June 2000, and was affiliated with the National Liberal Party (PNL).", "score": "1.4397621" }, { "id": "11411248", "title": "Dimitrie Petrino", "text": " Dimitrie Petrino (1838 (?)&mdash;April 29, 1878) was a Bessarabian-born Romanian poet. Born in Rujnița, a village in the Bessarabia Governorate's Soroca County within the Russian Empire, his parents were Petre Petrino, a rural landowner, and his wife Eufrosina (née Hurmuzachi). He studied at home under the guidance of a Nicolae Sbierea and perhaps of his uncles the Hurmuzachi brothers. As a young man, he travelled to Italy, Austria and Germany, adopting somewhat of a literary culture, albeit not in organized fashion. Between 1864 and 1867, he was a military officer at Botoșani in the Romanian Old Kingdom; after his wife's death, he again travelled abroad before settling in Czernowitz (Cernăuți), the capital of Bukovina region in Austria-Hungary. Returning to Romania in 1875, Petrino ", "score": "1.4395006" }, { "id": "31298863", "title": "Petru", "text": "Petru I of Moldavia (Petru Mușat, 1375-1391), ruler of Moldavia ; Petru II of Moldavia (? – 1452), co-ruler of Moldavia ; Petru Aron (died 1467), ruler of Moldavia ; Petru Bălan (born 1976), Romanian rugby union footballer ; Petru Cercel (died 1590), voivode of Wallachia, polyglot ; Petru Dugulescu (born 1945), Romanian Baptist pastor, poet, and politician ; Petru Filip (born 1955), current mayor of the municipality of Oradea ; Petru Fudduni (circa 1600-1670), poet ; Petru Giovacchini (1910-1955), Corsican hero ; Petru Groza (1884-1958), Romanian politician and Prime Minister ; Petru Lucinschi (born 1940), Moldova's second president ; Petru Luhan (born 1977), Romanian politician ; Petru Maior (circa 1756-1821), Romanian writer ; Petru Mocanu (1931–2016), Romanian mathematician ; Petru Pavel Aron (1709-1764), Romanian Greek-Catholic cleric and intellectual ; Petru Poni (1841-1925), Romanian chemist ; Petru Rareș (circa 1487-1546), ruler of Moldavia ; Petru Stoianov (born 1931), Romanian composer ; Petru Țurcaș (born 1976), Romanian footballer Petru is a given name, and may refer to: ", "score": "1.4387369" }, { "id": "30501953", "title": "Ion N. Petrovici", "text": " Ion N. Petrovici (born August 19, 1929 in Ploiești, Romania) is a German neurologist, professor of neurology and psychiatry at the University of Cologne. After studying at the Bucharest Faculty of Medicine, he received an MD degree from the University of Bucharest. He trained in neurology under Arthur Kreindler and Vlad Voiculescu (neurologist) at the Department of Clinical Neurology of the Institute for Neurological Research of the Romanian Academy of Sciences. In 1959, he became a specialist in neurology. From 1964 to 1969, he held the position of chief of the service of pre-operative diagnosis at the Clinic of Neurosurgery of the University of Bucharest under Constantin ", "score": "1.4351295" } ]
What is Pierre Abraham's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Pierre Abraham
2,573,242
76
[ { "id": "1937579", "title": "Jean Philippe Abraham", "text": " Jean Philippe Abraham (born June 21, 1982) is a former Canadian football linebacker for the Edmonton Eskimos. In his single season with the Eskimos, he appeared in 9 regular season games and made a single tackle.", "score": "1.7266248" }, { "id": "547199", "title": "Pol Abraham", "text": " Hippolyte Pierre \"Pol\" Abraham (11 March 1891 in Nantes, France &ndash; 21 January 1966 in Paris) was a French architect. He graduated in 1920 from the atelier of Jean-Louis Pascal at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, then followed a course in the Ecole du Louvre from 1921 to 1924. He was a member of the Société des Architectes Diplômés par le Gouvernement (SADG) and magazine editor from 1923 to 1924. After the First World War, he participated in reconstruction work in northern France. Then in 1923, he opened his office in Paris, in association with Paul Sinoir, and produced many public and private buildings in the Île-de-France: His mastery of construction techniques and concrete, in particular, is ", "score": "1.7013204" }, { "id": "30213929", "title": "Abraham François", "text": " Abraham François (born 7 June 1977) is a Canadian retired footballer. He competed in the 1997 Canada Games with Quebec, winning the competition. He was then selected to represent Canada at the Francophonie Games in Madagascar, also winning the competition. His career spanned from 1998 to 2016.", "score": "1.6468737" }, { "id": "28848175", "title": "Pierre Abraham Lorillard", "text": " Pierre Abraham Lorillard was born in Montbéliard (France) in 1742, the son of Jean Lorillard (b. 1707) and Anne Catherine Rossel. He had five brothers, Jean George, George David, Charles Christophe, Jean Abraham, and Leopold Frederick, and a sister, Anne Marguerite. The naturalization recorded in New York on April 21, 1762, of 'Peter Louillard', a stocking weaver and French Protestant, is probably that of Lorillard. This followed the naturalization on October 27, 1760, of John George Lorillard, described as a French Protestant yeoman of New York City.", "score": "1.597378" }, { "id": "16446035", "title": "Marc Abraham", "text": "As writer ", "score": "1.5857037" }, { "id": null, "title": "Pierre Abraham Lorillard", "text": "Pierre Abraham Lorillard\n\nPierre Abraham Lorillard (1742 – 1776) was a French-American tobacconist who founded the business which developed into the Lorillard Tobacco Company, which claimed to be the oldest tobacco firm in the United States and in the world. His name is also sometimes given as Peter Abraham Lorillard, Peter Lorillard and Pierre Lorillard I.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Pierre Lorillard II", "text": "Pierre Lorillard II\n\nPierre Abraham Lorillard II or Peter Abraham Lorillard II (September 7, 1764 – May 23, 1843), also known as Peter Lorillard, Jr., was an American tobacco manufacturer, industrialist, banker, businessman, and real estate tycoon.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Pierre Kartner", "text": "Pierre Kartner\n\nPetrus Antonius Laurentius Kartner (11 April 1935 – 8 November 2022) was a Dutch musician, singer-songwriter and record producer who performed under the stage name Vader Abraham (\"Father Abraham\"). He wrote around 1600 songs.<ref name=MT/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Peter Abrahams", "text": "Peter Abrahams\n\nPeter Henry Abrahams Deras (3 March 1919 – 18 January 2017), commonly known as Peter Abrahams, was a South African-born novelist, journalist and political commentator who in 1956 settled in Jamaica, where he lived for the rest of his life. His death at the age of 97 is considered to have been murder.<ref>Olivier Stephenson,", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Pierre-Esprit Radisson", "text": "Pierre-Esprit Radisson\n\nPierre-Esprit Radisson (1636/1640–1710) was a French fur trader and explorer in New France. He is often linked to his brother-in-law Médard des Groseilliers. The decision of Radisson and Groseilliers to enter the English service led to the formation of the Hudson's Bay Company. His career was particularly notable for its repeated transitions between serving Britain and France.\n\nThere is no image of him other than that provided in his writings and those of the people who encountered him in New France, in Paris on the fringes of the court, on remote Hudson Bay, and in late Stuart London. Radisson should be considered in multiple contexts; for his achievement as a narrator of his own life, the range of his explorations, his experiences among the Indigenous peoples, and his social formation, both as a man of the early modern period for whom personal honour was an important value and as a working trader participating in the mercantile projects of the era. Radisson's life and writings have been interpreted from many different perspectives. Many French Canadians until the twentieth century accepted the verdict of his French contemporaries that he was a traitor to France.", "score": null }, { "id": "28848174", "title": "Pierre Abraham Lorillard", "text": " Pierre Abraham Lorillard (1742 – 1776) was a French-American tobacconist who founded the business which developed into the Lorillard Tobacco Company, which claimed to be the oldest tobacco firm in the United States and in the world. His name is also sometimes given as Peter Abraham Lorillard, Peter Lorillard and Pierre Lorillard I.", "score": "1.5578675" }, { "id": "32666447", "title": "Jean-Pierre Isaac", "text": " Jean-Pierre Isaac main expertises are: Composing, Arranging, Programming, Recording, Producing & Mastering. His main instruments are Computers, Guitars, Bass, Keyboards, Drums & Percussions, and also performs as a Lead & Backup Singer, for studio sessions.", "score": "1.553093" }, { "id": "32277967", "title": "Henri Abraham", "text": " Henri Abraham was born July 12, 1868 in the 1st arrondissement of Paris. After brilliant studies at Chaptal secondary school, from 1886 to 1889 he pursued scientific graduate studies at the École Normale Supérieure, where he attended the lectures of physics professors Jules Violle and Marcel Brillouin, and the Faculty of Paris, where he studied physics with Gabriel Lippmann and Edmond Bouty and obtained degrees in physical sciences and in mathematical sciences. He was then appointed for one year preparer physics laboratory of the École Normale Supérieure, then led by Jules Violle, where he wrote his thesis for the doctorate in physical sciences: \"New determination of the ", "score": "1.5410025" }, { "id": "25672479", "title": "Xavier Abraham", "text": " Xavier Abraham is a Catalan poet, cultural activist and bookseller born in Palma de Mallorca, Spain in 1945. He is the author of three collections: Iceberg (1986), Les mosques, la por (The Flies, the Fear 1991) and Sagitari (Sagittarius,1998). His poetry includes elements of realism, delicate lyricism and avant-gardism. Abraham has been the promoter of cultural activities such as the poetry-lecture series Poemes a l’Havanna (1990–93, published as an anthology in 1996), the Traficants de Poesia convention (1996) and the exhibition Art i poesia (Art and poetry, 1996). Abraham was the commissioner for the exhibition Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, poet (1996) and Dos amics de vint anys: Salvador Espriu i Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel (Two friends of twenty years: Salvador Espriu i Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, 2002). In collaboration with Pere Rossello Bover, he has published Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, a la llum (Bartomeu Rossello-Porcel, In the Light, 1999). In 1994, he opened the bookstore Sagitari (Sagittarius) in Palma de Mallorca, specializing in poetry.", "score": "1.5103594" }, { "id": "30213940", "title": "Abraham François", "text": " François's father was a footballer in Haiti.", "score": "1.5051339" }, { "id": "5349823", "title": "Pierre Kartner", "text": " Petrus Antonius Laurentius \"Pierre\" Kartner (born 11 April 1935) is a Dutch musician, singer-songwriter and record producer who performs under the stage name Vader Abraham (Father Abraham). He has written around 1600 songs.", "score": "1.501514" }, { "id": "32666446", "title": "Jean-Pierre Isaac", "text": " Jean-Pierre Isaac (born 5 January 1956) in Belgium, emigrated to Quebec in 1961. Jean-Pierre Isaac is a bilingual lyricist, composer, programmer, DJ, recording studio owner (located in Montreal's Le Plateau-Mont-Royal borough) and a music producer. His contributions to music and his national and international success have earned him many awards.", "score": "1.5003152" }, { "id": "4598193", "title": "Hérard Abraham", "text": " Hérard Abraham (born July 28, 1940) is a former Haitian political figure.", "score": "1.4979279" }, { "id": "28057613", "title": "Julien Abraham", "text": " Prior becoming a filmmaker, he studied Economics and Management at the Sorbonne. His first film as a director was a documentary \"L'odyssée de musiques\" in 2001; his feature films followed a decade later.", "score": "1.4934331" }, { "id": "2477019", "title": "Abraham Peyrenc de Moras", "text": " Abraham, the fourth of the Peyrenc children, was born in 1684 and baptized as a Protestant in the church at Aulas, a few miles northwest of Le Vigan. His father was a licensed surgeon. A country surgeon, whose profession dealt with the body, could at times serve as barber. He was able to purchase the post of secretary to the king and lands at Saint-Cyr. Some of his children left France for England in order to continue to exercise their faith. Abraham left le Vigan around 1703. According to some, he fled to Geneva. where he met with members of ", "score": "1.4910264" }, { "id": "28057612", "title": "Julien Abraham", "text": " Julien Abraham (born on 14 May 1976 in Enghien-les-Bains) is a French film director and screenwriter.", "score": "1.4875917" }, { "id": "14112271", "title": "Ralph Abraham (mathematician)", "text": " Abraham earned his B.S.E. (1956), M.S. (1958) and Ph.D. (1960) from the University of Michigan. Prior to joining Santa Cruz, he held positions at the University of California, Berkeley (research lecturer in mathematics; 1960-1962), Columbia University (postdoctoral fellow and assistant professor of mathematics; 1962-1964) and Princeton University (assistant professor of mathematics; 1964-1968). He has also held visiting positions in Amsterdam, Paris, Warwick, Barcelona, Basel, and Florence. He founded the Visual Math Institute at Santa Cruz in 1975; at that time, it was called the \"Visual Mathematics Project\". He is editor of World Futures and for the International Journal of Bifurcations and Chaos. Abraham is a member of cultural historian William Irwin Thompson's Lindisfarne Association. Abraham has ", "score": "1.4797285" }, { "id": "1727110", "title": "Luke Abraham", "text": " Luke Abraham (The AK47) (born 26 September 1983 in Leicester) is a former professional rugby union player, who played for Lyon OU in the French Top 14 and the Sale Sharks and Leicester Tigers in the Premiership Rugby league in England. A strong and pacy Leicester-born back-row player, Abraham came through the ranks after joining the Leicester Tigers at the age of 15. He took up the sport three years earlier at Bushloe High School and joined his local club, the Leicester Vipers, before becoming part of the Tigers set-up. He played an important role in the 2006–07 Guinness Premiership and the 2006-07 Heineken Cup double-winning campaign, making 12 Guinness Premiership appearances including eight starts as well ", "score": "1.4750748" }, { "id": "30343715", "title": "1676 in France", "text": "Abraham Bosse, artist (born c.1602 – 1604). ; Isaac La Peyrère, theologian (born 1594 or 1596). ; Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, military officer (born 1612) ; Pierre Patel, painter (born 1605) ", "score": "1.4668846" }, { "id": "10860155", "title": "Stephen Abraham", "text": " Abraham currently works for the Law Offices of Stephen Abraham in Newport Beach, California.", "score": "1.4624691" } ]
What is Elvin Penner's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Elvin Penner
4,027,096
85
[ { "id": "25619067", "title": "Elvin Penner", "text": " Penner is of Canadian ancestry. He has three children, one daughter and two sons.", "score": "1.8712353" }, { "id": "25619065", "title": "Elvin Penner", "text": " Elvin Penner is a Belizean politician who served in the House of Representatives from 2008 to 2015 representing the Cayo North East constituency. He is a member of the United Democratic Party. Penner was the first Belizean Mennonite elected to national office. Penner was initially appointed as Minister of Natural Resources and the Environment in 2008. Following a cabinet reshuffling in March 2009, Penner transitioned to the Ministry of Public Utilities, Information and Broadcasting. After being re-elected in 2012, Penner was appointed Minister of State in the Ministry of National Security (with responsibility for immigration and border protection).", "score": "1.782978" }, { "id": "7966770", "title": "Alden Penner", "text": " Alden Penner (born 12 January 1983) is a Canadian musician and producer best known for his work with the Unicorns, Clues, and for his solo output.", "score": "1.5066338" }, { "id": "10451318", "title": "Elvin (given name)", "text": " actor in the Mediacorp stable in Singapore ; Elvin Nimrod (born 1943), politician from the island of Grenada ; Elvin Papik, the 26th head football coach for the Doane College Tigers located in Crete, Nebraska ; Elvin Penner, Belizean politician ; Elvin Ramírez (born 1987), Major League Baseball pitcher for the Washington Nationals ; Elvin Santos (born 1963), Vice President of Honduras 2006–2008 ; Elvin C. Stakman (1885–1979), American plant pathologist ; Elvin Tibideaux, fictional character on The Cosby Show ; Elvin Yunusov (born 1994), Azerbaijani football player Elvin is a given name. Notable people with the name include: ", "score": "1.4687371" }, { "id": "13420827", "title": "Jeff Penner", "text": " Jeffrey Ryan Penner (born April 13, 1987) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey defenceman who played two National Hockey League (NHL) games with the Boston Bruins during the 2009–10 season.", "score": "1.4554543" }, { "id": null, "title": "Private prosecution", "text": "Private prosecution\n\nA private prosecution is a criminal proceeding initiated by an individual private citizen or private organisation (such as a prosecution association) instead of by a public prosecutor who represents the state. Private prosecutions are allowed in many jurisdictions under common law, but have become less frequent in modern times as most prosecutions are now handled by professional public prosecutors instead of private individuals who retain (or are themselves) barristers.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Whiskey Howl", "text": "Whiskey Howl\n\nWhiskey Howl was a Toronto-based Canadian blues band, most popular between 1969 and 1972. The band is notable as being one of the early Canadian bands promoting and developing blues music in Canada.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Wooden", "text": "John Wooden\n\nJohn Robert Wooden (October 14, 1910 – June 4, 2010) was an American basketball coach and player. Nicknamed the Wizard of Westwood, he won ten National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) national championships in a 12-year period as head coach for the UCLA Bruins, including a record seven in a row. No other team has won more than four in a row in Division I college men's or women's basketball. Within this period, his teams won an NCAA men's basketball record 88 consecutive games. Wooden won the prestigious Henry Iba Award as national coach of the year a record seven times and won the AP award five times.\n\nAs a 5'10\" guard, Wooden was the first player to be named basketball All-American three times, and the 1932 Purdue team on which he played as a senior was retroactively recognized as the pre-NCAA tournament national champion by the Helms Athletic Foundation and the Premo-Porretta Power Poll. He played professionally in the National Basketball League (NBL). Wooden was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame as a player (1960) and as a coach (1973), the first person ever enshrined in both categories.\n\nOne of the most revered coaches in the history of sports, Wooden was beloved by his former players, among them Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) and Bill Walton. Wooden was renowned for his short, simple inspirational messages to his players (including his \"Pyramid of Success\") many of which were directed at how to be a success in life as well as in basketball. Wooden's 29-year coaching career and overwhelming critical acclaim for his leadership have created a legacy not only in sports but also extending to business, personal success, and organizational leadership.<ref name=\"AP obit\"/>", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kareem Abdul-Jabbar", "text": "Kareem Abdul-Jabbar\n\nKareem Abdul-Jabbar ( ; born Ferdinand Lewis Alcindor Jr.; April 16, 1947) is an American former professional basketball player who played 20 seasons in the National Basketball Association (NBA) for the Milwaukee Bucks and the Los Angeles Lakers. During his career as a center, Abdul-Jabbar was a record six-time NBA Most Valuable Player (MVP), a record 19-time NBA All-Star, a 15-time All-NBA Team member, and an 11-time NBA All-Defensive Team member. He was a member of six NBA championship teams as a player and two more as an assistant coach, and was twice voted NBA Finals MVP. He was named to three NBA anniversary teams (35th, 50th, and 75th). Widely regarded as one of the greatest players of all time,\n\nAbdul-Jabbar was known as Lew Alcindor ( ) when he played at parochial high school Power Memorial in New York City, where he led their team to 71 consecutive wins. He was recruited by Jerry Norman, the assistant coach at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), where he played for coach John Wooden on three consecutive national championship teams. He was a record three-time MVP of the NCAA Tournament. Drafted with the first overall pick by the one-season-old Bucks franchise in the 1969 NBA draft, Alcindor spent six seasons in Milwaukee. After leading the Bucks to its first NBA championship at age 24 in 1971, he took the Muslim name Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Using his trademark skyhook shot, he established himself as one of the league's top scorers. In 1975, he was traded to the Lakers, with whom he played the final 14 seasons of his career in which they won five additional NBA championships. Abdul-Jabbar's contributions were a key component in the Showtime era of Lakers basketball. Over his 20-year NBA career, his teams succeeded in making the playoffs 18 times and got past the first round 14 times; his teams reached the NBA Finals on ten occasions.\n\nAt the time of his retirement at age 42 in 1989, Abdul-Jabbar was the NBA's all-time leader in points (38,387), games played (1,560), minutes (57,446), field goals made (15,837), field goal attempts (28,307), blocked shots (3,189), defensive rebounds (9,394), career wins (1,074), and personal fouls (4,657). He remains the all-time leader in points scored, field goals made, and career wins. He is ranked third all-time in both rebounds and blocked shots. the greatest player in college basketball history in 2008, and the second best player in NBA history (behind Michael Jordan) in 2016. Abdul-Jabbar has also been an actor, a basketball coach, a best-selling author, and a martial artist, having trained in Jeet Kune Do under Bruce Lee and appeared in his film \"Game of Death\" (1972). In 2016, President Barack Obama awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Elmer Fudd", "text": "Elmer Fudd\n\nElmer J. Fudd is an animated cartoon character in the Warner Bros. \"Looney Tunes\"/\"Merrie Melodies\" series and the archenemy of Bugs Bunny. He has one of the more disputed origins in the Warner Bros. cartoon pantheon (second only to Bugs himself). But it was evidenced that the true origins of Elmer was that he was actually created by Fred \"Tex\" Avery in 1937, as a \"Running Gag\" character with small, sometimes squinty eyes, with a derby hat and with a green suit.' His aim is to hunt Bugs, but he usually ends up seriously injuring himself and other antagonizing characters. He speaks in an unusual way, replacing his Rs and Ls with Ws, so he often refers to Bugs Bunny as a \"scwewy\" or \"wascawwy (rascally) wabbit\". Elmer's signature catchphrase is, \"Shhh. Be vewy vewy quiet, I'm hunting wabbits\", as well as his trademark laughter.\n\nThe best known Elmer Fudd cartoons include Chuck Jones' work \"What's Opera, Doc?\" (one of the few times Fudd bested Bugs, though he felt bad about it), the Rossini parody \"Rabbit of Seville\", and the \"Hunting Trilogy\" of \"Rabbit Season/Duck Season\" shorts (\"Rabbit Fire\", \"Rabbit Seasoning\", and \"Duck! Rabbit, Duck!\") with Fudd, Bugs Bunny, and Daffy Duck. An earlier prototype of character named Elmer set some of the recognizable Elmer's aspects before the character's more conspicuous features were set.", "score": null }, { "id": "8653455", "title": "Michael D. Penner", "text": " Born in 1969, Penner attended elementary school at Roslyn Elementary School and secondary school at Selwyn House School. He received his JD degree from Hofstra University in Long Island, New York after earning an undergraduate degree at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec. He began his career as a lawyer in New York, first with Rivkin Radler & Kremer then with the Olsten Corporation.", "score": "1.4477358" }, { "id": "30353773", "title": "Norman Penner", "text": " served overseas during World War II as a signalman. When he returned home in 1947, he became an organizer in Toronto for the Labor-Progressive Party as the Communist Party was then known. He ran in the 1951 Ontario election in York South and the 1953 federal election in York South finishing with 877 and 755 votes respectively. He also ran for reeve of York Township in the 1954 and 1955 municipal elections, coming in third and fourth place, respectively. He broke with the party in 1957 as a result of the Soviet invasion of Hungary and Nikita Khrushchev's Secret Speech the ", "score": "1.4129765" }, { "id": "8019165", "title": "Mike Penner", "text": " Born in Inglewood, California, Penner graduated from Western High School in Anaheim and from California State University, Fullerton.", "score": "1.4123592" }, { "id": "10985306", "title": "Keith Penner", "text": " Raised in Alberta, Penner later moved to Northern Ontario. Penner completed his undergraduate degree at the University of Alberta and earned master's degrees from the University of Toronto and the University of Ottawa. He also pursued post-degree studies at Queen's University and McMaster University.", "score": "1.4042442" }, { "id": "10884057", "title": "Andrew Penner", "text": " Andrew Penner (born December 21, 1982) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey goaltender who last played for the Colorado Eagles of the ECHL.", "score": "1.3996015" }, { "id": "2464628", "title": "David Penner", "text": " David Penner was an architect with a strong dedication to improving the city through architecture and physical landscapes. He demonstrated his volunteerism though involvement in various initiatives to engage the public through design and architecture. Penner also worked towards rehabilitating Manitoba's major heritage landmarks, such as the Royal Manitoba Theatre Center, Carlton Building, Winnipeg Adult Education Centre, and St. John's Telephone Exchange. Penner believed that architecture is the core element that \"embodies the DNA of a city and its citizens.\" Penner experimented with various architectural styles throughout his career, ranging from postmodernism which can be found in his own residence built in 1993 to contemporary ", "score": "1.3957305" }, { "id": "29227899", "title": "Jim Penner", "text": " Jim Penner (September 4, 1939 – January 17, 2004) was a businessman and politician in Manitoba, Canada. He served in the Manitoba legislature from 1999 to 2003. Penner was born in Rosthern, Saskatchewan. He served as President and C.E.O. of Penner Foods Limited from 1962 to 1998 (overseeing a business which employed 800 workers), and was appointed to Trinity Western University's Board of Governors in 1981. He was a graduate of Trinity University in Chicago and was awarded an honorary degree in 2001. In 2002 Penner was honoured as the Humanitarian of the Year by the Variety Club of Manitoba. Penner was elected to the Manitoba legislature in the general election of 1999, running as a Progressive Conservative in the rural, southern riding of Steinbach. This riding is considered extremely safe for the Conservatives; Penner defeated his nearest opponent by almost 5000 votes, despite the fact that the Progressive Conservatives were defeated provincially. In parliament, Penner served as opposition critic for Consumer and Corporate Affairs and Finance. He chose not to run for re-election in 2003, having been diagnosed with cancer. Penner died on January 17, 2004.", "score": "1.3947262" }, { "id": "10985310", "title": "Keith Penner", "text": " After leaving the Agency, Penner established his own Commercial Dispute Resolution Firm. He became a coach-teacher with the Stitt/Feld/Handy Group and the University of Windsor in Mediation Training. From 2005 until 2016 he heard cases for the Ontario Licence Appeal Tribunal and he continues to serve as a Designated Arbitrator with ICDR (The International Centre for Dispute Resolution) which is affiliated with the American Arbitration Association. Penner is listed in the Whose Who in America. In 2009, Penner worked with the Algonquins of Barrier Lake in Quebec in an effort to assist them in the re-establishment of their Traditional Government. Due to an intra-community dispute, the result was challenged in the Federal ", "score": "1.3943388" }, { "id": "15976030", "title": "Dustin Penner", "text": " Dustin Penner (born September 28, 1982) is a Canadian former professional ice hockey forward who played in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Anaheim Ducks, Edmonton Oilers, Los Angeles Kings and Washington Capitals. Undrafted by any NHL team, in 2004, Penner signed with Anaheim after playing college hockey at the University of Maine in the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA). Penner won the Stanley Cup in his first full season with the Anaheim Ducks in 2007, before adding a second Stanley Cup in his first full season with Los Angeles in 2012.", "score": "1.392775" }, { "id": "25619066", "title": "Elvin Penner", "text": " On 19 September 2013, Penner was stripped of his ministerial portfolios by Prime Minister Dean Barrow due to his involvement in allegedly selling and issuing a fraudulent Belizean passport to South Korean national Kim Won Hong, who at the time was jailed in Taiwan. Penner was charged with illegally facilitating a passport in March 2014, but charges were dropped in July due to lack of evidence. After the scandal Penner was shunned in the Belize House and reportedly did not carry out any official government duties. He resisted calls to resign from both the Belize House and the UDP by Barrow and others. In 2013 Penner was the subject of a recall petition in his constituency. However the petition was declared invalid in January 2014. In June 2014 Penner was deselected as the UDP's candidate in Cayo North East in the 2015 general election in favour of former San Ignacio Mayor John August. At that election August was defeated by the People's United Party candidate, Orlando Habet.", "score": "1.3876524" }, { "id": "28195236", "title": "Stanford S. Penner", "text": " Stanford Solomon Penner (5 July 1921 – 15 July 2016) also known as Sol Penner, was a German-American scientist and engineer, a major figure in combustion physics, especially in rocket engines, and a founder of the Engineering program at University of California, San Diego. He obtained his PhD in 1946 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison under Farrington Daniels and Theodore von Kármán.", "score": "1.3858554" }, { "id": "9839100", "title": "Barry Penner", "text": " Born in Kitimat in 1966, Penner has lived most of his life in the eastern Fraser Valley of British Columbia, Canada. He has fought forest fires, spent summers on patrol as a park ranger and worked at a local saw mill. Penner completed two years at what is now University of the Fraser Valley (formerly Fraser Valley College) and has been named one of their \"Top 40\" alumni. Penner received a number of academic awards while studying at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby before completing a bachelor's degree in Political Science and Economics. He was then selected for the 1989 British Columbia Legislative Internship Program. While completing a law degree at the University of Victoria, Penner was one of the early participants in the UVic Law Co-operative Education program and worked for a law firm in Bangkok, Thailand in 1991.", "score": "1.3806899" }, { "id": "29913401", "title": "Jonathan Penner (writer)", "text": " He graduated from the University of Bridgeport and from the University of Iowa with an M.F.A., M.A., and Ph.D, which he earned in 1966. He was a Postdoctoral Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. He taught at the New School for Social Research, Southern Illinois University, Vanderbilt University, and the University of Hawaii. Since 1978 he has lived in Tucson; he has been married since 1968 to Lucille Recht Penner. He is now emeritus (retired) from the University of Arizona's Creative Writing Program. He believes the fiction workshop is fundamental to the academic practice of learning creative writing. His stories have appeared in Grand Street, Paris Review, Commentary, Ploughshares.", "score": "1.3797171" }, { "id": "2464627", "title": "David Penner", "text": " David Paul Penner (August 9, 1958 – January 7, 2020), MAA, FRAIC was a Canadian architect, born and raised in the Osborne Village neighbourhood of Winnipeg, Manitoba. He attended the University of Manitoba where he received his Bachelor of Environment Studies in 1979 and Masters of Architecture in 1985. Penner was the founding principal of David Penner Architect (DPA). He became a Fellow of the RAIC in 2012, and was involved in several organizations outside his firm including Storefront Manitoba and the Prairie Design Awards Program. His best-known architectural works include Fountain Springs Housing, Buhler Center, Windsor Park Library, and Mere Hotel. Penner died from a heart attack on January 7, 2020.", "score": "1.3734326" }, { "id": "29913400", "title": "Jonathan Penner (writer)", "text": " Jonathan Penner (born 1940 in Bridgeport, Connecticut) is an American writer.", "score": "1.3665304" } ]
What is Rodrigo Arocena's occupation?
