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<dbpedia:Davide_Lufrano_Chaves> | Davide Lufrano Chaves (April 4, 1983 – December 26, 2013) was an Italian guitarist based in London, UK. He is best known for his work on guitar duo De Fuego and Alejandro Toledo and the Magic Tombolinos, who on January 1, 2014, released a studio album on his tribute.The album has been made available online for free on Toledo's website with an optional contribution to Multiple Myeloma Research. |
<dbpedia:List_of_territorial_entities_where_Romanian_is_an_official_language> | This is a list of countries and territories and organisations where Romanian is an official language: |
<dbpedia:Pilot_Butte_Inn> | The Pilot Butte Inn was a hotel building in Bend, Oregon, in the United States. Designed by American architects Tourtellotte & Hummel, the inn was built in 1917 and exhibited American Craftsman style architecture. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1972, becoming the first site in Deschutes County to be listed, but was demolished in June 1973. |
<dbpedia:Acropora_millepora> | Acropora millepora is a species of branching stony coral native to the western Indo-Pacific where it is found in shallow water from the east coast of Africa to the coasts of Japan and Australia. |
<dbpedia:Sherwood_Mall> | Sherwood Mall is one of two shopping malls in Stockton, California. It is next to Weberstown Mall. Opened in 1979, it features Macy's, Best Buy, Petco, Ulta, and HomeGoods. Dick's Sporting Goods has replaced the former Gottschalks. It is owned and managed by Stone Brothers. |
<dbpedia:Orange_County,_California,_in_popular_culture> | Orange County has been the setting for numerous written works and motion pictures, as well as a popular location for shooting motion pictures. |
<dbpedia:Cow_lung> | Cow lung is used in various cuisines and as a source for pulmonary surfactants. In Peru it is known as bofe. In Southeast Asia, Nasi kuning can be made with cow lung. Paru goreng is fried cow lung Padang food. It is a type of offal. In Indonesia, cow's lung is called paru and is eaten coated with spices (turmeric and coriander) and fried as a snack or side dish. |
<dbpedia:Sancha_Ponce_de_Cabrera> | Sancha Ponce de Cabrera (died in 1176) was a daughter of Ponce Giraldo de Cabrera, and his first wife, Sancha Núñez. She was the wife of the important magnate from the Kingdom of León, Vela Gutiérrez.In 1149, King Alfonso VIII of León gave the couple as a wedding gift the villa of Nogales which they, in turn, donated to Aldara Pérez, abbess at the Monastery of San Miguel de Bóveda in Ourense. |
<dbpedia:List_of_flora_of_North_Carolina> | This list includes plants native and introduced to the state of North Carolina, designated (N) and (I), respectively. Varieties and subspecies link to their parent species. |
<dbpedia:La_Venexiana_(play)> | La Venexiana "\The Venetian Girl") is an anonymous Italian comedy in five acts from 1535-1537. The comedy plays on the dialects of Tuscany, Venice and Bergamo. It was adapted to film under the same name as an erotic comedy in 1986. |
<dbpedia:Larry_Tucker_(screenwriter)> | Larry Tucker (1934 – 2001) was an American film and television writer, producer, and occasional actor, who wrote the comedy Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice (1969) with Paul Mazursky. Tucker and Mazursky were nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for their work on Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice.Tucker was from Philadelphia and began his career with humorist Mort Sahl at San Francisco's Hungry i club. |
<dbpedia:The_Rough_Guide_to_Tango_(1999_album)> | The Rough Guide to Tango is a world music compilation album originally released in 1999. Part of the World Music Network Rough Guides series, the album presents the tango music of Argentina with an eye toward the history of the genre, featuring 78 rpm recordings to tracks of the modern day. Teddy Peiro & Tom Andrews wrote the liner notes, and Phil Stanton—co-founder of the World Music Network—produced and compiled the album. This release was followed by a second edition a decade later. |
<dbpedia:Joseph_F._Ware,_Jr.> | Joseph Fulton "Joe" Ware, Jr. (November 8, 1916 - April 23, 2012) was a flight test engineer at Clarence "Kelly" Johnson's famed Skunk Works in the Lockheed Corporation on the U-2, the SR-71 Blackbird, and many others from World War II, becoming Department Manager of Engineering Flight Test. He was the son of Joseph F. Ware, Sr. |
