_:b6968754 . _:b6968755 . _:b6968756 "A single trip might not seem particularly environmentally significant, but Norway\u2032s environment remains one of its main drawcards and one that millions of travellers who visit Norway every year have a responsibility to protect."@en . _:b6968754 "Falconry is another big drawcard at Hever and at other historical sites."@en . . _:b6968753 . . _:b6968756 . _:b6968757 . . _:b6968755 "The drawcard was a two-act comic revue written for the occasion, \u201CQuatsch\u201D (German, \u201CNonsense\u201D)."@en . . _:b6968754 "1998, The Bulletin, Issues 6138-6146, |%22drawcards%22&dq=%22drawcard%22|%22drawcards%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=uPZET_C3FI6WiQfc9PSmAw&redir_esc=y page 62,"@en . _:b6968752 . _:b6968753 "I remember once in the professional theatre in Addis Ababa a certain actor had become a popular drawcard."@en . "1" . _:b6968755 "1993, Brian Boyd, Vladimir Nabokov: The Russian Years\u200Ehttp://books.google.com.au/books?id=1qfhBbklYnIC&pg=PA273&dq=%22drawcard%22%7C%22drawcards%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=4glFT8jeI8ejiAem-ZH7Ag&redir_esc=y#v=onepage&q=%22drawcard%22%7C%22drawcards%22&f=false, page 273:"@en . _:b6968756 "2008, Anthony Ham, Miles Roddis, Kari Lundgren, Norway, Lonely Planet, page 19:"@en . _:b6968752 "(UK) Something that attracts customers, visitors, spectators, etc. to a place or an event."@en . _:b6968753 "1997, Robert Kavanagh, Making People\u2032s Theatre\u200Ehttp://books.google.com.au/books?id=9cccAQAAIAAJ&q=%22drawcard%22%7C%22drawcards%22&dq=%22drawcard%22%7C%22drawcards%22&hl=en&sa=X&ei=5QdFT42CCKeviQe1iKmGAw&redir_esc=y, page 182:"@en . _:b6968757 "He was the defending champion, a proven drawcard and a player of the future."@en . _:b6968757 "2009 January 28, Todd Woodbridge, \u201CAustralian tennis great says heat simply part of game\u201D, in Herald Sun\u200E[1], archived from the original on 4 August 2009:"@en .