[ "mathematician" ]
occupation
Rodrigo Arocena
3,146,386
74
[ { "id": "29073631", "title": "Rodrigo Arocena", "text": " Rodrigo Arocena Linn (born February 23, 1947 in Montevideo) is an Uruguayan mathematician, and rector of the University of the Republic since July 2006.", "score": "1.7769554" }, { "id": "29073632", "title": "Rodrigo Arocena", "text": " Son of Germán Arocena Capurro and Mercedes Linn Davie, he comes from an Uruguayan upper-class family. His only brother Ignacio Arocena Linn disappeared on 20 August 1978 in Argentina, under circumstances surrounding the military regime. He began his academic life in the Faculty of Engineering at the University of the Republic of Uruguay. After a short time he began to teach at the Institute of Mathematics and Statistics, today called \"Rafael Laguardia\". During the military dictatorship in Uruguay, Arocena was exiled from the country, after spending a period in prison. After a journey to Buenos Aires he obtained his doctorate in Mathematics in 1979 from the Central University of Venezuela, under the direction of Mischa Cotlar in the area of functional analysis. More recently, Arocena changed the direction of his studies, dedicating himself to social sciences, obtaining a second doctorate in development studies, in 1990. He acted as Professor of Science and Development at the Faculty of Science until his election as vice-chancellor of the University of the Republic of Uruguay. In 2007 the LGBT collective \"Ovejas Negras\" (Black Sheep) recognized him as Person of the Year.", "score": "1.713016" }, { "id": "29073633", "title": "Rodrigo Arocena", "text": " He is the author of more than 30 articles in the area of social science, dedicated to the study of the science in Uruguay and Latin America, and the themes of exile and technology. He has published 16 books (as author, co-author, or editor) regarding similar social themes. In the area of mathematics, between the years 1979 and 1998, he published some 40 articles about functional and harmonic analysis, unary operators and advancements.", "score": "1.6093241" }, { "id": "29073634", "title": "Rodrigo Arocena", "text": " Rodrigo Arocena was elected vice-chancellor of the University of the Republic of Uruguay in the third vote (the last possible moment) in the General Assembly of the Senate. After the withdrawal of several candidates, opinions were divided between Rodrigo Arocena and Roberto Markarian, another mathematician who also began teaching in the Rafael Laguardia Institute of Mathematics and Statistics at the same time as Arocena. Arocena counted on the support of the majority of the students from the Federation of University Students of Uruguay in the General Assembly of the Senate to boost his candidacy, while Markarian had backing from the Teacher's Association of the University of the Republic (ADUR).", "score": "1.5556185" }, { "id": "6803276", "title": "Rodrigo Maroni", "text": " Rodrigo Maroni (born 21 July 1981) is a Brazilian politician, as well as a yoga instructor and animal rights activist. He has spent his political career representing Rio Grande do Sul, having served in the state legislature since 2019.", "score": "1.5184544" }, { "id": null, "title": "Rodrigo Arocena", "text": "Rodrigo Arocena\n\nRodrigo Arocena Linn (born February 23, 1947 in Montevideo) is an Uruguayan mathematician, and rector of the University of the Republic since July 2006.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Argentine university reform of 1918", "text": "Argentine university reform of 1918\n\nThe Argentine university reform of 1918 was a general modernization of the universities, especially tending towards democratization, brought about by student activism during the presidency of Hipolito Yrigoyen, the first democratic government. The events started in Córdoba and spread to the rest of Argentina, and then through much of Latin America. The reform set up the freedom for universities to define their own curriculum and manage their own budget without interference from the central government. This has had a profound effect on academic life at the universities through the nationalization process that boasts academic freedom and independence throughout the university life.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Italian Uruguayans", "text": "Italian Uruguayans\n\nItalian Uruguayans (Spanish: \"ítalo-uruguayos\"; Italian: \"italo-uruguaiani\") are Uruguayan-born citizens who are fully or partially of Italian descent or Italian-born people in Uruguay. It is estimated that more than one third of Uruguayans are of Italian descent.\n\nAlong with its neighboring country, Argentina, Italian immigration to Uruguay is one of the largest, if not the largest, ethnic groups towards Uruguay's modern culture and society, along with Spanish Uruguayans, exhibiting significant connections to Italian culture in terms of language, customs and traditions. Outside of Italy, Uruguay has one of the highest percentages of Italians in the world.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Montevideo", "text": "Montevideo\n\nMontevideo () is the capital and largest city of Uruguay. According to the 2011 census, the city proper has a population of 1,319,108 (about one-third of the country's total population) in an area of . Montevideo is situated on the southern coast of the country, on the northeastern bank of the Río de la Plata.\n\nThe city was established in 1724 by a Spanish soldier, Bruno Mauricio de Zabala, as a strategic move amidst the Spanish-Portuguese dispute over the platine region. It was also under brief British rule in 1807, but eventually the city was retaken by Spanish criollos who defeated the British invasions of the River Plate. Montevideo is the seat of the administrative headquarters of Mercosur and ALADI, Latin America's leading trade blocs, a position that entailed comparisons to the role of Brussels in Europe.\n\nThe 2019 Mercer's report on quality of life, rated Montevideo first in Latin America, a rank the city has consistently held since 2005. , Montevideo was the 19th largest city economy in the continent and 9th highest income earner among major cities. In 2022, it has a projected GDP of $53.9 billion, with a per capita of $30,148.\n\nIn 2018, it was classified as a beta global city ranking eighth in Latin America and 84th in the world. Montevideo hosted every match during the first FIFA World Cup, in 1930. Described as a \"vibrant, eclectic place with a rich cultural life\", and \"a thriving tech center and entrepreneurial culture\",\n\nIt is the hub of commerce and higher education in Uruguay as well as its chief port. The city is also the financial hub of Uruguay and the cultural anchor of a metropolitan area with a population of around 2 million.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "List of French Argentines", "text": "List of French Argentines\n\nFrench Argentines are Argentines of full or partial French descent, or French-born people who reside in Argentina. Most of French immigrants settled in Argentina from the 1870s until WW1, though consistent immigration started in the 1820s and continued until the late 1940s. Half of these immigrants came from Southwestern France, especially from the Basque Country and Béarn (former Basses-Pyrénées accounted for more than 20% of immigrants), as well as Bigorre and Rouergue, but also from Savoy and the Paris region. As early as in the 1840s, Argentina also received immigrants with French background from neighboring countries, notably Uruguay. In 2006, it was estimated that around 6 million Argentines had some degree of French ancestry (up to 17% of the total population).\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "1555543", "title": "Arocena", "text": "Daymé Arocena (born 1992), Afro-Cuban jazz singer ; Horacio Terra Arocena (1894–1985), Uruguayan architect and politician ; Rodrigo Arocena (born 1947), Uruguayan mathematician and academic administrator Arocena is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5038629" }, { "id": "5893361", "title": "Roberto Rodrigo", "text": " Roberto Porfírio Maximiano Rodrigo (born 28 November 1988), known simply as Roberto, is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a forward for F.C. Penafiel. Mainly associated with Arouca whom he represented in three spells, he played 88 Primeira Liga matches and scored 18 goals, also for Moreirense. In LigaPro, he surpassed 150 games and 50 goals in service of four teams.", "score": "1.5005801" }, { "id": "7935307", "title": "Rodrigo Aliendro", "text": " .", "score": "1.4905317" }, { "id": "27221740", "title": "Rodrigo Valenzuela (artist)", "text": " Rodrigo Valenzuela (born 1982) is a Chilean-born award-winning contemporary visual (focusing on photography, video and installation) artist with exhibitions worldwide. He has a BFA in Art History from the University of Chicago, a BA in Philosophy from the Evergreen State College, Washington, and an MFA in PhotoMedia from the University of Washington. In 2017 he was appointed assistant professor in the Department of Art, UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture.", "score": "1.4888282" }, { "id": "6311949", "title": "Rodrigo Arús", "text": " Rodrigo Arús (born 20 February 1995) is an Uruguayan tennis player. Arús has a career high ATP singles ranking of 1190 achieved on 10 November 2014. He also has a career high ATP doubles ranking of 1453 achieved on 18 December 2017. Arús represents Uruguay at the Davis Cup, where he has a W/L record of 1–4.", "score": "1.4509964" }, { "id": "9412196", "title": "Rodrigo Pérez-Alonso González", "text": " Rodrigo Pérez-Alonso González (Mexico City, June 3rd, 1978) is a Mexican lawyer, columnist, academic and politician. He served as Federal Deputy in the LXI Legislature of the Mexican Congress of the Union; where he chaired the Special Commission for Digital Access. He also served, in the private sector in various roles such as General Director of the National Chamber of Air Transport (CANAERO).", "score": "1.4393063" }, { "id": "6803277", "title": "Rodrigo Maroni", "text": " Rodrigo Maroni was born on 21 July 1981 in Porto Alegre, Brazil. He identifies as a Buddhist and was a yoga instructor prior to entering politics. In 2019 he married public defender Isabel Wexel. Previously he had been in a relationship with journalist and politician Manuela d'Ávila. Maroni identifies as an animal rights activist, a key theme in his political campaigns. In 2017 Maroni claimed to have been a victim of an assassination attempt. While he was driving to deliver a dog from an animal shelter, a couple on a motorcycle followed him and started shooting at him. After speeding up to avoid them he ultimately crashed his car, and hid behind a group of trees until he was sure the assailants were gone.", "score": "1.4393022" }, { "id": "7151", "title": "Rodrigo Pérez Mackenna", "text": " Rodrigo Pérez Mackenna (born 21 December 1960) is a Chilean scholar, consultant and entrepreneur. He was bi-minister during president Sebastián Piñera's first government: he served as Housing & Urbanism Minister (2011–2014) and National Assets Minister (2012–2014). He studied at Pontifical Catholic University of Chile. After an extensive career in the private sector, he joined the State of Chile in March 2010, being appointment as Libertador General Bernardo O'Higgins Region Intendant. He remained as Intendant until mid-April 2011 when Piñera decided to send him to Housing Minister in replace of Magdalena Matte. In 2014 was elected Chile's AFP Union Association president.", "score": "1.4352505" }, { "id": "29938519", "title": "Rodrigo Montoya", "text": " Rodrigo Montoya (born June 4, 1996) is a Mexican racquetball player. He is the current International Racquetball Federation (IRF) World Champion in Men’s Doubles, winning the title with Javier Mar in 2021 in Guatemala City. That was his 2nd IRF World Championship, as he won Men’s Singles in 2018 in Costa Rica. He is also the current Pan American Games champion in both Men’s Singles and Doubles with Mar, winning those events at the 2019 Pan Am Games in Lima.", "score": "1.4321315" }, { "id": "15031647", "title": "Alexandre Arrechea", "text": " Alexandre Arrechea (born 1970) is a Cuban artist whose work involves concepts of power and its network of hierarchies, surveillance, control, prohibitions, and subjection. For twelve years he was a member of the art collective Los Carpinteros, until he left the group in July 2003 to continue his career as a solo artist. His public art The spectator's participation in the work adds to his contemplation. The work arises out of human actions and reactions in the face of contemporary versions of the worldview already described by Jeremy Bentham in the 18th century. The eye of power watches everything and everyone, and everyone watches everyone else and themselves. The interdisciplinary quality of Arrechea's work reveals a profound interest in the exploration of both public and domestic spaces. This quest has led him to produce several monumental projects like “Ciudad Transportable” (2000), “The Garden of Mistrust” (2003-2005) and “Perpetual Free Entrance” (2006). Arrechea has been represented by the Casado Santapau Gallery in Madrid since 2006.", "score": "1.4200866" }, { "id": "15031648", "title": "Alexandre Arrechea", "text": " Arrechea was born in Trinidad, Cuba in 1970. Arrechea graduated from the Instituto Superior de Arte (ISA) of Havana in 1994. He lives between Madrid & Miami, with his wife, Cuban art historian Marlene Barrios de Arrechea and their two children, Dalia and Arturo.", "score": "1.4166797" }, { "id": "29721194", "title": "Rodrigo Tavares", "text": " Rodrigo Tavares (26 December 1978) is a Portuguese-born academic, finance professional, and public administrator. Previously, he was Head of Foreign Affairs of the São Paulo state government.", "score": "1.4166505" }, { "id": "55323", "title": "Rodrigo Roncero", "text": " Rodrigo Roncero, also known as \"RoRo\", uncle of Mateo Morrone, alias Morronzero, Morroculo o Duketto, (born 16 February 1977, in Buenos Aires), is a retired Argentine former rugby union player. The last team in which he played was Stade Français in the Top 14. He has also played for Gloucester Rugby in the Guinness Premiership from 2002 to 2004. Roncero also played for Argentina, usually as a prop. Whilst at Gloucester he was a replacement in the 2003 Powergen Cup Final in which Gloucester defeated Northampton Saints. Like his team mate Felipe Contepomi, Rodrigo is a qualified doctor. Roncero made his first appearance for Argentina on 15 September 1998 in a ", "score": "1.4164183" }, { "id": "27375340", "title": "Rodrigo Leão", "text": " Rodrigo Costa Leão Muñoz Miguez (born 15 October 1964), known professionally as Rodrigo Leão, is a Portuguese musician and songwriter. He became known in the 1980s as a member of the Portuguese groups Sétima Legião and Madredeus. In the 1990s, Leão launched his career as a solo artist, with multiple albums reaching number-one in the Portuguese album charts.", "score": "1.409658" }, { "id": "32659450", "title": "Rodrigo Alberto Carazo Zeledón", "text": " Rodrigo Alberto Carazo Zeledón (born 1948) is a Costa Rican politician, economist, lawyer and political scientist and is currently Costa Rica's representative to the United Nations, having presented his credentials the 31st of August 2018. He was the first Ombudsman of the Republic of Costa Rica and a former delegate to the Legislative Assembly of Costa Rica who served in that capacity during the Pacheco administration. He was president of the Partido Acción Ciudadana (Citizen Action Party, known as PAC). Carazo Zeledón is the son of the former president of the Republic, Rodrigo Carazo Odio. Like his father, he has had a strong tendency towards social positions and is conspicuous in opposition to neoliberalism. ", "score": "1.4078593" } ]
What is Fidel Antuña Batista's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Fidel Antuña Batista
1,412,527
56
[ { "id": "1737016", "title": "Fidel Antuña Batista", "text": " Fidel Antuña Batista (born 27 April 1972) is a Mexican politician from the National Action Party. From 2008 to 2009 he served as Deputy of the LX Legislature of the Mexican Congress representing Yucatán.", "score": "1.7834678" }, { "id": "10860627", "title": "Víctor Ivo Acuña Velázquez", "text": " Víctor Ivo Acuña Velázquez (1966–2007) was a Cuban Communist and Lieutenant Colonel in the Revolutionary Armed Forces. In 1983 Acuña Velázquez enrolled in the General Carlos Rolof Military Academy, from which he graduated as a communications engineer. In his military career, he occupied various posts linked to the specialty of communications, and he rose successively in rank until attaining that of lieutenant colonel. Acuña Velázquez was murdered in 2007 when he tried to stop two hijackers of an airplane at José Martí International Airport. He was then awarded the Antonio Maceo Medal of Valor posthumously by Raúl Castro.", "score": "1.5489371" }, { "id": "29843277", "title": "Manuel Piñeiro", "text": " Piñeiro participated in student protests or demonstrations against the 10 March 1952 coup d'état, which brought dictator Fulgencio Batista to power. In September 1953, his relatively prosperous family (he was the son of a Bacardí executive) sent him to study business management at Columbia University in New York, to take him away from the political turmoil of the time. While studying in the US, he began to oppose the social, racial, and political discrimination that he saw in the United States at that time and he felt the need to return to Cuba. He returned to his hometown in 1955 and became a founder of the July 26 Movement. Soon after his comeback, Piñeiro was arrested by Batista's security agencies because of his subversive or underground political activities. After his release, he continued his clandestine activities in Havana. Upon discovering that he was under police surveillance, he decided that it was better to leave for the Eastern Sierra Maestra and join the guerrilla columns headed by Fidel Castro.", "score": "1.502558" }, { "id": "30086209", "title": "List of Cuban Americans", "text": " arbitrator on Caso Cerrado ; Manny Puig, Cuban-born wildlife entertainer ; Enrique Ros (1924–2013), Cuban-born businessman and activist opposed to Cuban president Fidel Castro ; Andrea Louise Simon, community leader ; Alfred-Maurice de Zayas, Cuban-born lawyer; writer; historian; expert in the field of human rights and international law; retired high-ranking United Nations official; peace activist; since 2012 the United Nations Independent Expert on the Promotion of a Democratic and Equitable International Order (also known as Special Rapporteur), appointed by the United Nations Human Rights Council ; Jose Battle, Cuban-born refugee whom was a police officer during the Batista regime. He was the founder and head of an organized crime syndicate known as the corporation, also referred to as the \"Cuban Mafia\". Battle controlled bolita rackets within the Cuban-American community. ", "score": "1.5018271" }, { "id": "4081303", "title": "Harry Villegas", "text": " Harry \"Pombo\" Villegas (10 May 1940 – 29 December 2019) was a Cuban Communist guerrilla. He was born in Yara, Cuba, and was a descendant of African slaves. He fought alongside Che Guevara in battles from the Sierra Maestra to the Bolivian insurgency. From 1977 to 1979, and again from 1981 to 1988, Villegas was part of the leadership of Cuba's volunteer military mission in Angola, fighting alongside Angolan and Namibian forces against aggression by South Africa's apartheid regime. Villegas was a Central Committee member of the Communist Party of Cuba from 1997 to 2011, a deputy of Cuba's National Assembly, and executive vice president of the Association of Combatants of the Cuban Revolution. Villegas was also a published writer. He died, aged 79, in Havana, Cuba.", "score": "1.4882236" }, { "id": null, "title": "Fidel Antuña Batista", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Fabio Grobart", "text": "Fabio Grobart\n\nFabio Grobart (born Abraham Grobart, August 30, 1905 – 22 October 1994; also known as Antonio Blanco and Abraham Simjovitch) was a Marxist-Leninist revolutionary and politician who played an important role in the 1959 Cuban Revolution that overthrew Fulgencio Batista and led to Fidel Castro's rise to power.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by nationality ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Missing articles by nationality ...", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "10465940", "title": "Víctor Ivo Acuña Velázquez", "text": "Víctor Ivo Acuña Velázquez Víctor Ivo Acuña Velázquez (1966–2007) was a Cuban Communist and Lieutenant Colonel in the Revolutionary Armed Forces. In 1983 Acuña Velázquez enrolled in the General Carlos Rolof Military Academy, from which he graduated as a communications engineer. In his military career, he occupied various posts linked to the specialty of communications, and he rose successively in rank until attaining that of lieutenant colonel. Acuña Velázquez was murdered in 2007 when he tried to stop two hijackers of an airplane at José Martí International Airport. He was then awarded the \"Antonio Maceo Medal of Valor\" posthumously by", "score": "1.4887059" }, { "id": "26456046", "title": "Fidel Castro", "text": " Fidel Alejandro Castro Ruz (13 August 1926 – 25 November 2016) was a Cuban revolutionary, lawyer, and politician who was the leader of Cuba from 1959 to 2008, serving as the prime minister of Cuba from 1959 to 1976 and president from 1976 to 2008. Ideologically a Marxist–Leninist and Cuban nationalist, he also served as the first secretary of the Communist Party of Cuba from 1961 until 2011. Under his administration, Cuba became a one-party communist state; industry and business were nationalized, and state socialist reforms were implemented throughout society. Born in Birán, Oriente, the son of a wealthy Spanish farmer, Castro adopted leftist and anti-imperialist ideas while studying ", "score": "1.485645" }, { "id": "28758240", "title": "Raúl Castro", "text": " Belén) in Havana. Raúl as an undergraduate studied social sciences. Whereas Fidel excelled as a student, Raúl turned in mostly mediocre performances. Raúl became a committed socialist and joined the Socialist Youth, an affiliate of the Soviet-oriented Cuban Communist Party, Partido Socialista Popular (PSP). The brothers participated actively in sometimes violent student actions. In 1953, Raúl served as a member of the 26th of July Movement group that attacked the Moncada Barracks; he received a 13-year prison sentence and spent 22 months in prison as a result of this action. During his subsequent exile in Mexico, he participated in the preparations for the expedition of the boat Granma to Cuba.", "score": "1.481674" }, { "id": "30247307", "title": "Fulgencio Batista", "text": " public school in Banes and later attended night classes at an American Quaker school. He left home at age 14, after the death of his mother. Coming from a humble background, he earned a living as a laborer in the cane fields, docks, and railroads. He was a tailor, mechanic, charcoal vendor and fruit peddler. In 1921, he traveled to Havana, and in April joined the army as a private. After learning shorthand and typing, Batista left the army in 1923, working briefly as a teacher of stenography before enlisting in the Guardia Rural (rural police). He transferred back to the army as a corporal, becoming secretary to a regimental colonel. In September 1933, he held the rank of sergeant stenographer and as such acted as the secretary of a group of non-commissioned officers who led a \"sergeants' conspiracy\" for better conditions and improved prospects of promotion.", "score": "1.4809223" }, { "id": "29843278", "title": "Manuel Piñeiro", "text": " In March 1958, he was recognized for his merits and was personally chosen by Fidel Castro to be the officer tasked with integrating the recently created Eastern Front II \"Frank País\", under the command of Fidel's younger brother, Raúl. During that time, he held several meetings with members of the Batistas' Cuban Army. Subsequently, he was appointed Chief of Personnel and Inspection, a position that included responsibilities for the Intelligence Service and the recently created Policía Rebelde, which was a predecessor of Castro's Revolutionary Police. During the battle for Santiago de Cuba, he was promoted to Commander of the Cuban Revolution. After the triumph of the Revolution he was appointed \"Chief of the Military Plaza\" in Santiago de Cuba, the second ", "score": "1.4698762" }, { "id": "7943592", "title": "Granma (yacht)", "text": " easy target. Many casualties ensued, most of them during battle at Alegría de Pío further inland. The survivors continued to the foot of Pico Turquino in the Sierra Maestra to carry out guerilla war. Initially, Batista did not know who exactly were among the casualties, and international media widely reported that Fidel had died. This was, however, not the case. Of the 82, around 20 had survived. According to the most credible version, the survivors were Fidel, Raúl, Guevara, Armando Rodríguez, Faustino Pérez, Ramiro Valdés, Universo Sánchez, Efigenio Ameijeiras, René Rodríguez, Camilo Cienfuegos, Juan Almeida Bosque, Calixto García, Calixto Morales, Reinaldo Benítez, Julio Díaz, Rafael Chao, Ciro Redondo (revolutionary), José Morán, Carlos Bermúdez, and Fransisco González. All others had been either killed, captured, or left behind.", "score": "1.4664738" }, { "id": "32278073", "title": "Politics of Fidel Castro", "text": " Fidel Castro proclaimed himself to be \"a socialist, a Marxist, and a Leninist\". As a Marxist–Leninist, Castro believed strongly in converting Cuba and the wider world from a capitalist system in which individuals own the means of production into a socialist system in which the means of production are owned by the workers. In the former, there is a class divide between the wealthy classes who control the means of production (i. e., the factories, farms, media, etc.) and the poorer working classes who labor on them, whilst in the latter, there is a decreasing class divide as the government redistributes the means of production leading to communism. Castro used Leninist thought as a model upon which to convert the Cuban state and society into a socialist form.", "score": "1.4650347" }, { "id": "11333286", "title": "Raúl Corrales Forno", "text": " In the 1950s Corrales joined the Partido Socialista Popular and worked as a photographer for the Party's newspaper. He specialized in going to the remote parts of Cuba to photograph the everyday lives of poor peasants and workers. During a police raid in the late 1950s, almost all of Corrales photographic work was destroyed. After the Revolution of 1959 against the Batista Government, Raúl Corrales joined the Communist Party of Cuba. He was one of Fidel Castro's official photographers for many years. Corrales worked for almost three decades in the Office of Historical Affairs, helping to preserve and organize the Castro government's documentary and photographic legacy.", "score": "1.464194" }, { "id": "30247328", "title": "Fulgencio Batista", "text": " \"I believe that there is no country in the world including any and all the countries under colonial domination, where economic colonization, humiliation and exploitation were worse than in Cuba, in part owing to my country's policies during the Batista regime. I approved the proclamation which Fidel Castro made in the Sierra Maestra, when he justifiably called for justice and especially yearned to rid Cuba of corruption. I will even go further: to some extent it is as though Batista was the incarnation of a number of sins on the part of the United States. Now we shall have to pay for those ", "score": "1.4595513" }, { "id": "29843276", "title": "Manuel Piñeiro", "text": " Manuel Piñeiro Losada (Matanzas, Cuba, March 14, 1933 – Havana, March 11, 1998), known as Barba Roja (Spanish: \"red beard\"), was a Cuban political and military figure, a leading character of the Cuban Revolution, as the first head of Fidel Castro's security apparatus (known as Dirección General de Inteligencia (DGI): General Intelligence Directorate). By supporting armed struggle in Latin America, the DGI would try to help the expansion of radical leftist guerrilla groups in the subcontinent. Piñeiro was the Cuban DGI chief from 1961–1964. He then became Deputy Minister of the Interior in charge of the state security apparatus from 1964–1968. A Soviet reorganization of the DGI forced Piñeiro out of his position and he was then placed in charge of the DGI's Latin American affairs division.", "score": "1.4588311" }, { "id": "6959506", "title": "Death and state funeral of Fidel Castro", "text": " and reunification as well as current national development.\" It added that \"Cuban communists and people will continue to unite under the leadership of the Communist Party of Cuba and President Raúl Castro to realise the wishes of late leader Fidel Castro, firmly safeguarding the national independence and sovereignty as well as building socialism.\" Europe ; – President Alexander Lukashenko said that Castro had \"turned into a politician of planetary scale who has exerted a substantial influence in the evolution of world events in the 20th century and in the long term. [...] The reflections and advice he has shared ", "score": "1.4546106" }, { "id": "26456171", "title": "Fidel Castro", "text": " Castro proclaimed himself to be \"a Socialist, a Marxist, and a Leninist\", and publicly identified as a Marxist–Leninist from December 1961 onward. As a Marxist, Castro sought to transform Cuba from a capitalist state which was dominated by foreign imperialism to a socialist society and ultimately to a communist society. Influenced by Guevara, he suggested that Cuba could evade most stages of socialism and progress straight to communism. The Cuban Revolution nevertheless did not meet the Marxist assumption that socialism would be achieved through proletariat revolution, for most of the forces involved in Batista's overthrow were led by members of the Cuban middle-class. According to Castro, a country could be ", "score": "1.4533107" }, { "id": "27887881", "title": "Osmany Cienfuegos", "text": " in 1965. In 1966, he was appointed as Secretary General of the Organization of Solidarity of the Peoples of Asia, Africa, and Latin America (OSPAAAL). He was removed from the Politburo of the Party and the Council of State after 17 years of membership (1980–1987). He remained as a member of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party and in the 1990s was appointed Minister of Tourism until he was replaced in 1998. He was a Vice-president of the Council of Ministers of Cuba until 2009-03-02. His departure caused controversy after some news reports suggested that he had been removed by Cuba's president, Raúl Castro. Fidel Castro responded criticising those reports. Cuban dissident Armando Valladares has alleged that he was responsible for at least nine extrajudicial killings by asphyxiating political opponents.", "score": "1.4523653" }, { "id": "26456175", "title": "Fidel Castro", "text": " Juan Reynaldo Sánchez, Castro's former bodyguard, detailed much of his personal and private life in his book The Double Life of Fidel Castro. He described Castro as \"Nothing ordinary about him at all, he is unique, special, and different\". He profiled him as an egocentric who loved being the center of attention, and with his almost electric charisma, grabbing the attention of the people around him. He was also extremely manipulative; with his formidable intelligence, he was capable of manipulating a person or a group of people without much difficulty. In addition, he was repetitive and obsessive. In discussions with his colleagues or foreigners, he would repeat the same things ", "score": "1.4521892" }, { "id": "13880612", "title": "René Ramos Latour", "text": " René Ramos Latour (May 12, 1932 in Antilla, Cuba – 30 July 1958) was a commander under Fidel Castro during the Cuban Revolution. He was killed in combat against Fulgencio Batista at the Battle of Las Mercedes. During his childhood his parents moved to Santiago, where he began his studies. Finally he studied at the Professional School of Commerce of Santiago. After obtaining the title of accountant, in 1953 he began working for the American Nicaro Nickel Processing Company, This company was located in the province of Holguín and was dedicated to the production of nickel where most of its workers were local. His revolutionary concerns led him to military and the organizations Acción ", "score": "1.4515798" }, { "id": "15041902", "title": "Armando Hart Dávalos", "text": " Before the Cuban Revolution which ousted President Fulgencio Batista, Hart studied to be a lawyer at the University of Havana. While there, he became politically active and would soon join Fidel Castro and Che Guevara in their fight against Batista. As Castro and Che Guevara were leading the guerrilla warfare in the Cuban mountains and jungles, Hart went onto become one of the main organizers of the revolutionary movement in the cities. Among his other writings, he has given a very full account of events leading up to the Revolution of 1959 in his seminal work, Aldabonazo. When Batista was finally overthrown, Hart was made the first Minister of Education of the Revolution, ", "score": "1.450948" } ]
What is Thomas Gifford's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Thomas Gifford (politician)
5,978,662
55
[ { "id": "12153318", "title": "Thomas Gifford (politician)", "text": " Thomas Gifford (June 1, 1854 &ndash; February 19, 1935) was a politician in British Columbia, Canada. Born in 1854 in Lockerbie, Scotland, the son of William Gifford and Margaret Stewart, he was educated there and apprenticed as a jeweller. He opened his own store in Lockerbie around 1876. In 1877, he married Annie Stoddart. Thomas and his wife, along with sons William (b. 3 Jul 1878) and Thomas Stuart (b. 3 Jun 1880), emigrated to St. Paul, Minnesota in 1881. Here, they had a daughter Margaret (b. 6 Apr 1882) and another son, James Stoddart (b. 26 Sep 1888), before moving again to New Westminster, British Columbia, Canada, where Gifford ", "score": "1.6419423" }, { "id": "5896068", "title": "Gifford baronets", "text": "Sir Thomas Gifford, 1st Baronet (died 1662) ", "score": "1.6230597" }, { "id": "11806756", "title": "Chris Gifford (field hockey)", "text": " Christopher Gifford (born March 20, 1966 in Vancouver, British Columbia) is a former field hockey striker from Canada, who currently is working in management for a neutraceutical company. Married in August 1998 to his wife Sandra, he now has three children, Carson, Vanessa and Myles.", "score": "1.6015608" }, { "id": "31973801", "title": "William Gifford", "text": " Gifford was born in Ashburton, Devon, to Edward Gifford and Elizabeth Cain. His father, a glazier and house painter, had run away as a youth with vagabond Bampfylde Moore Carew, and he remained a carouser throughout his life. He died when William was thirteen; his mother died less than a year later. He was left in the care of a godfather who treated him with little consistency. Gifford was sent in turn to work as a plough boy, a ship's boy, student, and cobbler's apprentice. Of these, Gifford cared only for the life of a student, and he continued to write verses as he learned the cobbler's trade. Gifford's fortunes changed when his ", "score": "1.5972136" }, { "id": "31973791", "title": "Richard Gifford", "text": " Richard Gifford (1725–1807), was an English poet and Church of England clergyman.", "score": "1.5893074" }, { "id": null, "title": "Thomas Gifford", "text": "Thomas Gifford\n\nThomas Eugene Gifford (May 16, 1937 – October 31, 2000) was a best-selling American author of thriller novels. He was a graduate of Harvard University.\n\nHe gained international fame with the crime novel \"The Glendower Legacy\" and later with the Vatican thriller \"The Assassini\". The books posited George Washington as a British spy and the Roman Catholic Church as a criminal organization. \"The Glendower Legacy\" was made into a movie in 1981 under the name \"Dirty Tricks\".\n\nGifford also published under the names Dana Clarins and Thomas Maxwell.\n\nHe died of cholangiocarcinoma in his home in Dubuque, Iowa, on Halloween 2000.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Elean Thomas", "text": "Elean Thomas\n\nElean Thomas (18 September 1947 – 27 May 2004) was a Jamaican poet, novelist, journalist and activist. She was active in the struggle for women's rights in the Caribbean and the movement for Jamaican national independence, as well as working in Latin America, Eastern and Western Europe and Africa.<ref name=DofA /> She was married (1988–97) to human rights barrister Anthony Gifford.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gifford Pinchot", "text": "Gifford Pinchot\n\nGifford Pinchot (August 11, 1865October 4, 1946) was an American forester and politician. He served as the fourth chief of the U.S. Division of Forestry, as the first head of the United States Forest Service, and as the 28th governor of Pennsylvania. He was a member of the Republican Party for most of his life, though he joined the Progressive Party for a brief period.\n\nBorn into the wealthy Pinchot family, Gifford Pinchot embarked on a career in forestry after graduating from Yale University in 1889. President William McKinley appointed Pinchot as the head of the Division of Forestry in 1898, and Pinchot became the first chief of the U.S. Forest Service after it was established in 1905. Pinchot enjoyed a close relationship with President Theodore Roosevelt, who shared Pinchot's views regarding the importance of conservation. After William Howard Taft succeeded Roosevelt as president, Pinchot was at the center of the Pinchot–Ballinger controversy, a dispute with Secretary of the Interior Richard A. Ballinger that led to Pinchot's dismissal. The controversy contributed to the split of the Republican Party and the formation of the Progressive Party prior to the 1912 presidential election. Pinchot supported Roosevelt's Progressive candidacy, but Roosevelt was defeated by Democrat Woodrow Wilson.\n\nPinchot returned to public office in 1920, becoming the head of the Pennsylvania's forestry division under Governor William Cameron Sproul. He succeeded Sproul by winning the 1922 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election. He won a second term as governor through a victory in the 1930 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, and supported many of the New Deal policies of President Franklin D. Roosevelt. After the repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment, Pinchot led the establishment of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, calling it \"the best liquor control system in America\". He retired from public life after his defeat in the 1938 Pennsylvania gubernatorial election, but remained active in the conservation movement until his death in 1946.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Thomas Hardy", "text": "Thomas Hardy\n\nThomas Hardy (2 June 1840 – 11 January 1928) was an English novelist and poet. A Victorian realist in the tradition of George Eliot, he was influenced both in his novels and in his poetry by Romanticism, including the poetry of William Wordsworth. He was highly critical of much in Victorian society, especially on the declining status of rural people in Britain, such as those from his native South West England.\n\nWhile Hardy wrote poetry throughout his life and regarded himself primarily as a poet, his first collection was not published until 1898. Initially, he gained fame as the author of novels such as \"Far from the Madding Crowd\" (1874), \"The Mayor of Casterbridge\" (1886), \"Tess of the d'Urbervilles\" (1891), and \"Jude the Obscure\" (1895). During his lifetime, Hardy's poetry was acclaimed by younger poets (particularly the Georgians) who viewed him as a mentor. After his death his poems were lauded by Ezra Pound, W. H. Auden and Philip Larkin.