{"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9617859721183777,"wiki_prob":0.9617859721183777,"text":"Authorities: Ex-officer threatened to kill chief\nBy - Associated Press - Saturday, September 6, 2014\nABERDEEN, N.J. (AP) - Authorities say a former Aberdeen Township police officer stalked and threatened to kill the town’s current police chief.\nBut they wouldn’t say why 66-year-old Christian Witzig allegedly took those actions.\nThe Asbury Park Press (https://on.app.com/1rRqyEv) reports Witzig, who lives in Keansburg, was arrested this week. His bail was set at $100,000 cash and it wasn’t known Saturday if he has retained an attorney.\nCiting court documents, the newspaper said Witzig made the threat before going to Aberdeen police headquarters to confront chief John Powers- despite being previously told not to contact him.\nThe documents also state that Witzig repeatedly made alarming and threatening statements toward Powers and his family on five occasions\nPowers told the newspaper that he couldn’t comment and referred all questions to the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office.\nInformation from: Asbury Park (N.J.) Press, https://www.app.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line380250"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7424188852310181,"wiki_prob":0.25758111476898193,"text":"@odenmemphis\nEven financial analysts agree at this point that brand equity is, while intangible, probably the most valuable asset on a company’s balance sheet. Stewardship of that asset is of foremost importance in the strategy of running a company. And the launch of a new brand, while exciting and full of promise, is merely one point on a sliding scale of actions that ensure nurturing of a long-term successful brand entity.\nAs with any business, brands progress through a life cycle of launch, growth, maturity, and either rejuvenation, reinvention, or fading from the market landscape. Enduring victory, therefore, depends upon making choices about brand consistency versus change. Those choices are affected by timing, the economy, customer needs, competition, and other factors that require thorough evaluation.\nConsider Crest® toothpaste, the first with fluoride, introduced to the public in 1955. Crest, while ubiquitous, is not the world’s top-selling toothpaste, but it’s a star in the crown of Procter & Gamble, the number-31 company on the Fortune 500 list. With revenues of $84.2 billion as a result of its standouts, including Tide®, Pantene®, and Crest, P&G can certainly afford to adapt to circumstances by investing in product enhancements—and it has. With Crest, P&G moved from the initial fluoride differentiator to now include tartar control, whitening, whitening strips, and complete multi-benefit herbal expressions. For 60 years, Crest has rejuvenated and expanded its scope many times over to keep those kiddies brushing and their parents smiling brightly. Relevance. Crest has it, because it’s stewarded the brand wisely, keeping its eye on the market and recognizing when it was time to invest in brand extensions and enhancements.\nNot Everybody Has $84 Billion\nWhat if you’re not Crest? Suppose you’re a 5-year-old mid-sized commercial lender with a strong product positioning. You’ve spent a lot of time and effort to develop a memorable brand image and message that’s resonating with your industrial customers. Until now, you’ve been staunch in requiring consistency in every aspect of your collateral, business cards, messaging, and online presence in order to build awareness of your brand. You’ve begun to enjoy growth regionally, yet you’re not quite a household name. You don’t have billions to reinvest in every new trick in the book, but you want to keep your brand healthy and growing.\nAt the same time, your competition’s new product offerings are coming online. This is where consistency meets adaptability, and you have to decide: stay the course, or begin to refresh and deviate from the well-entrenched image and positioning you’ve created.\nA good example of brand evolution in the B2B space is Adobe Systems Inc. Adobe was founded in 1982 by Charles Geschke and John Warnock to develop and sell the PostScript® page-description language. Today it’s a multinational computer software company with approximately $4.147 billion in revenues. Adobe’s product line has evolved from software products (such as Photoshop®) that individuals purchased to a suite of digital media and marketing solutions served up for a monthly fee with automatic upgrades. Recently described in an article by CBS News online as one of few software companies that survived Microsoft’s competition, the article cites Adobe as one of “10 companies with insanely great marketing.”\nBeginning as a single tool primarily for the graphics and publishing market, Adobe’s product line has become requisite for anyone who wants to edit video or save files in PDF format. In a larger sense, the company describes its business this way: “Our digital media and marketing solutions empower businesses to make, manage, measure and monetize content.”\nAdobe’s history has not been without difficulty. It competes in a fast-paced industry with significant players that are larger by far. It endured a major security breach in 2013 with far-reaching consequences for customers. Yet Adobe has secured its destiny through its dedication to giving customers what they want. Adobe claims that four value characteristics drive its business: to be genuine, exceptional, innovative, and involved. Their website features these two facts that validate their lofty position:\nOver 90% of the world’s creative professionals use Photoshop.\nMore than two-thirds of Fortune 50 companies use Adobe® Marketing Cloud, including 17 of the top 20 Internet retailers; 10 of the top 10 commercial banks; 5 of the top 5 media companies; and 5 of the top 5 automakers.\nWith ever-evolving graphic design tools at its beck and call, Adobe still retains its original logo, designed by founder John Warnock’s wife, Marva. Visual consistency with product evolution—Adobe’s formula for success.\nHow to Balance Consistency and Change\nAdobe didn’t reinvent the primary visual representation of its brand—its logo. But it did adjust, fine-tune, acquire, develop, and adapt in ways that kept it in favor with its market. How do YOU do that?\nFirst and foremost, stay true to your brand promise. This is what brought your customers to you, and it’s what will keep them coming back. No matter what other changes you consider, you have to be all in when it comes to living up to your mission and purpose. Every experience your customers have should remind them of that promise.\nDon’t wait until your customers begin shifting to competitors for services you don’t offer.\nTo continue to grow, you have to be in front of demand, not behind it. To do this:\nListen to your customers. Learn what services they’d like to have or what products they’ve seen in other markets that intrigue them.\nWatch your competition closely to see whether they’re taking an aggressive future stance or merely a hold-down-the-fort approach.\nLook at other markets and at business literature to see what’s new outside your arena.\nConsider the implications for your company if you invest in new products, services, technology, or other enhancements. Do you need a new product line? What’s the payback if you develop it, and what’s the drawback if you don’t?\nTest your theory with your customers to see their reaction. Test it with potential customers.\nIf you’re expanding geographically, you may find that your more locally flavored marketing campaigns and materials don’t represent the broader picture. Call in the experts to help you evaluate how your image plays among those other markets.\nAs your company grows, you may discover that you need to create variations on the brand, expanding your product line, tweaking existing products, and perhaps even eliminating some non-performing elements. For example, in 2011 Adobe ceased development of Flash for mobile devices because Apple refused to support it on the popular iOS platform.\nOne example of a local-to-more transition is the Starbucks story. Below, see the iterations of the logo as the company grew and changed. Starbucks didn’t start out as number 196 on the Fortune 500 list, where it is today; in 1971 it was a Seattle coffee bean roaster and retailer. Notice that it took 16 years to deviate from the original tried-and-true image.\nThe Starbucks story may be beyond what you envision for your company. But it helps to see that the company held true to its original course until it was evident that the future held more in store. And even today, after adding food products and Fizzio™ hand-crafted sodas, it has maintained its quality experience. The logo has changed, but the story is the same. And so should yours be.\nCrest, Adobe, and Starbucks all undertook change that was well thought out: meeting consumers’ needs, anticipating what the next must-have would be, and even creating a need where none existed. Remaining successful is all about knowing what’s working, quickly jettisoning what isn’t, and building new products at the right time. The “right time” is when you’ve researched the marketplace and your specific target audiences, and you’ve weighed the pros and cons of making a move or staying the course.\nYou can change your logo like Starbucks, or hold on to your original like Adobe, but you can’t stanch the tide of marketplace change, especially not today. A sustained stewardship discipline is paramount to the successful evolution of any brand. The marketing saying “If you’re not growing, you’re dying” is as true today as ever. It’s just a matter of knowing when and how to create growth. That’s the art and science of success.\nFor information on Oden, contact us at hello@oden.com.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line911764"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7613966464996338,"wiki_prob":0.7613966464996338,"text":"\"Eastlake woman, 82, to be ordained as priest Saturday sees role as example for other women\" by Brian Albrecht, Cleveland Plain Dealer\nhttps://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2018/06/eastlake_woman_82_to_be_ordain.html\nSusan Marie Guzik of Eastlake sheds a tear as women priests of the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests perform the laying on of hands during the Liturgy of Ordination mass in 2014 at the Brecksville United Church of Christ where she was ordained as a deacon. She will be ordained as a priest at the same church on Saturday. (Plain Dealer file photo\nBy Brian Albrecht, The Plain Dealer\nbalbrecht@plaind.com\nCLEVELAND, Ohio - Four years ago, when Susan Guzik was ordained a deacon by the Association of Roman Catholic Women Priests (ARCWP), she was automatically excommunicated by the church.\nGot an official letter from the bishop of the Cleveland Catholic Diocese and everything.\nIt didn't bother her then. And it won't bother her Saturday when she is ordained as a priest and three women as deacons by the ARCWP in ceremonies at 1 p.m. at the Community of St. Bridget in the Brecksville United Church of Christ.\nFour years ago, Guzik said, \"We're still Catholics. We believe we are the church.\n\"There have been times I've wondered if I'm doing the right thing,\" she added.\n\"I am doing the right thing.\"\nGuzik, 82, of Eastlake, recently said, \"That's still true today. We don't consider ourselves excommunicated.\"\nWhen asked why she wanted to become a priest, Guzik replied, \"Well why not? We're trying to prove that women can do what priests do.\n\"We're all priestly people. We're all equal,\" she added. \"We don't believe in a hierarchical model. Everybody has voice in everything.\"\nGuzik has been involved with the church for many years.\nShe received her diocesan certification as a lay ecclesial minister in the Cleveland diocese in 1993, and was active in St. Mary Magdalen Parish in Willowick for more than 55 years. She was one of the first woman lectors in that parish, and was a Stephen Ministry team member and director for several years.\n\"Most parishes today,\" Guzik noted, \"the lay people - and mostly women - they're doing most of the work in the parish. They always have.\"\nShe was married for 53 years to Matthew Guzik, who died in 2012, and has five children and nine grandchildren.\nGuzik will be ordained by Bishop Mary Eileen Collingwood, who will be ordaining priests and deacons for the first time in Cleveland.\n\"This is a milestone for Cleveland,\" she said.\nCollingwood said she has know Guzik for the past 35 years and described her as \"a very holy woman. She is very much into maintaining the right relationships with people as far as her family, her church and her community.\n\"She's an avid reader and has a very active mind,\" she added. \"We recognize that she has lived a priestly life for many, many years.\"\nCollingwood said Guzik decided to become a priest because \"she thought it was time. This where spirit is leading us.\"\nSusan Guzik, left, is shown as a deacon celebrating with Bishop Mary Eileen Collingwood. (Photo courtesy of Mary Eileen Collingwood)\nShe said Guzik will not have an easy road as far as the church goes.\n\"You will be ostracized. You will be persona non grata. Nobody will recognize you within the institutional church,\" she said. \"We've had to really come to grips with all of that.\"\nHowever, she added, \"We are a movement that believes church should not be a static spirit, but a continuing, living spirit that continues to move forward.\"\nThe women being ordained as deacons Saturday are Toni Kay Attanasio, Geraldne Lococo and Kathleen O'Connell Sauline.\nGuzik regards them as examples of a changing society.\n\"It's just the recognition that yes, women can do this, women have done this for years,\" she said.\nGuzik considers herself a role model, particularly for her granddaughters.\nShe said her accomplishment might motivate young women she has met who are \"lukewarm about the Catholic church because of the misogyny of male priests. They look down on women.\"\nGuzik said she has no plans to drastically alter her spiritual duties once she becomes a priest, and will continue to concentrate on her ministry to the elderly.\n\"I visit people in nursing homes, visit the sick. I'm not going start my own little circle of people and presiding as priest,\" Guzik said.\nShe also she will not celebrate Mass at her current church, the Community of St. Bridget, unless its two women priests are absent.\nGuzik chuckled as she recalled one person who asked if she has to be called \"father\" now, as are male priests.\n\"No, you can call me Sue,\" Guzik said she replied. \"I'm still the same person.\"\n(The ordination at the Community of St. Bridget, Brecksville United Church of Christ, 23 Public Square in Brecksville, will be followed by a reception in the church hall. 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Why the Catholic Chur...\n\"Priests' Social Justice Concerns Shape Assembly, ...\nAnn Harrington, ARCWP, Speaks at Keep Families Tog...\nPastor Dawn Begins a Summer Series - BRUNCHtalks:...\nJosepha Madigan is Walking in the Footsteps of St....\nARCC: Contemporary Catholic Belief in Action - The...\nUpper Room Inclusive Catholic Community Liturgy - ...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line876976"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6753910779953003,"wiki_prob":0.6753910779953003,"text":"As the world watches Syria, don’t forget about Yemen\nThe problem isn’t that the U.S. is standing by and doing nothing while this horror unfolds. It’s much worse than that.\nSOURCECampaign for America’s Future\nImage Credit: Democracy Now!\nIn the time it takes to read these words, a child under the age of five will probably die in Yemen.\nAnd, as this is being written, the U.N. Security Council is meeting to discuss a gas attack in Syria. President Trump, with newly-appointed National Security Advisor John Bolton at his side, says he will decide on his course of action within 24 to 48 hours.\nThe Syrian people’s tragedy is enormous. So is the possibility for military confrontation between two nuclear powers.\nBut while the headlines focus on Syria, and as a multitude of voices call for increased military involvement there, don’t forget the tragedy in Yemen. We can save lives much more easily there. We don’t have to send troops or launch missiles.\nAll we have to do is leave.\nEmpathy and intervention\nPolitical scientists at the University of Toronto have linked empathy to left-leaning political views. Linguist George Lakoff associates the liberal personality with the “nurturant parent” model of the family. And the stereotypical American self-image, across the political spectrum, is that of someone who is willing to help others.\nInterestingly, most Americans see other Americans as “selfish,” according to a 2015 Pew Research Center survey.\nPerhaps that’s why presidential candidate Bill Clinton used empathic language when he argued for US military action in Bosnia and Herzegovina – “because,” said candidate Clinton, “I’m horrified by what I’ve seen.”\nThat language reinforced what the New York Times called Clinton’s “aggressive tack” on the region.\nUnder President Clinton, NATO conducted years of bombing in the region and sent 60,000 troops to enforce the Dayton Accords. Clinton faced resistance from left and right. That conflict was, in the words of the New York Times Editorial Board, “not America’s war.” But Clinton and his team invoked the image of the U.S. as the world’s leader – and the suffering of children – to make the case for intervention.\nMore than just a place\nIn a 1995 speech announcing his decision to send peacekeeping troops, Clinton shrewdly leavened his liberal empathy (“In fulfilling this mission, we will have the chance to help stop the killing of innocent civilians, especially children”) with self-interest (“and at the same time, to bring stability to central Europe, a region of the world that is vital to our national interests.”)\nClinton then pivoted to the time-tested theme of the U.S. as a uniquely generous and selfless military force. “America has always been more than just a place,” he said, adding:\nAmerica has embodied an idea that has become the ideal for billions of people throughout the world… America is about life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness … America has done more than simply stand for these ideals. We have acted on them and sacrificed for them. Our people fought two world wars so that freedom could triumph over tyranny.\nThis is how liberal interventionism has always been packaged in American politics: with the notion that our highest ideals are best expressed, not through diplomacy, but through the projection of military force outside our borders. In this telling, history has ended. We are the indispensable nation. We alone must balance the war-torn world on our khaki-clad shoulders.\nA “humanitarian war”\nPerhaps that’s why, as the Bosnian conflict escalated, the Clinton Administration and other world governments ignored the nonviolent independence movement taking place in nearby Kosovo. It was only after that conflict turned violent, with the rise of the Kosovo Liberation Army, that the Administration responded.\nWhen Clinton addressed the nation on Kosovo, he didn’t rely on empathy for other people’s children. He called intervention the best course for American children and their future – saying it, not once, but three times.\nLiberals and leftists were divided on this intervention, as they had been with Bosnia and Herzegovina. But Susan Sontag made the case for military action in the New York Times Magazine. In the American Prospect, Paul Starr called the Kosovo intervention a “humanitarian war” and thought a land invasion would be more effective than airstrikes, but concluded:\n“Those of us who believe that the United States ought to use its power to prevent genocide and other high crimes against human decency are going to have to work a lot harder to convince our neighbors.”\nNotice the phrasing: “the United States ought to use its power …”\nWhat happens when the best way to prevent a genocide is by ending the use of American power? That seems to be a harder case to make in American political culture.\nThe forgotten catastrophe\nYemen, a nation long renowned for its beauty, has become a place of almost unimaginable horror. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres recently declared it ‘the world’s worst humanitarian crisis” and cited statistics that, once heard, should never be forgotten.\nHere’s one such statistic: Every ten minutes, a child under five dies of preventable causes. (Based on the average reading speed, it should take ten minutes to read these words. That means a child is statistically likely to die while it is being read.)\nHere are some more:\n18 million people are food insecure, and 8.4 million Yemenis don’t know how they will obtain their next meal.\n3 million acutely malnourished Yemenis are either children under 5, pregnant women, or nursing mothers.\nNearly half of all children aged between six months and 5 years old are chronically malnourished and stunted, conditions that will affect them for the rest of their lives.\nChildren are being forced to fight, or to work at very young ages. Many young girls are being forced into marriage before they are 18, or even 15, as a response to family debt and poverty.\nWomen and girls are at heightened risk of sexual and gender-based violence.\nMillions have no access to safe drinking water.\n1 million people suffered from watery diarrhea and cholera last year. There is a high risk of another cholera epidemic.\nMore than ten thousand civilians – perhaps many more – have been killed in the fighting.\nOur complicity\nThe problem isn’t that the U.S. is standing by and doing nothing while this horror unfolds. It’s much worse than that. The U.S. is actively working to cause these atrocities, by helping the dictatorship in Saudi Arabia in its relentless attack on Yemen.\nMarjorie Ransom, a former diplomat in Yemen, writes of “direct U.S. military complicity in this long and pointless campaign,” adding:\n“In addition to selling a vast arsenal of weapons to Saudi Arabia, our government’s military gave logistical guidance in the Saudi military headquarters in Riyadh and continues to provide intelligence to Saudi defense officials and aerial refueling during bombing runs.”\nShe concludes, “The Saudi-led coalition could not have conducted the two and a half years of bombing without the support of our military.”\nHow to use intelligence\nSen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont joined with one of the Senate’s most conservative members, Mike Lee of Utah, as well as Democrat Chris Murphy of Connecticut, to sponsor a resolution calling for an end to U.S. involvement in Yemen.\n44 senators voted for it, but 55 senators – including ten Democrats – voted against it. Some antiwar groups called it a step forward – but the war will not end.\nWhy haven’t progressives doing more to help the people of Yemen? Maybe it’s a problem of leadership. Nobody in a position of Democratic power is using their influence to end America’s involvement there. When the Clinton Administration was trying to build support for intervention in Yemen, it declassified intelligence photographs of the victims there and showed them to reluctant diplomats.\n“It was an amazing example of how you can use intelligence,” Albright later reflected.\nWhy America Slept\nWho in Washington’s national security establishment is handing out pictures of dying Yemenis? Nobody. It’s government policy under President Trump, just as it was under President Obama. In the last year of Obama’s presidency, in fact, the U.S. government dropped more than 20,000 bombs on seven countries. (There’s a map.)\nThere’s a lot of money to be made in arms sales. President Trump has approved massive U.S. arms sales to Saudi Arabia (Estimates of the deal’s value vary widely.) We’re told that there are no contracts in place, which places even more pressure on the American government to comply with the wishes of Mohammad bin Salman, or “MBS,” Saudi Arabia’s new dictator.\nNot that this government needs any convincing. Trump’s financial ties to Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries deserve much deeper scrutiny. So do those of his son-in-law, Jared Kushner.\nBut it is our country’s defense-industry ties have been driving that “special relationship” for decades, through Republican and Democratic governments alike. Those ties also serve to promote military policies that involve the use of expensive weaponry all around the world.\nAs the New Yorker’s Nicholas Niarchos reports, one such weapon – a U.S.-made bomb carrying 500 pounds of explosive – killed more than 140 mourners and injured 500 more during a Yemeni funeral in 2015. Among them was the mayor of Sana’a, who had been negotiating with several factions in an attempt to end the war\nThe bomb was manufactured by Raytheon.\nPrince not-so-charming\nBut defense contractors aren’t the only powerful interest keeping us in Yemen. American oil corporations have benefited from the U.S.-Saudi relationship for many decades.\nPoliticians have flattered and cajoled the country’s leadership all that time. So has the American media. With Mohammad bin Salman’s recent rise to power as “crown prince,” the self-interested servility of these elites is once again on display.\nThey call him “MBS,” as flattering pieces from the likes of Thomas Friedman affirm. Machiavelli wrote of princes like this a long time ago, saying “he who seeks to deceive will always find someone who will allow himself to be deceived.”\nMBS appears to be a nasty piece of work, even by Saudi standards, given his youthful threats – reportedly including, according to one story, a bullet in an envelope – toward anyone who stood in the way of his advancement. Then there’s the matter of his recent detention and torture of anyone who poses a political or financial threat to his power.\nTo cover up his brutality and flatter the thuggish potentate, the mainstream media dwells on MBS’ mild social liberalizations, like letting women drive and easing up on rules regarding live entertainment.\nWilkinson, who was chief of staff to former Secretary of State Colin Powell, says MBS’ social liberalizations were “designed to shift attention from this disastrous war.”\nIf so, it’s going well. While his opponents were undergoing incarceration and torture without warrant last November, albeit in a luxury hotel, Friedman wrote gushingly: “Though I came here at the start of Saudi winter, I found the country going through its own Arab Spring, Saudi style.”\nMBS may be a dictator, but in some people’s hearts he’s Number One – with a bullet.\nResistance wanted\nAs MBS was dazzling Friedman, Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna was working both sides of the aisle to end our involvement in Yemen. The Republican-led House “overwhelmingly” passed a resolution calling U.S. involvement in that country “unauthorized.”\nThis year, 44 senators voted against continued this country’s support for Saudi attacks on Yemen. Two antiwar groups, Win Without War and the Friends Committee on National Legislation, celebrated them who voted against it. Those groups are right: the tide is turning.\nBut in the meantime, the war goes on, ten minutes at a time.\nAnd as we listen to the debates in the U.N., while we wait for more information out of Douma, as the generals appear on television to discuss military options, these Yemeni children are deliberately being starved by the Saudi military – every day, all day long.\nLook at them. The morality of empathy demands that we care about these children as much as we care about children anywhere – including our own, here at home.\nWhere are the marchers, the silent vigils, the mass actions for them?\nSyria is a terrible tragedy, too – a tragedy caused by American intervention. Now we’re being told that more intervention is the cure.\nLiberal interventionism is seductive. It’s hard to resist the messianic voices that tell us we’re the indispensable heroes of our time, the saviors of the world and its children.\nBut it’s time to ask: In countries like Yemen, who will save the world from us?\nPrevious articleKoch vs. California: These groups are pushing Pruitt to undo the state’s right to regulate auto emissions\nNext articleBetsy DeVos needs an education on ethics\nRichard (RJ) Eskow is a writer, a former Wall Street executive and a radio journalist. He has experience in health insurance and economics, occupational health, risk management, finance, and IT.\nThe missing three-letter word in the Iran crisis\nI still can’t get no satisfaction\nThe riptide of American militarism\nAn hour with Noam Chomsky on fascism, nuclear weapons, climate change, Julian Assange & more\nIf war breaks out with Iran, it won’t be an accident\nVoices for Change\nWe’re not the good guys\n“What does war have to do with me?”\nOn Iran, It’s Trump vs. Trump\nWill the U.S. launch yet another unnecessary, unjustifiable war in the Middle East?\nUS military is a bigger polluter than as many as 140 countries – shrinking this war machine is a must\nBernie warns the ‘drums of war are beating in Washington again’\nAs conflict with Iran escalates, path to peace can be found","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line387160"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5352725982666016,"wiki_prob":0.46472740173339844,"text":"ROLEPLAY by Alan Ayckbourn\nIn ROLEPLAY Justin Lazenby and his live-in girlfriend Julie-Ann Dobson are planning to announce their engagement at a dinner party for each other’s parents. Julie-Ann wants everything to be perfect for her conservative mother and father. When she discovers that a dessert fork is missing, she panics and leaves the flat, hoping she can buy a new one before her parents arrive. When a woman climbs on to their balcony, however, the couple have a lot more than cutlery to worry about. The woman, Paige Petite, is desperate to escape from her boyfriend, gangster boxing promoter Rudy Raven, who told one of his thugs, Micky Rale, to hold her captive in his penthouse. After searching frantically, Micky finds Paige hiding out in Justin’s apartment and the two uninvited guests impose themselves upon the hospitality of the young couple. In addition, Justin’s drunken mother, Arabella, arrives and provides a sharp contrast to Julie-Ann’s bigoted parents. As personalities clash it becomes clear that the two young people are bound together more by the idea of romance than true love. ROLEPLAY is the third and final play in a series called DAMSELS IN DISTRESS. The other two plays are GAMEPLAN and FLATSPIN. The comedies opened on 7 September, 2002 at the Duchess Theatre in London and ran until 11 January, 2003. They are entirely separate plays, but were written to be performed either individually or as a trilogy.\nFelicity Rhys and Adam Redmayne\nAlso in the cast: Andrew Haynes, Zoë Ann Bown, Katie Kensit, Lee Town and Susan Shrand","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1272258"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7482431530952454,"wiki_prob":0.25175684690475464,"text":"HomeReligionRev. Angela Palacious publishes new book: A Question A Day: Part One\nRev. Angela Palacious publishes new book: A Question A Day: Part One\nIt has been over 30 years since Anglican priest, Reverend Angela Palacious first began to write meditations for church bulletins and newspapers, and now she has published a new book “A Question A Day: Part One.” The book is 366 verses in the Old Testament that are highlighted for reading, prayer and study.\nIt’s a book that is for the reader who is curious about the Bible and needs an introduction. It can also be used as a tool to help read through the Bible in a year.\n“I have based my thoughts on actual questions from the Bible, hoping to evoke from each reader a prayerfully personal response to the Word of God. I encourage you to record your thoughts and feelings in a journal, and discuss with your spiritual guide, prayer partner, or small group,” said Palacious.\nThe guided devotional challenges and inspires the reader to continue the diligent search towards personal and communal growth through Godly principles.\nDaily, the reverent references a biblical verse, provides a comment, and then poses a personal question. In response, the reader is encouraged to explore some of life’s deepest queries, journaling their thoughts and feelings for future introspection and reflection.\nIt’s a devotional that she says also gives way for discussions with a spiritual guide, prayer partner or small group. If you mentor others, she said you will be able to guide them toward more intentional maturity and ministry.\nThe 366 biblical references and reflections are organized chronologically but with no specific date attached. Book One focuses on the entire Old Testament, and Book Two concentrates on the New Testament and Psalms.\nPalacious says there are many questions people wrestle with in the course of their lifetime – questions that God puts to them, that others put to them, and that they have to put to themselves.\n“The Bible has well over 1,000 questions in it, with over 50 questions in the book of Genesis alone – some are repetitious, some rhetorical and others speak to our hearts, minds and spirits about deep matters,” said Palacious. “I pray that you will find the passages and the challenges helpful on your spiritual journey, and as you mentor others.”\nPart One of the series takes you on a comprehensive personal adventure through the Old Testament, one day at a time. It is written in a clear and simple style, and features daily reading to edify a person, no matter where they may be on their spiritual journey.\nNorma A. Dean, retired educator said many of the verses in the book she has known from childhood.\n“The thought-provoking questions at the end of the verses selected in this book have made me look at them differently, and they have helped me to make adjustments to my life,” said Dean.\nDorothy Jones, a cousin of Palacious said the book was easy to read, but challenging and in some areas difficult.\n“It is thought provoking and the questions are appropriate for our day, age and indeed nations. It encourages us to journey through and explore this section of the Bible in a way we may not have done before, enhancing our knowledge of his Holy Word. It promotes self-examination, irrespective of being committed Christians or not. It has certainly highlighted my lack of knowledge in areas of the Holy Bible,” said Jones.\nRetired educator and banker Hilda Knowles said the work was an insightful, methodical and practical way to study much of the Old Testament in one year.\n“In addition to the questions posed by Rev. Angela being thought provoking, they show us that there is really nothing new under the sun. The situations, problems and conflicts encountered by people in Old Testament times are very similar to those we face today. Our answers to these questions will, hopefully, show us a better, more effective way to approach, handle and/or resolve many [if not all] of the ones presented here,” wrote Knowles.\nPalacious’ book is available on Amazon and Kindle as well as in the following stores: Anglican Diocesan Office bookstore; All Seasons All Occasions; The Bible, Book and Gift Centre; Buy The Book; Logos and from Palacious directly.\nMyles and Ruth Munro\nPastor Gibson: Love\nProclaiming the gosp\nContinuing to conque","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line846474"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6131753921508789,"wiki_prob":0.6131753921508789,"text":"Let’s Pretend It’s 1977 Again\nFebruary 28, 2014 at 4:01 pm\t(Uncategorized)\nI missed the initial blast of fresh air that was punk through accidents of age and geography.\nI was 12 years old in 1976 which meant I was starting to take music seriously, but was not quite aware: I hadn’t discovered John Peel and the New Musical Express were still two years away. I also lived in Grove, a town near Wantage, itself thirty minutes outside of Oxford. In any event, Oxford was not London or Manchester or any of the hubs of punk. The town I lived in much less so.\nSo, I read about punk before I heard it, and I heard it long before I saw it live. The first band I saw was the Stranglers in 1979 when the toured with the Raven (their fourth album!). I did see Stiff Little Fingers and Adam and the Ants the following, but it when they were already established. 1977 was something I experienced thought newspaper headlines, Top of the Pops and the occasional song on the radio. But I was almost there.\nBy the time I moved to Canada in 1981, I’d seen a few bands, but I was reading the music press and my singles collection was growing. (My dad helped me stencil the Crass logo onto my jacket – funnily enough, the only other band kids at my school had on their backs was Rush).\nThirty years on and though many of those punk bands imploded within a year or two or moved onto another form, others still play. Lee Brilleaux of Dr. Feelgood once asked his critics why don’t people get on at classical musicians, how come you’re still playing Beethoven? Why don’t you play some new stuff? Of course, Brilleaux was playing new stuff, just like the Strypes today (who are themselves heavily influenced by the Feelgoods)\nStill, that’s a little different to go and see people who are still performing their own songs, and particularly in a medium like punk. In general there are two reasons why people still go to see bands now into their third decade of performing, in most cases long past their prime.\n1. It’s the first time. I saw Buzzcocks, Gang of Four, the Avengers, Steve Ignorant, the Rezillos and probably a few others after they had broken up and reformed to tour the hits. I really wanted to hear those songs. They were great shows, but I also have nothing to compare them to.\n2. Nostalgia. My twenties were great. I was at university. The musci i listened to was fantastic etc. etc. But it’s an illusion. First of all , you can never go home. Those moments are products of specific time and selective memory (how many of us have dug out a movei or a record and realized, it wasn’t anywhere near as good as we remembered – you can’t stand in the same river twice). Chasing nostalgia is like the junkie seeking that proverbial first high. You’ll never find it.\nWhich, after a long preamble, brings me to the subject of this post: Last Friday, I went to see the Forgotten Rebels at Lee’s Palace.\nI must have first seen the Forgotten Rebels in late 1983 or early 1984. I saw them open for the Cramps at the Concert Hall in 1984, but I remember that wasn’t the first time to see them. Wow. That’s thirty years ago. After that, I must have seen them at least a dozen time,. but probably the last was at a New Year’s show at the El Mo circa 1990. (Johnny Thunders was playing upstairs, and he died in 1993 – I saw him a year of so before he died, and there was another legend whose past was dishonoured by his present). I’d seen the Dik van Dykes (another band from my youth) just before New Year’s, so I thought why not?\nMissed the Cola Heads and the Noble Savages were just finishing their set as I arrived. A band to check out further, although it struck me as strange as all four band members were shirtless (was that a theme?)\nThe Forgotten Rebels came on stage a little after midnight. The band have been for many years Mickey DeSadist, and whomever he has playing with him. And Mickey, no longer rail thin, but with as much personality as ever.\nYes, it was great to hear all the hits again, including my favourite Rebels song “I think of her.” The set list drew heavily from the early records, National Unity, In Love with the System and This Ain’t Hollywood, but so what, that’s what people want isn’t it? In the same way, and this is not a comparrison, when Mick Jagger announces, “This is our new single,” no one really gets too excited – they’re there to hear “Satisfaction.”\nBut I’ll confess to feeling a little hollow. Maybe it was me. Certainly the audience enjoyed the show. Although the demographic was odd – lots of old guys with beer guts and bald spots, along with kids who seemed barely old enough to get into the show, and who were born long after the Rebels formed.\nI suppose it might be the difficulty of reconciling the rebellion of punk, the smash-the-system, fuck-the-old ways with becoming established, but it seemed I had gone to the show with the wrong mindset. I left before what I’m sure was the last song, “Surfin on Heroin.”\nShould bands like the Rebels go gently into that good night like the Stones or the Who? It’s not a question I can answer. If people still get a kick out of it, if the band still like doing it, who am I to say no? But, it should be recognized for what it is. In “My Generation” Daltrey sang, “Hope I die before I get old.” The better formulation though is “Hope I live before I get old.”\nMusic Notes: February 2014\nFebruary 27, 2014 at 11:46 pm\t(Uncategorized)\nHere we go then…\n1. Big Star – Nothing Can Hurt Me\nI confess I haven’t seen the movie, but the soundtrack is a treasure trove for Big Star fans, er fanatics. 21 previously unreleased versions of classic songs like “In the Street,” “Thirteen” and “September Gurls.” Demos, alternative mixes and a few mixes from 2012. If you’re new to Big Star’s blend of American pop and Beatlesque sounds, maybe this isn’t the place to begin (pick up the first two records), but for those of us who are already admirers, this will do very nicely thank you.\n2. September Girls – “Heartbeat /Wasted”\nIrish garage shoegazers make beautiful noise – listen at their bandcamp page.\n3. Courtney Barnett – The Double EP: A Sea of Split Peas\nTwo releases in one. You don’t want to use adjectives like quirky, but it does convey a certain sound in this Australian singer-songwriter’s work. Over to her site now Released in North America in April.\n4. Angel Olson – Burn Your Fire For No Witness\nMy favourite record this week. Folk, rock, Leonard Cohen. I really can’t describe this; just listen to it.\n5. Uncle Tupelo – Anodyne\nUncle Tupelo are in the news again because of the legacy edition of their first album No Depression, which contains among other treats the ND demos and the band’s early cassettes. Still, for my money, Anodyne is the band’s most realized vision; a perfect balance between country and rock, and between Jay Farrar and Jeff Tweedy’s songwriting talents. Alas, the delicate balance was unable to survive and Son Volt and Wilco were the result. This is simply beautiful work.\n6. Dean Wareham – Emancipated Hearts EP\nCame out last year, but if you didn’t get it, it serves as a nice reminder of his talent and a lead in to the new album coming in March. One whine about the album though. I his quite amazing book Black Postcards, Wareham complains about digital music. Fair enough, but the new album comes as an i-tunes release with an exclusive song. C’mon Dean. I love you, but are you trying to have your cake and eat it too.\n7. Dr. Feelgood – Oil City Confidential\nThe third of Julian Temple’s film about mb (the others being about the Sex Pistols and Joe Strummer). This time, the “best local band in the world,” Dr. Feelgood. A fantastic retelling of the Feelgood’s story up to the almost breakthrough and Wilco’s departure. Fascinating stuff. The DVD comes with extra Wilco stuff and the entire interview with Lee Brilleaux.\n8. Public Enemy – It’ll Take a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back\nHadn’t listened to this in ages, but was thumbing through stuff the other day and came across it. Bang! It’s one of those incendiary records like Bollocks or the first Velvets’ that time cannot dim the impact. Stunning.\n9. James Murphy – Subway Symphony\nThe former LCD Soundsystem leader has a plan to add music to New York’s subways. You can even sign a petitiotn\nNine because it’s February (Sorry – I thought this was funny last year, and I guess I still do)\nBeing a Dad (part 6): The Movies\nFebruary 24, 2014 at 1:58 am\t(Uncategorized)\nTook my son to see The Lego Movie this afternoon.\nInitially, the boy was too cool to see the movie, and I was puzzled. First, it’s a movie and the boy will see pretty much anything. Second, it’s Lego, and the boy loves Lego and has a couple of Lego video games.\nEventually, he changed his ind and I learned why. He thought it was a movie for younger kids, and thought maybe he was too old for it. But after a school friend told him it was a great film, he changed his mind.\nAnd yeah, I loved it too. I laughed all the way through (“Dad, I think you liked the movie more than I did”) . Why not, the portrayal of Batman as a narcissistic jerk is brilliant. Sure, sure, the movie is fairly traditional in its morality take about how every one is special, but the sheer energy and humour in the film… It’s wonderful.\nI remember the first time I went to the movies. It was around 1970. My dad took me to see Jungle Book with my cousin Richard and his dad. I was six. It’s a great moment, the first time. But the magic lingers.\nSo to the guy down the aisle from me who spent half the movie scrolling on his phone and even made a call while his little kids fussed around, “Buddy, it’s not about you and your important life. It’s about your kids. I can’t even really think you’re a jerk, because, ultimately, you’re missing out. ”\nTake your kids to a movie and enjoy the film with them. It’s worth it.\nAbout the Situation in Ukraine (Links)\nCouple of interesting pieces about situation in Ukraine.\nStatement about the Situation in Ukraine – Autonomous Workers Union (Feb 19, 2014)\nInterview with a Ukrainian Revolutionary Syndicalist (Feb 20, 2014 also on AWU site)\nFinally, a discussion on Lib com\nTwo Stories about Pete Seeger\nI’m not a regular reader of Rolling Stone, but the latest issue is worth looking at. For one thing it has a moving feature about the late Philip Seymour Hoffman – yes, it’s the issue with Hoffman on the cover which caused Drake to have a hissy fit about “his” cover being given to Hoffman.\nBut the more interesting piece is Mikal Gilmore’s article on Pete Seeger. Two stories in particular:\nIn September 1949, Seeger played a civil rights benefit with Paul Robeson in Peekskill, New York. After the show, a mob attacked attendees and performers alike. Seeger drove away with his young children in the car as rocks smashed his windows. His friend Lee Hayes later asked, “What is it in the people’s songs of Paul Robeson and Pete Seeger…to inspire this savagery, this hatred.”\nTwo decades later, Seeger played a show in Beacon, New york. After the show, a young man came up to Seeger and extended his hand to Seeger. As he did so, he told Seeger, “I think I should tell you, I came here this afternoon to kill you.” Seeger was apparently so startled (who wouldn’t be?) all he could say initially was “thank you.” Apparently the man was a soldier who had lost friends in Vietnam, and believed Seeger was a traitor. But, as he watched the show, saw how the crowd reacted, he lost that anger. “I feel cleansed,” he told Seeger.\nThe full story is in the February 27 issue of Rolling Stone.\nThe Return of Super Mayor!\nOK, I live in Toronto. A city that used to imagine it was New York run by the Swiss – hardly true, but people can dream. Still, whenever I mentioned I was from Toronto, most people had a fairly positive image of the city. (“clean” and “safe”) These days, the question is “What’s with that Rob Ford?”\nYes, indeed. What IS with that Rob Ford. For those who don’t watch late night TV or read newspapers, Rob Ford is the former suburban councillor who ran for mayor on a cut-the-gravy-train /lower-taxes-for-the-little-guy platform (more of a mantra really). And despite his clownish past behaviour (drunkenly abusing patrons at the Air Canada Centre, denying he was there, then admitting it – actually, now that I think about it , that’s Ford’s MO), he was elected. Handily.\nSince then however, Ford’s personality and embarrassing list of colourful achievements have made him an international laughing-stock as Toronto’s crack-smoking mayor. There were allegations of drunken behaviour, groping female councilors and most infamously smoking crack with suspected drug dealers (who else would you smoke crack with?). Ford denied it all\nUntil…Police chief Bill Blair confirmed the existence of a video. At this point, Ford fessed up. Yes, he had smoked crack but he hadn’t lied about it because the media had actually asked him that (they had, but hey). And finally, in a completely out of the blue moment, Ford denied he had ever wanted to eat a co-worker’s “pussy” noting, in what he appeared to think was a moment of wit, “I have plenty to eat at home.”\nAnd then silence. A few interviews in which Ford adopted a semi-repentant tone. He was no longer drinking – that was over. He had apologized. What more could he do?\nYes, yes, there were suspicions Ford did not declare a state of emergency during the December ice storm because he would no longer be in charge, (Ford had lost that right earlier in the year – he could declare a SOE, but then power passes to his executive committee) but nothing really to speak of.\nAnd then it began again,. A video surfaced from an Etobicoke restaurant where Ford swayed drunkenly speaking in a slurred Jamaican patois cursing the police chief. Shortly after his brother Doug denied Ford was drinking again, Ford admitted he was, but suggested since it was on his own time, it was his business (so much for the suggestion he was done with drinking). Parenthetically, we should all have a brother as loyal as Doug Ford. Brother Rob could run down the street butt naked with a gun in one hand and a big bag of crack in the other, and Doug would blame the liberal media.\nLast week he admitted he had lied abut not lying because he was embarrassed about it. Also last week, Ford got a ticket for jay-walking in Vancouver and saw allegations surface he was served alcohol after hours in a bar there .\nNot to be outdone, this week Ford has called for a rainbow flag flying at city Hall in Toronto to be taken down and replaced by another Canadian flag. Ford also announced he would not be attending the World Pride events this summer because he ” couldn’t change who he is. Er…what?\nIt seems Ford is going after the homophobic vote, which might not be a good idea given the size of the city’s gay and lesbian community. And moreover, wasn’t that a fight that ended decades ago? Gays and lesbians are…well, just as boring as straight people.\nMy wife believes that these little pieces are actually Ford’s strategy of staying in the public eye – a sort of buffoonish version of Wilde’s notion that the only thing worse than being talking about.,\nI’m almost convinced that Ford’s antics are some sort of wacky performance art piece. Despite his self-made man persona, he was born into money so he doesn’t really need to work. Maybe he’s in a decade long version of an Office-type program.\nSo the great hope now is moderate conservative, failed Tory party leader and ex-Mayoralty candidate John Tory or possibly Olivia Chow. My only experience of Ms. Chow is at an anti-war rally a few years back. I was there with my four-year old and Chow and her husband, Jack Layton, came through the crowd. Olivia glanced at the boy and whispered, “so cute.” Good taste, but not yet a policy.\nOf course, Ford is an unpleasant bully with a substance abuse problem. And that’s what makes his backers nervous. They see the agenda which Ford stands for going down with him. Sure Chow or Tory would superficially be different to Ford (OK, in terms of public fuck-ups probably substantially different), but would the underlying agenda be fundamentally different? I’m going to say that under a Tory or Chow regime, or hell, under a Ford one, things would largely continue to go in the same way. Vanilla, Chocolate or Strawberry. It’s not much of a choice.\nNo More Mister Nice Girl: Maggie Estep\nHeard today about the loss of poet, author and musician Maggie Estep. Her sudden passing at the age of 50 following complications from a heart attack is pretty shocking.Too soon, too soon.\nI went to the collection and pulled out the only CD of hers I own, No More Mister Nice Girl. Overall the record has aged well. The stuff I didn’t like much, I still don’t like, but the inspired stuff, “Hey Baby”, “Car Guy”, “Fuck Me”, “Rip Trip Strip”, and “Bad Day at the Beauty Salon” still sound great. Oh and there’s a fantastic shot of Estep on the cover with a “Fuck with me, I dare you” expression on her face.\nHere’s the video for her most famous recording, “Hey Baby” which features John S. Hall from King Missile\nLiner Notes – (from No More Mister Nice Girl)\nI was having a foul day. Some geezer harrassed me on the street and I got completely bent out of shape, but the guy was huge so I just stuffed my retort. Went home to drink coffee. No milk. I ripped through the cupboards and found Non Dairy Creamer. It tasted like shit. I got into one of those senseless rages where you throw stuff. I hurled the Non Dairy Creamer and it fell into the tub where I was running some bath water. The creamer erupted and made this bathing gel of Non Dairy Creamer. I was ready to kill myself. Instead I wrote Hey Baby.\nSo I’m walking down the street\nminding my own business\nwhen this guy starts with me\nhe’s suckin’ his lips goin’\nYo Baby\nand I get a little tense and nervous\nbut I keep walking\nbut the guy, he’s dogging my every move\nhey Miss, he says,\nDon’t miss this!\nAnd he grabs his crotch and sneers ear to ear\nso finally, I turn around\nHey Buddy, I say\nI’m feelin’ kinda tense, Buddy\nI got a fuckin’ song in my heart\nso come on,\nI got a huge bucket of non-dairy creamer\nand some time to kill\nso let’s do it\nwe’ll make some foul-smelling artifical milk\nand drink gallons and gallons and gallons of it\nGet our bladders exceedingly full then\nsit on the toilet together and let\nthe water run in the shower\nand torture ourselves by not letting ourselves urinate\nas the water rushes loudly\ninto the bathrub, okay?\nWe’ll do it together\nwrithe in utter agony\nJust you and me\nand I’ll even spring for some of that blue shit\nfor the toilet bowl, all right?\nI mean, that’s my idea of a good time\nso how bout it, you wanna?\nThe guy backs up a bit\nWhatsa matter, Baby?\nYou got somethin’ against men?, he says\nNo, I say\nI don’t have anything against men\nJust STUPID men\nMaggie Estep\nMark Twain on Why We’re Here\nThis quotation from Mark Twain arrived in my inbox this morning courtesy of Skeptics magazine’s weekly newsletter in an article about intelligent design. Worth sharing. It reminded me of that graphic about the ascent of man from ape to upright human Richard Dawkins hates so much because it posits an intelligent path to where we are. (Which is not to suggest that’s Twain’s intent here) Evolution isn’t a design. It just is.\n“Man has been here 32,000 years. That it took a hundred million years to prepare the world for him is proof that that is what it was done for. I suppose it is. I dunno. If the Eiffel tower were now representing the world’s age, the skin of paint on the pinnacle-knob at its summit would represent man’s share of that age; and anybody would perceive that that skin was what the tower was built for. I reckon they would, I dunno.”\n—Mark Twain, “Was the World Made for Man?” 1903\nPlatypus Society Forum: The Politics of Work (Audio Link) on Work\nFebruary 6, 2014 at 12:45 am\t(Uncategorized) (Platypus Society)\nLast week on a bitterly cold night, I spoke at a Platypus Society forum on the Politics of Work representing Internationalist Perspective. Approximately 25 people came out to hear differing perspectives on work.\nMy c0-panelists were L Susan Brown author of the 1993 book The Politics of Individualism and the article “Does Work Really Work?” Dave Bush from the Rank and File project, and Sam Ginden, a former Canadian Autoworkers staffer.\nWhile my three co-panelists looked to what I consider to be solutions within capitalism, I tried to link the politics of work to a broader critique of the value-form.\nTo hear whether or not I was successful, you can listen to the audio here (but you can skip to the good part at the 33 minute mark!).\nFebruary 3, 2014 at 1:37 pm\t(Uncategorized)\nThe death yesterday, apparently from a heroin overdose, of Philip Seymour Hoffman is a deep loss.\nHoffman was an exceptionally talented individual. Unlike many “movie stars” who essentially play themselves or a variant of such in each of their films, Hoffman was a gifted actor capable of playing different characters convincingly. Seldom a leading man, he possessed no “movie star” good looks, Hoffman played supporting characters who often were as memorable than the leads.\nThat he was found sitting on a toilet in his underwear, a syringe in his arm only underscores the loss. An entirely preventable one. Hoffman’s friend, playwright David Bar Katz commented,\n“I saw him last week, and he was clean and sober, his old self. I really thought this chapter was over.”\nAnd sadly now it is.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line888409"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8002365827560425,"wiki_prob":0.8002365827560425,"text":"10 of Your Favorite 80s/90s Action Movie Stars Then and Now\nThe 1980-1999s were pretty crazy decades for Hollywood. Everyone wanted to out-do everyone else, be it in the fashion aspect, catchy one-liners, or the general machismo of the main protagonist. During these 20 years we’ve had so many iconic action movies, that they hold-up even by today’s standards where everything feels fake and CGI.\nThanks to that Big Boom of action flicks we got to witness the birth of such incredible actors as Bruce Willis, Sylvester Stallone, Jackie Chan, and countless more. Today we’d like to revisit some of those old-school action stars and see what they’re up to these days.\n1. Harrison Ford\nAfter hitting it off as Han Solo, Ford blew up even more in the “Indiana Jones” films and “Blade Runner.” Today, funnily enough, he’s still playing in “Star Wars”, new “Blade Runner”, and the future “Indiana Jones” sequel. Nothing’s changed.\n2. Dolph Lundgren\nA big dude like Dolph was destined to make an impact on the movie scene. His Ivan Drago is to this day one of the best characters ever seen on the movie screen. And in case you forgot, he played He-man and Frank Castle (aka the Punisher). Today he’s still busy acting, with his latest appearance being in 2018’s “Aquaman”.