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Nasim Nisr Nasim Nisr, also spelled Nissim Nasser, was born in Lebanon to a Jewish mother and a Muslim father, and is an Israeli citizen. He was arrested in and by Israel for allegedly having contacts with Hezbollah, and charged as a spy.
Nasimuddin Amin Tan Sri SM Nasimuddin SM Amin is the founder of the Naza Group of Malaysia. The Naza Group's form in 1979 has 14 business divisions includes Motor Trading, Bikes, Manufacturing, Transport Services, Machine tools/parts, Engineering, Plantation, cigarette distrbution, Credit & Leasing, Water Crafts, Properties, Hotel Operation and Insurance Agent.
Nasinu Nasinu is an urban area in Fiji. It is officially designated a "Town" (and was formally incorporated as such in 1999), even though its population (approximately 80,000) is twice that of Lautoka, which is officially a "city".
Nasinu (Indian Communal Constituency, Fiji) Nasinu Indian Communal is an electoral division of Fiji, one of 19 communal constituencies reserved for Indo-Fijians. (Of the remaining 52 seats, 27 are reserved for other ethnic communities and 25, called Open Constituencies, are elected by universal suffrage).
Nasinu Rewa (Open Constituency, Fiji) Nasinu Rewa Open is an electoral division of Fiji, one of 25 open constituencies elected by universal suffrage (the remaining 46 seats, called communal constituencies, are allocated by ethnicity). Like the other open electorates, it came into being in 1999 and was used for the parliamentary elections of 1999, 2001 and 2006.
Nasinu Urban (Fijian Communal Constituency, Fiji) Nasinu Urban Fijian Communal is an electoral division of Fiji, one of 23 communal constituencies reserved for indigenous Fijians. (Of the remaining 48 seats, 23 are reserved for other ethnic communities and 25, called Open Constituencies, are elected by universal suffrage).
NasionCom NasionCom Holdings Berhad is a telecommunication service provider delivering innovative voice and data services, broadband internet access, interactive entertainment systems and information technology solutions to corporations and home users throughout Malaysia. It was incorporated in 1993.
Nasir al-Din Tusi Nasir al-Din Tusi (1201–1274) was a Persian scientist, of Shi'a Twelver Islamic belief, born in Tus, Khorasan, Iran. He is known as a philosopher, mathematician, astronomer, theologian, physician, and a prolific writer, i.
Nasir Ahmad Nasir al-Bahri Nasir Ahmad Nasir al-Bahri is a former bodyguard of Osama bin Laden, and is the brother-in-law of Salim Ahmed Hamdan, one of the four detainees in Guantanamo Bay scheduled to be tried by a military commission. Al-Bahri is a Yemeni citizen, and was captured and interrogated over his role in the USS Cole bombing.
Nasir Bagh Nasir Bagh (Urdu: ناصر باغ ) is a Afghan refugee camp near Peshawar, North-West Frontier Province, Pakistan. The one-time emergency settlement, that turned into a thriving community of more than 100,000 people on the edge of Peshawar, is now largely empty - many of its former residents part of the wave of around half a million people who have returned to Afghanistan in recent years.
Nasir Baig Chughtai Nasir Baig Chughtai (ناصر بیگ چغتائی) is the Editor News of Urdu-language Pakistani television network Geo TV. He is a journalist par excellence, with exceptionally diversified experience in print as well as electronic media and a successful and renowned author.
Nasir Bholu Nasir Bholu is another world class and the most popular third generation Pakistani wrestler. He is publicly known as the son of the former Pakistani Wrestling Champion Bholu Pahalwan and grand son of Imam Baksh Pahlwan.
Nasir Jamal Nasir Jamal is the founder of mel-jol, a social network and online community for South Asians living in UK. This online community for people of South Asian origin was created in collaboration with BBC DevonBBC, UK.
Nasir Javed Nasir Javed (born 21 June 1966 in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan) is an American cricketer. He started his cricket career in his native Pakistan, playing first-class cricket for Lahore City in 1984-85, Lahore City Whites in 1984-85 and Servis Industries in 1986-87 as a bowler.