\n\nMany of his novels concern tragic characters struggling against their passions and social circumstances, and they are often set in the semi-fictional region of Wessex; initially based on the medieval Anglo-Saxon kingdom, Hardy's Wessex eventually came to include the counties of Dorset, Wiltshire, Somerset, Devon, Hampshire and much of Berkshire, in southwest and south central England. Two of his novels, \"Tess of the d'Urbervilles\" and \"Far from the Madding Crowd\", were listed in the top 50 on the BBC's survey The Big Read.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Anthony Gifford, 6th Baron Gifford", "text": "Anthony Gifford, 6th Baron Gifford\n\nAnthony Maurice Gifford, 6th Baron Gifford, KC (born 1 May 1940), is a British hereditary peer and senior barrister. He inherited the title of Baron Gifford on the death of his father, the 5th Baron, in April 1961.", "score": null }, { "id": "13513872", "title": "Norman Gifford", "text": "England ", "score": "1.5690911" }, { "id": "12153319", "title": "Thomas Gifford (politician)", "text": " a jewelry store. They had three more children - Julia Stuart (b. 8 Aug 1888 ), Hugh Wilson (b. 29 May 1892 ), and John Jardine (b. 25 Nov 1893 ) - and lived the rest of their lives in New Westminster. Gifford served as an alderman for New Westminster, as well as a member of the school board, hospital board and Board of Trade. Thomas was elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in a 1901 by-election held after John Cunningham Brown was named to cabinet, and was re-elected in 1903, 1907, 1909 and 1912. He died in New Westminster at the age of 81 in 1935.", "score": "1.5488336" }, { "id": "6470916", "title": "Gifford (surname)", "text": " Peter Gifford (b. 1955), Australian guitarist for Midnight Oil ; Richard Gifford (1725–1807), British poet ; Rob Gifford, (fl. 1994–present), British-born radio correspondent and author ; Robert Swain Gifford (1840–1905), United States landscape painter ; Robin Gifford (born 1974), Zimbabwean cricketer ; Sally Gifford (born 1981), Canadian actress ; Sanford Robinson Gifford (1823–1880), American landscape painter ; Thomas Gifford (politician) (1854–1935), Canadian politician ; Thomas Gifford (1937–2000), American novelist ; Walter Sherman Gifford (1885–1966), American businessman and president of AT&T Corporation ; Will Gifford (born 1985), English cricketer ; William Gifford (1756–1826), English critic, poet and satirist ; Zerbanoo Gifford, British writer and human rights campaigner Gifford is an English surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.5486712" }, { "id": "28032558", "title": "Susan Williams Gifford", "text": " Gifford graduated from St. Joseph High School, St. Joseph, Michigan and later from Western Michigan University, with her Bachelor of Arts degree in 1982. Gifford was a Claims Consultant for Insurance Overload Systems from 2000-2002. She served as a Selectman for the town of Wareham from 1999-2002.", "score": "1.5413835" }, { "id": "31973792", "title": "Richard Gifford", "text": " He was born at Bishop's Castle, Shropshire. He was educated at Oxford University where he gained his degree in theology in 1748. Ordained in holy orders in the Church of England, he was appointed curate at Richard's Castle, Herefordshire and was later a preacher in Soho, London.", "score": "1.5405436" }, { "id": "29160600", "title": "Will Gifford", "text": " William McLean Gifford (born 10 October 1985) is an English cricketer who has played first-class cricket for Loughborough UCCE and one List A game for Worcestershire. He is, as Wisden put it, \"no known relation\" to former Worcestershire captain Norman Gifford.", "score": "1.5393938" }, { "id": "31580472", "title": "Harry Gifford", "text": " Harry Gifford was born in Kirkby-in-Furness, Lancashire, England, and his death aged 67 was registered in Ulverston district, Lancashire, England.", "score": "1.5345163" }, { "id": "3058865", "title": "Benjamin Gifford", "text": " Benjamin Gifford (September 13, 1833 - July 14, 1901) was an American soldier who fought in the American Civil War. Gifford received his country's highest award for bravery during combat, the Medal of Honor. Gifford's medal was won for his capturing the flag during the Battle of Sailor's Creek on April 6, 1865. He was honored with the award on May 10, 1865. Gifford was born in German Flatts, New York. He joined the Army in August 1862, and mustered out with his regiment in June 1865. Gifford was buried in Hinsdale, New York.", "score": "1.5175391" }, { "id": "6694929", "title": "Rodger Gifford", "text": " Gifford became a Football League linesman in 1976 at the age of twenty eight. However, it was another eight seasons before he progressed to the Referees List. Nevertheless, he did referee almost the whole of one (old) Football League First Division game long before that, on 15 September 1979, when fellow Welshman Clive Thomas had to go off injured after only two minutes of the 0-0 draw between Bristol City and Stoke City, and Gifford took over, having been the appointed senior linesman.† Thomas retired in 1984 and, as he left the List, Gifford was one of the new intake. Within two years, he was officiating in Europe, as he took charge of ", "score": "1.5143214" }, { "id": "11123746", "title": "Thomas Laird", "text": " Thomas C. Laird (born June 30, 1953) is an American journalist, writer, and photographer who specializes in Tibet. Laird divides his time between New Orleans and Kathmandu, Nepal, where he lived for 30 years. He has photographed and written for the likes of Time and Newsweek.", "score": "1.5043354" }, { "id": "29875007", "title": "Charles L. Gifford", "text": " Charles Laceille Gifford (March 15, 1871 – August 23, 1947) was a United States Representative from Massachusetts He was born in Cotuit on March 15, 1871. Through his father he was a descendant of Robert Pike, George Phillips, Richard Saltonstall and William Phelps, through his mother he was a descendant of John Humphrey, Thomas Hastings (colonist) and the Quaker Christopher Holder. Gifford attended the common schools and taught in Massachusetts and Connecticut from 1890 to 1900. He later engaged in the real estate business on Cape Cod as the owner of several summer cottages rented by vacationers and the operator of the Cotuit ", "score": "1.4979539" }, { "id": "31580471", "title": "Harry Gifford", "text": " Henry \"Harry\" Gifford (1884 – 1952 ) was an English professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1900s, 1910s and 1920s. He played at representative level for Great Britain, England and Lancashire, and at club level for Ulverston Hornets ARLFC, and Barrow, initially in the backs; as a (182-appearances), (65-appearances), (54-appearances), or / (25-appearances), i.e. number 1, 2 or 5, 3 or 4, 6, or 7, and latterly in the forwards (non-specific forward 21-appearances, prior to the specialist positions of; ), and (25-appearances), (6-appearances), (6-appearances), or (39-appearances), during the era of contested scrums.", "score": "1.497455" }, { "id": "10153997", "title": "Duncan Gifford", "text": " Duncan George Gifford (born 26 November 1972) is an Australian-born award-winning concert pianist and teacher. He has been a professor of piano at the Conservatory of Palma in Majorca since 2006. Musica Viva describes him as a \"major artist of his generation\". The Sydney Morning Herald described him as \"a virtuosic and musically eloquent soloist\".", "score": "1.4916651" }, { "id": "31973800", "title": "William Gifford", "text": " William Gifford (April 1756 – 31 December 1826) was an English critic, editor and poet, famous as a satirist and controversialist.", "score": "1.4914789" }, { "id": "3332004", "title": "Charles Gifford (astronomer)", "text": " Algernon Charles Gifford MA (Cantab.) (18 April 1861 &ndash; 27 February 1948) was an astronomer, explorer and teacher. Gifford was born off the Cape of Good Hope aboard the Zealandia and upon arrival in New Zealand his family settled in Oamaru. In 1880 he became a sizar at St John's College, Cambridge and graduated as 14th wrangler. After Cambridge he returned to New Zealand to teach mathematics and science at Waitaki Boys' High School (1883-1889), Christ's College (1889-1892) and Wellington College (1895-1927). He also helped create an observatory in 1912, which is named the Gifford Observatory in his honour. In 1901 Gifford married Suzie Jones at Oamaru and had three children. Near the end of his teaching career Gifford started to contribute regular astronomy articles to the Evening Post, one of Wellington's daily newspapers, which later turned into an influential column. His columns were later reprinted ", "score": "1.4897866" } ]
What is Pietro Marcenaro's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Pietro Marcenaro
2,901,881
34
[ { "id": "4381674", "title": "Pietro Marcenaro", "text": " Pietro Marcenaro (born 2 June 1946 ) is an Italian politician and trade unionist of the centre-left Democratic Party. Since 29 April 2008 he has been President, Commission on Human Rights.", "score": "1.7550704" }, { "id": "4381675", "title": "Pietro Marcenaro", "text": " Having worked at FIAT in the years following 1975, he joined the Italian Communist Party in 1989 and was secretary of the Piedmont Division of the Italian General Confederation of Labour as well as the Federazione Impiegati Operai Metallurgici , another Italian trade union. He subsequently became regional secretary of the Democrats of the Left Party.", "score": "1.6492695" }, { "id": "4381676", "title": "Pietro Marcenaro", "text": " In 2006 he won a seat in the Italian Chamber of Deputies (the Italian lower house) as a candidate for the l'Ulivo Party, which joined other centre-left parties to form the Democratic Party. He was then elected for the XVI. legislation of the Italian Senate (the Italian upper house)starting on 29 April 2008, his party now forming part of the opposition. During this legislation, he is also part, besides the extraordinary commission for the safeguard and promotion of human rights which he presides, of the senate commission for foreign affairs. Likewise, he is member of the ''parliamentary delegation of Italy to the Council of Europe as well as vice-president of the parliamentary delegation to the Assembly of the Western European Union.", "score": "1.5018077" }, { "id": "11443493", "title": "Marcantonio Michiel", "text": " Marcantonio Michiel (1484–1552) was a Venetian noble from a family prominent in the service of the State who was interested in matters of art. His notes on the contemporary art collections of Venice, Padua, Milan and other northern Italian centres (Notizie d'opere del disegno), written sporadically between 1521 and 1543 and preserved in the Biblioteca Marciana, provide a major primary source for art historians and a less thoroughly inspected source for historians of décor. Michiel never worked up his notes into a publishable itinerary of art collections; \"his publication record is poor and mainly posthumous,\" Jennifer Fletcher has noted, \"and letters from friends hint at a certain lack of perseverance.\" His diary was never intended to be read by the public, and his history of Venice was an endless project. Pietro Aretino wrote him a flattering letter praising his interests in painting, architecture ", "score": "1.4790862" }, { "id": "12431514", "title": "Giuseppe Marcinò", "text": " Giuseppe Marcinò was born in Caltagirone on 24 October 1859 to Pietro Marcinò and Laura Barone. He studied in a school that the Jesuits ran and finished his studies in 1607 at the time he entered the novitiate of the Order of Friars Minor. He change his name to \"Innocenzo from Caltagirone\" after his formal profession as a member of the order. He continued his studies in both philosophical and theological studies in the monasteries of places such as Malta. It was there in 1613 that he was ordained to the priesthood. He studied Hebrew in Rome after this until 1615 and returned to his home to teach Hebrew at a high school. He taught theological studies from 1619 until a decade later at Capuchin ", "score": "1.4522493" }, { "id": null, "title": "Pietro Marcenaro", "text": "Pietro Marcenaro\n\nPietro Marcenaro (born 2 June 1946) is an Italian politician and trade unionist of the centre-left Democratic Party. Since 29 April 2008 he has been President, Commission on Human Rights.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Vittorio Foa", "text": "Vittorio Foa\n\nVittorio Foa (18 September 1910 – 20 October 2008) was an Italian politician, trade unionist, journalist and writer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Francesco Repetto", "text": "Francesco Repetto\n\nMonsignor Francesco Repetto (Genoa, 1914–1984) was an Italian priest and librarian. He is honored by Jews as a Righteous Among the Nations for his leading role in the clandestine DELASEM organization, which contributed to the saving of thousands of Jews during the Holocaust in Italy during the German occupation.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1580s", "text": "1580s\n\nThe 1580s decade ran from January 1, 1580, to December 31, 1589.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1590s", "text": "1590s\n\nThe 1590s decade ran from January 1, 1590, to December 31, 1599.\n", "score": null }, { "id": "1252801", "title": "Pietro Paltronieri", "text": " He was a pupil of Giovanni Francesco Cassana and Marcantonio Chiarini. In quadratura, he collaborated with Ercole Graziani the Younger. He was known as Il Mirandolese dalle Prospettive to distinguish him from his contemporary fellow countryman, Giuseppe Perracini. Both had studied together with Giovanni Francesco Cassana in Modena, prior to moving to Bologna.", "score": "1.4476612" }, { "id": "12431513", "title": "Giuseppe Marcinò", "text": " Giuseppe Marcinò (24 October 1589 – 16 November 1655) was an Italian priest and a member of the Order of Friars Minor - or Capuchins. After he was admitted into the order he selected the new name of \"Innocenzo from Caltagirone\". He was well known for his frequent and often sensational predications and miracles attributed to him since 1623. Due to this he was granted the moniker of \"The Miracle Worker of the Earth\". He was declared to be Venerable in 2009 after the recognition of his life of heroic virtue. A miracle required for him to be beatified is now under investigation and must receive papal approval before beatification can take place.", "score": "1.4470645" }, { "id": "14546153", "title": "Antonio Marceglia", "text": " Antonio Marceglia (28 July 1915, Pirano – 13 July 1992, Venice) was a captain in the Naval Engineers during World War II. A municipal swimming pool at 245 via Sandro Gallo in Lido di Venezia is named after him.", "score": "1.4454403" }, { "id": "14588579", "title": "Marcantonio Barbarigo", "text": " Marcantonio Barbarigo was born on 6 March 1640 in Venice. Barbarigo studied in Padua where he earned a doctorate in both canon law and civil law. He abandoned a successful diplomatic career in order to follow his religious vocation.", "score": "1.4174562" }, { "id": "4158925", "title": "Giovanni Marcanuova", "text": " He was born in Padua, where he practiced medicine. But he is best known for his collection of images, some whimsical, of ancient Roman structures (Collectio antiquitatum), and other treatises on Roman customs, including De dignitibus Romanorum; De Triumpho; and De rebus militaribus. Some of the engraved images from Collectio are attributed to Marco Zoppo. Marcanova dedicated his collection to Domenico Malatesta, the lord of Cesena and patron of the Biblioteca Malatestina. The drawings are meant to depict Roman monuments (Tomb of Hadrian, Arch of Titus, Vatican Obelisk, Baths of Diocletian, Statue of Marcus Aurelius), Tiber River, Tarpean Rock, Monte Testaccio, Campidoglio, and smarket day, human sacrifice, tournament.", "score": "1.4161043" }, { "id": "8568668", "title": "Michele Ruggieri", "text": " Pompilio Ruggieri was born in Spinazzola, Apulia, then part of the Kingdom of Naples, in 1543. He obtained a doctorate in civil and canon law (in utroque iure) at the University of Naples and was employed in the administration of Philip II. He entered the Society of Jesus in Rome on 27 October 1572 taking the name \"Michele\". After completing the Jesuit usual spiritual and intellectual formation, Ruggieri volunteered for the Asian missions and left for Lisbon, where he was ordained in March 1578 while waiting for a ship to take him to Goa.", "score": "1.4160372" }, { "id": "28009086", "title": "Jacob Marcaria", "text": " Jacob Marcaria (died 1562) is best known as operator of the Jewish printing press in Trento in the period from 1558 to 1562. The press was licensed under Joseph Ottolengo, a German rabbi to whom Cardinal Cristoforo Madruzzo had granted the privilege of printing Hebrew books. Marcaria also practiced as a physician. Marcaria edited several of the works himself, and in some cases is thought to have in fact authored works published under other writers' names. His best known work is probably Kitzur Mizrachi a summary of Elijah Mizrachi's Sefer ha-Mizrachi.", "score": "1.4153302" }, { "id": "25318940", "title": "Pietro Gaspari", "text": " Pietro Gaspari (1720–1785) was an Italian artist, known for veduta and capriccio in etchings and paintings. Some of them resemble a more barren and finely detailed Piranesi. He worked for many years in Munich, Germany He was active mainly in Venice.", "score": "1.4109833" }, { "id": "9742404", "title": "Marc'Antonio Ingegneri", "text": " Marc'Antonio Ingegneri (also spelled Ingegnieri, Ingignieri, Ingignero, Inzegneri) (c. 1535 or 1536 – 1 July 1592) was an Italian composer of the late Renaissance. He was born in Verona and died in Cremona. Even though he spent most of his life working in northern Italy, because of his stylistic similarity to Palestrina he is often considered to be a member of the Roman School of polyphonic church music. He is also famous as the teacher of Claudio Monteverdi. Not much is known about his early life, but he probably had family from Venice, and he likely studied with Cipriano de Rore at Parma, and Vincenzo Ruffo at Verona. Sometime around 1570 he moved to Cremona, and established a reputation there as a composer and instrumentalist. He ", "score": "1.4044355" }, { "id": "1327565", "title": "Pietro Ameglio", "text": " Pietro Ameglio (born 1957) is a Uruguayan-born naturalized Mexican citizen and Gandhian civil rights and peace activist best known for his role in promoting nonviolence and creating a movement for peace and anti-militarism in Mexico. In May 2011, Ameglio helped to organize demonstrations in support of survivor and victim rights related to ongoing violence in Mexico following the death of Juan Francisco Sicilia Ortega, the son of Javier Sicilia, bringing hundreds of thousands of people together across Mexico and in 17 countries around the world. A practitioner of Gandhian methodology, Ameglio's philosophy is to tap the positive values and moral sensibilities of Mexican culture which can be marshaled to oppose war and to change the model of \"Armed Peace\" to a model of \"Peace with Justice.\" This combination of practical and formal peace work has led Pietro Ameglio to be described as \"one of the most important teachers and practitioners of active nonviolence in Latin America today.\" Pietro Ameglio has been selected as the 2014 winner of the El-Hibri Peace Education Prize, the eighth annual Laureate to be selected.", "score": "1.3990641" }, { "id": "26580959", "title": "Marcenaro", "text": "Carlos Marcenaro (1912–1988), Peruvian middle-distance runner ; Nelson Marcenaro (1952–2021), Uruguayan footballer ; Pietro Marcenaro (born 1946), Italian politician and trade unionist ; Roland Marcenaro (born 1963), Uruguayan football manager and former player Marcenaro is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.3988273" }, { "id": "31185067", "title": "Francesco Migliori", "text": " Another artist active in the decoration of the choir was Francesco Pittoni (the uncle of Giambattista). He also completed an altarpiece of St. Anthony Resuscitates Father Martino for a chapel at the right in the church. He painted a small canvas depicting Christ and the Samaritan and a Christ and Mary Magdalene now at Rovigo. By 1728, he began to perform extensive works in the decoration of San Marcuola. Beginning in April 1728, he is documented to have painted a series of canvases about the titular saints of Ermagora and Fortunato for the church of San Marcuola, recently renovated by Giorgio Massari. By 1729-1731, he competed paintings for the sacristy of this ", "score": "1.3912446" }, { "id": "28833083", "title": "Marcantonio Chiarini", "text": " Marcantonio Chiarini (c. 1652–1730) was an Italian painter of the late-Baroque period. Born near Bologna, he trained with Francesco Quaino and Domenico Santi. He painted scenography for plays as well as quadratura in which Sigismondo Caula inserted figures. Active in Bologna and Milan, he also painted the quadratura of the Palazzo Mansi in Lucca, for which Giovanni Gioseffo dal Sole painted the main frescoes. Chiarini was employed by the architect Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt in the fresco decoration of the upper and lower Belvedere palaces near Vienna, work shared with Martino Altomonte, Gaetano Fanti, and Carlo Carlone.", "score": "1.3849065" }, { "id": "31976346", "title": "Marcantonio Riverditi", "text": " Marcantonio Riverditi (died 1744) was an Italian painter of the Baroque. He was born in Alessandria della Paglia, and trained in Bologna, where he followed the style of Guido Reni. He painted portraits and altarpieces such as a Annunciation for the church of the Padri Camaldolesi and a S. Francesco di Paola for the church of Santa Maria de Foscherari. He died at Bologna.", "score": "1.3832189" }, { "id": "2345967", "title": "Pietro Ducros", "text": " Pietro Ducros (1745 &ndash; February, 1810) was a Swiss-Italian painter and engraver active in Rome.", "score": "1.3775778" } ]
What is William Australia Graham's occupation?
[ "farmer", "agriculturist", "grower", "raiser", "cultivator", "agriculturer", "farmer (occupation)", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
William Australia Graham
6,175,762
50
[ { "id": "6617806", "title": "William Australia Graham", "text": " William Australia Graham (22 November 1841 – 9 May 1916) was a New Zealand surveyor, mediator, farmer, politician and mayor. He was born in Auckland, New Zealand, on 22 November 1841, the third son of George Graham. He went to Clewer House School, Windsor, and Hele's School, Exeter and returned home in 1854. William was a Government surveyor, and produced a plan for Hamilton East in 1864, just after the invasion of the Waikato. In 1865 his father was instructed to contact Wiremu Tamihana. William acted as interpreter for General Carey, leading to Wiremu's submission to the Queen and acquiescence to the invasion of the Waikato. King ", "score": "1.831928" }, { "id": "33016389", "title": "William Grahame (1841–1906)", "text": " William Grahame (1 January 1841 – 29 May 1906) was an Australian politician. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1889 until 1894 and a member of the Protectionist Party. Grahame was born in Edinburgh, Scotland and after a minimal education worked as a labourer. He migrated to Australia in 1858 and laboured on road work until he found employment as a tenant farmer and contractor. He eventually kept a jewellery shop in Newcastle and served as an alderman on Wickham Municipal Council and as a member of the local water and sewage board. At the 1889 election, he was the third candidate on the Protectionist list and won the last position in the multi-member seat of Newcastle. However, Grahame was forced to resign from parliament in October 1889 when he became insolvent and he was defeated by James Curley at the subsequent by-election. He regained his seat in April 1891 at a by-election caused by the death of James Fletcher. Grahame was defeated at the 1894 election. He did not hold ministerial or party office.", "score": "1.7812073" }, { "id": "33017080", "title": "William Grahame (1808–1890)", "text": " William Grahame (1808 – 26 November 1890) was an Australian politician. He was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly from 1865 until 1869 and from 1872 until 1874. He was also a life member of the New South Wales Legislative Council from 1875 until 1889. Grahame was born in Stirlingshire, Scotland and migrated to Australia in 1828. He initially worked as a sheep hauler but rapidly acquired a large amount of land in the Monaro area. He failed in an attempt to win the seat of Monaro at the 1864–65 election but was elected to parliament unopposed at a subsequent by-election when it was found that the winner of the seat, the Premier, James Martin, had been elected to two seats. Grahame was defeated at the 1869–70 election but regained his seat at the subsequent election in 1872. He retired from the Legislative Assembly at the 1874–75 election and became a nominated life-time appointee in the Legislative Council. His seat on the council was declared vacant on 27 February 1889 because he had been absent from the council for 2 continuous sessions. He did not hold ministerial or party office.", "score": "1.7398617" }, { "id": "27149208", "title": "William Graham (Welsh politician)", "text": " William Graham JP FRICS (born 18 November 1949 in Newport, Monmouthshire) is a Welsh Conservative politician, former Shadow Leader of the House in the National Assembly for Wales, Opposition Chief Whip and Shadow Minister for Social Services.", "score": "1.6453937" }, { "id": "16275025", "title": "James Graham (physician)", "text": " Sir James Graham (29 July 1856 – 8 March 1913) was a Scottish-born physician and politician, active in Australia. He was Mayor of Sydney in 1901. Graham was born in Edinburgh, son of Thomas Graham, marble polisher, and his wife Jane ( née Square). Graham graduated M.A. at University of Edinburgh in 1879 and M.B. and C.M. in 1882. Graham migrated to Sydney in 1884 but then returned to Europe in August 1888 and studied at Berlin, Vienna and Paris. In 1888, he obtained the M.D. degree of Edinburgh Medical School with gold medal for his thesis on \"Hydatid Disease in its Clinical Aspects\". Returning to Sydney he was appointed superintendent of the Royal Prince Alfred Hospital which, largely by ", "score": "1.6375701" }, { "id": null, "title": "William Australia Graham", "text": "William Australia Graham\n\nWilliam Australia Graham (22 November 1841 – 9 May 1916) was a New Zealand surveyor, mediator, farmer, politician and mayor. He was born in Auckland, New Zealand, on 22 November 1841, the third son of George Graham. He went to Clewer House School, Windsor, and Hele's School, Exeter and returned home in 1854.\n\nWilliam was a Government surveyor, and produced a plan for Hamilton East in 1864, just after the invasion of the Waikato. In 1865 his father was instructed to contact Wiremu Tamihana. William acted as interpreter for General Carey, leading to Wiremu's submission to the Queen and acquiescence to the invasion of the Waikato. King Mahuta presented him with a patu parāoa, in recognition of his mediation. In 1887 he advocated for fair treatment of Māori land.\n\nFrom the mid-1860s to 1882, he and his brother, Samuel, developed over at Tamahere, on former Ngāti Haua land. In 1882 he was secretary of Waikato Farmers' Cooperative and, from 1884, chairman of the North New Zealand Farmers' Co-operative Association, formed to establish a sugar beet industry. He influenced Julius Vogel to introduce the Beet-root Sugar Act 1884.\n\nOn 5 March 1872 William married Alice, eldest daughter of Walter Coombes, of the shipping company Coombes and Daldy. That day ships in Auckland harbour were decorated with bunting. Their 3 sons and 6 daughters included a son born on 11 February 1897, Alice Australia Buckleton, Hilda Herberta Blanche Hume, Mrs J. H. Hume, Mrs C. L. & Mrs A. C. Macdiarmid. and Cedric Kenny Onslow Graham, who was born on 21 December 1889 and died on 16 September 1916 at the battle of the Somme, having ignored his father's advice to come home. Alice shared her husband's interest in the Anglican church and charitable work.<ref name=\":4\"/>\n\nHe represented Waikato on Auckland Provincial Council from 24 November 1873 to 1876 and was elected Mayor of Hamilton on 27 November 1884, by 84 votes to 56. As mayor he gained Hamilton of endowments from the government. when he was insulted by a request for a public meeting to review a decision.<ref name=\":4\"/>\n\nHe was also appointed borough representative on Auckland Hospital and Charitable Aid Board in 1885 and became chairman of the Waikato Board, when it was formed in 1886. He opposed attempts to establish cottage hospitals around Waikato, still used by Waikato Hospital.<ref name=\":4\"/> He retired from the hospital board in December 1888.<ref name=\":4\"/>\n\nIn 1882 run by Mrs Watts, built on what had been Ngāti Wairere's Kirikiriroa pā. a magistrate (1893) and continued his church work.\n\nHe was reported as having a lengthy illness in 1904. He was badly injured in a buggy accident\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Billy Graham", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Graham Henry", "text": "Graham Henry\n\nSir Graham William Henry (born 8 June 1946) is a New Zealand rugby union coach, and former head coach of the country's national team, the All Blacks. Nicknamed 'Ted', he led New Zealand to win the 2011 World Cup.\n\nHenry played rugby union for Canterbury and cricket for Canterbury and Otago in the Plunket Shield. Before becoming a full-time coach, Henry worked as a school teacher and headmaster.\n\nHe coached successful Auckland and Auckland Blues teams in the 1990s, winning National Provincial Championship titles in 1993, 1994, 1995 and 1996 with Auckland, and the first Super 12 title with the Blues in 1996. He coached Wales from 1998 to 2002, with some success, including an 11-match winning streak. He was head coach of the British & Irish Lions in their 2001 tour of Australia, in which they lost the test series 2–1.\n\nHe was appointed head coach of New Zealand in 2004, and had several successful seasons, including a series victory over the British & Irish Lions in 2005. Henry was heavily criticised following the All Blacks' quarterfinal exit at the 2007 Rugby World Cup and was reappointed amid some controversy. He subsequently led the All Blacks to win the 2011 Rugby World Cup final. He stepped down as All Blacks coach in 2011 after 140 matches in a career that also included five Tri Nations titles.\n\nIn 2012, Henry joined Argentina as an advisor, and acted as an assistant coach to the Argentina national team. In 2013, he re-committed to Argentina for the 2013 Rugby Championship.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Will Graham (evangelist)", "text": "Will Graham (evangelist)\n\nWilliam Franklin Graham IV (born January 30, 1975) is an American Christian evangelist. He is the executive director of the Billy Graham Training Center at The Cove and associate evangelist of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association. Graham is the third generation of Grahams to preach under the banner of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association (BGEA). He is a grandson of Billy Graham and the oldest son of Franklin Graham.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Bill Graham (Australian politician)", "text": "Bill Graham (Australian politician)\n\nBruce William Graham, OBE (22 August 1919 – 18 February 1995) was an Australian politician. He was a member of the Liberal Party and served in the House of Representatives for over 20 years, representing the New South Wales seats of St George (1949–1954, 1955–1958) and North Sydney (1966–1980).", "score": null }, { "id": "9634109", "title": "Fiona Graham", "text": " Fiona Caroline Graham is an Australian anthropologist working as a geisha in Japan. She made her debut as a geisha in 2007 in the Asakusa district of Tokyo under the name Sayuki (紗幸), and was working in the Fukagawa district of Tokyo.", "score": "1.6346817" }, { "id": "1592877", "title": "William Calman Grahame", "text": " William Calman Grahame, known as W. C. Grahame, (3 February 1863 – 15 September 1945) was a member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly, representing Wickham from 1907 to 1920. Grahame served as Minister for Agriculture under Premier William Holman in both the Labor ministry and Nationalist ministry. Wickham was abolished in 1920, with the introduction of proportional representation and combined with Newcastle and Grahame unsuccessfully stood as an independent at the 1920 election for Newcastle. He was also the first mayor of the recreated Municipality of Gosford, from 1936 to 1944. Central Coast Stadium (Bluetongue Stadium) in Gosford was formerly known as Grahame Park, named after him in 1939.", "score": "1.6219096" }, { "id": "27149209", "title": "William Graham (Welsh politician)", "text": " William Graham was born to the late William Douglas Graham and Eleanor Mary Scott (née Searle). Educated at Blackfriars School, and the College of Estate Management, he is the sixth generation principal of a family firm of surveyors in Newport established in 1844. Graham is a fellow of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors, and has been Chairman of Newport Harbour Commission and Rougemont School Trust, Newport. He is also a member of the Listed Building Advisory Committee, the Rent Assessment Committee for Wales. He was appointed Justice of the Peace in 1979, and is a member of the Carlton Club. Graham married his wife in 1981; the couple have three children.", "score": "1.6209521" }, { "id": "27426849", "title": "Grahame", "text": "William Grahame (1808–1890) - member for Monaro 1865-69 and 1872-74 ; William Grahame (1841–1906) - member for Newcastle 1889-89 and 1891-94 ; William Calman Grahame (1863–1945) - member for Wickham 1907-20 ", "score": "1.6084697" }, { "id": "33009087", "title": "Bill Graham (Australian politician)", "text": " Bruce William Graham, OBE (22 August 1919 – 18 February 1995) was an Australian politician. Born in Sydney, he was educated at Sydney Grammar School before becoming an announcer on the ABC. He served in the military from 1939 to 1948 and was a company director before entering politics in 1949 as the Liberal member for St George in the Australian House of Representatives. He held the seat until 1954, when he was defeated by former Labor minister Nelson Lemmon. Graham defeated Lemmon in 1955, but was defeated again in 1958, this time by Lionel Clay. He returned to politics in 1966 when he was elected to the seat of North Sydney, a position he held until his retirement in 1980. Graham died in 1995.", "score": "1.6071608" }, { "id": "11766362", "title": "Fred Graham (politician)", "text": " Graham was born at Croydon, Queensland, the son of Joseph Henry Graham and his wife Louisa Jane (née Stephens). When he arrived in Queensland he took up farming. He attended primary school in Croydon and by 1916 he was working as an engine driver and cleaner for Queensland Railways. From 1925 until his election to parliament he worked as a fireman in Mackay. On 14 June 1922 he married Agnes May Bowling (died 1977) and together had one daughter. Graham died in Brisbane in June 1996 and was cremated at the Mt Thompson Crematorium.", "score": "1.6029742" }, { "id": "5618989", "title": "Charles Graham (Queensland politician)", "text": " After resigning from Parliament he was appointed Under Secretary for Public Instruction. Director-General of Education 1876–1878 Later he became the editor (and later sole owner) of the Peak Downs Telegram. He later moved to Orange, New South Wales where he operated a brewery. Graham died on 18 March 1886 in Albany, Western Australia, Australia.", "score": "1.6018735" }, { "id": "29502458", "title": "George Graham (Victorian politician)", "text": " George Graham (16 August 1838 – 22 July 1922), was a farmer and politician in colonial Victoria, Minister of Water Supply 1890–1893. Graham was born in Linlithgow, West Lothian, Scotland, the son of George Graham, farmer, and his wife Ellen, née Hardy. Graham was returned to the district of Moira in the Legislative Assembly in June 1884. Graham held this seat until its abolition in March 1889, he was then elected for the new Numurkah and Nathalia district in April 1889, which he held until May 1904 when it was abolished. In November 1890 he accepted office in James Munro's Government as Minister of Water Supply (5 November 1890 – 23 January 1893 ), and was sworn of the Executive Council. Graham then represented Goulburn Valley from June 1904 to November 1914. Graham died in Numurkah, Victoria on 22 July 1922.", "score": "1.6008049" }, { "id": "31861956", "title": "Graham Edwards (politician)", "text": " Graham John Edwards AM (born 18 July 1946) is an Australian soldier, veteran's advocate and Labor Party member who represented the electorate of Cowan in the Australian House of Representatives from 1998 to 2007. He was born in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, and voluntarily joined the Australian Army for service in the Vietnam War in 1968. On 12 May 1970, he was severely injured, losing both legs. After leaving the Army he joined the Department of Defence as an officer with the Vietnam Veterans' Counselling Service. He was elected to the Council of the City of Stirling in 1981. Edwards was elected to the Western Australian Legislative Council in 1983. He was Parliamentary Secretary to the Cabinet 1987, Minister for Sport and Recreation 1987–89, Minister for Consumer Affairs 1988–93, Minister for Racing and Gaming, Sport ", "score": "1.592879" }, { "id": "14360839", "title": "Laurie Graham (politician)", "text": " Laurence William Graham (born 21 November 1945) is an Australian politician. He was elected to the Western Australian Legislative Council at the 2017 state election, as a Labor member in Agricultural Region. His term began on 22 May 2017 and ended on 21 May 2021 following his retirement at the 2021 state election. Graham was a member of Greater Geraldton City Council before entering state politics.", "score": "1.5908667" }, { "id": "5618986", "title": "Charles Graham (Queensland politician)", "text": " Charles James Graham was born on 7 October 1839 in Hinxton, Cambridgeshire, England. He was educated at Uppingham and Peterhouse, graduating with a BA in 1862 before moving to Australia where he was a squatter.", "score": "1.5883548" }, { "id": "13353876", "title": "Wade Graham", "text": " Graham was born in Blacktown, New South Wales, Australia and is of Indigenous Australian descent - from Bundjalung people.", "score": "1.5642169" }, { "id": "5618748", "title": "Graham Mylne", "text": " Graham arrived in Australia in 1859 to manage the family grazing property Eatonswill, near Grafton, New South Wales, and in 1860 married Helena White daughter of William and Jane White of Lota in Manly, Queensland. In 1864, he moved to Roma, Queensland, in the Maranoa district, where he leased the grazing property Amby Downs in partnership with Sir Robert Herbert, the Premier of Queensland, and Sir John Bramston, the Attorney-General of Queensland. He returned to Eatonswill in 1869 with his wife Helena and six children and lived there until his untimely death in 1876, aged 42. Graham was a member of the Queensland Legislative Assembly, Member for Maranoa, and of the Queensland and Australian Clubs, and also a frequent guest of the governor Sir George Bowen and his wife Diamantina at Government House, Brisbane, they being of similar age and close friends. He died on 5 April 1876 in Grafton, New South Wales.", "score": "1.5635998" }, { "id": "13356987", "title": "William Graham (winger)", "text": " William Graham was an English professional footballer who played as a winger.", "score": "1.5618099" }, { "id": "8679995", "title": "John Benjamin Graham", "text": " John Benjamin Graham (8 March 1813 – 8 November 1876) was an English settler in the early days of South Australia, who became very wealthy thanks to his mining interests, then left the colony, but not before establishing a mansion for many years known as \"Graham's Castle\".", "score": "1.5603848" } ]
What is Richard Myers's occupation?