<dbpedia:The_Busconductor_Hines> | The Busconductor Hines (ISBN 978-1857990355) is the first published novel of the Scottish writer James Kelman, published in 1984. This novel is the first to be published by Kelman, but it was written after A Chancer. |
<dbpedia:Leverhulme_Memorial> | The Leverhulme Memorial stands to the west of the Lady Lever Art Gallery on the junction of Windy Bank and Queen Mary's Drive, Port Sunlight, Wirral, Merseyside, England. It commemorates the life of William Lever, 1st Viscount Leverhulme, the businessman who created the factory and model village of Port Sunlight. The memorial was designed by James Lomax-Simpson, and the sculptor was William Reid Dick. |
<dbpedia:Dalkttongjip> | Dalkttongjip (Korean: 닭똥집) is a Korean cuisine dish of stir-fried chicken rectum prepared with spices. The sphincter dish is made from the muscular part of the anus. |
<dbpedia:Steve_Fossey> | Stephen John Fossey is a British astronomer at University of London Observatory, which is part of University College London (UCL). He is known as co-discoverer of the transit of planet HD 80606b (along with Ingo Waldmann and David Kipping). The transit of this Jupiter-sized planet, with its distinctive elliptical orbit around HD 80606, its parent star, was first sighted in February 2009. |
<dbpedia:Flex_language> | Flex language is flexibility inserted into a syndicated loan contract that allows the arranging bank to alter the terms of the borrowing in order to attract enough lenders to finance the loan. These alterations could include increases in the interest rate, changes in covenants, or increases in prepayment penalties. |
<dbpedia:Blank_Project> | Blank Project is the fourth studio album by Neneh Cherry, released by Smalltown Supersound on February 25, 2014. The record is Cherry's first album of solo music in 18 years. It was recorded and mixed over a 5-day period in Woodstock, NY. It was produced by Four Tet's Kieran Hebden and features a guest appearance by Robyn. The record also includes work with prior collaborators, synth/drum duo RocketNumberNine. Critical reviews of the album were very positive. |
<dbpedia:Guillén_Pérez_de_Guzmán> | Guillén Pérez de Guzmán (ca. 1180–1233), a member of the House of Guzmán, one of the most aristocratic of the Kingdom of Castile, was the maternal grandfather of Queen Beatrice of Castile, Queen Consort of Portugal as the wife of King Alfonso III. |
<dbpedia:Eden_(South_African_band)> | Eden is a South African pop band. Originally made up of Jay, Paulo, Johan and Sean, the band debuted during the popular South African Aardklop Festival followed by a tour all over South Africa releasing their album In in 1997. After Sean Else left in 2006, the boy band continued as a trio. Since 2003, the band has released three more albums, Point of No Return (2003), Eden (2006) and Knieë Lam (2008), a live DVD Live at The Mardi Gras (2008) and a compilation album Dekade (2009). |
<dbpedia:Carmen_Lamas> | Carmen Lamas (Spain, 1900 - Buenos Aires, 1990) was a Spanish-born tango singer, and the first Spanish actress who made her career in Argentina. Lamas debuted in 1921 in a cast headed by his father, Miguel Lamas, Spanish actor and director. She was one of the first important figures of the Teatro Maipo, a vedette in the group known at that time as "Primera triple". |
<dbpedia:Amelia_Rose_Earhart> | Amelia Rose Earhart (born 1983, Downey, California) is a private pilot and former traffic and weather news presenter for NBC affiliate in Denver, Colorado, where she resides. In 2013 Earhart started the Fly With Amelia Foundation, which grants flight scholarships to girls aged 16–18.Earhart was told by family members in her youth that she was a descendant of Amelia Mary Earhart. When she was in college, she hired a genealogist to research her connection to Amelia Earhart. |
<dbpedia:Begin_Again_(Kloq_album)> | Begin Again is the second album by British electronic rock band KLOQ, released 8 October 2013. The album was released via Metropolis Records.The album reached No. 2 in its 13th week in the European Alternative Charts and also reached No. 1 on the Rockadia new release chart in its first week. |
<dbpedia:Nokia_Fastlane> | Nokia Fastlane is a user interface from Nokia, used on the Nokia Asha platform and Nokia X platform. Fastlane is the timeline of your activities in your phone. You can access Fastlane in Asha OS by swiping left or right from the Start screen. The first device to run Fastlane is Nokia Asha 501. |