Nasir Khamees Nasir Khamees, full name Nasir Khamees Mubarak (born 1965-08-02) is a UAE football (soccer) player who played as a midfielder for the UAE national football team and Al-Wasl Club in Dubai. He is considered one of the best midfielders played for the UAE national team ever.
Nasir Khusraw Abu Mo’in Hamid al-Din Nasir ibn Khusraw (1004 - 1088 CE) was a scholar, traveller, Persian poet and an Isma'ili Da'i or theologian, who was especially well-known in the northern areas of Pakistan, parts of China, Afghanistan and Central Asia. He is considered as one of the great writers in Persian literature, the Safarnama, an account of his travels, being his most famous work.
Nasir Schon Nasir Schon (Urdu: ناصر شان ) (born November 28, 1957) is a prominent business leader of Pakistan and the CEO of Schon Group. He is also the Honorary Consul-General of Sierra Leone in Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan.
Nasir ud din Mahmud Nasir ud din Firuz Shah (1246-1266) was an Islamic ruler and the eighth Sultan of Delhi of medieval India during the Slave Dynasty (or Mameluk dynasty). He was the youngest son of Shams ud din Iltutmish (1211-1236) and he succeeded Ala ud din Masud after the chiefs replaced Masud when they felt that he began to behave as a tyrant.
Nasir-ud-Din Qabacha Nasir-ud-Din Qabacha (Persian: ناصرالدین قباچه ) was the governor of Sindh, appointed by Shahabuddin Muhammad Ghori in 1203, but declared himself independent in 1210 CE. He twice repulsed the attacks of Tajuddin Elduz of Ghanzi, but could not defeat Shams-ud-Din Iltutmish and perished in sea while trying to escape.
Nasirdin Isanov Nasirdin Isanov () (born on 7 November 1943 in Osh Province, Kyrgyzstan and died on November 29, 1991) served as the first Prime Minister of Kyrgyzstan from 30 August 1991 to 29 November 1991, when he died in a car crash.
Nasireddin (crater) Nasireddin is a lunar impact crater that lies in the rugged terrain in the southern part of the Moon's near side. This crater overlays two older formations, intruding into Miller crater to the north and Huggins crater to the west.
Nasjonal Samling Nasjonal Samling (Norwegian for "National Gathering" or "National Unification") was a fascist party in Norway before and during World War II, founded on May 17, 1933 by Vidkun Quisling and Johan Bernhard Hjort. The strongholds of the party were among people with a "national attitude" in the inner parts of the country, specifically in Telemark, and in the area around the capital Oslo.
Nasjonal Sikkerhetsmyndighet Nasjonal Sikkerhetsmyndighet (NSM) (Norwegian; National Security Authority) is a Norwegian intelligence agency at the level of government agency ("Direktorat") established on January 1, 2003 as one of two newly established organizations to take over the responsibilities of the defunct Forsvarets sikkerhetsstab (FO/S), the other being Forsvarets sikkerhetsavdeling (FSA). It is responsible for proactive national security, identifying national objects of special interest (like the national oil company Statoil) and reducing their vulnerability to internal and external threats.
Naskh (script) Naskh (نسخ, also known as Naskhi or by its Turkish name Nesih) is a specific calligraphic style for writing in the Arabic alphabet. It is the style most commonly used for printing Arabic, and usually the first to be taught to children.
Naskh (tafsir) Naskh, an Arabic language word usually translated as "abrogation" and alternately appearing as the phrase al-nāsikh wal-mansūkh ("the abrogating and abrogated [verses]"), is a technical term for a major genre of Islamic legal exegesis directed at the problem of seemingly contradictory material within or between the twin bases of Islamic holy law: the Qur'ān and the Prophetic Sunna. In its application, naskh typically involves the replacement (ibdāl) of an earlier verse/tradition (and thus its embodied ruling) with a chronologically successive one.
Nasko Sirakov Nasko Sirakov () (born 26 April 1962) is a former Bulgarian football (soccer) player and the current executive director of Levski Sofia. Part of the 1994 World Cup Bulgarian team that came fourth, their best achievement ever, he is a Levski Sofia legend, also regarded as one of the top Bulgarian footballers of the 1980s and 90s.