\n3. Steven Seagal\nTo be frank, I’ve watched every single Seagal movie but can’t tell you a single title. They’re all the same! One thing is certain, his Aikido moves are legendary. Believe it or not, he’s now a reserve deputy chief in the Jefferson Parish, Louisiana Sheriff’s office!\n4. Anne Parillaud\nMeet the only lady on this list! French actress Anne Parillaud became famous and internationally known for her role as Nikita in Luc Besson’s movie Nikita. This film made Anne an S-grade action star. But what about today? Well, she’s still acting but her great success has never returned to her again.\n5. Bruce Willis\n“Die Hard.” That’s it. Just “Die Hard” and nothing else. The bulk of his greatest movies were in the early 2000’s. What about today? There were the “Expendables” and Shyamalan’s still got Bruce for the Unbreakable trilogy.\n6. Arnold Schwarzenegger\nThe list for this titan goes on and on: he’s the Conan, the Terminator, the Commando, the commando hunting the Predator, and so on, and so forth, with a bunch of action comedies splattered in there. Now Schwarzenegger is the governor of California, but he still does cameos.\n7. Sylvester Stallone\nAfter his iconic role in “Rocky” and its sequels, Stallone played John Rambo, a crazy policeman in Cobra, and equally as crazy cop in “Demolition Man.” Now Stallone is doing his best to stay relevant and judging from Creed 1 and 2, he’s doing a fine job!\n8. Jean-Claude Van Damme\nDid you know he’s actually Belgian and not French? Either way after “Bloodsport”, and “Kickboxer” he’s joined the Hollywood’s S-class. Now he’s got a beautiful daughter and doesn’t seem to be super involved with the whole movie shindig.\n9. Chuck Norris\nIn short, Chuck Norris was, is, and will always be the meanest Texas ranger in the whole world. Sadly, Norris hasn’t been in anything too amazing since “Expendables 2”, but maybe one day…\n10. Jackie Chan\nSaved the best for last. It’s no secret that Jackie Chan is a certified badass. I mean, he does all his stunts and rarely uses any tethers or safety nets. He’s done well over 20 movies in 80-90’s and unlike Steven Seagal all of them were super fun. Today he’s still doing stunts, and fighting bad guys on the big screen, but he’s transitioned more into suspenseful action dramas rather than all-out Kung Fu goodness. God bless this man!\nJanuary 15, 2019\t (Updated: January 15, 2019\t )","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1210493"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6733600497245789,"wiki_prob":0.6733600497245789,"text":"August 28, 2018 6:00 am | FILED UNDER: europe\nBabis Calls For EU Ban On All Illegal Migrants\nWe have the people to help but in their country, Prime Minister Andrej Babis said in a speech before Czech ambassadors about migrants heading for Europe. “If I’m talking about not wanting to accept one migrant, it’s because it’s a symbol. We should negotiate with the states of North Africa and have the Marshall Plan for Africa,” Babis told the Foreign Ministry.\nHe wants to talk about it with Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Contem, whom he meets on Tuesday. Italy is pushing for the other European countries to share the migrants heading for Europe.\nBabis also said he does not agree with the planned increase in funds for the European agency Frontex to EUR 10.3 billion. “I am not convinced that we should increase the Frontex budget,” Babis said.\nThe money should be made directly by the Mediterranean countries of Italy, Spain, Greece or Malta, which, according to the Czech Prime Minister, could be more concerned with protecting the European maritime border than with Frontex. Meanwhile, according to him, Europe is rather acting by telling those heading for Europe to try to get to the European continent and then have the chance to get asylum.\n“We are a solid part of the West, no one can question it. The question is how we perform. I’m trying to be active. When I say that I want to promote our national interests, it is nothing anti-European, “the prime minister said. Europe, according to him, must save his identity and civilization.\n“If anyone talks about Czexit, it threatens our future,” said Babis. Speaking in front of Czech ambassadors, he also talked about the need for a European Union reform. The EU, according to him, has to return to its essence, a safe continent based on a prosperous market, free movement of people, goods, services and capital. He said that if the eurozone does not reform, the Czech Republic’s accession to it is not a topic for it.\nUncontrolled migration is a fundamental risk, said Minister Hamacek\nAccording to Jan Hamacek, the Minister of the Interior, who is also in charge of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the problem of illegal migration is also crucial. “Uncontrolled migration is a fundamental security risk for Europe,” Hamacek said.\n“The world around us has changed and not for the better,” said the CSSD chief. Climate change can drive millions of Africans out of Africa and become a detonator of war conflicts. Therefore, it is in the interest of Europe to create a belt of prosperity and security around us. But if we are to provide assistance to African states, we must also ask them to genuinely engage in the fight against illegal migration.\nWe will not impose who will work or live with us, said Babis.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line783573"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5830538272857666,"wiki_prob":0.4169461727142334,"text":"Your search found 23 Results\nProjected Uptake of New Antiretroviral (ARV) Medicines in Adults in Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A Forecast Analysis 2015-2025.\nGupta A; Juneja S; Vitoria M; Habiyambere V; Nguimfack BD; Doherty M; Low-Beer D\nPloS One. 2016; 11(10):e0164619.\nWith anti-retroviral treatment (ART) scale-up set to continue over the next few years it is of key importance that manufacturers and planners in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) hardest hit by the HIV/AIDS pandemic are able to anticipate and respond to future changes to treatment regimens, generics pipeline and demand, in order to secure continued access to all ARV medicines required. We did a forecast analysis, using secondary WHO and UNAIDS data sources, to estimate the number of people living with HIV (PLHIV) and the market share and demand for a range of new and existing ARV drugs in LMICs up to 2025. UNAIDS estimates 24.7 million person-years of ART in 2020 and 28.5 million person-years of ART in 2025 (24.3 million on first-line treatment, 3.5 million on second-line treatment, and 0.6 million on third-line treatment). Our analysis showed that TAF and DTG will be major players in the ART regimen by 2025, with 8 million and 15 million patients using these ARVs respectively. However, as safety and efficacy of dolutegravir (DTG) and tenofovir alafenamide (TAF) during pregnancy and among TB/HIV co-infected patients using rifampicin is still under debate, and ART scale-up is predicted to increase considerably, there also remains a clear need for continuous supplies of existing ARVs including TDF and EFV, which 16 million and 10 million patients-respectively-are predicted to be using in 2025. It will be important to ensure that the existing capacities of generics manufacturers, which are geared towards ARVs of higher doses (such as TDF 300mg and EFV 600mg), will not be adversely impacted due to the introduction of lower dose ARVs such as TAF 25mg and DTG 50mg. With increased access to viral load testing, more patients would be using protease inhibitors containing regimens in second-line, with 1 million patients on LPV/r and 2.3 million on ATV/r by 2025. However, it will remain important to continue monitoring the evolution of ARV market in LMICs to guarantee the availability of these medicines.\nUse of network meta-analysis in clinical guidelines.\nKanters S; Ford N; Druyts E; Thorlund K; Mills EJ; Bansback N\nBulletin of the World Health Organization. 2016; 94:782-784.\nIn conclusion, WHO clinical guidelines have become increasingly evidence-based through the use of rigorous methods of synthesizing the evidence. Over the past decade, high-quality, pairwise meta-analyses have been widely used in this context, but network meta-analysis methods are increasingly important for the optimal evaluation of competing interventions. We expect that network meta-analysis will increasingly be used and adapted for developing other guidelines. (Excerpt)\nProgress Toward Strengthening National Blood Transfusion Services - 14 Countries, 2011-2014.\nChevalier MS; Kuehnert M; Basavaraju SV; Bjork A; Pitman JP\nMMWR. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. 2016 Feb 12; 65(5):115-9.\nBlood transfusion is a life-saving medical intervention; however, challenges to the recruitment of voluntary, unpaid or otherwise nonremunerated whole blood donors and insufficient funding of national blood services and programs have created obstacles to collecting adequate supplies of safe blood in developing countries (1). Since 2004, the U.S. President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) has provided approximately $437 million in bilateral financial support to strengthen national blood transfusion services in 14 countries in sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean* that have high prevalence rates of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infections. CDC analyzed routinely collected surveillance data on annual blood collections and HIV prevalence among donated blood units for 2011-2014. This report updates previous CDC reports (2,3) on progress made by these 14 PEPFAR-supported countries in blood safety, summarizes challenges facing countries as they strive to meet World Health Organization (WHO) targets, and documents progress toward achieving the WHO target of 100% voluntary, nonremunerated blood donors by 2020 (4). During 2011-2014, overall blood collections among the 14 countries increased by 19%; countries with 100% voluntary, nonremunerated blood donations remained stable at eight, and, despite high national HIV prevalence rates, 12 of 14 countries reported an overall decrease in donated blood units that tested positive for HIV. Achieving safe and adequate national blood supplies remains a public health priority for WHO and countries worldwide. Continued success in improving blood safety and achieving WHO targets for blood quality and adequacy will depend on national government commitments to national blood transfusion services or blood programs through increased public financing and diversified funding mechanisms for transfusion-related activities.\nAdoption of national recommendations related to use of antiretroviral therapy before and shortly following the launch of the 2013 WHO consolidated guidelines.\nNelson LJ; Beusenberg M; Habiyambere V; Shaffer N; Vitoria MA; Montero RG; Easterbrook PJ; Doherty MC\nAIDS. 2014 Mar; 28 Suppl 2:S217-24.\nOBJECTIVE: To determine the status of key national policies on the use of antiretroviral therapy (ART) at the time of the launch of the 2013 WHO consolidated guidelines as well as to track early progress towards adoption of these recommendations following dissemination. DESIGN: Descriptive analysis of global data on baseline ART policies as of June 2013 and early intentions to adopt the 2013 WHO for use of antiretroviral drugs guidelines as of November 2013. METHODS: Compilation of existing global reports on key HIV policies, review of national guidelines, data collection through annual drug procurement surveys and through guidelines dissemination meetings in each of the six WHO regions. RESULTS: Data were available from 124 low- and middle-income countries, including 97% of the 57 high-priority countries that have been identified by WHO and the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). At baseline, only one country reported recommending antiretroviral therapy (ART) at a CD4 T-cell count 250 cells/mul or less for adults and adolescents in 2013, whereas nine countries already recommended using CD4 T-cell count 500 cells/mul or less. Recommendations for ART initiation regardless of CD4 T-cell count for HIV-infected patients with tuberculosis (86%), hepatitis B (75%), all HIV-infected women who were pregnant or breastfeeding (option B+: 40%) or HIV-infected persons in a serodiscordant relationship (26%) had been nationally adopted as of June 2013. Eight of 67 countries (12%) already recommended treating all children less than 5 years of age. The triple antiretroviral combination of tenofovir + lamivudine (or emtricitabine) + efavirenz was recommended as the preferred first-line option for adults and adolescents more frequently (51%) than for pregnant women (38%), or for both adults/adolescents and pregnant women (28%; P < 0.05). Fewer than half (37%) of all countries reported recommending lopinavir/ritonavir for all HIV-infected children less than 3 years of age; 54% of countries reported recommending routine viral load monitoring, whereas only 41% recommended nurse-initiated ART. CONCLUSIONS: A number of key WHO policy recommendations on antiretroviral drug use were adopted rapidly by countries in advance of or shortly following the launch of the 2013 guidelines. Efforts are needed to support and track ongoing policy adoption and ensure that it is accompanied by the scale-up of evidence-based interventions.\nContraception for women with medical disorders.\nNg CH; Fraser IS; Berbic M\nBest Practice and Research. Clinical Obstetrics & Gynaecology. 2014 Aug; 28(6):917-30.\nMany women in the reproductive years have chronic medical conditions that are affected by pregnancy or in which the fetus is placed at increased risk. In most of these women, ongoing medical management of their conditions is greatly improved, even compared with a decade or two ago. However, their condition may still be seriously exacerbated by the physiological changes of pregnancy, and close monitoring of a carefully planned pregnancy is optimal. This requires effective and safe contraceptive use until pregnancy is desired and the medical condition is stabilised. Many contraceptives will also have adverse effects on some medical conditions, and there is now a considerable awareness of the complexities of some of these interactions. For this reason the World Health Organization has developed an excellent, simple and pragmatic programme of guidelines on a four point scale (the WHO \"Medical Eligibility Criteria\": WHO-MEC), summarising risk of specific contraceptive methods in women with specified chronic medical conditions. The general approach to contraceptive management of many of these conditions is addressed in this article. Copyright (c) 2014. Published by Elsevier Ltd.\nUNAIDS terminology guidelines. Revised version.\nJoint United Nations Programme on HIV / AIDS [UNAIDS]\nGeneva, Switzerland, UNAIDS, 2011 Oct. [40] p.\nThese guidelines to UNAIDS’ preferred terminology have been developed for use by staff members, colleagues in the Programme’s 10 Cosponsoring organisations, and other partners working in the global response to HIV. Language shapes beliefs and may influence behaviours. Considered use of appropriate language has the power to strengthen the global response to the epidemic. UNAIDS is pleased to make these guidelines to preferred terminology freely available. It is a living, evolving document that is reviewed on a regular basis. Comments and suggestions for additions, deletions, or modifications should be sent to terminology@unaids.org.\nPrevention of mother-to-child transmission of HIV: antiretroviral strategies.\nRead JS\nClinics In Perinatology. 2010 Dec; 37(4):765-76, viii.\nThe World Health Organization's Strategic Approaches to the Prevention of HIV Infection in Infants includes 4 components: primary prevention of HIV-1 infection; prevention of unintended pregnancies among HIV-1-infected women; prevention of transmission of HIV-1 infection from mothers to children; and provision of ongoing support, care, and treatment to HIV-1-infected women and their families. This review focuses on antiretrovirals for secondary prevention of HIV-1 infection-prevention of HIV-1 transmission from an HIV-1-infected woman to her child. Antiretroviral strategies to prevent the mother-to-child transmission of HIV-1 in nonbreastfeeding populations comprise antiretroviral treatment of HIV-1-infected pregnant women needing antiretrovirals for their own health, antiretroviral prophylaxis for HIV-1-infected pregnant women not yet meeting criteria for treatment, and antiretroviral prophylaxis for infants of HIV-1-infected mothers. The review primarily addresses antiretroviral strategies for nonbreastfeeding, HIV-1-infected women and their infants in resource-rich settings, such as the United States. Antiretroviral strategies to prevent antepartum, intrapartum, and early postnatal transmission in resource-poor settings are also addressed, albeit more briefly. Copyright (c) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.\nHIV: the fight is far from over.\nLancet. 2010 Dec 4; 376(9756):1874.\nThis editorial argues that despite the report by UNAIDS that the trajectory of the HIV epidemic has been broken, a US Institute of Medicine (IOM) report paints a bleaker picture for the immediate future of HIV/AIDS in Africa. The IOM report states that sub-Saharan Africa bears 68% of the worldwide burden of HIV infection and the gap is growing between the number of people needing treatment and the availability of resources.\nThe Millennium Development Goals report 2007.\nNew York, New York, United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 2007 Jun. 36 p.\nSince their adoption by all United Nations Member States in 2000, the Millennium Declaration and the Millennium Development Goals have become a universal framework for development and a means for developing countries and their development partners to work together in pursuit of a shared future for all. The Millennium Declaration set 2015 as the target date for achieving most of the Goals. As we approach the midway point of this 15-year period, data are now becoming available that provide an indication of progress during the first third of this 15-year period. This report presents the most comprehensive global assessment of progress to date, based on a set of data prepared by a large number of international organizations within and outside the United Nations system. The results are, predictably, uneven. The years since 2000, when world leaders endorsed the Millennium Declaration, have seen some visible and widespread gains. Encouragingly, the report suggests that some progress is being made even inthose regions where the challenges are greatest. These accomplishments testify to the unprecedented degree of commitment by developing countries and their development partners to the Millennium Declaration and to some success in building the global partnership embodied in the Declaration. The results achieved in the more successful cases demonstrate that success is possible in most countries, but that the MDGs will be attained only if concerted additional action is taken immediately and sustained until 2015. All stakeholders need to fulfil, in their entirety, the commitments they made in the Millennium Declaration and subsequent pronouncements. (excerpt)\nPopulation and HIV / AIDS 2007. [Wallchart].\nUnited Nations. Department of Economic and Social Affairs. Population Division\nNew York, New York, United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division, 2008 Mar. [2] p. (ST/ESA/SER.A/270)\nThe AIDS epidemic remains one of the greatest challenges confronting the international community. In countries with a large number of people living with HIV, all population and development indicators are affected by the epidemic. Governments often cite HIV/AIDS as their most significant demographic concern. For more than two decades, the rapidly expanding HIV/AIDS epidemic has triggered a wide array of responses at the national, regional and global levels. The goals established by the United Nations General Assembly in the 2000 Millennium Declaration and through the adoption of the 2001 Declaration of Commitment on HIV/AIDS reflect widely-held concerns about the impact of the epidemic on development and human well-being. More recently, at the 2006 High Level Meeting on AIDS, Member States adopted a Political Declaration focusing on how to attain universal access to comprehensive HIV/AIDS prevention programs, treatment, care and support by 2010. (excerpt)\nChildren and AIDS: Second stocktaking report. Actions and progress.\nUNICEF; Joint United Nations Programme on HIV / AIDS [UNAIDS]; World Health Organization [WHO]\nNew York, New York, UNICEF, 2008 Apr. 48 p.\nThis report will focus on three major themes. First, strengthening communities and families is crucial to every aspect of a child-centred approach to AIDS. Support by governments, NGOs and other actors should therefore be complementary to and supportive of these family and community efforts, through, for example, ensuring access to basic services. Second, interventions to support children affected by HIV and AIDS are most effective when they form part of strong health, education and social welfare systems. Unfortunately, because maternal and child health programmes are weak in many countries, millions of children, HIV-positive and -negative alike, go without immunization, mosquito nets and other interventions that contribute to the overall goal of HIV-free child survival. A final theme of this report is the challenge of measurement. Documenting advances and shortfalls strengthens commitment and guides progress. A number of countries have data available on the 'Four Ps', and targeted studies are being developed to assess the situation of the marginalized young people who are most at risk but often missed in routine surveys. (excerpt)\nInternational guidelines on HIV / AIDS and human rights. 2006 consolidated version. Second International Consultation on HIV / AIDS and Human Rights, Geneva, 23-25 September 1996. Third International Consultation on HIV / AIDS and Human Rights, Geneva, 25-26 July 2002. Organized jointly by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV / AIDS.\nOffice of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights; Joint United Nations Programme on HIV / AIDS [UNAIDS]\nGeneva, Switzerland, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, 2006. 115 p. (HR/PUB/06/9)\nThe International Guidelines on HIV/AIDS and Human Rights arose because of various calls for their development in light of the need for guidance for Governments and others on how to best promote, protect and fulfill human rights in the context of the HIV epidemic. During the first International Consultation on AIDS and Human Rights, organized by the United Nations Centre for Human Rights, in cooperation with the World Health Organization, in Geneva, from 26 to 28 July 1989, participants discussed the possible elaboration of guidelines to assist policymakers and others in complying with international human rights standards regarding law, administrative practice and policy. Several years later, in his report to the Commission at its fifty-first session (E/CN.4/1995/45, para.135), the United Nations Secretary-General stated that \"the development of such guidelines or principles could provide an international framework for discussion of human rights considerations at the national, regional and international levels in order to arrive at a more comprehensive understanding of the complex relationship between the public health rationale and the human rights rationale of HIV/AIDS. In particular, Governments could benefit from guidelines that outline clearly how human rights standards apply in the area of HIV/AIDS and indicate concrete and specific measures, both in terms of legislation and practice, that should be undertaken\". (excerpt)\nAIDS epidemic update, December 2007.\nJoint United Nations Programme on HIV / AIDS [UNAIDS]; World Health Organization [WHO]\nGeneva, Switzerland, UNAIDS, 2007 Dec. 50 p. (UNAIDS/07.27E; JC1322E)\nEvery day, over 6800 persons become infected with HIV and over 5700 persons die from AIDS, mostly because of inadequate access to HIV prevention and treatment services. The HIV pandemic remains the most serious of infectious disease challenges to public health. Nonetheless, the current epidemiologic assessment has encouraging elements since it suggests: the global prevalence of HIV infection (percentage of persons infected with HIV) is remaining at the same level, although the global number of persons living with HIV is increasing because of ongoing accumulation of new infections with longer survival times, measured over a continuously growing general population; there are localized reductions in prevalence in specific countries; a reduction in HIV-associated deaths, partly attributable to the recent scaling up of treatment access; and a reduction in the number of annual new HIV infections globally. Examination of global and regional trends suggests the pandemic has formed two broad patterns: generalized epidemics sustained in the general populations of many sub-Saharan African countries, especially in the southern part of the continent; and epidemics in the rest of the world that are primarily concentrated among populations most at risk, such as men who have sex with men, injecting drug users, sex workers and their sexual partners. (excerpt)\nGlobal progress in PMTCT and paediatric HIV care and treatment in low- and middle-income countries in 2004 -- 2005.\nLuo C; Akwara P; Ngongo N; Doughty P; Gass R\nReproductive Health Matters. 2007 Sep; 15(30):179-189.\nA growing number of countries are moving to scale up interventions for prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV in maternal and child health services. Similarly, many are working to improve access to paediatric HIV treatment. This paper reviews national programme data for 2004-2005 from low- and middle-income countries to track progress in these programmes. The attainment of the UNGASS target of reducing HIV infections by 50% by 2010 necessitates that 80% of all pregnant women accessing antenatal care receive PMTCT services. In 2005, only seven of the 71 countries were on track to meet this target. However PMTCT coverage increased from 7% in 2004 (58 countries) to 11% in 2005 (71 countries). In 2005, 8% of all infants born to HIV positive mothers received antiretroviral prophylaxis for PMTCT, up from 5% in 2004, though only 4% received cotrimoxazole. 11% of HIV positive children in need received antiretroviral treatment in 2005. In 31 countries that had data, 28% of women who received an antiretroviral for PMTCT also reported receiving antiretroviral treatment for their own health. Achieving the UNGASS target is possible but will require substantial investments and commitment to strengthen maternal and child health services, the health workforce and health systems to move from pilot projects to a decentralised, integrated approach. (author's)\n[Molecular epidemiology of HIV infection]\nYin TM\nZhonghua Liu Xing Bing Xue Za Zhi / Chinese Journal of Epidemiology. 1997 Oct; 18(5):309-311.\nGlobal HIV infection and AIDS: according to WHO estimates, by mid 1996 there were 7 million cumulative AIDS cases. Today the number of people infected with HIV is even more alarming: roughly 21.8 million, of those 42% are women. By the year 2000 there will be between 40 and 50 million cases. Each day about 8,500 additional people are infected with AIDS; one can say the situation is grim. Currently, the AIDS and HIV epidemic regions are shifting, they have gradually moved from the original sites of North America and West Europe toward the mass populations of developing countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. In the Asian region which contains about 60% of the world's population, beginning in 1988, with Thailand and India at the center, an exploding epidemic has taken shape. Recent materials indicate, those infected with HIV in Thailand exceed 700,000, over 2 million in India, and the HIV epidemic has already spread to the near neighbors Burma, southern China, Cambodia, Malaysia and Vietnam. With the accumulation of molecular epidemiology research materials, the complete picture of the causes and characteristics of this massive epidemic happening in the Asian region is gradually becoming clear. (excerpt)\nWanted: a just, humane world.\nBekele F\nAfrica Recovery. 1999 Dec; 13(4):[3] p..\nWithin a generation, the world could -- and should -- become a place where every infant is properly nurtured and cared for, where every child receives a quality basic education, and where every adolescent is given the support and guidance he or she needs in the difficult transition to adulthood, says the State of the World's Children 2000, published in December by the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF). Acknowledging the progress made in protecting children over the course of this century and in the decade since the 1989 adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child, UNICEF says much more remains to be done. It draws particular attention to three tragedies of which children and women are currently the main victims, largely in the developing world: armed conflict, HIV/AIDS and poverty. And the report adds that women are victims of these ills in disproportionate numbers due to gender discrimination. (excerpt)\nStrategic guidance on HIV prevention.\nNew York, New York, UNFPA, 2001. 32 p. (Preventing HIV / Promoting Reproductive Health)\nUNFPA has worked in the field of population and development for more than three decades and has addressed the issue of HIV/AIDS for the last decade. However, no organization by itself has the capacity or the resources needed to address and halt the pandemic. An effective response requires careful collaboration and coordination among organizations, with each bringing to the partnership a distinct set of capabilities, strengths and comparative advantages. As one of the eight cosponsors of UNAIDS (the other cosponsors being UNICEF, UNDP, UNDCP, UNESCO, ILO, WHO and World Bank), UNFPA chairs Theme Groups in many countries and supports HIV-prevention interventions in almost all of its country programmes. To maximize its response and to strengthen coordinated activities with other partners, it is critical for staff at every level to have a common understanding of the Fund’s policies and strategic priorities. The aim of this document is to provide such guidance to staff, delineating the niche in which UNFPA as an organization has a definite comparative advantage in addressing the HIV/AIDS epidemic, especially at the country level. (excerpt)\nAntiretroviral drugs for treating pregnant women and preventing HIV infection in infants: guidelines on care, treatment and support for women living with HIV / AIDS and their children in resource-constrained settings.\nWorld Health Organization [WHO]\nGeneva, Switzerland, WHO, 2004. v, 49 p.\nMother-to-child transmission (MTCT) is the most important source of HIV infection in children. In 2001, the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on HIV/AIDS committed countries to reduce the proportion of infants infected with HIV by 20% by 2005 and by 50% by 2010. Achieving this urgently requires an increase in access to integrated and comprehensive programmes to prevent HIV infection in infants and young children. Such programmes consist of interventions focusing on primary prevention of HIV infection among women and their partners; prevention of unintended pregnancies among HIV-infected women; prevention of HIV transmission from HIV-infected women to their children; and the provision of treatment, care and support for women living with HIV/AIDS, their children and families. WHO convened a Technical Consultation on Antiretroviral Drugs and the Prevention of Mother-to-child Transmission of HIV Infection in Resource-limited Settings in Geneva, Switzerland on 5–6 February 2004. Scientists, policymakers, programme managers and community representatives reviewed the most recent experience with programmes and evidence on the safety and efficacy of various antiretroviral (ARV) regimens for preventing HIV infection in infants. This information was reviewed in the context of the rapid expansion of ARV treatment in resource-constrained settings using standardized and simplified drug regimens. Prior to the Technical Consultation, a draft set of recommendations had been issued for public comment. (excerpt)\nAt the crossroads: accelerating youth access to HIV / AIDS interventions.\nJoint United Nations Programme on HIV / AIDS [UNAIDS]. Inter-Agency Task Team on Young People\nNew York, New York, United Nations Population Fund [UNFPA], HIV / AIDS Branch, UNAIDS Inter-Agency Task Team on Young People, 2004. 8 p.\nYoung people remain at the centre of the epidemic in terms of transmission, vulnerability, impact, and potential for change. Today’s young generation, the largest in history, has not known a world without AIDS. Of the over 1 billion young people worldwide, 10 million are currently living with HIV. If we are to reach the global targets set forth in international agreements, urgent action and increased investment must be made in HIV prevention, treatment and care programmes specifically for young people. (excerpt)\nSport for development and peace: towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals. Report from the United Nations Inter-Agency Task Force on Sport for Development and Peace.\nUnited Nations. Inter-Agency Task Force on Sport for Development and Peace\nNew York, New York, United Nations, 2003. vi, 36 p.\nThis report analyses in detail the potential contribution that sport can make towards achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). It provides an overview of the growing role that sports activities are playing in many United Nations programmes and crystallizes the lessons learned. It also includes recommendations aimed at maximizing and mainstreaming the use of sport. (excerpt)\nTechnical advisory meeting on implications of the newly identified HIV-1 subtype O viruses for HIV diagnosis. Press release.\nWorld Health Organization [WHO]. Office of Information\nGeneva, Switzerland, WHO, 1994 Jun 24. 2 p. (Press Release WHO/50)\nHIV is characterized by an high level of genetic diversity. HIV types HIV-1 and HIV-2 have been identified, and HIV-1 variants have been grouped by their gag and env sequences into at least eight subtypes, subtypes A-H. Divergent HIV-1 subtypes also have recently been identified which cannot be classified in any of the existing HIV-1 subtypes and are thus designated as subtype O for \"genetic outliers\". Limited available sequence data from HIV-1 subtype O viruses suggest that diversity within the subtype O group may be as great as that which exists between HIV-1 subtypes A-H. The majority of virus strains classified as HIV-1 subtype O have been isolated from patients of Cameroonian origin or their sexual contacts although recent preliminary studies in Cameroon suggest that less than 10% of HIV-1 infections there are caused by subtype O strains. A few subtype O infections have also been reported in Gabon and France, but limited studies have found no evidence of the presence of HIV-1 subtype O in Belgium, Cote d'Ivoire, Kenya, Togo, and Zaire. The ability of currently available anti-HIV assays to identify individuals infected with subtype O has not been extensively studied. An informal consultation of 22 international experts on the implications of this newly identified subtype for HIV diagnosis took place June 9-10, 1994, at World Health Organization headquarters. In general, one is more likely to fail in detecting HIV infection because of the absence of antibody in the seroconversion window phase than from infection with an highly divergent HIV subtype. The existence of these subtype O viruses is therefore likely to have little, if any, impact upon HIV diagnosis and blood safety outside of the area where they are prevalent. The expert group recommended that diagnostic tests and strategies for HIV antibody testing be urgently reevaluated in the region where subtype O virus has been found, a panel of sera be collected from asymptomatic and symptomatic individuals to use in assessing the sensitivity of available HIV antibody assays for antibodies against HIV-1 subtype O, envelope genes of subtype O isolates be sequenced to provide information useful in the production of HIV antibody assays and the determination of the relatedness of HIV strains, expanding the global surveillance of newly recognized HIV subtypes, and developing and evaluating algorithms for the detection and further characterization of variant HIV strains.\nEstimated global distribution and regional spread of HIV-1 genetic subtypes in the year 2000.\nOsmanov S; Pattou C; Walker N; Schwardlander B; Esparza J\nJournal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes. 2002 Feb 1; 29(2):184-90.\nThe objective of this study was to estimate the global distribution and regional spread of different HIV-1 genetic subtypes and circulating recombinant forms (CRFs) in the year 2000. These estimates were made based on data derived from global HIV/AIDS surveillance and molecular virology studies. HIV-1 incidence during the year 2000 was estimated in defined geographic regions, using a country-specific model developed by WHO-Joint UN Programmes on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS). The proportion of new infections caused by different HIV-1 subtypes in the same geographic regions was estimated by experts from the WHO-UNAIDS Network for HIV Isolation and Characterization, based on results generated by HIV molecular epidemiology studies in 1998-2000. The absolute numbers and relative proportions of new infections due to different genetic subtypes of HIV- 1 by different geographic regions were calculated using these two sets of estimated data. The results of the study demonstrated that the epidemiology of HIV-1 subtypes and CRFs is characterized by their differential distribution and varying significance as a driving cause of the pandemic on regional and global basis. The largest proportion of HIV-1 infections in the year 2000 was due to subtype C strains (47.2%). Subtype A/+CRF02_AG was estimated to be the second leading cause of the pandemic (27%), followed by subtype B strains (12.3%). The same analysis confirmed an increasing role of HIV-1 CRFs in the pandemic. The authors conclude that combined analysis of data based on the global HIV/AIDS surveillance and molecular virology studies provides for a useful model to monitor the dynamics of the global spread of HIV-1 subtypes and CRFs on regional and country levels--the information of potential importance for diagnosis and treatment of HIV/AIDS, as well as for the development globally effective HIV vaccines. (author's)\nNetworking of laboratories for isolation and characterization of HIV-1 in different countries.\nOsmanov S\nIn: International Symposium on Biomedical Research Issues of HIV Infection in Thailand. Bangkok, Thailand, January 31 - February 2, 1994. Sponsors: Thailand Health Research Institute, Harvard AIDS Institute, Ministry of Public Health of Thailand, Center for Vaccine Development, Mahidol University. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard AIDS Institute, 1994. 4-6.\nHIV-1 is a complex retrovirus characterized by extensive genetic variation due to numerous errors in reverse transcription and involving different geneses of the mutations. At least six nearly equidistant genetic clades, or subtypes, can be identified based upon the phylogenetic analysis of the env coding sequences. HIV-1 variability may make it difficult to develop vaccines which are effective against the various HIV-1 strains prevalent in different geographic locations. With the goal of establishing a mechanism for monitoring HIV-1 variability on a global basis, the Global Program on AIDS of the World Health Organization (WHO) established the WHO Network for HIV-1 Isolation and Characterization. The network constitutes an integral part of the WHO Strategy for HIV-1 Vaccine Development. It is formed by primary laboratories in Brazil, Rwanda, Thailand, and Uganda, the WHO-sponsored sites for the development and field evaluation of HIV-1 vaccines; 15 secondary/expert laboratories in France, Germany, Spain, Sweden, the Netherlands, the UK, and the US which conduct detailed characterization of HIV-1 strains; centralized facilities in Germany and the UK for the isolation of HIV-1 strains following standard procedures; repositories for the storage and distribution of viral isolates and other reagents in the UK and the US; and data management facilities in collaboration with the Los Alamos HIV-1 Database in the US. Five of the six known HIV-1 genetic subtypes were found through genetic screening of HIV-1 strains collected from the four sites. In most cases, more than one subtype was present in the same country. Biologic characterization of the HIV-1 isolates determined that most of the viral strains collected in Brazil, Rwanda, and Thailand can be defined as slow/low phenotypes and were non-syncytia inducing. The Ugandan isolates belonging to subtype D, but not to subtype A, were characterized by the highest replicative capacities and were syncytia-inducing viruses. There is as yet no explanation for this latter finding.\n15 AIDS Apply AIDS filter\n12 WHO Apply WHO filter\n5 Antiretroviral Therapy Apply Antiretroviral Therapy filter\n4 International Cooperation Apply International Cooperation filter\n4 Prevalence Apply Prevalence filter\n3 Antiretroviral Drugs Apply Antiretroviral Drugs filter\n3 Pregnant Women Apply Pregnant Women filter\n3 Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission Apply Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission filter\n3 UN Apply UN filter\n2 Communicable Diseases Apply Communicable Diseases filter\n2 Condom Use Apply Condom Use filter\n2 Education Apply Education filter\n2 Epidemiology Apply Epidemiology filter\n2 Evaluation Apply Evaluation filter\n2 Health Apply Health filter\n2 HIV Transmission Apply HIV Transmission filter\n2 Human Rights Apply Human Rights filter\n2 Manual Apply Manual filter\n2 Safety Apply Safety filter\n2 Sustainable Development Apply Sustainable Development filter\n1 Administration and Dosage Apply Administration and Dosage filter\n1 Adolescents Female Apply Adolescents Female filter\n1 Advocacy Apply Advocacy filter\n1 Antenatal Care Apply Antenatal Care filter\n1 Behavior Apply Behavior filter\n1 Blood Donors Apply Blood Donors filter\n1 Blood Transfusion Apply Blood Transfusion filter\n1 Breastfeeding Apply Breastfeeding filter\n1 Cardiovascular Effects Apply Cardiovascular Effects filter\n1 Care and Support Apply Care and Support filter\n1 Child Apply Child filter\n1 Child Mortality Apply Child Mortality filter\n1 Chronic Diseases Apply Chronic Diseases filter\n1 Conferences and Congresses Apply Conferences and Congresses filter\n1 Contraceptive Availability Apply Contraceptive Availability filter\n1 Contraceptive Methods Apply Contraceptive Methods filter\n1 Coordination Apply Coordination filter\n1 Counseling Apply Counseling filter\n1 Data Collection Apply Data Collection filter\n1 Death Rate Apply Death Rate filter\n1 Decision Making Apply Decision Making filter\n1 Development Planning Apply Development Planning filter\n1 Development Plans Apply Development Plans filter\n1 Diabetes Apply Diabetes filter\n1 Economic Development Apply Economic Development filter\n1 Endometriosis Apply Endometriosis filter\n1 Environment Apply Environment filter\n1 Environmental Protection Apply Environmental Protection filter\n1 Food Security Apply Food Security filter\n1 Hepatitis Apply Hepatitis filter\n1 Immunization Apply Immunization filter\n1 Infant Apply Infant filter\n1 Infections Apply Infections filter\n1 Laboratory Procedures Apply Laboratory Procedures filter\n1 Legislation Apply Legislation filter\n1 Life Expectancy Apply Life Expectancy filter\n1 Malaria Apply Malaria filter\n1 Maternal Health Apply Maternal Health filter\n1 Morbidity Apply Morbidity filter\n1 Mortality Apply Mortality filter\n1 Mother-to-Child Transmission Apply Mother-to-Child Transmission filter\n1 Needs Apply Needs filter\n1 Obesity Apply Obesity filter\n1 Organizations Apply Organizations filter\n1 Population Distribution Apply Population Distribution filter\n1 Pregnancy Planned Apply Pregnancy Planned filter\n1 Progress Report Apply Progress Report filter\n1 Risk Factors Apply Risk Factors filter\n1 Safer Sex Apply Safer Sex filter\n1 Sex Education Apply Sex Education filter\n1 Social Development Apply Social Development filter\n1 Social Welfare Apply Social Welfare filter\n1 Terminology Apply Terminology filter\n1 Vaccines Apply Vaccines filter\n1 Volunteers and Voluntarism Apply Volunteers and Voluntarism filter\n1 War Apply War filter\n1 Women's Empowerment Apply Women's Empowerment filter\n- Remove Global filter Global\n22 English Apply English filter\n1 Chinese Apply Chinese filter","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1765788"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5601085424423218,"wiki_prob":0.4398914575576782,"text":"400 Communications Ltd\n57 Hatton Garden, London\nEC1N 8HP (Map)\ndesign@400.co.uk\njobs@400.co.uk\nCase Studies About Archive Journal Contact\nMuseum of Brands\nThe Museum of Brands hosts exhibitions that explore the social impact of good design, and is a great addition to your list of places to visit in 2019.\nLast year Time Out magazine celebrated their 50th birthday with a series of events across London. One of the things that caught our eye was their ‘50 Years, 50 Covers’ exhibition at the Museum of Brands. Not only did this explore the way in which Time Out has grown as a brand since its birth, but it made for a stunning visual representation of the changing face of London: a timeline of how the city, the consumer and our society has developed over the past 50 years.\nWith contributions from a huge number of designers, the exhibition offered a diverse exploration of aspects of design including typography, photography, illustration and collages. It exposed how each contributor has been influenced by the decade, year, month, even week in which they were working. These designs act as a social narrative, telling us something of the time in which they were created.\nExhibition: Time Out: 50 years, 50 covers\nThe museum is a great place to go to discover how society informs the way we think about design. The current exhibition, ‘Can Marketing Save Lives?’ looks at how advertising has been used over the past century to influence the British public in terms of motivating and educating them on issues of public health. It highlights how visual cues have been used in the media to influence behaviour over the years, and asks how advertising can be used going forward to engage the public and act as a support tool for the prevention and handling of public health concerns.\nExhibition: Can Marketing Save Lives?\nWith exhibitions running alongside each other that address such varied subjects, the museum explores how good design connects politics, modern culture, social issues and technology. Taking this on board, and working with clients such as UNICEF and the World Health Organisation, we are keen to further explore the social impact of design.\nLooking towards the year ahead we will be considering human-led design in more detail and looking to translate our ideas and briefs into visually effective work that both illustrates and informs. Watch this space!\nMuseum of Brands has one permanent exhibition, ‘Time Tunnel’, which showcases the history of advertising over the last 150 years, as well as a rolling series of different exhibitions, talks and events throughout the year.\n‘Can Marketing Save Lives?’ is on until 26 May.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line703215"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8854368925094604,"wiki_prob":0.8854368925094604,"text":"Arthur Meredith Walters\nArthur Meredith Walters (1918 - 2010) was a social services administrator who is most recognized for his role as the Louisville Urban League executive director from 1970 to 1987. Known as a “bridgebuilder” and one of Louisville, Kentucky’s most effective leaders for justice and opportunity, he was among the inaugural inductees of the Kentucky Human Rights Commission Hall of Fame in 2000. Walters was born Nov. 6, 1918, in Magnolia, Ky. He graduated as valedictorian of his class from Bond-Washington High School. He was attending Kentucky State College when he entered the U.S. Army in 1945. A veteran of World War II and the Korean War, he was one of the first African American officers to lead integrated troops. Walters earned the U.S. Army Bronze Star for valor and the Soldier’s Medal. He retired as a lieutenant colonel after serving 20 years. He later earned his Master’s of Education degree from the University of Louisville. He joined the Louisville Urban League, an affiliate of the National Urban League, in 1963, as its industrial relations secretary, and from 1963 to 1987, he worked tirelessly in creating employment, housing, and educational opportunities previously denied minorities. He wrote the nationally recognized on-the-job training program for the League to assist the under-skilled in finding employment and to help persuade Kentucky and area companies to hire, train, and recruit black workers. In 1969, for example, he led efforts to place 345 workers in jobs, which paid them a combined paycheck of more than $2 million, according to Urban League statistics. He told The Louisville Times in 1970, “We have convinced the ‘doubting Thomases’ that disadvantaged people can be good employees, and the only way to determine if they can perform is to put them on jobs.” Arthur Walters’ hard work gained him the respect of many, statewide and nationally. His achievements earned him an impressive list of honors, including Adult Black Achiever of the Year, Freedom Award, and Doctor of Humane Letters from Bellarmine University, where there is a scholarship named for him. The annual Louisville Urban League Arthur M. Walters Champion of Diversity Award is also named in his honor. He died Oct. 16, 2010, at the age of 91.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1025787"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.662065327167511,"wiki_prob":0.337934672832489,"text":"Hot Topic #10\nHere is our list of examples dealing with asbestos:\nPlease note that this is only a random selection of examples of good practice and this list is not supposed to and cannot be complete.\nTo learn more, you can go to our TOOLBOX and search for the title of the example (please note that the database search takes some time), go to the GOOD PRACTICE area (if the example is presented there) or follow the link to the project or partner web site.\nAsbestos in schools (UK)\nThis website by HSE offers a variety of information and material related to abestos – guidelines, regulations, information on inspection initiatives and a checklist.\nAsbestos was extensively used as a building material in the UK from the 1950s through to the mid-1980s. It was used for a variety of purposes, typically fireproofing and insulation. Any building built before 2000 (houses, factories, offices, schools, hospitals etc) can contain asbestos.\nSystem buildings (for example CLASP, SCOLA, SEAC, MACE, ONWARD) constructed during the period 1945 -1980 were widely used for the construction of school premises. These buildings can have structural columns fire proofed with asbestos containing materials (ACMs).\nThe Impact of Asbestos (Canada)\nThis video describes the history of asbestos, from its origins as a \"miracle\" material to its threat to worker health and safety. It includes personal stories from those who've been directly affected and urges those at risk of exposure to test for the presence of asbestos and only remove it if trained and qualified.\nVideo (on YouTube)\nInformation modules for the safer handling of asbestos (Europe)\nNine information modules have been produced by the European Federation of Building and Woodworkers (EFBWW), each dealing with a specific family of products. The nine modules are presented in a folder which gives basic information on asbestos and on how to work with it. Additionally, it covers some details on the project partners. Additionally a leporello/leaflet has been produced, also giving some basic information on asbestos and showing parts of the nine information modules. This leaflet is directed to workers especially. All products are available in the following languages. English, French, German, Hungarian, Italian, Lithuanian, Polish and Spanish. They are available as a printed version and on the project partners webpages as electronic versions.\nHåndbogen (Denmark)\nThis manual is a work of reference for the working environment in the building and construction industry. The manual provides guidelines on good working environment practice and on how the rules of the Working Environment Act can be followed within enterprises and on building sites.\nThe manual has been published by Branchearbejdsmiljørådet for Bygge & Anlæg, with specialist assistance from Working Environment Authority experts in the field of building and construction.\nABClean Project (Europe)\nIn many Member States, asbestos related training requirements are often limited to workers in companies specialized in asbestos removal. This leaves out many workers who are at risk of exposure to asbestos, who receive no training on asbestos awareness at all.\nFor this reason, ABClean distinguishes between two types of workers when it comes to asbestos. The first group consists of workers in companies that are specialized in asbestos removal, who receive the appropriate training to perform this task and the second group consists of workers in other professions who are not specialized in asbestos removal, but who may encounter asbestos containing products in the course of e.g. maintenance, demolition or renovation. While some Member States have legislation in place to train this second group of workers on asbestos awareness, other Member States do not. In order to help address this discrepancy, the e-learning course is being offered together with training providers and institutes for occupational medicine.\nIntroduction to asbestos learning package (UK)\nThis 45 minute interactive lesson with supporting activities and materials is aimed primarily at trades apprentices in the 16 - 19 age group, for delivery by college lecturers and other vocational education providers. It is also relevant to, and capable of being delivered by, industry professionals, eg as part of workplace training.\nResearch shows that although tradespeople know that asbestos is harmful to health, they believe that it is a historical problem, and so do not take action to protect themselves. This package is designed to raise awareness of apprentices about the risks they face when working with asbestos, providing them with basic guidance about what they need to do.\nThe package is free to download and consists of: Introduction and Lesson Plan for lecturers, 'Asbestos The Hidden Killer' power point presentation (Including notes for lecturers), Task sheets „The hunt for asbestos“, Pocket card , Film poster, Comic poster, Asbestos building poster\nAsbestos – the hidden killer (UK)\nSpecial website run by HSE providing information on asbestos and asbestos- related risks and dangers. The website contains information, brochures, videos and more.\nWhats is asbestos? Where can it be found? What is the danger? How should I handle it? What are the facts? These are the questions asked and answered on the website.\nAsbestos guidelines (Austria)\nThese guidelines offers hands-on information about asbestos, risks and dangers related to asbestos and methods for minimizing and avoiding dangers and risks at work related to asbestos.\nAsbestos in Kyrgyzstan (Kyrgyzstan)\nAsbestos and asbestos waste are hazardous to human health and the environment. Kyrgyzstan is one of world's biggest consumers of asbestos. Currently asbestos containing materials are used without restriction in public buildings like hospitals, schools and kindergartens, and in many other consumer products such as brakes and building materials. To raise awareness, provide information, build networks, strengthen citizen's capacities and develop solution strategies to present to state authorities, this project will help to reduce the use of asbestos and clean up contaminated waste sites. People now and future generations will highly benefit from these activities.\nWECF in cooperation with BIOM, Kyrgyzstan, will convene a High-Level Conference on Asbestos in Bishkek and conduct trainings in several cities of Kyrgyzstan with different multpliers, including NGOs.\nasbestos.com\nThis website by The Mesothelioma Center, USA, provides various information and help on Asbestos-related health problems. Information on Mesothelioma and its causes, resources to find help, legal options and lots of other resources are available.\nVideos of people with asbestos-related health problems, the „Mesothelioma Packet“, an informational packet with detailed and comprehensive resources about this disease and the information on the website about possible Asbestos exposure at work can be used for prevention and educational purposes to raise awareness for the risks and dangers of Asbestos.\nwww.asbestos.com\nOSH Reps\nThis website from Australia offers information on many different hazards at work, training courses on various topics, frequently asked questions and the possibility to ask questions.\nwww.ohsrep.org.au\nMesothelioma + Asbestos Awareness Center\nThe Mesothelioma + Asbestos Awareness Center brings attention to the dangers of asbestos and the deadly form of cancer it causes: mesothelioma. MAA center is an independent group working to help mesothelioma patients, caregivers, \u0003advocates and others looking to learn more about the disease.