<dbpedia:Lake_Pavilion,_Copenhagen> | The Lake Pavilion (Danish: Søpavillonen) is a historic building at The Lakes in central Copenhagen, Denmark. Situated on the north side of Gyldenløvesgade, on the embankment that separates Peblinge Lake and Sankt Jørgens Lake, it was completed in 1895 to a Historicist design by Vilhelm Dahlerup and listed in 1984. |
<dbpedia:LGBT_history_in_Portugal> | Homosexuality in Portugal was made a criminal act in 1886, but was decriminalised in 1983. Same-sex marriage in Portugal was legalized in 2010. |
<dbpedia:North_Carolina_Highway_201> | North Carolina Highway 201 (NC 201) was the designation for two former routes in North Carolina. |
<dbpedia:Carlo_Lastimosa> | Carlo Dan Lastimosa (born September 3, 1990) is a Filipino professional basketball player currently playing for Blackwater Elite of the Philippine Basketball Association. He was drafted 20th overall by the Barako Bull in the 2013 PBA Draft. |
<dbpedia:Chris_Exciminiano> | Christopher "Ping" Exciminiano (born November 17, 1988) is a Filipino professional basketball player who plays for the Alaska Aces of the Philippine Basketball Association. |
<dbpedia:The_Martian_(Weir_novel)> | The Martian is a 2011 science fiction novel and the first published novel by American author Andy Weir. It was originally self-published in 2011 after which Crown Publishing purchased the rights and re-released it in 2014. Described as an Apollo 13 meets Cast Away, the story follows an American astronaut, Mark Watney, as he becomes stranded alone on Mars and must improvise in order to survive. |
<dbpedia:Captain_America:_Civil_War> | Captain America: Civil War is an upcoming American superhero film featuring the Marvel Comics character Captain America, produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. It is intended to be the sequel to 2011's Captain America: The First Avenger and 2014's Captain America: The Winter Soldier, and the thirteenth installment of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). |
<dbpedia:List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_Iggy_Azalea> | Iggy Azalea is an Australian rapper. Her debut studio album The New Classic was released in April 2014. Azalea has been nominated for numerous major music awards including the MTV Video Music Awards and the World Music Awards.Azalea's first notable nomination was in 2013 by the MTV Video Music Awards where she was up for Artist To Watch for her debut single "Work". 2014 proved to be Azalea's mainstream breakthrough year as she was nominated for several awards from various events. |
<dbpedia:Operation_Orient> | Operation Orient (German: Fall Orient) was the code name given to the operation that envisioned Nazi Germany linking up with the Empire of Japan mainly through the Middle East. |
<dbpedia:Ramón_Collazo> | Ramón Collazo (January 25, 1901 – July 16, 1981) was an Tango pianist, composer, actor.was born in the now extinct Red-light district of the Barrio Sur of Montevideo, where his father owned a grocery. |
<dbpedia:Tom_Elliott_(investment_banker)> | Tom Elliott (born 22 November 1967) is an Australian investment banker and radio and television presenter. |
<dbpedia:William_Elliott_(American_stage_actor)> | William Elliott (December 4, 1879 - February 5, 1932) was an American stage and screen actor. As a child he played violin with the Weems Juvenile Concert Party. He toured in the stage companies of Herbert Kelcey and Effie Shannon, Mary Shaw and Richard Mansfield. He was one of the most popular leading men in the first two decades of the twentieth century.He was the son-in-law of David Belasco through his first wife Augusta Belasco. |
<dbpedia:2014_MAAC_Men's_Basketball_Tournament> | The 2014 Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 6–10 at the MassMutual Center in Springfield, Massachusetts. The winner of the tournament, Manhattan, received the conference's automatic bid into the 2014 NCAA Tournament. The regular season champion, Iona, received an automatic bid into the 2014 NIT Tournament. |
<dbpedia:2014_Ohio_Valley_Conference_Men's_Basketball_Tournament> | The 2014 Ohio Valley Conference Men's Basketball Tournament was held March 5–8 at Nashville Municipal Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. |
<dbpedia:Luigi_Soffietti> | Luigi "Gigi" Soffietti is a former Italian racing driver. He entered 48 sports car races and Grands Prix between 1932 and 1938 (41 started) in Alfa Romeo's and Maserati's. Notable entries include the Mille Miglia and Targa Florio, but also the German Grand Prix, the Tripoli Grand Prix (both three times), and the Monaco Grand Prix (twice). |