Nasmod NASMOD (National Airspace Modernization) A program currently underway to modernize and upgrade the NAS (National Airspace). ALPA (Air Line Pilots Association), the FAA, MITRE Corporation, NASA, UPS and aeronautic companies such as Boeing, Airbus, Lockheed Martin and ACSS to name a few are involved.
Nasmyth, Gaskell and Company Nasmyth, Gaskell and Company, was a Locomotive manufacturer in Patricroft, near the town of Eccles, England. The works was located adjacent to both the Liverpool and Manchester Railway and the Bridgewater Canal; and could export locomotives after, May 1894, via the Manchester Ship Canal.
Naso (genus) The unicorn fishes are 17 species of marine] [[surgeonfishes in the genus Naso. They are so named because of a spike that protrudes from its forehead; however some species have a bulbous protrusion rather than a pronounced spike, and some lack a spike altogether.
Naso (parsha) Naso or Nasso (נשא – Hebrew for "take,” the sixth word, and the first distinctive word, in the parshah) is the 35th weekly parshah or portion in the annual Jewish cycle of Torah reading and the second in the book of Numbers. It constitutes Jews in the Diaspora generally read it in late May or June.
Naso (people) The Central American tribe, Naso, Teribe or Tjer-di are an indigenous people located in northwest Panama, specifically to the west of the Bocas del Toro Province. There are roughly 3,500 people who belong to the Naso tribe.
Nasolabial cyst This nasolabial cyst, also known as a nasoalveolar cyst, is located superficially in the soft tissues of the upper lip. Unlike most of the other developmental cysts, the nasolabial cyst is an example of an extraosseous cyst, one that occurs outside of bone.
Nasonia Nasonia (Hymenoptera: Pteromalidae) are small parasitoid wasps that sting and lay eggs in the pupae of various flys. The fly species that Nasonia usually parasitize are primarily blowflies and fleshflies, making Nasonia a usefull tool for biocontrol of these pest flys.
Nasonov The Nasonov (alternatively, Nasanov) pheromone is released by worker bees to orient returning forager bees back to the colony. To broadcast this scent, bees raise their abdomens, which contain the Nasonov glands, and fan their wings vigorously.
Nasopharyngeal airway In medicine, a nasopharyngeal airway, also known as a nasal trumpet because of its flared end, is a tube that is designed to be inserted into the nasal passageway to secure an open airway. The purpose of the flared end is to prevent the device from becoming lost inside the patient's head.
Naspers Naspers () is a South Africa-based multinational media company with principal operations in electronic media (including pay-television, internet and instant-messaging subscriber platforms and the provision of related technologies) and print media (including the publishing, distribution and printing of magazines, newspapers and books, and the provision of private education services).
Nasr ad-Din (Lamtuna) Imam Nasr ad-Din was a Lamtuna Berber religious and military leader, who in 1644-74 led an alliance of Sanhadja Berber tribes in an attempt to repulse the Maqil Arabs then entering their areas of the western Sahara desert (mainly todays Mauritania and Western Sahara). The conflict (the Char Bouba, or 30-years war) was eventually lost by the Berber tribes, and they were reduced to subordinate roles in the elaborate tribal hierarchy that was then developed by the Arabo-Berber Moorish people that resulted from the fusion between indigenous and immigrant peoples.
Nasreddin Nasreddin was a lower Muslim cleric who lived during the Middle Ages. His name is spelled differently in various cultures and is often preceded or followed by titles "Mullah", or "Hodja" (see section "Name variants").
Nasreen Pervin Huq Nasreen Pervin Huq (born Bangladesh, 18th November 1958, died Bangladesh, 24th April 2006) was a prominent women's activist and campaigner for women's rights and social justice. She died in a tragic accident at her home in Dhaka when she was hit by a vehicle collecting her for work as Director of the UK non-governmental organization Action Aid.