[ "songwriter", "song writer" ]
occupation
Richard Myers (songwriter)
5,577,511
85
[ { "id": "15527620", "title": "Richard E. Myers", "text": " Richard E. Myers (born October 29, 1934) is an American politician in the state of Iowa. Myers was born in Iowa City, Iowa. He attended Iowa State University, the University of Iowa, and Kirkwood Community College and is a businessman. A Democrat, he served in the Iowa House of Representatives from 1993 to 2005 (49th district from 1995 to 2003 and 30th district from 1993 to 1995 and in 2003).", "score": "1.7948058" }, { "id": "8722943", "title": "Richard Myers (filmmaker)", "text": " Richard Myers (or Richard L. Myers) is an American experimental filmmaker based in northeast Ohio. He holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree (1959) and a Master of Arts degree (1961), both from Kent State University in Kent, Ohio. Myers taught at Kent State University in the art department beginning in 1964 and is particularly known for his 1970 film Confrontation at Kent State, which he filmed in Kent during the week following the Kent State shootings of May 4, 1970; it is an important document of the period. Myers began to produce independent films in the early 1960s. Many of his films are highly personal, with non-narrative or loose narrative structures derived from his dreams. Although some films (as, for example, his 1993 film Tarp) feature no actors at all, instead focusing entirely on inanimate objects, most films feature nonprofessional actors and are produced on very small budgets. Myers is the recipient of two (due to a name spelling error) Guggenheim Fellowships as well as grants from the American Film Institute and the National Endowment for the Arts. The Academy Film Archive preserved several of Richard Myers' films, including Akran, The Path, and Allison Beth Krause.", "score": "1.7776496" }, { "id": "12994137", "title": "Richard E. Myers II", "text": " Richard Ernest Myers II (born 1967) is the Chief United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina. He is a former law professor at the University of North Carolina School of Law.", "score": "1.7510526" }, { "id": "12994138", "title": "Richard E. Myers II", "text": " Myers was born in Kingston, Jamaica, and moved to Wilmington, North Carolina, as a child. His voter registration states that he belongs to \"two or more races.\" Myers earned his Bachelor of Arts, summa cum laude, and his Master of Arts from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. He worked as a reporter for the Star-News from 1991 to 1995, where he covered the murder of James R. Jordan Sr., the father of Michael Jordan. In 1998, he received his Juris Doctor, magna cum laude, from the University of North Carolina School of Law, where he served as an Articles Editor on the North Carolina Law Review. He graduated Order of the Coif.", "score": "1.7072673" }, { "id": "33073639", "title": "Richard: A Novel", "text": " fuelled his alienation anorexia and self-harm,\" and the New Humanist describes Ben Myers as \"a sensitive, thoughtful writer...His greatest skill is the atmospheric evocation of landscape and place.\" According to Marie Claire magazine, “Myers' recreation of Edward's life is sensitively handled – an exploration of a troubled, articulate man who was shy and withdrawn.” Time Out writes that “Richard is not a provocation, nor does it claim to solve the Richey mystery. It is a sympathetic and sad imagining of the boy who became a reluctant pop idol before that notion became oxymoronic.” bookmunch.com has described Richard as \"a novel for our celebrity-obsessed age, a thorough ", "score": "1.6774627" }, { "id": null, "title": "Dick Myers", "text": "Dick Myers\n\nRichard George Myers (born 6 July 1950) is a former New Zealand rugby union player. A loose forward, Myers played for Leamington RFC in Cambridge and is the only All Black to have played for the club. He represented Manawatu and Waikato at a provincial level, and was a member of the New Zealand national side, the All Blacks, in 1977 and 1978. He played five matches for the All Blacks including one international. On his test debut for New Zealand he played at Number 8 against the Wallabies where his opposite number Greg Cornelsen scored 4 tries in a 30–16 victory for Australia.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Richard E. Myers", "text": "Richard E. Myers\n\nRichard E. Myers (born October 29, 1934) is an American politician in the state of Iowa.\n\nMyers was born in Iowa City, Iowa. He attended Iowa State University, the University of Iowa, and Kirkwood Community College and is a businessman. A Democrat, he served in the Iowa House of Representatives from 1994 to 2005 (49th district from 1994 to 2003 and 30th district in 2003). Myers was first elected to the state house in a February 1994 special election called after Robert Dvorsky resigned to contest a state senate seat. During the Democratic Party primaries later that year, Myers defeated David Johnson and won his first full term as a state representative.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Rick Scott", "text": "Rick Scott\n\nRichard Lynn Scott ( Myers, born December 1, 1952) is an American politician serving as the junior United States senator from Florida since 2019. A member of the Republican Party, he was the 45th governor of Florida from 2011 to 2019.\n\nScott is a graduate of the University of Missouri–Kansas City and the Dedman School of Law at Southern Methodist University. In 1987, after serving in the United States Navy and becoming a law firm partner, he co-founded Columbia Hospital Corporation. Columbia later merged with another corporation to form Columbia/HCA, which eventually became the nation's largest private for-profit health care company. Scott was pressured to resign as chief executive of Columbia/HCA in 1997. During his tenure as chief executive, the company defrauded Medicare, Medicaid, and other federal programs. The Department of Justice won 14 felony convictions against the company, which was fined $1.7 billion in what was at the time the largest healthcare fraud settlement in U.S. history. Following his departure from Columbia/HCA, Scott became a venture capitalist and pursued other business interests. In 2009, he founded Conservatives for Patients' Rights.\n\nScott ran for governor of Florida in 2010. He defeated Bill McCollum in a vigorously contested Republican primary election, and then narrowly defeated Democratic nominee Alex Sink in the general election. Scott was reelected in 2014, defeating former governor Charlie Crist. He was barred by term limits from running for reelection in 2018, and instead ran for the United States Senate.\n\nScott won the 2018 US Senate election, defeating Democratic incumbent Bill Nelson. The initial election results were so close that they triggered a mandatory recount. The recount showed that Scott had won by 10,033 votes; Nelson then conceded the race. Scott took office following the expiration of his term as governor of Florida on January 8, 2019.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Chocolate Myers", "text": "Chocolate Myers\n\nDanny \"Chocolate\" Myers (born October 17, 1948) is an American stock car racing personality. A long-time staffer for Richard Childress Racing, he was the fueler on six of the team's NASCAR championships (Dale Earnhardt Sr., 1986–87, 1990–91, 1993–94) and is the current curator of the team's museum. He is a radio host on Sirius Satellite Radio.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Richard Strauss", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "26819725", "title": "Richard P. Myers", "text": " Richard P. \"Rich\" Myers (December 27, 1947 – December 1, 2010 ) was a Republican member of the Illinois House of Representatives, having represented the 94th district from 1995 until his death in 2010. Representative Myers was a conservative Republican, who valued the importance of fiscal responsibility. Much of his time was spent doing constituent work when the Illinois House was not in session. During the 2008 Republican Party presidential primaries, Myers worked on behalf of the presidential campaign of former U.S. Senator Fred Thompson serving as a congressional district chair for Illinois's 17th congressional district. Representative Myers had expected to survive in acceptable health long enough to serve another term despite his struggle with ill health, but he died December 1, 2010, after a long battle with prostate cancer. He was lauded on his death for his contributions to the district, to its schools, and to Western Illinois University. He was succeeded by longtime aide Norine Hammond to fill the remainder of his term until the next election.", "score": "1.6625001" }, { "id": "26618498", "title": "Dick Myers", "text": " Richard George Myers (born 6 July 1950) is a former New Zealand rugby union player. A loose forward, Myers played for Leamington RFC in Cambridge and is the only All Black to have played for the club. He represented Manawatu and Waikato at a provincial level, and was a member of the New Zealand national side, the All Blacks, in 1977 and 1978. He played five matches for the All Blacks including one international. On his test debut for New Zealand he played at Number 8 against the Wallabies where his opposite number Greg Cornelsen scored 4 tries in a 30–16 victory for Australia.", "score": "1.6540034" }, { "id": "5136283", "title": "Richard Myerscough", "text": " Richard Myerscough (born 17 November 1965) is a Canadian windsurfer. He competed in the men's Division II event at the 1988 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.6293044" }, { "id": "12994141", "title": "Richard E. Myers II", "text": " Myers has been a member of the Federalist Society since 2004. He has been a member of the National Rifle Association since 2010. He has been a member of the Christian Legal Society since 2004, of which he serves as a faculty advisor.", "score": "1.6172421" }, { "id": "24930196", "title": "Kevin Myers", "text": " Kevin Myers (born 30 March 1947) is an English-born Irish journalist and a writer. He has contributed to the Irish Independent, the Irish edition of The Sunday Times, and The Irish Timess column \"An Irishman's Diary\". Myers is known for his controversial views on a number of topics, including single mothers, aid for Africa, and the Holocaust. In July 2017, The Sunday Times announced that Myers would no longer be writing for them following an article he wrote on the BBC gender pay gap, for which he was accused of antisemitism and misogyny, although the chair of the Jewish Representative Council of Ireland stated \"Branding Kevin Myers as either an antisemite or a Holocaust denier is an absolute distortion of the facts.\"", "score": "1.6010067" }, { "id": "33073642", "title": "Richard: A Novel", "text": " Metro claims that “for all the objective merits of Myers’ writing, it's hard not to find Richard: A Novel rather repulsive. Fictional stories about real people are not new but taking so much artistic licence with a man only legally presumed dead in 2008 is distasteful.” Terry Staunton of Record Collector writes that \"There's an element of macabre tabloid sleaze to [Myers'] conjecture, and some awkward amateur psychoanalysis attempting to identify the demons that led to Richey going AWOL. Equally contentious are the flashback sequences, differentiated here by itallics, charting Edwards’ rise and fall, which clearly take liberties with the subject's innermost thoughts...Nicky Wire has already ", "score": "1.6004683" }, { "id": "33073643", "title": "Richard: A Novel", "text": " the band's unhappiness with the book, and several thousand diehard Manics fans may soon be joining the chorus of disapproval.\" Reviewing Richard, Paul Owen of The Guardian writes that “It seems a cheap criticism to say that a former music journalist falls back too frequently on the style of the indie press, but unfortunately that is the case here...Banality and lack of imagination mar the text...Myers deploys frequent paragraph breaks and short, solemn sentences in an attempt to imbue the text with gravitas, a device overused to the point of self-parody. The book is also poorly edited, adding to an overall impression of sloppiness.” Owen goes ", "score": "1.5967734" }, { "id": "6151237", "title": "Stephen Myers", "text": " Stephen Myers (born 3 August 1946) is an electronic engineer who works in high-energy physics.", "score": "1.594758" }, { "id": "33073637", "title": "Richard: A Novel", "text": " Upon its release, Richard has received mixed reviews. The Times review claims that \"Myers is finest when relating the mechanics of life in and around a rock band; never once is there a dropped beat. He understands the reactionary nature of the post-punk diktat, the people it attracts and its importance to lives given up to it.\" The review also descrives Richard as an \"excellent book,\" and in its \"most arresting of sections, Myers draws on all his journalistic skill and fan-boy credentials to give a realistic account of Edward's final days...Myers deserves credit not only for adding a third dimension to Edwards, but for trying ", "score": "1.5834665" }, { "id": "14867036", "title": "John Myers (photographer)", "text": " John Myers (born 1944) is a British landscape and portrait photographer and painter. Between 1973 and 1981 he photographed mundane aspects of middle class life in the centre of England—black and white portraits of ordinary people and suburbia within walking distance of his home in Stourbridge. Myers self-published this photography in books in 1974 and 1990; then only after renewed critical attention in 2011 were more books dedicated solely to his photography published. His work was included in the international survey of photographers, The Photography Book (Phaidon Press, 2014). Since the early 1970s he has exhibited in the UK and Europe. His work is held in the collection of the Library of Birmingham, in the Arts Council Collection, and in the James Hyman Collection. He later gave up photography for painting and had a solo exhibition in 2003 at Rugby Art Gallery and Museum. Myers worked as a lecturer in fine art, then painting, from 1969 to 2001.", "score": "1.5690532" }, { "id": "33073640", "title": "Richard: A Novel", "text": " – written in beautiful prose – of a young man suicided or disappeared by society. From life in a small town to sex, drugs and rock and roll excess, Ben Myers' Richard slashes and burns its way through the bloated beigeness of the contemporary British novel.\" The review by 3:am review claims that \"What is sure is Myers' skill for storytelling; the absence of any cynicism, a certain hypnotic meditative pace he successfully employs that draws you in as the novel progresses and a mood of melancholic nostalgia, a tantalising nostalgia for a time not long passed but gone forever, before social networking and mobile phones, ", "score": "1.5621331" }, { "id": "26468859", "title": "Chris Myers (footballer)", "text": " Christopher Myers (born 1 April 1969) is an English former professional footballer who played for clubs including Torquay United and Exeter City.", "score": "1.5595818" }, { "id": "33073644", "title": "Richard: A Novel", "text": " to say that “Myers tries to interpret Edwards's depression, eating disorders and self-harm, key components of his cult status and crucial precursors of his decision to disappear. The trouble is that the real Richey wrote about these things far more memorably and distinctively himself, most notably on his final album with the Manics, The Holy Bible...Set against this existing body of work, the task Myers has set himself seems somewhat pointless...it is hard to escape the feeling that this is less a novel than a music biography written in the first and second person.” When issued as a mass market paperback in October 2011 Richard received ", "score": "1.5586431" }, { "id": "14238214", "title": "Jerome Myers", "text": " Jerome Myers (March 20, 1867 – June 19, 1940) was an American artist and writer associated with the Ashcan School, particularly known for his sympathetic depictions of the urban landscape and its people. He was one of the main organizers of the 1913 Armory Show, which introduced European modernism to America. Born in Petersburg, Virginia and raised in Philadelphia, Trenton and Baltimore, he spent his adult life in New York City. Myers worked briefly as an actor and scene painter. He then studied art for a year at Cooper Union followed by study at the Art Students League over a period of eight years where his main teacher was George de Forest Brush. In 1896 he went to Paris, but only stayed a few months, believing that his main classroom was ", "score": "1.5549873" }, { "id": "11281289", "title": "Roger Myerson", "text": " Roger Bruce Myerson (born 1951) is an American economist and professor at the University of Chicago. He holds the title of the David L. Pearson Distinguished Service Professor of Global Conflict Studies at The Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts in the Harris School of Public Policy, the Griffin Department of Economics, and the College. Previously, he held the title The Glen A. Lloyd Distinguished Service Professor of Economics. In 2007, he was the winner of the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel with Leonid Hurwicz and Eric Maskin for \"having laid the foundations of mechanism design theory.\" He was elected a Member of the American Philosophical Society in 2019.", "score": "1.543061" } ]
What is Frits Castricum's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists", "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Frits Castricum
609,565
59
[ { "id": "868754", "title": "Rutger Castricum", "text": " Rutger Castricum (born in The Hague on 29 May 1979) is a Dutch journalist and presenter, who was known as reporter for the PowNews television programme by the Dutch broadcaster PowNed and previously for the blog Geenstijl.", "score": "1.6769241" }, { "id": "10569267", "title": "Frits (given name)", "text": "Frits Agterberg (born 1936), Dutch-born Canadian geologist ; Frederik Frits Korthals Altes (born 1931), Dutch politician and former Minister of Justice ; Frits Bernard (1920–2006), Dutch clinical psychologist and sexologist ; Frits Beukers (born 1953), Dutch mathematician ; Frits van Bindsbergen (born 1960), Dutch road cyclist ; Frits Bolkestein (born 1933), Dutch politician ; Frits Bülow (1872–1955), Danish politician and Justice Minister ; Frits Castricum (1947–2011), Dutch journalist and Labour Party politician ; Frits Clausen (1893–1947), Danish collaborator with Nazi Germany ; Frits Dantuma (born 1992), Dutch footballer ; Frits van Dongen (born 1946), Dutch architect ; Frits Dragstra (1927–2015), Dutch politician ; Frits Eijken (1893–1978), Dutch rower ; Frits ", "score": "1.6512817" }, { "id": "25228186", "title": "Sietse Fritsma", "text": " Sietse Rindert Fritsma (born 31 March 1972 in Franeker) is a Dutch politician and former civil servant. As a member of the Party for Freedom (Partij voor de Vrijheid) he has been a member of the House of Representatives since 1 September 2020. He previously served in the House between 30 November 2006 and 31 October 2019. He focuses on matters of social affairs, employment, political asylum and immigration. From March 2010 till January 2011 he was also a member and PVV fraction leader of the municipal council of The Hague. He previously worked for the Dutch Immigration and Naturalisation Service (IND). Fritsma studied human geography at the University of Groningen. He obtained a master's degree in spatial science, specializing in regional geography of developing countries. Around 1990 he lived for a year in an Israeli kibbutz.", "score": "1.6447324" }, { "id": "10569270", "title": "Frits (given name)", "text": " Olympics ; Frederik Muller (1817–1881), Dutch bibliographer, book seller, and print collector ; Frits Niessen (1936–2020), Dutch politician ; Frits van Oostrom (born 1953), Dutch historic philologist ; Frits van Paasschen (born 1961), Dutch and American chief executive ; Frits Pannekoek (born 1947), Canadian historian and university dean ; Frits Peutz (1896–1974), Dutch architect ; Frits Philips (1905–2005), Dutch chairman of Philips electronics and Righteous Among the Nations ; Frits Pirard (born 1954), Dutch retired professional road bicycle racer ; Frits Poelman (born ca. 1930), Dutch-born New Zealand footballer ; Frits Potgieter (born 1974), South African retired discus thrower and shot putter ; Frits Purperhart (1944–2016), Surinamese football player and ", "score": "1.6371107" }, { "id": "30805586", "title": "Castricum", "text": "Arjan de Zeeuw (born 1970 in Castricum) a retired Dutch footballer with 553 club caps ; Eddy Putter (born 1982 in Akersloot) a Dutch football player with over 200 club caps ; Kees Luijckx (born 1986 in Beverwijk) a Dutch footballer with over 270 club caps ", "score": "1.5514991" }, { "id": null, "title": "Ruud Vreeman", "text": "Ruud Vreeman\n\nRudolf Lourens \"Ruud\" Vreeman (born 31 December 1947) is a Dutch politician of the Labour Party (PvdA) and trade union leader.\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Knights of the Order of the Netherlands Lion", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Members of the Senate (Netherlands)", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Labour Party (Netherlands) politicians", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Abraham Louis Schneiders", "text": "Abraham Louis Schneiders\n\nAbraham Louis “Bram” Schneiders (1 October 1925 — 2 July 2020) was a Dutch writer and diplomat. He was ambassador of the Netherlands to Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Central African Republic, Gabon, Chad (1979-1982), Zimbabwe (1982-1986); New Zealand, Fiji, Tonga; Samoa (1986-1990) and Tuvalu (1987-1990).\n\nAs writer he had pseudonyms Drievoeter and A. van Anders.", "score": null }, { "id": "30805585", "title": "Castricum", "text": "Willem Jacobszoon Coster (1590 in Akersloot – 1640) Dutch colonial Governor of Zeylan in 1640 ; John Ton (1826 in Akersloot - 1896) an American abolitionist active in the Underground Railroad in Illinois. ; Willem Schermerhorn (1894 in Akersloot – 1977) a Dutch politician, Prime Minister of the Netherlands 1945/1946 ; Abraham Louis Schneiders (1925 in Castricum - 2020) a Dutch diplomat and writer ; Jan Gmelich Meijling (1936 in Heemstede – 2012) a Dutch politician, naval officer and Mayor of Castricum from 1978 to 1985 ; Theo van den Boogaard (born 1948 in Castricum) a Dutch cartoonist ; Henk Jaap Beentje (born 1951 in Bakkum) a Dutch botanist, works at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew ; Sefa Jeroen Vlaarkamp (2000 in Alkmaar) a Dutch frenchcore musician ", "score": "1.5508854" }, { "id": "10569268", "title": "Frits (given name)", "text": " van Vlissingen (1882–1962), Dutch businessman and entrepreneur ; Frits Goedgedrag (born 1951), first Governor of Curaçao and former Governor of the Netherlands Antilles ; Frits Goldschmeding (born 1933), Dutch businessman ; Frits Hansen (1841–1911), Norwegian educator, newspaper editor, biographer and politician ; Frits Hartvigson (1841–1919), Danish pianist and teacher ; Frits Heide (1883–1957), Danish botanist and science writer ; Frits Helmuth (1931–2004), Danish film actor ; Frits Henningsen (1889–1965), Danish furniture designer and cabinet maker ; Frederik David Holleman (1887–1958), Dutch and South African ethnologist and jurist ; Frits Holm (1881–1930), Danish scholar and adventurer ; Frits Hoogerheide (born 1944), Dutch racing cyclist ; Frits Janssens (1898–?), Belgian wrestler who ", "score": "1.5482144" }, { "id": "10569271", "title": "Frits (given name)", "text": " ; Frits de Ruijter (1917–2012), Dutch middle-distance runner ; Frits Ruimschotel (1922–1987), Dutch water polo player ; Frits Schalij (born 1957), Dutch retired speed skater ; Frits Schlegel (1896–1965), Danish architect ; Frederik Carl Gram Schrøder (1866–1936), Danish civil servant ; Frits Schuitema (born 1944), Dutch chief executive and football director ; Frits Schutte (1897–1986), Dutch swimmer ; Frits Schür (born 1954), Dutch retired cyclist ; Frits Sins (born 1964), Dutch slalom canoer ; Frits Smol (1924–2006), Dutch water polo player ; Frits Soetekouw (born 1938), Dutch footballer ; Frits Staal (1930–2012), Dutch Indologist ; Frits Tellegen (1919–2020), Dutch urban designer ; Frits Thaulow (1847–1906), Norwegian Impressionist painter ; Frits ", "score": "1.5471208" }, { "id": "10569269", "title": "Frits (given name)", "text": " in the 1920, 1924 and 1928 Olympics ; Frits Kemp (born 1954) is a Dutch attorney, receiver and activist ; Frits Kiggen (born 1955), Dutch sidecarcross passenger ; Frits Korthals Altes (born 1931), Dutch Minister of Justice ; Frederik Kortlandt (born 1946), Dutch linguistics professor ; Frits Kuipers (1899–1943), Dutch footballer, rower and physician ; Frederik Lamp (1905–1945), Dutch sprinter ; Frits Landesbergen (born 1961), Dutch jazz drummer and vibraphonist ; Frits von der Lippe (1901–1988), Norwegian journalist and theatre director ; Frits Lugt (1884–1970), Dutch collector of Dutch drawings and prints and authority on Rembrandt ; Frits Meuring 1882–1973), Dutch swimmer ; Frits Mulder, Belgian sailor at the 1928 ", "score": "1.5349734" }, { "id": "10569272", "title": "Frits (given name)", "text": " (1909–2014), Dutch journalist and news anchor ; Frits van Turenhout (1913–2004), Dutch sports journalist ; Frits Van den Berghe (1883–1939), Belgian expressionist and surrealist painter and illustrator ; Frits Vanen (born 1933), Dutch painter and sculptor ; Frederik Vermehren (1823–1910), Danish genre and a portrait painter ; Frits Went (1863–1935), Dutch botanist, father of Frits Warmolt Went ; Frits Warmolt Went (1903–1990), Dutch biologist and botanist ; Frits Zernike (1888–1966), Dutch physicist and Nobel Prize winner Frits is a masculine given name and also a diminutive form (hypocorism) of Frederik (or Frederick, Fredericus, Frederikus). Quite common in the Netherlands, it also occurs in Denmark and Norway. It may refer to: ", "score": "1.5050735" }, { "id": "96576", "title": "Frits Palm", "text": " Frederik Albert \"Frits\" Palm (born 1947 - died 2011) was a Dutch economist, civil servant and former politician for the Pim Fortuyn List in the House of Representatives from 2002 to 2003. Before he was elected to parliament, Palm was the director of the Cabinet of Antillean Affairs. In parliament he focused on Foreign Affairs, European Affairs, Defense and Kingdom Relations. Palm was also second vice-president of the House of Representatives.", "score": "1.4971175" }, { "id": "8414529", "title": "Godfrid Storms", "text": " Godfrid Storms, known as \"Frits\", was born in Sittard, Netherlands, on 4 May 1911. He was educated at Radboud University Nijmegen where he had Aurelius Pompen as his doctoral adviser, and on 4 June 1948 successfully defended his dissertation.", "score": "1.4969323" }, { "id": "30644272", "title": "Frits Agterberg", "text": " Frederik Pieter Agterberg (born 15 November 1936) is a Dutch-born Canadian mathematical geologist who served at the Geological Survey of Canada. He attended Utrecht University in The Netherlands from 1954 to 1961. He was instrumental in establishing International Association for Mathematical Geosciences. He received William Christian Krumbein Medal in 1978 from International Association for Mathematical Geosciences. In 1981 Agterberg became a correspondent of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. In 2004, he was named IAMG Distinguished Lecturer. He was the president of International Association for Mathematical Geosciences from 2004 to 2008.", "score": "1.4857259" }, { "id": "9142143", "title": "Frits Scholten", "text": " Frits Scholten (born 1959 in Hengelo, Netherlands) is a Dutch art historian specialising in art of the Netherlands from the late Middle Ages until 1800, and sculpture from the 15th to 19th centuries. Currently he is Head of Department of Sculpture and the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam. Previously he was senior curator of sculpture at the Rijksmuseum from 1993, prior to which he worked at the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag. Scholten has published extensively on applied arts and European sculpture. He is editor of the Nederlands Kunsthistorisch Jaarboek and the Wallraf-Richartz Museum Jahrbuch.", "score": "1.4749882" }, { "id": "15246358", "title": "Frits Lambrechts", "text": " Fredericus Amos (Frits) Lambrechts (born 24 March 1937) is a Dutch actor, musician and cabaret artist.", "score": "1.471499" }, { "id": "29223536", "title": "Frits Niessen", "text": " Godefridus Adrianus Quirinus \"Frits\" Niessen (16 September 1936 – 23 October 2020) was a Dutch politician. He served in the House of Representatives for the Labour Party between 1977 and 1978 and once more from 1980 to 1994.", "score": "1.4689497" }, { "id": "31831555", "title": "Frits Sins", "text": " Frederik Jacobus Johannes \"Frits\" Sins (born 30 August 1964 in Sittard) is a Dutch slalom canoer who competed from the early 1980s to the mid-1990s. Competing in two Summer Olympics, he earned his best finish of 19th in the K-1 event in Barcelona in 1992.", "score": "1.4603294" }, { "id": "30581688", "title": "Frits Lugt", "text": " Lugt was a precocious connoisseur who made a catalog of his own Museum Lugtius at age eight. Encouraged by his father, he became an art expert at a young age and cut short his formal education in 1901 to become an employee at the auction house of Frederik Muller in Amsterdam. Lugt's marriage in 1910 to Jacoba Klever (1888&ndash;1969), a woman of independent means, meant that he could pursue his interests without financial concerns. By 1911 he had become a partner of the firm, a position he held until 1915. One of his tasks at the auction house was the compilation of auctioneers' sale catalogues. Though art history as an academic field did not exist, he made a difficult choice to focus on this, and gave up his budding art career. He began to collect art with his wife, travelling throughout Europe for this and focussing on masters of the Dutch Golden Age. Upon the death of his father-in-law in 1931, his wife inherited a sizeable fortune, which enabled the couple to expand their collecting interests.", "score": "1.4555538" }, { "id": "542899", "title": "Frits Korthals Altes", "text": " Frederik Korthals Altes was born on 15 May 1931 in Amsterdam. He worked as a lawyer from 1957 until 1982.", "score": "1.4547474" }, { "id": "12754453", "title": "Frits Schalij", "text": " Frits Schalij (born 14 August 1957) is a retired speed skater from the Netherlands who was active between 1978 and 1987. He competed at the 1984 Winter Olympics in the 1500 m and 5000 m and finished in 10th and 17th place, respectively. He won a bronze and a silver medal at the European allround championships in 1984 and 1985, respectively. Nationally, he finished second allround in 1982 and 1984 and third in 1981, 1983, 1985 and 1986.", "score": "1.4492275" } ]
What is Per Risvik's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
Per Risvik
5,417,853
33
[ { "id": "30833571", "title": "Per Risvik", "text": " Per Risvik (born 4 September 1937 in Herøy, Møre og Romsdal) is a Norwegian politician (FrP). He was elected to the Stortinget from Sør-Trøndelag in 1989.", "score": "1.7555865" }, { "id": "30833572", "title": "Per Risvik", "text": "1989 – 1993 part of the Transport and Communication committee ", "score": "1.5793579" }, { "id": "11908899", "title": "Rikard Olsvik", "text": " Rikard Olsvik (6 February 1930 in Aure – 21 August 2017) was a Norwegian politician for the Labour Party.", "score": "1.5712849" }, { "id": "11908900", "title": "Rikard Olsvik", "text": " Rikard was the son of Hans Olsvik (1897-1974) and Anna Rosvoll (1897-1977).", "score": "1.5255253" }, { "id": "11908902", "title": "Rikard Olsvik", "text": " He died on 21 August 2017 at the age of 87.", "score": "1.4955227" }, { "id": null, "title": "Tormod Næs", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Food choice", "text": "Food choice\n\nResearch into food choice investigates how people select the food they eat. An interdisciplinary topic, food choice comprises psychological and sociological aspects (including food politics and phenomena such as vegetarianism or religious dietary laws), economic issues (for instance, how food prices or marketing campaigns influence choice) and sensory aspects (such as the study of the organoleptic qualities of food).\n\nFactors that guide food choice include taste preference, sensory attributes, cost, availability, convenience, cognitive restraint, and cultural familiarity. In addition, environmental cues and increased portion sizes play a role in the choice and amount of foods consumed.\n\nFood choice is the subject of research in nutrition, food science, food psychology, anthropology, sociology, and other branches of the natural and social sciences. It is of practical interest to the food industry and especially its marketing endeavors. Social scientists have developed different conceptual frameworks of food choice behavior. Theoretical models of behavior incorporate both individual and environmental factors affecting the formation or modification of behaviors. Social cognitive theory examines the interaction of environmental, personal, and behavioral factors.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:Norwegian translators", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Deaths in March 2021", "text": "Deaths in March 2021\n\nThe following is a list of notable deaths in March 2021.