<dbpedia:The_Tom_and_Jerry_Show_(2014_TV_series)> | The Tom and Jerry Show is a 2014 American animated television series produced by Warner Bros. Animation and Renegade Animation, based on the Tom and Jerry characters and theatrical cartoon series created by William Hanna and Joseph Barbera in 1940. It had its world premiere on the Canadian channel Teletoon on March 1, 2014, and premiered on Cartoon Network in the United States on April 9, 2014. |
<dbpedia:S.O.S._Mulheres_ao_Mar> | S.O.S. Mulheres ao Mar is a 2014 Brazilian comedy film directed by Cris D'Amato starring Giovanna Antonelli, Reynaldo Gianecchini, Fabíula Nascimento, Thalita Carauta, Marcelo Airoldi and Emanuelle Araújo.The film follows the story of Adriana, which disappointed with the end of her marriage, decides to win back her ex-husband embarking on the same cruise that he is with his new girlfriend, a soap opera star. The film was shot almost entirely on an ocean liner, but also had scenes shot in Venice. |
<dbpedia:List_of_archives_in_Denmark> | This is list of archives in Denmark. |
<dbpedia:Carmencita_Calderón> | Carmen Micaela Risso de Cancellieri (February 10, 1905 – October 31, 2005), better known as Carmencita Calderón, was an Argentine tango dancer. |
<dbpedia:María_Ruanova> | María Ruanova (July 3, 1912, San Juan, Argentina – June 5, 1976, Buenos Aires, Argentina) was an Argentine dancer, choreographer, teacher and ballet master, known for her performances at the Teatro Colón and internationally. She is considered the first Argentina-grown ballet dancer to gain international fame. |
<dbpedia:María_Nieves> | María Nieves Rego (born 1938) is an Argentine tango dancer and choreographer who starred in the 1983 musical Tango Argentino. |
<dbpedia:Taylor_Steele_(filmmaker)> | Taylor Steele was born on 7 June 1972. Steele has been involved in the surf film industry for over two decades. He has won awards as both director and producer. His production company, Poor Specimen, has launched the careers of some of surfing’s most influential figures and has played a role in the success of bands such as Blink-182, Pennywise, and Jack Johnson, who were introduced in Steele's early movies. |
<dbpedia:Francis_Preserved_Leavenworth> | Francis Preserved Leavenworth (born September 3, 1858 in Mount Vernon, Indiana; died November 12, 1928; a.k.a. Frank Leavenworth) was an American astronomer. He discovered many New General Catalogue objects together with Frank Muller and Ormond Stone. They used a telescope with a 66-cm aperture at the Leander McCormick Observatory at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, Virginia. |
<dbpedia:Sekoteng> | Sekoteng, a ginger-based hot drink which includes peanuts, diced bread, and pacar cina, can be found in Jakarta, West Java, and Yogyakarta. |
<dbpedia:LG_G3> | LG G3 is an Android smartphone developed by LG Electronics. First released in South Korea on May 28, 2014, it is a successor to 2013's LG G2. Inheriting design elements from the G2, such as its thin screen bezels and rear-mounted power and volume buttons, the G3 is distinguished primarily by being the first smartphone from a major manufacturer to incorporate a quad HD (1440p) display, and its inclusion of an infrared hybrid autofocus system for its camera. |
<dbpedia:Kendrick_Perry> | Kendrick Perry (born December 23, 1992) is an American professional basketball player who currently plays for BC Körmend of the Hungarian Nemzeti Bajnokság I/A. He played college basketball at Youngstown State University. |
<dbpedia:Chordeumatida> | Chordeumatida (from the Greek word for "sausage") is a large order of millipedes containing some 1200 species with a nearly worldwide distribution. They possess around 30 body segments and reach about 25 mm (1 in) in length. |
<dbpedia:Sinocallipus> | Sinocallipus is a genus of predominantly cave-dwelling millipedes in the order Callipodida. Five of the six known species are found in limestone caves on the Indochinese Peninsula from Vietnam to southern China, and it is the only callipodidan genus entirely confined to the tropics. Individuals range from 40–70 mm (1.6–2.8 in) long and possess 55 to 70 segments. |