\nThe website offers information about mesothelioma diagnosis, treatment, and other aspects of the disease, as well as the \u0003substance that causes it (asbestos), a regularly updated blog that provides the latest news about mesothelioma treatment research, advocacy efforts, and legal issues, a comprehensive directory of doctors and cancer centers that treat mesothelioma, complete with contact information, a well as access to free case reviews for mesothelioma patients and family members who want to learn more about legal compensation.\nMAA Center\nMesothelioma Justice Network at asbestos.net\nThe Mesothelioma Justice Network was established to be the leading online resource for victims of asbestos exposure. The network tries to help people suffering from Mesothelioma by learning exactly how asbestos has affected them, understand and cope with the disease and take legal action against those responsible for the diagnosis.\nIt’s been well-established that mesothelioma patients and those with asbestos-related diseases are legally entitled to compensation for their diagnosis. The complicated part is proving the exposure and linking it directly to one or more negligent companies.\nThe Mesothelioma Justice Network longs to help prove the case. Comprehensive informational, legal and supportive resources have been established to help patients navigate the intricacies of this situation. The Mesothelioma Justice Network is the resource that not only helps to understand the legal rights, but actually fights for the victims on their behalf.\nwww.asbestos.net\nMesothelioma Guide\nMesothelioma is a rare but serious cancer caused by exposure to asbestos. It takes 20-50 years to develop and occurs in the lining of the lungs, chest, abdomen and heart. Mesothelioma Guide is a website providing lots of resources for people suffering with this asbestos-related type of cancer. The website helps to learn about the disease, find doctors, treatment, financial help and advice. It offers an interactive live chat and maps to find a doctor in your region, a link to a community of patients, as well as reports of patients who survived mesothelioma.\nThe Free Mesothelioma Guide can be ordered on the website.\nwww.mesotheliomaguide.com\nMesothelioma Group\nMesothelioma is a type of cancer that affects the mesothelium, a thin membrane protecting the lungs, abdomen and heart. Where the cancer originated in the mesothelium determines the mesothelioma type. There are three types of Mesothelioma: Pleural Mesothelioma, Peritoneal Mesothelioma and Pericardial Mesothelioma.\nThe Mesothelioma Group is a small team of healthcare professionals, patient advocates, and communication specialists who have one goal: to lead the way in supporting and encouraging mesothelioma patients and their families. The group provides step-by-step guidance, caregiving support, and invaluable resources and information.\nwww.mesotheliomagroup.com\nMesothelioma Help\nThe mission of Mesothelioma Help is to spread awareness and provide information to individuals who might have experienced Asbestos exposure, which leads to the deadly cancer of Mesothelioma.\nThe primary victims of Asbestos exposure and Mesothelioma include veterans, emergency personnel, firemen, mechanics, and even homeowners. By providing a live chat option (the only mesothelioma/asbestos website that offers a live chat 24/7), Q & A sessions, survivor blog posts, and an annual $10,000 scholarship, the website strives to have an impact on the community. Mesothelioma Help has fostered relationships with organizations all across the globe.\nwww.mesotheliomahelp.org\nMesothelioma HelpNow\nMesothelioma HelpNow wants to educate and support mesothelioma patients and their families. Research has shown the more they know about a disease, the better prepared they'll be to cope with everything that comes their way.\nThe website offers a wide range of information material for patients and friend or family members, a blog and lots of resources to find information and help.\nwww.mesotheliomahelpnow.com\nmesothelioma.net\nAnother resource for help in case of Mesothelioma is mesothelioma.net. This website offers lots of information, contact details for doctors, trusts, veterans, a live chat and facts on Mesothelioma, treatments, benefits and free resources.\nMesothelioma Fund\nMesotheliomafund.com provides support and assistance for mesothelioma victims. Th mission is to help patients and their families get compensation through asbestos and mesothelioma trust funds. Trust funds were formed in the 1970's as irresponsible companies were forced to reveal the true dangers of the mineral. Since then, hundreds of thousands of victims have filed claims against companies that were responsible for asbestos exposure.\nwww.mesotheliomafund.com\ntreatmesothelioma.org\ntreatmesothelioma.org is a website containing information on Asbestos, Mesothelioma, treatments, medical help and further information on the topic. The site offers videos, a handbook, a community, and more.\nwww.treatmesothelioma.org\nBYGGESIKKERHED (Construction Safety) (Denmark)\nBYGGESIKKERHED.DK is a multimedia website dealing with construction safety. The website is available in four languages: Danish, English, Polish and German. It contains 15 different areas, each of them covering one profession at the construction site: bricklayer, scaffold builder, glazier, floor fitter, construction builder, mason paviour, building builder, electrician, painter, demolition worker, roofer, carpenter, plumber, asphalt worker and safety representative.\nFor every profession, a humorous video clip starring \"Bent E\" puts a focus on the special safety requirements. In addition, a collection of facts is available, as well as \"Tasks\", a kind of quiz to show what the user has learned so far.\nThis example can be found in detail in our GOOD PRACTICE area\nDealing safely with asbestos (Greece)\nGreek Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs\nMaterials containing asbestos are a risk factor for those who come into contact with them, especially employees carrying out dismantling and demolition work. The hazards attached to asbestos will have not disappeared with the adoption of the proposed Community directive (amending Directive No 83/477/EEC) prohibiting the production and use of asbestos.\nProtocol for a safe building renovation (Italy)\nRenovation of a historic 14th century country house and its buildings in its grounds (lemon-house, cellar, storerooms) in order to create a large, luxury hotel complex and the creation of a business centre for the farm’s production activities. There is generally a high accident rate in building work. This particular project was difficult because of the need to preserve the historic features of the building and renovate to modern standards. The age of the buildings meant that there could be additional and unknown safety and health risks to the building workers present, for example due to weaknesses in the building structure.\nDatabase (Tool Box)\nEducation Online","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1181964"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6267469525337219,"wiki_prob":0.6267469525337219,"text":"Fifth Quarter\nSports related news stories\nKentucky AD to succeed Duke AD as next to lead NCAA D1 men’s hoops...\nAssociated Press - July 12, 2019 3:16 PM\nKentucky athletic director Mitch Barnhart has been selected to lead the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Committee.\nWWAY News - July 10, 2019 5:50 PM\nN.C. State fans are one step closer to drinking alcohol at Carter-Finley Stadium this fall after the Board of Trustees updated the school’s alcohol policy on Wednesday.\nTanner Barth - July 10, 2019 3:32 PM\nCori \"Coco\" Gauff took the tennis world by storm at Wimbledon and it began by beating her idol Venus Williams. There's a similar story right here in our own backyard.\nWILMINGTON, NC (WWAY) — This weeks episode of Tanner’ Tee-Off Tuesday sent us to the Beau Rivage Golf and Resort in Wilmington.\nThe Burgaw Dixie Youth Sweetees are pint-sized sluggers who have something big to celebrate.\nFans cheer World Cup champs as leaders on and off the field\nAssociated Press - July 10, 2019 11:28 AM\nThe U.S. women's national soccer team will reign supreme once again Wednesday in New York City's Canyon of Heroes.\nTanner Barth - July 9, 2019 11:42 PM\nThe Los Angeles Lakers announced on Tuesday night that they have signed former UNCW men's basketball standout Devontae Cacok to deal.\nThe All-Star baseball season will continue for the Supper Optimist 10 & Under team out of Wilmington. They won the 10 & Under State Championship over the weekend in Ayden, NC.\nCoco Gauff ends run at Wimbledon after loss in 4th round\nCoco Gauff’s unexpected but remarkable run at Wimbledon is over. The 15-year-old American, who became the youngest player to qualify for Wimbledon’s main draw in the professional era, lost to former No. 1 Simona Halep 6-3, 6-3 in the fourth round on Monday.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line526007"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9132460355758667,"wiki_prob":0.9132460355758667,"text":"20 Secrets Behind Yukon Men\nby Doug Wintemute\nSince it premiered on August 24th, 2012, Discovery Channel's Yukon Men has gained a large following of fans, who enjoy the show for its unscripted feel and its look at the lives of hunters and trappers in the wild north. Set in and around the Alaskan town of Tanana, a small village with about 300 residents, the name Yukon Men might seem misplaced. That being said, Tanana's location on the Yukon River might give you some insight into the choice.\nThe show follows a few specific hunters, trappers, and their families as they try to survive among the difficult conditions of the middle of nowhere. With few resources readily available, the men on the show must hunt and fish to survive and thrive. Each episode provides viewers with an closer look at the personal lives of these men -- we hear stories and watch as they try to overcome Mother Nature.\nFans aren't told everything. By scouring behind-the-scenes, we've found information that even the most voracious of fans might have missed. We'll reveal the information that is missing from many episodes and the secrets that the producers may not want viewers to know.\nFrom untold dangers to the hidden and harsh realities of the show, here are 20 Secrets Behind Yukon Men.\n20 Stan Zuray Fights\nOne of the stars of Yukon Men, Stan Zuray, has been living in the wilderness for more than 40 years. In that time, he's experienced many close calls -- times when he's almost been bested by nature. He's discussed some of this on the show and has even encountered a few close calls on air, but when he visited Reddit to hold an AMA, he delved into his most dangerous moments in more detail.\nWhen a fan asked Zuray to talk about his scariest moment, the survivalist had two that came to mind.\nHe detailed an episode of Yukon Men, in which he nearly drowned in freezing water because his arms and legs were so cold he could barely move.\nLuckily, the current had enough mojo to help him to shore.\nThe other, according to Zuray, was what he called, \"the scariest short moment.\" He described how \"A bear came up a tree to grab ahold of my leg and rip me out of the tree. I had gotten too close to a mother with two cubs. I could tell from their agitation that that was the case. I casually climbed up a tree, not expecting the bear to come after me. The momma decided differently. I got about 10 feet up and the bear charged at the tree and ripped me out of the tree.\"\n19 The Real Yukon Men Challenge Discovery's Yukon Men\nPicking the name Yukon Men for a show that takes place in Alaska is a bit confusing. As mentioned above, however, the men in the show hunt and fish along the Yukon River, which is where they stake a claim to the name. That didn't stop some members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs) from issuing complaints to the network for the name. Some, like MLA Darius Elias, say the show's hunting and trapping methods are vastly different from Yukoners. In fact, many of the activities in the show are illegal in Canada.\n\"Yukon hunters and trappers consider this program's name as an outright case of identity theft,\" claimed Elias. \"Yukoners have worked so hard to ensure our territory is recognized around the world as a beautiful land filled with wonderful people.\" Currie Dixon, Yukon's Environment Minister, agreed with Elias. \"I have to say that I do agree with him that some of the portrayals of trapping in the television show in question and the presentation of that as being in the Yukon is unfortunate.”\nDiscovery Channel's president and general manager, Paul Lewis, acknowledged the differences, but insisted that the setting is made quite clear. \"With regard to the hunting and trapping activities featured in the series,\" he said. \"We understand and recognize that there are important legal and cultural differences on this issue between Canada and many other countries around the world… As a channel that brings international stories to Canadians, diverse perspectives are an important feature of our programming.”\n18 Questionable Hunting Methods\nOne of the huge controversies surrounding Yukon Men is the type of hunting methods used on the show. An article on the topic from The Guardian called the show \"bloodthirsty\" because of their tactics. According to the piece, many of the weapons used on the show seem excessive, overly violent, and brutish.\nOne of the most common guns seen, for instance, is an AR-15, a semi-automatic assault rifle, in other cases, one of the hunters uses a small tree to \"stun\" a trapped animal, and then there's the particularly troubling scene in which a man uses a wire noose for hunting. From the outside looking in, the hunters methods seem inhumane.\nIt is these methods on Yukon Men that has given rise to most of the criticism of the show.\nViewer discretion disclaimers and numerous warnings aside, there is an argument to be made that some of these hunting tactics are more for shock value than practicality.\nAccording to the Yukon MLAs, the extreme hunting methods are a big reason why they want the show to change its name. Darius Elias suggests that the barbarity of the hunters on Yukon Men is alien to true Yukon hunters. \"The few citizens who still maintain traplines take pride in their responsible approach to harvesting their fur,\" he said.\n17 Dramatic Renactments\nWhile it's expected from almost every reality show nowadays, fans still get a little disappointed to hear that their favorite \"real\" show involves a some falsehoods. For Yukon Men, the fakery might not be as extreme as most shows, but not everything shown on screen is happening exactly as viewers see it.\nOn Stan Zuray's Reddit AMA, he said that most of the film work simply made disjointed lifestyles seem coherent and story-based. \"All reality shows have to produce an understandable story for its audience,\" he said. \"But all the animals are real, all the hunting is real, all the fishing is real. Everything you've seen has been done. Sometimes it just gets edited to make it understandable.\"\nNow the key here is the phrase \"has been done.\" This is because Yukon Men, like many reality shows, use dramatic reenactments. In an interview with the Anchorage Daily News, Zuray admitted to this small manipulation. \"The shows are like ours. They dramatize them, but it's also reenactments of what they really do. The drama is absolutely needed to hold the audience who has a remote ready to click at the slightest lack of excitement but you can get a good idea of the day-to-day life of these people on these shows -- it's hard work and can be dangerous.\"\n16 Being Judged In Tanana\nOne of the most common questions that fans ask the cast of Yukon Men is about how the townsfolk of Tanana view them. Knowing that some of the scenes add in more drama than necessary and how much attention the show brings to the trapping and hunting methods, do people in Tanana like the show?\nAccording to Stan Zuray, most of the reception is quite good. \"By far, most of the people love the show and support it,\" he said on his Reddit AMA.\n\"It brings in a little bit of an economy to the village so it helps everyone out too. Kids absolutely love the show too - they run around the town sometimes trying to act like they're Courtney [Agnes], or Charlie [Wright], or me. We're always getting ribbed about being movie stars, but it's always in good fun.\"\nNot everyone in the town is exactly thrilled with the show and the representation of Tanana's hunters and trappers. In an interview with the Anchorage Daily News, Zuray explained that \"There are a few who do not like the show, did not like it when it was an idea and do not like it now.\" While he doesn't get into the reasons for the divide, it's possible that, in trying to \"let people not from Alaska see it for what it is and not all the misconceptions of us as poachers and cruel trappers,\" Zuray and the rest of the cast actually worsened those accusations.\n15 Are These Really Subsistence Lifestyles?\nThe stars of Yukon Men all live what they call a \"subsistence lifestyle.\" They work for enough food and money to keep them alive and well, but they also live without many of the comforts that most people enjoy. It seems very dramatic, but is it manufactured drama?\nWhen Charlie Wright, one of the stars, is asked if he could live without a gun, he says, \" No, not for very long; something would eat you. You could live in the middle of the town with no gun, but if you want to live a subsistence life, there’s no way you could survive.”\nAccording to some viewers who live in the area, however, this claim is mostly fiction. \"I live in Alaska 125 miles from Tanana on the Tanana river,\" one viewer wrote. \"[I] know the store owner in Tanana so, when they are saying they only have a few days of food left, all they would have to do is walk down the street to get a cheese burger at the cafe store. There is an airport in town that has flights every day in and out with mail, food, cargo, fuel, and people. The town has cell service, internet service, satellite TV, electricity, and all the other things the rest of the world has.\"\n14 In Memory Of Seth Fairbanks\nDuring the season finale of season four, \"Breaking Point\", viewers met Seth Fairbanks, a pilot from the area. Sadly, at the end of the episode, a note popped up: \"In Memory Of Seth Fairbanks, 1985-2015\". When the episode avoided any details about Fairbanks' passing, fans were sent scrambling for information.\nStan Zuray then posted a statement:\n“People have been asking about Seth the pilot in the last episode of the Yukon Men season last Tuesday. He was a good friend of Charlie and became a good friend of the cast and crew of the show and many in Tanana. The plan was for him to continue being in the show and we were all looking forward to it as he was such a great guy and very capable young man. This fall, 500 miles to the south near the city of Anchorage, he and another person passed away in a plane crash (they survived the crash, but rescuers were unable to reach them before the tide came in). May he rest in peace and his family take some comfort in knowing what a nice person he was to us here.”\nReports came out about his passing, stating that Fairbanks called 9-1-1 after his plane crashed.\nHe and his passenger were forced to stand on the plane's wing, as the tide quickly came in, and awaited rescuers. Tragically, the rescue efforts were too late.\n13 Close Encounters Of The Cold Kind\nIn a setting like Tanana, Alaska, we expect there to be dangerous situations, but just how dangerous is it to film a show like Yukon Men? According to the cast and crew, there have been a number of close calls when making the show.\nIn a behind-the-scenes special on the Discovery Channel website, Stan Zuray relates an occasion when his sled flipped over and he got stuck upside-down in a dangerous spot on a frozen channel. Thinking he needed help, a cameraman bravely ran over to his aid, but he then fell through the ice. Zuray said, \"He was in a heck of lot more danger of falling into that channel and getting swept away than I did.\"\nIn another interview on the Russell Scott Show, Zuray spoke about the dangers of extreme weather in Tanana. He discussed how even taking off protective clothing in deep freeze temperatures can be dangerous. He also noted that in Tanana, the coldest temperature he ever experienced was -76 degrees.\nIncredibly, the coldest temperature ever recorded in Alaska is -80. That came from Prospect Creek, which is about 150 miles north of Tanana. While that recording is from 1971, temperatures in Alaska lately are alarming.\n12 Camera Crew and Cast Are Great Friends\nWhen Yukon Men first started filming, before it became a hit show, the many of the townsfolk in Tanana were unsure about how it would all work out. After all, this is a town with around 300 people living in it. Everyone knows each other and outsiders might find that intimidating.\nOver the years, the crew that work on the show have been welcomed into Tanana with open arms.\nWhen speaking about how easily the camera crew integrated with the Tanana people, Stan Zuray said, \"That is hard to do in this place or any place, actually. The camera crew actually lives with us in the village and are real friends with many of the people.\" The other cast members feel the same way. Pat Moore said, \"The guys have been able to adapt into the community.\" Wright said that \"they kind of feel like part of the family now, even the dogs are used to them now.\"\nJames Roberts takes it a step further. \"I started naming my dogs after cameramen,\" he laughed. \"I got a Reno, a Scotty, a Yoshi. I had two Tims, and I think that's it. Oh! Mitch. Because he was the meanest dog I had, and I named him after the nicest camera crewmember ever.\"\n11 Camera Crew's Cabin Catching Fire\nSeveral of the camera crew on the set of Yukon Men have done other shows on the network, but few experienced dangers like the ones they encountered on the set of the Alaskan show. One cameraman, who participated in a Reddit AMA, was asked about his scariest moment on the set.\nHis answer? \"Coming very, very close to burning... while asleep,\" he said. \"Another cameraman and myself were staying at Stan's [Zuray] fish camp in one of his cabins. It was the summer so the mosquitos were terrible...like carry you away terrible. We didn't end up putting the mosquito pick completely out before bed -- like we thought we did. It smoldered under the cabin for a few hours and we awoke to the crackle of fire and a 5-foot flame in the doorway of the cabin. Our cabin was on fire!! The only way out was to jump into/over the flame. It was scary.\"\nNow, if jumping through flames doesn't light your, uh, fire, this cameraman and another crewmember were chastised by Stan when one of them fell off a fishway into the river. He scolded the crewmember, \"When you walk on a fishway, you walk like an old man.\"\n10 Stan Zuray In The Iditarod\nOne of Stan Zuray's most incredible stories tells of a day in 1982. Like every other day, Zuray worked his traplines in the woods, but opportunity was about to pounce on him.\n“In those years I was just a trapper with a very limited amount of worn-out dogs out on the trapline, barely keeping them alive and feeding them,\" he said. \"I was out on the trapline when a plane landed close to me and it was a friend of mine. He lived about 40 miles away and his wife had landed and said, \"Get into town sometime and talk to my husband. He wants to sponsor you in the Iditarod race,\"\"\nThat's how it began, but though Zuray's dogs weren't trained to race, they were trained to work. Those working dogs ended up bringing Zuray all the way to the front of the pack at one point. \"The dogs that I had were so tough,\" he said. \"And I guess it was the bush skills that I had were so hardened that I was able to get in the race and figure it out.\"\nBy the end of the 16-day grueling race, Zuray finished 9th and won Rookie of the Year.\nIn fact, Zuray's top-ten finish is a record that stood for a decade until another Rookie tied his ninth-place finish. \"It was a humble and meager start,\" Zuray recalled. \"But we ended up doing really fantastic and was one of the coolest things I’ve ever done in my life.\"\n9 Big Crime In A Small Town\nThough an episode of Yukon Men touched on the tragedy, the details of the incident of two state troopers in the small town of Tanana, Alaska were largely avoided. The story, however, is interesting.\nAccording to reports, it started when a public safety officer questioned Arvin Kangas for driving without a license. Kangas allegedly pointed a gun at the man. The following day, two state troopers, Sergeant Scott Johnson and Trooper Gabe Rich, two stars of Discovery's Alaska State Troopers, flew into Tanana. When the reached Kangas' home to arrest Kangas, a struggle broke out. During the scuffle, Kangas' son, Nathanial \"Satch\" Kangas, shot and ended both troopers' lives.\nNow, while both Kangas men were sentenced to prison time through the legal system, the village of Tanana ensured that Arvin Kangas would not return. Equipped with local law enforcement since the event, some villages in the Alaska area resort to tribal court to dole out punishment.\nFor his actions and for manipulating his son, Satch, the village elders banished Arvin from Tanana for life. \"Tribal councils always have attempted to protect the peace,\" said Heather Kendall-Miller, an attorney for the Native American Rights Fund in Anchorage. \"It seems to me like a reasonable approach to avoid violent situations, especially when you have no law enforcement providers within a community. Try to pre-empt a bad situation before it happens.\"\n8 Stan Zuray's Old Dogs\nNow, Stan Zuray understands well that his way of life is not always understood or even agreed with by the average person. It's an alien lifestyle to many people.\nPerhaps more than any other aspect of Zuray's lifestyle, his relationship with his dogs is one of the most jarring. In his Reddit AMA, Zuray spoke of his dogs as workers and not pets. \"They're all for running,\" he said. \"I realize that I don't have the emotional attachment to the individual dogs that somebody has with a single pet. But in some ways, as far as knowing my dogs and being in tune with them, I bet I have a closer relationship with them than most people would have with a pet.\"\nIn his interview on The Russell Scott Show, Zuray got into some of the more challenging details of his dogs' lives, such as when it's time for them to move on.\nZuray described using old dog fur to make mittens and clothes, or even dog food for his living dogs -- a difficult concept for people to grasp.\n\"With me it's a matter of respect,\" Zuray said. \"I would go out of my way, even I didn't need the fur that moment, if I had a dog that had given me its life, pulling hard for me and being loyal all its life, that dog would be specially used. I would try to use that dog for something special, make sure its life went back into the team.\"\n7 The Great Wildfires\nIn the wilderness of Alaska, there's more than the cold, the water, and the animals to be wary of. Wildfires are a major danger. Large burns devastate the food chain for trappers and hunters. In 2017, the entire town of Tanana was nearly destroyed as wildfires burned through Alaska. According to Discovery Channel reports, \"Half a million acres of prized hunting and trapping land were incinerated.\"\nWildfires threaten the lives of the animals in the woods, but they also move their territory. Long-standing trapline territories and traditional hunting grounds were gutted, forcing the Yukon Men to travel further and work even harder. While the detection systems in Alaska are improving rapidly, the causes of these fires are not always known. They are unlikely to be human-caused, which is the first thought for most people.\nAccording to the Huffington Post, \"The majority of fires in the North are started by lightning – not humans, as is the case in the lower 48 states. In the hot summer months, it’s not unheard of for more than 2,000 lightning strikes to hit Alaska’s lowlands in a single day.\" Sadly, these fires are becoming more common and more severe as global warming heats Alaska up at twice the global rate.\n6 Dangerous Home Remedies\nOn Yukon Men, and other shows like it, the stars often show off their ingenuity and ability to use what they have to accomplish tasks. Without everyday materials and resources readily available to them, they are forced to make do and find alternative methods. Sometimes, the men's creations and alternatives are remarkable and quite effective. Other times, however, the results can be shockingly dangerous.\nIn one episode, the Yukon Men discussed methods for treating Parvo virus, a dangerous and contagious viral disease affecting dogs. Without proper and accessible veterinarian care, the trappers drew up their own cures. The answer?\nThey put bleach into the dog's water and had them drink it, which is apparently quite common in the wilderness.\nAccording to Dr. Sara Smith, a veterinarian at Delphos Animal Hospital, \"Chlorine bleach is NOT a Parvo treatment or prevention, and it may cause great harm... to a dog or puppy. True, bleach deals with Parvo virus on surfaces, but those surfaces must be cleaned before the bleach is used. Contact with organic material (i.e. a puddle of feces, or a bowl of dog food) makes the bleach less active. Bleach is a strong base and is very caustic to mucous membranes in the mouth, esophagus, and stomach.\"\n5 Wolves Not Nearly As Dangerous As Yukon Men Suggest\nOne of the common criticisms for Yukon Men (and really any similar reality show) is the overly dramatic picture being painted of constant danger. While these men certainly face great danger in the wilderness, not every situation is life threatening.\nTake the depiction of wolves, for instance. In one episode of Yukon Men, the narrator explains, \"But that's not the only crisis. Wolves have been spotted on the edge of town.\" Then, one of the stars, Charlie Wright, says, \"Wolves are mean, ferocious animals and they can tear a man apart real easy. … We have to get this wolf, it's not an if, its a must, because he'll go to any measure to eat. They're the worst kind.\"\nAre they really as bad as the show makes it seem? To hear it from the narrator of Yukon Men, \"There have been twenty fatal wolf attacks in the last ten years.\" Yet, research conducted by Adam Welz of The Guardian disputes that number. In fact, his numbers are drastically different. \"Even though the US and Canada hold over 60,000 wolves,\" Welz reports. \"I found only two records of fatal attacks by wild wolves in these countries in last ten years.\"\n4 Hibernating Bear Hunting\nWhile many of the hunting methods and strategies featured on Yukon Men are concerning for critics of the show, one of the most alarming sights for viewers is the bear den hunting.\nFor the uninitiated, bear den hunting is the practice of hunting bears while they hibernate.\nAccording to Stan Zuray, \"Bear den hunting is a traditional thing going way back prior to contact. The state recognizes it as such and law allows it some places. Common when I first came to Tanana 40 years ago.\" While Zuray is correct about the legality in some places, that actually changed quite recently.\nLast year, President Donald Trump made this practice legal across the entire state of Alaska, so now all hunters, even those who aren't subsistence hunters, are allowed to take part. For animal rights activists and animal lovers, den hunting is a horrifying prospect.\nMany rally against as it seems very unfair for the animal. Zuray, however, doesn't seem to worry about balancing the playing field. \"We usually don’t care about den hunting or any hunting being sporting or \"fair,\" he said. \"We are after the meat and fur, period – not the chase. It may be because we are ignorant or something.\"\n3 The Camera Men Are World Class\nSimply watching a single episode of Yukon Men is enough to highlight the extreme conditions that these people live with every day, but when making a show like this, it's not only the cast that have to survive -- it's the crew as well. \"You got to be a certain breed to survive out here, to tag along with me and keep up,\" says \"Yukon man\" Charlie Wright.\nThese camera guys are experienced in this life. In addition to working on many similar shows, the team that works on Yukon Men spend much of their lives in the outdoors.\n\"The camera guys that make it our here, they're world class outdoorsmen,\" says Stan Zuray. When discussing the qualifications of the camera team he works with, Zuray also added, \"We do not have much contact with Discovery Channel people. The show is filmed by a smaller production company from NY and ... many of the camera men are nothing short of what I call world class outdoorsmen. One example that is easy to use is the guy that traveled with me for the first couple of years - he had been to the top of Mt Everest twice and done it since I last worked with him also. Been a good experience.\"\n2 The Struggle Against The Outside World\nOne of the recent storylines on Yukon Men, is the threat of a new road being built that bring the outside world into the remote Tanana wilderness.\nThe road off the highway will allow for cheaper supplies to be imported and exported, but the threat to the wilderness and nature's resources worry the people of Tanana.\n“There are a lot of people in the village who do the trapping, hunting and fishing lifestyles, and others who don’t do it as much. But the ones who do, they’re the ones who are going to be impacted by people coming in and taking over fishing spots and traplines,” said Stan Zuray. “There are other people who just want to use their trucks and go to town and aren’t as concerned about it.”\nYet, while Zuray, the unofficial star of Yukon Men, worries for the people of Tanana, the road won't stop him from living the way he has for the last 40 years. \"I came to the Tanana area specifically because there was no road to it,\" he said. \"I feel it is more up to the young people in town and those who were born here to decide the issue, so I voice no opinions at meetings, etc. I spent my life running from the city or better put running towards God's country and I'm good at it and will continue to do that.\"\n1 Wolverines Are Nicer Than They Seem\nOf all the animals on the show, one of the most frequently discussed is the wolverine. Perhaps because this animal is not well-known and is misunderstood, Yukon Men provides a lot of information about it. According to The Guardian's Adam Welz, however, the information the show provides appears wildly incorrect.\nIn the show, Stan Zuray tells the camera, \"He's really dangerous\", he says of the wolverine. \"I don't think any human being could keep an attacking wolverine from [ending] them.\"\nHow accurate is that information? Welz looked into it. \"I searched the web and could not find a single documented case of a wolverine even attacking a person anywhere in the world, ever,\" he writes. Welz then claims that he contacted Jeff Copeland from the Wolverine Foundation to get more information. When he asked Copeland about how dangerous wolverines really are to humans, Copeland responded that he is \"not aware of any instance in which a wolverine has [ended] a human, or even attempted to do so.\"\nNow, it is possible that the wolverines in Tanana are more vicious than other areas, but the evidence seems to suggest that they are not as threatening as Yukon Men makes them seem.\nDid we miss any secrets from Yukon Men you know about? Tell us in the comments!\nSons Of Anarchy: 10 Most Dangerous Characters, Ranked\nBest Amazon Prime Day Deals (UPDATED)\nInstant Hotel: All The Hotels From Season 1 & 2, Ranked\nBradley Cooper's 5 Best Roles (& 5 That Divided Fans)\n10 Golden Girls Memes That Are Too Hilarious For Words\nThe 10 Best Animated Movies Of All-Time, According To IMDB\n10 Hysterical Star Wars Logic Memes Only True Fans Understand\nHarry Potter: The 10 Worst Things McGonagall Has Ever Done\n5 Things HIMYM Does Better Than Friends (& Vice Versa)\nBig Bang Theory: 10 Hidden Details About The Main Characters Everyone Missed\n10 Jokes From Two And A Half Men That Have Already Aged Poorly","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1159524"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.722356379032135,"wiki_prob":0.722356379032135,"text":"\"The People's Place:\" How Placemaking Can Build Today's Best Libraries\nMegan MacIver\n\"State of the Art\" Library Opens in Nova Scotia\nVisitors say \"The People's Place feels like a place to live\"\nFor all those who feared the rise of the Internet would mean the fall of the library here's a story of hope. Last week, June 26, the city of Antigonish, Canada, celebrated the grand opening of The People’s Place, the product of a community-initiated Placemaking process led by Eric Stackhouse, Chief Librarian of the Pictou-Antigonish Regional Library in partnership with local “Zealous Nuts,” PPS' term for all the enthusiastic community leaders who get things done.\n“You don’t expect to be shhhhhshed here”\nToday’s best libraries so much more than places to check out books. Built within a paradigm of place, \"The People's Place\" has become a civic center at the heart of this Nova Scotia community- and an important node on the town’s main street. As Stackhouse explained, to build a truly state of the art library, “librarians have to think about our spaces differently: our role is heading toward more community development.”\nThis great video from CTV interviews visitors who say The People’s Place feels like a “place to live. ” Local press calls The People’s Place a “state of the art library” -and we couldn’t agree more. This library points the way toward building public buildings within a paradigm of place. It starts with including all those who will use the space in deciding how the space will look, function, and feel.\nThe People’s Place Building Committee “firmly believes that to create a great place, you have to build it for people.”\nComputer stations at \"The People's Place\"\nOn the library’s opening day, organizers estimate about 6,000 people (out of a population of about 18,000!) showed up to celebrate. The vision for the library was guided by PPS’ principles and was designed to serve as a multi-use destination civic center- a place where people can read, learn, enjoy art, and get to know one another.\nStackhouse says “we managed to include every idea the consultations came up with, which resulted in community ownership and the result is a 100% community thumbs up. [The library is] a green building, designed to integrate into Main Street and support the businesses, and flexible. Best thing I ever did was learn the process from PPS.”\nThe People’s Place is a $5.5 million joint project of the Municipality of the County of Antigonish, the Town of Antigonish, and the Pictou-Antigonish Regional Library. Funding was obtained from both Federal and Provincial government sources as well as significant contributions from the community at large and the Friends of the Antigonish Library to make sure that when the library was completed it would be true to the community’s original vision.\nMany local non-profits also use the library- making The People's Place a destination for people of all ages.\nAs well as a modern, welcoming public library, the facility hosts a Community Access Program (CAP) site, the Antigonish County Adult Learning Association (ACALA), and Health Connections. Also, several multi-purpose meeting and gathering spaces are included which can be used at no cost by non-profits. All these agencies and spaces are combined together in order to share resources and provide a single point of access by users.\nPublic Art is a Major Component Throughout several visioning sessions, community members agreed that public art should be a major component including over 20 pieces of sculpture, woodworking, visual art, textile, poster art, and more, including a mural by Alan Syliboy titled “The Dream Canoe”.\nLibraries can change the world! Resources to make your libraries and civic centers great community places:\nLibraries that Matter\nLibrary Placemaking in Action\nHow to Make Your Library Great\nA Library Instills Community Spirit in Nova Scotia\nLibraries at the Heart of our Communities (a featured article from our partner, the Planning Commissioner’s Journal)\nPublic Library Design: Working from the Inside Out and the Outside In (MP3 of seminar) featurung PPS VP Ethan Kent speaking in Melbourne on Libraries as a Catalyst for Placemaking\nCivic Centers in a Paradigm of Place: Reinventing the Courthouse\nGet inspired by all the ideas the Antigonish community generated on this page.\nPlacemaking and Consultations\nAntigonish Library Site Plan\nPlans for the library were sensitive to its context within the rest of the town. Site plan prepared by Archibald and Jones Architects Ltd.\nTell us about your community's library: how are you making it a great place?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line182792"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6336281299591064,"wiki_prob":0.36637187004089355,"text":"Doctors to be Trained in CHIP HIV Intervention\nPosted on May 21, 2010 by Chris Tarricone\nA new partnership with the W. Montague Cobb/National Medical Association Health Institute could lead to hundreds of African American doctors being trained in a nationally-recognized HIV prevention intervention developed at CHIP.\nWith UConn Incentive Grant funding, UConn’s Institute for Clinical and Translational Science (CICATS) and the Cobb/NMA will train physicians in the east coast region of the NMA in CHIP’s Options intervention. Following successful completion of the pilot project, the partners will seek additional grant funding for a nationwide roll-out of Options to the NMA’s full membership.\nUsing powerful health behavior change methods, Options enlists trusted healthcare providers to talk with HIV-positive patients during routine medical appointments about reducing their risky sexual and drug use behaviors. Clinicians work collaboratively with patients in assessing their risky behaviors and willingness to change. Together, clinicians and patients then develop strategies and set future goals that are written out in a “prescription” for safer sex or drug use behaviors.\nThe intervention, developed by a research team led by CHIP Director and Professor of Psychology Jeffrey Fisher and CHIP Associate Director Deborah Corrnman, is one of the few risk reduction interventions for use with HIV-positive patients. It has been tested with urban populations and proven effective in the U.S. and South Africa. It also has been lauded by the CDC as a promising intervention and included in its Compendium of Evidence-Based HIV Prevention Interventions.\nOptions has been funded by the National Institutes of Mental Health (NIMH), Centers for Disease Control (CDC), Human Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) and the Department of Defense.\nTo date, over 500 trainings in Options have been completed both nationally and internationally.\nThe NMA is the oldest and largest organization of African American physicians in the United States with a mission to create parity and justice in medicine for African American physicians and their patients. The Cobb Institute was created in 2004 by the NMA to promote wellness, conduct research and eliminate health disparities including in the area of HIV/AIDS.\n“This is an ideal partnership at an opportune time,” Fisher said. “We’ll be putting an intervention that has been proven effective into practice with one of the populations at greatest risk for new HIV infections.”\nAfrican Americans account for 45 percent of new HIV infections – more than any other ethnic or racial group in the U.S. – yet they make up only 12 percent of the total U.S. population.\n“Healthcare providers have an excellent opportunity to address risk behaviors and reinforce safer\nbehaviors in their HIV-positive patients, because they have a trusting relationship and repeated contact for reinforcement,” Fisher explained.\nOptions, which Fisher’s team developed in consultation with physicians and patients, uses a patient-centered, non-judgmental and supportive approach.\nCICATS and Cobb/NMA formed its partnership in July 2009.\nFisher, Cornman and the CHIP research team, including the Cobb/NMA Options Project Coordinator Joanne Cunningham, are working with Dr. Randall Morgan, Jr., executive director of the Cobb Institute, and Dr. Nicole Jarrett, director of Health Policy Research for the NMA.\nTo date, a daylong meeting with Dr. Morgan and Dr. Jarrett was held at the UConn Health Center campus in early January as part of a broader Cobb/NMA and UConn Planning Committee Meeting hosted by Dr. Judith Fifield, director of the Ethel Donaghue Center for Translating Research into Practice and Policy. In mid-January, an 11-member Cobb/NMA UConn Options Advisory Board, comprised of nationally known physicians and HIV specialists, was convened and the first board meeting was held in early February.\nMost recently, Fisher, Cornman and Cunningham attended the 11th Annual Scientific Colloquium held in Arlington, Virginia. There, Fisher made a presentation to the NMA attendees about the Options project.\nThe first focus groups for the pilot project are planned for early summer with physician trainings to follow.\nThe UConn Incentive Grant was awarded to Fisher and Fifield, partners in the Community Engagement Core of CICATS.\nNew Aetna Grant Targets Childhood Obesity\nCHIP collaborators are bringing parents and pediatricians together to target obesity in Hartford children as young as age 2.\nWith a new grant from the Aetna Foundation to Connecticut Children’s Medical Center, Dr. Michelle Cloutier, a professor of pediatrics at the UConn Health Center and a CHIP affiliate, and Amy Gorin, an assistant professor of psychology and a CHIP principal investigator, will develop and test an intervention to address obesity in African American and Latino children between the ages of 2 and 4.\n“In general, rates of obesity are higher in underserved populations. In Hartford, 40 percent of African American and Latino children are obese or at risk for obesity by the time they start school at age 5,” said Cloutier, the grant’s principal investigator. The UConn researchers will assess how parents in the target population view their children’s diet, activity level and weight and they will work with pediatricians to deliver meaningful messages to parents about those topics. The messages will be linked to intervention strategies families have stated that they can implement at home. Cloutier and Gorin’s team will train participating healthcare providers in a technique known as ‘brief motivational counseling,’ so that they can effectively and efficiently reinforce the identified messages and intervention strategies at every check-up during the course of the study.\n“A physician can say, ‘Eat less and exercise more,’ but that doesn’t help a family learn the specific things it needs to do differently,” said Cloutier, an expert in medical messaging. “This intervention will provide messages that can be tailored and customized for each family and that can be delivered consistently at every medical visit in three minutes or less.”\nCloutier and Gorin’s preliminary work on this project included developing a 21-question survey, called Growing Up Healthy, and conducting the survey with parents of children seen at two Hartford clinics affiliated with Connecticut Children’s. Parents were invited to complete the survey if they had a child with a Body Mass Index (BMI) at or above the 85th percentile.\nThe U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) considers a child overweight if his or her BMI falls between the 85th and 95th percentile. A child is considered obese if his or her BMI falls above the 95th percentile.\nThrough their survey, Cloutier and Gorin identified several behaviors linked with children being overweight or obese. These included the amount of juice consumed, the type and amount of milk consumed and the amount of television viewed daily. These behaviors will be the focus of the intervention they are developing.\n“The strength of this intervention is its simplicity,” Cloutier said. “Small changes in these three areas over the course of a year could make a huge difference.”\nThe researchers plan to recruit up to 40 pediatricians and 250 children to participate in the study. They anticipate each child will see a healthcare provider at one of the two Hartford-based clinics three to five times during the course of the study, which will last one year.\nThey will compare the BMI of each child at the beginning of the year with his or her BMI at the end of the year to determine the intervention’s effectiveness. They also will evaluate if it is efficient for pediatricians to deliver the brief obesity intervention at every visit, given the time constraints they face.\nCloutier, who also directs the Asthma Center at Connecticut Children’s, is optimistic, based on the results she had with a disease management program she created for pediatricians and their patients. The award-winning program, Easy Breathing, helped busy physicians identify and treat asthma in their patients.\nShe believes it is because of the success with Easy Breathing, coupled with the extent of childhood obesity and the concern that pediatricians have in this area, that Hartford’s pediatric community has been so enthusiastic about Growing Up Healthy to date.\nCloutier and Gorin’s pilot work on this project was funded through an award from The Donaghue Foundation and a UConn Research Foundation Faculty Grant.\nCHIP Director Named Distinguished Professor\nUConn Today, April 20, 2010\nCHIP Director Jeffrey Fisher is one of three UConn faculty members named a Board of Trustees Distinguished Professor this year in recognition of excellence in research and teaching.\nThree faculty members in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are this year’s new Board of Trustees Distinguished Professors.\nJeffrey D. Fisher in psychology, Harry A. Frank in chemistry, and Johann Peter Gogarten in molecular and cell biology all earned the distinction, which is the University’s highest award for faculty excellence in research, teaching, and service.\n“These are three outstanding researchers and teachers who have made substantial contributions to their fields and mentored a new generation of scientists,” says Jeremy Teitelbaum, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. “They set the standard for the College’s mission of excellence in teaching, research, and service.”\nPosted in InCHIP Affiliates in the News, InCHIP Today, News\nCHIP’s Brown Bag Lecture Series Now Available via LIVE Webcast\nCHIP’s regular Brown Bag Lecture is now available LIVE! Users can access the talk 10 minutes prior to the scheduled start by clicking here.\nCHIP’s AITC is Now a UConn Fee-for-Service Center\nPosted on May 19, 2010 November 25, 2015 by Chris Tarricone\nWith help from CHIP and AITC Director Timothy Gifford, Principal Investigator Kerry Marsh has parlayed a $2 million federal grant to study sexual risk behavior in virtual reality (VR) environments into a resource for the entire University.\nSpring 2010 CHIP Lecture Series\nThe CHIP Lecture Series hosts speakers of national and international prominence who share late-breaking research. The spring 2010 schedule can be found here.\nStatistical Support for CHIP Affiliates\nIf you are in need of any statistical help, we have set up an arrangement with Dr. Ming Chen of the UConn Statistics Department in order to fulfill your statistical needs.\nCHIP Statistical Support is offered to give CHIP-affiliated investigators the opportunity to have a methodological and statistical pre-review of a proposal being prepared for major external funding. Statistical support can also be used to assist CHIP-affiliated investigators with other health related research work. This opportunity is available throughout the year.\nIf you are in need of any statistical help, we have set up an arrangement with Dr. Ming Chen of the UConn Statistics Department in order to fulfill your statistical needs. Please follow the directions below in order to gain access to a statistical consult.\nStep 1: Visit www.stat.uconn.edu\nStep 2: On the left side of the stat dept main page, under “Consulting”, click on “Application”.\nStep 3: On the consulting main page, click on “Start Online Application” and then follow the step-by-step instructions to complete the online process.\nStep 4: If Step 3 is successful, Dr. Chen will automatically receive an email notification. Then, he will set up the userid and password and notify the applicant.\nStep 5: Dr. Ming Chen will arrange an initial meeting.\nIf you have any questions, please feel free to contact Jeff Fisher at jeffrey.fisher@uconn.edu.\nHealth Behavior Change Courses at UConn\nThe University offers a variety of undergraduate and graduate courses in health behavior change and health policy. Click here for a listing.\nCHIP Graduate Student Affiliation\nCHIP now offers an Affiliate status to graduate students to accommodate your interest in multidisciplinary research in the area of health behavior change.\nThere are a number of benefits that you may experience as a CHIP Student Affiliate. First, there may be opportunities for collaboration or mentorship with highly-regarded, well-published and funded researchers from across the health behavior change domain. Through our network of CHIP Affiliates, we can guide you toward graduate research and career opportunities.\nSecond, you will receive notice of our CHIP Brown Bag Lecture series that attracts presenters of national and international prominence who share late-breaking research in the fields of health behavior change and health communication related to HIV/AIDS, cancer, obesity, alcohol abuse, diabetes management, and medication adherence. Search our database of previous presenters here.\nCHIP uses a significant portion of its funds to foster new health behavior change research. Specifically, CHIP graduate students may apply annually for grants to conduct preliminary research related to CHIP overarching goals. Priority is given to promising research likely to develop into a larger study and garner external funding (such as a National Research Service Award proposal through the National Institute of Mental Health). Click here for further information.\nTo become a graduate student affiliate, please e-mail the following information to C.Stacey.Leeds@uconn.edu:\n— Department\n— E-mail address\n— Name of your advisor\nAbstinence-only Sex Ed Leaves Kids Unprotected\nHartford Courant, February 12, 2010\nCHIP Principal Investigator Blair Johnson penned an op-ed in favor of safer sex education programs for teens.\nPosted in InCHIP Affiliates in the News, News","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line648893"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9236529469490051,"wiki_prob":0.9236529469490051,"text":"Clemson expert questions tariffs as a negotiating tool, says net-zero effect on jobs\nScott Baier, a specialist in trade liberalization, cast doubt Tuesday on whether Trump's trade tactics would help the South Carolina economy.\nClemson expert questions tariffs as a negotiating tool, says net-zero effect on jobs Scott Baier, a specialist in trade liberalization, cast doubt Tuesday on whether Trump's trade tactics would help the South Carolina economy. Check out this story on greenvilleonline.com: https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/money/2018/08/01/clemson-prof-tariffs-threat-tariffs-poor-negotiation-strategy/869903002/\nAnna B. Mitchell, The Greenville News Published 6:30 a.m. ET Aug. 1, 2018\nAn industry analyst says he expects a proposed White House plan to impose tariffs on imported vehicles and auto parts to move forward and have a negative impact on carmakers and dealers. (July 19) AP\nEconomics Professor Scott Baier spoke Tuesday at an Upstate Chamber Coalition meeting in Spartanburg\nA shipping container is place on a train at the South Carolina Inland Port in Greer on Monday, September 25, 2017. (Photo: LAUREN PETRACCA/Staff)Buy Photo\n1994 study found protectionist trade investigations yield little success\nExtent of tariffs' impact unknown until costs work their way through the supply chain, experts say\nUncertainty prevails locally as business leaders await president's next move\nProposed auto tariffs could cost up to 2,000 manufacturing jobs in South Carolina\nSPARTANBURG — The chairman of Clemson University's economics department says tariffs and the threat of tariffs are an unreliable tool at best for negotiating better trade deals for the United States.\nScott Baier, a specialist in the causes and consequences of trade liberalization, offered his assessment of the current trade war during a gathering Tuesday of the Upstate Chamber Coalition. The Trump administration has since the beginning of the year imposed tariffs on washing machines, solar panels, raw steel and aluminum, and a range of Chinese raw materials and components.\nTaken together, said Kris Denzel of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, President Trump's 2018 tariffs affect $75 billion in goods, $34 billion of them from China alone. The president has also called for an investigation into automobile and auto parts imports and the possibility of a 25 percent tariff on those.\nTariffs fallout: BMW announces price increase on South Carolina-made SUVs sold in China\nPush back: Bevy of Upstate auto suppliers oppose Trump administration's proposed tariffs\n\"The current administration uses the notion that we're going to threaten to put tariffs on or we won't put tariffs on because we want you to behave better,\" Baier said. \"In the history of the United States, its ability to use this negotiating tactic to help people behave in a better way, it doesn't really show up in the data.\"\nManagers and financial officers from a host of regional small- and medium-sized businesses and manufacturers — including Berger turning tools, Röchling engineering plastics, Tietex industrial fabrics, Hogan construction, Trelleborg tires and the Elliott Davis accounting firm — came to the Spartanburg event with questions about how long existing tariffs might last, whether new ones are likely and what long-term damage they might do to the state's economy.