\n\nEntries for each day are listed alphabetically by surname. A typical entry lists information in the following sequence:\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "12588156", "title": "Harald Rensvik", "text": "permanent under-secretary of State in the Ministry of the Environment, being granted a leave of absence from 1999 to 2001. He was also a member of the board of the European Environment Agency. Harald Rensvik Harald Rensvik (born 4 March 1946) is a Norwegian civil servant. He was born in Arendal, and grew up in Ålesund and Valdres. He graduated as a siv.ing from the Norwegian Institute of Technology. He worked as a head of department in the Norwegian Pollution Control Authority from 1982 to 1986. In 1987 he took over as director of the Pollution Control Authority. He served", "score": "1.4428208" }, { "id": "11908901", "title": "Rikard Olsvik", "text": " He was elected to the Norwegian Parliament from Møre og Romsdal in 1981, and was re-elected on two occasions. Olsvik was involved in local politics in Tustna and Rindal, serving as mayor of Rindal from 1971 to 1973. He was also a member of Møre og Romsdal county council during the terms 1975&ndash;1979 and 1979&ndash;1983.", "score": "1.4876149" }, { "id": "29281357", "title": "Ris Church", "text": "Per Asplin (1928-1996) a musician, actor and artist ; Bias Bernhoft (1902-1986) Singer, review author ; Sverre Grette (1888-1959) Jurist, Norwegian supreme court justice A cemetery is contained within the church yard, (\"Ris Kirkegård\"). Here multiple notable Norwegians are buried including: ", "score": "1.4789791" }, { "id": "7804934", "title": "Per Arne Rikvold", "text": " Per Arne Rikvold (born 4 October 1948 in Norway) is an academic physicist specializing in materials science, condensed-matter physics and computational science. He took the cand.real. degree at the University of Oslo in 1976 and the PhD at Temple University in 1983. He is James G. Skofronick Professor of Physics at Florida State University, where is affiliated with the Center for Materials Research and Technology (MARTECH), the School of Computational Science, and the National High Magnetic Field Laboratory. He is an elected fellow of the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters and of the American Physical Society.", "score": "1.4777532" }, { "id": "2155161", "title": "Harald Rensvik", "text": " Harald Rensvik (born 4 March 1946) is a Norwegian civil servant. He was born in Arendal, and grew up in Ålesund and Valdres. He graduated as a siv.ing from the Norwegian Institute of Technology. He worked as a head of department in the Norwegian Pollution Control Authority from 1982 to 1986. In 1987 he took over as director of the Pollution Control Authority. He served until 1996, except for the period between 1990 and 1992, when he was a state secretary for the Minister of Government Administration and Labour in the third cabinet Brundtland. From 1996 he was permanent under-secretary of State in the Ministry of the Environment, being granted a leave of absence from 1999 to 2001. He was also a member of the board of the European Environment Agency.", "score": "1.4600375" }, { "id": "25101327", "title": "Per Torsvik", "text": " Per Torsvik (30 November 1925 – 1998) was a Norwegian political scientist and media scholar. He held the mag.art. degree in political science, but is better known for founding media research in Norway. In 1958 he co-founded the Department of Press Research at the University of Oslo, and was the only employee for many years. He was later hired at the University of Bergen, at a \"secretariat for media research\" which was founded following a 1968 report written by Torsvik, Stein Rokkan and Leif Holbæk-Hanssen. The three wrote the book Medieforskning in 1972, and Torsvik also co-wrote a chapter in Rokkan's 1970 book Citizens, Elections, Parties and a chapter in the 1968 book Det norske samfunn. In 1978 Torsvik was promoted to docent in communication, and later promoted to professor.", "score": "1.4541552" }, { "id": "10472320", "title": "Kari Risvik", "text": " Kari Risvik (born 13 June 1932) is a Norwegian translator, one of the most productive translators of literature into Norwegian language. She has translated books from several languages, including English, Spanish and German. She was awarded the Brage Honorary Prize, in 2006, along with her husband Kjell Risvik.", "score": "1.4444811" }, { "id": "27896847", "title": "Knut Henning Thygesen", "text": " He started education as an architect from the Norwegian Institute of Technology in Trondheim where he among other things was editor of the student newspaper Under Dusken. After two years he moved to Bærum and started training as a construction worker. After finishing his qualifications he moved back to Risør. He spent 1979 in the Royal Norwegian Army. He has worked as a construction worker, architect, teacher and as an author since.", "score": "1.443979" }, { "id": "10472330", "title": "Kjell Risvik", "text": " Kjell Risvik (29 June 1941 &ndash; 28 March 2021) was a translator of literature into Norwegian from various languages, including Catalan, English, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Portuguese and Spanish. He was awarded the Brage Honorary Prize in 2006, along with his wife Kari Risvik.", "score": "1.4436722" }, { "id": "30751612", "title": "Per Rolf Sævik", "text": " Per Rolf Sævik (born 15 December 1940) is a Norwegian fisher, ship-owner and politician for the Christian Democratic Party. He was born in Herøy, Møre og Romsdal as a son of fisher Arthur Sævik (1910–1976) and housewife Magda Steinsvik (1915–2003). He worked as a fisher since 1955. In 1981 he returned to land as manager of Sævik Supply I and Sævik Supply II. Between 1993 and 2006 he was the chief executive of Sævik Supply Management I, Sævik Supply, Havila Supply, Havtank and Havyard. After 2006 he served as chairman of Havyard. He was a member of Herøy municipal council from 1971 to 1979 and 1983 to 1989, serving as mayor ", "score": "1.4307917" }, { "id": "16115757", "title": "Per Norvik", "text": " Per Kristian Norvik was born in Vadsø, Norway on February 10, 1938. He is the older brother of businessman Harald Norvik and a cousin of politician Erling Norvik. Norvik began his medical studies in 1957, but dropped out in 1959 to become a journalist at Morgenbladet. From 1965 to 1970 he worked at Aftenposten. Since 1970 he worked as editor at Arbeidsgiveren (1970-1972), and as a political journalist at NRK (1972-1978). Norvik joined Verdens Gang in 1978, where he worked as associate editor (1978-1986), and political editor (1986-1993). In November 1993 Norvik left Verdens Gang together with its editor Einar ", "score": "1.4244914" }, { "id": "2194313", "title": "Tomas Riad", "text": " Tomas Staffan Riad (born 15 November 1959 in Uppsala) is a Swedish linguist, specialised in Swedish phonology and prosody. He received his Ph.D. from Stockholm University in 1992 and is professor at the Department of Scandinavian languages there. Riad is also a violinist, trained at the Royal College of Music in London and has worked as a full-time musician. He was elected a member of the Swedish Academy on 29 September 2011 (taking his seat on 20 December).", "score": "1.413475" }, { "id": "14138478", "title": "2009 in Norway", "text": " Arvid Berglind, politician (b. 1924) ; Per Ulriksen, politician (b. 1937) ; Robert Bergsaker, missionary (b. 1914) ; Alf Blyverket, musician (b. 1929) ; Tore Brantenberg, architect and writer (b. 1934) ; Finn Sollie, political scientist (b. 1928) ; Jan Erik Stenberg, Paralympic athlete (b. 1944) ; Thorstein Thelle, popular writer (b. 1913) ; Kåre I. Torp, industrialist (b. 1923) ; Nils Viker, nature writer (b. 1911) ; Inger Vonheim, short story writer (b. 1943) ; Sverre Kongshavn, politician (b. 1926) ; Hans Fredrik Marthinussen, judge (b. 1918) ; Bernt Daniel Odfjell, ship-owner (b. ) ; Ivar Bjerknes, painter (b. 1922) ", "score": "1.4100406" }, { "id": "8179253", "title": "Rita Skjærvik", "text": " Rita Skjærvik (born 13 March 1974) is a Norwegian politician for the Labour Party. She started her political career in the Workers' Youth League, as deputy leader of that organization in Sør-Trøndelag, from 1993 to 1995. In 1995 she was elected to Rissa municipal council. She later enrolled at the University of Oslo, graduating in political science. She worked as a secretary for the Workers' Youth League from 1996 to 1998, and as an advisor in the Labour Party from 1999. From 2002 to 2003 she worked as a personal advisor for Jens Stoltenberg. When the second cabinet Stoltenberg assumed office following the 2005 election, she was appointed State Secretary in the Office of the Prime Minister.", "score": "1.4055862" }, { "id": "16115756", "title": "Per Norvik", "text": " Per Kristian Norvik (born February 10, 1938) is a Norwegian journalist and editor.", "score": "1.4050839" }, { "id": "9281773", "title": "Truls Vasvik", "text": " Truls Vasvik (born 28 June 1978) is a Norwegian politician. He was elected representative to the Storting from the constituency of Vestfold for the period 2021–2025, for the Labour Party. He was deputy representative to the Storting 2017–2021.", "score": "1.4049983" } ]
What is Alan Bjerga's occupation?
[ "journalist", "journo", "journalists" ]
occupation
Alan Bjerga
3,255,842
82
[ { "id": "10436843", "title": "Alan Bjerga", "text": " Alan Bjerga (born 1973) is an American journalist, author of the book Endless Appetites: How the Commodities Casino Creates Hunger and Unrest. He also covers global food policy for Bloomberg News and is a journalism instructor at Georgetown University, where in 2016 he received a department award for dedication to student learning. In 2010 he served as president of the National Press Club and was president of the North American Agricultural Journalists in 2010-2011. He has been recognized for his work with awards from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers, the New York Press Club, the Kansas Press Association, the North American Agricultural Journalists, and the Overseas Press Club. He has commented on food and agriculture for Bloomberg ", "score": "1.7298763" }, { "id": "10436845", "title": "Alan Bjerga", "text": " under 40, and in 2013 received Concordia College's annual \"Sent Forth\" award given to an outstanding young alumnus. Bjerga began his career with the St. Paul Pioneer Press (Minn.) and also reported for the Sioux Falls (S.D.) Argus Leader and The Wichita Eagle (Kan.). Alan Bjerga was a contestant on the game show, \"Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?\" where he won $50,000. He was a second-place finisher on Jeopardy!' At his National Press Club inaugural on January 30, 2010, he played guitar and sang lead vocals with \"Honky Tonk Confidential\", a retro/alt country band with songs written by former CBS Face the Nation anchor, Bob Schieffer. He has also competed for the standup comedy title of \"DC's Funniest Journalist.\"", "score": "1.6810112" }, { "id": "10436844", "title": "Alan Bjerga", "text": " National Public Radio, the BBC and PBS Newshour, among other programs. Bjerga won the NAAJ's top writing award in 2005 while working for the Knight-Ridder Washington Bureau, where as a Midwest correspondent also covered foreign policy issues including defense contracting and intelligence related to the Iraq war. Bjerga, who grew up on a farm near the town of Motley, Minnesota, went to Concordia College (Minnesota) where he earned a bachelor's degree in history and English literature and edited the student newspaper, The Concordian. He earned a master's degree in mass communication from the University of Minnesota, where he was the managing editor of The Minnesota Daily. In 2012 he was an inaugural winner of the university's award for outstanding journalism ", "score": "1.5340257" }, { "id": "1144068", "title": "Alan Sosa", "text": " .", "score": "1.4895847" }, { "id": "1557427", "title": "Ola Bjerkaas", "text": " Ola Bjerkaas (born 1952) is a Norwegian politician. He served as the acting County Governor of Nordland county from 2008 until 2009 while Hill-Marta Solberg was finishing up her term in the Parliament of Norway.", "score": "1.4767992" }, { "id": null, "title": "Alan Bjerga", "text": "Alan Bjerga\n\nAlan Bjerga (born 1973) is an American journalist, author of the book \"Endless Appetites: How the Commodities Casino Creates Hunger and Unrest.\" He also covers global food policy for Bloomberg News and is a journalism instructor at Georgetown University, where in 2016 he received a department award for dedication to student learning. In 2010 he served as president of the National Press Club and was president of the North American Agricultural Journalists in 2010-2011. He has been recognized for his work with awards from the Society of American Business Editors and Writers, the New York Press Club, the Kansas Press Association, the North American Agricultural Journalists, and the Overseas Press Club. He has commented on food and agriculture for Bloomberg Television, National Public Radio, the BBC and PBS Newshour, among other programs. Bjerga won the NAAJ's top writing award in 2005 while working for the Knight-Ridder Washington Bureau, where as a Midwest correspondent also covered foreign policy issues including defense contracting and intelligence related to the Iraq war.\n\nBjerga, who grew up on a farm near the town of Motley, Minnesota, went to Concordia College (Minnesota) where he earned a bachelor's degree in history and English literature and edited the student newspaper, \"The Concordian\". He earned a master's degree in mass communication from the University of Minnesota, where he was the managing editor of The Minnesota Daily. In 2012 he was an inaugural winner of the university's award for outstanding journalism alumni under 40, and in 2013 received Concordia College's annual \"Sent Forth\" award given to an outstanding young alumnus.\n\nBjerga began his career with the St. Paul Pioneer Press (Minn.) and also reported for the Sioux Falls (S.D.) Argus Leader and The Wichita Eagle (Kan.).\n\nAlan Bjerga was a contestant on the game show, \"Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?\" where he won $50,000. He was a second-place finisher on \"Jeopardy!\"' At his National Press Club inaugural on January 30, 2010, he played guitar and sang lead vocals with \"Honky Tonk Confidential\", a retro/alt country band with songs written by former CBS Face the Nation anchor, Bob Schieffer. He has also competed for the standup comedy title of \"DC's Funniest Journalist.\"\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Tim Davis (activist)", "text": "Tim Davis (activist)\n\nTimothy A. Davis (born September 24, 1955) is an American cannabis rights activist, cyclist, gardener, politician, writer, retired warehouse laborer, and disc jockey. A founding member of the Grassroots Party in 1986, Davis was their candidate for Minnesota Lieutenant Governor in 1994, and United States Senator in 1996 and 2012.<ref name=\"ShafferPioneerPress\"/>\n\nDavis, who helped establish a Saint Louis, Missouri, chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws in the 1970s, headed the Minnesota branch of the organization during the 1980s and 1990s.<ref name=\"Reader\"/><ref name=\"StarTribuneArchive\"/>\n\nDavis, a resident of Minneapolis, is state chairperson of the Minnesota Legal Marijuana Now Party.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "John Burkel", "text": "John Burkel\n\nJohn Burkel (born April 6, 1967) is an American farmer and politician serving as a Republican member of the Minnesota House of Representatives for District 1A since 2021. The district includes all of Kittson, Roseau, and Marshall as well as portions of Pennington counties in northwestern Minnesota.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "New Riverside Cafe", "text": "New Riverside Cafe\n\nThe New Riverside Cafe was a coffeehouse and vegetarian restaurant located near the University of Minnesota in the West-Bank neighborhood of Minneapolis, Minnesota, from 1970 to 1997. It became a center for political and social movements around revolutionary politics.<ref name=\"00523.xml\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Kouhyar Goudarzi", "text": "Kouhyar Goudarzi\n\nKouhyar Goudarzi () is an Iranian human rights activist, journalist and blogger who was imprisoned several times by the government of Iran. He previously served as an editor of Radio Zamane. He is a member of Committee of Human Rights Reporters (CHRR), serving as the head from 2005-2009.", "score": null }, { "id": "895587", "title": "Paul Bjerke", "text": " Paul Bjerke (born 2 October 1952) is a Norwegian media scientist. He currently works as a research fellow at the Volda University College and the research institute De Facto, having graduated from the University of Oslo with the mag.art degree in 1982. Bjerke was the editor-in-chief of Klassekampen from 1995 to 1997, and still has a column there.", "score": "1.4605523" }, { "id": "6900104", "title": "Michael Bjerkhagen", "text": " Michael Russel Johannes Bjerkhagen (born 28 November 1966 in Kandy, Sri Lanka) is a Swedish priest. He is pastor of the Royal Court Parish and chaplain to the King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden. ", "score": "1.4521272" }, { "id": "12763240", "title": "Alan Pogue", "text": " Alan Pogue (born 1946 in Corpus Christi, Texas) is a photojournalist who works exclusively in black-and-white still documentary photography. His career focuses on social justice and Texas politics from the early 1970s to the present. Pogue's work is impelled by \"unstoppable activism and commitment\". His striking images have an unimposing, intimate quality. His travels have taken him around the world, including Cuba, Pakistan, Iraq, Chiapas, Haiti, Saudi Arabia, and Rio Grand valley of Texas.", "score": "1.448659" }, { "id": "27376067", "title": "Arne Bjerhammar", "text": " Arne Bjerhammar (September 15, 1917 – February 6, 2011) was a Swedish geodesist. He was professor at Royal Institute of Technology (KTH) in Stockholm. He was born in Båstad, Scania in the south of Sweden. He developed a method used to determine the geoid in gravimetric data, as well as a system for electro-optical measuring of distances. He also did research about the Fennoscandian post-glacial rebound.", "score": "1.4481301" }, { "id": "27510745", "title": "Bjarte Breiteig", "text": " Bjarte Breiteig was born in Kristiansand, 1974. He studied physics at NTNU in Trondheim, but dropped out after two years to study literature at the same place. He has studied at the Skrivekunstakademiet and the University of Bergen. He now resides in Oslo.", "score": "1.443792" }, { "id": "32883907", "title": "Rune Bjerke", "text": " Rune Bjerke (born 17 June 1960) is a Norwegian businessperson and politician for the Labour Party. Rune is son of Juul Bjerke and brother of Siri Bjerke. Bjerke studied economics at the University of Oslo, and has a master's degree in public administration from Harvard University. From 1992 to 1995 he was city commissioner (byråd) of finance in the city cabinet of Oslo. He has previously been advisor in the Norwegian Ministry of Petroleum and Energy, director in Scancem and chief executive officer in Hafslund. Since 2007 he has been chief executive officer of DNB. He is the chair Doorstep, and of both the Norwegian Financial Services Association and Finance Norway. Bjerke is married to the Labour party politician Libe Rieber-Mohn.", "score": "1.4430599" }, { "id": "25301826", "title": "Ragnar Bøe Elgsaas", "text": " Ragnar Bøe Elgsaas (born 8 June 1971) is a former Norwegian politician for the Labour Party. He finished upper secondary school at Ulsrud in 1990. The next year he was hired as a Labour Party office clerk and was elected as a deputy member of Oslo city council for 1991&ndash;1995. He worked as a campaigner for the 1993 Norwegian parliamentary election and in Sosialdemokrater mot EU i Oslo for the 1994 Norwegian referendum. He was leader of the Oslo chapter of the Workers' Youth League (AUF) from 1993 until 1995, when he withdrew after the publishing of the Workers' Youth League affair in Verdens Gang. In 1998, he was convicted of fraud. He remained a central board member of the Workers' Youth League ", "score": "1.4420147" }, { "id": "27815590", "title": "Jakob Blåbjerg", "text": " Blåbjerg studied energy on bachelor's degree at Aalborg University and studied to become an engineer. Aalborg University had a collaboration with AaB, so when Blåbjerg was in Dubai with the Danish U21 national team, he took an exam through his computer.", "score": "1.4418292" }, { "id": "13680523", "title": "Alf Bøe", "text": " in Trondheim. From 1962 to 1968 he was the head curator at the Norwegian Museum of Decorative Arts and Design in Oslo. He was the director of the Norwegian Design Center (Norsk Designcentrum) in Oslo from 1968 to 1973, lecturer in art history at the University of Oslo from 1973 to 1976, and then the director of Oslo municipality's art collections from 1976 to 1995. Bøe held membership in the International Council of Museums and was associated with the Brukskunst Association (Foreningen Brukskunst). He also held a number of directorships in cultural institutions. He was president of the Association of Applied Arts (Foreningen Brukskunst) and the Scandinavian Museums Association (Skandinavisk Museumsforbund), He was chairman ", "score": "1.4407463" }, { "id": "6713022", "title": "Alan Puga", "text": " Alan de Jesús Puga Olivares (born 8 April 1995 in San Francisco del Rincón, Guanajuato) is a Mexican professional footballer who plays in the midfielder position for Club León Premier.", "score": "1.4400618" }, { "id": "10713462", "title": "Alan C. Swedlund", "text": " Swedlund was born in Sacramento, CA and grew up in Colorado. He received his B.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Colorado Boulder.", "score": "1.4370053" }, { "id": "743610", "title": "Bjørn Haga", "text": " Bjørn Haga (7 April 1926 &ndash; 2010) was a Norwegian journalist. He was born in Odda. After finishing his secondary education in 1947 he studied political science between 1949 and 1953, then took one year at the Norwegian Journalist Academy. He began his journalistic career in Nordlys from 1954 to 1959 and Fremtiden from 1959 to 1963. He was a sports journalist, and also wrote about jazz. He later worked for Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation radio and became a news anchor in Dagsrevyen, the main newscast of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation, at that time the only television channel in Norway. The Lund Commission found that Haga was subjected to secret surveillance by the Norwegian Police Security Service in 1968. Haga died in 2010.", "score": "1.4302962" }, { "id": "13680521", "title": "Alf Bøe", "text": " Alf Bøe (8 September 1927 – 8 June 2010) was a Norwegian art historian, educator, curator and author.", "score": "1.429457" }, { "id": "29778381", "title": "Bjørn Aamodt", "text": " He was born in Bærum and died in Oslo, Norway. He graduated artium at Valler Gymnasium in 1962 and later studied psychology at the University of Oslo, where he graduated in 1975. Between 1962 and 1972, he worked as a sailor and dockworker. He was later employed as a crane operator and metal worker. He made his literary debut with the poetry collection Tilegnet in 1973. Aamodt was awarded Gyldendal's Endowment jointly with Kjersti Scheen in 1994, the Halldis Moren Vesaas Prize in 1997, and the Dobloug Prize in 2003. He was twice nominated for the Nordic Council's Literature Prize in 1995 for ABC and again in 1998 for Anchorage.", "score": "1.4229016" }, { "id": "2288481", "title": "Bjarne Stroustrup", "text": " Stroustrup was born in Aarhus, Denmark. His family was working class, and he went to the local schools. He attended Aarhus University 1969–1975 and graduated with a master's degree in mathematics and computer science. His interests focused on microprogramming and machine architecture. He learned the fundamentals of object-oriented programming from its inventor, Kristen Nygaard, who frequently visited Aarhus. In 1979, he received a PhD in computer science from the University of Cambridge, where he was supervised by David Wheeler. His thesis concerned communication in distributed computer systems.", "score": "1.4192402" } ]
What is Rose Beaudet's occupation?
[ "actor", "actress", "actors", "actresses" ]
occupation
Rose Beaudet
1,053,271
88
[ { "id": "11047683", "title": "Ruth Rose (educator)", "text": " Ruth Rose (born 1944) is a Quebec educator and feminist. The daughter of Arnold Marshall Rose and Caroline Baer, both American sociologists, she was educated at the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Chicago. Rose taught economics at the Université du Québec à Montréal from 1970, but is now retired. Her areas of interest include labour economics, income security, post-Keynesian economics, the Quebec economy and the relationship between women and the economy. Her research contributed to the development of daycare services, benefits for parents, policies in support of families and improved working conditions in Quebec. Rose was awarded the Prix Idola Saint-Jean in 1999. She was named a Knight in the National Order of Quebec in 2011. She married Michel Lizée.", "score": "1.5226531" }, { "id": "1084586", "title": "Rose Beaudet", "text": " Rose Beaudet (born Eliza Lang; 1862&ndash;1947) was an American actress and opera singer of the late 19th and early 20th century who regularly appeared in musical theatre. She was born as Eliza Lang, the daughter of Councilman Lewis H. Lang (1836-1912) of Stockton near San Francisco, and his wife Mary Ann Lang (1848 -1878). She married S. Arlant Edwards on 15 January 1891, but had divorced him by 1902. She appeared with the C. D. Willard Company in 1903. A mezzo-soprano, Beaudet's appearances on Broadway included Eva in The Beggar Student at the Casino Theatre (1883 - 1884), Amorita at the Casino Theatre (1885), Captain Delauney in Erminie at the Casino Theatre (1886), a role played ", "score": "1.521027" }, { "id": "3406837", "title": "Rose Christiane Raponda", "text": " Raponda was born in 1964 in Libreville. Raponda is a member of the Mpongwe people. Raponda received a degree in economics and public finance from the Gabonese Institute of Economy and Finance.", "score": "1.4344149" }, { "id": "10692293", "title": "Rose Beuret", "text": " Rose Beuret, born Marie Rose Beuret on 9 June, 1844 in Vecqueville (Haute-Marne) and died on 14 February, 1917 in Meudon, was a French seamstress and laundress, known to have been one of the muses and, for 53 years, the companion of Auguste Rodin, whom she married just weeks before her own death, in 1917.", "score": "1.4209087" }, { "id": "3406836", "title": "Rose Christiane Raponda", "text": " Rose Christiane Ossouka Raponda (born 1964) is a Gabonese politician who is currently serving as Prime Minister of Gabon since 16 July 2020, making her the first female prime minister of the country. She previously served as the Mayor of Libreville and later as the country's Defense Minister from February 2019 to July 2020.", "score": "1.4121281" }, { "id": null, "title": "Rose Beaudet", "text": "Rose Beaudet\n\nRose Beaudet (born Eliza Lang; 1862–1947) was an American actress and opera singer of the late 19th and early 20th century who regularly appeared in musical theatre.\n\nShe was born as Eliza Lang, the daughter of Councilman Lewis H. Lang (1836-1912) of Stockton near San Francisco, and his wife Mary Ann Lang (1848 -1878). She married S. Arlant Edwards on 15 January 1891, but had divorced him by 1902. She appeared with the C. D. Willard Company in 1903.\n\nA mezzo-soprano, Beaudet's appearances on Broadway included Eva in \"The Beggar Student\" at the Casino Theatre (1883 - 1884), \"Amorita\" at the Casino Theatre (1885), Captain Delauney in \"Erminie\" at the Casino Theatre (1886), a role played in the original London production by Kate Everleigh, \" The Kitchen Belle\" (1889), Mrs St Mirim in \"Miss Innocence Abroad\" at the Bijou Theatre (1894), Catherine in \"Lost, Strayed or Stolen\" at the Fifth Avenue Theatre (1896), \"All on Account of Eliza\" at the Garrick Theatre and Wallack's Theatre (1900 - 1901), \"The Cardinal\" at the Garden Theatre (1902), Mrs Jefferson Briscoe in \"The County Chairman\" at Wallack's Theatre (1903 - 1904), Marcie Brook in \"Miss Jack\" at the Herald Square Theatre (1911), and Mrs Kennion in \"The Younger Generation\" and in \"Half an Hour\" at the Lyceum Theatre (1913).\n\nShe died in 1947 and is buried in Stockton Rural Cemetery with her father, mother and sister.\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Verna Felton", "text": "Verna Felton\n\nVerna Arline Felton (July 20, 1890December 14, 1966) was an American actress, best known for providing many voices in numerous Disney animated films.\n\nShe also provided the voice for Fred Flintstone's mother-in-law, Pearl Slaghoople in Hanna-Barbera's \"The Flintstones\" (1962–1963) and had roles in live-action films. However, she was most active in radio programs, where her characters were known for their husky voices and no-nonsense attitudes. Two of her most famous roles were as Dennis Day's mother, Mrs. Day on \"The Jack Benny Program\" (1939–1962) and as Hilda Crocker on the CBS sitcom \"December Bride\" (1952–1959).\n\nFelton's television appearances include those in \"The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show\", \"I Love Lucy\", \"Where's Raymond?\", \"Pete and Gladys\" and \"Dennis the Menace\".", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:American silent film actresses", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "2018 Quebec general election", "text": "2018 Quebec general election\n\nThe 2018 Quebec general election was held on October 1, 2018, to elect members to the National Assembly of Quebec. The election saw a landslide victory for the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) led by François Legault, which won 74 of 125 seats, giving the party a majority and unseating the Quebec Liberal Party. The Liberals became the Official Opposition with 31 seats.\n\nThis election was the first won by the CAQ, which had previously been the third party in the legislature. It was also the first since 1966 that had been won by a party other than the Liberals or Parti Québécois.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Guy L. Coté", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "14305242", "title": "Rose-Marie Desruisseau", "text": " Rose-Marie Desruisseau (August 30, 1933 – 1988) was a Haitian painter. Born in Port-au-Prince, Desruisseau won many awards in Haiti for her works, which have been exhibited in Senegal, Venezuela, Santo Domingo, the United States, Canada, and Martinique. After gaining an interest in Vodou in the 1960s, Desruisseau began to include themes of Vodou in her work. Having studied ethnography from 1967 to 1972, Desruisseau taught at the Academy of Fine Arts in 1977. Desruisseau's painting \"Delivrance\" was awarded the Jacques Roumain first prize in 1974.", "score": "1.4073281" }, { "id": "32715641", "title": "Self-Portrait with a Harp (Rose-Adélaïde Ducreux)", "text": " The work depicts Rose-Adélaïde Ducreux, who was often the subject of her artistic works. Because the career of painter was uncommon for women and perceived as a masculine endeavor, it was not a widely accepted occupation at the time. Female artists frequently used themselves as a subject, creating a persona of femininity. By employing her beauty, talent and charm, Ducreux captured the traits society valued for women in her era. Painted in a Neoclassical style, the image is a life-sized, standing portrait of the artist playing a harp. The instrument, is depicted as a prop for the splendor of the female form draped in a luxurious, silk gown highlighting the artist's refinement. In addition to her youthful beauty, her enlightenment is enhanced by the presence of a novel, her skill with music, and a decorative vase on a nearby table.", "score": "1.4048676" }, { "id": "29168984", "title": "Rose-Aimée Bacoul", "text": " Rose-Aimée Bacoul (born 9 January 1952 in Le Francois, Martinique) is a French athlete who specialises in the 100 and 200 meters. Bacoul competed in the women's 100 and 200 meters and also the 4 x 100 meter relay at the 1984 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.403682" }, { "id": "890254", "title": "Rose (French singer)", "text": " Her maternal grandfather immigrated from Italy to France. Her mother was an interior designer and her father a pied noir and a real estate agent. Rose married singer songwriter Bensé (real name Julien Bensenior) in a civil court on 24 June 2008 followed by a religious marriage on 24 August 2008 in Var. But the couple divorced in November 2009. On 8 June 2011, Rose had a baby boy she named Solal.", "score": "1.3912114" }, { "id": "7100348", "title": "Rose Combe", "text": " Rose Combe, born Marie-Rosalie Bugne (14 September 1883 – 24 September 1932), was a French railway worker and writer, viewed as an archetype of Proletarian literature. Born into a poor family, despite receiving little education, she was a voracious reader and memorised one of the few books she had access to, an almanac, by the age of four. She wanted to be a teacher but instead worked for the railway between Ambert and Thiers as a level crossing operator. She continued to write, however, and through the author Henri Pourrat, who lived locally, was first published in 1927. Her work was subsequently printed in L'Auvergne littéraire et artistique and her novel Le Mile des Garre appeared in 1931. She was known as the La Garde-Barrière Auvergnate (the Auvergne Gatekeeper) from her job on the railway. She died in 1932, much of her work still unpublished.", "score": "1.3887427" }, { "id": "1799710", "title": "Rose Mukantabana", "text": " Rose Mukantabana was born 31 August 1961 in Nyanza District, Southern Province, Rwanda. She graduated from high school and began working in the civil service in 1980, first in the Rwanda Society for Insurance and later in the Ministry of Public Services. In 1992, she entered the National University of Rwanda and graduated with a law degree in 1996. That year, she began working for Haguruka Association, an NGO which focuses on human rights and specifically rights of women and children. Spending nine years at the organization, she began as a Legal Assistant and worked up to Coordinator of Legal Affairs. After serving as National Executive Secretary, Mukantabana returned to school. Studying in Belgium, she earned a post-graduate \"specialized diploma in human rights\" from Université Saint-Louis Bruxelles. In 2002, she was serving as vice president ", "score": "1.3847551" }, { "id": "6074163", "title": "Roselyne Sibille", "text": " Roselyne Sibille is a French poet who was born on June 28, 1953 in Salon-de-Provence (France). She studied geography, and then worked as a librarian before running creative writing workshops. She lives in Provence where she writes on her approach to the human being in connection with self and nature. She leads writing workgroups for the association \"Share horizons\"(Partage d'horizons). She has been organizing writing workshops in the Sahara Desert for the association \"Wind's friend\" (L'Ami du Vent ).", "score": "1.3843436" }, { "id": "5659028", "title": "Rose Garrard", "text": " Rose Garrard (born 21 September 1946, Bewdley, Worcestershire, England) is an installation, video and performance artist, sculptor, and author. Garrard's works have been exhibited at the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Tate Gallery, the British Council maintained Great Britain pavilion at the 1984 Venice Biennale, and national galleries in Austria and Canada.", "score": "1.3822798" }, { "id": "14717551", "title": "Rose-Adélaïde Ducreux", "text": " Ducreux first exhibited at one of Pahin de la Blancherie's bi-weekly exhibitions, known as the Salon de la Correspondance, in 1786. This self-portrait in pastel, the location of which is currently unknown, depicted the artist in the act of painting. Her self-portraits often included musical and artistic attributes. A self-portrait of Ducreux seated at a piano-forte, c. 1785 and formerly part of the Erlanger Collection, was misattributed to Jacques-Louis David for a long time, as were other works by her. Work by Decreux has also been misattributed to her contemporaries Antoine Vestier and Élisabeth Vigée Le Brun. In her brief career, Ducreux exhibited at a number of important exhibitions beginning in 1786 and continuing until 1799, including the January 1786 ", "score": "1.3817575" }, { "id": "28437930", "title": "Sonya Rose", "text": " Rose is an expert in the role of gender identity in British history, with a particular emphasis on the role of the woman in industrial development during the 19th and 20th centuries, and domestically during World War II. She has conducted detailed research into the capitalist society, industrialization and the role of women in factories during these periods, including an insight into the age of women with children working in factories, in professions such as lace clipping in Nottinghamshire. Historian Angela Woollacott notes that according to Rose, class and gender are not separate systems or structures in 19th century industrial England, but the \"content of class relations is gendered and the content of gender distinctions and gender relations is 'classed'\". Rose has also commented on the roles of civic republicanism and citizenship during World War II.", "score": "1.3799026" }, { "id": "14717550", "title": "Rose-Adélaïde Ducreux", "text": " Rose-Adélaïde Ducreux (1761 – July 26, 1802) was a French painter and musician, born in Paris. Eldest daughter of Joseph Ducreux, with whom she also studied, she showed at the Louvre Salons in 1791, 1793, 1795, 1798, and 1799. She was accomplished both as a performer and as a composer.", "score": "1.3794439" }, { "id": "3930224", "title": "Rose Valland", "text": " Rose Antonia Maria Valland (1 November 1898 – 18 September 1980) was a French art historian, member of the French Resistance, captain in the French military, and one of the most decorated women in French history. She secretly recorded details of the Nazi plundering of National French and private Jewish-owned art from France; and, working with the French Resistance, she saved thousands of works of art.", "score": "1.3792238" }, { "id": "9768469", "title": "Marie-Antoinette Rose", "text": " Marie-Antoinette Rose is a member of the National Assembly of Seychelles. A journalist by profession, she is a member of the Seychelles People's Progressive Front, and was first elected to the Assembly in 2006 on a proportional basis; she was reelected in 2007.", "score": "1.3782635" }, { "id": "27964147", "title": "Lida Rose McCabe", "text": " her identity from those who failed to detect \"only a woman\" in her writing style. In 1889, in the Paris Exposition Universelle, she did her first work for the American Press Association, and her letters were favorably received from the start. Her first intention was to spend a few months abroad and then return to her home, to engage in literary work. A love of Paris and its wonderful possibilities, and a desire to become familiar with the French language, kept her there for more than a year. During her visit to France, she went over the scenes of General Lafayette's life, sleeping ", "score": "1.3722513" }, { "id": "6340703", "title": "Tracey Rose", "text": " ; The Kiss, 2001, lambda photograph. ; Venus Baartman, 2001, lambda photograph, 120 x 120 cm. ; Half A, 2003, digital print, 55 x 37.5 cm. ; Lucie's Fur Version 1:1:1 – La Messie, 2003, lambda photograph, 148 x 102 cm. ; The Prelude The Gardenpath, 2006, DVD. Rose's work responds to the limitations of dogma and the flaws in institutionalised cultural discourse. Her practice, which is known for centering on performance, also includes photography, video, and installation. Always evident in her work is the artist's insistence in confronting the politics of identity, including sexual, racial, and gender-based themes. According to Jan Avgikos, \"part of Rose's appeal is her fluid referencing of '60s and '70s performance art\". ", "score": "1.3717852" } ]
What is Jean Gabriel Marie's occupation?