<dbpedia:Rosslyn_Tower> | Rosslyn Tower is a Grade II listed house at St John's Avenue, Putney, London.The double-fronted house built in the 1870s has a steeple tower, eight bedrooms, a library, a music room with 15 ft high ceilings and a wine cellar. The drawing room was redesigned by Leonard Wyburd RA (1865–1958), one of Britain's leading Arts & Crafts furniture designers, who also launched Liberty's furnishing and decoration studio.In 1997, it was listed for sale at £1.25 million. |
<dbpedia:Lake_Stubbe> | Lake Stubbe (Stubbe Sø, in Danish) is a nature conservation area, and a former fjord, which in the Stone Age entered the sea, Kattegat, at the entrance to the Baltic Sea between Denmark and Sweden in Northern Europe. The lake is the largest lake in Djursland and is located about 6 km north of Ebeltoft. 150 years ago the lake was surrounded by moor land as the original oak forest had been depleted due to human intervention. |
<dbpedia:Ari_Handel> | Ari Handel (born in Zürich, Switzerland) is an American neuroscientist, film producer, and writer. He is known for co-writing the films Noah and The Fountain with his Harvard Dunster House suitemate Darren Aronofsky and for helping to produce these films along with two other Darren Aronofsky films, The Wrestler and Black Swan. He started co-writing the film Noah around 2003.Handel grew up in a Jewish family in Newton, Massachusetts. |
<dbpedia:John_M._Elliott,_Jr.> | John M. Elliott, Jr. is a makeup artist who was nominated at the 75th Academy Awards for Best Makeup. He was nominated for The Time Machine, his nomination was shared with Barbara Lorenz.He has over 65 film and television credits since his start in 1970. |
<dbpedia:Frank_Worthington_Simon> | Frank Lewis Worthington Simon (31 March 1862 – 19 May 1933) was a British architect working in the Arts and Crafts style. In Scotland, he was sufficiently noteworthy as to be commissioned by Queen Victoria to remodel Balmoral Castle In later life he worked in Canada and is best remembered for the highly impressive Manitoba Legislative Building. |
<dbpedia:Lucky_Yates> | Matt "Lucky" Yates (born October 18, 1967), is an American actor, voice actor, and comedian. He is known for his voice-over roles as Dr. Krieger on Archer and Xtacle on Frisky Dingo. He was also a recurring actor on the Food Network series Good Eats. He studied theater at Wayne State University and regularly performs at Dad's Garage in Atlanta, Georgia.Yates wasn't aware that he had a Wikipedia page until he did an AMA (Ask Me Anything) with Amber Nash on Reddit. |
<dbpedia:Richard_Battin> | Richard "Dick" Horace Battin (March 3, 1925 – February 8, 2014) was an American engineer, applied mathematician and educator who led the design of the Apollo guidance computer during the Apollo missions during the 1960s.Battin was born on March 3, 1925 in Atlantic City, New Jersey to Martha Scheu and Horace L. Battin. |
<dbpedia:John_Banks_Elliott> | John Banks Elliott was Ghana's first Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Moscow USSR from 1960 to 1966. During his tenure, he was Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Head Commonwealth Ambassadors, Head African and Diplomats, Head African Ambassadors Group. |
<dbpedia:Eternal_Melodies> | Eternal Melodies (Italian:Melodie eterne) is a 1940 Italian historical drama film directed by Carmine Gallone and starring Gino Cervi, Conchita Montenegro and Luisella Beghi. It was one of several musical biopics directed by Gallone. The film was shot at Cinecittà in Rome. |
<dbpedia:Bernard_Goldman> | Bernard Goldman was an art historian and archeologist specializing in ancient Near Eastern art and archeology. He was born in 1922 and died in 2006. Goldman was the author of several books including The Sacred Portal, Reading and Writing in the Arts, The Ancient Arts of Western and Central Asia. Goldman received his PhD from the University of Michigan and was a professor of art history at Wayne State University. |
<dbpedia:Alf_Hurum> | Alf Hurum (21 September 1882 – 12 August 1972) was a Norwegian composer and painter.Alf Thorvald Hurum was born in Kristiania (now Oslo, Norway. He was a son of Thorvald Hurum (1839-1909) and Jakobine Olava Haslum (1844-1929). From 1905 to 1907, he studied composition at the Berliner Akademie der Künste. Among other, his instructors included Max Bruch. He was married in Berlin, Germany in 1908 with Elizabeth Leslie Wight (1884-1984). |
<dbpedia:Microsoft_Mobile> | Microsoft Mobile is a multinational mobile phone and mobile computing device manufacturing company headquartered in Espoo, Finland, and a wholly owned subsidiary of Microsoft. |