\nDenzel and Baier agreed that no one will know the impact until negotiations conclude and the costs of import taxes work their way throughout America's complex, globally integrated supply chain.\nUncertainty prevails locally\nCharles Johnson, chief financial officer of Leigh Fibers, said much of his company's business is tied to the auto industry. Leigh Fibers recycles textiles, converting them into lint-like sound-deadening and fire-retardant materials that manufacturers like BMW use to insulate vehicles.\n\"So far the tariffs have had a minimal impact,\" Johnson said. \"It's wait and see.\"\nAllen Smith, president of the Spartanburg Chamber of Commerce, said the evolving issue has caused unease in the business community.\n\"There's one thing that business people value probably above all else,\" he said, \"and that's certainty.\"\nMelody Horton with Elliott Davis said she works with many foreign companies in or considering opening shop in South Carolina. She asked Baier whether he believed Trump's tariffs and threats of more were just a negotiating tactic.\n\"We all thought maybe this is just a short-term issue,\" Horton said. \"But now it's beginning to feel like it's the beginning of a trade war.\"\n\"I'd like to believe this is a negotiating tactic, that the Trump administration wants to lower the barriers for our exports,\" Baier said, \"but it does seem like it's escalating on our part and the response by other countries seem to be escalating as well.\"\nThough not good for the economy, he said, the overall costs of the current tariffs — assuming Trump does not follow through on threats to tax the foreign auto industry and billions of dollars of Chinese consumer goods — are about 0.1 to 0.2 percent of America's gross domestic product (which totals $18.6 trillion compared to China's $11.2 trillion, according to the World Bank).\n\"So the costs aren't large, but they are there, and they will impact certain industries quite hard,\" Baier said.\nOft-cited research says tariffs a no-go\nIn his presentation, Baier referenced an oft-cited 1994 book by Kim Elliott and Thomas Bayard — Reciprocity and Retaliation in U.S. Trade Policy — that examined American protectionist trade investigations going back to the Reagan administration. The authors assessed the success of those investigations, seeing if they opened up foreign markets for U.S. exporters, reduced foreign subsidies or produced better protection of U.S. intellectual property, Baier said.\nThe Trump administration launched another such an investigation, under Section 301 of the 1974 U.S. Trade Act, to justify the tariffs on China.\n\"So Bayard and Elliot found that of the 72 investigations filed in the U.S., negotiations were 'successful' less than 50 percent of the time,\" Baier said. \"Of the 12 cases where the U.S. retaliated against foreign competition, success was achieved in only two of the 12 cases.\"\nTariffs also have a net-zero effect on jobs, Baier said, because protectionist policies tend to preserve jobs in one sector while threatening those in another.\nSouth Carolina buyers who imported a total of $550 million in steel last year would see costs increase about 20 percent if they were to purchase that same amount of steel now, Baier said. Steel prices have gone up 45 percent since Jan. 1, he added, and aluminum 23 percent.\nConsumer product companies such as Coca Cola, Polaris and Sam Adams have announced tariff-related price increases in the wake of these supply-chain increases, and the cost of washing machines jumped 16 percent from March to May after Trump imposed a tariff on that industry's imports.\nCarolina auto jobs\nAuto tariffs are still on the table, Denzel said, though talks between the Trump administration and the European Union last week look promising and have placed a pause on their going forward.\n\"This is the big one,\" Denzel said of the proposed auto tariffs. \"We figure it would have an economic impact maybe about 10 times the size of what we see on steel and aluminum. So you are looking at possibly applying tariffs on about $350 billion worth of imports.\"\nCar prices would go up $2,500 to $4,500, Baier said, and 1,000 to 2,000 South Carolina jobs in the auto-manufacturing sector would disappear.\nAllen Smith, president of the Spartanburg chamber, said people in his county, the home of BMW, are all about talking to trade partners and working out better deals.\n\"We think it's necessary that government officials do things to support free trade; however, we don't think that should be done at the cost of local jobs,\" he said. \"And unfortunately, based on today's presentation, that could be an unintended consequence of some of these tariffs.\"\nRead or Share this story: https://www.greenvilleonline.com/story/money/2018/08/01/clemson-prof-tariffs-threat-tariffs-poor-negotiation-strategy/869903002/\nGreenville area home construction slowly builds back to pre-recession levels\nDuke's Mayonnaise brand sold to Charlotte-based private equity firm\nWhy it matters that Lockheed Martin is set to launch production of F-16s in Greenville\nBMW freezes pension plans for all US employees including South Carolina\n6 CBD stores opened in Greenville since October, and more are coming\nEasley clinics benefit from over-prescribing opioids, lawsuits say","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line933799"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5992676615715027,"wiki_prob":0.4007323384284973,"text":"Female Authors\nBooks By Women\nBecoming An Author\n20th September 2018 11th March 2019 charlieFemale Authors\nHer Life And The Cromwell Trilogy\nDame Hilary Mary Mantel is a prolific writer from England. She is known for her expertly crafted historical fiction novels, short stories and personal memoirs. Born in 1952, Mantel has won the Booker Prize twice so far. The first award was given for her book Wolf Hall. This is a semi-fictional account of Thomas Cromwell’s early days in Tudor court. Its sequel, Bring Up the Bodies was also awarded the Booker Prize.\nThis makes Mantel the only woman to have received this particular award twice. The only other writers to do so were J G Farrell, Peter Carey and J M Coetzee. She is currently writing the concluding third part of her Cromwell trilogy. The current title for this book is The Mirror and the Light.\nHer O ther Work\nMantel’s first novel was Every Day is Mother’s Day. This came out in 1985 and was soon followed by a sequel called Vacant Possession. She later worked as a film critic for The Spectator. She retained this position from 1987 to 1991. Mantel has also provided reviews for a number of other newspapers and magazines, both in the UK and US.\nShe continued to gain acclaim with her later novels such as Eight Months on Ghazzah Street. Released in 1988, this book draws on Mantel’s time when she lived in Saudi Arabia. One of the key themes is the clash between cultures in this nation.\nHer book Fludd takes place in the mid 1950’s and deals with Roman Catholicism. In this story a mysterious character arrives in the fictional town of Fetherhoughton. He changes the lives of the other protagonists forever.\nSticking To A Routine\nChoosing A Format\nValerie Solanos\nFive Female Authors of the 19th-Century\nLITERATURE – Jane Austen\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LIYiThAyY8s\nProudly powered by imrohan","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line89110"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6779913306236267,"wiki_prob":0.3220086693763733,"text":"Griet Eeckhout\nMuay Thai Professional\nPhoto Credit: KoylOgraphy\nGriet Eeckhout fight stats\nGriet Eeckhout fight records\nGriet Eeckhout personal details\nFirst Name Griet\nLast Name Eeckhout\nNickname/s The Painapple\nBirth Name Griet Eeckhout\nBorn Belgium\nResidence Belgium\nNationality Belgian\nWeight class Flyweight\nGriet Eeckhout social networks\nLike Griet\nGriet on Instagram\nGriet Eeckhout martial arts details\nBrazilian Jiu-Jitsu Blue Belt\nGriet Eeckhout fight history\nCorinne Laframboise Unanimous Decision MMA 12/08/17 TKO 41: Champions, Bell Centre, Montreal, Quebec, Canada\n5:00 R3 / 3×5 Pro Flyweight • 125 lbs • Preliminary Card • Weigh-In: 125.2 lbs (56.8 kgs)\nAshley Nichols TKO (Punches) MMA 06/16/17 TKO 39: Ultimatum, Complexe JC Perreault, St. Roch, Quebec, Canada\n3:31 R1 Pro TKO Strawweight Tournament Semi-Finals • 115 lbs • Preliminary Card\nBryony Tyrell Unanimous Decision MMA† 04/08/17 360 Promotion: Volition, Centre Jean Moisse, Mont-Saint-Guibert, Belgium\n5:00 R3 / 3×5 Pro 360 Vacant Strawweight title • 116 lbs • Main Card • Weigh-In: 114.4 lbs (51.9 kgs)\nLindsay Garbatt Rear-Naked Choke MMA 01/13/17 TKO 37: Rivals, Tohu, Montreal, Quebec, Canada\n3:07 R1 Pro Strawweight • 117 lbs • Main Card • Weigh-In: 117.2 lbs (53.2 kgs)\nJudith Levi TKO MMA 10/29/16 360 MMA Fight Nights: Genesis, Centre Sportif Jean Moisse, Belgium\n4:47 R2 / 3×5 Pro Strawweight • 115 lbs • Main Card\nDaniela Kortmann Rear-Naked Choke MMA 04/09/16 MMA Meets Wild West, El Dorado Templin, Templin, Brandenburg, Germany\n4:44 R2 / 3×5 Pro Flyweight • 125 lbs • Main Card\nAitek Emadi Draw MMA 08/23/15 K-1 Germany Topalevents\nSandra Redegeld TKO (Punches) MMA 05/02/15 Fight Lounge: Rulezzz\n3:42 R1 Amateur ……………………………………………………………………………………..\nAnke Van Gestel Points Muay Thai 11/27/10 Merchtem, Belgium\n……… ………………….. Pro ……………………………………………………………………………………..\nGriet Eeckhout Tapology Profile\nGriet Eeckhout Sherdog Profile\nOne comment on Griet Eeckhout\nPingback: April Female Fight Fixtures and Results - Awakening Fighters","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line583336"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6464796662330627,"wiki_prob":0.35352033376693726,"text":"I'll Mature When I'm Dead\nAmazing Tales of Adulthood\nI'll Mature When I'm Dead ( )\nAuthor: Barry, Dave\nPublisher: Penguin Publishing Group\nImprint: Penguin AudioBooks\nBook Format: CD-Audio\nList Price: USD $29.95\nUnabridged CDs, 5 CDs, 6 hours\nRead by TBA\nA brilliantly funny exploration of the treacherous state of adulthood by the Pulitzer Prize-winning humorist.\nDetailed Subjects: Humor / General\nPhysical Dimensions (W X L X H): 5.27 x 5.83 x 0.84 Inches\nBook Weight: 0.31 Pounds\nBarry, Dave (Author)\nDave Barry was born in Armonk, New York on July 3, 1947. He received an English degree from Haverford College in 1969. His early attempts at small-town journalism for the Daily Local News in West Chester, Pennsylvania, were directed towards local matters, such as zoning and sewage. In 1975, he briefly attempted to teach business writing to business people. Since then, he has worked as a professional humorist.\nFor many years he wrote a newspaper column that appeared in more than 500 newspapers and for which he won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary. He is the author of numerous fiction, nonfiction, and young adult books. His novels include Big Trouble, Tricky Business, Lunatics, and Insane City. His nonfiction works include Dave Barry's Complete Guide to Guys, Dave Barry Slept Here: A Sort of History of the United States, I'll Mature When I'm Dead, You Can Date Boys When You're Forty: Dave Barry on Parenting and Other Topics He Knows Very Little About, and Live Right and Find Happiness (Although Beer Is Much Faster): Life Lessons and Other Ravings from Dave Barry. His young adult books include the Starcatchers series and the Never Land series.\nDave Barry's title, Best. State. Ever, made the New York Times bestseller list in 2016.\nRed, White and Royal Blue\nMcQuiston, Casey","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1330694"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9515472054481506,"wiki_prob":0.9515472054481506,"text":"Calif. filmmaker admits guilt, gets probation\nAndre Salvail\nA California documentary filmmaker who was arrested by Aspen police in March after an alleged theft at the Marolt Place seasonal-housing development pleaded guilty Monday in Pitkin County District Court to two misdemeanors in connection with the incident.\nAndrew Anthony, 27, previously faced a felony trespassing charge in connection with the March 21 events that led to his arrest. He pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor counts — criminal possession of a financial device and theft — through a plea agreement with the 9th Judicial District Attorney’s Office. Judge Gail Nichols sentenced him to two years of supervised probation, which he will serve in California.\nPolice said Anthony was highly intoxicated when he showed up at an acquaintance’s apartment and was asked to leave. Upon leaving, he took some items with him, including someone else’s wallet, police said.\nHe allegedly returned to the apartment and was told to leave again. He was arrested after the second incident.\nA website for Best Coast Productions, of Santa Barbara, California, lists Anthony as the CEO. The website describes Best Coast as a video-production company “focused on promoting underground music with a positive message, small business and extreme sports.”\nAccording to the movie-information website IMDB.com, Anthony co-directed and shot a 2012 documentary called “Stillness,” featuring the voice of Irish-American actor Malachy McCourt, brother of Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Frank McCourt.\nAnthony told Nichols he has lived in the Aspen area for the past two winters. His family and his business are in California, he said.\nA public defender representing Anthony said he is prepared to make restitution to the victims. Anthony also has made arrangements to receive counseling for alcohol abuse through an inpatient treatment facility in California.\n“I’m just sorry this happened,” Anthony told Nichols.\nIn the days following his arrest, he told The Aspen Times that the incidents at Marolt Place and the arrest itself were misunderstandings and that all of the charges likely would be dropped. One charge, felony trespassing, was dropped.\nIn other District Court action on Monday:\n• Weston J. Petrovich, 26, pleaded guilty to a felony drug-possession charge and received probation. Petrovich, a local restaurant server at the time of his arrest more than two months ago, ran away from an Aspen policeman who suspected him of holding drugs outside the Belly Up music club in the early-morning hours of June 8. The policeman then identified him through the club’s surveillance video and arrested him that same evening at his workplace on East Hopkins Avenue. Nichols told Petrovich that if he successfully completes his probation, his record will be changed to reflect a misdemeanor, not a felony.\n• Nichols reduced to $1,000 the bond for a 23-year-old homeless man accused of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. Minnesota native Russell L. Nelson, who has been in the custody of the Pitkin County Jail on $5,000 bond since Thursday, allegedly harbored a 17-year-old runaway girl from Arapahoe County. Assistant District Attorney Scott Turner argued against his release on a personal-recognizance bond, pointing out Nelson’s extensive criminal history. A local man who recently met Nelson spoke up and said he would feed and house Nelson, a recovering substance abuser, if Nelson were set free. Nichols noted that Nelson had obvious knowledge of drug- and alcohol-counseling programs in Aspen, and Nichols agreed to reduce the bond but stipulated that Nelson attend counseling sessions five times a week and appear for all scheduled court dates.\nandre@aspentimes.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1730312"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.607913613319397,"wiki_prob":0.392086386680603,"text":"top tunes of 2018\nEach of the last two years I’ve written posts about how much music has shaped the year. In 2016 there was a lot of shit that went down and music was the bright spot. Last year was one of my favorite years in music in a while so 2018 had a lot to live up to. So as the year comes to a close, the results are in. It was in no way comparable to last year, but thats okay! Because music was still important as it always is.\n2018 as a whole will never be comparable to last year. I felt too much in 2018 and in the process I lost a lot of perspective. I had to dig myself out of personal holes so many times. A lot of which I hadn’t felt in years. In a way I’m still trying to overcome some personal struggles but one thing I learned this year is that it could be worse. So I try to remind myself of that. Despite losing perspective at times, I was able to gain it back through meeting new incredible people, through traveling all over the country, through new experiences, and most importantly through music.\nI worked harder and put in more miles than I ever had in the past this year all because of a goal that started last January. My friend and I planned a trip to London. I went on that trip last week and it was definitely a trip I won’t soon forget. As much as all the work made it worth it. It was the journey of the year that made it special and so many songs and bands that got me through this weird rollercoaster of a year. So without further delay, here are some of my faves from 2018:\n“NUMB” by Hayden James\nAccording to Spotify, this is my top song of the year. Spotify isn’t lying either. It’s now my second most played song on my iTunes. I fell in love with this song during EDC Las Vegas, a festival which ultimately changed the course of the year for me. This song related to my life in all the ways at times, so I kept turning to it. Plus it’s a big fucking mood! I saw Hayden James perform at Electric Forest this year and was able to catch this song during his sets both weekends and during his Weekend 2 DJ set. The bass was so overpowering, but I loved it nonetheless. Now, 7 months later and I’m still choosing to listen to this song. It will forever be associated with this year and all the ups and downs that came with it.\n“Safe” by Bay Ledges\nThis song was released in 2017 but I first heard this song in the spring of 2018 and I became hooked on it. It was a song that I would constantly choose to play whenever I was scrolling through my iTunes in the car or on Spotify. We also kept hearing it on our drives from Joshua Tree to Indio during Coachella this past year. It always puts me in a good mood and creates such a vibe. I was lucky enough to see Bay Ledges play last month and to hear this song live. Even if the song was released in 2017, it still got me through 2018.\nKygo was my top Spotify artist this year. It makes sense. After seeing Kygo play at Coachella, one of my favorite sets of the festival, I got really into listening to his music. I eventually created a Kygo Spotify playlist that I’ll occasionally use to work out to. I’ve always been into the tropical house style of electronic music so it was a matter of time before I dove head first into Kygo and all of his tunes that I’ve already been listening to over the past 3 years. I kind of credit the song “Stargzing”, but overall I love almost all of Kygo’s tracks and seeing him live was incredibly fun. This was the year that made it happen for me and the Norwegian DJ.\n“Curious” by Hayley Kiyoko\n2018 can be defined by the hashtag 20GAYTEEN and that’s all in part to Hayley Kiyoko. She released her first full length album this year and exploded in the music scene. She performed at Coachella, sold out her tour, opened for Panic! At the Disco, performed with Taylor Swift, and won a VMA! It’s been an epic year for Lesbian Jesus. This song was released early in 2018 as a single to promote Hayley’s debut album. It’s been one of my faves ever since. I snuck away during work at Coachella to catch a glimpse of her set Weekend 2, but missed a large portion of it. It wasn’t until I worked a Panic! At the Disco show that I got to see the entirety of her opening set and felt all the proud mom feelings. I saw Hayley play a small venue show in Philly in late 2016 and it’s been pleasure being a fan and seeing her grow so much since then. This year was the icing on the cake for that. So to answer the question, in case you were curious, it is serious that she’s only going up from here.\n2018 was a comeback year for Arctic Monkeys. They released their first album since 2013’s AM, toured worldwide, and played numerous dates on the festival circuit. It was my goal this year to see them play and I did while working their show at Forest Hills Stadium back in July. Although their new album wasn’t the comeback I hoped for, 2018 revitalized my interest in Arctic Monkeys and caused me to listen to their music even more than I did in the past. I found a love in old songs like “Suck It And See” and “I Bet That You Look Good On the Dance Floor”. I also eventually started to enjoy their latest release. It seems like the Monkeys will be riding the 2018 wave into 2019 as well so hopefully they coast back to the states soon.\n“Saturday Sun” by Vance Joy\nVance Joy released his sophomore album this year back in February. “Saturday Sun” was a single from that album that was the theme of my Coachella 2018 experience. On our 1 hour drives to and from work every day from Joshua Tree, we listened to Alt Nation on Sirius XM. “Saturday Sun” was in the rotation at the time at it seemed like we heard it ever time we got in Denise’s car. It became our Coachella song. The whole experience culminated on Sunday of Weekend 2 when Vance Joy asked to sit at our table in catering and ate lunch with us. This song will always remind me this year and drives through California with my Day One since Day One Weekend One, Denise.\n“Wanderlust” by James Bay\nThere’s no special story behind this song compared to the others I have on here. It’s just one that I kept going back to once I had it on my iTunes and Spotify playlists. I got into it right before I left for Electric Forest in June and it’s been a staple ever since. It gave me a new opinion on James Bay, whose music I thought was always slower and created romance type vibes. This song was an indie pop/rock dream that I never knew I needed from James Bay this year.\nIt took me a while to get into the new Florence and the Machine album, but I did just in time to see her live at the Barclays Center in October. Again just like the Arctic Monkeys, High As Hope, the 2018 follow-up to 2015’s How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful, was a bit of a disappointment to me initially. In general, it seemed like after a big 2017 of brilliant albums, 2018’s hype wasn’t cutting it for me. New music from 2018 just took a little while to get used to. Once I did I fell for songs like “Hunger” and “Patricia”. Florence reminded me this year when I needed it most that “it’s a wonderful thing to love” and I’m grateful for that.\n“Body” by Loud Luxury\n“Body” came to me around the same time as “NUMB” at EDC Las Vegas so it makes total sense that it would always play after “NUMB” on my iTunes rotation. I first heard the song on the way to site at EDC via Josh Hurlbert’s music. My friend Erin and I were jamming to it. I didn’t know the name of the song after that, but I needed to find out. So after some detective work, Josh figured out the song I was referring to and told me what it was called on load-out day. It’s been as much of a favorite as “NUMB” since EDC and a great work out track as well. I can’t say I’ve listened to Loud Luxury beyond “Body”, but it’s been a big hit of 2018 all around so I’m sure there will be more great tracks to come from the electronic artists.\nBishop Briggs ended 2017 for me and moved right in 2018. Her debut album came out in May and she was high on my list to see live until I saw her perform at Electric Forest. I will say my interest in Bishop Briggs kind of faded after seeing her perform live, but for the first half of this year I was focused on her debut album and possibly seeing her in the summer. She didn’t disappoint at Forest either. Her performance was full of energy and power that had everyone feeling as bad ass as her by the end of the set. It was a highlight of the festival that seemed to be one of my lowest points of the year. Thankfully, I survived the Forest and went on to have some great festival experiences beyond that.\n“Happy Man” by Jungle\n“Happier” by Marshmello, ft. Bastille\n“Whippin'” by Kiiara\nSo that’s it! 10 songs and artists that were big for me in 2018 (plus a few runner-ups!). There was another band that I easily could have put on the list but I decided to hold off because 2019 will surely be a big year for them. That band is Vampire Weekend. Their comeback started in 2018 with a few festival appearances, including a special one that I was witness to at Lollapalooza, but they’ve yet to release their much anticipated fourth full length album. There were rumors it would come out in 2018, but that hasn’t happened. So I expect 2019 will be the year for them. They’re already slated to play Firefly in June and I’m sure more dates and festivals are in the works as well. I can’t wait. They’re who I’m most excited about heading in to this new year.\nAs with any year, there will be plenty of new music and new discoveries for me. I didn’t plan on this year being better than 2017 and it wasn’t honestly as far as music goes. Professionally though, 2018 was my best year yet. When I set out to follow my music industry dreams in 2015 (technically 2016 but it started in 2015), my goal was always to be better, learn more, and grow every year. I’ve done that so far, especially this year. I have no plans to stop any time soon either. I’ve started to reach some goals I’ve had, but I have so much more to do and accomplish. I’m so lucky I get to do what I love. I’m grateful for everyone that’s helped and supported me, everyone I’ve met, and all the experiences I’ve had. I owe it all to music. So hopefully next year is even better because I plan on trying to make it that way and I’m sure I’ll have plenty of new tunes to help me through it all. Be back next week for the Coachella 2019 lineup release!\n“All of life is energy vibrating at different frequencies. It has been said, the universe is a uni-verse, one song or vibration that plays throughout existence and gives us life. When we get in tune with that tone, we are in harmony with life. Music is a way we can tap into that power. That is why we feel music with our whole being. It moves us, stimulates our imagination, opens emotions, and can pass language and cultural barriers. It lives on a primal level, one that we can all connect with.”\nPosted in Music, Uncategorized and tagged 2018 music review, 20GAYTEEN, Arctic Monkeys, Bastille, Bay Ledges, Bishop Briggs, Body, Body Loud Luxury, Coachella 2019, Coachella 2019 lineup release, Curious, Curious Hayley kiyoko, dashboard confessional, EDM, Electric Forest, Electric Forest 2018, electronic, electronic dance music, electronic music, florence and the machine, Happier, Happier Marshmello, Happy Man, Happy Man Jungle, Hayden James, Hayley Kiyoko, High As Hope, indie, indie music, indie pop, indie pop music, indie rock, indie rock music, james bay, jungle, Kiiara, Kygo, Loud Luxury, Marshmello, Marshmello ft. Bastille, Music, music is sacred, music review, NUMB, NUMB Hayden James, pop, pop music, Safe, Safe Bay Ledges, Saturday Sun, Saturday Sun Vance Joy, spotify, top songs of 2018, top tunes of 2018, trop house, trop house music, tropical house, tropical house music, vance joy, Wanderlust, Whippin, Whippin Kiiara, years & years on December 27, 2018 by prostreetcross. Leave a comment","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line878015"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6553564071655273,"wiki_prob":0.6553564071655273,"text":"Home / A Portrait of Magritte by Markus Pierson (2001)\nA Portrait of Magritte by Markus Pierson (2001)\nProduct Code: SG089\nMarkus Pierson began his professional life as an accountant in his early 20’s. after a near-fatal bout with Crohn’s disease in early 1985, Pierson declared the accountant “dead” and in his place was a man pursuing his dream to become a successful artist.\nPierson's coyote series was born in June of 1986, after Markus heard the Joni Mitchell song, “coyote.” the song centered on its main character, simply referred to as “coyote,” a reckless, footloose wanderer who would entice woman only to leave them behind for the next adventure. Pierson aspired to be the carefree coyote described in those lyrics and did something he’d never done before or since: made a drawing of a song.\nIn the decades that followed, Pierson's work has evolved to include a vast array of paintings, drawings, sculpture, hand-pulled serigraphs and original found-object works. Over time, the metaphor of the coyote has taken on a more poignant and profound purpose. At its essence, the work urges us to pursue our dreams, wear our hearts on our sleeves, and to celebrate all of life’s ups and downs.\nM. Pierson has had nearly one hundred solo exhibitions in galleries across America, Australia and New Zealand, museum exhibitions and representation at international art fairs including Art Miami, Sofa Chicago, Chicago Contemporary & Classic, and many others. Markus has amassed a collector base including museums, heads of state, major corporations and celebrities worldwide.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1108791"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6603463888168335,"wiki_prob":0.3396536111831665,"text":"Film ID: YFA 16\nHULL VICTORY CELEBRATIONS (1945)\nMade by Debenham & Co, Beverley, this film records the City of Hull’s Victory in Europe Celebrations, May 1945; it includes extensive footage of all servicemen and women who participated in the victory processions and salute at Victoria Square.\nNEAR AND FAR (1945)\nThis is a film from the Noel Beardsell Collection of family trips to Flamborough, Wentworth Woodhouse, and London.\nFilm ID: YFA 176\nBEVERLEY GRAMMAR SCHOOL FOUNDERS DAY (1942)\nOn June 18th, 1942, a Founder's Day ceremony took place at Beverley Minster. It was attended by the Lord Mayor, members of the clergy, army cadets and scouts. Members of the local community were also in attendance. The film was made by Ernest Symmons who owned the Beverley Playhouse Cinema. He filmed local events for newsreels which he would show before a main feature.\nSALUTE THE SOLDIER (1944)\nThis film documents a fund raising event for the Green Howards, an infamous Yorkshire regiment. Salute the Soldier week features a procession from international regiments, speeches from senior military leaders (Charles De Gaule is possibly in attendance) and local dignitaries. Other fund raisings schemes include an open air service.\nWINGS FOR VICTORY (1943)\nThis film records the events of 'Wings for Victory' week held in Bridlington and District 12th to 19th June 1943. The military agencies and local community join to raise money to pay for new aeroplanes that will be used to help Britain win the Second World War.\nHOMEGUARD 1 (1942)\nPart one of a training film made by the army in Yorkshire that shows the best methods of camouflage and fieldcraft for the Home Guard. Using short clips of film footage and intertitles are used throughout to explain the right and wrong way to carry out their certain manoeuvres.\nPart two of a training film made by the army in Yorkshire that shows the best methods of camouflage and fieldcraft for the Home Guard. Using short clips of film footage and intertitles the film explains the right and wrong way to carry out their duties.\nPart three of a training film made by the army in Yorkshire that shows the best methods of camouflage and fieldcraft for the Home Guard. Using short clips of film footage and intertitles the film explains the right and wrong way to carry out their duties.\nBRIDLINGTON WARSHIPS WEEK (1940)\nThis film records the events of a 'Warship Week' fundraising appeal held in Bridlington in the East Riding of Yorkshire. Each day different events would be held to encourage people to donate money to help build warships for the war effort. Intertitles would precede the events of each day that celebrated Home Front services.\nCIVIL DEFENCE (1941)\nThis amateur film, set in Bridlington in the East Riding of Yorkshire, shows clear examples of the work that different Home Front agencies undertook during war time. As well as capturing a Warship Week in the heart of the town, the film includes interesting scenes showing a female ARP officer going about her work.\nVISIT OF LADY MOUNTBATTEN (1942)\nThis is a film from Bridlington showing various events during 1942, including a campaign to forge links between the youth of Britain and America, a visit by Lady Mountbatten, Armistice Sunday, a procession of wartime service personnel, and a celebration of the victory in Libya.\nA SCRAP OF PAPER (1919)\nThis film, made by Debenham & Co. of York, was made in order to raise money for the dependents of war casualties as well as soldiers disabled during the conflicts of World War I. It features a mixture of drama and actuality footage.\nKING GEORGE AND QUEEN VISIT HULL (1941)\nThis E.F. Symmons film documents the visit of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth to Kingston-upon- Hull in August 1941. All in black and white, it contains some superb footage of the damage to Hull’s buildings caused by the Luftwaffe, many close-up shots of the visiting Royals, and depicts the amazing resilience of the people of Hull even in the face of the destruction of their homes and communities.\nKINGSTON UPON HULL PEACE DAY CELEBRATIONS (1946)\nThis film features a Commemoration for the members of the police force who lost their lives fighting in World War Two.\nTHE WRECKED ROHILLA (1914)\nTopical Budget newsreel 167-1 (4/11/1914)\nOriginal film held by British Film Institute\nON THE WAR PATH AND SPORT'S DAY (1950s)\nMade by Bill Freeman, this film contains a variety of footage from the 1950s including scenes of Hilderthrope Primary School, Bridlington Spa, and a school sports day.\nVISIT OF US AMBASSADOR (1941)\nThis film documents the Viscount and Lady Halifax's visit to Hull in 1941. They have come to visit the city after The Blitz during World War II. The day begins at the Dorchester theatre where they view the film and are presented with a wooden engraved case containing the film. They also visit a refuge for people whose homes have been bombed and look at the worst hit sites of the city.\nPEACE DAY 1946 FREEDOM OF HULL (1946)\nThis film documents the Peace Day celebrations in Hull. It includes troop and cadet inspections as well as a parade of the East Yorkshire Regiment and accompanying parties through the city.\nCIVIL DEFENCE WEST PARK (1962)\nIn 1962, a Civil Defence Rally was held in West Park, Hull. This rally was different from previous events as it brought together all defence volunteers from across the Yorkshire region. This film documents the activities surrounding the event from initial preparations, set up in the park, defence displays, informational marquees, and musical entertainment and is accompanied by commentary explaining the events.\nMILITARY RACE (1916)\nThis film, made by Debenham & Co., documents a military race at the Beverley Racecourse on Saturday, 29th April, 1916. The cross-country race was organized by the Northern Command Cross-Country Association and included 435 starters. Upwards of 250 men finished the 6.5 mile race including winner Lance Corporal Chapell.\nTERRITORIALS ARRIVING IN BEVERLEY SUNDAY JULY 25TH 1937 PART ONE (1937)\nThis is the first part of a two part film of the Territorial Army in Beverley. This part shows them arriving in Beverley, marching to the Westwood where they are have set up camp and are cooking.\nTERRITORIALS ARRIVING IN BEVERLEY SUNDAY JULY 25TH 1937 PART TWO (1937)\nThis is the second part of a two part film of the Territorial Army in Beverley. This part shows them camped in the Westwood, cooking and eating.\nRAF BEVERLEY SCENES (1942)\nThis is a film of the RAF in Beverley, with a march through Beverley – made alongside another film, ‘Inspection of the ATC 399 (Beverley)', YFA number 5158.\nINSPECTION OF THE ATC 399 (BEVERLEY) (1942)\nThis is a film of Beverley Air Training Corp on parade through the Market Square – made alongside another film, ‘RAF Beverley Scenes’, YFA number 5157.\n(-) Remove WARTIME filter WARTIME\n(-) Remove East filter East\nNorth (1) Apply North filter","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line823528"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6136848330497742,"wiki_prob":0.38631516695022583,"text":"Princess’s possessions to go up at auction in Sussex\nPart of the 19th century ruby and diamond brooch\nMaria Hudd\nA small group of items originally owned by Princess Margaret are to be sold at auction in Sussex later this month.\nThey were among a collection that provoked a bidding frenzy at Christies in 2006, when 1,000 people packed into four salerooms, all trying to acquire a piece of royal history.\nA 1967 aquamarine brooch made by John Donald\nEverything in the sale sold for many times its estimated value, and the four lots being offered for sale in Sussex were all bought that day.\nA 1967 aquamarine brooch made by John Donald, which has the Princess’s ‘M’ monogram on the reverse, is a classic piece of retro designer jewellery. The pre-sale estimate is £5,000-10,000.\nAlso included is a 19th century ruby and diamond brooch, again monogrammed on the reverse, and again estimated at £5,000-10,000.\nA 19th century silver figure of a Hussar on horseback was given to the Princess as a wedding gift from the King’s Royal Hussars in 1960, and was on display in the dining room of her private apartment in Kensington Palace. The estimate is £5,000-7,000.\nThe final lot is a group of books on ballet which were presented to the Princess, and all have been signed by the various authors and dancers, with dedications. This group is estimated at £2,000-3,000.\nEach item comes with a leather bound document or provenance signed by Viscount Linley, under who the original sale was instructed.\nThe sale will take place at Burstow and Hewett of Battle on Wednesday, September 19 as part of an auction of antique and modern jewellery, silver, and fine art.\nFor more details, visit www.burstowandhewett.co.uk.\nMagistrates Court results for the Eastbourne area for June 19 - 27","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line332750"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6666471362113953,"wiki_prob":0.33335286378860474,"text":"Barbells, books and beer\nMost of the good things in life begin with \"B\"\nLa Perle des Antilles\nOn November 7, 2018 By expatpowerlifterIn 3rd World, Cultural differences, Dealing with adversity, haiti, travel\nThis may sound maudlin, but sometimes hate does turn into love and sometimes, if you’re in the right frame of mind, a challenging situation is indeed an opportunity. By the time I left home at 18, I had moved house 17 times in 3 continents, 4 countries, 3 US states and the District of Columbia. One of those places, for better or worse, was to have a major influence on my life. In the early 70s my family moved to Haiti for what was supposed be “a few years”.\nIf nature abhors a vacuum, it’s equally true that young children abhor uncertain, chaotic situations. So let me reiterate what I just said in the paragraph above – it was the 1970s (an era, in retrospect, when everyone was seemingly flying by the seat of their pants) and I had just landed in the poorest country in the Western hemisphere, a 3rd world country ruled by secret police and a “president for life” dictator. Oh, and we didn’t speak the language (creole). My parents spoke French and my sister and I had spoken French as younger children but at that point had forgotten it after a few years in inner-city DC. (Haiti was\\is considered a francophone country but the reality is that the vast majority of the population do not speak French.)\nMy father’s job allowed us to have a comfortable life of a higher standard than we’d just had in DC, complete with a pool and servants. I was in a new school (again), and as per usual most of the kids had known each other since infancy. While it was an “American” school, most of the kids flat-out spoke creole amongst themselves outside of class. I was told we’d move again in a few years so it seemed sort of pointless to learn the language and otherwise get attached to this place that I wasn’t overly fond of.\nIt wasn’t all bad, of course, because in spite of extreme poverty and political corruption, Haiti was – and is – a country unlike no other. There is natural beauty (including the best beaches I’ve ever seen anywhere), an extremely vibrant culture and great cuisine. I might have been a moody little git, but it’s hard not to like pate, poulet creole and fresco gwenadin ak pistache griye (shaved ice with grenadine syrup and grilled peanuts – trust me). However, what really burned Haiti into my memory, and not in a good way, was the final breakdown of my parents’ marriage and also a fairly scary health issue my mother encountered. I had made friends and was doing OK in school but I really couldn’t wait to see the last of that country.\nLeave we did, and for a few brief years my sister, my mother and I ping-ponged around the US Midwest and East Coast. Somewhere along the line I made a fetish out of “normalcy”. I longed to fit in, to be as vanilla as possible, to blend into the crowd. Finally, we ended up in incredibly small-minded town in the metropolitan Boston area as my mother worked ridiculous hours, raised 2 kids and pursued her degrees in arguably the best university in the US. My “normalcy” campaign was an abject failure. Sure, I had made a few friends and had become reasonably proficient at baseball but I was far from what you’d call popular. In fact, I received more than my share of shit, straight up bullying, at school because I was a shy, geeky, pimply new kid (entirely on me) but also because of my family situation (beyond my control). At roughly the same time I discovered the martial arts and latched on with laser focus. I trained 4 hours a day 5 times a week so after a year or 2 I began to get fairly proficient. The better I got, the more local notoriety I received and, for the most part, the bullying stopped. After a fight or 2, kids decided to pursue easier targets.\nNevertheless, I was miserable anywhere outside of a dojo, and school, especially, was the 9th circle of hell. I began to skip obscene amounts of school. Towards the end, I was skipping every Monday and Friday. To this day, I’m not sure how I got away with it, but let’s just say that my middle school was a bit of a chaotic, Lord of the Flies situation for students and teachers alike. Most kids probably would have fallen in with a bad element at this point but honestly, I was too geeky to be accepted by the “bad element”. Skipping school was the limit of my rebellion.\nAll miserable things must come to an end so, eventually, the day came when my mother sat my sister and I down to announce that we’d be going back to Haiti for a brief period so she could finish her doctoral thesis. Looking back, as the divorced parent of 2 children, I appreciate the courage behind her decision. As a self-involved young teenager, naturally, my first thought was “WTF, why me and why, of all the places in the world, there???” And I didn’t want to leave my dojo, the one place that I fit in. Soon thereafter, however, the school administration finally noticed my laughable attendance record and the dragnet began to close in. Suddenly, a few months in the Caribbean didn’t seem like such a bad idea.\nIn no time at all, we were back in Port-au-Prince. This time, though, the experience was going to be radically different. My sister and I were older and there was less “family drama” to complicate things further. On the other hand, we had very little money and were operating well and truly without a safety net. Money equals power everywhere, but even more so in desperately poor countries. The 3 of us lived in 1 rented room for the first few months. In adult terms, we had only been gone for a few years, but as an early adolescent it seemed like decades.\nIt was like “The Brief Wonderous Life of Oscar Wao” in reverse, only I was painfully skinny (we all were back then) and incredibly “blan”. Even my Irish-American schoolmates in Boston used to give out to me for how pale I am…so while my school in PauP reflected all the colors in the rainbow, I selflessly anchored the far gringo end of the chromatic spectrum. The similarities with the book, however, outweighed the differences: it was the very early 80s, I was on the island of Hispaniola and, oh yes indeedy, was very socially awkward.\nMy mother had managed, by dint of a level of hustle one rarely sees these days, to send us to our old school. This was notable because it’s a private school and as I mentioned above, she had very limited funds at that point. (In fact, I’m fairly certain her income was poverty level by US standards, but in Haiti in those days it was “middle-class”. One didn’t often see an entire “blan” family with limited means (and, at the time, limited connections) so it’s accurate to say we were a rarity.) My classmates were an interesting mix of Haitian elite (the 1 percent), embassy brats, some missionary kids and a few odd-ball cases like my sister and I. It was a weird mix by anybody’s standards. The 14 year old kid on my left might have a Patek Philippe on his wrist and had driven himself to school in his BMW while the kid on my right could be a snuff-dipping South Carolina redneck in training. Every high school has cliques and subcultures, but this place added class and a wider range of socio-political issues to boot. (We had, for example, Lebanese, Palestinians and Israelis in our school – which made for an interesting period after Israel invaded Lebanon in 1982).\nI also searched around for a new dojo – one that I could get to via public transportation (aka Tap-taps, camionettes and “publiques” (ancient communal taxis of a sort) and we could afford. We eventually found one and I began training with my new dojo mates. It was my first real re-introduction to unadulterated Haitian culture. Nobody spoke English, just Creole (mostly) and French (sorta). It was a real old school dojo, with the old-school “recitation of the credo” before every training session, all counting and technique names in Japanese and, distressingly (for me) they insisted on wearing a full gi at all times. Wearing a full gi while performing intense physical exercise in a stifling, non-air-conditioned dojo in a tropical country was, shall we say, challenging at first. I puked a few times and passed out at least once before my body adjusted. That being said, my dojo mates and instructors where really cool guys and surprisingly accepting of the goofy “sans-ave” “blanmana” that was deposited in their midst. Oh, and they were the most flexible bunch I had ever run into, capable of doing full splits with little or no warm-up. Long after I finally gave up the martial arts, I’d often run into guys from the old dojo whilst out and about in PauP/Petionville and they were always extremely cool.\nIn spite of a very modest living situation, a certain amount of culture-shock, a high-school environment on steroids and being the new kid once again I couldn’t honestly say that my level of adolescent angst and general miserableness was worse than it was in the States. Still, I longed to return to Boston and continue training with my original dojo. This might seem strange but as I’ve said before, karate was the only thing in my life that was entirely mine in which I had achieved a certain level of success and notoriety. However, as the months wore on, it became increasingly obvious that a “short stint” in Haiti was becoming a longer, more open-ended affair.\nIt’s fully to my mother’s credit that she allowed me to return to Boston and my old dojo. Much credit also goes to first instructor and mentor, P, as he agreed to do the heavy lifting transportation wise, waiving the already cheap monthly fees, etc. Be that as it may, I was essentially a young teenager living with very nice strangers back in the same damn town. I realized 2 things very quickly: a) I missed my mother and sister a whole lot and b) man, did I ever hate that town. I had always thought the fault was squarely on me but I realized the town sucked, too. It seemed to dislike me, and I , it. I remember a visceral feeling of suffocation and it dawned on me that there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of its’ philosophy. As much as I hated to leave my original dojo, I felt, surprisingly, a very strong desire to return to Haiti.\nSo, in very short order, I found myself back in funky ol’ PauP. My living situation hadn’t changed, it was still as “challenging” as ever, but my attitude had. I was still miserable, but I realized that non-stop moaning wasn’t solving anything. I eventually learned creole, made a number of friends (many of them outside of school) and, hell yes, even met girls. I returned back to my PauP dojo for a time, at least. After a few years, we had a very small, old school traditional shotgun style house on a hill overlooking downtown PauP. It was filled to the tin roof with books that we had brought and that various of my mother’s university colleagues had left which was key as we didn’t have a TV. Hell, the phone didn’t even work half the time. Those books saved my sanity and gave me a painless “by osmosis” education that saved my *ss in school. Boredom is a very powerful motivator, one that is increasingly rare these days. My sister eventually left for college, leaving just my mother and I. My mother’s various jobs often took her into countryside for days at time which effectively left me, by this time an older teenager, alone. I know what you’re thinking, and you wouldn’t be totally wrong (see above re: friends and girls). I learned a number of valuable lessons, like it’s possible to get by on 2 gourdes worth of fritaille a day in a pinch and who I could sell my clothes to if my friends and I had prematurely blown the food budget on parties.\nIt’s worth noting that in some respects the Haiti I am referring to no longer exists. At that time it was far safer than most US cities at the time. While I did run into some issues whilst literally running in the streets, it was pretty tame. I routinely cut through slums, on foot, at all hours of the day. We’d do things like hop a tap-tap (or hitchhike) to Grand Goave (a town on the coast outside of Port-au-Prince) to watch a voudun ceremony, drink rum and return back home the next morning. Crime and insecurity was not really a factor in those days, as crazy as that sounds now. I often wonder if our ultra low-budget, no connection having re-introduction to Haiti as described above would do-able these days. I’m not sure it would be.\nHaiti is a complex place, one that you hate and love simultaneously. It’s “The land of unlimited impossibilities” that’s always capable of breaking your heart.\nhaitilife lessonsthird culture kidstravel\nWhen life don’t give you squat, squat gives you life.\nWhat to do when you don’t feel like training…\nVeganism and Strength Sports May 26, 2019\nTo sleep, perchance to dream… January 11, 2019\nAn ode to fringe activities… January 1, 2019\nWhat to do when you don’t feel like training… December 30, 2018\nLa Perle des Antilles November 7, 2018","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line785104"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8650224804878235,"wiki_prob":0.8650224804878235,"text":"Iowa Center for Public Affairs Journalism (http://www.iowawatch.org/2017/09/02/an-iowa-desperados-greatest-sorrow/)\nIowa History\nAn Iowa Desperado’s Greatest Sorrow\nBy Cheryl Mullenbach/Iowa History | September 2, 2017\nMore on Iowa History\nSubscribe to Iowa History\nCourtesy Library of Congress\nPolk Wells was sentenced to life in prison.\n“Aside from the overt criminal acts described and a too liberal use of profanity, my life has been approximately pure and correct,” Polk Wells said from his prison cell at Anamosa, Iowa. And he swore he never used liquor or tobacco.\nHowever, during his lifetime the words “desperado,” “bandit,” and “wanted: dead or alive” were frequently seen in connection with Polk Wells. And according to an 1895 article in the New York Times, he was the “greatest of Iowa desperadoes.”\nIowa History, a weekly column, appears at IowaWatch on Saturdays.\nCheryl Mullenbach is a former history teacher, newspaper editor, and public television project manager. She is the author of four non-fiction books for young people. Double Victory was featured on C-SPAN’s “Book TV” and The Industrial Revolution for Kids was selected for “Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People.” Her most recent book, Women in Blue traces the evolution of women in policing.\nVisit her website at: www.cherylmullenbachink.com\nWells blamed his early life of crime on a mean stepmother. Running away from his Missouri home at the age of 12, he won a pot of money in a poker game, bought a “cowboy’s outfit,” and headed west. After spending several years roaming throughout the western territories, Wells returned to Missouri in 1872 and married Nora Wilson. He went into the grocery and liquor business, but wasn’t successful as an entrepreneur. He left his wife and baby but promised to return.\nWhen Wells returned to Nora two years later, she had married a man named Al Warnica. According to Wells, “Warnica was a hard-working young fellow, and I determined not to interfere, for there had been no intentional wrongdoing. I gave him $300 to buy a team, kissed Nora good-bye, mounted my horse, and rode away to the West.”\nWells quickly fell into a life of crime—committing highway robberies and robbing banks throughout several states. He killed a Mormon bishop in Utah in 1876. And in July 1881 he stole a couple of horses from a farmer near Sidney in southwest Iowa and rode to neighboring Riverton where he robbed the bank of $4,600.\nFremont County Sheriff Dan Farrell put together a posse of local citizens, and they took off over the prairie in pursuit of Wells. The sheriff followed Wells all the way to Randolph, Wis., where a shoot-out occurred. Carrying at least three bullets in his body from Sheriff Farrell’s gun, Wells was taken back to Iowa. (Wells once claimed his body housed 27 bullets from various encounters over his career.)\nBack in Iowa, Sheriff Farrell collected a $1,000 reward; and Wells pleaded guilty to highway robbery and was sentenced to 10 years at Fort Madison Penitentiary. Only a month into his sentence, Wells escaped by overpowering a prison guard with chloroform; and the guard, John Elder, died.\nWhile on the run, Wells hid out in a haystack in the barn of a family named Winterbottom. Word of the prisoner’s escape had traveled fast, and Mrs. Winterbottom convinced her husband to check out the barn. Taking his pitchfork along as a precaution, the farmer plunged the fork into the hay pile, striking Wells in the head, neck and breast. But the prisoner managed to wrestle the weapon from Winterbottom and took off across the countryside.\nWells hid out for several days but was recaptured and sentenced to life in prison for the murder of the guard. He passed time by studying, practicing Christianity and giving talks at the prison Sunday school. He became a skilled leather tooler. Officials said he was a model prisoner. He wrote a book about his life of crime and had received an offer from a publisher but was holding out for more money according to an interview he gave to the New York Times in 1895.\nPolk Wells died of consumption at Anamosa prison in September 1896. Before he died, Wells said his greatest sorrow was hearing a mother threaten her kids, saying she would give them to Polk Wells if they didn’t behave. “I floundered in the lowest depths of shame and remorse at having my name used as a cudgel to coerce little children into submission and obedience,” Wells said.\n©www.CherylMullenbachInk.com\n• “Career of Polk Wells,” Des Moines Register, Sept. 13, 1896.\n• “Iowa’s Famed Desperado,” New York Times, Jan. 29, 1895.\n• “Polk Wells Dead,” Perry Daily Chief,” Sept. 13, 1896.\n• “Polk Wells Dies in Prison,” Estherville Daily News, Sept. 18, 1896.\n• “Wanted: Polk Wells, Dead or Alive—$1,500 Reward,” Washington Citizen, March 14, 1947.\n• “Western Bandits Caught,” New York Times, Feb. 27, 1882.\nIowa History, a weekly column by Cheryl Mullenbach exploring Iowa history, will appear on IowaWatch on Saturdays. Mullenbach is a former history teacher, newspaper editor, and public television project manager. She is the author of four non-fiction books for young people. Double Victory was featured on C-SPAN’s “Book TV” and The Industrial Revolution for Kids was selected for “Notable Social Studies Trade Books for Young People.” Visit her website at http://www.cherylmullenbachink.com/.\nAnamosa\ndesperadoes\nEstherville Daily News\nIowa murders\nIowa state prison\nPolk Wells\nThe Prairie City Bank Robbery That Ended In An Iowa Cornfield\nIt was about 1:30 in the morning on October 28, 1902, when Prairie City dentist, Dr. S. B. Gidford, woke up in his room across the street from the bank. As he stuck his head out a window, a “loaded 44-caliber Colt” was “presented to his face” by a stranger who told him his life was “worth less than 30 cents.”\nIs This What We Want From Our State?\nFree Speech Is For Those We Disagree With, Too","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line148071"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6813157200813293,"wiki_prob":0.31868427991867065,"text":"Aston Martin Zagato Production\nAston Martin Zagato\nRather than segregating its racing pedigree from its consumer-facing arm, Aston Martin has decided to turn it to good use.\nThe V12 Zagato race car has been tweaked to allow it to go into full production and is expected to make an official appearance at Kuwait’s Concours d’Elegance this weekend.\nUnder the hood is a six-liter V12 engine churning out 510 horsepower, which produces a 0-60 mph time of 4.2 seconds and a top speed of 190 mph.\nAll of the styling of the racing version of the Zagato has been kept the same, except for a few minor modifications to the body required for the track. Unfortunately, Aston has decided to limit production of the car to just 150 pieces, and slapped a £330,000 price tag on the side.\nThe current V12 Vantage can be picked up for some £200,000 less. Then again, it’s not quite the same as knowing your Aston can drive flat-out for 24 hours and still turn heads.