[ "composer" ]
occupation
Jean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970)
836,769
72
[ { "id": "33125530", "title": "Jean Gabriel-Marie", "text": " Gabriel-Marie was born in Paris, France on 8 January 1852. He studied at the Conservatoire de Paris and held a prominent position in the local musical world. He died unexpectedly on 29 August 1928 in Puigcerdà, Girona, Spain. He was the father of the composer Jean Gabriel Marie.", "score": "1.6648576" }, { "id": "33125519", "title": "Jean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970)", "text": " Jean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970) was a French composer.", "score": "1.6232672" }, { "id": "33125529", "title": "Jean Gabriel-Marie", "text": " Jean Gabriel Prosper Marie (8 January 1852 – 29 August 1928) was a French romantic composer and conductor.", "score": "1.5917628" }, { "id": "33125522", "title": "Jean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970)", "text": " His father, Jean Gabriel-Marie, was also a composer.", "score": "1.5908337" }, { "id": "33125521", "title": "Jean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970)", "text": " He directed of the Institut Gabriel-Marie in Marseille for many years until his death at age 63.", "score": "1.5377333" }, { "id": null, "title": "Jean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970)", "text": "Jean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970)\n\nJean Gabriel Marie (1907–1970) was a French composer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jean Monnet", "text": "Jean Monnet\n\nJean Omer Marie Gabriel Monnet (; 9 November 1888 – 16 March 1979) was a French civil servant, entrepreneur, diplomat, financier, administrator, and political visionary. An influential supporter of European unity, he is considered one of the founding fathers of the European Union.\n\nJean Monnet has been called \"The Father of Europe\" by those who see his innovative and pioneering efforts in the 1950s as the key to establishing the European Coal and Steel Community, the predecessor of today's European Union. Although Monnet was never elected to public office, he worked behind the scenes of American and European governments as a well-connected \"pragmatic internationalist\".\n\nFor three decades, Jean Monnet and Charles de Gaulle had a multifaceted relationship, at some times cooperative and at other times distrustful, from a first encounter in London during the Battle of France in mid-June 1940 until De Gaulle's death in November 1970. Monnet and De Gaulle have been referred to together as \"probably the two most outstanding Frenchmen of the 20th century\" ().<ref name=Casa2003/>\n\nJean Monnet was the first-ever individual to be designated as an Honorary Citizen of Europe in 1976. On the hundredth anniversary of his birth in 1988, his native country of France honoured Monnet's memory by transferring his mortal remains to the Panthéon in Paris.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jean-Gabriel Pageau", "text": "Jean-Gabriel Pageau\n\nJean-Gabriel \"J-G\" Pageau (; born November 11, 1992) is a Canadian professional ice hockey player for the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League (NHL). \n\nHe was selected by the Ottawa Senators in the fourth round, 96th overall, of the 2011 NHL Entry Draft with whom he spent the first part of his NHL career prior to his trade to the Islanders in 2020.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Gabriel-Marie Legouvé", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Jean Gabriel Maurice Rocques", "text": "Jean Gabriel Maurice Rocques\n\nJean Gabriel Maurice Rocques, comte de Montgaillard (November 16, 1761 – February 8, 1841) was a French political agent of the Revolution and First Empire era.", "score": null }, { "id": "12428462", "title": "Jean Marie", "text": "Jean Marie Antoine de Lanessan (1843–1919), French statesman and naturalist ; Jean Marie Balland (1934–1998), Roman Catholic Cardinal and Archbishop of Lyon ; Jean Marie Chérestal, prime minister of Haïti ; Jean Marie Higiro (born c. 1945), head of television and radio broadcasting in the Republic of Rwanda ; Jean Marie Marcelin Gilibert (19th century), French Commissioner in the French Gendarmerie ; Jean Marie Pardessus (1772–1853), French lawyer ; Jean Marie Stine (born 1945), American editor, writer, anthologist, and publisher ; Jean Marie (DJ), Italian DJ and producer Jean Marie may refer to: ", "score": "1.465183" }, { "id": "5578826", "title": "Jean-Joseph Carriès", "text": " Jean-Joseph Marie Carriès (15 February 1855 – 1 July 1894) was a French sculptor, ceramist, and miniaturist. His ceramic work is mostly in stoneware, and part of the French art pottery movement, and includes many faces and heads, often with grotesque expressions, but he made several conventional pots, often with thick unctuous ash glaze effects in the Japanese style.", "score": "1.4513154" }, { "id": "10645742", "title": "Gabriel Ste-Marie", "text": " Gabriel Ste-Marie is a Canadian politician and academic who was elected to represent the riding Joliette in the House of Commons in the 2015 election. He teaches economics at Cégep régional de Lanaudière. Ste-Marie served as the Bloc Québécois House Leader (and its parliamentary leader as the party leader did not have a seat in parliament) from 2017 until he resigned from the position on February 25, 2018 in a dispute with party leader Martine Ouellet. He, along with six other Bloc MPs, resigned from the Bloc's caucus to sit as an independent MP on February 28, 2018 citing conflicts with the leadership style of Martine Ouellet. He rejoined the Bloc Québécois caucus on September 17, 2018. He is also a researcher at the Contemporary Economics Research Institute and lecturer at Université du Québec à Montréal.", "score": "1.4414823" }, { "id": "4178376", "title": "Jean-Gabriel Prêtre", "text": " Prêtre was born in Geneva. His father Jean-Louis Prêtre married Judith Renauld on 28 December 1767 in the church of Saint Germain. From their marriage the children Pernette Marguerite, Jean-Gabriel and Marie were born. He worked as a natural history illustrator, first for Empress Josephine's zoo, and then for the Natural History Museum in Paris. He illustrated many books of animals and birds, and had several species named after him.", "score": "1.4384403" }, { "id": "10929133", "title": "James Gabriel Huquier", "text": " James Gabriel Huquier, originally Jacques-Gabriel (1725–1805) was a portrait-painter and engraver. He was the son of the roccoco engraver Gabriel Huquier and his wife Marie-Ann (Desvignes). One of Huquier's subjects was Chevalier d'Eon, an early transvestite.", "score": "1.4382136" }, { "id": "12428307", "title": "Jean-Marie", "text": "Jean-Marie Abgrall (born 1950), a French psychiatrist, criminologist, specialist in forensic medicine, cult expert, and graduate in criminal law ; Jean-Marie Charles Abrial (1879–1962), a French Admiral and Minister of Marine of France ; Jean-Marie Andre (born 1944), a Belgian scientist ; Jean-Marie Auberson (1920–2004), a Swiss conductor and violinist ; Jean-Marie Balestre (born 1921), a president of FISA ; Jean-Marie Basset (born 1943), a French chemist ; Jean-Marie Beaupuy (born 1943), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Benjamin, a priest ; Jean-Marie Beurel (1813–1872), a French Roman Catholic priest ; Jean-Marie Bockel (born 1950), a French politician ; Jean-Marie Buchet, a Belgian film director ; Jean-Marie Cavada (born 1940), a French politician ; ", "score": "1.4362693" }, { "id": "9356256", "title": "Gabriel Jeantet", "text": " Gabriel Jeantet (3 April 1906 – 1 December 1978) was a French far-right activist, journalist and polemicist. Active before, during and after the Second World War, Jeantet's links to François Mitterrand became a source of controversy during the latter's Presidency. His brother Claude Jeantet was also a far right activist.", "score": "1.4343506" }, { "id": "28089652", "title": "Jean-Marie Poumeyrol", "text": " Jean-Marie Poumeyrol (born at Libourne on June 8, 1946) is a French artist. Much of his early work consisted of erotica and hallucinogenic art, but as his art has developed he has shown a great interest in landscapes as well. He is an exponent of the fantastic realism movement.", "score": "1.4231929" }, { "id": "12428312", "title": "Jean-Marie", "text": "Lincoln Jean-Marie (born 1966), a British singer ", "score": "1.413852" }, { "id": "8634695", "title": "Marie-Joseph Gabriel", "text": " Marie-Joseph Gabriel was a French fencer. He competed in the men's masters sabre event at the 1900 Summer Olympics.", "score": "1.4080745" }, { "id": "11749933", "title": "Gabriel Huquier", "text": " Gabriel Huquier (1695–1772) was an entrepreneurial French draughtsman, engraver, printmaker, publisher, and art collector, who became a pivotal figure in the production of French 18th-century ornamental etchings and engravings", "score": "1.3986187" }, { "id": "29187325", "title": "Jean Marie Syjuco", "text": " Jean Marie Syjuco (born June 26, 1952) is a painter, installation artist, and performance artist from Manila, Philippines. Through the 1980s and the 1990s, Jean Marie brought attention and institutional support to the maverick art-form of Performance Art in the Philippines. Beginning in the 1970s as an extension of her work as a visual artist, her performance works developed from conceptual pieces of marked brevity rooted in anti-narrative devices, to the thematic spectacles and large-scale collaborations and video documentations for which she is now better known. For over 3 decades, she has balanced her roles as a painter of Abstract and ", "score": "1.3952204" }, { "id": "758296", "title": "Gabriel Alapetite", "text": " Gabriel Alapetite was born on 5 January 1854 in Clamecy, Nièvre. He came from an old republican family. His parents were Marien Ferdinand Alapetite (1821–95) and Alphonsine Janiska (1832–91). His siblings were Jeanne Marie Alapetite (1852–1918) and Emile Marien Alapetite (1856–1911). Gabriel Alapetite qualified as a lawyer in Paris in 1873. He began practice as a lawyer with Théodore Tenaille-Saligny as his political mentor. Tenaille-Saligny was named Prefect of Pas-de-Calais in 1876, then Prefect of Haute-Garonne, and appointed Alapetite his chef de cabinet. Alapetite was chef de cabinet in Pas-de-Calais from December 1876 to May 1877 and in Haute-Garonne from December 1877 to February 1879.", "score": "1.3889151" }, { "id": "12428310", "title": "Jean-Marie", "text": " Catholic Church ; Jean-Marie Atangana Mebara, a Cameroonian politician ; Jean-Marie Messier (born 1956), a French businessman ; Jean-Marie Mokole, a member of the Pan-African Parliament ; Jean-Marie Mondelet (circa 1771–1843), a notary and political figure in Lower Canada ; Jean-Marie Morel (1728–1810), a French architect ; Jean-Marie Musy (1876–1952), a Swiss politician ; Jean-Marie Neff (born 1961), a French racewalker ; Jean-Marie Pallardy (born 1940), a French film director ; Jean-Marie Pelt (born 1933), a French botanist ; Jean-Marie Peretti, a French researcher and teacher in human resources management ; Jean-Marie Perrot (1877–1943), a Breton priest ; Jean-Marie Pfaff (born 1953), a Belgian former football goalkeeper ; Jean-Marie Poiré (born 1945), a ", "score": "1.3876344" }, { "id": "14935038", "title": "Éric Jean-Jean", "text": " Éric Jean-Jean (born 20 September 1967 in Blaye) is a French radio and television host. He is occasionally an actor.", "score": "1.3862519" } ]
What is George Birnie Esslemont's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
George Esslemont
4,208,555
75
[ { "id": "13692473", "title": "George Esslemont", "text": " George Birnie Esslemont (1860 – 2 October 1917) was a Scottish Liberal politician. He was elected as Member of Parliament for Aberdeen South in 1907, and held the seat until he resigned in 1917. He married Clementine Macdonald who became President of the Aberdeen Women's Liberal Association. Their daughter was Mary Esslemont who became a leading doctor and was born in Aberdeen in 1891.", "score": "1.9604218" }, { "id": "15751802", "title": "Esslemont (surname)", "text": "Anna Esslemont, Welsh folk musician, member of Uiscedwr ; George Birnie Esslemont (1860-1917), British politician ; Ian Cameron Esslemont (born 1962), Canadian writer ; John Esslemont (1874-1925), Scottish Bahá'í ; Mary Esslemont (1891-1984), Scottish doctor ; Peter Esslemont (1834-1894), Scottish politician ; Sonny Esslemont (born 1993), Scottish rugby player Esslemont is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:", "score": "1.6332799" }, { "id": "3677264", "title": "John Esslemont", "text": " Esslemont began his medical career in Aberdeen but moved to Australia in 1902. There he took a position at Ararat Hospital and became the District Surgeon and Health Officer for Alexandar County. He returned to Aberdeenshire in 1903 and, later that same year, left for South Africa in the hopes that the climate would be beneficial to his health. He worked in South Africa for five years, serving as Medical Officer of a government hospital and then as the District Surgeon at Kroonstad. He returned to Britain in 1908 and took a position as the Resident Medical Officer of the Home Sanatorium in Bournemouth, England. This was one of many facilities established for the care and ", "score": "1.5926595" }, { "id": "3677265", "title": "John Esslemont", "text": " of tuberculosis patients, as the disease was quite common at the time. In addition to his role as a medical provider, John organized events for his patients in order to raise their morale, and spent long hours comforting those at the very end of their lives. Esslemont was also involved in the conceptualization of a comprehensive national health service. He helped establish the State Medical Service Association, producing recommendations which became the foundation of the British National Health Service. The combination of increasing health issues and his focus on the work of the Baháʼí Faith precluded the continuation of his medical career, and in the spring of 1923, Esslemont left Bournemouth and returned to Aberdeen..", "score": "1.5476813" }, { "id": "9221374", "title": "Ian C. Esslemont", "text": " Ian Cameron Esslemont was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. He has lived and worked in Southeast Asia, including four years spent in Thailand and Japan. He is currently working on a new trilogy set in the Malaz world. He lives in Alaska with his wife, novelist Gerri Brightwell, and their three sons.", "score": "1.5281037" }, { "id": null, "title": "List of stewards of the Manor of Northstead", "text": "List of stewards of the Manor of Northstead\n\nThe office of Crown Steward and Bailiff of the Manor of Northstead functions as a procedural device to allow a member of Parliament (MP) to resign from the House of Commons of the United Kingdom. As members of the House of Commons are forbidden from formally resigning, a legal fiction is used to circumvent this prohibition: appointment to an \"office of profit under The Crown\" disqualifies an individual from sitting as an MP. As such, several such positions are maintained to allow MPs to resign. Currently, the offices of Steward of the Manor of Northstead and Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds are used, and are specifically designated for this purpose under the House of Commons Disqualification Act 1975; several other offices have also been used historically.<ref name=\"hcio\" /> The appointment is traditionally made by the chancellor of the Exchequer. The position was reworked in 1861 by William Ewart Gladstone, who was worried about the honour conferred by appointment to people such as Edwin James, who had fled to the United States over £10,000 in debt. As such, the letter by the chancellor was rewritten to omit any references to honour.\n\nThe office was first used in this way on 20 March 1844 to allow Sir George Henry Rose, MP for , to resign his seat. Appointees to the offices of Steward of the Manor of Northstead and Steward of the Chiltern Hundreds are alternated so that two MPs can resign at once (as happened on 23 January 2017 when Tristram Hunt and Jamie Reed resigned). However, every new appointment revokes the previous one, so there is no difficulty in situations in which more than two resign, such as the 1985 walkout of Ulster Unionist MPs when several separate appointments were made on a single day.\n\nThe incumbent steward of the Manor of Northstead is Kate Green, formerly the Labour MP for Stretford and Urmston.<ref name=\"Parish\"/>\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Category:People from Aberdeen", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "1955 Birthday Honours", "text": "1955 Birthday Honours\n\nThe Queen's Birthday Honours 1955 were appointments in many of the Commonwealth realms of Queen Elizabeth II to various orders and honours to reward and highlight good works by citizens of those countries. The appointments were made to celebrate the official birthday of The Queen.\n\nThey were announced on 3 June 1955, for the United Kingdom and Colonies, Australia, New Zealand, Ceylon, Pakistan, and for various members of Commonwealth forces in recognition of services in Korea during 1954–1955.\n\nThe recipients of honours are displayed here as they were styled before their new honour, and arranged by honour, with classes (Knight, Knight Grand Cross, \"etc.\") and then divisions (Military, Civil, \"etc.\") as appropriate.\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n", "score": null }, { "id": "6001696", "title": "George Edwin Bissell", "text": "George Edwin Bissell George Edwin Bissell (February 16, 1839 – August 30, 1920) was an American sculptor. Bissell was born New Preston, Connecticut, the son of a quarryman and marble-cutter. During the American Civil War he served as a private in the 23rd Connecticut Volunteers in the Department of the Gulf (1862–1863), and on being mustered out became acting assistant paymaster in the South Atlantic Squadron. At the close of the war he joined his father's marble business in Poughkeepsie, New York. He studied the art of sculpture abroad in 1875–1876, and lived much in Paris during the years 1883–1896,", "score": "1.4764493" }, { "id": "7388624", "title": "John Esslemont", "text": "(1859-1927), a successful merchant, and Margaret Esslemont (née Davidson). He came from an eminent family and was educated at Ferryhill School, Robert Gordon's College, and the University of Aberdeen. Esslemont is related to 19th Century Liberal Member of Parliament Peter Esslemont - John's great-grandfather is Peter's grandfather. He graduated in medicine in 1898 with honorable distinction. Unfortunately, Esslemont had contracted tuberculosis during his college days and this caused him to give up his promising career in medical research. He traveled internationally and married Jean Fraser to whom he was drawn by their mutual interest in music. On return to Britain", "score": "1.4700425" }, { "id": "3677262", "title": "John Esslemont", "text": " John Ebenezer Esslemont was born in Aberdeen, Scotland on 19 May 1874, the third son and fourth child of John E. Esslemont and Margaret Davidson. The Esslemont family was distinguished and accomplished and John would prove to be no exception. He was educated at Ferryhill School and Robert Gordon's College in Aberdeen. He then went on to Aberdeen University, where he graduated with degrees in Medicine and Surgery with honorable distinctions in 1898. In his final year, he won a medal in clinical surgery and was runner-up for the James Anderson Gold Medal and Prize in clinical medicine. As a winner of ", "score": "1.5005553" }, { "id": "9221373", "title": "Ian C. Esslemont", "text": " Ian Cameron Esslemont (born 1962) is a Canadian writer. He was trained and has worked as an archaeologist. He is best known for his series Novels of the Malazan Empire, which is set in the same world as the Malazan Book of the Fallen epic fantasy series written by his friend and collaborator, Steven Erikson. Esslemont is the co-creator of the Malazan world.", "score": "1.491707" }, { "id": "2086392", "title": "Mary Esslemont", "text": " Mary Esslemont CBE FRCGP (3 July 1891 - 25 August 1984) was a general practitioner in Aberdeen, Scotland, Vice President of the British Medical Association (BMA) and president of the Soroptimist Federation.", "score": "1.4908013" }, { "id": "3105236", "title": "Birnie (surname)", "text": "Alexander Birnie, (1763–1835), Scottish merchant and shipowner ; David and Catherine Birnie, Australian husband and wife pair of serial killers ; Esmond Birnie (born 1965), author, economist, and Ulster Unionist Party politician ; George Birnie Esslemont (1860–1917), British Liberal politician ; Harry Charles Birnie (1882–1943), Scottish seaman, captain with the Cunard line and commodore in the Royal Navy Reserve ; James Birnie (1799–1864), Scottish fur trader in the Pacific Northwest ; John Birnie Philip (1824–1875), English sculptor of the 19th century ; Patricia Birnie (1926–2013), British lawyer ; Ted Birnie (1878–1935), professional footballer and manager ; Tessa Birnie (1934–2008), New Zealand-born Australian concert pianist ; William Birnie Rhind (1853–1933), Scottish sculptor Birnie is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.4643643" }, { "id": "3677261", "title": "John Esslemont", "text": " John Ebenezer Esslemont M.B., Ch.B. (1874 &ndash; 1925), from Scotland, was a prominent British adherent of the Baháʼí Faith. Shoghi Effendi, Guardian of the Baháʼí Faith, posthumously named Esslemont a Hand of the Cause of God, one of the Disciples of ʻAbdu'l-Bahá (Effendi's predecessor), and one of the United Kingdom's three luminaries of the Baháʼí Faith. He was the author of one of the foremost introductory texts on the Baháʼí Faith (Baháʼu'lláh and the New Era) and worked as a translator of Baháʼí texts near the end of his life. In addition to his work for the Baháʼí Faith, Esslemont was an accomplished physician, as well as a linguist, proficient in English, French, Spanish, German, Esperanto, and later Persian and Arabic. Dr. Esslemont died of tuberculosis in Palestine in 1925.", "score": "1.4539521" }, { "id": "2086393", "title": "Mary Esslemont", "text": " Mary Esslemont was born in Aberdeen in 1891. Her mother, Clementine Macdonald, was President of the Aberdeen Women's Liberal Association, and her father George Esslemont, was the Liberal MP for South Aberdeen. She was educated at Aberdeen High School for Girls and the University of Aberdeen, graduating with a BSc (1914) and an MA (1915). After completing her degrees, she lectured in science at Stockwell Training College, London (1917-1919) before returned to Aberdeen to complete her medical degree, MBChB (1923). At university, she was the first woman President of the Students' Representative Association.", "score": "1.4387237" }, { "id": "7918164", "title": "George Arnold Escher", "text": " George Arnold Escher (10 May 1843 – 14 June 1939) was a Dutch civil engineer and a foreign advisor to the Japanese government during the Meiji period. He was the father of the graphic artist M. C. Escher and the geologist Berend George Escher.", "score": "1.4331241" }, { "id": "3677263", "title": "John Esslemont", "text": " Phillips Research Scholarship he spent the latter part of 1899 at the Universities of Berne and Strasbourg researching pharmacology. At the end of that year, he returned to Aberdeen and continued his research. At some point during his college years, Esslemont had contracted tuberculosis. This would fundamentally alter his career and his life, focusing his efforts on tuberculosis treatment, care and eradication, as well as working to preserve his own health to the extent possible. In December 1902, John married Jean Fraser, an accomplished pianist, and settled in Australia. Unfortunately, the marriage did not last long, and the couple had no children.", "score": "1.4308922" }, { "id": "2071688", "title": "George Edwin Bissell", "text": " Bissell was born New Preston, Connecticut, the son of a quarryman and marble-cutter. During the American Civil War he served as a private in the 23rd Connecticut Volunteers in the Department of the Gulf (1862–1863), and on being mustered out became acting assistant paymaster in the South Atlantic Squadron. At the close of the war he joined his father's marble business in Poughkeepsie, New York. He studied the art of sculpture abroad in 1875–1876, and lived much in Paris during the years 1883–1896, with occasional visits to America. Bissell also created smaller works, such as a bust of President Abraham Lincoln as well as a larger statue of the president.", "score": "1.4249737" }, { "id": "2539150", "title": "Sonny Esslemont", "text": " Sonny Esslemont (born 29 December 1993) is a Scotland international rugby league footballer who plays as a. Esslemont previously played for Hull Kingston Rovers, Keighley Cougars and the Hemel Stags, and has also represented Scotland at international level.", "score": "1.4239632" }, { "id": "12158958", "title": "Alexander Birnie", "text": " cargo to ports in the southern hemisphere before engaging in sealing and whaling. Alexander Birnie was active in London as a philanthropist and a supporter of worthy causes. He was a director of the Royal Highland School Society. He was also an elder of the Scotch Church in Swallow Street. For many years he was a director of the London Missionary Society and he supplied missionaries and their families with free transport on his ships to the South Sea islands. He died at his home in Great Helen's Street on 15 February 1835, aged 72. He had married Ann Bayley in 1784 and they had at least nine children. His son, George, then took over as principal in the firm.", "score": "1.4235244" }, { "id": "29659229", "title": "Berend George Escher", "text": " Berend George Escher (4 April 1885 in Gorinchem – 11 October 1967 in Arnhem) was a Dutch geologist. Escher had a broad interest, but his research was mainly on crystallography, mineralogy and volcanology. He was a pioneer in experimental geology. He was a half-brother of the artist M.C. Escher, and had some influence on his work due to his knowledge of crystallography. M.C. Escher created a woodcut ex libris for his brother 'Beer' with a stylized image of a volcano around 1922 (Bool number 91). Escher was the son of the civil engineer G. A. Escher, a director of the ", "score": "1.4165833" }, { "id": "32168173", "title": "George Ainslie (delegate)", "text": " George Ainslie was born in Boonville, Cooper County, Missouri. George's grandfather and father had served in the Scottish regiments of the British Army. Also, his uncle, Colonel William Ainslie, served with the 93rd Regiment of Foot (the \"Sutherland Highlanders\"). The exploits of \"The Sutherlands\" during the Crimean War gave rise to the phrase, \"The Thin Red Line\", later applied to British Army infantry in general. George's parents, John and Mary, moved to Missouri around two years before he was born. His father became a wealthy landowner, and also operated a salt works. The family went back to Scotland for a time while George was an infant, but returned in 1844. His father drowned in the Missouri River in June of that year. In his late teens, Ainslie read law under experienced lawyers and a judge in St. Louis. He also attended courses at what is now St. Louis University. George attained a law degree and was admitted to the Missouri bar in 1860. After a few months practicing law in Missouri, he moved to the Pike's Peak area in Colorado Territory. He opened a law office there and apparently invested in some mining properties.", "score": "1.416082" }, { "id": "11267562", "title": "George Esson", "text": " George Albert Esson (b. 30 March 1942) was Assistant Chief Constable of Grampian Police and Chief Constable of Dumfries and Galloway Constabulary (1989-1994). He was at the centre of major inquiries into the Piper Alpha disaster and the 1986 Chinook Helicopter Crash. He also headed the police investigation into the Lockerbie Bombing. He is a graduate of the University of Aberdeen. After retiring from the Police, he worked for Shell UK as a security and external affairs advisor and led their response to the Greenpeace protests at the decommissioning of the Brent Spar oil facility in the North Sea. He was appointed CBE in the 1994 Birthday Honours.", "score": "1.4147922" }, { "id": "16155907", "title": "George Swede", "text": " George Swede (Juris Švēde), (born as Juris Puriņš, November 20, 1940 in Riga, Latvia) is a Latvian Canadian psychologist, poet and children's writer who lives in Toronto, Ontario. He is a major figure in English-language haiku, known for his wry, poignant observations.", "score": "1.4082711" } ]
What is Shorty Hamilton's occupation?