<dbpedia:Bò_lúc_lắc> | Bò Lúc Lắc (Sauté Diced Beef) is a cubed beef sauteed with cucumber, tomatoes, onion, pepper, and soy sauce dish in French-inspired Vietnamese cuisine. The name derived from the shape of the beef, which is cut into small cubes the size of playing dice (hột lúc lắc) before being sauteed. Lok lak is a Cambodian cuisine version of the dish served on a bed of lettuce, cucumbers, and tomatoes and dipped in a sauce consisting of lime juice, sea salt and black Kampot pepper (tek merec). |
<dbpedia:Monnikenlangenoog> | Monnikenlangenoog (Dutch pronunciation: [mɔnɪkə(n)lɑŋə(n)oːx]; English: Monks' Long Island), also called Moenkelangenoe, was a West Frisian island in the Wadden Sea. It was situated off the coast of present-day Groningen in the Netherlands, between the islands of Schiermonnikoog and Borkum.Monnikenlangenoog was 12 to 14 or 15 km long. During summers, the island was used for animal farming, which was of economic importance. In the 14th century, the island was the property of the St. |
<dbpedia:45th_NAACP_Image_Awards> | The 45th NAACP Image Awards, presented by the NAACP, honored outstanding representations and achievements of people of color in motion pictures, television, music and literature during the 2013 calendar year. The awards were presented in two separate ceremonies. The first ceremony honoring non-televised categories took place on Friday, February 21, 2014 and was hosted by Rickey Smiley and Kimberly Elise. |
<dbpedia:Safa_Palatino_Studios> | The Safa Palatino Studios are a complex of film and television studios in the Italian capital Rome. It is owned by Mediaset, who use it for the production of television programmes.Historically, the site was used as a film studio from the 1930s to the 1970s. Although smaller than the better-known Cinecittà, a significant number of films were made there including Bicycle Thieves (1948). In 1983 the studios were bought by Silvio Berlusconi. |
<dbpedia:Nam_kaeng_hua_chai_thao> | Nam kaeng hua chai thao (Thai: น้ำแกงหัวไชเท้า) is a Thai-Chinese radish soup, traditionally served with khao man kai "\chicken steamed rice"), and also often served with khao mok (Thai biryani), khao na pet (roast duck on rice), khao mu daeng (Thai char siu on rice). Different regions of Thailand tend to have different variations of the soup. |
<dbpedia:The_Untitled_Rachel_Berry_Project> | "The Untitled Rachel Berry Project" is the twentieth episode and season finale of the fifth season of the American musical television series Glee, and the 108th episode overall. Written by Matthew Hodgson and directed by co-creator Brad Falchuk, it aired on Fox in the United States on May 13, 2014, and features the return of special guest star Shirley MacLaine as rich socialite June Dolloway. |
<dbpedia:Portugal_in_the_Middle_Ages> | The kingdom of Portugal was established from the county of Portugal in the 1130s, ruled by the Alfonsine Dynasty.During most of the 12th and 13th centuries, its history is chiefly that of the gradual reconquest of territory from the various petty Muslim principalities (taifas) of the period.This process was essentially complete with the ascension of Afonso III of Portugal, the first to claim the title of King of Portugal and Algarve. |
<dbpedia:2015_Big_Ten_Conference_Women's_Basketball_Tournament> | The 2015 Big Ten Conference Women's Basketball Tournament was being held from March 4–8, 2015 at the Sears Centre in Hoffman Estates, IL. |
<dbpedia:Brian_Oliver_(producer)> | Brian Oliver (born January 29, 1971) is an American feature film producer and President/Partner at Cross Creek Pictures. He has produced films that include Black Swan, The Ides of March, The Woman in Black, Rush, A Walk Among the Tombstones, and Everest. He was nominated for Academy Award for Best Picture for Black Swan at the 83rd Academy Awards and won the Best Feature Film Award at the 26th Independent Spirit Awards. |
<dbpedia:USell> | uSell (OTCQB: USEL) is a publicly traded recommerce company with headquarters in New York City. It operates as an online marketplace where people can sell used cell phones, tablets, video games, textbooks and gift cards to professional buyers. |
<dbpedia:Two_Cheers_for_Democracy> | Two Cheers for Democracy is the second collection of essays by E. M. Forster, published in 1951, and incorporating material from 1936 onwards.Reflecting Forster's increasing politicisation in the Thirties, particularly in the first section entitled 'The Second Darkness', the collection contains versions of his anti-Nazi broadcasts of 1940, as well as his defence of individualism as “a liberal who has found liberalism crumbling beneath him” in the face of the rise of totalitarianism. |