\n11 Summer-Approved Sheet Sets\nReady For a New Bed? These Mattresses Hold Up\n15 Dads Share Their Experiences of Fatherhood and Entrepreneurship\nEverything You Need to Know Before You Commit to a Bed and Make the Investment\nWin Barbecue Season With These Chef-Approved Grilling Tools","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line422026"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.722871720790863,"wiki_prob":0.27712827920913696,"text":"As a new bride, I pledged to be strong after second breast cancer diagnosis\nJuanita Johnson Anderson, 57, elected to have a double masectomy following her second diagnosis in 2013. Today, she is cancer free.\nAs a new bride, I pledged to be strong after second breast cancer diagnosis Juanita Johnson Anderson, 57, elected to have a double masectomy following her second diagnosis in 2013. Today, she is cancer free. Check out this story on shreveporttimes.com: https://www.shreveporttimes.com/story/opinion/guest-columnists/2016/10/02/new-bride-pledges-strong-after-second-breast-cancer-diagnosis/91148014/\nJuanita Johnson Anderson, Guest columnist Published 6:00 a.m. CT Oct. 2, 2016 | Updated 10:17 a.m. CT Oct. 3, 2016\nJuanita Anderson(Photo: Special to The Times)Buy Photo\nEDITOR'S NOTE: Throughout the month of October, The Times will periodically publish reader-submitted accounts of surviving breast cancer. Juanita Johnson Anderson, 57, is a breast cancer survivor who elected to have a double masectomy following her second diagnosis in 2013. Today, she is cancer free. This column has been edited for clarity and length.\nMy first breast cancer diagnosis came in 2007, followed by a lumpectomy (a procedure in which a portion of the breast is removed.)\nWhat should have been eight weeks of treatment turned into 12 because of infection, which led to hospitalization. They tried Tamoxifen (a medication used to treat breast cancer). But I had a reaction to it and there was nothing else at the time. There was a six-year period during which it could return, and it did.\nIn 2013, I was a new bride having just been married in June.\nOne morning, in August of that same year, my husband touched an area of my breast asking, “Is that painful?\" What I thought! I looked in the mirror, closed my eyes, said a prayer and called my doctor. The lump was inflamed.\nWhen my mother and I walked across the street to the Feist-Weiller Cancer Center that same month she told me,”you are about to get some news that is going to be hard to hear, but know that God has you.”\nStill, cancer is the hardest word to hear besides you are pregnant.\nThroughout my life, I’ve tried to keep a positive outlook and a good sense of humor. Ecclesiastes 3:1-12 is the chapter of seasons. \"Nothing happens without reason and in due season.\"\nMy doctor looked at me and said, “I am sorry. It came back, and I need to remove the whole breast. Once again, I closed my eyes, the tears slowly started to fall, I said a prayer. Looking at him I said, \"OK, let’s talk. When can we do this? Is there a possibility that it can come back in the second breast? How long will I be down? And the most important one, pain medication afterwards, right?\"\nThroughout the month of October, The Times will periodically publish reader-submitted accounts of surviving breast cancer. (Photo: Courtesy photo)\nI was determined to be strong. I decided to have them both removed. I endured four strong treatments of chemotherapy that started on my birthday Sept. 27, 2013.\nI wiped my head one morning in bed and all my hair was on the pillow, I took a shower to remove the fuzz. I was crying again because I was tired. I could not take Neulasta shot, it caused legions all over my head and a huge one in my back that had to be surgically removed. What was planned as a day surgery turned into an eight-day stay.\nI have strong support from family, friends, church family and total FAITH. I broke down, depression set in, anger, a total sense of loss, mourning a free spirited life to one of almost a recluse.\nI still cry. My mother gave me a scripture one day and told me to read it; to make me stronger — Psalms 121.\nI have no feeling in the breast area right now, nor my right underarm. I speak to people about breast cancer and encourage them to get their exams. Breast cancer runs deep in my fathers’ side of the family, my sister two years older endured the same thing in her twenties.\nDoctors report today Sept. 20 is that I'm cancer free. I still cry today, but it is because I am a SURVIVOR.\nThroughout the month of October, The Times will periodically publish reader-submitted accounts of surviving breast cancer. Submit your story by emailing yourstories@shreveporttimes.com. Stories will be accepted through Sept. 30 and should be no longer than 500 words.\nRead or Share this story: https://www.shreveporttimes.com/story/opinion/guest-columnists/2016/10/02/new-bride-pledges-strong-after-second-breast-cancer-diagnosis/91148014/\nAvallone: Mayor's apology doesn't go far enough","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line843451"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7978852987289429,"wiki_prob":0.7978852987289429,"text":"HOME • META SEARCH • TRANSLATE\nRace and ethnicity in the United States Census Information\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Race_and_ethnicity_in_the_United_States_Census\nTable of Contents ⇨\ninformation collected by self-identification in the U.S. census\nRace and ethnicity in the United States Census, defined by the federal Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the United States Census Bureau, are self-identification data items in which residents choose the race or races with which they most closely identify, and indicate whether or not they are of Hispanic or Latino origin (the only categories for ethnicity). [1] [2]\nThe racial categories represent a social-political construct for the race or races that respondents consider themselves to be and, \"generally reflect a social definition of race recognized in this country.\" [3] OMB defines the concept of race as outlined for the US Census as not \"scientific or anthropological\" and takes into account \"social and cultural characteristics as well as ancestry\", using \"appropriate scientific methodologies\" that are not \"primarily biological or genetic in reference.\" [4] The race categories include both racial and national-origin groups. [5]\nRace and ethnicity are considered separate and distinct identities, with Hispanic or Latino origin asked as a separate question. Thus, in addition to their race or races, all respondents are categorized by membership in one of two ethnic categories, which are \"Hispanic or Latino\" and \"Not Hispanic or Latino\". However, the practice of separating \"race\" and \"ethnicity\" as different categories has been criticized both by the American Anthropological Association and members of US Commission on Civil Rights. [6] [7]\nIn 1997, OMB issued a Federal Register notice regarding revisions to the standards for the classification of federal data on race and ethnicity. [8] OMB developed race and ethnic standards in order to provide \"consistent data on race and ethnicity throughout the Federal Government. The development of the data standards stem in large measure from new responsibilities to enforce civil rights laws.\" Among the changes, OMB issued the instruction to \"mark one or more races\" after noting evidence of increasing numbers of interracial children and wanting to capture the diversity in a measurable way and having received requests by people who wanted to be able to acknowledge their or their children's full ancestry rather than identifying with only one group. Prior to this decision, the Census and other government data collections asked people to report only one race. [3]\n1 How data on race and ethnicity are used\n2 Brief overview of race and ethnicity in the US Census's history\n2.1 18th and 19th centuries\n2.1.1 1790 Census\n2.1.1.1 Loss of data\n2.1.1.2 Data\n2.1.1.3 Contemporary perception\n2.1.1.4 Data availability\n2.2 1800 & 1810 census\n2.3 20th century\n2.3.10 2000 Census\n2.4 21st century\n3 Relation between ethnicity and race in census results\n4 Other agencies\nHow data on race and ethnicity are used\nThe OMB states, \"many federal programs are put into effect based on the race data obtained from the decennial census (i.e., promoting equal employment opportunities; assessing racial disparities in health and environmental risks). Race data are also critical for the basic research behind many policy decisions. States require these data to meet legislative redistricting requirements. The data are needed to monitor compliance with the Voting Rights Act by local jurisdictions\".\n\"Data on ethnic groups are important for putting into effect a number of federal statutes (i.e., enforcing bilingual election rules under the Voting Rights Act; monitoring and enforcing equal employment opportunities under the Civil Rights Act). Data on Ethnic Groups are also needed by local governments to run programs and meet legislative requirements (i.e., identifying segments of the population who may not be receiving medical services under the Public Health Act; evaluating whether financial institutions are meeting the credit needs of minority populations under the Community Reinvestment Act).\" [5]\nBrief overview of race and ethnicity in the US Census's history\nFurther information: Race and ethnicity in the United States\nExternal image\n\"Government Collection of Race and Ethnicity Data\", Center for American Progress, February 6, 2015. An illustrated history of the racial and ethnic categories used in the US Census from 1790 through 2010. [9]\nTitle page of 1790 United States Census\nThe 1790 United States Census was the first census in the history of the United States. The population of the United States was recorded as 3,929,214 as of Census Day, August 2, 1790, as mandated by Article I, Section 2 of the United States Constitution and applicable laws. [10]\n\"The law required that every household be visited, that completed census schedules be posted in 'two of the most public places within [each jurisdiction], there to remain for the inspection of all concerned...' and that 'the aggregate amount of each description of persons' for every district be transmitted to the president.\" [11] This law along with U.S. marshals were responsible for governing the census.\nLoss of data\nApproximately one third of the original census data has been lost or destroyed since documentation. The data was lost in 1790–1830 time period and included data from: Connecticut, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Delaware, Georgia, New Jersey, and Virginia; however, the census was proven factual and the existence of most of these data can be confirmed in many secondary sources pertaining to the first census. [12] [13]\nCensus data included the name of the head of the family and categorized inhabitants as follows: free white males at least 16 years of age (to assess the country's industrial and military potential), free white males under 16 years of age, free white females, all other free persons (reported by sex and color), and slaves. [14] Thomas Jefferson, then the Secretary of State, directed marshals to collect data from all thirteen states ( Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, and Virginia), and from the Southwest Territory. [11] The census was not conducted in Vermont until 1791, after that state's admission to the Union as the 14th state on March 4 of that year.\nFree white males at least 16 years of age, including heads of families.\nFree white males under 16 years.\nFree white females, including heads of families.\nAll other free persons.\nSlaves.\nVermont 22,435 22,328 40,505 255 16 [a] [15] 85,539 [b]\nNew Hampshire 36,086 34,851 70,160 630 158 141,885\nMaine 24,384 24,748 46,870 538 0 96,540\nMassachusetts 95,453 87,289 190,582 5,463 0 378,787 [c] [16]\nRhode Island 16,019 15,799 32,652 3,407 948 68,825\nConnecticut 60,523 54,403 117,448 2,808 2,764 237,946\nNew York 83,700 78,122 152,320 4,654 21,324 340,120\nNew Jersey 45,251 41,416 83,287 2,762 11,423 184,139\nPennsylvania 110,788 106,948 206,363 6,537 3,737 434,373\nDelaware 11,783 12,143 22,384 3,899 8,887 59,094 [d]\nMaryland 55,915 51,339 101,395 8,043 103,036 319,728\nVirginia 110,936 116,135 215,046 12,866 292,627 747,610 [e] [16]\nKentucky 15,154 17,057 28,922 114 12,430 73,677\nNorth Carolina 69,988 77,506 140,710 4,975 100,572 393,751\nSouth Carolina 35,576 37,722 66,880 1,801 107,094 249,073\nGeorgia 13,103 14,044 25,739 398 29,264 82,548\nTotal 807,094 791,850 1,541,263 59,150 694,280 3,893,635\n^ The census of 1790, published in 1791, reports 16 slaves in Vermont. Subsequently, and up to 1860, the number is given as 17. An examination of the original manuscript allegedly shows that there never were any slaves in Vermont. The original error occurred in preparing the results for publication, when 16 persons, returned as \"Free colored\", were classified as \"Slave\". But this claim is disputed by at least one historian.\n^ Corrected figures are 85,425, or 114 less than the figures published in 1790, due to an error of addition in the returns for each of the towns of Fairfield, Milton, Shelburne, and Williston, in the county of Chittenden; Brookfield, Newbury, Randolph, and Strafford, in the county of Orange; Castleton, Clarendon, Hubbardton, Poultney, Rutland, Shrewsburg, and Wallingford, in the county of Rutland; Dummerston, Guilford, Halifax, and Westminster, in the county of Windham; and Woodstock, in the county of Windsor.\n^ The figures for Massachusetts do not include the population of Maine. Though Maine was then a part of Massachusetts, the Maine figures were compiled separately, and are shown on the line for Maine.\n^ Corrected figures are 59,096, or 2 more than figures published in 1790, due to error in addition.\n^ The figures for Virginia do not include the population of Kentucky. Though Kentucky was then a part of Virginia, the Kentucky figures were compiled separately, and are shown on the line for Kentucky. The Virginia figures do include the portion of Virginia that later became the state of West Virginia.\nContemporary perception\nCommemorative pitcher with census results\nThere was some doubt surrounding the numbers, President George Washington and Thomas Jefferson maintained the population was undercounted. [17] The potential reasons Washington and Jefferson may have thought this could be refusal to participate, poor public transportation and roads, spread out population, and restraints of current technology.\nNo microdata from the 1790 population census is available, but aggregate data for small areas and their compatible cartographic boundary files, can be downloaded from the National Historical Geographic Information System.\n1800 & 1810 census\nIn 1800 and 1810, the age question regarding free white males was more detailed. [18]\nThe 1820 Census built on the questions asked in 1810 by asking age questions about slaves. Also the term \"colored\" entered the census nomenclature. In addition, a question stating \"Number of foreigners not naturalized\" was included. [18]\nIn the 1830 Census, a new question which stated \"The number of White persons who were foreigners not naturalized\" was included. [18]\nThe 1850 Census saw a dramatic shift in the way information about residents was collected. For the first time, free persons were listed individually instead of by head of household. There were two questionnaires: one for free inhabitants and one for slaves. The question on the free inhabitants schedule about color was a column that was to be left blank if a person was white, marked \"B\" if a person was black, and marked \"M\" if a person was mulatto. Slaves were listed by owner, and classified by gender and age, not individually, and the question about color was a column that was to be marked with a \"B\" if the slave was black and an \"M\" if mulatto. [18]\nFor the 1870 Census, the color/racial question was expanded to include \"C\" for Chinese, which was a category that included all east Asians, as well as \"I\" for American Indians. [18]\nFor 1890, the Census Office changed the design of the population questionnaire. Residents were still listed individually, but a new questionnaire sheet was used for each family. Additionally, this was the first year that the census distinguished among different Asian ethnic groups, such as Japanese and Chinese, due to increased immigration. This census also marked the beginning of the term \"race\" in the questionnaires. Enumerators were instructed to write \"White\", \"Black\", \" Mulatto\", \" Quadroon\", \" Octoroon\", \"Chinese\", \"Japanese\", or \" Indian\". [18]\nDuring 1900, the \"Color or Race\" question was slightly modified, removing the term \"Mulatto\". Also, there was an inclusion of an \"Indian Population Schedule\" in which \"enumerators were instructed to use a special expanded questionnaire for American Indians living on reservations or in family groups off of reservations.\" This expanded version included the question \"Fraction of person's lineage that is white.\" [18]\nThe 1910 Census was similar to that of 1900, but it included a reinsertion of \"Mulatto\" and a question about the \"mother tongue\" of foreign-born individuals and individuals with foreign-born parents. \"Ot\" was also added to signify \"other races\", with space for a race to be written in. This decade's version of the Indian Population Schedule featured questions asking the individual's proportion of white, black, or American Indian lineage. [18]\nThe 1920 Census questionnaire was similar to 1910, but excluded a separate schedule for American Indians. \"Hin\", \"Kor\", and \"Fil\" were also added to the \"Color or Race\" question, signifying Hindustani (South Asia Indian), Korean, and Filipino, respectively. [18]\nThe biggest change in this year's census was in racial classification. Enumerators were instructed to no longer use the \"Mulatto\" classification. Instead, they were given special instructions for reporting the race of interracial persons. A person with both white and black ancestry (termed \"blood\") was to be recorded as \"Negro,\" no matter the fraction of that lineage (the \" one-drop rule\"). A person of mixed black and American Indian ancestry was also to be recorded as \"Neg\" (for \"Negro\") unless he was considered to be \"predominantly\" American Indian and accepted as such within the community. A person with both White and American Indian ancestry was to be recorded as an Indian, unless his American Indian ancestry was small, and he was accepted as white within the community. In all situations in which a person had White and some other racial ancestry, he was to be reported as that other race. Persons who had minority interracial ancestry were to be reported as the race of their father.\nFor the first and only time, \"Mexican\" was listed as a race. Enumerators were instructed that all persons born in Mexico, or whose parents were born in Mexico, should be listed as Mexicans, and not under any other racial category. But, in prior censuses and in 1940, enumerators were instructed to list Mexican Americans as white, perhaps because some of them were of white background (mainly Spanish), many others mixed white and Native American and some of them Native American.[ citation needed]\nThe Supplemental American Indian questionnaire was back, but in abbreviated form. It featured a question asking if the person was of full or mixed American Indian ancestry. [18] [19]\nPresident Franklin D. Roosevelt promoted a \"good neighbor\" policy that sought better relations with Mexico. In 1935, a federal judge ruled that three Mexican immigrants were ineligible for citizenship because they were not white, as required by federal law. Mexico protested, and Roosevelt decided to circumvent the decision and make sure the federal government treated Hispanics as white. The State Department, the Census Bureau, the Labor Department, and other government agencies therefore made sure to uniformly classify people of Mexican descent as white. This policy encouraged the League of United Latin American Citizens in its quest to minimize discrimination by asserting their whiteness. [20]\nThe 1940 Census was the first to include separate population and housing questionnaires. [18] The race category of \"Mexican\" was eliminated in 1940, and the population of Mexican descent was counted with the White population. [21]\n1940 Census data was used for Japanese American internment. The Census Bureau's role was denied for decades, but was finally proven in 2007. [22] [23]\nThe 1950 Census questionnaire removed the word \"color\" from the racial question, and also removed Hindu and Korean from the race choices. [18]\nThe 1960 Census re-added the word \"color\" to the racial question, and changed \"Indian\" to \"American Indian\", as well as added Hawaiian, Part-Hawaiian, Aleut, and Eskimo. The Other (print out race) option was removed. [18]\nThis year's census included \"Negro or Black\", re-added Korean and the Other race option. East Indians (the term used at that time for people whose ancestry is from the Indian subcontinent) were counted as White. There was a questionnaire that was asked of only a sample of respondents. These questions were as follows:\na. Where was this person born?\nb. Is this person's origin or descent...\nCentral or South American\nOther Spanish\nWhat country was the person's father born in?\nWhat country was the person's mother born in?\na. For persons born in a foreign country- Is the person naturalized?\nb. When did the person come to the United States to stay?\nWhat language, other than English, was spoken in the person's home as a child?\nNone, only English [18]\nThis year added several options to the race question, including Vietnamese, Indian (East), Guamanian, Samoan, and re-added Aleut. Again, the term \"color\" was removed from the racial question, and the following questions were asked of a sample of respondents:\nIn what state or foreign country was the person born?\nIf this person was born in a foreign country...\na. Is this person a naturalized citizen of the United States?\nb. When did this person come to the United States to stay?\na. Does this person speak a language other than English at home?\nb. If yes, what is this language?\nc. If yes, how well does this person speak English?\nWhat is this person's ancestry? [18]\nThe racial categories in this year are as they appear in the 2000 and 2010 censuses. The following questions were asked of a sample of respondents for the 1990 Census:\nIn what U.S. State or foreign country was this person born?\nIs this person a citizen of the United States?\nIf this person was not born in the United States, when did this person come to the United States to stay? [18]\nThe 1990 Census was not designed to capture multiple racial responses, and when individuals marked the Other race option and provided a multiple write in, the response was assigned according to the race written first. \"For example, a write in of \"Black-White\" was assigned a code of Black, a write in of \"White-Black\" was assigned a code of White.\" [3]\nIn the United States, census data indicate that the number of children in interracial families grew from less than one half million in 1970 to about two million in 1990. In 1990, for interracial families with one white American partner, the other parent...was Asian American for 45 percent... [24]\nRace was asked differently in the 2000 Census in several other ways than previously. Most significantly, respondents were given the option of selecting one or more race categories to indicate racial identities. Data show that nearly seven million Americans identified as members of two or more races. Because of these changes, the 2000 Census data on race are not directly comparable with data from the 1990 Census or earlier censuses. Use of caution is therefore recommended when interpreting changes in the racial composition of the US population over time.\nThe following definitions apply to the 2000 Census only. [25]\nWhite. A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Europe, the Middle East, or North Africa. It includes people who indicate their race as \"White\" or report entries such as Irish, German, English, Scandinavian, Scottish, Near Easterners, Iranian, Lebanese, or Polish. [25]\nBlack or African American. A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. It includes people who indicate their race as \"Black, African Am.\" or provide written entries such as Kenyan, Nigerian, or Haitian. [25]\nAmerican Indian and Alaska Native. A person having origins in any of the original peoples of North and South America (including Central America) and who maintain tribal affiliation or community attachment. [25]\nAsian. A person having origins in any of the original peoples of the Far East, Southeast Asia, or the Indian subcontinent including, for example, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Pakistan, the Philippine Islands, Thailand, and Vietnam. It includes \"Asian Indian\", \"Chinese\", \"Filipino\", \"Korean\", \"Japanese\", \"Vietnamese\", and \"Other Asian\". [25]\nNative Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander. A person having origins in any of the original peoples of Hawaii, Guam, Samoa, or other Pacific Islands. It includes people who indicate their race as \"Native Hawaiian\", \"Guamanian or Chamorro\", \"Samoan\", and \"Other Pacific Islander\". [25]\nSome other race. Includes all other responses not included in the \"White\", \"Black or African American\", \"American Indian and Alaska Native\", \"Asian\" and \"Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander\" race categories described above. Respondents providing write-in entries such as multiracial, mixed, interracial, We-Sort, or a Hispanic/Latino group (for example, Mexican, Puerto Rican, or Cuban) in the \"Some other race\" category are included here. [25]\nTwo or more races. People may have chosen to provide two or more races either by checking two or more race response check boxes, by providing multiple write-in responses, or by some combination of check boxes and write-in responses. [25]\nSnapshot: Race in the US Census\nThe 23rd federal census, 2010 [26] asks one ethnic and one race question (questions 1-4 not reproduced here, questions 5 and 6 paraphrased):\nIs the person of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin?\nNo, not of Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin\nYes, Mexican, Mexican Am., Chicano\nYes, Puerto Rican\nYes, Cuban\nYes, another Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish origin — Print origin, for example, Argentinian, Colombian, Dominican, Nicaraguan, Salvadoran, Spaniard, and so on.\nWhat is the person's race?\nAmerican Indian or Alaska Native — Print name of enrolled or principal tribe.\nOther Asian — Print race, for example, Hmong, Laotian, Thai, Pakistani, Cambodian, and so on.\nOther Pacific Islander — Print race, for example, Fijian, Tongan, and so on.\nSome other race — Print race.\nThis census acknowledged that \"race categories include both racial and national-origin groups.\"\nThe federal government of the United States has mandated that \"in data collection and presentation, federal agencies are required to use a minimum of two ethnicities: \"Hispanic or Latino\" and \"Not Hispanic or Latino\". [27] The Census Bureau defines \"Hispanic or Latino\" as \"a person of Cuban, Mexican, Puerto Rican, South or Central American or other Spanish culture or origin regardless of race.\" [27] For discussion of the meaning and scope of the Hispanic or Latino ethnicity, see the Hispanic and Latino Americans and Racial and ethnic demographics of the United States articles.\nUse of the word \"ethnicity\" for Hispanics only is considerably more restricted than its conventional meaning, which covers other distinctions, some of which are covered by the \"race\" and \"ancestry\" questions. The distinct questions accommodate the possibility of Hispanic and Latino Americans' also declaring various racial identities (see also White Hispanic and Latino Americans, Asian Hispanic and Latino Americans, and Black Hispanic and Latino Americans).\nIn the 2000 Census, 12.5% of the US population reported \"Hispanic or Latino\" ethnicity and 87.5% reported \"Not-Hispanic or Latino\" ethnicity. [27]\nThe 2010 US Census included changes designed to more clearly distinguish Hispanic ethnicity as not being a race. That included adding the sentence: \"For this census, Hispanic origins are not races.\" [28] [29] Additionally, the Hispanic terms were modified from \"Hispanic or Latino\" to \"Hispanic, Latino or Spanish origin\". [28] [29]\nAlthough used in the census and the American Community Survey, \"Some other race\" is not an official race, [27] and the Bureau considered eliminating it prior to the 2000 Census. [30] As the 2010 Census form did not contain the question titled \"Ancestry\" found in prior censuses, there were campaigns to get non-Hispanic West Indian Americans, [31] Turkish Americans, [32] Armenian Americans, Arab Americans and Iranian Americans to indicate their ethnic or national background through the race question, specifically the \"Some other race\" category. [33] [34] [35]\nThe Interagency Committee has suggested that the concept of marking multiple boxes be extended to the Hispanic origin question, thereby freeing individuals from having to choose between their parents' ethnic heritages. In other words, a respondent could choose both \"Hispanic or Latino\" and \"Not Hispanic or Latino\". [36]\nRelation between ethnicity and race in census results\nThis section needs to be updated. Please update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information. (December 2018)\nThe Census Bureau warns that data on race in 2000 Census are not directly comparable to those collected in previous censuses. [25] Many residents of the United States consider race and ethnicity to be the same. [4]\nPopulation distribution by race (2000 Census) [37]\nHispanic or\n% of\nH/L\nNot Hispanic\nor Latino\n% of Not\nAll races 35,305,818 100 12.5 246,116,088 100 87.5\nOne race 33,081,736 93.7 11.8 241,513,942 98.1 85.8\nWhite 16,907,852 47.9 6.0 194,552,774 79.1 69.1\nBlack or African A. 710,353 2.0 0.3 33,947,837 13.8 12.1\nA. Indian/Alaska Nat. 407,073 1.2 0.1 2,068,883 0.8 0.7\nAsian 119,829 0.3 <0.1 10,123,169 4.1 3.6\nHawaiian N. & Pacific Is. 45,326 0.1 <0.1 353,509 0.1 0.1\nSome other 14,891,303 42.2 5.3 467,770 0.2 0.2\n2+ races 2,224,082 6.3 0.8 4,602,146 1.9 1.6\nSome other + W/B/N/A 1,859,538 5.3 0.7 1,302,875 0.5 0.5\n2+ W/B/N/A 364,544 1.0 0.1 3,299,271 1.3 1.2\nIn the 2000 Census, respondents were tallied in each of the race groups they reported. Consequently, the total of each racial category exceeds the total population because some people reported more than one race. [3]\nAccording to James P. Allen and Eugene Turner from California State University, Northridge, by some calculations in the 2000 Census the largest part white biracial population is white/Native American and Alaskan Native, at 7,015,017, followed by white/black at 737,492, then white/Asian at 727,197, and finally white/Native Hawaiian and other Pacific Islander at 125,628. [38]\nThe Census Bureau implemented a Census Quality Survey, gathering data from about 50,000 households to assess the reporting of race and Hispanic origin in the 2000 Census with the purpose of creating a way to make comparisons between the 2000 Census with previous census racial data. [3]\nIn September 1997, during the process of revision of racial categories previously declared by OMB directive no. 15, the American Anthropological Association (AAA) recommended that OMB combine the \"race\" and \"ethnicity\" categories into one question to appear as \"race/ethnicity\" for the 2000 Census. The Interagency Committee agreed, stating that \"race\" and \"ethnicity\" were not sufficiently defined and \"that many respondents conceptualize 'race' and 'ethnicity' as one in the same [ sic] underscor[ing] the need to consolidate these terms into one category, using a term that is more meaningful to the American people.\" [4]\nThe AAA also stated,\nThe American Anthropological Association recommends the elimination of the term \"race\" from OMB Directive 15 during the planning for the 2010 Census. During the past 50 years, \"race\" has been scientifically proven to not be a real, natural phenomenon. More specific, social categories such as \"ethnicity\" or \"ethnic group\" are more salient for scientific purposes and have fewer of the negative, racist connotations for which the concept of race was developed.\nYet the concept of race has become thoroughly—and perniciously—woven into the cultural and political fabric of the United States. It has become an essential element of both individual identity and government policy. Because so much harm has been based on \"racial\" distinctions over the years, correctives for such harm must also acknowledge the impact of \"racial\" consciousness among the U.S. populace, regardless of the fact that \"race\" has no scientific justification in human biology. Eventually, however, these classifications must be transcended and replaced by more non-racist and accurate ways of representing the diversity of the U.S. population. [4]\nThe recommendations of the AAA were not adopted by the Census Bureau for the 2000 or the 2010 censuses.\nIn 2001, the National Institutes of Health adopted the new language to comply with the revisions to Directive 15, [39] as did the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission of the United States Department of Labor in 2007. [40] See Race and ethnicity (EEO).\nHistorical racial and ethnic demographics of the United States\nRace (human classification)\nRace and ethnicity in censuses\nRace and ethnicity in the United States\nRacial segregation in the United States\nClassification of ethnicity in the United Kingdom\n^ \"American FactFinder Help: Race\". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved September 13, 2017.\n^ \"American FactFinder Help: Hispanic or Latino origin\". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved September 13, 2017.\n^ a b c d e \"Questions and Answers for Census 2000 Data on Race\". United States Census Bureau. March 14, 2001. Archived from the original on April 5, 2001. Retrieved April 25, 2010.\n^ a b c d \"A Brief History of the OMB Directive 15\". American Anthropological Association. 1997. Retrieved May 18, 2007.\n^ a b \"American FactFinder Help: Ethnic Groups\". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved September 13, 2017.\n^ Gerald A. Reynolds, Chairman Abigail Thernstrom, Vice Chair Todd Gaziano Gail Heriot Peter N. Kirsanow Arlan D. Melendez Ashley L. Taylor, Jr. Michael Yaki (April 7, 2006). \"Racial Categorization in the 2010 Census\" (PDF). University of Maryland: Thurgood Marshall Law Library. US Commission of Civil Rights. Retrieved December 7, 2012. CS1 maint: Multiple names: authors list ( link)\n^ \"American Anthropological Association Response to OMB Directive 15:\". Race and Ethnic Standards for Federal Statistics and Administrative Reporting. Retrieved December 7, 2012.\n^ \"Revisions to the Standards for the Classification of Federal Data on Race and Ethnicity\" (PDF). Office of Management and Budget. October 30, 1997. Retrieved October 7, 2008.\n^ Ahmad, Farah Z.; Hagler, Jamal (February 6, 2015). \"Infographic: Government Collection of Race and Ethnicity Data\". Center for American Progress. Retrieved July 24, 2016.\n^ \"History: 1790 Fast Facts\". U.S. Census Bureau.\n^ a b \"History: 1790 Overview\". U.S. Census Bureau.\n^ Dollarhide, William (2001). The Census Book: A Genealogists Guide to Federal Census Facts, Schedules and Indexes. North Salt Lake, Utah: HeritageQuest. p. 7.\n^ \"1790 Census\". 1930 Census Resources for Genealogists.\n^ \"1790 Census of Population and Housing\". U.S. Census Bureau. Archived from the original on April 26, 2015.\n^ http://slavenorth.com/vermont.htm\n^ a b \"A Century of Population Growth from the First Census of the United States to the Twelfth, 1790–1900\". 1909. p. 47.\n^ \"1790 Overview\". U.S. Census Bureau.\n^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p \"Through the Decades\". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 18, 2012.\n^ copy of the full 1930 census instructions https://www.census.gov/history/pdf/1930instructions.pdf\n^ Patrick D. Lukens, A Quiet Victory for Latino Rights: FDR and the Controversy over Whiteness (University of Arizona Press, 2012)\n^ The 1930 Census in Perspective, 1930census.com\n^ JR Minkel (March 30, 2007). \"Confirmed: The U.S. Census Bureau Gave Up Names of Japanese-Americans in WW II\". Scientific American. Archived from the original on August 29, 2013.\n^ Haya El Nasser (March 30, 2007). \"Papers show Census role in WWII camps\". USA Today.\n^ \"US Census Bureau, 2000\" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 20, 2003.\n^ a b c d e f g h i \"2000 Census of Population, Public Law 94-171 Redistricting Data File: Race\". US Census Bureau. Archived from the original on August 31, 2009. Retrieved January 5, 2010.\n^ \"2010 US Census Form\" (PDF). US Census Bureau. 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 24, 2017. Retrieved December 9, 2017.\n^ a b c d Grieco, Elizabeth M.; Cassidy, Rachel C. (March 2001). \"Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: Census 2000 Brief\" (PDF). US Census Bureau.\n^ a b Waite, Preston. US Census Bureau. \" 2010 Decennial Census Program.\" 2006. accessed July 7, 2008.\n^ a b \"2010 US Census form\" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 24, 2017. Retrieved March 15, 2010.\n^ \"Census Bureau to Test Changes in Questionnaire, New Response Technology\" (Press release). US Census Bureau. January 16, 2003.\n^ Kay, Jennifer (February 24, 2010). \"Caribbeans urged to write in ancestry on US Census\". Archived from the original on May 1, 2019. Retrieved March 14, 2010.\n^ The Washington Diplomat. \"Census Takes Aim to Tally 'Hard to Count' Populations\". Retrieved May 5, 2011.\n^ \"The Arab American Institute | Get Involved!\". Archived from the original on May 26, 2010. Retrieved March 15, 2010.\n^ Ashmawey, Roqaya (March 1, 2010). \"Arab-Americans Aim to Increase Their Census Count\". Retrieved March 14, 2010.\n^ SMITH, DOUG (April 5, 1990). \"\"They ask, 'Where are we going to write Armenian? ' \"\" – via LA Times.\n^ \"OMB Standards\". White House. Archived from the original on March 10, 2012. Retrieved April 25, 2010.\n^ \"Overview of Race and Hispanic Origin: 2010\" (PDF). 2010 Census Briefs. US Census Bureau. (see Table 1. Population by Hispanic or Latino Origin and by Race for the United States: 2000 and 2010)\n^ Bridging 1990 and 2000 census race data: Fractional assignment of multiracial populations Archived 2008-10-02 at the Wayback Machine, James P. Allen and Eugene Turner, Department of Geography, California State University, Northridge, Northridge, CA 91330-8249\n^ \"Amendment: NIH Policy and Guidelines on the Inclusion of Women and Minorities as Subjects in Clinical Research\". National Institutes of Health. October 9, 2001.\n^ Final Revisions of the Employer Information Report (EEO-1) Archived 2009-08-13 at the Wayback Machine by the EEOC. The page contains links to FAQs, forms and instructions\nAhmad, Farah Z.; Hagler, Jamal (February 6, 2015). \"The Evolution of Race and Ethnicity Classifications in the Decennial Census\". Center for American Progress.\nPrewitt, Kenneth. What Is Your Race? The Census and Our Flawed Efforts to Classify Americans (Princeton University Press; 2013) argues for dropping the race question from the census.\nBy economic\nand social\nHome-ownership\nMiddle classes\nSocial class\nUnemployment by state\nBaha'is\nCoptics\nJains\nAhmadiyyas\nFive Percenters\nMoorish Scientists\nValue Creators\nNeopagans\nRastafaris\nZoroastrians\nand ethnicity\nAfrican diaspora in the Americas\nAfro-Caribbean / West Indian Americans\nBahamian Americans\nBelizean Americans\nGuyanese Americans\nHaitian Americans\nJamaican Americans\nTrinidadian and Tobagonian Americans\nBlack Hispanic and Latino Americans\nAfrican immigrants to the United States\nCentral Africans in the United States\nHorn Africans in the United States\nSoutheast Africans in the United States\nSouthern Africans in the United States\nWest Africans in the United States\nNorth Africans in the United States\nAlgerian Americans\nBerber Americans\nEgyptian Americans\nMoroccan Americans\nAsian Hispanic and Latino Americans\nMongolian Americans\nUzbek Americans\nChinese Americans\nHong Kong Americans\nTibetan Americans\nTaiwanese Americans\nJapanese Americans\nKorean Americans\nBangladeshi Americans\nBhutanese Americans\nIndian Americans\nNepalese Americans\nPakistani Americans\nSri Lankan Americans\nBurmese Americans\nCambodian Americans\nFilipino Americans\nHmong Americans\nIndonesian Americans\nLaotian Americans\nMalaysian Americans\nSingaporean Americans\nThai Americans\nVietnamese Americans\nRomani Americans\nAfghan Americans\nArab Americans\nArmenian Americans\nAssyrian Americans\nAzerbaijani Americans\nEmirati Americans\nGeorgian Americans\nIranian Americans\nIraqi Americans\nIsraeli Americans\nJewish Americans\nJordanian Americans\nKazakh Americans\nKurdish Americans\nKuwaiti Americans\nKyrgyz Americans\nLebanese Americans\nPalestinian Americans\nSaudi Arabian Americans\nSyrian Americans\nTurkish Americans\nYemeni Americans\nWhite Americans\nAlbanian Americans\nBritish Americans\nEnglish Americans\nScottish Americans\nWelsh Americans\nCypriot Americans\nFrench Americans\nGerman Americans\nGreek Americans\nIrish Americans\nItalian Americans\nMaltese Americans\nPolish Americans\nPortuguese Americans\nRomanian Americans\nScandinavian Americans\nSlavic Americans\nSpanish Americans\nNon-Hispanic whites\nWhite Hispanic and Latino Americans\nPacific Islands Americans\nChamorro Americans\nNative Hawaiians\nSamoan Americans\nTongan Americans\nAmericans of Euro Oceanic origin\nAustralian Americans\nNew Zealand Americans\nNative Americans and Alaska Natives\nCanadian Americans\nHispanic and Latino Americans\nCosta Rican Americans\nGuatemalan Americans\nHonduran Americans\nNicaraguan Americans\nPanamanian Americans\nSalvadoran Americans\nCuban Americans\nDominican Americans\nMexican Americans\nChicanos\nPuerto Ricans (Stateside)\nArgentine Americans\nBolivian Americans\nChilean Americans\nColombian Americans\nEcuadorian Americans\nParaguayan Americans\nPeruvian Americans\nUruguayan Americans\nVenezuelan Americans\nBrazilian Americans\nAmerasian\nMelungeon\nPeople of the United States / Americans\nAmerican ancestry\nMaps of American ancestries\nRace and ethnicity in the Census\nRace and ethnicity in the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission\nRetrieved from \" https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=Race_and_ethnicity_in_the_United_States_Census&oldid=905142960\"\nRace in the United States\nEthnic groups in the United States\nCS1 maint: Multiple names: authors list\nUse mdy dates from August 2018\nWikipedia articles in need of updating from December 2018\nRACE AND ETHNICITY IN THE UNITED STATES CENSUS\nYoutube | Vimeo | Bing |\nPOPULAR INDEXES\nGoogle | Yahoo | Bing\nMeta Search Engine | Map | Travel Reviews","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line431720"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8552703261375427,"wiki_prob":0.8552703261375427,"text":"Brigitte DeMeyer and Will Kimbrough: Mockingbird Soul\nDeMeyer and Kimbrough are resolute artists who observe the world through their five senses. They see, hear, touch and even smell the people and places around them.\nBrigitte DeMeyer and Will Kimbrough\nMockingbird Soul\nLabel: MRI\nUK Release Date: 2017-01-27\nBrigitte DeMeyer and Will Kimbrough have been singing and playing together for several years. They have collaborated on each other’s records and performed in concert as a tandem. But Mockingbird Hill marks the first time the Nashville-based musicians are co-billed on an official release.\nThere’s a bit more Kimbrough on this album than there has been on previous discs, but the duo remains essentially the same. DeMeyer’s rich vocals sound steeped in a Southern swampy vibe. One can feel the humidity and Spanish moss dripping from the notes. Her voice dominates when she and Kimbrough harmonize, but he provides the solid ground from which she can fly. The title track works as a fine example of this as DeMeyer praises a bird singing outside her bedroom window with an intonation that resembles the eponymous creature. Kimbrough joins in quietly as a whisper before offering a low-toned counterpoint to the higher pitched DeMeyer. He lets his guitar do most of the talking.\nKimbrough’s acoustic stringed accompaniment is heavily rooted in the country blues so that even when he plays the melodies, he can’t help but also provide a thumping back up to pound the cadences forward. He’s ably aided by Chris Wood on upright bass (on the muggy number “Rainy Day”), and there are a few other artists who lend a hand on a few tracks including Oliver Wood (Chris’s brother and a co-member of the Wood Brothers), who co-wrote and sings on the graceful “Carpet Bagger’s Lullaby.” DeMeyer even strums an eight-string ukulele on one cut, but basically, Kimbrough supplies the instrumentals. He utilizes a vintage Gibson J-45 to give the music a lush yet airy resonance. The guitar’s acoustics reverberate in his hands without a clatter or a tinkle.\nWhen Kimbrough does take the lead on vocals, such as on the disc’s one cover, the Incredible String Band’s ode to the ravages of time, “October Song”, he sings without affection. He delivers the plain but poetic lyrics (i.e., “The fallen leaves that jewel the ground / They know the art of dying”) as statements of fact. It is DeMeyer’s voice that reveals the sadness of time passing. The ache in her throat conveys the change of seasons as something to be mourned instead of celebrated. It may all be part of life’s rich pageant, but that’s no reason to fete the passage of time. Acceptance is the best one can do. Meanwhile, Kimbrough’s complex stringed accompaniment suggests the dour truth. Life is temporary, and like our dreams, all things must pass.\nThe original material exposes DeMeyer and Kimbrough as resolute artists who observe the world through their five senses. They see, hear, touch and even smell the people and places around them. Rather than think too much about things, they revel in the experience of being and doing. The ideas here are expressed in terms of things, as William Carlos Williams would say. They don’t intentionally use metaphors as much as say what they mean. That’s true in the way they sing and play. DeMeyer’s honeyed vocals and Kimbrough’s intricate fingering are not ornamentation, but representation. The world itself contains its dulcet complexities. Like the Mockingbird’s song, the soul of the world can be revelatory if one only pays attention.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1295291"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7727541327476501,"wiki_prob":0.7727541327476501,"text":"If You Think Classical Music is Dead, You're Dead Wrong!\nClassical 101\nArts Presenters\nChamber Ensembles\nOpera Companies\nEsprit Orchestra\nVenue: Koerner Hall, TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning 273 Bloor Street West\nVenue Phone: 416.408.0208\nWebsite: espritorchestra.com\nLatest posts by Ludwig Van (see all)\nPRIMER | A Guide To Getting The Most Out Of Stratford Summer Music - July 12, 2019\nPRIMER | 10 Concerts We’re Looking Forward To The Most At Toronto Summer Music - July 10, 2019\nPRIMER | 5 Reasons Not To Miss ‘Rite Of Spring’ At Luminato This Week - June 18, 2019\nEsprit Orchestra is Canada’s only full-sized, professional orchestra devoted to performing and promoting new orchestral music. Founded in 1983 by Music Director and Conductor, Alex Pauk, Esprit’s commitment to commissioning and advancing contemporary music has set it apart as one of the few organizations of its kind on a global scale. Esprit consistently collaborates with outstanding composers, and performs with first-class soloists and ensembles from Canada and abroad.\nEach concert season, Esprit Orchestra commissions, promotes and performs the work of Canadian composers, and features Canadian premieres of music by leading International composers.\nWith a dynamic annual subscription concert series, this skilled 65-member orchestra presents music that is otherwise unavailable in Canada, always performed to the highest standards in the acoustically acclaimed Koerner Hall at the TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning.\nIn addition to its commitment to new music, one of Esprit’s core initiatives is to cultivate the next generation of new music professionals and audiences through mentorship and outreach programs. Each year, Esprit engages with schools and organizations to provide free educational experiences including lectures, open rehearsals, and mentorship opportunities in both composition and orchestral performance. Esprit’s annual New Wave Composers Festival celebrates young Canadian artists, providing a rendezvous where young composers and performers can connect with one another and the wider musical community.\nEsprit has been the recipient of multiple prestigious awards, including three Lieutenant Governor’s Arts Awards, the Jean A. Chalmers National Music Award, the Vida Peene Award and the SOCAN Award for Imaginative Orchestral Programming. Esprit aims to continue this trajectory of excellence as the organization proudly undertakes its third decade of operation.\nOne of Esprit’s most important recent endeavours was a debut tour to China for performances at the 2015 Beijing Modern Music Festival and the China-ASEAN Music Week in Nanning where Esprit was also orchestra-in-residence. The tour coincided with the 40th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Canada and China and set the stage for developing long-lasting musical exchanges between Esprit and Chinese musical artists.\nEsprit is a non-profit charitable organization governed by a volunteer Board of Directors.\nThe Folks Behind It All\nAlex Pauk, Music Director and Conductor\nAlex Pauk was inducted into the Order of Canada on September 23rd, 2015. Through founding Esprit Orchestra in 1983 and devoting the organization to new music, Pauk revitalized orchestral life for composers across Canada. With a core of 65 top instrumentalists, Canada’s best soloists, and an annual subscription series in Toronto, Esprit encourages composers to take bold new directions. Through building and sustaining Esprit’s high calibre performances, commissioning programme, innovative programming (70% Canadian), recordings, performing arts videos and DVDs, outreach projects, national and international tours, and interdisciplinary arts and multimedia ventures, Pauk has been a leader in developing and promoting Canadian music at home and abroad.\nAs a conductor, he attains excellent performances on stage and in recordings. Pauk’s commissioning of Canadian composers of all ages and stylistic trends is central to his work. He has been a leader in taking new music out of the concert hall and into communities with performances in unusual and alternative locations. He has provided opportunities for choreographers and dancers, stage and lighting designers, actors, directors, and multimedia and visual artists to combine their talents with Esprit in adventurous cross-disciplinary projects.\nIn 2007, Pauk was a recipient of the Canada Council for the Arts Molson Prize, awarded to those who contribute to the cultural and intellectual heritage of Canada:\n“A passionate and visionary conductor, artistic director, composer and educator, Alex Pauk has demonstrated remarkable skills in the arts of initiative, risk-taking and the building and promotion of a leading Canadian arts organization, Esprit Orchestra, which is recognized around the world. A fervent believer in the richness and vitality of Canadian new music, he is a cutting-edge leader in the cultivation and presentation of contemporary music, in Canada and abroad. His true brilliance has emerged in the way that he has introduced new audiences – including young people and more traditional audiences for orchestral music – to the joys of exploring uncharted terrain, both musically and in the new and unusual venues where he has set his performances. Alex Pauk is a true champion of new music who continues to introduce Canadian and international composers to the world.”\n~ Molson Prize Jury Citation\nPauk’s commitment to the community through Esprit has also garnered SOCAN and Chalmers Awards, as well as three Lieutenant Governor’s Arts Awards. He was named Musician of the Year (1999) by peers at the Toronto Musicians’ Association, and has helped many composers advance their careers through commissions, high profile performances, recordings and broadcasts. Under Pauk’s direction, Esprit was awarded the 2005 Vida Peene Award for excellent standards of performance and programming.\nIn addition to his work as a conductor, Alex Pauk has a prolific career as a composer, having written music for every kind of performing ensemble as well as dance and theatre companies.\nHe has also composed over thirty film scores, many in collaboration with his wife, the composer Alexina Louie. His works for the concert hall have included pieces incorporating digital soundtracks, film, video and dance. Notable recent additions to his catalogue include Musiques immergées for orchestra and digital playback (with a film by photographer Edward Burtynski and film maker John Price having been created for integration with some performances of the work), Devotions, an oratorio for choir and orchestra and Impulse for twenty-four piece flute orchestra. Pauk has composed for and conducted more than sixty works for organizations such as the Société de musique contemporaine du Québec, CBC Vancouver Orchestra, New Music Concerts, Quebec Symphony Orchestra, Hannaford Street Silver Band, Vancouver New Music Society, the Toronto Symphony and Esprit Orchestra. Alex Pauk graduated from the University of Toronto Faculty of Music in 1971. He currently resides in Toronto with his wife, Alexina Louie, who is his vital partner in the development of Esprit Orchestra.\nFOR ORBITING SPHERES\n8:00pm Concert / 7:15 pm Pre-Concert Chat\nKoerner Hall, TELUS Centre for Performance and Learning, 273 Bloor St. W.\nNORTH/WHITE\n8:00pm Concert / 7:15pm Pre-Concert Chat\nGRAND SLAM!\nKoerner Hall,\nTELUS Centre for Performance and Learning,\n273 Bloor St. W.\nNEW WAVE REPRISE\n7:30 pm Concert\nTrinity St. Paul’s Centre, 427 Bloor St W\nTickets info TBA\nlv_toronto_ssb_atf_300x300\nlv_toronto_ssb_high_300x300\nlv_toronto_ssb_mid_300x300\nQ&A | 15 Questions For Composer Bekah Simms\nlv_toronto_ssb_low_300x300\nlv_toronto_tsb_high_300x700\nlv_toronto_tsb_low_300x700\nLudwig Van Who's Who\nAllArtist Management (1)Arts Presenters (17)Chamber Ensembles (6)Choirs (4)Education Programs (4)Festivals (4)Orchestras (7)Publicity (1)Soloists (1)Venues (1)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line198789"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7031375169754028,"wiki_prob":0.7031375169754028,"text":"Commodus to Alexander Severus – the Roman Empire\nHome » Commodus to Alexander Severus – the Roman Empire\nThe Roman emperor Commodus, Marcus Aurelius’ son\nCommodus becomes emperor\nMarcus Aurelius, unlike the other Good Emperors, had a son. His son’s name was Commodus, and when Marcus Aurelius died in 180 AD Commodus took over the Roman Empire. But Commodus, like the later Julio-Claudians or like Domitian, had grown up at court, and liked partying more than he liked fighting or working at running the Empire. Still he did well enough at first, and made peace with the Germans.\nConspiracies everywhere\nBut when Commodus came back to Rome, his sister Lucilla tried to kill him, with the help of some Senators. Even though the plot failed, Commodus became very suspicious (like Domitian again!) and had a lot of Senators and other people killed. One plan he had to kill some of his closest friends backfired when they killed him instead in 192 AD.\nBut these friends didn’t have anybody in mind to be the next emperor. A few of the more powerful men in Rome called themselves emperor, but all of them were quickly killed in their turn. Civil war seemed unavoidable.\nThe Roman emperor Septimius Severus and his family\nSeptimius Severus starts a new dynasty\nIn 193 AD an African named Septimius Severus, who was the general of the army in Upper Pannonia, made himself emperor with the support of the army. Nobody knows for sure whether Septimius Severus was dark-skinned, but he certainly seems to be in this painting.\nHe beat the other candidates, though it took him several years to finally defeat the most serious threat, Clodius Albinus, also an African and the governor of Britain.\nThe Parthians attack\nThen in 197 AD the Parthians, seeing civil war in the Roman Empire, attacked again. Septimius Severus went there and pushed the Parthians back again.\nCaracalla and Geta\nAfter travelling around the Empire, he spent four years in Rome before going to England to fight an invasion there. Septimius Severus died in England, at York, in February 211 AD. He left the Empire jointly to his two sons, Caracalla and Geta. He is said to have told them to take care of each other and the army, and never mind anything else.\nMore about the Severan Dynasty\nMore about the Parthians\nBibliography and further reading about the Severans:\nThe Ancient Roman World, by Ronald Mellor (2004). Straight political history, For teens.\nClassical Rome, by John Clare (1993). For kids, the whole political history from beginning to end.\nThe Romans: From Village to Empire, by Mary Boatwright, Daniel Gargola, and Richard Talbert (2004). Okay, it’s a little dry, but it is up to date and has all the facts you could want.\nThe Roman Empire, by Colin Wells (1984). More readable. Alternates chapters on political and social history. Unfortunately, he stops at the third century crisis.\nThe Severans: The Changed Roman Empire, by Michael Grant (1996).\nSeptimius Severus, by Anthony Birley (1971). Emphasizes the emperor’s African origins.\nMore about the Severans\nThe Third Century Crisis\nBy Karen Carr|2018-04-25T10:08:45-07:00September 3rd, 2017|History|0 Comments\nCite this page: Carr, K.E. Commodus to Alexander Severus – the Roman Empire. Quatr.us Study Guides, September 3, 2017. Web. July 15, 2019.