Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://citation.dbpedia.org/hash/f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2> ?p ?o }
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- f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2 date "2004-06-04".
- f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2 first "Cris".
- f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2 isCitedBy Chewing_gum_ban_in_Singapore.
- f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2 last "Prystay".
- f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2 location "New York".
- f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2 newspaper "The Wall Street Journal".
- f775a546d5bc0022eefe110b6ff673e1c5c0390b6a633e776adae406da7e4ea2 title "At long last, gum is legal in Singapore, but there are strings".