<dbpedia:Paris_Pride> | The Paris Pride or Marche des Fiertés LGBT, is a parade and festival held at the end of June each year in Paris, France to celebrate the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) people and their allies. The parade starts each year at Tour Montparnasse and ends at Place de la Bastille. After the parade the party continues in the gaydistrict Le Marais. Paris was the host of Europride in 1997. |
<dbpedia:Rock_in_Rio_USA> | Rock in Rio USA is a music festival held in Las Vegas, Nevada. A spin-off of Rio de Janeiro's Rock in Rio festival, it was first held on May 9 & 10, 2015 at City of Rock—a purpose-built venue on the Las Vegas Strip which is similar to its namesake in Rio, developed in cooperation with the festival's organizers. |
<dbpedia:2014_4_Hours_of_Silverstone> | The 4 Hours of Silverstone was an endurance motor race held at the Silverstone Circuit near Silverstone, England on 18–19 April 2014, and served as the opening round of the 2014 European Le Mans Series, and the first race under the series' new four-hour format. The event shared the weekend at Silverstone with the FIA World Endurance Championship's six hour event. |
<dbpedia:Linnévatnet> | Linnévatnet is a lake in Nordenskiöld Land at Spitsbergen, Svalbard. It is located in the lower part of the valley Linnédalen, and has a length of about 4.5 kilometers. The lake is among the largest lakes of Spitsbergen. It is named after Swedis botanist Carl Linnaeus. |
<dbpedia:The_Devil's_Gondola> | The Devil's Gondola (Italian:La gondola del diavolo) is a 1946 Italian drama film directed by Carlo Campogalliani and starring Loredana, Carlo Lombardi and Erminio Spalla. |
<dbpedia:List_of_Fargo_episodes> | Fargo is an American dark comedy–crime drama television series created and written by Noah Hawley. The show is inspired by the 1996 film of the same name written and directed by the Coen brothers, who serve as executive producers on the series. It premiered on April 15, 2014, on FX.As of June 17, 2014, 10 episodes of Fargo have aired, concluding the first season. |
<dbpedia:Jesús_Aguirre> | Jesús Aguirre y Ortiz de Zárate, Duke Consort of Alba (June 9, 1934 – May 11, 2001) was a Spanish intellectual, Jesuit priest, literary editor, and aristocrat. After leaving the priesthood, he became the literary editorial director of Taurus Publishing and later held the position of Director General of Music in the Spanish Ministry of Culture from 1977 to 1980. On March 16, 1978, he married Cayetana Fitz-James Stuart, 18th Duchess of Alba and head of the House of Alba. |
<dbpedia:Bosch_(island)> | Bosch (Dutch pronunciation: [bɔs]) was a West Frisian island in the Wadden Sea. It was situated off the coast of present-day Groningen in the Netherlands, between the islands of Schiermonnikoog and Rottumeroog.Between 1400 and 1570 CE, the island Monnikenlangenoog had split into the islands Bosch and Rottumeroog. Bosch disappeared in the Christmas Flood of 1717. |
<dbpedia:Di_san_xian> | Di san xian (Chinese: 地三鲜) is a Chinese dish made of stir-fried potatoes, aubergine (egg-plant) and sweet peppers. Other ingredients may include garlic, spring onion, etc. |
<dbpedia:IHeartRadio_Music_Awards> | iHeartRadio Music Awards is an music awards show, founded by iHeartRadio in 2014, to recognize the most popular artists and music over the past year as determined by the network's listeners. The inaugural edition was held on May 1, 2014 at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, and was broadcast live on NBC. The second edition was held on March 29, 2015.The nominations are based on results from the iHeartRadio Chart. Those charts are supplied and compiled by Mediabase. |
<dbpedia:June_1941_uprising_in_eastern_Herzegovina> | In June 1941, Serbs in eastern Herzegovina rebelled against the authorities of the Independent State of Croatia (Croatian: Nezavisna Država Hrvatska, NDH), an Axis puppet state established during World War II on the territory of the defeated Kingdom of Yugoslavia. As the NDH imposed its authority, members of the fascist Ustaše ruling party began a campaign of persecution against Serbs throughout the country. |
<dbpedia:Goldman-Cecil_Medicine> | Goldman-Cecil Medicine is a medical textbook published by Elsevier. First released in 1927, the book is one of the most prominent and widely-consulted medical textbooks in the United States. Goldman's Cecil Medicine is often compared with Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine, which it predates by three decades. Approximately one third of its authors are changed with each new edition. |