\nAncient Rome Caracalla Clodius Albinus Geta history Parthian Septimius Severus Severan","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line818675"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6692571043968201,"wiki_prob":0.33074289560317993,"text":"Business Plan Contest 2012\nChelsea Ho & Connie Hong\nEach year, the FCU Entrepreneurship Education and Development Center sponsors the Feng Chia Business District Entrepreneurship Competition. The winner of the competition wins NT$30,000, a trophy, and three months of rent-free shop space in the Feng Chia Shopping District where they can sell their product. Last year’s winner sold handmade sock dolls. She won the competition because her products were creative and because they were popular in the female market. This year’s winner has will not be chosen until the end of March.\nPeople who would like to participate in this competition should organize a group. In each group, more than half of the members must be college students. The competition is separated into two types – real shops and online shops. Feng Chia university teachers and members of the Feng Chia Shopping District Association are the competition judges.\nPhotos courtesy of FCU College of Business\nHow do the participants prepare for the Feng Chia District Entrepreneurship Competition? The leader of each group registers to participate and submits the group’s business plan to the FCU Entrepreneurship Education and Development Center for the preliminary competition. Participants who are successful in the preliminary competition then attend training camp for competitors. This year, the camp was held on February 18. The main activity in this year’s competition camp was a class on writing business plans. Participants learned how to write a more perfect business plan. During the camp, many successful entrepreneurs also shared their experiences with the participants. Before the final competition, each group had to send a more detailed business plan to the FCU Entrepreneurship Education and Development Center and prepare a poster and a presentation.\nThis year’s final competition will be held on March 24 (Saturday). Many teams will exhibit their products. Participants will grade each other, and the competition judges will also grade each team. If you are interested, come visit the exhibition and see which group’s product you think will win. The exhibit will be held in FCU’s Jung Chin Building, Room B-1 from 10:00 to 16:00; the winners will be announced at the conclusion of the exhibition.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1598569"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5636866688728333,"wiki_prob":0.43631333112716675,"text":"EU: Schengen stalls, Prüm ploughs on: fingerprint, DNA and vehicle registration data exchange networks continue to expand\nStatewatch News Online, April 2013\n11.04.2013 - Discussions on allowing Bulgaria and Romania to join the Schengen area of border-free travel may have been postponed until December, but the EU's law enforcement authorities will soon start benefitting from easier access to fingerprint and vehicle registration data from the two countries as they move towards fully implementing the Prüm Decisions.\nThe Prüm Decisions (Council Decisions 2008/615/JHA and 2008/616/JHA, named after the town in which the original treaties were signed) mandate the exchange of DNA, fingerprint and vehicle registration data (VRD) amongst EU member states. They also permit the exchange of personal data for the prevention of terrorist offences and for joint police operations.\nLast year a Statewatch analysis noted the ongoing difficulties states have had with implementing the \"complex, technologically fraught and expensive\" Decisions, which are ultimately intended to \"overcome lengthy mutual legal assistance bureaucratic procedures by establishing a single national contact point as an electronic interface for automated information exchange.\" [1]\nThe adoption of positive reports on Romania's readiness to exchange fingerprints and Bulgaria's readiness to exchange VRD shows that it may be easier for the personal data of Romanians and Bulgarians to cross the EU's internal borders than it is for citizens of the two Black Sea countries.\nOn 25 March, the Working Party on Data Protection and Information Exchange (DAPIX) recommended to the Council that it permit the exchange of fingerprint data between Romanian and other EU authorities.\nAn \"overall evaluation report on dactyloscopic [fingerprint] data exchange for Romania,\" undertaken by a team from Austria, announced that \"the implementation of the Prüm/dactyloscopic data-information flow, both on a legal and on a technical level, has been done up to a satisfactory level in Romania.\" [2]\n\"All conditions are met for Romania to start the exchange of dactyloscopic data pursuant to Council Decision 2008/615/JHA,\" says the report.\nNo date has yet been set for the next JHA Council meeting when it will have to approve the draft Decision. When it does so, Romania will become a part of the networked national systems that ease the exchange of fingerprint data amongst European law enforcement authorities.\nIt seems likely that at the same Council meeting, Bulgaria's vehicle registration databases will official become part of the Prüm network.\nA recent document summarises the outcome of a visit by a joint Dutch and Belgian evaluation team which concluded that \"for the purposes of automated searching of vehicle registration data (VRD), Bulgaria has fully implemented the general provisions on data protection of Chapter 6 of Decision 2008/615/JHA.\" [3]\nRomania has been exchanging vehicle registration data with other EU member states since 2011 and both countries also exchange DNA data with a number of EU countries. Bulgaria is able to exchange DNA profiles with Slovenia, Austria, the Netherlands and France, while Romania is connected to the systems of Austria, the Netherlands, Slovenia, France, Slovakia, Latvia, Lithuania, Germany and Spain, and is conducting tests with Cyprus and Estonia.\nBulgaria is also part of the Prüm network for exchanging fingerprint data and is connected to Austria, Germany, Spain, Slovakia, Lithuania, Slovenia, the Czech Republic, France, the Netherlands, Lithuania and Cyprus.\nHowever, it may be possible for one member state to obtain fingerprint data from another even if the two do not have a direct connection by using a state with which they both have connections as an intermediary. The extent to which this practice may or may not take place is, however, unknown.\nIt seems likely that the next JHA Council meeting will also authorise the exchange of Prüm data from countries other than Bulgaria and Romania. Council Decisions have been drawn up that, when agreed, will permit Sweden to exchange DNA data and Malta to exchange DNA and fingerprint data.\n- \"Complex, technologically fraught and expensive\" - the problematic implementation of the Prüm Decisions by Chris Jones, March 2012\n- “Network with errors”: Europe’s emerging web of DNA databases by Eric Topfer, March 2011\n- Searching for Needles in an ever expanding haystack: Cross-border DNA exchange in the wake of the Prüm Treaty by Eric Topfer, September 2008\n[1] \"Complex, technologically fraught and expensive\" - the problematic implementation of the Prüm Decisions by Chris Jones, March 2012\n[2] Presidency, \"Prüm Decisions\" - overall evaluation report on dactyloscopic data exchange for Romania, 25 March 2013, 7824/13; Presidency, Draft Council Decision on the launch of automated data exchange with regard to dactyloscopic data in Romania, 25 March 2013 7826/13\n[3] Presidency, Draft Council Decision on the launch of automated data exchange with regard to Vehicle Registration Data (VRD) in Bulgaria, 26 March 2013, 7942/13","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1123476"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7939887642860413,"wiki_prob":0.7939887642860413,"text":"'He needs prayers': Richard Overton, nation's oldest man and WWII vet, is in the hospital\nFiled under People at Dec 17\nBrendan Meyer, How We Live writer\nConnect with Brendan Meyer\nThe oldest man in America is in the hospital.\nRichard Overton, the 112-year-old lifelong Austin resident and most-senior veteran, is fighting his latest bout of pneumonia.\n\"He needs prayers,\" said Volma Overton, Richard's third cousin. \"He needs everybody's prayers.\"\nOverton has been in the hospital since Wednesday. This year, he's been in and out of the hospital multiple times for pneumonia.\nRichard Overton, 112, smoked a cigar on his front porch on Richard Overton Avenue in Austin on May 25, 2017, among signs displayed to celebrate his birthday. Overton is known for smoking cigars and drinking whiskey on his front porch. He is the oldest living U.S. war veteran.\n(Ashley Landis/Staff Photographer)\nIn the past year, the supercentenarian and World War II veteran has had some highs and lows. In April, he went on his first private jet ride to Washington, D.C., for a tour of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. But in late June, Overton's family members learned that his identity had been stolen and that his personal bank account had been drained. Days later, Bank of America restored the stolen funds in full.\nOverton's favorite pastime is smoking his 12 daily cigars on the front porch of the home he built 70 years ago. His friends call it his \"stage.\" It's on Richard Overton Avenue, as the town renamed the street for his 111th birthday.\nThat's where he celebrated his 112th birthday in May, with DJs, food, drinks and T-shirts with one of his famous quotes — advice on the secret to a long life: \"Keep living, don't die.\"\nAll about Richard Overton, the Texan who's the oldest man in America\nIn this Collection...\nRichard Overton, nation's oldest man, laid to rest in Austin\nPhotos: Austin funeral honors WWII vet Richard Overton, 'a soldier, a survivor, a jokester, a joy'\nRichard Overton, nation's oldest man, dead at 112\nSee all 10 Stories\nWhen Apollo 11 landed on the moon, one black woman watched from the facility that made the space craft\nYoga is not a religious practice, though religious leaders would do well to practice it","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1324415"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5161212682723999,"wiki_prob":0.4838787317276001,"text":"Unlike a piano or the voices of a choir, the guitar (in standard tuning) has difficulty playing the chords as stacks of thirds, which would require the left hand to span too many frets,[40] particularly for dominant seventh chords, as explained below. If in a particular tuning chords cannot be played in closed position, then they often can be played in open position; similarly, if in a particular tuning chords cannot be played in root position, they can often be played in inverted positions. A chord is inverted when the bass note is not the root note. Additional chords can be generated with drop-2 (or drop-3) voicing, which are discussed for standard tuning's implementation of dominant seventh chords (below).\nA guitar's frets, fretboard, tuners, headstock, and truss rod, all attached to a long wooden extension, collectively constitute its neck. The wood used to make the fretboard usually differs from the wood in the rest of the neck. The bending stress on the neck is considerable, particularly when heavier gauge strings are used (see Tuning), and the ability of the neck to resist bending (see Truss rod) is important to the guitar's ability to hold a constant pitch during tuning or when strings are fretted. The rigidity of the neck with respect to the body of the guitar is one determinant of a good instrument versus a poor-quality one.\nI think for all parties, if we had the ability to send a \"two day backstage pass\" (you can use that), where we can send a friend a link and they could try the sight for free but couldn't submit videos. I have a few friends that I keep trying to sell them on but they just are not totally sold and I think it's because the beauty of this site is the personalized VE's are. The interaction between student and teacher is what really makes this magical and it's really hard to describe. The search feature could be a little better, more precise and sometimes it finds no VE hits on simple searches like street. Otherwise I am one of your biggest fans.\nThe California Conservatory of Music offers guitar lessons with the most qualified teachers in the Bay Area at both our Santa Clara and Redwood City schools. Whether you're looking to start your young child with Suzuki guitar lessons, preparing for a college audition, or getting reading for an upcoming concert, we can assist you. We offer the Bay Area’s most comprehensive guitar lessons which include technique, sight reading, music theory, and in addition to the private lessons, we offer ensemble, repertoire, and theory classes on the weekends. For students under the age of 8, we ask the parents to be involved in their guitar lessons and practice at home. To better help parents develop in to this role, the first three lessons are dedicated to the parent education class. The child can then begin their guitar lessons. This helps ensures the student’s success and motivation.\nJump up ^ \"We know from literary sources that the five course guitar was immensely popular in Spain in the early seventeenth century and was also widely played in France and Italy...Yet almost all the surviving guitars were built in Italy...This apparent disparity between the documentary and instrumental evidence can be explained by the fact that, in general, only the more expensively made guitars have been kept as collectors' pieces. During the early seventeenth century the guitar was an instrument of the people of Spain, but was widely played by the Italian aristocracy.\" Tom and Mary Anne Evans. Guitars: From the Renaissance to Rock. Paddington Press Ltd, 1977, p. 24.\nThe musical theory of chords is reviewed, to provide terminology for a discussion of guitar chords. Three kinds of chords, which are emphasized in introductions to guitar-playing,[10][11] are discussed. These basic chords arise in chord-triples that are conventional in Western music, triples that are called three-chord progressions. After each type of chord is introduced, its role in three-chord progressions is noted.\nThe fingerboard, also called the fretboard, is a piece of wood embedded with metal frets that comprises the top of the neck. It is flat on classical guitars and slightly curved crosswise on acoustic and electric guitars. The curvature of the fretboard is measured by the fretboard radius, which is the radius of a hypothetical circle of which the fretboard's surface constitutes a segment. The smaller the fretboard radius, the more noticeably curved the fretboard is. Most modern guitars feature a 12\" neck radius, while older guitars from the 1960s and 1970s usually feature a 6-8\" neck radius. Pinching a string against a fret on fretboard effectively shortens the vibrating length of the string, producing a higher pitch.\nThere's an abundance of guitar information out there on the web, some good, some not. I stumbled across Justin Sandercoe's site a year ago and now tell everyone about it. The lessons are conveyed so clearly, concisely and in the most congenial way. The site is laid out logically as well so you can to go straight to your area of interest... beginner, blues, rock, folk, jazz, rhythm, fingerpicking... it's all there and more. Spend ten minutes with Justin and you'll not only play better but feel better too. From novice to know-it-all, everyone will learn something from Sandercoe.\nLearning to play other people's guitar solos is a great way to begin learning to write your own! Guitar teacher Nils B. shares his tips to learning four classic rock solos so you can develop your technique... An essential part of every musician's development is to imitate those who have already mastered their instrument. After settling on a song, give it a couple of close listens (preferably on headphones or a decent stereo), pick up a good transcription, then learn the rhythm parts, while an\nI would especially like to stress the gentle approach Justin takes with two key aspects that contributed to my development as a musician - music theory and ear training. Justin has succeeded in conveying the importance and profoundness of understanding music both theoretically and through your ears while maintaining a simple and accessible approach to them, all while sticking to what is ultimately the most important motto: 'If it sounds good, it is good'.\nWhile the free guitar lessons here will help you get started, we always recommend committed students to invest in their guitar skills by starting a Guitareo membership. That’s where you’ll get a more comprehensive library of step-by-step video lessons so you always know exactly what to learn next, play-along songs so you can apply your skills to real music, and community support so you’ll get all of your questions answered. Click here to learn more about Guitareo.\nArchtop guitars are steel-string instruments in which the top (and often the back) of the instrument are carved, from a solid billet, into a curved, rather than a flat, shape. This violin-like construction is usually credited to the American Orville Gibson. Lloyd Loar of the Gibson Mandolin-Guitar Mfg. Co introduced the violin-inspired \"F\"-shaped hole design now usually associated with archtop guitars, after designing a style of mandolin of the same type. The typical archtop guitar has a large, deep, hollow body whose form is much like that of a mandolin or a violin-family instrument. Nowadays, most archtops are equipped with magnetic pickups, and they are therefore both acoustic and electric. F-hole archtop guitars were immediately adopted, upon their release, by both jazz and country musicians, and have remained particularly popular in jazz music, usually with flatwound strings.\nAs a beginner guitar player, one of the most difficult hurdles to overcome is that of transition between chords. We learn the chords to our favourite songs or a new complex chord shape, but when it comes to making music with them, our lack of muscle memory and dexterity inhibits us from stringing these chords together in a meaningful and comprehensive manner.\nJump up ^ \"The first incontrovertible evidence of five-course instruments can be found in Miguel Fuenllana's Orphenica Lyre of 1554, which contains music for a vihuela de cinco ordenes. In the following year, Juan Bermudo wrote in his Declaracion de Instrumentos Musicales: 'We have seen a guitar in Spain with five courses of strings.' Bermudo later mentions in the same book that 'Guitars usually have four strings,' which implies that the five-course guitar was of comparatively recent origin, and still something of an oddity.\" Tom and Mary Anne Evans, Guitars: From the Renaissance to Rock. Paddington Press Ltd, 1977, p. 24.\nStudents can earn a Certificate in MI’s Performance Studies program for Guitar. With an innovative 360-degree approach to music education, MI Certificates are centered on Harmony, Theory and Ear Training, with core subjects in Reading, Technique and Performance. This Certificate program provides students with a broad foundation of knowledge and practical experience, encouraging the rapid development of skills in preparation for a range of professional music performance situations.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1228079"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7150659561157227,"wiki_prob":0.7150659561157227,"text":"UK's first automated enclosure-making machine gets going\nThe British electrical engineering and controls group LCA has combined the operations from its sites in Runcorn and Ewloe in a new multi-million pound manufacturing plant in Hawarden, North Wales. The facilities include a £500,000 laser machining centre for the automated production of enclosures – the first of its kind in the UK, and one of only seven in use around the world.\nThe new site was opened recently by the Welsh Cabinet Secretary for the Economy, Ken Skates.\nThe new machine will automate LCA’s previously manual production of stainless-steel control panels. The company expects to boost its production rate “dramatically”, as well as well as turning around orders faster – allowing next-day deliveries in some cases.\nLCA Controls’ managing director, Alan Sheppard, describes the investment in the Rittal automated machining centre as being “incredibly important for the growth of our control panel manufacturing and design business… It means we can deliver more, faster, better, more efficiently for customers across the world, without compromising on the quality we’re famous for.”\nHe adds that the machine “will give us capabilities that are way ahead of the curve on our competitors in the UK”.\nLCA's new site was opened recently by the Welsh Cabinet Secretary for the Economy, Ken Skates (centre), seen here with LCA's chairman David Williams (left) and managing director, Alan Sheppard (right).\nBuilt-in 3D modelling and CAD capabilities mean that the machine can process panels in a fraction of the time needed previously. “We can immerse our customers in the design and build process like never before,” says Sheppard. “They can literally fly in and fly out of the designed products we build, and we can deliver them to their door within days. Not only that, but we can now do one-off jobs, or high-volume mass manufacturing of control panel boxes, at the touch of a few buttons.”\nAccording to Paul Metcalfe, Rittal’s product manager for industrial and outdoor enclosures in the UK, the automated enclosure-production machines are “light years ahead of the alternative, manual approach” and can speed up processing by up to 66%, compared to traditional hand-tooling.\nDespite its move to automated enclosure manufacturing, LCA is currently recruiting control panel experts to expand its workforce.\nEU project could result in machinery that repairs itself\nRitchie takes control of ABB’s automation and motion division\nServomotor-maker doubles capacity in move to new premises","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1717780"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6767343878746033,"wiki_prob":0.6767343878746033,"text":"BREAKING: Senate Passes Seven Bills Rejected By Buhari\nThe Senate has passed seven of the at least 16 bills rejected so far this year by President Muhammadu Buhari.\nThe bills are the Petroleum Industry Governance Bill (PIGB), National Institute for Hospitality and Tourism Bill, National Research and Innovation Council Bill, Stamp Duties Act (Amendment) Bill, National Agricultural Seed Council Bill, Agricultural Credit Guarantee Scheme Fund (Amendment) Bill and Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC) Act 2010 (Amendment) Bill.\nBuhari had expressed reservations about the constitutionality of passing the bills into law, and therefore wrote the Senate to reconsider them.\nThe upper chamber also initiated moves to the override the President’s veto on the Fourth Alteration Bill No.28 — a constitutional amendment that seeks to mandate the President and state governors to present annual budget estimates before legislature at most three months to the end of a financial year. It also seeks to encourage early presentation and passage of Appropriation Bills.\nThe President had rejected the bill, arguing that it didn’t capture the provisions of Section 58(4) of the 1999 Constitution, as amended.\nWith the Industrial Development Amendment Bill, which, if passed, will enable companies expand their operations in pioneer industry or product to apply for a new pioneer status, the President had declined, saying assenting to it would interfere with ongoing inter-ministerial consultations.\nHowever, even though the Senate had listed both bills — the Fourth Alteration Bill No.28 and the Industrial Development Amendment Bill — in its Order Paper for the day as meant to be overruled. However, the two bills were not considered at the end of plenary.\nSaharaReporters had reported exactly a week ago that a clash was brewing between the executive and the legislature in the about-to-expire life of the current political dispensation, as the Senate had resolved to overrule the President’s veto on two bills.\n16 Hours Of Agony With Arik Airline By Adewale Adeoye\nTake advantage of my olive branch, Wike begs politicians in Rivers","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1003181"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8966345191001892,"wiki_prob":0.8966345191001892,"text":"11 Jul 19 | New Delhi\nMG Motor India to focus further on community building; commences contribution to girl child education with sales of MG Hector\nLeveraging its partnership with IIMPACT NGO, the carmaker will contribute towards facilitating one month’s education for every girl child from every Hector sold\nNew Delhi, July 11, 2019: Underlining its commitment towards gender diversity and community development, marquee carmaker MG (Morris Garages) Motor India has commenced contribution towards girl child education with the commencement of sales of the MG HECTOR. Leveraging its partnership with IIMPACT NGO, the carmaker will contribute towards facilitating one month’s education for every girl child from every Hector sold.\nIn partnership with IIMPACT, an NGO engaged in providing quality education to young girls through its learning centres in remote villages across the country, MG has adopted and will be supporting 30 learning centres to begin with. MG India plans to increase this number substantially every year as the scale of its operations grows as part of its focus on ‘community building’.\nSpeaking on the partnership, Rajeev Chaba, President & Managing Director, MG Motor India, said, “As responsible corporate citizens, MG India and IIMPACT share a common vision of supporting, providing access to women to support themselves and transform their lives and the community around them. Educating and empowering the girl child is amongst the most impactful ways of doing so. With IIMPACT, the focus is on girls hailing from underprivileged backgrounds, as they work towards creating a better future for themselves. The initiative also enables owners of MG vehicles to contribute to and support a critical cause and become MGChangemakers.”\nCommenting on the initiative, Rema Harish, Executive Director, IIMPACT, said, “We share a common vision with MG India, an organization which is focused on gender diversity as a core principle. Our aim is to provide access to quality education to the girl child, particularly in areas lagging in basic social services and economic development. Regional inequalities are compounded by historical social inequalities, particularly for the girl child. Our program seeks to bring about social change through education. We are grateful for this partnership which will help address issues in these specific areas.”\nIn 2018, as part of its efforts to highlight gender diversity, the carmaker collaborated with ‘The Better India’ for the “MG Changemakers” initiative, honouring 6 women trailblazers that inspired change in different communities across the country. The aim was to highlight how women, with their extraordinary spirit, peerless grit and determination, can create a positive impact within society. The carmaker also joined hands with TRAX NGO to launch its road safety initiative, ‘Road Safety and Juniors Programme’. Since its launch in November 2018, the programme has already been implemented across 257 schools in Gurugram and Faridabad, impacting over 300,000 school students.\nMG Motor India is a future-ready organization that is trying to set industry benchmarks not only in terms of a young & smart work culture but also in terms of diversity; female employees already account for 32% of the company’s total workforce, with plans to further increase the number of women hires in the future. With a focus on four key organisational pillars of innovation, diversity, experiences, and community, the carmaker is building a strong base for its future operations.\nFounded in the UK in 1924, Morris Garages vehicles were world famous for their sports cars, roadsters, and cabriolet series. MG vehicles were much sought after by many celebrities, including the British Prime Ministers and even the British Royal Family, for their styling, elegance, and spirited performance. The MG Car Club, set up in 1930 at Abingdon in the UK, has more than a million loyal fans, making it by far one of the world’s largest clubs for a car brand. MG has evolved into a modern, futuristic and innovative brand over the last 95 years. MG Motor India has commenced its manufacturing operations at its car manufacturing plant at Halol in Gujarat.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line337814"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6574288010597229,"wiki_prob":0.3425711989402771,"text":"Energy, Sustainability and Society\nLocal power and land use: spatial implications for local energy development\nCheryl de Boer1Email author,\nRichard Hewitt2,\nHans Bressers1,\nPatricia Martinez Alonso2,\nVerónica Hernández Jiménez2,\nJaime Díaz Pacheco2 and\nLara Román Bermejo2\nEnergy, Sustainability and Society20155:31\n© de Boer et al. 2015\nPublished: 7 October 2015\nThe decentralised and private nature of small-scale renewable energy development does not fit traditional models of government planning and oversight. The land use impacts related to these developments are not well understood and data is lacking related to the environmental, social and economic impacts that can occur under various scenarios.\nThis research note provides a literature review of the scarce information available about the spatial impacts of small-scale renewable energy and outlines the current stream of research being undertaken to address this knowledge gap. The preliminary case studies in Overijssel, the Netherlands and Navarre, Spain provide the background for understanding this complex issue, and a new integrated policy and land use model is introduced in order to combine qualitative and qualitative data that is important for understanding the dynamics of this growing field.\nThe main difficulties in moving forward in planning for the decentralised renewable energytransition are the variation of perspectives on the attractiveness and appropriateness of urban renewableenergy (RE) development, differences in implementation processes and incentives, the dynamic nature ofthe relevant technologies and the lack of up to date information on land use.\nMulti-functional land use is a key strategy for increasing the uptake of small-scale renewable energy but little to no data is available regarding it in European land use literature and policy. This needs to be addressed in order to enable pragmatic policies that will enable effective implementation of renewable energy.\nLand use impacts\nIntegrated modelling\nDecentralised and smaller-scale approaches to renewable energy may facilitate or accelerate implementation under certain conditions. Key elements supporting this hypothesis are (1) larger projects have more visible spatial impacts and projects with high spatial impacts are slow to develop in places with strict planning regulations and where land use changes are open to public debate1 and (2) larger projects require large investment of capital which developers may be unwilling to outlay when economic or legislative changes generate instability in the sector [1].\nSome articles exist with respect to the spatial implications of land-based photovoltaic energy (PV) installations [2–4] and the landscape impacts and related implementation issues of wind turbines [5–8]. However, there are few local or sub-regional scale studies on implementation or land planning conflicts specifically due to displacement or incompatibility of uses with the development of renewable energy-related landscape features (RELF). RELF are the physical structures necessary for the deployment of renewable energy (RE). This is an important area of study since there has been a relatively recent emergence of local RE developments aligned with the transition to a more decentralised energy model. Often due to the smaller impact per installation, the typical environmental impact assessment (EIA) or related planning instruments do not apply and installations can go “unnoticed” from a planning perspective2. We focus principally on wind and PV developments since they can be achieved through both large- and small-scale activities, which are important for increasing the resilience of the energy supply in a given region or locality.\nThis research note corresponds to research being undertaken as part of the EU FP7 funded project COMPLEX: Knowledge Based Climate Mitigation Systems for a Low Carbon Economy. The efforts involve better understanding how contextual (qualitative and quantitative) data can be used to understand land use patterns and possible future scenarios of local renewable energy in the Netherlands and Spain. We provide here the results of our literature review of the available knowledge on spatial impacts of RE and a summary of what this means for researchers attempting to understand this dynamic field. Our main research in this project is related to the relationships between land use change, renewable energy development and policy. We dedicate this research note to increasing the visibility of how current data is limiting us in understanding this dynamic and important relationship. Secondly, we introduce very briefly the model being developed to help us understand these relationships and relevant case studies that we are applying it to in order to advance future studies in understanding the spatial impacts of RE. As such, this research will support future efforts in the fields of land use change modelling and those involved in areas of public administration research-related policy implementation.\nLiterature review of the spatial impacts of RE\nThe spatial impacts of implementing various renewable energies (RE) are complex and dependent on the technology as well as the particular context in which RELF are implemented. They may be visual, physical, functional, long-term, short-term, easily reversible or not, etc. Spatial impacts are related to the topography of the landscape, the area of land physically covered by RELF, the current land use and geography, the distance from areas of natural beauty or sensitive ecosystems and biodiversity [9]. Full attribution of spatial impacts of RELF requires an understanding of the entire implementation and usage process chain; impacts may include changes to existing infrastructure, land conversion and agricultural productivity impacts, ecosystem modifications and habitat and biodiversity reduction, aesthetic changes and adjustments to recreational potential. Some spatial impacts, such as the negative impacts of wind turbines on bird populations (ecological impacts), landscape visual quality (aesthetic impacts) and disruption to food supply from transforming agricultural land to biofuels (direct land use impacts) are widely known. Other related aspects, such as land use intensity, indirect land use change and land multi-functionality have received less attention in the literature. In the following paragraphs, we provide a review of the literature relevant to the question of spatial impacts associated with solar PV and wind energy implementation and then include a more detailed discussion of land use, the key focus of this paper. Much literature relevant to the potential spatial impacts of RE development was identified; however, significant gaps do exist. The spatial impacts of solar energy installations are generally less well studied than for other RE types. The impact of solar thermic (ST) energy is likely to be minimal, since this is mostly associated with heating systems added to buildings [2], but the spatial impact on the territory of PV installations may be quite substantial. In addition, though the literature on wind energy is abundant, few studies seem to relate to the direct land use impacts of wind installations, a key concern of our research. Overall, precise assessment of expected and real impacts was generally sparse for all RE types. One exception to this is that spatial impacts due to land use transformation from food to biofuel have been deeply studied; however, the focus on RELF requires information on the location of these “crop installations”. Gathering the information related to this is seen as a particular issue in and of itself as crops for biofuels are not distinguishable from regular crops from a land use perspective. As such, we have chosen not to include biomass-related RE in this research.\nDirect land use impacts\nAlterations to land use can be expected to occur for all new RE installations. PV installations and wind turbines that are not located on top of already existing infrastructure will reduce the ability to use the land for other activities, though to different degrees based on the previous land uses and the type of project implemented. While for example, it could be expected that much agricultural land would be too valuable to turn into PV fields3, new standards requiring a percentage of utility supplied power to come from renewable sources is resulting in large-scale PV projects expanding into a wide range of locations and ecosystems that were once considered uneconomic. The potential land use issues and concepts related to PV and wind installations found in the literature are highlighted below.\nConstruction phase impacts are relevant to the installation of PV or wind installations [3]. Large-scale wind installations together with their associated access roads and electricity supply infrastructure have major direct impacts and are compatible only with some existing uses (e.g. forestry, pasture). Literature relating to impacts of wind turbines however mostly deals with issues around ecological or visual impact of the erected turbines. Research with stakeholders to estimate the social cost of wind farm developments in Saragossa (Spain) identified loss of natural areas and the impact of access road construction as key impacts [5]. In this work, stakeholders consulted in the Spanish region of Navarre noted that the impact of access construction was one of the factors that provoked public controversy when the first wind farms were developed in the 1990s (Martínez Alonso P, Hewitt R, Pacheco JD, Román L, Hernández Jiménez V, Bressers H and de Boer C: Losing the roadmap: Renewable energy paralysis in Spain and its implications for the EU low-carbon economy, Submitted). A lack of assessment procedures established at an international level for PV is also contributing to this gap [3].\nThe concept of land use intensity is important when addressing the land use impacts from installation and operation of large-scale PV plants [4]. Land use intensity is a metric that expresses the quantity of land transformed relative to power output or unit of electricity generated. The land occupation relative to the time the power plant is in use is also important and should take into account the time required for the land to recover following use. While land use intensity for large-scale solar installations and coal plants was comparable in the short-term over the long-term PV installations required lower land areas for equivalent energy generation capacity [4]. These authors found that recent commercial PV power plants in the USA covered an average of 25 km2/GWp. They estimated also that in cases where the PV systems were installed in forest areas that recovery of the forest requires an average of 10 years. Additionally, they calculate that a 30-year-old PV plant occupies ~15 % less land than a coal power plant of the same age. The study of overall land coverage of PV panels that has increased due to legislative incentives in Italy quantified the future potential impact with an assumption that between 7 and 10 m2 of surface area is necessary to generate 1 kWp [3]. A continuing increase in the installed capacity of 10 MWp per month would then result in between 80,000 and 100,000 m2 of additional PV land cover per month.\nThese studies are surprising since they challenge two key popular assumptions: (1) that solar installations always occupy far less land than coal plants—in fact, their impact is initially comparable and only begins to show advantage after ~25 years—and (2) energy generation capacity of solar is per se less intense than all fossil fuels—something that can be seen to be untrue if intensity is measured over the lifetime of the plant [4]. These impacts are related to land-based PV, not those that are implemented on top of existing infrastructure.\nMore generally, the available literature suggests that, besides the various negative impacts, there may be a number of potential land use benefits of PV systems. PV projects can be used to reclaim degraded land and reduce requirements of transmission lines of electricity grids, be used in scenic areas and National Parks, where the avoidance of pylons and wires is a major advantage, can be integrated into the façades of buildings, used as a cladding material for commercial buildings and provide shading and heat extraction [2]. Additionally, greater multi-functionality is generally more possible than with many other energy technologies. Placing PV panels on top of existing infrastructures rather than on forested or farmland can also prevent biodiversity loss [4]. The main negative land use impacts related to PV systems are the loss of amenity; the implementation of a PV system in once cultivable land limits the soil productivity in that area [2]. The electricity output in this case is then competing with food production and as such is similar to the dilemmas faced by energy crops [3]. Some negative visual aspects have also been noted, but there is little certainty about how these impacts are experienced.\nAesthetic impacts\nThe literature on aesthetic or visual landscape impacts resulting from RE installations relates mostly to wind energy as widespread deployment of wind turbines has taken place over the last 2 or 3 decades. Since this literature is extensive, the following summary is intended to be illustrative rather than comprehensive. Generally, the research on the aesthetic impacts of solar is based on solar cells that are not added to previous infrastructures. This needs to be considered when determining the relevance of these impacts to the context at hand.\n“One of the most difficult-to-quantify…environmental costs is visual impacts, whether from wind, solar or hydropower developments” [5]. These authors used choice modelling techniques based on stakeholder interviews to estimate the social cost of wind farm developments in Saragossa, Spain. Respondents tended to value impacts on flora and fauna more highly than impacts to the visual landscape or to the area’s rare geological heritage. This study is notable in that it recognises that wind farm developments have significant social costs and that these costs can be assessed through engagement with local stakeholders. In a study of annoyance due to wind turbine noise in Sweden, it was found that interviewees in a municipality in the south of Sweden were more likely to report annoyance due to turbine noise if they felt that turbines negatively impacted the visual landscape [10]. In general, respondents accepted the necessity of wind turbines but felt that their contribution to the landscape scenery was negative. Further, a 2007 study of renewable energy planning in the Netherlands, found the visual evaluation of the impact of wind power on landscape values to be the most dominant factor in community acceptance of such schemes [11].\nAlthough there seems to be broad general consensus about the importance of visual impact of wind energy developments, not all authors explicitly consider it [12].\nStakeholders interviewed in this study’s Navarre case considered that public controversy related to installation of wind farms in the 1990s had now mostly been resolved [13] thanks to public information campaigns and growing general awareness of environmental issues. Other parts of Spain have seen political disagreement between autonomous communities (e.g. between Castille and Leon and Cantabria) over the visual impact of wind energy installations in border areas of landscape beauty [13].\nFor solar energy installations [14], the aesthetic impacts of PV installations can be quantified based on four criteria: visibility, colour, fractality and concurrence between fixed and mobile panels. This study determined the overall impact by expert opinion through a Delphi procedure. Different impacts were generated by different types of plants in different types of landscapes. The proximity to urban or recreational areas was however not taken into account, and so this study can better be seen as potential aesthetic impact since frequency of impact was not considered. Analysing subjective reactions requires a cognitive study of people’s preferences for PV power plants. There is yet no psychological research specific to PV power plants in the literature according to [14], and this would be extremely important for highlighting successful opportunities for implementing these projects in urban and semi-urban areas. The only empirical result related to land use impacts was that differences in size were important in the overall impact of the subjects and that both objective variables and subjective feelings were taken into account when making their judgments. A scoping survey completed in the province of Overijssel found that among those (N = 15) that completed the survey, the landscape implications were of lower importance in the development of PV energy than other factors such as importance for the environment and economic benefits.\nRecreational impacts\nImplementation of RELF may also imply changes to the land as a public amenity. Metrics for the impacts of RE installations on recreational resources have not been developed but would likely be similar to the aesthetic impacts mentioned earlier [4]. However, additional factors may need to be considered such as loss of public access. While wind farms may be accessible to the public, in most cases, PV arrays are not.\nEcological impacts\nEcological impacts relate to habitat loss or damage, such as insect and bird death from intense light generated by solar installations or wind turbines, and increased use of resources such as water. The impact of wind turbines on birds has been widely studied, e.g. [6–8], and the importance of this aspect for assessing the environmental impact of windfarms is well-recognised. In the previously mentioned study, stakeholders in Saragossa valued impacts to flora and fauna more highly than other landscape impacts [5]. The authors include resource depletion in their list of environmental impacts of PV systems, since their manufacture required scarce materials (In/Te/Ga). A 2009 study of the territorial and landscape impacts of PV systems identifies impacts from landscape fragmentation, vegetation degradation, interference with flora and fauna as well as microclimatic change caused by the daytime warming of the surface of the solar array [3]. Concerns have also been noted about impacts to wildlife, which may prohibit solar development on large areas of desert land in California [4].\nIn terms of habitat and biodiversity impacts, research continues on measuring habitat fragmentation and risk assessment of complex ecosystem collapse. Land use intensity is often used as a proxy for assessment of impacts on biodiversity [4]. However, biodiversity can be directly measured by species density (recorded in the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment), and PV installations can be sited accordingly in less biodiverse areas. The water needed for cleaning solar panels is approximated at 500–1000 gallons per MWp of panels per year [4]. The hydrological footprint of large solar arrays, particularly in arid or semi-arid environments, is likely to be considerable.\nThe term energy sprawl addresses the varying spatial extents of different energy production techniques [9]. It is the product of the total quantity of energy produced annually (e.g. TW h/year) and the land use intensity of production (e.g. km2 of habitat per TW h/year). This is used to address the potential habitat effects of energy sprawl and to show that more compact energy generation does not necessarily reduce damage to biodiversity. Particularly important is that energy production techniques can have multiple effects on biodiversity, which “operate at different spatial and temporal scales. Biodiversity impacts that are likely to scale with real impact include habitat replacement and habitat fragmentation. Further, the longevity of the impacts… also… varies” ([9]; p3).\nSpatial planning for RE impacts\nSpatial impacts of different types of RELF can be assessed, but no simple calculation will enable the right technology to be selected to ensure maximum capacity for minimum spatial impact. Instead impacts should be determined based on the particular characteristics of the area in question. Many different criteria for siting of RE installations need to be balanced to take into account the various types of impact from each technology. For example, while the elevation of the wind turbines increases the area of aesthetic land use impact compared to PV, the actual area occupied by PV is the main intrusion into the landscape due to their low elevation and wide expanse.\nReversibility\nSome impacts resulting from installation of RELF are quickly reversible through the removal of the relevant installations, such as solar panels or wind turbines. In other cases, previous or alternative uses will only return once the previous state has been regained. Clearly, installations in urban areas on rooftops are nearly completely reversible, but large-scale land clearance for wind farms or PV arrays may take decades or centuries to recover. In general, spatial planning procedures do not deal well with the issue of reversibility, often because high value land uses such as urban development or mining are irreversible on a human time scale.\nLarge-scale wind and solar developments in the EU require an EIA, which includes a visual impact analysis. Though there do not seem to be many published examples (EIA studies are mainly an annex to the project itself), a GIS-based visibility catchment (viewshed) analysis would be an appropriate starting point for evaluation of visual impact. Published research exists on the environmental impacts from the manufacturing and decommissioning phases of PV power equipment; however, more studies are needed about the installation and operation phase.\nLocal communities can experience difficulty in deciding the siting of PV installations [3]. Innovative approaches involving participatory cartography are one way to address these difficulties [13, 15, 16]. Modelling approaches directed at RE installation location, such as multi-criteria decision-making (MCDM) procedures [17] or optimal site potential models [18], are beginning to emerge and are likely to offer a way forward with respect to the spatial allocation of RELF in line with environmental criteria. This section provides an overview of the two case studies used in this research to understand how local RE development is taking place and particularly what elements of spatial issues are developing alongside it that should be considered.\nThe study of local renewable energy development from a spatial perspective is a relatively new field of study. Two cases were chosen with different spatial contexts in order to develop understandings of relationships that take place in both space-scarce (the Netherlands) and space-abundant (Spain) areas. In the Netherlands, locally based solar implementation is increasing exponentially. Collective purchasing, crowd-sourcing and small-scale solar farms are becoming commonplace. The highly regulative nature of Dutch spatial planning could be used to reduce the changes seen due to solar energy. Currently, this is only being done in cases where the scale is considered to be industrial and not for personal or community use. Discussions are being held at the provincial level about how to incorporate medium-size solar installations in the landscape, but no final decisions have been made. Wind energy is highly regulated and has not achieved much in comparison to other countries in Europe. In Spain, previous advancements made through large-scale wind and solar installations have come to a standstill due to an altered funding environment at the national level. Current developments are considered to be more modest or small scale and need to address more local issues due to the lack of support from higher levels.\nConnecting the types of local RE projects and the resulting implementation processes and land use impacts that have taken place in these two cases is desired in order to provide us with the necessary preliminary data to simulate and model these relationships. What is missing from the available literature is how qualitative and quantitative social factors increase or decrease the likelihood of implementation of renewable energy in different cases. In this ongoing research, we are using a specially developed integrated participatory land use model APOLUS—actor and policy land use simulator.\nAPOLUS is articulated as two model blocks (see Fig. 1): land demand and land use allocation are connected by a feedback loop. The land demand model block determines the amount of land to be changed or combined with RE uses which is then allocated in the land use allocation model block. Land demand is initially determined for each scenario on the basis of factors exogenous to the land allocation block, but land allocation outcomes are fed back into the demand block so that the system is modified dynamically as RE implementation progresses. To produce simulations of land use and RELF at future dates (e.g. 2020, 2050), the storyline and simulation approach is employed [19]. Storylines are developed through the participatory process and the model represents them. This enables the contextual factors related to the implementation process to be introduced into the model. Determination of RE demand for each scenario is a key challenge. As noted above, the demand model block also needs to consider multi-functionality, enabling the allocation of new RELF in existing land areas. It is anticipated that more multi-functionality of land use will take place in the Netherlands area than in Spain, so some difference in the operation of the system across the two areas is anticipated.\nFig. 1 Conceptual Model for APOLUS: Actor and POlicy Land Use Simulator\nᅟ\nAs such, the differences and similarities between the chosen case studies will give us a perspective on different European approaches to land use and renewable energy. The model enables us to incorporate geographical, social and economic factors into the development of future scenarios with the help of expert and local stakeholder input. Doing so at a regional/local scale in our two case studies will provide direction as to what type of spatial land use data is necessary for understanding land use changes associated with local renewable energy development.\nImplementation of local RE installations, as with any change to local resources or amenities, is more effectively accomplished if it is community driven and if both costs and benefits are shared across different members of society. As seen in Spain, a success story can turn into failure overnight if implementation is excessively reliant on top-down mechanisms such as legislative support and subsidy regimes. Conversely, even if a considerable amount of general support for renewable energy policy exists, at a local level, many residents feel that a renewable energy system may limit their quality of life [3]. A number of important points emerged from the preliminary case study work that need to be addressed in the spatially focused simulation model that has been developed to study these implementation processes. These are as follows:\nMulti-functionality: No clear distinction was identified between wind and PV energy with respect to multi-functionality of use. In the opinion of Spanish stakeholders, PV energy installation development implies loss of the previous land use, while wind energy was regarded as compatible with other uses. This is quite different to the current situation in the Netherlands where there is strong resistance to wind energy because it is viewed as incompatible with the landscape, yet PV on roof tops is generally accepted. Since multiple land uses are not recorded under Corine land cover data, it is not possible to verify whether there were good examples of compatibility of land use from the maps. It is very important that the simulation model take multi-functionality into account since under some circumstances, RE must be incorporated into the existing land uses without taking them over.\nTemporal resolution of innovations: Another challenging aspect of this research is the speed at which changes are taking place and the minimal level of oversight which can occur. This is particularly visible for the diffusion of PV panels in the Netherlands. An underlying hypothesis is that new projects are influenced by the presence (or lack) of other PV panels in the area. Detecting the presence of any causal aspects to this relationship implies a need for data on a highly detailed temporal scale. However, since this level of detail is not present in the available open data, the model will be tasked with simulating this process. By generating plausible outcomes from multiple model runs, the simulation model serves as a virtual laboratory for exploring the spatial and temporal diffusion of these processes.