[ "actor", "actress", "actors", "actresses" ]
occupation
Shorty Hamilton
3,588,016
89
[ { "id": "30288520", "title": "Shorty Hamilton", "text": " Shorty Hamilton (September 9, 1879 &ndash; March 7, 1925) was an American actor and silent film comedian who appeared in more than 80 films, mostly westerns, from 1909 to 1925. His birth name was William John Schroeder, and he was also known as \"Jack Hamilton.\" He had served in the United States Cavalry for several years and worked as a cowboy in Montana and Texas. He was best known for the \"Adventures of Shorty\" series of two-reel silent films that were released from 1912 to 1917.", "score": "1.835072" }, { "id": "30288521", "title": "Shorty Hamilton", "text": " Before becoming an actor, Hamilton served six years in the United States Cavalry and worked as a cowboy for five years in Montana and Texas. As an actor, he appeared in many of the western films produced by Thomas H. Ince, including The Great Smash. He was described as \"an extremely likeable little chap who combines the wonderful riding, lassoing, cow-punching stunts of the true westerner with the polished, quick-wittedness of the New York society man.\"", "score": "1.7302358" }, { "id": "30288522", "title": "Shorty Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton was best known for the \"Adventures of Shorty\" series of two-reel comedies in which he starred from 1914 to 1917. There were more than 35 two-reel films featuring Hamilton as the \"Shorty\" character, a cowboy with a trained horse&mdash;his \"remarkably intelligent horse, Beauty.\" W. H. Clifford continued the series at his short-lived film company. Hamilton was not the only big talent associated with the \"Shorty\" pictures; the films were produced by Thomas H. Ince, many were written by the noted screenwriter C. Gardner Sullivan, and the directors included Francis Ford. Aside from the trained horse, Hamilton's co-stars in the \"Shorty\" pictures included Enid Markey and Charles Ray.", "score": "1.6940387" }, { "id": "30288524", "title": "Shorty Hamilton", "text": " The last of the \"Adventures of Shorty\" films was released in 1917. However, Hamilton continued to appear in western genre films. In March 1925, Hamilton died at age 45 when his automobile crashed into a steam shovel standing in a street in Hollywood.", "score": "1.6518426" }, { "id": "30288523", "title": "Shorty Hamilton", "text": " Hamilton's popularity drew attention to his personal life as well as his screen performances. In the fall of 1914, less than six months after the release of Shorty Escapes Matrimony, Hamilton married Ethel Spurgin. Hamilton met Spurgin, who was a fan of Hamilton's work, at an appearance at a movie theater in Venice, Los Angeles, California. The two married less than two months after they met.", "score": "1.6296417" }, { "id": null, "title": "Shorty Hamilton", "text": "Shorty Hamilton\n\nShorty Hamilton (September 9, 1879 – March 7, 1925) was an American actor and silent film comedian who appeared in more than 80 films, mostly westerns, from 1909 to 1925. His birth name was William John Schroeder, and he was also known as \"Jack Hamilton.\" He had served in the United States Cavalry for several years and worked as a cowboy in Montana and Texas. He was best known for the \"Adventures of Shorty\" series of two-reel silent films that were released from 1912 to 1917.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Martin Short", "text": "Martin Short\n\nMartin Hayter Short (born March 26, 1950) is a Canadian-American actor, comedian, and writer.<ref name=moviestimes/> He has received various awards including two Primetime Emmy Awards, and a Tony Award. In 2019 Short became an Officer of the Order of Canada.\n\nHe is known for his work on the television programs \"SCTV\" and \"Saturday Night Live\". Short created the characters Jiminy Glick and Ed Grimley. He also acted in the sitcom \"Mulaney\" (2014–2015), the variety series \"Maya & Marty\" (2016), and \"The Morning Show\" (2019). He has also had an active career on stage, starring in Broadway productions including Neil Simon's musicals \"The Goodbye Girl\" (1993) and \"Little Me\" (1998–1999). The latter earned him a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical and the former a nomination in the same category.\n\nHe has starred in comedy films such as \"Three Amigos\" (1986), \"Innerspace\" (1987), \"Three Fugitives\" (1989), \"Captain Ron\" (1992), \"Clifford\" (1994), \"Mars Attacks!\" (1996), \"Jungle 2 Jungle\" (1997), and \"\" (2006). Short also provided voice-work for films like \"The Pebble and the Penguin\" (1995), \"The Prince of Egypt\" (1998), \"Treasure Planet\" (2002), \"\" (2003), \"The Spiderwick Chronicles\" (2008), \"\", \"Frankenweenie\" (both 2012), and \"The Wind Rises\" (2013).\n\nIn 2015, Short started touring nationally with fellow comedian Steve Martin. In 2018, they released their Netflix special \"An Evening You Will Forget for the Rest of Your Life\" for which they received three Primetime Emmy Award nominations. Since 2021, he has co-starred in the Hulu comedy series \"Only Murders in the Building\" alongside Martin and Selena Gomez. For his performance he has earned nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award, the Golden Globe Award, the Screen Actors Guild Award, and the Critics Choice Television Award.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Hamilton Camp", "text": "Hamilton Camp\n\nHamilton Camp (Born Robin S. Camp, 30 October 1934 – 2 October 2005) was a London-born singer, songwriter and actor, He is known for his work as a folk singer during the 1960s, and eventually branched out into acting in films and television.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Steven Weber", "text": "Steven Weber\n\nSteven Robert Weber (born March 4, 1961) is an American actor and comedian. He is best known for his role as Brian Hackett on the television series \"Wings\" which aired from April 1990 to May 1997 on NBC, as Sam Blue in \"Once and Again\", and Jack Torrance in the TV miniseries adaptation of Stephen King's \"The Shining\". He had a recurring role on \"iZombie\" as Vaughn du Clark. He played Mayor Douglas Hamilton on \"\" in a recurring role, and as Sergeant First Class Dennis Worcester in \"Hamburger Hill\" (1987).", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Alex Sawyer", "text": "Alex Sawyer\n\nAlexander James Sawyer (born 13 February 1993) is an English actor, singer, songwriter and director. He is best known for his roles as Alfie Lewis in \"House of Anubis\" and Topher in \"The End of the F***ing World\". In 2018, he began portraying David Oumou in \"Get Shorty\".", "score": null }, { "id": "14771938", "title": "Shorty (nickname)", "text": " (1867–1904), American Major League Baseball player ; Shorty Gallagher (1872–1924), baseball player ; Shorty Green (1896–1960), Canadian National Hockey League player ; Shorty Hamilton (1879–1925), American silent film actor and comedian ; Shorty Hogue, middleweight boxer in the 1940s ; George Horne (ice hockey) (1904–1929), Canadian National Hockey League player ; Shorty Howe, a baseball player ; Shorty Hughes (1922–2003), American football coach ; Shorty Jenkins (1935–2013), ice technician in the sport of curling ; Vernon Keogh (1911–1941), American World War II fighter pilot ; Shorty Long (1940–1969), American soul singer, songwriter, musician and record producer ; Frank Longman (1882–1928), American college football player and coach ; Shorty Mack (born 1981), producer, rapper, and actor ", "score": "1.5848391" }, { "id": "14409257", "title": "Shorty Green", "text": " the Northern Ontario Hockey Association. He moved back to Hamilton in 1923 and began his professional career. He played on a line with his brother, \"Red\" Green, and Billy Burch for the last place Tigers. Green was unanimously voted as team captain prior to the start of the 1924–25 NHL season and his skill and physical style in spite of his small stature made him a fan favourite. The Tigers flourished on the ice, finishing as the top team in the NHL, and qualifying for the playoffs for the first time in franchise history. When the players learned that team owners were making large profits on the Tigers despite ", "score": "1.5128982" }, { "id": "8231735", "title": "Columbus Short", "text": " Columbus Keith Short, Jr. (born September 19, 1982) is an American actor, choreographer, dancer and rapper. He choreographed Britney Spears's Onyx Hotel Tour and worked with Brian Friedman (of So You Think You Can Dance fame). He is best known for his roles in the films Stomp the Yard, Cadillac Records, Armored, and The Losers. He previously starred as a series regular in the ABC drama Scandal, as Harrison Wright. On April 26, 2014, it was announced that Short would leave Scandal after three seasons with the show.", "score": "1.5010418" }, { "id": "13881549", "title": "John &quot;Bugs&quot; Hamilton", "text": " John \"Bugs\" Hamilton (March 8, 1911, St. Louis – August 15, 1947, St. Louis) was an American jazz trumpeter. Hamilton was a member of New York City-based trombonist Billy Kato's band in 1930-1931 and played with Chick Webb around the same time. Toward the middle of the 1930s he played with Kaiser Marshall, then joined Fats Waller's ensemble in 1938. He remained with Waller until 1942, touring and recording with him often and appearing in several films as a member of Waller's group. During World War II he played with Eddie South and Roy Eldridge, but shortly after the end of the war, he contracted tuberculosis, resulting in his death at age 36.", "score": "1.4981384" }, { "id": "5933691", "title": "Frank Hamilton Short", "text": " Frank Hamilton Short (September 12, 1862 - June 5, 1920) was a Fresno, California lawyer and a states' rights advocate within the early American Conservation movement. Soon after Short's birth in Shelby County, Missouri, his father died from drinking poisoned water while engaged in the American Civil War. Short and his mother moved to Fresno, California in 1881. After a brief stint as a school teacher in Ahwanee, California, Short was, at age 22, elected justice of the peace in Fresno County. Admitted to the bar in 1887, Short became an accomplished trial lawyer. Later, he changed his practice to represent companies in the oil, water, ", "score": "1.4957098" }, { "id": "32689676", "title": "Bob &quot;Bones&quot; Hamilton", "text": " Bob \"Bones\" Hamilton (September 8, 1912 – April 1, 1996) was an American football player. He was drafted by the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1936 NFL Draft, but he didn't play pro football. He was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame in 1972.", "score": "1.4925113" }, { "id": "8316919", "title": "Ray Hamilton (defensive end)", "text": " Raymond Hamilton (June 6, 1916 – February 13, 1995) was a standout football and basketball player for the University of Arkansas and a professional football player in the National Football League where he played for the Cleveland / Los Angeles Rams and the Detroit Lions.", "score": "1.4899881" }, { "id": "26500219", "title": "David Hamilton (baseball)", "text": " David Lewis Hamilton (born September 29, 1997) is an American professional baseball shortstop and second baseman for the Boston Red Sox organization. Hamilton attended San Marcos High School in San Marcos, Texas. The Los Angeles Angels selected him in the 28th round of the 2016 MLB draft, but he did not sign with the Angels. He enrolled at the University of Texas at Austin, where he played college baseball for the Texas Longhorns. He tore his achilles tendon, causing him to miss his junior season in 2019. The Milwaukee Brewers selected Hamilton in the eighth round, with the 253rd overall selection, of the ", "score": "1.4880648" }, { "id": "28185057", "title": "Bobby Hamilton (American football)", "text": " Bobby Hamilton (born July 1, 1971) is a former American football defensive end. He was originally signed by the Seattle Seahawks as an undrafted free agent in 1994. He played college football at Southern Mississippi.", "score": "1.4666703" }, { "id": "4056209", "title": "Steve Hamilton (American football)", "text": " Steven Hamilton (born September 28, 1961) is a former American football defensive end in the National Football League (NFL) for the Washington Redskins. He played college football at East Carolina University and was drafted in the second round of the 1984 NFL Draft.", "score": "1.4543083" }, { "id": "3932891", "title": "Ben Hamilton", "text": " Benjamin Thomas Hamilton (born August 18, 1977) is a former American college and professional football player who was a guard and center in the National Football League (NFL) for ten seasons. He played college football for the University of Minnesota, and was a two-time consensus All-American. The Denver Broncos picked him in the fourth round of the 2001 NFL Draft, and he played professionally for the Broncos and Seattle Seahawks of the NFL.", "score": "1.4538186" }, { "id": "31711770", "title": "Keith Hamilton (American football)", "text": " Keith Lamarr Hamilton (born May 25, 1971, in Paterson, New Jersey) is a former American football defensive tackle for the New York Giants of the National Football League. He played college football at the University of Pittsburgh and was selected in the 1992 NFL Draft. Hamilton spent his entire 12-season career with the Giants and recorded 63 sacks, placing him fourth on the team's career sack list since sacks became an official statistic in 1982. \"Hammer,\" as he was known, played in 173 games in a Giants uniform, tying him with Harry Carson for sixth on the franchise's all-time list. He was named a Pro Bowl alternate in 2000, when he recorded ten sacks and the Giants reached Super Bowl XXXV.", "score": "1.4537382" }, { "id": "14409255", "title": "Shorty Green", "text": " Wilfred Thomas \"Shorty\" Green (July 17, 1896 – April 19, 1960) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played four seasons in the National Hockey League (NHL) for the Hamilton Tigers and New York Americans. As captain of the Tigers in 1925, he led the team on a strike with the demand that the players be paid an additional C$200 to participate in the playoffs. The league refused, suspended the team and sold the organization to New York interests. As a member of the Americans, Green scored the first goal in Madison Square Garden history, and after two seasons as a player in New York, coached the team for one before coaching minor league teams for several years. He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1963. His younger brother Red Green was also a hockey player in the NHL.", "score": "1.4514949" }, { "id": "28455941", "title": "Shane Hamilton", "text": " Shane Hamilton (born 18 August 1970) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong and the Brisbane Bears in the VFL/AFL. Hamilton was only 17 when he made his league debut for Geelong and in just his third game kicked 7 goals 4 against Sydney at the SCG. He played six games in 1989 but four of them were finals, including the famed 1989 VFL Grand Final against Hawthorn where he kicked a couple of goals in a losing cause. He finished his career in Brisbane where he spent five seasons at the Bears and got more regular game time than he did when he was with the stronger Geelong. Hamilton now coaches the Huntly Football Club in the Heathcote and District Football League.", "score": "1.4506052" }, { "id": "4576153", "title": "Jack Hamilton (footballer, born 1937)", "text": " Jack R. Hamilton (born 4 June 1937) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with South Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL).", "score": "1.4492178" } ]
What is Nandor Balazs's occupation?
[ "physicist" ]
occupation
Nándor Balázs
2,011,238
74
[ { "id": "9389122", "title": "Balázs Bese", "text": " .", "score": "1.7733265" }, { "id": "13090062", "title": "Nándor Balaskó", "text": " Nándor Balaskó (August 30, 1918 – June 28, 1996) was a sculptor from Romania. Balaskó graduated from Silvania National College in 1937. He studied at the Bucharest National University of Arts (1937–40) and the Hungarian University of Fine Arts (1940–43). Then he worked with Ion Andreescu Institute of Fine and Decorative Art in Cluj Napoca. In 1958 he took part in the International Auschwitz-contest. In 1970, Balaskó emigrated to Sintra, Portugal.", "score": "1.7479651" }, { "id": "7670506", "title": "Nándor Litter", "text": " Nándor Litter (born 18 September 1953) is a Hungarian operating engineer and politician (MSZP), who served as Mayor of Nagykanizsa from 2002 to 2006. Formerly he had interests in the oil industry and worked for the MOL Group.", "score": "1.6755409" }, { "id": "4238769", "title": "Nándor Tánczos", "text": " Nándor Steven Tánczos (, Tánczos Nándor; born 29 May 1966) is a New Zealand social ecologist, researcher, educator, activist and political commentator. He is currently a councillor in the Whakatāne District. He is also co-director of He Puna Manawa social and political change agency. Tánczos was a member of the New Zealand Parliament from 1999 to 2008, and represented the Green Party as a list MP.", "score": "1.6308863" }, { "id": "5124311", "title": "Balázs Zamostny", "text": " .", "score": "1.610209" }, { "id": null, "title": "Gergő Lovrencsics", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Adherence (medicine)", "text": "Adherence (medicine)\n\nIn medicine, patient compliance (also adherence, capacitance) describes the degree to which a patient correctly follows medical advice. Most commonly, it refers to medication or drug compliance, but it can also apply to other situations such as medical device use, self care, self-directed exercises, or therapy sessions. Both patient and health-care provider affect compliance, and a positive physician-patient relationship is the most important factor in improving compliance. Access to care plays a role in patient adherence, whereby greater wait times to access care contributing to greater absenteeism. The cost of prescription medication also plays a major role.<ref name=Harris/>\n\nCompliance can be confused with concordance, which is the process by which a patient and clinician make decisions together about treatment.\n\nWorldwide, non-compliance is a major obstacle to the effective delivery of health care. 2003 estimates from the World Health Organization indicated that only about 50% of patients with chronic diseases living in developed countries follow treatment recommendations with particularly low rates of adherence to therapies for asthma, diabetes, and hypertension. Efforts to improve compliance have been aimed at simplifying medication packaging, providing effective medication reminders, improving patient education, and limiting the number of medications prescribed simultaneously. Studies show a great variation in terms of characteristics and effects of interventions to improve medicine adherence. It is still unclear how adherence can consistently be improved in order to promote clinically important effects.<ref name=\":2\" />", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Wikipedia:AfC sorting", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Final Fight Championship", "text": "Final Fight Championship\n\nFinal Fight Championship (FFC) is an international fighting sports promotion company founded in 2003 by the FFC owner and CEO Orsat Zovko. The company has its headquarters in Las Vegas, Nevada, USA, as well as a European office in Zagreb, Croatia.\n\nFFC started as a kickboxing promotion, in 2013 FFC introduced MMA fights in its events as well as boxing matches in 2016.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "2014–15 Budapest Honvéd FC season", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "2162915", "title": "Balázs Slakta", "text": " .", "score": "1.6054149" }, { "id": "29326460", "title": "Balázs Bús", "text": " Balázs Bús (born 29 January 1966) is a Hungarian social worker and politician, who served as Mayor of Óbuda-Békásmegyer (3rd district of Budapest) between 2006 and 2019. Besides that he represented Óbuda-Békásmegyer (Budapest Constituency IV) in the National Assembly of Hungary from 2010 to 2014.", "score": "1.597756" }, { "id": "9203943", "title": "List of Hungarian astronomers", "text": "Rezsabek Nándor ", "score": "1.5911508" }, { "id": "6855677", "title": "Nándor Katona", "text": " Katona Nándor or Nathan Ferdinand Kleinberger (12 September 1864 Szepesófalu (Spišská Stará Ves), Kingdom of Hungary now Slovakia – 1 August 1932, Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian Jewish painter. One of seven children of a dismally poor Jewish family he was discovered as a prodigy, brought up and instructed in painting by László Mednyánszky. He later studied in Budapest and Paris, and traveled extensively throughout Western Europe. Most of his works depict scenes of nature from his home region, the Szepes county (Spiš) in particular views of the Tatra Mountains and the area of Késmárk (Kežmarok), which he considered his home town despite having spent much of his life in Budapest. His works are on exhibit at the Hungarian National Gallery in Budapest, the Slovak National Gallery, the Eastern Slovak Gallery in Kassa (Košice) and the Tatra Gallery in Poprad.", "score": "1.5803766" }, { "id": "13090063", "title": "Nándor Balaskó", "text": "1968 • Little Gallery of Fine Arts, Cluj-Napoca ; 1990 • Lisbon 1940, Bucharest, student festival ; 1941, 1942, 1943, Budapest ; 1943, Cluj-Napoca. Solo Exhibitions Selected group exhibitions", "score": "1.5703286" }, { "id": "9042502", "title": "Balázs", "text": "Andre Balazs (born 1957), American hotelier and residential developer ; Árpád Balázs (born 1937), Hungarian classical music composer ; Béla Balázs (1884–1949), Hungarian-Jewish film critic and poet ; Endre Alexander Balazs (1920–2015), Hungarian-American in the New Jersey Inventors Hall of Fame ; Étienne Balázs (1905–1963), Hungary-French sinologist ; Harold Balazs (1928–2017), American sculptor ; Janika Balázs (1925–1988), Serbian musician ; Márton Balázs, (1929–2016), Romanian mathematician of Hungarian descent ; Mihály Balázs (born 1948), Hungarian historian ; Nándor Balázs (1926–2003), Hungarian-American physicist ; Péter Balázs (born 1941), Hungarian politician ; Péter Balázs (canoeist) (born 1982), Hungarian canoeist ; Peter Balazs (mathematician), (born 1970), Austrian mathematician Balázs Orbán (1829–1890), Hungarian writer and politician ", "score": "1.5666246" }, { "id": "29261033", "title": "Nándor Fa", "text": " Nándor Fa is a Hungarian yachtsman, born on 9 July 1953 in Székesfehérvár (Hungary). He is of the adventurer generation having not only done the race but designed and built the boat.", "score": "1.5596557" }, { "id": "14082982", "title": "György Balázs", "text": " György Balázs (Balázs György) (born 24 July 1985 ) is a retired tennis player from Hungary. He played for the Hungarian Davis Cup team in 2010 and 2011 His younger brother Attila also tennis player, they won 5 ITF doubles title with together.", "score": "1.5536847" }, { "id": "13695024", "title": "Balázs Ander", "text": " Ander was born in Nagyatád. He graduated from the Faculty of Humanities of the University of Pécs. He was a history teacher in Barcs. He is married and raised three children.", "score": "1.5487118" }, { "id": "6077795", "title": "Balázs Major", "text": " Balázs Major (born 18 December 1990 in Budapest) is a Hungarian former competitive ice dancer. With Dóra Turóczi, he is the 2014 national champion. They competed in the final segment at two World Junior Championships, finishing 12th in 2010. They also appeared at two World Championships, two European Championships, and two senior Grand Prix events. They were coached by Ilona Berecz in Budapest, and by Muriel Zazoui and Olivier Schoenfelder in Lyon, France.", "score": "1.5443444" }, { "id": "6411109", "title": "Blažej Baláž", "text": " Blažej Baláž (born 29 October 1958 in Nevoľné, Slovakia, former Czechoslovakia) is a contemporary Slovak artist. His practise as an artist is usually associated with political art, environmental, activist, mail-art and neo-conceptualism. After 1988 he began working with text as art, neo-conceptual and post-conceptual texts (intext, outtext).", "score": "1.5379465" }, { "id": "6633025", "title": "Ferdinand Čatloš", "text": " Ferdinand Čatloš (October 7, 1895 – December 16, 1972) - born Csatlós Nándor - was a Slovak military officer and politician. Throughout his short career in the administration of the Slovak Republic he held the post of Minister of Defence. He was also the commanding officer of the Field Army Bernolák during the Invasion of Poland and Operation Barbarossa. On 2 August 1944 he abandoned his post and joined the partisan fighters. At the conclusion of World War II, he was imprisoned for three years by the National Court of Bratislava and released in 1948. He spent the remainder of his life working as an ordinary clerk in Martin, Czechoslovakia.", "score": "1.5298574" }, { "id": "8846684", "title": "Nandor Njergeš", "text": " Nandor Njergeš (Serbian Cyrillic: Haндop Њepгeш, Hungarian: Nyerges Nándor ; born September 4, 1973 ) is a retired Serbian football goalkeeper of Hungarian descent. During his career he played with FK Budućnost Banatski Dvor, renamed in 2005 to FK Banat Zrenjanin.", "score": "1.5286219" }, { "id": "13360395", "title": "Nándor Zsolt", "text": " Nándor Zsolt (May 12, 1887 Esztergom, Austria-Hungary - June 24, 1936 Budapest, Hungary) was a Hungarian violinist, conductor, composer and the professor of violin at the Franz Liszt Academy of Music. He was born in a professional musician family; his father was a conductor and music teacher. After graduating at Esztergom, he entered the Franz Liszt Academy of Music in Budapest, taking violin studies with Jenő Hubay and composition with Hans von Koessler. After completing his studies in Budapest, he continued his musical career in England, where he became the leader of the Queen's Hall Orchestra in London in 1908 at the age of 21. Nándor Zsolt made his soloist debut in London at The Proms in 1909, playing the Tchaikovsky's violin concerto under the baton of Henry ", "score": "1.5259235" }, { "id": "192819", "title": "2008 Canadian honours", "text": "Mr. Béla Balázs ", "score": "1.5226672" } ]
What is Maurice Le Boucher's occupation?