Nasrollah Jahangard Nasrollah Jahangard (born 1957 in Tehran) is an Iranian politician and expert manager. Since 1997, he was the Deputy Minister of Post, Telegraph & Telephone (PTT) for Development & Planning, that the ministry later renamed to Ministry of Communications and Information Technology, he recently resigned from that position.
Nasrollah Nasehpoor Nasrollah Nasehpoor (), born in 1940, is a renowned Iranian vocalist and professor for classical Persian vocal music. Through his father, the famed garmon player Agha Shakour, he has been influenced already in his childhood by Azerbaijani music.
Nasrullah Khan Nasrullah Khan (1875-May 1920) was the heir successor to the Afghan throne after the death of his father, King Habibullah Khan, in 1919. However, his nephew Amanullah Khan wrestled control away from him immediately after his father's death.
Nass Marrakech Nass Marrakech () is a Gnawa music group formed in 1991. They have evolved in directions unknown before for Gnawa musicians with the introduction of instruments foreign to Gnawa music such as the djembe, tam-tam, mandolin, tabla and Afro-Cuban percussion.
Nass River The Nass River is a river in northern British Columbia, Canada. It flows 380 km (235 miles) from the Coast Mountains southwest to Nass Bay, a sidewater of Observatory Inlet, itself an arm of Portland Inlet, which connects to the North Pacific Ocean via the Dixon Entrance.
Nassau Avenue (IND Crosstown Line) Nassau Avenue is a station on the New York City Subway's IND Crosstown Line. The platform level fare controls at the north end have no crossunders nor crossunders and leads to Norman Avenue while the full time mezzanine at the south end leads to Nassau Avenue and has crossovers both inside and outside fare control.
Nassau Broadcasting Partners Nassau Broadcasting Partners LP is a company based in Princeton that owns a group of radio stations. These AM and FM Radio stations are located in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, and Vermont.
Nassau County Soil and Water Conservation District The Nassau County Soil and Water Conservation District (SWCD), located in Nassau County, Florida is a government entity dedicated to encouraging productive use of land, water and air resources in the county. According to a summary taken from Florida Statutes Ch.
Nassau County Sports Commission The Nassau County Sports Commission is a non-profit, 501(c)(3) organization created to enhance the quality of life of Nassau County, NY residents through the promotion of physical fitness, healthy activity and good sportsmanship and to continue the fight against the perils of childhood obesity and performance enhancing drug use within our community.
Nassau Family Pact The Nassau Family Pact () was a mutual pact of inheritance and succession made in 1783 by princes of the old German noble and sovereign family of Nassau. It confirmed Salic Law to operate in favor of all agnatic lines of the family, divided into first surviving lines which existed in the Middle Ages (Walramian and Ottonian).
Nassau grouper The Nassau grouper (Epinephelus striatus) is one of the large number of Perciform fish in the family Serranidae that are commonly referred to as groupers. It is the most important of the groupers for commercial fishery in the West Indies but has been endangered by overfishing.
Nassau Hall Nassau Hall (or Old Nassau) is the oldest building at Princeton University in the Borough of Princeton, New Jersey (USA). Built originally under a design by Smith, it was subsequently redesigned by notable American architects Joseph Henry Latrobe and John Notman.
Nassau Stakes The Nassau Stakes is a Group 1 flat horse race in the United Kingdom for three-year-old and above thoroughbred fillies and mares run over a distance of 1 mile 1 furlong and 192 yards (1,986 metres) at Goodwood Racecourse during the Glorious Goodwood meeting in late July / early August.
Nassau Street (Manhattan) Nassau Street is a street in the Financial District of the New York City borough of Manhattan, located near Pace University and New York City Hall. It is one block east of Park Row which once housed many of the city's newspapers.
Nassau Street, Dublin Nassau Street (Irish: Sráid Thobar Phádraig) is a street in central Dublin, running along the south side of Trinity College. It runs from Grafton Street in the west, to the junction of South Leinster Street and Kildare Street in the East.
Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum The Nassau Veterans Memorial Coliseum, commonly known as Nassau Coliseum (or simply The Coliseum), is a multi-purpose indoor arena in Uniondale, New York, on Long Island. The Coliseum is 19 miles (30 km) from New York City.