\nPath dependency: A further challenge to the successful development of future scenarios is the underlying assumption that the past land use relationships will hold in the future (path dependency). Using past land use changes relationships as the basis for the scenarios has a number of issues. As technologies change, the underlying characteristics of RELF also change. This is true particularly with respect to the footprint and aesthetic impacts that are related to a technology. To address this, we include a certain amount of randomness into the development of scenarios and will also include the changes in potentially influential contextual factors as variables in the model. The spatial allocation component of the model and the cellular automata model of White and collaborators [20] is especially suitable for this kind of work, since small changes to model parameters can produce highly divergent outcomes as the simulation progresses, a feature known as bifurcation. Model results are thus not limited to a few scenarios (e.g. business as usual, renewables super development, continued fossil fuel dependence, etc.), but instead produce a broad range of possible options based on the various bifurcations from each scenario path. Multiple model runs can be used to assess the probability of the various outcomes. Model results can assist policymakers in assessing the likelihood of the developments having an impact in their particular area based on the timespan over which they expect their policies and plans to be relevant.\nThe need for additional and interdisciplinary studies related to the development of local renewable energy is clear. The multiple types of RELF possible will have significant and varying impacts on the speed and success of the energy transition in various places. The increasingly private and local nature of renewable energy development increases the complexity of monitoring and understanding these processes. We aim for this study to provide some insight into the gaps and lack of information available for policymakers and planners in preparing, supporting and steering the local, decentral renewable energy transition.\nThe exception to this is the case where changes are required for flood safety, in which case the high level of public acceptance can slightly speed up the necessary processes.\nRecently, Spain approved a new law on EIA (Law 21/2013, 9th of December, of Env. Impac. Asses.) relaxing these instruments further: photovoltaic installations under 10 ha. Do not require study as well as those dedicated to self-consumption under 100 kW.\nSee results of the land use analysis for the Navarre case study, end of Section 4.2.\nRELF:\nrenewable energy landscape features\nThe research presented in this paper is conducted and funded from the EU FP7 project number 308601—COMPLEX. Further detailed information is available on the project website.\nCDB coordinated the development of the paper, contributed to the Dutch research and text of the paper. RH coordinated the team in Spain, contributed to the research, contributed to the text of the paper and revised the manuscript. HB contributed to the Dutch research and to the text of the paper. PMA carried out the research work in Spain, contributed to the text of the paper and revised the manuscript. VHJ, LRB and JDP contributed to the research and revised the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.\nAuthors’ information\nThis team of authors have grouped themselves together based on their collective work and interest in the effects of social factors in land use change. CDB is currently a senior researcher appointed jointly to two departments of the University of Twente—PGM (Urban and Regional Planning and Geo-Information Management) and CSTM (Department of Governance and Technology for Sustainability) at the University of Twente (UT). Her research focuses on connecting land use data and knowledge with policy relevant instruments and planning. The largest support for the land use change mapping and modelling component comes from the expertise of RH, based on his experience in participatory modelling, land use modelling and software. VHJ has a lengthy profile in community engagement and modelling which has helped to determine the stakeholder participation elements of the research. Both RH and VHJ are members of OCT (Observatory for a Culture of the Territory). The other authors (HB, VHJ, PMA, LRB, JDP) are also affiliated with these two institutions (OCT and UT) and provide expertise on policy implementation, GIS and modelling and land use change and impacts of development.\nCSTM/ITC, University of Twente, Drienerlolaan 5, 7522 NB Enschede, the Netherlands\nObservatory for a Culture of the Territory (OCT), C/ Duque Fernán Nuñez, 2 – 1º, 28012 Madrid, Spain\nDe Boer C, Hewitt R, Bressers H, Verónica Hernández J, Martínez Alonso P, Warbroek B (2014) Stakeholder input and feedback on model development of PLUS4-CMP. Project Report for EU FP7 Programme COMPLEX ProjectGoogle Scholar\nTsoutsos T, Frantzeskaki N, Gekas V (2005) Environmental impacts from the solar energy technologies. 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Applied Energy 119:99–117View ArticleGoogle Scholar\nWhite R, Engelen G, Uljee I (1997) The use of constrained cellular automata for high-resolution modelling of urban land-use dynamics. Environment and planning B 24:323–344View ArticleGoogle Scholar\nAlcamo J (2008) The SAS approach: combining qualitative and quantitative knowledge in environmental scenarios. Environmental futures: The practice of environmental scenario analysis 2:123–150Google Scholar\nIn these collections\nCape Forum on Green and Smart Transitions in Cities and Regions: Technic...\nSubmission enquiries: marie.canama@springernature.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1614898"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6984259486198425,"wiki_prob":0.6984259486198425,"text":"Parton visits TV to push live disc\nWednesday, April 4, 2012 – Dolly Parton is pushing her just released \"An Evening with... Dolly,\" a DVD/CD set available exclusively at all Cracker Barrel, on TV. The double-disc set includes live performances of Dolly's biggest hits, including 9 to 5, Jolene, Coat of Many Colors, Here You Come Again, Islands in the Stream, and I Will Always Love You, among others.\nParton Dolly will appear tomorrow on Nightline on ABC during their Playlist segment as well as Inside Edition. On Friday, Parton engages in a one-on-one question and answer session with Billboard.com and the entertainment news magazine show EXTRA! On Saturday, Parton sits down with Rebecca Jarvis on CBS This Morning and Katie Cook for CMT Insider.\nThe PR effort continues next week as well. On Wednesday, April 11, Parton will be featured on the mid-day syndicated The Better Show. On Saturday, April 14, she talks with Gov. Mike Huckabee for Fox News Channel's HUCKABEE. The show will re-air on Sunday, April 15.\nMore news for Dolly Parton\n03/01/18: Parton presents milestone book to Library of Congress\n08/15/17: Parton unveils first children's release\n10/04/16: Parton wins CMA honor\n08/30/16: Parton debuts atop Billboard\n08/19/16: Parton tops new releases\n07/07/16: Parton keeps it \"Simple\" with Sony\n07/05/16: Parton backs off Clinton endorsement, or was it?\n04/25/16: Parton keeps it Pure & Simple\nCD reviews for Dolly Parton\nDolly Parton is no stranger to flash. Even before our modern country era, where many of the most successful artists rival contemporary pop stars for high profile image manipulation, Parton had the city girl look down pat (alas, without ever denying her Appalachian roots). However, this master songwriter has simply given us an album about as close to purity as one can get. The incredibly bright Parton is far from simple, however, so the \"simple\" in this album's title solely refers »»»\nOf all the songs you never expected Dolly Parton to cover, Bon Jovi's \"Lay Your Hands on Me\" has got to be near the top of the list. Although by the time Miley Cyrus's godmother gets through personalizing the song there's not enough of the original left to call it a cover - just a word or two here and there and the chorus, which for those of you who have forgotten this masterpiece of 80's hair metal is just the title of the song repeated almost enough times to make a »»»\nIf Dolly Parton were to host a summer replacement daytime TV show, her new record album could very well be the soundtrack. It is so totally Dolly - an hour's worth of can-do, I'm-country-gol'-dang-it-but-don't-forget-I'm-Hollywood, yet never abandoning the singer-songwriter that's been her overriding trademark. It gets a little silly, which you expect from Dolly. In fact, the song she co-wrote with Mac Davis, Country Is as Country Does - gets a lot silly. »»»","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1311220"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9147713780403137,"wiki_prob":0.9147713780403137,"text":"These free speech lawsuits won't scare Donald Trump. But they give me chills\nLawsuits against Donald Trump and former Sheriff Joe Arpaio could test the nation's long-standing commitment to free speech.\nThese free speech lawsuits won't scare Donald Trump. But they give me chills Lawsuits against Donald Trump and former Sheriff Joe Arpaio could test the nation's long-standing commitment to free speech. Check out this story on azcentral.com: https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/lindavaldez/2018/10/17/donald-trump-first-amendment-lawsuit-joe-arpaio-new-york-times/1673686002/\nLinda Valdez, Arizona Republic Published 6:07 p.m. MT Oct. 17, 2018\nOpinion: Lawsuits against the president and former Sheriff Joe Arpaio could test the nation's long-standing commitment to free speech.\nPresident Donald Trump walks to Marine One on Oct. 12, 2018.(Photo: Susan Walsh/AP)\nA First Amendment lawsuit against Donald Trump won’t spark fear in the president’s heart.\nBut it ought to give you a chill.\nIt is one of a series of current events that shows the vulnerability of the free press is in our allegedly free society.\nThere is also $147.5 million lawsuit by Arizona’s own Joe Arpaio against The New York Times and one of its opinion writers over a column the former Maricopa County sheriff didn't like. Brought by a conservative group that aspires to “bring this 'failing newspaper' to its knees,” it may represent the belief that a Trump-influenced Supreme Court will roll back long-honored press freedoms.\nThere is Trump’s smiley-face, paternalistic treatment of the Saudis after the presumed murder of a U.S.-resident journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was last seen entering a Saudi consulate in Turkey. The coddling of Saudi Arabia despite suspicions about its role Khashoggi's disappearance is welcome news to all despots who know a journalist they'd like to see disappear.\nCriticizing the press is fine. This is not\nIn this context, the First Amendment lawsuit against Trump offers a few good reasons why all Americans – across the political spectrum – should shudder at thought of rolling back press freedom.\n“President Trump has First Amendment rights and is free to criticize the press vehemently, but he is not free to use the power and authority of the United States government to punish and stifle it,” says the lawsuit that was filed Tuesday by the nonpartisan group Protect Democracy on behalf of the PEN American Center, Inc.\nIt cites examples of retaliation:\nThreatening online retailer Amazon, owned by Jeff Bezos, who also owns The Washington Post – a relentless Trump critic. Trump “personally directed U.S. Postmaster General Megan Brennan to double the rate the Postal Service charges Amazon and other firms to ship packages,” according to the suit.\nAnother relentless Trump critic is CNN, owned by Time Warner, whose planned merger with AT&T was challenged by the Trump Justice Department – something candidate Trump “publicly threatened” to do, according to the suit. Time Warner won, but incurred costs that continue as the administration appeals.\nTrump has threatened to pull White House press credentials of reporters he doesn’t like.\nTrump threatened the broadcast licenses of NBC and other television stations “in retaliation for coverage he disliked,” the suit says.\nTrump’s “use of the power and machinery of government to punish his media critics creates an atmosphere in which journalists must work under the threat of government retaliation,” says the lawsuit.\nSupporters of the president may enjoy his chest-beating posture toward the press.\nCourts have long protected free speech\nBut an attempt by any president to intimidate and silence journalists represents a terrifying lack of appreciation of the role of a free press.\nIt also shows a disrespect for America’s long, long tradition of protecting a free press.\nAccording to the lawsuit:\nBenjamin Franklin defended freedom of speech as the “principal pillar” of a free society and said a leader who had “the power to punish for words would be armed with a weapon the most destructive and terrible.”\nIn 1936, the U.S. Supreme Court said: “newspapers, magazines, and other journals of the country . . . have shed . . . more light on the public and business affairs of the nation than any other instrumentality of publicity; and since informed public opinion is the most potent of all restraints upon misgovernment, the suppression or abridgement of the publicity afforded by a free press cannot be regarded otherwise than with grave concern.”\nIn 1964, the Supreme Court said the First Amendment represents “a profound national commitment to the principle that debate on public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and that it may well include vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public officials.”\nIn 1972, the Supreme Court said it is “well established that the Constitution protects the right to receive information and ideas.”\nIn 2012, the Supreme Court said the government cannot “orchestrate public discussion through content-based mandates.”\nWhat will a Trump-influenced Supreme Court say?\nDon't miss the point of the First Amendment\nIf the Free Speech lawsuit against Trump makes it that far, this could be another chance for the highest court in the land to speak up for a free press.\nBut Arpaio’s suit may represent the hopes of those who want to curb speech a politician doesn't like. It could become a vehicle to allow a more conservative high court to start rolling back America's press freedoms.\nTrump supporters who see that as a good thing are missing the point of the First Amendment.\nIt wasn't written to protect journalists. It was written to protect free people.\nReach Valdez at linda.valdez@arizonarepublic.com.\nMORE FROM VALDEZ:\nTucson woman wants to make sure deported parents don't lose their kids\nArizona Supreme Court blames the domestic violence victim, takes the kids\nSecretary of State candidate says LGBT workers don't need law to protect them\nWant more opinions? Subscribe to azcentral.com.\nRead or Share this story: https://www.azcentral.com/story/opinion/op-ed/lindavaldez/2018/10/17/donald-trump-first-amendment-lawsuit-joe-arpaio-new-york-times/1673686002/\nDump #DumpStarbucks over Tempe cops incident\nDo Democrats even want to win in 2020?\nWhy our schools are crushing this national test\nWhat? Did Gov. Ducey wear Nikes on July 4th?\nDiane Douglas's latest rant is just sick\nWhy did Gov. Ducey channel Trump over Nike?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line342779"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6458548903465271,"wiki_prob":0.3541451096534729,"text":"Critique of a Yellowish Piece of “Journalistic”-Trash\nNortheast / New York 1 week ago 40 Views\nJul 05, 2019EditorialComments Off on Critique of a Yellowish Piece of “Journalistic”-Trash\nOp-ed by Howard Eagle –\nHoward Eagle\nThat’s right, I’m referring to City Newspaper’s so-called ‘Highlights from an early summer primary‘, as representing “journalistic”-trash, which are very strong words, and which I should either be able to validate, or I should apologize. So, examine my critique (below), and you decide whether or not I owe the three different “news” reporters (truly amazing) who compiled the article an apology, or not.\nThe very first fact that should be emphasized is super-“low 14 percent Democratic [voter] turnout,” which City pundits attempted to minimize by, for no logically or relevant reason, mentioning that it “was slightly higher than four years ago”. How pitiful is that? Next, let’s be clear that the majority of those who did turnout to vote were mainly middle and upper class white folks who would not dream of sending their own children, grandchildren, nieces, nephews, cousins, etc. to Rochester City School District (RCSD) schools, period. So, most have no skin in the game. The 86% (the overwhelming majority of whom are poor and Black, and have the most skin in the game) stayed home, as usual.\nAs noted, “voters returned incumbents Beatriz LeBron (whom many believe is devilish) and Willa Powell (the 20-plus-years-know-nothing, or at least, know-little about urban, public education)\nand elected newcomers Amy Maloy and Ricardo Adams”—all of whom are recipients of benefits that flowed from thousands upon thousands of dollars spent by New York State United Teachers (NYSUT), Rochester Teachers Association (RTA), and other racist unions, in order to ensure victory of the so-called Powell Adams LeBron Maloy Slate. They are all definitely beholding to the man who many refer to as ‘the real RCSD superintendent,’ Mister Adam Urbanski.\nNow here’s where their “journalistic”-rubish starts to get really yellowish and trashy. They claim that “it’s hard to draw an overarching conclusion”\\.Really? Well it was quite easy for me to do so. The bottom line is that old, entrenched, status-quo-based, white, minority-rule, continues firmly intact in slave-town-U.S.A. Additionally, they actually had the intestinal fortitude, raw audacity, unmitigated gall to attempt to convince you and me that “the election results don’t seem to indicate a particular dissatisfaction with the school board.” They have got to be kidding. A full 86% of the electorate did not bother to show up (as most haven’t for decades). Yet, “the election results don’t seem to indicate a particular dissatisfaction with the school board?” WHAT? Even in the face of clear reality, the pundits still tried to make the case that “people did care enough about the district and the school board to show up and vote.” Well, we know (for sure) which “people” they’re talking about (the mainly white, middle and upper class minority-majority; along with some middle and upper class Blacks and other people of color, many of whom exhibit “Negropean” tendencies, and therefore (obviously) vote similar to, or just like their white counterparts, and a smattering of ordinary poor and working people. The fact that “the top vote-getters were incumbents LeBron and Powell” is an absolute affirmation that old, deeply-entrenched status-quo reigns.\nIt’s very interesting, if not amazing that three different journalists (collectively) can’t keep the story straight. For example, they claimed that “Anthony Hall and Robert Hoggard campaigned independently,” but those of us who were on the ground know that Hall and Hoggard were supposedly part of a slate that included Lebron and Adams. Thus, two were used solely to siphon off votes, and the other two were anointed by RTA’s racist ‘czar,’ along with two white women (one of whom has presided over chaos and dysfunction for more than two decades). Yes, that’s really what happened.\nNot only is their political ineptness, less than stellar research skills, and hegemonic tendencies on full display, but they are actually distorting the truth. For example they claimed that Rochester Board of Education Commissioner Judith Davis “abdicated one of her most important jobs as a board member, refusing to take part in the selection of a new superintendent because she disagreed with the process.” That’s a straight-up distorted, convoluted, conflated, twisted lie. She did in fact participate in all of the initial interviews, and definitely voted, but at the same time, she also publicly criticized the exclusionary (of parents, families and community), illegitimate, rigged process, which has absolutely nothing to do with so-called “abdicating” anything at all. Instead, the pundits obviously do not recognize critically important, necessary interruption of the entrenched status-quo when they see it. Perhaps that’s because they are such a vital part of it.\nThey tried to make a big deal out of the fact that “the current board has already committed to the professional development that Aquino recommended.” Yet they had nothing to say about the specific nature of what was, and was not recommended and why, e.g., one of Dr. Aquino’s most important findings is that “the Board acknowledges that there is a need to minimize the underlying racial tension that exists among the group and has engaged in two retreats to begin to address these issues” (Finding #4, p.16). However, one of the few shortfalls of the Report is that it contains no specific recommendations for conclusively addressing/resolving this fundamentally vital issue, which we can be certain did not get resolved via two so-called “retreats.” In the final analysis, the journalistic-pundits are merely spewing status-quo-supporting rhetoric.\nLastly, they claim that “if the June and August graduation rates continue to improve, and parents and teachers like what they see in new superintendent Terry Dade, voters may be reluctant to support the [State] takeover.” It’s most interesting that they would mention “graduation rates” and “new superintendent Terry Dade” in the same sentence, especially when considering that Superintendent Dade expressed to members of our Coalition (https://www.facebook.com/tidpc/) when we met with him on June 26th that he has been wondering about something that we believe is very, very important; something that we have also pondered for years. “How can we have a 60% graduation rate when proficiency rates are in the low teens?” Is anyone willing to try to provide a credible, rational, informed, valid answer? Don’t ask the pundits because they are guaranteed to steer you wrong.\nHoward Eagle is a longtime educator and local anti-racism advocate, known for his campaigns for the Rochester school board and prolific political and social commentary. Eagle taught social studies in the RCSD for 23 years, before retiring in 2010, and is now an adjunct professor in the Department of African American Studies at SUNY Brockport.\nClick HERE to comment on this article from our Facebook page\nPrevious PostSupreme Court Sends Mixed Civil Rights Signals As America Celebrates July 4th Next PostEast's Shaun Nelms Leads ROC the Future Convener Board\nAnother Call to Action: Come Out On March 30TH\nAn Open Letter to Tim Louis Macaluso, City Newspaper\nJim Ryan, Who Specifically is the “We” in Your Article?\nMinority Reporter\nWhy Dem. Senators Richard Pan and Steven Glazer Are Holding Out Their Votes on Ethnic Studies Bill","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1608954"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5923911333084106,"wiki_prob":0.5923911333084106,"text":"Do You Own Anything You're Wearing?\nWith a queen's ransom of loaner gowns, jewelry, and heels at the Metropolitan Museum of Art's Costume Institute Gala, the CFDA Fashion Awards, and the Emmy Awards, we wondered which items actually belonged to the celebrities wearing them.\nThe 8 Best Beauty Looks From the 2014 Emmy Awards\nThe 66th annual Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles were nothing short of spectacular. As our favorite actresses accepted their statues (and cracked up at some of the funniest people in the world), we rounded up our favorite hair and makeup looks of the night. Take a peek at the top beauty moments that truly impressed us.\nToday's Alluring Links\nAll the looks (good and bad) from the Billboard Music Awards red carpet, what Julianna Margulies and Chrissy Teigen have in common, and some high-stakes nose strips in today's Alluring Links....\n9 Celebrities Talk About Dating\nBad-date horror story? You're not alone. Take solace in the fact that even celebrities have been there, too.\nCelebrity Hairstylist Chris McMillan on Prepping Julianna Margulies for the Golden Globes\nI've been doing Julianna Margulies's hair all week (I also helped her get ready for the People's Choice Awards and the AFI luncheon) and she is such a pleasure to work with. She says...\nThe Best Beauty Looks of the 2014 Golden Globes\nSome of the events at this year's Golden Globes were expected—Tina Fey and Amy Poehler killed it, Lena Dunham wore canary yellow, and Jennifer Lawrence won an award. What surprised us? Emma Thompson threw off her shoes, everyone was pregnant, and the hair and makeup was stunning across the board. We recap our favorites of the night.\nJulianna Margulies Named the Face of L'Oréal's Women of Worth\nI love it when a company makes good products and tries to do some good as well. In 2006, L'Oréal launched its Women of Worth program, which recognizes women who are making a big difference...\nHair Idea: Red Carpet Ponytails\nA My Little Pony Obsession has officially hit the red carpet, and this time, the evening ponytail trend transcends age—worn by teen stars like Shailene Woodley as well as over-40 actresses like Diane Lane (who...\nOn Location With The Good Wife\nWe recently dropped in on a taping of CBS TV's legal drama, The Good Wife. Two of the stars—Julianna Margulies, who plays Alicia, and Josh Charles, who plays Will—along with the rest of the crew,...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1036582"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5143121480941772,"wiki_prob":0.48568785190582275,"text":"SFWS Seminar Series – Dr. Ilari Filpponen\nSeptember 19, 2018 @ 11:00 am - 12:00 pm\n« AUsome Amphibians and Reptiles\nAUsome Amphibians and Reptiles »\nAuburn University School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences Fall Seminar Series Presents:\nDr. Ilari Filpponen, Assistant Research Professor, Alabama Center for Paper and Bioresource Engineering, Department of Chemical Engineering, College of Engineering, at Auburn University who will give a talk entitled, Tailoring the surface wettability of cellulose-based paper/nanopaper via novel photo-induced thiol-ene and thiol-yne reactions: Towards electronic and microfluidic applications.\nSeminar is held at 11 a.m. in Conference Room 1101 in the SFWS Building, 602 Duncan Drive, Auburn, AL.\nFaculty, students and the public are invited to attend this free program.\nComplimentary cookies and coffee will be served.\nCFEs are available by request.\nAdvanced registration is not required.\nParking is available on the 3rd and 4th floors of the South Quad parking deck on Duncan Drive, directly across from the SFWS Building. See Parking Services on Level 3 to obtain a visitor pass.\nFilms prepared from cellulose nanofibrils (CNF) have recently been considered as promising substrates for the utilization in electronic devices including displays, transistors, organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), touchscreens, lithium ion batteries, solar cells, transparent conductive electrodes and antennas. However, a significant drawback for the use of CNF films in such applications is their high sensitivity to moisture. In this work, a novel and facile process to tailor the wettability of CNF film was developed. Firstly, transparent and reactive porous silicone brush-like nanolayers were introduced onto the CNF film surface by polycondensation of trichlorovinylsilane. Next, the pre-modified CNF films were converted superhydrophobic by introducing low surface tension thiolated fluorine and alkyl molecules via thiol-ene chemistry. Water contact angles (WCA) of 167° and WCA hysteresis < 3° were determined and found to change little after extensive rubbing cycles.\nMoreover, it is demonstrated that the micropatterning of cellulose paper/nanopaper can be achieved by using a novel and highly-effective thiol-yne click reaction. Firstly, the paper/nanopaper was functionalized with 4-pentynoic acid via well-known and scalable esterification procedure. Degrees of substitution (DO) of 0.2 and 0.3 were obtained for the paper and nanopaper, respectively. Next, the alkyne-bearing cellulose substrate was subjected to photo-induced click reactions with various thiol-containing molecules to yield either hydrophobic or hydrophilic cellulose surfaces. Finally, micropatterning of the cellulose surfaces was demonstrated by using a photomask-assisted approach. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), contact angle measurements (CAM) and X-Ray photoelectron spectroscopy were applied to characterize the main morphological and chemical features of the produced materials. Main results and possible applications for such systems will be discussed.\nDr. Ilari Filpponen gained his Master’s degree (2003) from University of Helsinki, Finland majoring in organic chemistry, and his PhD degree (2009) from North Carolina State University (NCSU) with research on production and chemical modifications of cellulose nanocrystals. In 2009-2010 he conducted postdoctoral studies at the NCSU after which he joined the Department of Forest Products Technology, Aalto University, Finland. In 2016, he started as an assistant research professor at Auburn University (joint appointment between SFWS & CHEN). He is currently performing research on chemical functionalization of cellulosic substrates by using different chemistries, with special emphasis on Click chemistry based approaches. His research targets on developing value-added products from renewable woody biomass. To date, he has authored and co-authored 40+ peer-reviewed publications and delivered 30+ presentations in domestic and international conferences.\nEvents, Main Calendar\nDr. Brenda Allen\nallenbm@auburn.edu\nAuburn, AL 36849 United States + Google Map\nPage Last Updated: Sep 12, 2018 @ 5:17 pm","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line48873"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8725088834762573,"wiki_prob":0.8725088834762573,"text":"Jerry Buss (1933-2013): Greatest U.S. sports team owner ever!\nWhen ranking the sports team owners in American professional sports, it is not much of a contest, because Jerry Buss, who recently passed away, has every other owner beat by a mile, including New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, who passed away in 2010.\nMany people say that the Yankees are the premiere team in American sports, mostly because their history of greatness dates back to the early 1900s, but in the modern era it is not even close. The Lakers, mostly because of the vision of Buss, has been the greatest franchise in any sport.\nSince Buss purchased the Lakers in 1979, the Lakers have made it to the NBA Finals 16 times, which is nearly half of the years that Buss owned the team. They won the title 10 times, more than any other American professional sports team over that time period. Under Steinbrenner, who owned the Yankees from 1973 until his passing, the ball club won seven World Series titles in 11 appearances.\nBuss took a team that was one of the better teams in the NBA and turned them into the greatest pro team in the nation. When he took over the Lakers were not even the best team in town. Los Angeles was a Dodgers town. USC football and UCLA basketball were a lot more popular, as the Lakers had lost seven times in the NBA Finals from the time that they moved to Los Angeles from Minneapolis in 1960 until Buss bought the team. All of those losses came against the Celtics, and the Lakers had only won the NBA title once over that time period, in 1972.\nWhen Buss took over the Celtics had 13 NBA titles compared to the Lakers six (five of those won in Minneapolis), and it did not seem like any team would ever come close to catching them. But since Buss took over the Lakers have defeated the Celtics three times in the NBA Finals, won 10 overall, and now they are only behind the Celtics by one championship (17-16).\nFormer Laker Tommy Hawkins remembers the Dodgers receiving a parade in Downtown when they moved to Los Angeles in 1958, but when the Lakers showed up two years later, they came in on a bus through San Bernadino and nobody knew who they were.\nBefore Buss bought the team the Lakers were always lost in the shuffle of the Los Angeles sporting scene. But he instantly changed that.\nBuss' first move was to create Showtime, and that was not just on the court. He understood that in Los Angeles, just watching a game would not be enough to captivate people who are in the \"Entertainment Capitol of the World.\" Buss created an environment that the Hollywood stars wanted to be at. Laker games were the place to be, not just for celebrities, but for the masses.\nBuss created a show, but at the same time, that was not going to hold people's attention for long. Laker great Kareem Abdul-Jabbar pointed out that dancing girls were not going to win games. The show was not just during timeouts, or before and after the game. The main attraction was the players, and Buss stopped at nothing to get the best.\nOne thing that separated Buss from other owners who will stop at nothing to win was that Buss knew his role, and he let others do their jobs. Bill Sharman and Jerry West built the rosters that became Showtime. They surrounded Magic Johnson and Abdul-Jabbar with other star players. They took the risk on drafting James Worthy over Dominique Wilkins. They took the risk to trade Norm Nixon in order to draft Byron Scott. And to trade Vlade Divac for Kobe Bryant, who was right out of high school. That was a major risk because Shaquille O'Neal had not signed with the team at that point, and there was no telling if he would come to Los Angeles.\nBuss also allowed O'Neal to be traded, and he convinced Bryant that he should be a Laker forever, which resulted into two more championships.\nBuss' efforts and his visions have given Los Angeles fans the best team in the modern era of sports. The only thing that it looks like Buss will miss out on is when the Lakers finally catch, and pass, the Celtics in total titles.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line284095"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8477849960327148,"wiki_prob":0.8477849960327148,"text":"Table of Contents » Gretna\nGretna, Town of\nCounty of Pittsylvania\nHistory of incorporation\nFormerly the Town of Elba.\nElba charter, 1901, c. 19, incorporation and charter; repealed 1916, c. 223.\nElba, 1914, c. 167, name changed to Gretna.\nGretna charter, 1916, c. 223; repealed 1979, c. 308.\nCurrent charter\nCharter, 1979, c. 308.\nAmendments to current charter\n1980, c. 70 (§ 4)\n2003, cc. 659, 672 (§ 4)\n2010, c. 173 (§ 4)\n§ 1. Style of corporation.\nThe inhabitants of the territory in Pittsylvania County, Virginia, comprised within the present limits of the town of Gretna, as such limitations are now or may hereinafter be altered and established by law, shall constitute and continue a body, politic and corporate, to be known and designated as the town of Gretna, and as such shall have and may exercise all powers which are now or hereafter may be conferred upon or delegated to towns under the Constitution and laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia, as fully and completely as though such powers were specifically enumerated herein, and no enumeration of particular powers by this charter shall be held to be exclusive, and shall have, exercise and enjoy all rights, immunities, powers and privileges and be subject to all the duties and obligations now appertaining to and incumbent on the town as a municipal corporation, and the town of Gretna, as such, shall have perpetual succession, may sue and be sued, implead and be impleaded, contract and be contracted with, and may have a corporate seal, which it may alter, renew or amend at its pleasure by proper ordinance. (1979, c. 308)\n§ 2. Town boundaries.\nThe territory and limits of the town shall embrace and extend one-half mile in every direction from the marker indicating the site of the chimney of the Southern Railway depot. (1979, c. 308)\n§ 3. Powers generally.\nIn addition to the powers elsewhere mentioned in this charter and powers conferred by general law, and the Constitution, the town of Gretna shall have specifically, but not limited to, all powers set forth in §§ 15.1-837 through 15.1-915.1, inclusive, of the Code of Virginia. (1979, c. 308)\n§ 4. Administration and government.\nA. The administration and government of the Town of Gretna shall be vested in one body, to be called the council of the Town of Gretna, which shall consist of seven members, six of whom shall be known as councilmen and one to be known as mayor, all of whom shall be residents and qualified voters of the town. The council of the town shall have power to elect or appoint such other officers as it may deem necessary, and to define their duties, including a town manager, who shall, under the control of the council, have the general charge and management of the administrative affairs and work of the town, and who shall perform such other duties as may be required of him by the council. The manager shall receive a salary as shall be allowed him by the council, and may be dismissed at any time by the council. The council may create, appoint, or elect such other departments, bodies, boards, and other officers as are hereinafter provided for, or as are permitted or required by law to be appointed by the council.\nB. The present mayor and council of the Town of Gretna shall continue in office until the expiration of the term for which they were respectively elected, or until their successors are duly elected and qualified.\nC. The mayor and the six councilmen shall constitute the Town Council of Gretna.\nIn the year 2010, and every two years thereafter, the mayor shall be elected at large by the qualified voters of the Town of Gretna at a municipal election to be held in November. The mayor shall be elected for a term of two years beginning on the January 1 next following his election and shall serve until his successor shall have been elected and qualified.\nIn the year 2010, and every four years thereafter, three councilmen shall be elected at large by the qualified voters of the Town of Gretna at a regular municipal election to be held in November for four-year terms beginning on the January 1 next following their election and shall serve until their successors shall have been elected and qualified.\nThe council shall be a continuing body, and no measure pending before such body shall abate or be discontinued by reason of expiration of the term of office or removal of the members of such body or any of them. Every person elected shall take an oath faithfully to execute and discharge the duties of his office to the best of his judgment, and the mayor shall take an oath prescribed by law for State officers. The failure of any person elected or appointed under the provisions of this charter to qualify or to take the oath required, within the time prescribed for entering upon the discharge of the duties of the office to which he is elected or appointed, shall vacate the office, and the council shall proceed and are hereby vested with power to fill such vacancy in the manner herein prescribed.\nAny vacancy occurring during the term of any member of the council shall be filled by the council by the appointment of anyone eligible to such office. A vacancy in the office of mayor shall be filled by the council from the electors of the town as soon as possible.\nD. For the transaction of business by the council, four members, of whom the mayor may be counted as one, shall constitute a quorum.\nE. Each member of the council may receive a salary to be fixed by the council, payable at such times, and in such manner, as the council may direct. The mayor may receive a salary to be fixed by the council, payable in such manner and at such times as the council may direct. No increase in salary of a council member or the mayor shall take effect during the incumbent council member's or mayor's term of office.\nF. The mayor shall preside at the meetings of the council and perform such other duties as may be prescribed by this charter and by general law, and such as may be imposed by the council, consistent with his office. The mayor shall have no right to vote in the council, except that in case of a tie vote then the mayor shall vote.\nG. The council shall, as soon as practicable, after qualification, choose one of its members as vice mayor. The vice mayor shall perform the duties of the mayor during his absence or disability, and in event of a vacancy for any reason in the office of mayor, he shall serve until a mayor is duly appointed by the council or is elected. The vice mayor shall continue to have all rights, privileges, powers, duties, and obligations of a councilman while performing the duties of mayor, during the absence or disability of the mayor of the town. In the absence of the mayor or vice mayor, the mayor may designate a member of the council to perform his duties.\nH. The council shall, by ordinance, fix the time for their meetings, but shall have at least one meeting each month. Special meetings shall be called by the clerk at the instance of the mayor or any three members of the council, in writing; no business shall be transacted at a special meeting but that for which it shall be called, unless the council be unanimous. The meetings of the council shall be open to the public, except such meetings as may be permitted by general law to be closed.\nI. The council shall keep a minute book, in which the clerk shall note the proceeding of the council, and shall record proceedings at large on the minute book and keep the same properly indexed.\nJ. The council may adopt rules for regulating its proceedings, but no tax shall be levied or corporate debt contracted, except by a vote of two-thirds of the council, four votes being counted as two-thirds, which vote shall be taken by \"Yeas\" and \"Nays,\" and recorded in the minute book. It may appoint such committees as may be deemed proper for the transaction of business, and may compel attendance of absent members.\nK. The council may require the mayor to communicate to it annually as soon after the close of the fiscal year, or more often, if necessary a general statement of the condition of the town in relation to its government, finances and improvements, with such recommendations as he may deem proper. He shall exercise a constant supervision over the conduct of all subordinate officers, have power and authority to investigate their acts, have access to all books and documents in their offices, and may examine such officer on oath. He shall have power to suspend all officers appointed by the council until the next regular meeting of the council, but such suspension shall, in all cases, be for misconduct in office or neglect of duty, to be specified in the order of suspension. In case of suspension of any officer, the mayor shall submit a written report of the same to the council at its next regular meeting, or any meeting called for that purpose, specifically designating the charge against the officer and reasons for dismissal, and in case of suspension by the mayor, he shall have power to appoint some other person in his place to hold such office and perform the duties thereof until the next regular meeting of the council.\nL. Every ordinance passed by the council for the violation of which a penalty is imposed shall be published in such a way as the council may order, so as to give general publicity thereto, and no order may become effective until so published, either by handbills posted in at least two public places, or in a newspaper published and having general circulation in the town, except in the case of an emergency, in which instance the ordinance shall so state and shall become effective immediately upon its passage. If published by handbill, a certification of the posting thereof shall be made by the clerk or sergeant as to the time and place where the ordinance is recorded; provided, however, that after the expiration of six months from date of the passage of any ordinance, its publication shall not be questioned, or its validity affected by any failure to publish the same.\nM. The council may, in addition to a town manager, appoint a town sergeant, a clerk and a treasurer. Such officers shall qualify and give bond, if any be required, in such amount as council may deem proper. Such officers shall perform those duties as council, from time to time, may prescribe by ordinance not inconsistent with the Constitution and general laws of this Commonwealth. The clerk of the council and the treasurer may be one and the same person in the discretion of the council.\nN. The council may add penalties and interest, in an amount not to exceed that provided for, if any, by State law, for failure of any person or firm or corporation to pay taxes or licenses at the time provided for by ordinances of the council, and there shall be a lien for all taxes assessed which may be enforced as provided by general law of the Commonwealth.\nO. The council shall issue no bonds or certificates of debt, except in anticipation of current revenue, until it shall have first submitted to the qualified voters of the town by a court ordered election on the question of whether or not such bonds shall be issued and a majority of the qualified voters voting at any election held for such purpose shall have voted for such issue. Such election shall be held as provided for by general laws of this Commonwealth including, specifically, § 24.1-165. A copy of the court order shall be published at least five days before the election in some newspaper published in the town or having general circulation therein. The publisher of the newspaper shall certify to the publication thereof, which certification shall be recorded in the minute book of the town.\nP. The council may provide for a sinking fund for the purpose of paying off as it matures, any indebtedness of the town and may make an additional levy therefor, such sinking fund to be set aside and invested as provided for hereinafter.\nWhen taxes on real and personal property are collected for the year, the town treasurer shall take therefrom the necessary amount of any additional sum, if any, so set apart, and deposit the same in a separate account to the credit of the sinking fund in such bank or banks as the council may designate.\nAll sinking funds shall be used exclusively in the payment or purchase and redemption of the outstanding bonds of the town, and when such sinking funds are not required or may not, within a reasonable time, be required for payment of any bond of the town, or cannot be used to advantage in purchase and redemption of any bond of the town, which may be outstanding, the same shall be securely invested in interest bearing municipal, State or U. S. government bonds or obligations, or invested in any security approved by the general laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia for investment of such funds. Such sinking funds may be used in the payment or redemption of all bonds of the town, at the discretion of the council.\nThe town council shall act as the sinking fund commission or committee and shall provide for the investment, deposit and application of the funds in conformity to the provisions of this charter; and may require any bank or banks receiving on deposit its revenues or any of its sinking fund a fidelity bond or other security.\nQ. The council may provide for charging and collecting fees for permits to use public facilities and for public services and privileges. The town shall have the power and right to charge a different rate for any service rendered or convenience furnished to citizens without the corporate limits from the rates charged for similar services to citizens within the corporate limits.\nR. The council may establish, regulate and control a department or division of fire.\nS. The council may establish, regulate and control a department or division of police. (1979, c. 308; 1980, c. 70; 2003, cc. 659, 672; 2010, c. 173)\n§ 5. Fixed term elections or appointments.\nWhenever, under the provisions of this charter, any officer of the town or member of any board or commission is elected or appointed for a fixed term, such officer or member shall continue to hold office until his successor is appointed and qualified. (1979, c. 308)\n§ 6. Validation of contracts.\nAll contracts and obligations heretofore or hereafter made by the council of the town of Gretna, while in office, not inconsistent with this charter, or the Constitution, or the general laws of this Commonwealth, shall be, and hereby are declared to be valid and legal. (1979, c. 308)\n§ 7. Ordinances to continue in force.\nAll ordinances now in force in the town of Gretna, not inconsistent with this charter, shall be and remain in full force until altered, amended or repealed by the council of the town. (1979, c. 308)\n§ 8. Severability of charter provisions.\nIf any clause, sentence, paragraph or part of this charter shall, for any reason, be adjudged by any court of competent jurisdiction to be invalid, such judgment shall not affect, impair or invalidate the remainder of the charter, but shall be confined in its operations to the clause, sentence, paragraph or part thereof, directly involved in the controversy in which such judgment shall be rendered. (1979, c. 308)\n§ 9. Citation of charter.\nThis charter may for all purposes, be cited or referred to as the Town of Gretna Charter of 1979. (1979, c. 308)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1740327"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6859259605407715,"wiki_prob":0.3140740394592285,"text":"India | Orissa | Puri\nChilika Wildlife Sanctuary\nNalaban Wildlife Sanctuary\nSituated in the districts of Puri, Khordha and Ganjam of Orissa, Chilika Wildlife Sanctuary is known for its immaculate scenic beauty and rich bio-diversity. It is managed by the Forest Department of the Government of Orissa. The sanctuary, spread over an area of 1000 sq km, was established in 1987 with the aim to protect the wildlife in Chilika, the largest brackish water lagoon. Due to its rich bio-diversity, the sanctuary is identified as a 'Ramsar Site'(a wetland of international importance).\nChilika Wildlife Sanctuary is a habitat for migratory birds and butterflies and protects endangered species such as blackbuck and spotted deer. Main attractions are lesser flamingos, grey and purple herons, egrets, spoonbills, storks and white ibis. Chilika Lake, Asia�s largest brackish water lake, supports a wide variety of fish, prawn, algae and aquatic plants.\nThe sanctuary is 50 km away from Puri city and 100 km away from Bhubaneswar. It is well connected to Chennai-Kolkata national highway. Chennai-Kolkata rail line passes along the western side of Chilika.\nDistrict: Khordha\nLocation: Puri","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line764883"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.651981770992279,"wiki_prob":0.34801822900772095,"text":"Proposal for H-1B visas to favour advanced US degrees underway\nA proposal by the Trump administration to make changes to the current H-1B visa application process has come into the spotlight recently, sparking debate over whether or not it’s a fair move. This proposal is a result of United States President Donald Trump’s direction that urges companies and agencies to adopt a “Buy American, Hire American” strategy.\nI wonder if they will get the pre-registration process in place prior to the 2019 H-1B application lottery or not. #H1B #Preregistration https://t.co/iXFYAyweT8\n— Immigration Lawyer (@HSDImmigration) December 4, 2018\nThe H1-B visa, for those who are unaware, is a temporary visa in the United States under the Immigration and Nationality Act that allows foreign workers to be employed in the country under a specialty occupation.\nSpecialty occupations are jobs which commonly require a bachelor’s degree or experience in that particular field. The visa is valid for three years, and then renewable for another three years, thus clearing a path to citizenship, making it most attractive to students intending to make a life for themselves in the United States after graduation.\nThe H1-B is known among international students in America for being difficult to obtain, as there is a limit to the number of visas given out each year. Therefore, not everyone who qualifies or applies will receive it, even if their employer is willing to sponsor them, and it ultimately comes down to the luck of the draw.\nIn the past, certain degrees were also favoured, mainly from the tech sector, making the odds even slimmer for those who don’t have degrees in that field. The rationale behind this was to fill the employment gap that employers faced in these fields.\nThe proposed changes might make it more difficult for tech companies who have relied heavily on filling their workforce with skilled workers from other countries, such as India. Top tech companies such as Google and Facebook hire tens of thousands of foreign workers each year under the H1-B visa. However, this will reduce the likelihood of these workers being underpaid or certain companies hiring unskilled workers, as the new process will make that near impossible.\nThe new process might negatively affect the tech industry’s workforce. Source: Shutterstock\nCurrently, the lottery for 20,000 H-1B visas given to advanced degree holders from US institutions are conducted first, then followed by the remaining 65,000 H-1B visas, open to anyone who intended to anyone who holds a bachelor’s degree and intends to take on a specialty occupation.\nWith the new proposed changes, the process will be changed in an effort to introduce a selection based on merit, according to USCIS. All registrations, including those from people eligible for the advanced degree exemption, will be included in the application pool for the regular cap of 65,000. Following that, USCIS will select from the remaining applicants to fill the degree cap.\nWhat this means is that the number of H1-B holders who have advanced degrees from US universities will have a higher chance of obtaining the visa, potentially increasing the number of H-1B holders with these degrees to 16 percent, ensuring that “more of the best and brightest workers from around the world come to America”, according to CNN Business.\nAnother big change being proposed is to move the registration process online. Currently, US employers file a full H-1B petition for their applicants before lottery selections, but with the new ruling, employers must first register their applications online with USCIS during a designated registration period. Following this, if their applicants are selected for the visa lottery, they will need to prepare and submit the full application.\nIt is not clear if the new online system will be implemented before the next round of H-1B visa applications, set to be in April next year. Public comments on the proposed rule can be submitted from December 3 to January 2.\nWhere are Indian H-1B rejects heading?\nQuiz: How well do you know the H-1B visa program?\nTopics covered: US visas","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1041749"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9489031434059143,"wiki_prob":0.9489031434059143,"text":"Theiapolis > Cinema > Titles > T... > Th... > The... >\nThe Adventures of Pluto Nash2002\n| Gallery | Quotes || The Adventures of Pluto Nash: DVD | Blu-Ray | Collectibles\nDirected by Ron Underwood, \"The Adventures of Pluto Nash\" (also known as \"Pluto Nash\", \"Pluto Nash - Im Kampf gegen die Mondmafia\") is a Comedy/Action/Science Fiction film, released on August 16 of 2002 in the USA , starring Eddie Murphy, Randy Quaid, Rosario Dawson, Joe Pantoliano, Jay Mohr and Luis Guzmán.\nThe Man On The Moon\nWho directed \"The Adventures of Pluto Nash\":\nThe Adventures of Pluto Nash was directed by Ron Underwood, an American director, writer, and producer.\nBefore The Adventures of Pluto Nash, Ron Underwood had directed Mighty Joe Young, released in 1998, Speechless (1994), Heart and Souls (1993), City Slickers (1991), Tremors (1990). Since, he directed In the Mix, released in 2005.\nWhen was \"The Adventures of Pluto Nash\" released:\nThe Adventures of Pluto Nash was first released on Friday, August 16, 2002, in the United States.. This was sixteen (16) years ago.\nIt has been released on Friday, August 30, 2002 in the United Kingdom; Friday, August 16, 2002 in Canada; Wednesday, August 21, 2002 in France; Thursday, May 22, 2003 in Germany; Friday, November 29, 2002 in Italy; Friday, August 23, 2002 in Spain; Thursday, August 22, 2002 in Australia and on Saturday, May 17, 2003 in Japan.\nWhat is the cast of \"The Adventures of Pluto Nash\":\nAt the casting of The Adventures of Pluto Nash we find Eddie Murphy, previously seen in Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001) and Shrek (2001); Randy Quaid (The Adventures of Rocky & Bullwinkle (2000), The Debtors (1999)); Rosario Dawson (Men in Black II (2002), The First $20 Million Is Always the Hardest (2002)) [ more... ]\nPeter Boyle and John Cleese can be seen in Yellowbeard, released in 1983.\nEddie Murphy and John Cleese also worked together in Shrek 2, released in 2004.\nJohn Cleese and Eddie Murphy can also be seen in Shrek the Third, released in 2007.\nWhat is the Storyline of \"The Adventures of Pluto Nash\":\nIn 2080, on a Moon colony called Little America, a retired smuggler called Pluto Nash (Eddie Murphy) buys a nightclub, in an attempt to fulfill a longtime wish of his. Additionally, this prevents the murder by ingestion of battery acid of the club's previous owner, Anthony Frankowski (Jay Mohr) by mobsters Gino (Burt Young) and Larry (Lillo Brancato) whom Anthony owed money to. Seven years later, \"Club Pluto\" has become a successful business, frequented by many socialites. Its staff consists of Pluto [...]\nNo message has yet been posted about The Adventures of Pluto Nash.\nThe Adventures of Pluto Nash ➤ Message Board\nLuis Guzmán\nThe Adventures of Pluto Nash ➤ Cast\nNew HD Pictures from \"The Adventures of Tintin\", a film by Steven Spielberg\n2 messages - «The Adventures of Tintin» (also known as \"De avonturen van Kuifje - Het geheim van de Eenhoorn\", \"Les aventures de Tintin...\nNew Photos from \"The Adventures of Tintin\", a film by Steven Spielberg\n1 message - Directed by Steven Spielberg, and written by Steven Moffat, Edgar Wright, Joe Cornish and Hergé, «The Adventures of Tintin» (also...\nUpdated HD Gallery for \"The Adventures of Tintin\", a film by Steven Spielberg\n1 message - Starring Simon Pegg, Daniel Craig, Cary Elwes, Andy Serkis, Nick Frost and Jamie Bell, «The Adventures of Tintin» (also known as \"De...