<dbpedia:Bets_and_Wedding_Dresses> | Bets and Wedding Dresses (Italian: Tris di donne e abiti nuziali) is a 2009 Italian drama film written and directed by Vincenzo Terracciano. It was screened out of competition at the 66th Venice International Film Festival. |
<dbpedia:1st_iHeartRadio_Music_Awards> | The 1st iHeartRadio Music Awards, was the inaugural music award show presented by iHeartMedia's platform iHeartRadio and NBC. The awards were held on May 1, 2014, at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles. The awards show was announced on February 26, 2014. The nominations were compiled by the results of Mediabase charts, listener feedback and digital straming data from the iHeartRadio platform and announced on March 26, 2014. The awards recognized the biggest artists and songs of the year. |
<dbpedia:1._Spielklasse_Bezirk_Braunschweig> | The 1. Spielklasse Bezirk Braunschweig, also known as 1. Spielklasse Herzogtum Braunschweig, Bezirksliga Braunschweig and Bezirksmeisterschaft Braunschweig at various points, was the highest association football league in the German Duchy of Brunswick and, later, the Free State of Brunswick from 1904 to 1920. The league also covered small parts of the neighbouring Prussian Province of Hanover. It was one of several first tier leagues in the German Empire and Weimar Republic. |
<dbpedia:Red_Band_Society> | Red Band Society is an American teen medical comedy-drama television series that aired on Fox for the 2014–15 American television season developed by Margaret Nagle. The series premiered on September 17, 2014.Based upon the Catalan drama series Polseres vermelles, the series is a dramedy focused on a group of teenagers living together as patients in a hospital's pediatric ward. |
<dbpedia:Fall_Braun> | Fall Braun (English: Case Brown) were the German military plans in 1940 and 1945 during World War II. |
<dbpedia:Matt_McGorry> | Matthew "Matt" McGorry (born April 12, 1986) is an American actor. He is best known for his roles as John Bennett in the Netflix comedy-drama series Orange Is the New Black and Asher Millstone on ABC's How to Get Away with Murder. |
<dbpedia:Anoplocephalidae> | The Anoplocephalidae are a family of tapeworms containing Bertiella species and others. |
<dbpedia:The_Opium_Den> | The Opium Den (Italian:La fumeria d'oppio) is a 1947 Italian crime film directed by Raffaello Matarazzo and starring Emilio Ghione Jr., Mariella Lotti and Emilio Cigoli. It was an unsuccessful attempt to revive the Za La Mort character, who had been a popular figure during the silent era. Ghione jr. was the son of the actor Emilio Ghione who had originally played the role. |
<dbpedia:BET_Awards_2014> | The 2014 BET Awards were held at the Nokia Theatre L.A. Live in Los Angeles, California on June 29, 2014. Chris Rock was unveiled as the host for the upcoming BET Awards on May 14 during the network's 106 & Park music video countdown show. Beyoncé lead the nominations with 6, followed by Jay-Z with 5. Drake, Pharrell Williams and August Alsina were tied for 4. Beyoncé was the big winner of the night winning 3 BET Awards, while Nicki Minaj, Drake, August Alsina and Pharrell Williams with 2. |
<dbpedia:April_2014_North_Carolina_tornado_outbreak> | On April 25, 2014, a localized tornado outbreak struck North Carolina, resulting in the first tornado-related fatality during that year in the United States. The event marked the latest formation of an EF3 or stronger tornado during a calendar year and latest date for the first tornadic death.Throughout North Carolina, the tornadoes killed 1 person and injured 27 others. A total of 327 homes were damaged or destroyed across four counties, with 60% of these being in Beaufort County. |
<dbpedia:List_of_awards_and_nominations_received_by_K._Michelle> | Comprehensive list of awards and nominations received by K. Michelle. |
<dbpedia:The_Blind_Woman_of_Sorrento_(1916_film)> | The Blind Woman of Sorrento (Italian:La cieca di Sorrento) is a 1916 Italian silent drama film directed by Gustavo Serena and starring Alfredo De Antoni, Olga Benetti and Carlo Benetti. It is set in the nineteenth century in Sorrento in southern Italy. It is an adaptation of the 1852 novel of the same title by Francesco Mastriani. Subsequent adaptations were made in 1934, 1952 and 1963. |