Nasser Amin Nasser Amin is a Muslim postgraduate student at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, England, and a writer and broadcaster, who won a case against his university over the right to free speech.
Nasser Hussain Nasser Hussain (born March 28 1968, Madras (now Chennai, India) is a former Essex and England cricketer. He was born of an Indian father, Jawad (also known as "Joe"), and an English mother, Shireen, who changed her name on conversion to Islam.
Nasser Saidi Dr. Nasser Saidi is a Lebanese politician and economist who served as the Minister of economy and industry and the Vice-governor for the Lebanese central banks for several terms in the last decade of the 20th century.
Nasser Sebaggala Nasser Ntege Sebaggala is a Ugandan politician. After his re-election in the National Elections 2006, to be Mayor of Kampala till 2011, he was an independent presidential candidate in the 2006 Ugandan general election before dropping out and joining the Kampala Mayoral race.
Nasserism Nasserism is an Arab nationalist political ideology based on the thinking of the former Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser. It was a major influence on pan-Arab politics in the 1950s and 1960s, but slowly died away.
Nasserist Party The Arab Democratic Nasserist Party (Arabic: الحزب العربى الديمقراطى الناصرى) is a political party in Egypt. The party presses for achieving comprehensive development, establishing a strong national economy, sticking to the gains of the 1952 July Revolution and protecting human rights.
Nassi-Shneiderman diagram A Nassi-Shneiderman diagram is a graphical design representation for structured programming. Developed in 1972 by Isaac Nassi and Ben Shneiderman, these diagrams are also called structograms, as they show a program's structures.
Nassib Lahoud [Lahoud]Nassib Lahoud (Arabic: نسيب لحود) is a Lebanese political figure born on 23 November 1944 in Baabdat - Matn, Lebanon. After finishing his engineering studies in the United Kingdom, he founded Lahoud Engineering Co.
Nastar Center The NASTAR Center, or National Aerospace Training and Research Center, is an aerospace training and research facility located in Southampton, Pennsylvania, a northern suburb of Philadelphia. The facility is opening in January 2007, offering training and research capabilities to:
Nastasya filipovna Principle heroine in Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Idiot (novel). She is the daughter of an aristocrat with no money and, when still a young child, falls under the "protection" of a rich rogue named Totski.
Nastasya Filippovna Principle heroine in Fyodor Dostoevsky's The Idiot (novel). She is the daughter of an aristocrat with no money and, when still a young child, falls under the "protection" of a rich rogue named Totski.
Nasturtium Nasturtium (literally "nose-twister"), as a common name, is a genus of roughly 80 species of annual and perennial herbaceous flowering plants Tropaeolum, one of three genera in the family Tropaeolaceae. This genus, native to South America and Central America, includes several very popular garden plants, the most commonly grown being T.
Nastus Nastus is a genus of slender, erect, scrambling or climbing bamboo. It has 7 species, mainly found in the tropical mountain forests of the Southern Hemisphere from Madagascar and Reunion to the Solomon Islands.
Nasty Boys The Nasty Boys, sometimes referred to incorrectly as the Nasty Boyz, are the all-male personal strike force of X-Men and X-Factor nemesis Mister Sinister. The Nasty Boys can be distinguished from the Marauders, who were a group of mercenaries brought together by Gambit to specifically kill the Morlocks.
Nasty Boys (Cincinnati Reds) The Nasty Boys were a trio of relief pitchers from the Cincinnati Reds comprised of Norm Charlton, Rob Dibble and Randy Myers. In 1990, the "Nasty Boys" were key figures in the Reds' charge to the World Championship.
Nasty Girl (Destiny's Child song) "Nasty Girl" is the first and the last single from Destiny's Child's remix album This Is the Remix (2002). The song features a distinct vocal interpolation of Salt N' Pepa's "Push It" and Baltimora's "Tarzan Boy".
Nasty Suicide Nasty Suicide (born as Jan Stenfors on September 4, 1963) is the ex-rhythm guitarist for Hanoi Rocks, a Finnish outfit, who combined elements of punk, glam rock, rock and roll, and blues. After the breakup of Hanoi, he and former bandmate Andy McCoy recorded an acoustic album under the name of The Suicide Twins.