[ "composer", "organist", "organ player" ]
occupation
Maurice Le Boucher
4,805,477
83
[ { "id": "15960032", "title": "Maurice Le Boucher", "text": " Maurice Georges Eugène Le Boucher (25 May 1882 – 9 September 1964), was a French organist, composer, and pedagogue. Le Boucher was born in Isigny-sur-Mer. In 1904, he entered the Conservatoire de Paris, where he was a student of Gabriel Fauré. In 1907, Le Boucher won the prestigious Grand Prix de Rome. Later, he became professor at the École Niedermeyer and organist at St. Germain-l'Auxerrois in Paris. He wrote an Organ Symphony in E major, which was published in 1917 by Éditions Leduc, Paris. He wrote a drama on Oscar Wilde la Duchesse de Padoue which was published by Salabert in 1931. In 1920, he was appointed as director of the Montpellier Conservatory, a post he held for 22 years. His students included André David. Le Boucher died in 1964 in Paris.", "score": "1.7412413" }, { "id": "14542532", "title": "Maurice Boucher", "text": " Born in Causapscal, Quebec, Canada, he was raised in poverty in the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve borough of inner-city Montreal, where his family moved when he was two years old. Boucher had seven siblings with his father working as a construction worker while his mother stayed at home to raise their eight children. Boucher's father was an alcoholic who frequently beat his wife and children, and his mother was described as the main source of love during his childhood. In the 1960s–1970s, the construction industry in Quebec was dominated by the Mafia-linked union boss André \"Dédé\" Desjardins, known as le roi de la construction ", "score": "1.6600542" }, { "id": "2437649", "title": "Jules Boucher", "text": " He was born on June 8, 1933 in Sayabec, Bas-Saint-Laurent. He became a social worker in Riviere-du-Loup.", "score": "1.6209469" }, { "id": "14542533", "title": "Maurice Boucher", "text": " king of construction\"), who ran the Conseil des métiers de la construction union quite brutally. The world that Boucher grew up was a world where violence was commonplace and where corruption was accepted as normal. Boucher's school reports describe him as an indifferent student and he dropped out of school in grade 9 to work odd jobs. In April 1973, the 19-year-old Boucher committed his first known crime, when he stole $200 from a dépanneur. In July 1974, Boucher got a certificate allowing him to work in the construction industry, but he only lasted a week before being fired due to ", "score": "1.5941721" }, { "id": "570009", "title": "Faucher de Saint-Maurice", "text": " Narcisse Henri Édouard Faucher (April 18, 1844 – April 1, 1897) was a Canadian author, journalist, army officer, and politician who published books under the name Faucher de Saint-Maurice.", "score": "1.58197" }, { "id": null, "title": "Maurice Boucher", "text": "Maurice Boucher\n\nMaurice Boucher (21 June 1953 – 10 July 2022) was a Canadian gangster, convicted murderer, reputed drug trafficker, and outlaw biker—once president of the Hells Angels' Quebec Nomads chapter. Boucher led Montreal's Hells Angels against the rival Rock Machine biker gang during the Quebec Biker War () of 1994 through 2002 in Quebec, Canada. In 2002, Boucher was convicted of ordering the murders of two Quebec prison officers in an effort to destabilize the Quebec Justice system. \n\nHe was sent to serve three life sentences at Canada's only supermax prison, in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines. While imprisoned there, Boucher survived several assassination attempts motivated by his infamy, and was placed in a special unit of the prison to isolate him. Authorities transferred him in June 2022 to the nearby Archambault Institution under conditions of secrecy so he could receive palliative care following the metastasis of his throat cancer. He died 10 July 2022. \n\nBoucher had two children, Alexandra Mongeau and Francis Boucher, who have also been involved in organized crime.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Maurice Duplessis", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Maurice Quentin de La Tour", "text": "Maurice Quentin de La Tour\n\nMaurice Quentin de La Tour (5 September 1704 – 17 February 1788) was a French Rococo portraitist who worked primarily with pastels. Among his most famous subjects were Voltaire, Rousseau, Louis XV and Madame de Pompadour.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Henri Nibelle", "text": "Henri Nibelle\n\nHenri Jules Joseph Nibelle (6 November 1883 – 18 November 1967) was a French organist, choral conductor and composer.", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Arsène Lupin", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "14542560", "title": "Maurice Boucher", "text": " did not speak French and his grotesquely deformed face was as far from being telegenic as possible, the Quebec media preferred to focus on the charismatic French-Canadian Boucher. In what appeared to be a division of labour, Stadnick was in charge of expanding the Angels into Ontario and the Prairies while bringing the Angel chapters in British Columbia which answered to the Hells Angels chapter in Seattle under control of the Montreal chapter while Boucher had the task of fighting the Quebec biker war. As Stadnick spoke no French and Boucher no English, police wiretaps showed that the two men needed interpreters to communicate. On 17 October 1994, ", "score": "1.5767136" }, { "id": "570010", "title": "Faucher de Saint-Maurice", "text": " Faucher was born in Quebec. His father, Narcisse-Constantin Faucher, was a lawyer and the seigneur of Beaumont, Vincennes, and of Montapeine. His mother was Catherine-Henriette Marcier. He was educated at the Séminaire de Québec and at the Collège de Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière. In 1864, he joined the conflict in Mexico and became a captain in the 4th Mexican sharpshooters. Afterward, he was aide-de-camp to General the Viscount Courtois Roussel d'Hurbal. He served through the war, being in 11 battles, 32 minor engagements, and at the sieges of Oaxaca and Satillo; at the latter, he was made prisoner and sentenced to be shot, but was, instead, exchanged. While in Mexico, he met Honoré Beaugrand. He returned to Canada in 1866, and was for the next fourteen years a clerk of the legislative council of the province of Quebec. In 1874 he began ", "score": "1.5743717" }, { "id": "14542531", "title": "Maurice Boucher", "text": " Maurice Boucher (born June 21, 1953) is a Canadian murderer, reputed drug trafficker, and outlaw biker—the former President of the Hells Angels' Montreal chapter. Boucher led Montreal's Hells Angels against the rival Rock Machine biker gang during the Quebec Biker war (Guerre des motards au Québec) of 1994 through 2002 in Quebec, Canada. In 2002, Boucher was convicted of ordering the murders of two Quebec prison officers in an effort to destabilize the Quebec Justice system, and is currently serving three life sentences at Canada’s only supermax prison in Sainte-Anne-des-Plaines. He has one known daughter, Alexandra Boucher, and a son, Francis Boucher.", "score": "1.5727069" }, { "id": "15095516", "title": "Georges Mounin", "text": " Georges Mounin, born Louis Leboucher, who also wrote under the pseudonym Jean Boucher (June 20, 1910 – January 10, 1993) was a French linguist, translator and semiotician. He was active in the French Resistance and the French Communist Party.", "score": "1.5707068" }, { "id": "27033358", "title": "Pierre Boucher de la Bruère", "text": " Pierre Boucher de la Bruère (baptized Joseph-René-Pierre-Hypolite) (July 5, 1837 &ndash; March 6, 1917) was a Canadian lawyer, journalist, author, office holder, and politician. Born in Saint-Hyacinthe, Lower Canada, the son of Pierre-Claude Boucher de La Bruère and Hippolyte Boucher de Labroquerie, he studied at the Séminaire de Saint-Hyacinthe. From 1857 to 1858 he studied law at the Université Laval and he was called to the bar of Lower Canada in 1860. He started practicing law in Saint-Hyacinthe and was protonotary for the judicial district of Saint-Hyacinthe from 1870 to 1875. In 1875, he became editor of Le Courrier de Saint-Hyacinthe and became owner in 1877. In 1877, he was named to the Legislative Council of Quebec for the Rougemont division. A Quebec Conservative, he was Speaker of the Council from 1882 to 1889 and again from 1892 to 1895. He resigned in 1895 and was appointed superintendent of public instruction. He was a member of the group that created the Société d'industrie laitière de la province de Québec in 1882, an organization to improve the dairy industry in Quebec that founded a dairy school in Saint-Hyacinth in 1892, later taken over by the provincial government.", "score": "1.5632639" }, { "id": "14542569", "title": "Maurice Boucher", "text": " estate developer. A great fan of Luciano Pavarotti and Phil Collins, Boucher always purchased front-row seats whenever those artists played in Montreal. Despite his background in the white supremacist gang, the SS, Boucher's bodyguard was the Haitian immigrant Gregory \"Picasso\" Woolley, who was also reputed to be the best assassin working for the Angels. Woolley is known as \"Picasso\" in the Montreal underworld because it is said that he is such an artist when it comes to killing, having first killed at the age of 17 when he knifed another Haitian immigrant and gang member to death. Woolley was said to have done such an \"exquisite\" job at carving up his rival that he earned the nickname ", "score": "1.5617089" }, { "id": "9470309", "title": "Gustave Bouchereau", "text": " Louis Gustave Bouchereau (20 June 1835, Montrichard – 22 February 1900, Paris) was a French psychiatrist. He studied medicine in Paris, becoming a hospital externe in 1859, followed by an internship in 1863. In Paris he had as instructors Jean-Pierre Falret, Jules Baillarger, Jean-Martin Charcot and Alfred Vulpian. In 1866 he obtained his medical doctorate with a thesis on old hemiplegia, Des Hémiplégies anciennes. Soon afterwards, he was co-appointed with Valentin Magnan (1835–1916) to the Sainte-Anne asylum in Paris. In 1879 he succeeded Prosper Lucas (1805–1885) as superintendent of the women's division at Sainte-Anne. Bouchereau served in a field hospital during the Franco-Prussian War. He was wounded at the Battle of Châtillon, subsequently being awarded with the badge of the Legion of Honour for gallantry and devotion. In 1871 he became a member of the Société Médico-Psychologique of Paris, being elected its president in 1891. For many years he served as general secretary of the Association mutuelle des médecins aliénistes de France.", "score": "1.5478944" }, { "id": "25944739", "title": "Claude Boucher (politician)", "text": " Claude Boucher (born September 2, 1942) is a former Quebec political figure. He represented Johnson in the Quebec National Assembly from 1994 to 2007 as a member of the Parti Québécois. He was born in Bromptonville, Quebec (now Sherbrooke, Quebec), the son of Edgar A. Boucher and Yvette Lecours, and was educated at the Université de Sherbrooke. He was employed in the fields of health, education and social services and was manager at the CLSC in Sherbrooke. Boucher was mayor of Saint-Denis-de-Brompton and served as prefect for the Regional County Municipality of Val-Saint-François. He was defeated when he ran for reelection in the 2007 provincial election. His son Étienne-Alexis served in the Quebec National Assembly from 2008-2012, as the member for Johnson.", "score": "1.5457844" }, { "id": "11693375", "title": "Alfred Boucher", "text": " Alfred Boucher (23 September 1850 – 1934) was a French sculptor who was a mentor to Camille Claudel and a friend of Auguste Rodin.", "score": "1.537538" }, { "id": "404875", "title": "Patrick Boucheron", "text": " Patrick Boucheron was born in 1965 in Paris. Boucheron was educated at the Lycée Marcelin Berthelot in Saint-Maur-des-Fossés and the Lycée Henri IV in Paris. He graduated from the École normale supérieure de lettres et sciences humaines (ENS) in Saint-Cloud and earned the agrégation in history in 1988. He earned a PhD in history from the University of Paris in 1994. His thesis supervisor was Pierre Toubert.", "score": "1.5293815" }, { "id": "30730545", "title": "Tom Boucher", "text": " Thomas Charles Boucher (born 1873, date of death unknown) was an English professional association football player at the turn of the twentieth century. He made over 130 appearances in the Football League and over 60 appearances in the Southern League as a centre-forward or inside-forward in the years either side of the start of the twentieth century.", "score": "1.5196447" }, { "id": "570011", "title": "Faucher de Saint-Maurice", "text": " more effort into his writing. In 1881 he was elected a representative for Bellechasse to the Quebec legislative assembly as a Conservative; he was reelected in 1886 but defeated in 1890. He was a commissioner in 1881 from the province of Quebec at the third Geographical Congress and Exhibition in Venice, and while in Europe was created a chevalier of the Legion of Honor for services rendered to France in the Canadian press. He also had been created a knight of the Imperial order of Guadaloupe by Maximilian, and received the medal of the Mexican campaign from Napoleon III. He was editor of Le journal de Québec (1883-5) then wrote for Le Canadien (1885-6). He contributed largely to the newspaper press in France, Canada, and the United States. He died at Quebec City at the age of 52.", "score": "1.5186298" }, { "id": "14542568", "title": "Maurice Boucher", "text": " morning to meet other Angels at about 9:30 am. Cleverly, Boucher usually paid his lawyer to be present at his meetings with other Angels, thus technically making these meetings between a client and his lawyer, meaning the police could not record these meetings as that would violate solicitor-client confidentiality. Boucher purchased a mansion in the south end of Montreal, complete with gardens and stables for his horses. Boucher was also active as a real estate developer in Mexico, owning several properties in Acapulco and often hosted parties attended by senior officers of the extremely corrupt Acapulco police department. When filing his income taxes, Boucher variously gave his occupation as a chef, construction worker, used car salesman, and ", "score": "1.5148056" }, { "id": "6549486", "title": "Francois Boucher (art historian)", "text": " François Leon Louis Boucher (1885–1966) was a French museum curator and writer. Boucher was born in Paris and became curator at the Musée Carnavalet, Paris. He founded the Union française des arts du costume (UFAC) that later merged with the costume museum Musée de la mode et du textile of the Louvre under the guidance of his assistant Yvonne Deslandres. Boucher died in Neuilly-sur-Seine.", "score": "1.5143476" }, { "id": "13541914", "title": "Roger Boucher", "text": " Roger Boucher (13 January 1885 – 20 October 1918) was a French organist and composer.", "score": "1.5132322" } ]
What is T. P. Poonatchi's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
T. P. Poonatchi
1,046,764
35
[ { "id": "13491233", "title": "T. P. Poonatchi", "text": " T. P. Poonatchi is an Indian politician and incumbent member of the Tamil Nadu Legislative Assembly from the Manachanallur constituency. He represents the Anna Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam party.", "score": "1.778408" }, { "id": "11866252", "title": "P.T. Punnoose", "text": " P.T Punnoose was born on 20 November 1911 at Thiruvalla in Travancore. His father was I. Thomas. He was educated at Changanacherry and Trivandrum.", "score": "1.433663" }, { "id": "5924044", "title": "P. T. Chandapilla", "text": " Podimannil Thomas Chandapilla was the only son of a Christian preacher Chiramannil Chadaplilla Thomas and his wife Sosamma Thomas. His parents were members of the Mar Thoma Church, working in tribal areas with no regular income, trusting to God to supply their needs. Despite the family's poverty, Chandapilla was educated in Mar Thoma Boarding school and Gurukulam High School, finishing his schooling in 1942.", "score": "1.4293404" }, { "id": "5924043", "title": "P. T. Chandapilla", "text": " Podimannil Thomas Chandapilla (18 March 1926 – 4 December 2010) was the Vicar General of St. Thomas Evangelical Church of India. He ministered to the university students in India and the Church at large through new mission initiatives, including the founding of Jubilee Memorial Bible college at Chennai, India.", "score": "1.4238733" }, { "id": "12179155", "title": "Polayil Joseph Thomas", "text": " Thomas hails from a middle-class family from Alappuzha district. A brilliant student right from his school days, Thomas is a post-graduate in Physics and later took his Masters in Economics. Thomas joined the Indian Administrative Service as one of the toppers in the Civil Services Examination in the year 1973. His elder brother, Johny Joseph, is also an IAS officer. As an IAS officer, Thomas has held important assignments in Kerala as the Chief Electoral Officer of the state, and as Secretary in Finance, Industry, Agriculture, Law and Justice and Human Resource Development Departments. As the chief electoral officer, Thomas was instrumental in introducing electronic voting ", "score": "1.4193552" }, { "id": "11243627", "title": "P. Uthayakumar", "text": "P. Uthayakumar Uthayakumar s/o Ponnusamy (Tamil: உதயகுமார் பொன்னுசாமி) (born 7 November 1961) is a Malaysian lawyer of Tamil origin. He is the older brother of P. Waytha Moorthy, HINDRAF (the Hindu Rights Action Force) lawyer who headed a team of lawyers to file a class action suit against the United Kingdom for \"abandoning minority Indians to the mercy of majoritarian Malay rule while granting independence on August 31, 1957\". Although Uthayakumar is only a legal advisor of HINDRAF, a coalition of several non-governmental organisations, he is regarded as the de facto leader of HINDRAF. Uthayakumar was born on 7 November", "score": "1.3746195" }, { "id": "15415422", "title": "P. J. Thomas (Indian administrative officer)", "text": "from a middle-class family from Alappuzha district. A brilliant student right from his school days, Thomas is a post-graduate in Physics and later took his Masters in Economics. Thomas joined the Indian Administrative Service as one of the toppers in the Civil Services Examination in the year 1973. His elder brother, Johny Joseph, is also an IAS officer. As an IAS officer, Thomas has held important assignments in Kerala as the Chief Electoral Officer of the state, and as Secretary in Finance, Industry, Agriculture, Law and Justice and Human Resource Development Departments. As the chief electoral officer, Thomas was instrumental", "score": "1.3639333" }, { "id": "10316660", "title": "T. M. Krishna", "text": "assisted with relief, rescue and rehabilitation efforts. Today, the Urur Olcott Kuppam Vizha is now Chennai Kalai Theruvizha, a new avatar that will begin exploring new locations around the city in collaboration with local communities. T. M. Krishna Thodur Madabusi Krishna (born 22 January 1976) is a Carnatic music vocalist, writer and author, and socio-political activist. As a vocalist, he has courted controversy by making a large number of innovations in both the style and substance of his concerts. As an activist, he has championed a number of causes connected to the environment, the caste system, communalism, religious reform, reform", "score": "1.3630308" }, { "id": "15129278", "title": "P. T. Chandapilla", "text": "1988. An eloquent preacher, he was described in 1997 with the words, \"He lives like Mother Teresa but thinks like John Calvin.\" www.chandapilla.blogspot.in Blog: A Tribute to Very Rev. P. T. Chandapilla P. T. Chandapilla Podimannil Thomas Chandapilla (18 March 1926 – 4 December 2010) was the Vicar General of St. Thomas Evangelical Church of India. He ministered to the university students in India and the Church at large through new mission initiatives, including the founding of Jubilee Memorial Bible college at Chennai, India. Podimannil Thomas Chandapilla was the only son of a Christian preacher Chiramannil Chadaplilla Thomas and his", "score": "1.3619235" }, { "id": "12269330", "title": "C. M. Poonacha", "text": "C. M. Poonacha Cheppudira Muthana Poonacha usually referred to as C. M. Poonacha was Chief Minister of Coorg, Minister in Mysore State, Member of Parliament (Rajya Sabha and Lok Sabha), Union Railway Minister of India and Governor of Madhya Pradesh and Orissa. C. M. Poonacha was a descendant of the Coorg Dewans. During the Freedom Movement he was sentenced to imprisonment twice during the Salt Satyagraha in 1932 and 1933. He was again imprisoned in 1940–41. and in 1942–44. He became a member of All-India Congress Committee in 1938. Also, in 1938 he was elected to Coorg District Board, became", "score": "1.3614769" }, { "id": "545283", "title": "P. T. Thomas", "text": " P. T. Thomas is a Member of the Kerala Legislative Assembly, representing Thrikkakkara assembly constituency. He is also a former Member of Parliament who represented the Idukki Lok Sabha constituency in Kerala, India. He belongs to Indian National Congress. He was elected to Kerala Legislative Assembly from Thrikkakkara assembly constituency in 2016 Kerala Legislative Assembly election by defeating Sebastian Paul of Communist Party of India (Marxist) by a margin of 11996 votes.", "score": "1.4158396" }, { "id": "1290937", "title": "P. Uthayakumar", "text": " Uthayakumar s/o Ponnusamy (Tamil: உதயகுமார் பொன்னுசாமி) (born 7 November 1961) is a Malaysian lawyer of Tamil origin. He is the older brother of P. Waytha Moorthy, HINDRAF (the Hindu Rights Action Force) lawyer who headed a team of lawyers to file a class action suit against the United Kingdom for \"abandoning minority Indians to the mercy of majoritarian Malay rule while granting independence on August 31, 1957\". Although Uthayakumar is only a legal advisor of HINDRAF, a coalition of several non-governmental organisations, he is regarded as the de facto leader of HINDRAF.", "score": "1.4046581" }, { "id": "11866251", "title": "P.T. Punnoose", "text": " P. T. Punnoose (20 November 1911 – 1971) was an Indian politician. He was elected to the Lok Sabha, the lower house of the Parliament of India from the Ambalapuzha in Kerala.", "score": "1.3977711" }, { "id": "15784044", "title": "T. S. Suresh", "text": " Tirupattur Sathyanarayanan Suresh (born 1 July 1986) is an Indian film editor working in the Indian film Industry.", "score": "1.3957231" }, { "id": "12179154", "title": "Polayil Joseph Thomas", "text": " '''Polayil Joseph Thomas (P. J. Thomas)''' is a 1973 batch Indian Administrative Service officer from Kerala cadre. He was appointed as the 14th Chief Vigilance Commissioner of India, in an appointment that came under Supreme Court's review and later to be annulled by court as \"non-est\" in law. The appointment and the subsequent quashing led to several public debates with regard to the eligibility criteria for CVC's appointment, judicial activism, as well as the role played by mainstream media to hide several key facts that could establish his otherwise unblemished record in the civil services.", "score": "1.3937811" }, { "id": "9432809", "title": "Pratap Naik", "text": " Fr. Pratap Naik, S.J. (real name Carvalho) is a Mangalorean Catholic Jesuit priest from Kundapur, India. He was the director of the Thomas Stephens Konkkni Kendr (TSKK), a research institute working on issues related to the Konkani language, literature, culture and education. The institute is based in Alto Porvorim, on the outskirts of the state capital of Panaji, Goa.", "score": "1.3860321" }, { "id": "5584485", "title": "T. M. Thomas Isaac", "text": " The son of T. P. Mathew and Saramma Mathew, Isaac obtained a PhD from the Centre for Development Studies. His PhD thesis is titled Class Struggle and Industrial Structure: A Study of Coir Weaving Industry in Kerala 1859 - 1980. While a student, he became involved in student politics, being involved with the Students Federation of India (SFI), an organisation which is politically linked with the Communist Party of India (Marxist). He has held posts in the SFI at college, district and state level. Isaac was a professor at the Centre for Development Studies, Thiruvananthapuram and has published a number of articles and books. Isaac is divorced from his wife Dr. Nata Duvvury who is currently a senior lecturer at National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland. They have two daughters: Sara Duvisac, and Dora Duvisac.", "score": "1.3833536" }, { "id": "2418027", "title": "Kookkanam Rahman", "text": " Kookkanam Rahman (also known as M. T. P Abdul Rahman) is a social worker, writer, orator and retired teacher living in the South Indian state of Kerala.", "score": "1.3808265" }, { "id": "9166167", "title": "South Malabar", "text": " - Social reformer (hailed from erstwhile Ponnani taluk). • Vaidyaratnam P. S. Warrier - Ayurvedic physician. • Vaidyaratnam Triprangode Moossad - Ayurvedic physician. • Vallathol Narayana Menon - Malayalam poet. • Variyan Kunnathu Kunjahammed Haji - Indian Freedom Fighter. • Vazhenkada Kunchu Nair - Kathakali master and a Padma Shri winner. • Vazhenkada Vijayan - Retired principal of Kerala Kalamandalam. • Veliyankode Umar Khasi - Freedom fighter and poet. • Vinay Govind - Indian film director. • Zainuddin Makhdoom II - The author of Tuhfat Ul Mujahideen. • Zakariya Mohammed - Film director, screenwriter, and actor. • Zakeer Mundampara - Footballer. • Zeenath - actress.", "score": "1.3804703" }, { "id": "16492791", "title": "Resul Pookutty", "text": " Pookutty moved to Mumbai after his graduation. He termed it as \"a natural immigration as a graduate of the institute.\" He pointed out that \"Ninety-five per cent of the technicians of the Mumbai film industry are alumni of FTII, Pune.\" Pookutty made his debut in sound design with the 1997 film Private Detective: Two Plus Two Plus One, directed by Rajat Kapoor. He got his big break with the critically acclaimed 2005 film Black, directed by Sanjay Leela Bhansali. He subsequently engineered sound for major productions like Musafir (2004), Zinda (2006), Traffic Signal (2007), Gandhi, My Father (2007), Saawariya (2007), Dus Kahaniyaan, Kerala Varma Pazhassi Raja (2009) and Enthiran (2010).", "score": "1.3774242" }, { "id": "27483251", "title": "Tini Tom", "text": " Tom was born at North Paravoor, Kerala. His father, Puthevelikkal Pallaty Tomy P.D. is an engineer. He has a sister Tincy. Tom completed his high school education from St. Albert's High School, Ernakulam and his pre-degree course at St. Albert's College, Ernakulam, and degree in politics from Maharajas College, Ernakulam. He studied L.L.B at Ramamanohar Lohia College of Law, Bangalore but discontinued. He has a wife Rupa and a son.", "score": "1.3760544" }, { "id": "26228700", "title": "Poongani", "text": " Poongani was born in 1934 in Saravanan Theri near Agastheeswaram in the Kanyakumari district of Tamil Nadu at the tip of India. She attended school till fourth grade but family circumstances did not permit her to continue. At the age of either 10 or 12 she saw a troupe performing the villu paatu at a local temple. Two notable women exponents of the art-form, Lakshmi and Dhanalakshmi, encouraged her to pursue it. She then learned from Vedhamanikkam Pulavar and Sivalingam Vathiyar, maestros of the tradition. Poongani began performing with a troupe in which Thangapandian, a percussionist of the kudam (a clay pot instrument), was a member. They married when she was fifteen years old, and continued to perform together. Thangapandian died in 2015. Poongani lived in penury on a small pension in Kottaaram near Nagercoil, until her death on 2 November 2018, although in her final year her residence was given a polish. Lady Kash, a Tamil rapper from Singapore, visited her and cleaned her home. Her visit saw Poongani again at the centre of attention. The press reported that Lady Kash had created a song named \"Villupattu\" in her honour.", "score": "1.3756008" }, { "id": "25944482", "title": "P. T. Chacko", "text": " P. T. Chacko was born on 9 April 1915 to Thomas Puthiaparampil and Annamma Thomas Koottumkal (Pullolil) Chirakkadavu in erstwhile Travancore. He was married to Mariamma Ottaplackal, Chirakkadavu and was survived by six children. His son, P. C. Thomas, represented the Muvattupuzha constituency in Lok Sabha from 1989 to 2009, and also served as the Union Minister of State for Law in the Atal Bihari Vajpayee cabinet. He graduated from St. Joseph’s College, Trichy, the University of Madras after studying in St. Berchmans College Changanacherry. He continued his studies in law in Law College, Trivandrum, where as a student leader in 1938, he launched himself into the freedom movement and the struggle for self-government in the princely state of Travancore.", "score": "1.3733233" }, { "id": "10940575", "title": "P. L. Punia", "text": " Panna Lal Punia, usually known as P. L. Punia, is an Indian politician and Member of the Rajya Sabha from Uttar Pradesh since 2014. He was member of the Lok Sabha from 2009 to 2014 and represented Barabanki (Lok Sabha constituency). He is a Dalit leader of the Indian National Congress party. He was also chairperson of the National Commission for Scheduled Castes between 2013-16 and as such sat ex officio on the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC). In July 2012, Punia appeared in the popular TV show Satyamev Jayate, hosted by Bollywood star Aamir Khan, to raise awareness of discrimination against scheduled castes.", "score": "1.371016" }, { "id": "26488120", "title": "P. T. Ajay Mohan", "text": " Ajay Mohan is currently secretary of the KPCC and Overseas Indian Cultural Congress (OICC) member. He was also the candidate representing the INC in the Ponnani constituency for the 2011 Kerala Legislative Assembly election, in which he lost by a small margin of 4,101 votes. In May 2015 Ajay Mohan started an indefinite hunger strike demanding a detailed probe into the alleged irregularities in the construction of Chamravatom RCB and Ponnani fishing harbour, at Ponnani on 26 May 2015.", "score": "1.3702757" } ]
What is René Bégin's occupation?
[ "politician", "political leader", "political figure", "polit.", "pol" ]
occupation
René Bégin
1,688,359
71
[ { "id": "8434864", "title": "René Bégin", "text": " René Bégin (July 2, 1912 &ndash; November 18, 1981) was a Canadian politician and wholesaler. He was elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1957 election as a Member of the Liberal Party for the riding of Quebec West. He lost the 1953 election as an Independent Liberal candidate and lost the elections of 1958 and 1962 as a Member of the Liberal Party. He was born in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada.", "score": "1.7555153" }, { "id": "32090038", "title": "René Revol", "text": " René Revol (born November 22, 1947 in La Mure, Isère) is a French politician and a member of the Left Party (PG). He is mayor of Grabels, a working-class suburb of Montpellier (Hérault) since 2008. A former member of the Socialist Party's left-wing, he joined Jean-Luc Mélenchon and Marc Dolez's Left Party in 2008. In 2010, he was selected to be the Left Front's candidate in Languedoc-Roussillon for the 2010 regional elections. His list also received the support of the New Anticapitalist Party (NPA), despite negotiations between the NPA and Left Front failing nationally.", "score": "1.50454" }, { "id": "5680656", "title": "Paul Bégin", "text": " Paul Bégin (born May 15, 1943 in Dolbeau-Mistassini, Quebec) is a former Quebec politician and Cabinet Minister. Member of the Parti Québecois, he served as the province's Justice Minister from 1994 to 1997 and from 2001 to 2002. Begin is a graduate from the Université Laval obtaining a law degree. He was admitted to the Barreau du Québec in 1969 and practiced law for 25 years mostly at the law firm Pinsonneault Pothier Begin Delisle. He was first elected in the Louis-Hébert riding in the 1994 elections when the Parti Québécois re-claimed power after 9 years of Liberal governance under ", "score": "1.4954777" }, { "id": "12551225", "title": "Emile-Auguste Begin", "text": " Begin was born at Metz on 24 April 1802 to François-Nicolas Bégin, a prominent physician, and Marie Victorine Ledoux. Begin received his medical training at the University of Strasbourg. During the Siege of Paris (1870–71), he treated the wounded, which earned him the Legion of Honor. In 1874, he was appointed assistant librarian at the Bibliothèque nationale de France a position that allowed him to continue his historical research. In 1881, Émile Bégin was appointed chief librarian at the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Émile Bégin died on 31 May 1888, after visiting his hometown annexed by the German Empire. He is buried in the cemetery of Montrouge in Paris.", "score": "1.4893342" }, { "id": "14297579", "title": "René Röspel", "text": " René Röspel (born 9 July 1964) is a German biologist and politician of the Social Democratic Party (SPD) who has been serving as a member of the Bundestag from the state of North Rhine-Westphalia since 1998.", "score": "1.4798973" }, { "id": null, "title": "René Bégin", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "J.-Eugène Bissonnette", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "J.-Wilfrid Dufresne", "text": "J.-Wilfrid Dufresne\n\nJ.-Wilfrid Dufresne (5 August 1911 – 30 June 1982) was a Progressive Conservative party member of the House of Commons of Canada. Born in Quebec City, Quebec, he held various other jobs such as interior decorator, promoter, teacher, a Quebec provincial public servant, a federal statistician for the Minimum Wages Commission.<ref name=CPG />\n\nDufresne attended schools at the Saint-Sauveur orphanage, Saint-Sauveur Academy and St. Mary's College.<ref name=CPG57 />\n\nHe was elected to Parliament at the Quebec West riding in the 1953 general election as a Progressive Conservative, defeating Liberal party incumbent Charles Parent. Dufresne served only one term in Parliament before Liberal René Bégin won the riding back in the 1957 election. His next attempt to win a House of Commons seat was made in the 1972 election where he was a Social Credit candidate at Langelier riding, but was unable to unseat incumbent Jean Marchand. His last federal campaign was in the 1979 election at Québec-Est where he returned to the Progressive Conservative party, but was again unsuccessful.\nSection::::References.\n<references />\n", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Louis-Édouard Roberge", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": null, "title": "Maurice Duplessis", "text": "", "score": null }, { "id": "10865377", "title": "Monique Bégin", "text": " Bégin was born in Rome and raised in France and Portugal before emigrating to Canada at the end of World War II. She received a MA degree in sociology from the Université de Montréal and a PhD degree from the Sorbonne. She describes her early life in Montreal as challenging, but credits community groups and her childhood role as a Girl Guides of Canada member as \"sav(ing) her life\".", "score": "1.4693058" }, { "id": "26099229", "title": "René Stockman", "text": " René Stockman studied at the Saint-Laurens Institute in Zelzate between 1966 and 1972. He finished grammar school with a diploma in economics. In 1972 he joined the Congregation of the Brothers of Charity. He fulfilled the noviciate training in (1972–1973). He then started in Ghent his training as a nurse at the Higher Institute for Paramedic Professions (1973–1976). He continued with studies leading to a Master in medical and social sciences and management of hospitals at the University of Louvain (1977–1980). His thesis was entitled Organization of mental health-care in Rwanda and Burundi. Additionally he obtained a teaching certificate for teaching in higher secondary schools (1981), at the University of Louvain. He completed his education by obtaining a doctors degree at the Catholic University of Louvain. His thesis was entitled: The place of the religious within the mental health care and obtained high examination marks (1986).", "score": "1.4641156" }, { "id": "28357176", "title": "René", "text": " Rene Plasencia, (born 1973) Florida House of Representatives member ; René Juan Pérez Joglar (born 1978), known professionally as Residente, is a Puerto Rican rapper, writer and filmmaker. ; Rene Ranger (born 1986), New Zealand rugby player ; René Reyes, American baseball player ; René Robert, Canadian ice hockey player ; René Rougeau (born 1986), American basketball player for Maccabi Haifa of the Israeli Basketball Premier League ; Rene Russo, American actress ; René Simard, French-Canadian singer ; René Steinke, German actor ; René Thom, French mathematician ; René Toribio (1912–1990), Guadeloupean politician The name was also given to the French Cafe owner and war hero René Artois in popular British TV series 'Allo 'Allo.", "score": "1.4522786" }, { "id": "1487072", "title": "Begin (surname)", "text": "Benny Begin (born 1943), Israeli politician ; Catherine Bégin (1939–2013), Canadian actress ; Charles Auguste Frédéric Bégin (1835–1901), French general and Acting Governor of Cochinchina ; Floyd Lawrence Begin (1902–1977), American Roman Catholic bishop ; Jean Bégin (1944–1991), Canadian ice hockey coach ; Johanne Bégin (born 1971), Canadian water polo player ; Joseph-Damase Bégin (1900–1977), Canadian politician ; Louis-Nazaire Bégin (1840–1925), Canadian Roman Catholic Church prelate ; Menachem Begin (1913–1992), Israeli prime minister ; Monique Bégin (born 1936), Canadian politician ; Paul Bégin (born 1943), Canadian politician ; René Bégin (1912–1980), Canadian politician ; Romeo Bégin (born 1895), Canadian politician ; Steve Bégin (born 1978), Canadian ice hockey player Begin or Bégin is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: ", "score": "1.4519076" }, { "id": "5581617", "title": "René Le Hir", "text": " Le Hir was born in Plougastel, Finistère. He participated in Skol Ober, correcting students' homework. He also taught Breton in Brest. He was county chair for the Parti National Breton in Landerneau.", "score": "1.447442" }, { "id": "15805441", "title": "René-Louis Baron", "text": " René-Louis Baron (born February 9, 1944 in Romans-sur-Isère) is a French inventor, author and songwriter. He was 14 years old when he played for the first time on stage as a jazz clarinetist. Later, in 1978, he began in Paris a career as solo singer. In 1980, he began to use computers to record his music for films, advertising, large companies, theaters, singers and art galleries as well as his song-poems. In 1989, he, a self-taught eclectic, began his own research into algorithmic composition and thus, musical artificial intelligence. In 1998, he filed the first patent for automatic musical composition at the National Industrial Property Institute in Paris.", "score": "1.4454284" }, { "id": "1583140", "title": "France-Albert René", "text": " René was born in Victoria, Crown Colony of Seychelles. He was educated at St. Mary's College, Southampton, England, and later completed his university education at King's College London before serving as a lawyer in Seychelles from 1957 to 1961. While abroad, he became heavily involved in the politics of the Labour Party, at the time led by Clement Attlee and later Hugh Gaitskell. These experiences led him to adopt a moderate socialist ideology that favoured some state intervention in the economy and strong ties with conservative forces such as the Roman Catholic Church – René's initial career goal was to join the priesthood. Later, René denounced local church leaders who criticised his policies. In 1964 he formed the Seychelles People's United Party, the forerunner to today's Seychelles People's Party. ", "score": "1.4341383" }, { "id": "16334776", "title": "Frédéric Bégin", "text": " Bégin graduated with a degree in music from the Université de Montréal.", "score": "1.4307497" }, { "id": "27306924", "title": "Ralph René", "text": " René referred to himself as an \"extra bright kid from the slums.\" After attending Rutgers University for a time, he dropped out and went to work as a carpenter and millwright. He then continued to pursue his personal interests in structural and mechanical engineering, physics, writing and inventing. René held two patents for simple mechanical tools. He maintained a website that archived many of his past columns and essays on a wide variety of subjects.", "score": "1.4264624" }, { "id": "30139838", "title": "Inger René", "text": " Inger René (born 1937) is a Swedish politician of the Moderate Party. She has been a member of the Riksdag since 1991.", "score": "1.419944" }, { "id": "27913706", "title": "René Christensen (politician)", "text": " René Bjørn Christensen (born 31 October 1970 in Nykøbing Falster) is a Danish politician, who is a member of the Folketing for the Danish People's Party. He entered parliament in 2008 after Mia Falkenberg resigned her seat. Christensen has a background as teacher and mechanic.", "score": "1.4143693" }, { "id": "29002531", "title": "Jean Bégin", "text": " Bégin was born in 1944 in Quebec. He played minor ice hockey for the Quebec Junior Aces during the 1964–65 season.", "score": "1.4109931" }, { "id": "4942938", "title": "René Gründer", "text": " René Gründer was born in 1975 in Zittau. He completed his doctorate at the University of Freiburg in 2010. Since 2013 he is professor of social work at the Baden-Württemberg Cooperative State University Heidenheim. He has written about new religious movements, especially Germanic neopaganism in Germany. His approach has been to focus on the perspectives of the individual practitioners and how they combine their worldview with the modernity they live in.", "score": "1.4053317" }, { "id": "8724788", "title": "Peter Van Den Begin", "text": " Peter Alfons Christiaan Van Den Begin (born 25 October 1964 in Berchem) is a Belgian actor and director. He has two daughters with actress and singer-songwriter Tine Reymer. His very first theater performances include acting in such plays as De Straat (Ronald Van Rillaer), Droomspel (Mannen van den Dam) and De getemde feeks (theaterMalpertuis). Later on he has continued his theater acting career by performing in various plays. Under Blauwe Maandag Compagnie he has performed in such pieces like All for love, Joko and Vrijen met dieren.", "score": "1.4052494" }, { "id": "15315475", "title": "René Leegte", "text": " René Willums Leegte (born 8 July 1968, in The Hague) is a Dutch politician and former businessman. As a member of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy he was a member of the House of Representatives of the Netherlands between 26 October 2010 and 24 March 2015. He focused on matters of natural environment, sustainable development and energy. In January 2015 Leegte laid down his party spokesmanship for gas winning in Groningen and earthquakes in the region. He did so after having a conversation on the topic and party strategy on it being overheard during a trainride. Leegte resigned as member of the House of Representatives on 24 March 2015 after having had an additional paid job for over a year at an organisation which was subjected to his parliamentary portfolio. Leegte did not enter the job in the register, nor reported the earnings, he also used his parliamentary emailadress for the additional job. Leegte felt this conflicted with the integrity rules of the People's Party for Freedom and Democracy and thus resigned.", "score": "1.4029697" } ]