Nasu: Summer in Andalusia is a 2003 Japanese anime film by Madhouse, directed by Kitaro Kosaka, the famed animation supervisor of the Oscar-winning anime film Spirited Away and Princess Mononoke and long-time collaborator of Studio Ghibli, and adapted from a short 3-tankĹŤbon manga by Iou Kuroda, entitled , which was serialized in the Afternoon manga magazine. It was the first Japanese anime film to be selected for the Cannes Film Festival Review: Nasu: Summer in Andalusia - by Tom Mes, Midnight Eye..
Nasuh Mahruki Ali Nasuh Mahruki (1968) is a professional mountain climber, writer, photographer and documentary producer. An all-round outdoor sportsman, he climbed to the summit of Mount Everest and completed the mountaineering of the Seven Summits as the first ever Turkish person.
Nasuhi The Nasuhi are a sub order of the Khalwati Sufi order. Their founder Pir Nasuhi was a prolific author who wrote a number of works including a commentary upon the Qur'an he passed away and was buried at his Tekke in Uskudar in Istanbul.
Nasum Nasum (pronounced Nah-sum) was a Swedish political grindcore and deathgrind band that was formed in 1992 by Anders Jakobson (guitar) and Rickard Alriksson (drums/vocals), two former members of the goregrind band Necrony. Two weeks before their first recording they added Mieszko Talarczyk as a guitarist.
NaShawn Kearse NaShawn Kearse is an American television and film actor. Kearse has appeared in guest starring roles on several modern day programs which include HBO series, Entourage, as rapper Saigon's cousin, New York Undercover and The Shield.
Nat (information) A nat (sometimes also nit or even nepit) is a logarithmic unit of information or entropy, based on natural logarithms and powers of e, rather than the powers of 2 and base 2 logarithms which define the bit. The nat is the natural unit for information entropy, corresponding to Boltzmann's constant for thermodynamic entropy.
Nat (Wild Cards) Nat is a slang term from the Wild Cards novels referring to normal humans uninfected by the Wild Card virus. Most often used by Jokers when referring to their uninfected oppressors, though also occasionally employed by Aces as a pejorative.
Nat Adderley Nathaniel Adderley (born November 25, 1931 in Tampa, Florida–died January 2, 2000) was an American jazz cornetist who played in the hard bop and soul jazz genres. He was the brother of saxophonist Julian "Cannonball" Adderley.
Nat Dorsey Nathaniel Willie Dorsey, III, (born September 9, 1983 in Hopewell, Virginia), is an American Football player who plays offensive tackle. He was selected out of Georgia Tech by the Minnesota Vikings in the fourth round (115 overall) in the 2004 NFL Draft.
Nat Faxon Nat Faxon is an actor best known for the roles of Manny in the 2004 film Club Dread and Rolf in the 2006 film Beerfest, both of which were written by and star the Broken Lizard comedy group. He has also appeared in a commercial for State Farm Insurance as well as numerous commercials for the Holiday Inn hotel chain.
Nat Finkelstein Born in Brooklyn in 1933, Nat Finkelstein studied photography under Alexey Brodovitch, the legendary art director of Harper's Bazaar, and worked as a photojournalist for the Black Star and PIX photo agencies, reporting primarily on the political developments of various subcultures in New York City in the 1960s. In 1964, Finkelstein entered Andy Warhol's Factory as a photojournalist and remained for three years; Finkelstein's photographs from this period are now regarded as some of the most iconic of the time.
Nat Goldhaber A. Nathaniel ("Nat") Goldhaber - An Internet entrepreneur and longtime associate the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, was the Natural Law Party nominee for Vice President in 2000 on the ticket headed by John Hagelin.
Nat Hentoff Nat Hentoff (born June 10, 1925) is an American historian, jazz critic, and columnist for the Village Voice, Legal Times, Washington Times, The Progressive, Editor & Publisher, Free Inquiry and Jewish World Review.
Nat Hiken Nat Hiken (June 13, 1914 - December 7, 1968) was a pioneering American television writer, producer, and songwriter who rose to prominence in the 1950s. Born in Chicago, Illinois, Hiken worked on a number of popular TV series during the 1950s and 1960s, including Car 54, Where Are You?
Nat Langham Nat Langham (born May 1820 - died 1 September 1871) was born in Hinckley, Northamptonshire, he was an English middleweight bare-knuckle prize fighter. He had the distinction of being the only opponent ever to beat the legendary Thomas Sayers.
Nat Love Nat Love (1854 - 1921) was an African American cowboy during the time of the Wild West. He claimed to be "Deadwood Dick," a character made famous by dime novels; he may have the strongest historical claim to that moniker.
Nat Moore Nathaniel Moore (born September 19 1951 in Tallahassee, Florida) is a former American football wide receiver for the National Football League Miami Dolphins, the only team for whom he played in his 13-year career. He is best known as the favorite passing target of both Bob Griese and Dan Marino.
Nat Perrin Nat Perrin (March 15, 1905-May 9, 1998) was a comedy writer who contributed gags and story lines to several Marx Brothers films, cowrote the play Hellzapoppin' that became a film, and was the producer of the television series The Addams Family.
Nat Schachner Nat Schachner (January 16, 1895 - 1955) was an American author. His first published story was "The Tower of Evil," written in collaboration with Arthur Leo Zagat and appearing in the Summer 1930 issue of Wonder Stories Quarterly.
Nat Simpson Nathaniel Oliver (Nat) Simpson was a fictional character in the defunct Channel 4 Soap Opera, Brookside, played by John Sandford from 1996 to 1997. His most notable storyline was his Incestuous relationship with his sister, Georgia.
Nat Tarnopol Nat Tarnopol played a vital role in producing and shaping R&B music throughout the 1960s and 1970s as the president and owner of Brunswick Records. Responsible for launching the careers of the Chi-Lites, Jackie Wilson, Tyrone Davis, Barbara Acklin and The Young-Holt Unlimited, Tarnopol scored 150 on the Billboard charted singles between the years of 1957 and 1981.
Nat Thomson Nathaniel Frampton Davis Thomson (born May 29, 1839, Surry Hills, Sydney, New South Wales; died September 2, 1896, Burwood, Sydney) was an Australian cricketer who played in the first two Tests ever played, in 1877. Thomson has the distinction of being the first batsmen dismissed in a Test match when he was clean bowled by England's Allen Hill.
Nat Turner Nat, remembered today as Nat Turner, (October 2 1800 – November 11 1831) was an American slave whose failed slave rebellion in Southampton County, Virginia, was the most remarkable instance of black resistance to enslavement in the antebellum southern United States. His methodical slaughter of white civilians during the uprising made him a controversial figure, but he is still considered by many to be a heroic figure of black resistance to oppression.
Nata de coco Nata de coco is a chewy, translucent, jelly-like food product produced by the bacterial fermentation of coconut water. Nata de coco is most commonly sweetened as a candy or dessert, and can accompany many things including pickles, drinks, ice cream, and fruit mixes.
Natacha Rambova Natacha Rambova (January 19, 1897 – May 6, 1966) was an American costume and set designer, art director, playwright, silent film actress, fashion designer, Egyptologist, collector of antiquities, and the second wife of the silent film star Rudolph Valentino. She was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, and died in Pasadena, California at the age of 69.
Natal astrology Natal astrology, also known as Genethliacal astrology, is the system of astrology based upon the concept that each individual's personality or path in life can be determined by constructing a natal chart for the exact date, time, and location of a person's birth. Natal astrology can be found both in Eastern and Western traditions.
Natal Carbineers The Natal Carbineers Regiment is an Infantry regiment of the South African Army. As a reserve unit, it has a status roughly equivalent to that of a British Territorial Army or United States Army National Guard unit.
Natal Field Artillery The Natal Field Artillery (usually abbreviated as NFA) is an artillery regiment of the South African Army. As a reserve unit, it has a status roughly equivalent to that of a British Territorial Army or United States Army National Guard unit.
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