\nHD images of \"Captain Haddock\" from \"The Adventures of Tintin\" (2011), a film by Steven Spielberg\n[PHOTO GALLERY] \"The Adventures of Tintin\", a film by Steven Spielberg\n( 2003 )The Adventures of Ociee Nash\nDirected by: K. McGary, starring S. Day, A. P. Rodriguez, B. Butler, K. Carradine...\n( 1983 )The Adventures of Bob & Doug McKenzie: Strange Brew\nDirected by: R. Moranis, D. Thomas, starring D. Thomas, R. Moranis, M. von Sydow, P. Dooley...\nThe Adventures of Tintin: Prisoners of the Sun\nDirected by: P. Jackson\nResources: Castle Rock Entertainment, Village Roadshow Pictures, NPV Entertainment, Wikipedia and contributions from movie fans. Anyone can submit additionnal information and corrections, you can post a message into the forum, or you can contact me by e-mail. Information and materials are submitted by users and thus may not always contain up-to-date and correct information, so do not hesite to report mistakes, and submit corrections.Thank you!. Direct editing is no longer available, sorry.\nThis page includes a \"Storyline\" from Wikipedia (EN) which is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License; additional terms may apply.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line77398"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5575003027915955,"wiki_prob":0.5575003027915955,"text":"The Other America\nA young man, who had emigrated from India, stood up hesitantly, then fearlessly asked the famous author on the stage, “Could you please share some of your experiences and offer advice as to how to transition between Indian and American cultures?” Nilanjana Sudeshna Lahiri, who goes by Jhumpa, smiled at the questioner and her audience before stating that she had grown up American and her experiences of navigating cultures could be found in her stories and writings.\nFrom a hospitably crowded pew in Hendricks Chapel on a cold night on the Syracuse University campus, I thought about the “other America,” the one disparaged for its diversity, by the current U.S. President. Hendricks Chapel that evening was filled to capacity with Americans of every color and shade on the planet. What distinguished this crowd from the America painted by Trump and his ardent supporters was not skin color alone, however, but a curiosity of intellect, a willingness to listen to others, an empathy and understanding of humanity that runs wide and deep. While people’s experiences in the hushed chapel were varied, everyone shared a common concern for the redefinitions of America and Americans under the new president. Even if that concern was quiet and reflective, not posed in anger or vitriol, the Americans in Hendricks Chapel were determined not to let ignorance and fear, bigotry and animosity define them.\nWe had all arrived at Hendricks to hear Lahiri read from her new work In Other Words and to listen to her speak about language and how it shapes and suggests. We were present for a journey through cultural, philosophical, and intellectual waters all the way to Italy, as Jhumpa recounted her experiments in a language other than English.\nLahiri, who was born in England to parents originally from India, came to America when she was only two years old; she became an American citizen at 18 years. We are fortunate, indeed, to claim her as an American author—this Princeton University professor, winner of the O. Henry Award, the Pen/Hemmingway Award, and nominee for the National Book Award and the Man Booker Prize, among many other distinguishing recognitions for her achievements. Lahiri is also, very much, a citizen of the world, living much of the year in Rome, Italy, where she pursues her love of the Italian language and culture that competes and struggles with her love of her American culture and English language.\nA young teacher, originally from Cuba, sat to my right, and spoke with me at the end of Lahiri’s discussion about his students who were struggling with a much more basic command of their native language. Beside me sat a dear friend, originally from Ireland, but who had lived in France and knew multiple languages of the world, before coming to America to raise her family and teach American children French. In the pew behind me were Syracuse University students who had come out of curiosity and desire to learn, as much as for their course requirements. Not everyone in the audience could afford to buy Lahiri’s new book, but all of us made the time during the evening to listen and learn.\nDriving home from the event with Lahiri’s In Other Words on the passenger seat of my car, I thought about the petulant words of Donald Trump in his tweet to America on the cusp of the New Year, his jeering comment, “including my many enemies and those who have fought me and lost so badly they just don’t know what to do.” It is almost impossible to comprehend an American President claiming openly that more than half of the American electorate are his “enemies.” Needing scapegoats for societal ills, including mechanization and robotics replacing human jobs, Trump and his campaigners found those targets in Mexicans and Muslims, in women and girls, in black Americans and recent immigrants, legal immigrants, as well as those undocumented. Some in Trump’s Cabinet and those closest to his ears also targeted Jews, but more subtly, at first. Trump’s Executive Order on immigration restrictions, banning those from seven countries (but not those predominantly Muslim countries where Trump has business dealings), was dishonorably conceived, inherently unconstitutional, and poorly rolled out. It served, however, to deepen the divide in the United States of America. Of course, the irony is apparent in that Trump’s grandfather was an immigrant. There are no citizens in the United States, except American Indians, who are not the sons and daughters of immigrants a generation or several back. We all came from other shores.\nThe people gathered at Hendricks Chapel that evening were not elites in the Trump campaign’s sense of the word, regarding class, but they are elite in the meaning of the word that is “the choice, the best” because there were people who were thinkers and doers, thoughtful, tolerant, kind, and generous.\nAlthough the Trump presidency still fills me with dread and discomfort, I left Lahiri’s talk inspired by her bravery, as well as the daring of those other Americans who were recent immigrants. Long after hearing Lahiri’s quiet, lyrical voice and words, I thought about the metaphor of her “black sweater,” comparing that garment to her language, about what a language means to both identity and understanding of others. I may be saddened by the increasingly sharp divide among Americans, yet I remain hopeful that the American ideal is still alive, still inclusive, and even if not exactly exceptional, America, even in her flaws and fallibility, is still preeminent in her peoples who have hailed from all over this Earth.\nby Nancy Dafoe\nPrevious Post: Open Letter to Claudia Tenney\nNext Post: Where’d all these elephants come from?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1162278"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5462646484375,"wiki_prob":0.4537353515625,"text":"Rodney W. Casler\nLOUDONVILLE - Rodney W. Casler, age 49, resident of Loudonville, Ohio, died Tuesday, June 25, 2019, at his home surrounded by his family.\nBorn February 24, 1970, in Ashland, Ohio, he was the son of Roger E. and Ruth A. (Palser) Casler. Rodney had been a resident of the Loudonville-Perrysville area all his life and was a 1989 graduate of Loudonville High School. He worked at Mohican Reservation and Loudonville Canoe Livery for 15 years, retiring in 2016. He was also the owner/operator of Redbird Country Towing for several years. He was so proud of that wrecker! Rodney was good at working with his hands and could fix just about anything.\nRodney's favorite pastimes were spending time with his wife and family, hunting, fishing and camping. He was a loving, ornery jokester who brightened the lives of his family and friends. He loved buying and selling anything and everything because he was a \"Wheeler-Dealer\" and smooth talker. He was deeply devoted to his parents, wife, children and grandchildren, and they were devoted to him also.\nRodney is survived by his wife, Sherri J. Brothers Casler, whom he married on November 10, 2001; son, Zachery J. Casler (Bethany M. Miller); daughter-in-law, Christina R. Casler; stepson, William J. (BJ) Mondragon; two daughters, Ruthie M. and Julia R. Casler; two grandchildren, Joseph \"Joey\" L. Casler and Lillyann V. Blair; mother, Ruth A. Casler; two brothers, Timothy (Kim) Casler and Ronald (Rose) Casler; sister, Trinia K. Casler; aunts, Patricia Ash and Sylvia Hudson; uncles, Bob Palser and John Palser; and numerous nieces and nephews.\nHe was preceded in death by his father, Roger E. Casler; father-in-law, Pete (Orman) Brothers; two brothers, Joseph L. Casler and Michael Casler; sister, Larissa Taylor; and grandparents, Rev. Edwin Casler, Edith P. Barrier Casler, Cloyd F. Palser and Ruth Margaret Hively Palser.\nThere will be no visitation. A memorial service will be held Saturday, July 20, 2019, at 4:00 p.m. at the Perrysville Baptist Church with Rev. Howdie Burnett officiating. The Diamond Street Home of Wappner Funeral Directors is privileged to serve the family.\nWords of comfort may be expressed to the family at www.wappner.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line330942"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5458565354347229,"wiki_prob":0.4541434645652771,"text":"Learn About Damages and Profits Fast and Easy\nIf a holder of a copyright discovers that another party has used his or her material for their own benefit, it is a legal right of the copyright owner to file a civil lawsuit. Once a court has decided that copyright infringement has indeed taken place, it may decided upon remedies to make up for any damages suffered by the copyright owner because of the illegal activity. In most cases, courts may find that the infringer of the copyright is liable for the owner's actual damages sustained from improper use of his or her product or statutory damages.\nActual Damages and Profits\nJudging by the nature of the copyright infringement that took place on the copyright owner, the owner may be entitled to the actual damages suffered by him or her as a result of the infringement. This also includes any profits obtained by the infringer which are directly linked to the copyright violation.\nWhen establishing a proper amount of actual damages to compensate for the infringer's profits, the copyright owner is permitted to present evidence based on the infringer's gross revenue. At the same time, the infringer must prove that the profits he or she has incurred are not directly related to the copyright infringement through deductible expenses.\nStatutory Damages\nBefore a judgment is decided upon by a court of civil law, the copyright owner has the right to request the recovery of statutory damages caused by the infringement, rather than actual damages. This is based on any single work of authorship for which the infringer is liable either individually or through joint involvement.\nThe sum of statutory damages is never less than $750 and never more than $30,000. If the copyright owner is able to prove that the infringer committed the violation willfully, the statutory damages sum may increase to no more than $150,000. If the court finds that the infringer unknowingly committed the violation, the statutory damages sum is lowered to no less than $200.\nAdditional Damages\nSome cases may also provide further damages to the aggrieved copyright owner under a certain condition. If the court finds that the copyright infringer claimed to be exempt under certain conditions of a violation, but actually was knowingly breaking the law, the copyright owner may be entitled to twice the amount of the license fee for a period of up to three years. This is in addition to any award of damages given to the copyright owner.\nRead This Before Reporting Copyright Infringement\nBlogger’s guide to avoid copyright violation\nInjunctions and Impounding Explained\nRead This Before Finding A Copyright Infringement Attorney","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line278974"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7070059180259705,"wiki_prob":0.29299408197402954,"text":"Number of Scots accepted to university at all-time high\nA record number of Scottish students have secured a place at uni.\nA record number of Scottish students have secured a place at university according to UCAS statistics published recently.\nThe figures released today also show that the overall number of students accepted so far to study at Scottish institutions in 2016/17 increased by 4 per cent compared to last year, from 44,690 to 46,380 – a record level, making Scotland the destination for Higher Education.\nMinister for Further, Higher Education and Science, Shirley-Anne Somerville, said: “Firstly, I want to congratulate all students who have been accepted into university this year and secured a place at one of the many great universities in our country.\n“Scotland has a world class higher education system and one that will always be based on the principles of being free, fair and funded. The latest UCAS figures show a really positive picture for Scotland’s higher education system, with a record number of students choosing to study at one of our universities.\n“It is also extremely heartening to see record levels of Scottish students being accepted to study at universities not only in Scotland but across the UK. This is really positive news and this Scottish Government will continue to do all that we can to ensure all of our young people get an equal chance to go to university and get a world class education.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1047692"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9819327592849731,"wiki_prob":0.9819327592849731,"text":"by: MATTHEW DALY, Associated Press\nEntertainer and activist Jon Stewart, speaks at a news conference on behalf of 9/11 victims and families, Friday, July 12, 2019, at the Capitol in Washington. The House is expected to approve a bill Friday ensuring that a victims’ compensation fund for the Sept. 11 attacks never runs out of money. (AP Photo/Matthew Daly)\nWASHINGTON (AP) — The House on Friday overwhelmingly approved a bill ensuring that a victims compensation fund for the Sept. 11 attacks never runs out of money.\nThe 402-12 vote sends the bill to the Senate, where Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has agreed to call a vote before Congress goes on its August recess.\nLawmakers from both parties hailed the House vote, which comes a month after comedian Jon Stewart sharply criticized Congress for failing to act. Stewart, a longtime advocate for 9/11 responders, told lawmakers at an emotional hearing that they were showing “disrespect” to first responders now suffering from respiratory ailments and other illnesses as a result of their recovery work at the former World Trade Center site in New York City.\nStewart called the sparse attendance at the June 11 hearing “an embarrassment to the country and a stain on this institution.” He later targeted McConnell for slow-walking previous version of the legislation and using it as a political pawn to get other things done.\nStewart said Friday that replenishing the victims fund was “necessary, urgent and morally right.”\nReplenishing the fund will not fix the health problems of emergency workers and their families, but it would remove “a 15-year, unnecessary burden placed by their own government upon them,” Stewart said at a Capitol news conference.\nHouse Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other lawmakers credited Stewart for raising the profile of the issue, which has lingered on Capitol Hill for years.\n“You made it too hot to handle” in the Senate, Pelosi, D-Calif., told Stewart, praising him for shining his “celebrity spotlight” on the issue.\nEleven Republicans and independent Rep. Justin Amash of Michigan opposed the bill. No Democrat voted against the measure.\nThe bill would extend a victims compensation fund created after the 2001 terrorist attacks through 2092, essentially making it permanent. The $7.4 billion fund is rapidly being depleted, and administrators recently cut benefit payments by up to 70%.\nThe Congressional Budget Office said in a report this week that the bill would result in about $10.2 billion in additional compensation payments over 10 years, including more than $4 billion for claims already filed. The bill would require that victims whose compensation payments were reduced because of the fund’s declining balance be made whole.\n“This was not a hurricane or a flood or a tornado. This was the largest terrorist attack ever on American soil,” Rep. Lee Zeldin, R-N.Y., said in a floor speech before the House vote. “As Jon Stewart testified in front of the House Judiciary Committee, these terrorists weren’t saying ‘Death to Tribeca’. This was an attack on all of us as Americans and we all should be voting yes today as Americans.”\nZeldin and other lawmakers noted that one of the bill’s most prominent advocates, former New York City police detective Luis Alvarez, did not live to see its passage. Alvarez, who testified with Stewart at last month’s House hearing, died June 29 at age 53.\nAlvarez, who was diagnosed with colorectal cancer in 2016, traced his illness to the three months he spent in the rubble of the World Trade Center’s twin towers after the attacks.\nAlvarez “shouldn’t have had to come down here to fight on behalf of all of these other victims and first responders in the first place,” Zeldin said. “Month after month, year after year … how many first responders have made dozens of trips (to the Capitol) educating, advocating, passionately asking members of Congress for their support?”\nThe bill was renamed to honor Alvarez and other first responders.\nMcConnell said in a statement after the House vote that the Senate will take up the legislation soon.\n“The first responders who rushed into danger on September 11th, 2001, are the very definition of American heroes and patriots,” he said. “The Senate has never forgotten the victim compensation fund and we aren’t about to start now.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line77902"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6984755992889404,"wiki_prob":0.6984755992889404,"text":"Representative Tom Malinowski\nRepresenting the 7th District of New Jersey\nVotes and Legislation\nInvite Me to an Event\nCommendations and Greetings\nGrant Applicants\nCasework Request\nService Academy Request\nTours and Tickets\nMobile Office Hours\nYouth Advisory Council\nRep. Malinowski Remarks on Co-sponsoring HR 676, a Bill that Would Prevent US Withdrawal from NATO\nIt's crazy that we have to be introducing this bill. But it is, unfortunately, both necessary and urgent, for three reasons.\nI believe it's necessary, first of all, because NATO is so important to our security. No alliance in history has done more to prevent war, and no alliance is more rooted in the values America champions, than NATO. Ever since the end of the Cold War, it has been our paramount interest in Europe to strengthen NATO and to extend it -- an effort I was part of when I served in the State Department and the NSC in two administrations. By the same token, it has been Russia's paramount goal to weaken and divide NATO. If we were to do anything to weaken or divide it ourselves, or, God forbid, to leave it, we'd be doing our enemies' work for them.\nThe second reason I believe it's necessary is that I take the president of the United States seriously. President Trump has made no secret of his disdain for NATO and his willingness to consider leaving it. He's been consistent from the earliest days of the campaign through the first two years of his presidency. It's part of his world view. His approach to the world seems to be the opposite of John F. Kennedy's: We will pay no price, bear no burden, meet no hardship, support no friend, oppose no foe, unless someone pays us to do it. And if NATO allies don't pay us to protect them, he doesn't see the point of NATO. The blood of their soldiers spilled alongside ours in every conflict we've waged since World War II does not seem to count.\nThe final reason this bill is necessary is that Congress is now the only check we have. In his first two years, the president was surrounded by advisers like Generals Mattis, McMaster and Kelly, Ambassador Haley, even Secretary Tillerson, who pushed back when he suggested abandoning America's commitments around the world, or siding with our foes over our friends. They're all gone now. We're all that's left. It is urgent and essential that the Congress play its constitutional role, and take this action, especially with the 70th anniversary NATO summit coming up in Washington in April. In these unsettled times, we have to be an alternative voice for America in the world.\n426 Cannon HOB\nSomerville Office\n58 E Main St.\nHouse.gov","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1138230"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7344214916229248,"wiki_prob":0.2655785083770752,"text":"In this section: Consumer Updates\nConsumer Updates\nAnimal & Veterinary\nVaccines, Blood & Biologics\nArtículos en español\nHave Food Allergies? Read the Label\nSince 2006, it has been much easier for people allergic to certain foods to avoid packaged products that contain them, says Rhonda Kane, a registered dietitian and consumer safety officer at the Food and Drug Administration.\nThis is because a federal law requires that the labels of most packaged foods marketed in the U.S. disclose—in simple-to-understand terms—when they are made with a “major food allergen.”\nEight foods, and ingredients containing their proteins, are defined as major food allergens. These foods account for 90 percent of all food allergies:\nfish, such as bass, flounder, or cod\ncrustacean shellfish, such as crab, lobster, or shrimp\ntree nuts, such as almonds, pecans, or walnuts\nThe law allows manufacturers a choice in how they identify the specific “food source names,” such as “milk,” “cod,” “shrimp,” or “walnuts,” of the major food allergens on the label. They must be declared either in:\nthe ingredient list, such as “casein (milk)” or “nonfat dry milk,” or\na separate “Contains” statement, such as “Contains milk,” placed immediately after or next to the ingredient list.\n“So first look for the ‘Contains’ statement and if your allergen is listed, put the product back on the shelf,” says Kane. “If there is no ‘Contains’ statement, it’s very important to read the entire ingredient list to see if your allergen is present. If you see its name even once, it’s back to the shelf for that food too.”\nThere are many different ingredients that contain the same major food allergen, but sometimes the ingredients’ names do not indicate their specific food sources. For example, casein, sodium caseinate, and whey are all milk proteins. Although the same allergen can be present in multiple ingredients, its “food source name” (for example, milk) must appear in the ingredient list just once to comply with labeling requirements.\n\"Contains\" and \"May Contain\" Have Different Meanings\nIf a “Contains” statement appears on a food label, it must include the food source names of all major food allergens used as ingredients. For example, if “whey,” “egg yolks,” and a “natural flavor” that contained peanut proteins are listed as ingredients, the “Contains” statement must identify the words “milk,” “egg,” and “peanuts.”\nSome manufacturers voluntarily include a “may contain” statement on their labels when there is a chance that a food allergen could be present. A manufacturer might use the same equipment to make different products. Even after cleaning this equipment, a small amount of an allergen (such as peanuts) that was used to make one product (such as cookies) may become part of another product (such as crackers). In this case, the cracker label might state “may contain peanuts.”\nBe aware that the “may contain” statement is voluntary, says Kane. “You still need to read the ingredient list to see if the product contains your allergen.”\nWhen in Doubt, Leave It Out\nManufacturers can change their products’ ingredients at any time, so Kane says it’s a good idea to check the ingredient list every time you buy the product—even if you have eaten it before and didn’t have an allergic reaction.\n“If you’re unsure about whether a food contains any ingredient to which you are sensitive, don’t buy the product, or check with the manufacturer first to ask what it contains,” says Kane. “We all want convenience, but it’s not worth playing Russian roulette with your life or that of someone under your care.”\nRegulated Product(s)\nGet regular FDA email updates delivered on this topic to your inbox.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line420373"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8347718119621277,"wiki_prob":0.8347718119621277,"text":"Doktorand\\innen\nSarah Epping\nepping@gsnas.fu-berlin.de\nDoctoral Candidate at the Graduate School of North American Studies,\nMaster of Arts in History and Middle Eastern Studies,\nCourse in Modern Standard Arabic at the Higher Language Institute,\nUniversity of Damscus\nBachelor of Arts in History and Middle Eastern Studies,\nResearch assistant at DOMiD - Dokumentationszentrum und Museum über die Migration in Deutschland e.V., Köln\nInternship at the Konrad-Adenauer Stiftung in Amman, Jordan\nThe United States in Mesopotamia (Iraq), to 1921\nShort Outline of my Research Project\nAmerica´s penetration of the Middle East in the 19th century was, compared to other nations, slow. Mostly American merchants and missionaries were attracted to this faraway region, although with time, journalists and travelers who wanted to see the sites referred to in the bible came as well. In addition, American professionals like archeologists, and craftsmen who helped rebuild the Ottoman navy and officers who modernized parts of the army all came to the Ottoman Empire.\nWhile Americans were fewer in number than Europeans, they still reached every corner of the Ottoman Empire. Mostly staying close to the Mediterranean Sea, a few made their way to the area of the present Iraqi state, which during the 19th century, consisted of three political rather unimportant border provinces of the Ottoman Empire. The penetration of this area was facilitated by the help of foreign investors who supported the development of infrastructure which reflects the growing importance of the region as its relations with “the West” started to intensify. However in contrast to Europeans, American activities were not directed or guided by the government since they did not take part in the political power play of the other European empires in the region.\nThis political non-involvement makes the American approach to the area so unique and therefore, interesting to look at. Hence, my dissertation project asks about the diversity of the American-Mesopotamian relations up to the establishment of the Kingdom of Iraq in March 1921. It tries to pinpoint decisive, long-term personal, cultural, political and economic interactions between the United States and a region that we know very little about even though it plays such a central role in today’s U.S. relations to the Middle East. It aims to depict a structural picture of early interdependencies of both nations and to interpret them as part of a slowly globalizing world.\nvan der Walle, Sarah: Die Mission des Major Klein nach Mesopotamien. In: Historische Mitteilungen der Ranke-Gesellschaft 26 (2013/2014), p. 277-293.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line286957"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7331326603889465,"wiki_prob":0.7331326603889465,"text":"Mick Mulvaney & James E. Clyburn\nCompare the voting records of Mick Mulvaney and James E. Clyburn in 2015-16.\nRepresented South Carolina's 5th Congressional District. This was his 3rd term in the House. He left the House in 2017.\nJames E. Clyburn\nRepresented South Carolina's 6th Congressional District. This was his 12th term in the House. He is a current member of Congress.\nMick Mulvaney and James E. Clyburn are from different parties and disagreed on 78 percent of votes in the 114th Congress (2015-16).\nJune 16, 2016 — Making appropriations for the Department of Defense for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2017, and for other purposes\nMay 26, 2016 — Energy and Water Appropriations FY 2017\nNov. 18, 2015 — Reforming CFPB Indirect Auto Financing Guidance Act\nJune 16, 2015 — Intelligence Authorization Act\nJune 10, 2015 — Country of Origin Labeling Amendments Act of 2015\nMay 19, 2015 — Highway and Transportation Funding Act of 2015\nMay 12, 2015 — Regulatory Integrity Protection Act\nApril 30, 2015 — Making appropriations for military construction, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and related agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2016, and for other purposes\nApril 23, 2015 — National Cybersecurity Protection Advancement Act of 2015\nApril 22, 2015 — Protecting Cyber Networks Act\nFeb. 27, 2015 — Making further continuing appropriations for fiscal year 2015, and for other purposes\nFeb. 11, 2015 — Keystone XL Pipeline Approval Act\nJan. 9, 2015 — Keystone XL Pipeline Act\nJuly 12, 2016 — Lujan of New Mexico Amendment No. 21\nJuly 6, 2016 — DeFazio of Oregon Amendment No. 11\nJune 16, 2016 — Lee of California Amendment No. 45\nJune 16, 2016 — McGovern of Massachusetts Amendment No. 44\nJune 16, 2016 — Conyers of Michigan Amendment No. 40\nJune 16, 2016 — Huffman of California Amendment No. 17\nJune 13, 2016 — Networking and Information Technology Research and Development Modernization Act\nJune 13, 2016 — United States-Caribbean Strategic Engagement Act of 2016\nMay 25, 2016 — Garamendi of California Amendment\nMay 25, 2016 — First Polis of Colorado Amendment\nMay 25, 2016 — Clawson of Florida Amendment\nMay 18, 2016 — Lee of California Amendment No. 5\nApril 26, 2016 — Investor Clarity and Bank Parity Act\nMarch 22, 2016 — To amend title 38, United States Code, to provide for the burial of the cremated remains of persons who served as Women’s Air Forces Service Pilots in Arlington National Cemetery\nMarch 22, 2016 — Inspiring the Next Space Pioneers, Innovators, Researchers, and Explorers (INSPIRE) Women Act\nMarch 22, 2016 — Promoting Women in Entrepreneurship Act\nMarch 21, 2016 — Counterterrorism Screening and Assistance Act of 2016\nFeb. 12, 2016 — McMorris Rodgers of Washington Amendment No. 1\nDec. 11, 2015 — Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act of 2015\nNov. 4, 2015 — DeSaulnier of California Part B Amendment No. 41 to Rules Print 114-32\nOct. 1, 2015 — To authorize appropriations for fiscal year 2016 for military activites of the Department of Defense and for military construction, to prescribe military personnel strengths for such fiscal year, and for other purposes\nOn agreeing to the Polis of Colorado Amendment to the title\nJuly 23, 2015 — DeFazio of Oregon Part B Amendment No. 1\nJune 17, 2015 — Directing the President, pursuant to section 5(c) of the War Powers Resolution, to remove United States Armed Forces deployed to Iraq or Syria on or after August 7, 2014, other than Armed Forces required to protect United States diplomatic facilities and personnel, from Iraq and Syria\nJune 11, 2015 — Providing for consideration of the Senate Amendment to H.R. 1314, to provide for a right to an administrative appeal relating to adverse determinations of tax exempt status of certain organizations; and for consideration of the Senate Amendments to H.R. 644, Fighting Hunger Incentive Act\nJune 11, 2015 — First Johnson of Georgia Amendment\nJune 11, 2015 — Schiff of California Amendment\nJune 4, 2015 — Lee of California Amendment\nApril 30, 2015 — Garamendi of California Amendment\nApril 30, 2015 — First Swalwell of California Amendment\nApril 30, 2015 — Second Mulvaney of South Carolina Amendment\nApril 30, 2015 — First Mulvaney of South Carolina Amendment\nApril 30, 2015 — Van Hollen of Maryland Amendment\nApril 30, 2015 — Setting forth the congressional budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2016 and setting forth the appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2017 through 2015\nMarch 25, 2015 — Establishing the budget for the United States Government for fiscal year 2016 and setting forth appropriate budgetary levels for fiscal years 2017 through 2025\nMarch 25, 2015 — Second Tom Price of Georgia Substitute Amendment No. 6","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line879689"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.513945460319519,"wiki_prob":0.513945460319519,"text":"1 week agoWhy The Fall Of The Roman Republic Is A Good Analogy For Today’s Chaotic Time – Part 2 4 weeks agoWhy The Fall Of The Roman Republic Is A Good Analogy For Today’s Chaotic Time – Part 1 2 months agoMore Steve Jobs Secrets: The Technique For Forming Good Analogies To Solve Problems 2 months agoHow To Think Like Steve Jobs: Improve Your Understanding Of Things By Thinking In Analogies 2 months agoOne Simple Ancient Strategy To Calm Yourself Down When Angry\nRenaissance Man Journal\nAncient Secrets To Learning More, Making Better Decisions, And Future-Proofing Your Life\nWhat Makes A Renaissance Man?\nThe Real Gladiator Workout: Train Like A Gladiator\nTo Be Or Not To Be: When To Be A Contrarian Thinker And When Not To Be\nThe Original PUA: Learn To Pick Up Chicks The Way The Ancient Romans Did\nThe Best Bodyweight Exercises To Do When Travelling\nHow Long Does It Take To Form A Habit?\nOperation Anthropoid: The Story Of The Most Daring Secret Mission Of World War 2\nPosted On : 18/02/2016 Published By : Peter\nIf you had seen the movie “Casablanca”, you might remember the scene in the cafe where the German officers start singing a German song. To hush them down, the brave Czechoslovak resistance leader, husband of the Scandinavian bombshell Ilsa (played by Ingrid Bergman) starts singing the Marsellaise. Right after that, everyone else joins in.\nThe film was made in 1942 and one of the most heroic characters there, is a Czechoslovak resistance fighter who is trying to smuggle himself out of Nazi-controlled territories in order to continue his struggle. This guy was a fictional character, however the year 1942 was also the setting of probably the most daring act of resistance during the entire war. And this was real!\nThe act was codenamed Operation Anthropoid and resulted in the assassination of one of the most-feared Nazi leaders, Reinhard Heydrich. This was the guy who organized the Final Solution and planned the extermination of all the Jews from Europe.\nJust like the movie, the heroes of this story were Czechoslovak resistance fighters.\nThe scene is this: Hitler is on a roll. His armies have crushed all opposition and control most of continental Europe. The German armies are going from one victory to another in the East against the Soviets and an invasion of Britain is imminent.\nIn the middle of the continent lies the city of Prague, formerly the capital of the Czechoslovak Republic, the only democracy in Central Europe before the war, and now the seat of the government of the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, completely controlled by the Nazis.\nBefore the War, Czechoslovakia was one of the continent’s economic powerhouses and had a very strong military industry, especially producing heavy machinery and tanks. It was sacrificed by the UK and France in order to appease Hitler, but that just made him even stronger.\nBy occupying the country, he took over its military equipment and added it to his own army (almost half the German tanks that attacked France in 1940 were formerly from the Czechoslovak army).\nMany Czechoslovak military personnel escaped the country and installed themselves in places like the UK, France or the Soviet Union, in order to fight the Nazis and free their country. The Czechoslovak government-in-exile was located in London and so were much of the forces of the Czechoslovak army-in-exile.\nHowever the situation in their homeland was dire. The country was occupied by the Nazis, who were crushing any forms of opposition. The exile authorities were determined to shake things up.\nStriking at the heart of the Nazi machine, at one of its leaders, could galvanize the population and wake up the resistance, which was losing any hope of success at this point. After a long discussion, it was decided that the target of this operation would be Heydrich, one of the most feared men in the Nazi Reich.\nHeydrich was serving as the Chief Reichsprotektor of Bohemia and Moravia, but also had other duties in the Nazi regime. In order to oversee the Protectorate, he moved his residence to Prague, an ancient and beautiful city.\nAfter an initial period of training, the two guys chosen to carry out the assassination, Jozef Gabcik and Jan Kubis, together with a number of other paratroopers who were to carry out other acts of sabotage, were airlifted over Bohemia and parachuted down.\nUnfortunately, due to navigational errors, they were dropped down about 100 kilometers away from where they were supposed to have landed. They had to make their way through treacherous terrain in order to get to their initial destination, to meet their contacts and get their fake documents, as well as weapons.\nAfter that, they went to Prague and made contact with local resistance groups. The work on planning the actual assassination could now start.\nThey spent some time observing their target, his daily routines and his weak points. After a period of observation, it was decided that a spot on his daily ride to work would be the best place to hit him. There was a curve on a street next to some tram tracks that seemed perfect.\nThe Assassination\nThey picked a date, the 27th of May 1942.\nOn that date, like every morning, Heydrich was riding to work in his open-air Mercedes, without any other escort, except for his driver.\nJan Kubis and Jozef Gabcik called in another paratrooper, Josef Valcik, to help them out. He was to serve as a lookout for them and give them a signal when the car was approaching their position and whether it had an SS escort with it.\nThe operation was proceeding according to plan. Heydrich’s car was rounding the bend, when Gabcik threw down his coat and revealed his Sten MKII submachine gun. He aimed it at Heydrich, but it jammed!\nIt was a common complaint among many soldiers that this British-made weapon was prone to jamming. Unfortunately this now happened at the most innoportune moment.\nGabcik became fully exposed and without a way to fire at Heydrich. Heydrich could now have gotten away quickly. Fortunately, he made a fatal error. He told the driver to stop the car as he stood up from his seat and started firing his pistol at the resistance fighter.\nThis gave enough time to Jan Kubis, who was standing to the side of Gabcik, to throw a grenade into the open car. The grenade exploded and wounded Heydrich.\nEven though wounded, Heydrich could still move. The two Czechoslovak resistance fighters, also stunned from the bomb blast, took out their pistols and started firing at Heydrich and his driver, but missed.\nAt that moment, Heydrich staggered out of his car and together with his driver started chasing Gabcik and Kubis. Both resistance fighters managed to escape, but were convinced that their attack had failed.\nIt seemed that Heydrich had survived their attack. After the incident he was transported to a Prague hospital, where he was looked at by specialists. His injuries were graver than they initially seemed. It was decided to operate on him, but he died from complications the next day.\nJan Kubis\nJozef Gabcik\nJosef Valcik\nThis was not the end however. In order to retaliate for this assassination, the Nazis began a veritable reign of terror. They hauled in thousands of people for questioning, many of them dying under brutal interrogation. They also decided to raze two villages, Lidice and Lezaky, down to the ground and kill all their inhabitants. This was to serve as a grotesque example of what will happen if someone resists.\nThe two Operation Anthropoid operatives, Gabcik and Kubis, together with Valcik and four other paratroopers, hid themselves in the Eastern Orthodox Church of St. Cyril and Methodius. There, they were determined to ride things out and then slip out of Prague unnoticed. In this, they were being aided by Bishop Gorazd and others.\nThese were not the only paratroopers present on the territory of the Protectorate. There were several other groups of fighters that had been dropped down in order to carry out different acts of sabotage and several of the members of these groups were also hiding out in various places.\nAs the terror began to get worse and worse, two of them snapped. First, one paratrooper, Viliam Gerik turned himself into the Gestapo and told them the names and addresses of many of the people who were helping him out.\nHowever, what proved to be crucial was the betrayal of Karel Curda from the group codenamed “Out Distance”. The commander of that group, Adolf Opalka, was one of the paratroopers hiding out in the church.\nAfter spending several scary days and nights in hiding, Karel Curda also turned himself in to the Gestapo and gave up the names and addresses of many people in the Resistance. One address that he gave was that of the Moravec family.\nThe Gestapo raided their house. The mother managed to committ suicide as the Nazis came into the house, but the father and the son were arrested. After brutal torture, the son finally gave up the location where the paratroopers were hiding.\nI won’t go into detail on what happened next. This is an entire tale in itself, but a short summary will suffice for now.\nThe Nazis surrounded the church and tried several ways of trying to flush the paratroopers out or to raid the church and kill them. Many of these proved unsuccessful and only after hours of heroic fighting were all the paratroopers killed.\nMemory of Heroism\nThis proved to be one of the most legendary acts of resistance during WW2. Never before or after was there a successful assassination of such a high-ranking Nazi functionnary.\nIn 2016, a movie on this operation called “Operation Anthropoid” will come out, starring Mr. Grey Jamie Dornan himself as Jan Kubis and Cilian Murphy as Jozef Gabcik.\nThe heroic acts that were committed by these brave men and the people that helped them, have passed into legend. Their memory lives on, as example of people who saw a greater cause than themselves, who risked their lives and ended up paying the ultimate price.\nTheir acts were not in vain, as their nation shook off the chains of the Nazis and once again became free.\nimage 1; image 2; image 3; image 4; image 5; image 6;\nPosted in: History\nYour Simple Guide To Being Funny 6: Even More On Joke Forms\nCrazy Shit To Do: Climb Mt. Kilimanjaro\nOne thought on “Operation Anthropoid: The Story Of The Most Daring Secret Mission Of World War 2”\nJoe11b says:\nJan kubis and Josef gabcik were heroes to the Czechs\n@RenaissanceManG 16/06/2019\ngainweightjournal.com/11-lessons-fro…\ngainweightjournal.com/how-to-think-l…\nThe real gladiator workout: train like a gladiator gainweightjournal.com/the-real-gladi…\nTheme: Royal Magazine by ThemeinWP","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1748958"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7330381274223328,"wiki_prob":0.26696187257766724,"text":"“Call to action” on Southland’s environment\n2019-04-18T11:50:00 Pacific/Auckland\nEnvironment Southland welcomes the Environment Aotearoa 2019 report released by the Ministry for the Environment and Stats NZ today as an opportunity to keep the need for improving the environment at the forefront of people's minds.\nThe report takes a whole system approach to look at a wide range of issues, from how our native plants, animals and ecosystems are faring to the activities we are doing that are causing urban and rural pollution.\nEnvironment Southland chief executive Rob Phillips said that while the report paints a less than ideal picture of New Zealand’s environment, it was a good “call to action” and reminder that the need to do more is urgent.\n“Here in Southland, we have our challenges, but we are on the right path. There are many examples of people, industries and organisations coming together to improve the environment. We need to maintain and build on that momentum,” Mr Phillips said.\nEnvironment Southland recognises the complexity of the environment and our outcomes reflect this: Managing access to quality resources, diverse ways to make a living, empowered and resilient communities, and communities expressing their diversity. The approach to achieving them focuses on sharing knowledge, engaging and communicating with Southlanders, and acknowledging the interconnectedness of the environment.”\nThe council’s top priority is to maintain and improve Southland’s freshwater and land, and one way that is being achieved is through the People, Water and Land programme - Te Mana o te Tangata, te Wai, te Whenua. This programme is in partnership with Te Ao Marama Inc. (the environmental arm of Ngāi Tahu ki Murihiku) with the vision of ‘inspiring change to improve Southland’s water and land’ and is focused on bringing people together to lead change.\nEnvironment Southland has a number of initiatives underway to improve water quality and land use. We continue to support farmer-driven catchment groups and land care groups who have been leading positive on-the-ground action for a number of years, with more than 30 groups currently active across Southland.\nOne of those initiatives is in the Aparima river catchment, where six farmer-led catchment groups have come together to work on the Aparima Community Environment (ACE) project supported by industry, local and central government, and community groups. Environment Minister David Parker recently commended the ACE project as a positive example of how industry, councils and central government can work together to support farmers for positive change.\nEnvironment Southland’s land sustainability team has also put a strong emphasis on preparing farm environment plans and supporting landowners to move towards good land management practices.\nTo date, 806 farm plans covering 330,518 hectares have been completed, with focus activities including nutrient management, intensive winter grazing and riparian management, which all contribute to improving water quality.\nMirroring the sentiment of the report to acknowledge the connection of water and land across the environment is the essence of the People, Water and Land programme which takes a ‘ki uta ki tai - from the mountains to the sea’ approach that recognises the need to consider the environment in its entirety.\n“What we do in one part of the environment can have consequences in another and the New River Estuary is an example of how both urban and rural activity – past and present – has had a negative impact. It also emphasises the need for a collective response through a mountains to the sea approach to improve the situation,” said Mr Phillips.\n“Education is another area where we can have a positive impact now and into the future, and the Enviroschools programme is one great way for achieving that.”\nThe programme supports children and young people to plan, design and implement sustainability actions that are important to them and their communities. There are now more than 1,000 Enviroschools nationwide, encompassing over 260,000 children and young people, their whānau and teachers. In Southland, the programme is coordinated by Environment Southland in partnership with Kindergartens South, and supported by funding from Southland District Council, Invercargill City Council and Gore District Council.\nThe report also highlights the significant impact that introduced species can have on our ecosystems and biodiversity. The council has long had a focus on biosecurity and has coordinated its biodiversity efforts with other agencies in recent years, with a view to enhancing and protecting native species and ecosystems.\nIn recent years we have introduced the Fiordland Marine Pathway plan, a first of its kind, in conjunction with our partners the Fiordland Marine Guardians, Ministry for Primary Industries, Department of Conservation and Ngai Tahu. The plan includes a clean vessel pass system to stop the introduction of pests hitching a ride on boat hulls into the area’s pristine waters. It has had good uptake and won the New Zealand Biosecurity Supreme Award among others late last year.\nThere are many other initiatives including our very successful Possum Control Area programme where we support land managers to work together in adjoining properties to control possums; and our longstanding biocontrol programme where we facilitate the distribution and population growth of biocontrol agents on properties across Southland.\nWe also support many other groups who are doing a lot of great work with animal and plant pest control, school and community groups to plant native species, landowners to identify and preserve remnants of native forest on their properties through our High Value Area programme. Recently we consulted on a proposed pest management plan and biosecurity strategy, which will set the future direction of biosecurity and biodiversity for Southland.\n“We all want a thriving Southland and ensuring our natural resources are being used sustainably is essential to achieving this. The Ministry’s environment report is a timely reminder that we all have a role to play in ensuring our natural resources are in good shape and that we need to keep building on all the good work already underway. The council’s stepping up our People, Water and Land programme as part of that challenge. For Southland to thrive everyone needs to be part of the solution.”\nNote: LGNZ Regional council sector response to the Environment Aotearoa 2019 report: https://www.lgnz.co.nz/environment-aotearoa-yardstick-welcomed-by-lgnz/\nPage reviewed: 18 Apr 2019 11:50am","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line81350"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9947538375854492,"wiki_prob":0.9947538375854492,"text":"Shays received campaign donations from McMahons\nApr 27, 2012 at 12:01 AM Apr 27, 2012 at 11:35 PM\nFormer U.S. Rep. Christopher Shays, who is running against former wrestling executive Linda McMahon for U.S. Senate, has criticized the company she led but accepted $5,000 in donations from her and her husband when he was in Congress.\nHearst Connecticut Media Group reported that Shays accepted the campaign cash from Linda and Vince McMahon in 2005 and 2006.\nLinda McMahon told the Greenwich Time her rival for the Republican nomination never raised concerns about the television content of the Stamford-based company formerly known as World Wrestling Entertainment while he was in office. McMahon said Shays visited the company and had his photo taken with Vince McMahon.\nShays' campaign spokeswoman says the visit doesn't mean he supported the business.\n\"None of this changes the fact that WWE has a long history of promoting violence, bullying, and degradation o f minorities and women,\" said Amanda Bergen, Shays' campaign spokesman. \"It also doesn't make Linda McMahon qualified to be a United States senator.\"\nWWE provided Greenwich Time with several photos of Shays at events sponsored by the company in 2000 and 2001 to encourage people to vote. In one photo, Shays and his wife, Betsi, appear with McMahon and then-WWE superstar Kurt Angle at a black-tie event in Washington, D.C.\n\"Never did Mr. Shays express any issues with our programming nor the company,\" WWE spokesman Robert Zimmerman told the newspaper. \"Now that he is running for Senate, he is using outdated video excerpts from that exact time period to mischaracterize the nature of our current business and TV-PG programming.\"\nMcMahon stepped down as chief executive of the WWE to run unsuccessfully for Senate in 2010.\nShays' campaign counters that McMahon has been inconsistent.\n\"She's criticizing his record now on a daily basis, criticizing votes and positions taken at the very time that she was contributing to his campaign,\" Bergen said. \"She knew his record when she was contributing to his campaigns in the past. So why is his record all of a sudden a problem now?\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line536210"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8271169662475586,"wiki_prob":0.8271169662475586,"text":"Celebrity surgeries\nButt Implants\nNose Job\nCelebrities without make-up\nCelebrity Hair Changes\nCelebrity family\nCelebrity Lovers Changes\nCelebrity Weight, Height and Age\nCelebrity Weight Changes\nBest Movies and TV shows\nColin Firth’s height, weight and fitness journey\nDate of birth: September 10, 1960 (Age 57)\nFull name: Colin Andrew Firth\nBorn place: Grayshott, Hampshire, England\nHeight: 6’1’’ (185.4 cm)\nWeight: 76 kg (167 pounds)\nColin Firth’s body measurements:\nChest: 43” (109.2 cm)\nBiceps: 15” (38.1 cm)\nWaist: 34” (86.4 cm)\nColin Firth is an outstanding actor who has attained the most fame through his role as King George VI in the 2010 movie, The Kings Speech. Through this movie, Colin has earned himself an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, 2 Screen Actors Guild Awards and a Golden Globe.\nHowever, all his present success was as a result of a desire birth in him at the early age of 10.\nDuring the early years of his career, Colin was a very lean young man with a handsome looking face that always left the ladies drooling. At the age of 57, Colin has so kept himself fit as he is still considered an eye candy. Over the years, Colin has grown in various areas from his acting even to his physical appearance. He has now become more muscular than he used to be.\nColin has attained the well-built physique by regularly working out and not neglecting eating right.\nIn order to portray the role of Eric Lomax impeccably in the 2014 movie The Railway Man, he had to up his fitness game and aim at a slimmer figure. This work out was quite tasking because he had to look like a prisoner of war.\nThroughout his career of juggling various genres of movies, Colin has shown the world that he will do whatever it takes to really become the character he plays.\nBefore featuring in the Kingsman movies, Colin has to undergo some intense training both to keep his physique and perfect stunts that had to be pulled on camera. Colin stated in an interview that in contrast with the actual world, it takes much more hard work to lose a fight on camera than it does to win one.\nColin also stated some challenges in his career, one of which includes times he had put so much work and energy into training for a particular stunt and when it was time to shoot the scene, the whole thing was changed. Nevertheless, Colin has learnt to embrace this challenge after realising that the changes always make the scene better.\nColin Kaepernick’s height, weight. The Muhammad Ali of this generation?\nDaniel Sharman’s height, weight. His secret to a gorgeous body\nCaleb Followill’s height, weight and style transformation\nJennifer Lawrence – Hair Changes\nDiane Keaton’s height, weight. Aging gracefully\nBrandy Norwood and her complicated way toward slender figure\nFrench Montana’s height, weight. One of America’s top rappers\nGary Woodland’s height, weight. Professional golf player\nHome Stars Changes\nStars Changes © 2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line270591"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7973082661628723,"wiki_prob":0.7973082661628723,"text":"Legal Professional Privilege and the Duty of Confidentiality - the beginning and the end\nDuncan A. W. Abate\nThe Court of Final Appeal has recently undertaken a comprehensive review of the extent to which the law will protect information obtained by an employee in the course of employment following the cessation of his employment. The case in question specifically concerned the interplay between confidential information and information protected by legal professional privilege (LPP).\nThe employee in question, Mr. Aitken, is an Australian qualified lawyer. Whilst he has never worked as a practising lawyer in Hong Kong, he did work in a regulatory capacity for PCCW and, as such, became privy to confidential communications and information between PCCW and their external legal advisors in respect of certain legal proceedings involving CSL.\nMr. Aitken left PCCW to join CSL in late March 2008. PCCW was, understandably, concerned that Mr. Aitken would use the information obtained during his employment with PCCW to the detriment of PCCW (as the litigation was ongoing). PCCW therefore applied for an injunction. The injunction imposed two restrictions on Mr. Aitken. The first was an order prohibiting Mr. Aitken from using or disclosing any information of PCCW (relating to the ongoing litigation) (the \"Non-disclosure Injunction\"). The second was an order prohibiting Mr. Aitken from, effectively, being involved in any capacity with the specific regulatory issue while employed with CSL (to use the words of PCCW, they wanted Mr. Aitken to be \"taken out of the arena\") (the \"Restrictive Injunction\").\nMr. Aitken accepted the Non-disclosure Injunction. However, Mr. Aitken did not accept the Restrictive Injunction as it would have the effect of significantly reducing his ability to work in Hong Kong in his chosen career.\nMr. Aitken challenged the Restrictive Injunction. The consequential proceedings have sped through the Court of First Instance, the Court of Appeal and was heard by the Court of Final Appeal in early February this year.\nThe Legal Issues\nThe key issue considered by the courts was the interplay and/or conflict between the principles in Bolkiah on one hand and Faccenda Chicken on the other.\n(a) The Bolkiah principles\nThe UK House of Lords in the case of Prince Jefri Bolkiah v KPMG considered the relationship between a solicitor (or an analogous person) and client. It determined that:\nA solicitor (or a person in an analogous position; in Bolkiah it was KPMG acting in a litigation support role) has a duty to his former client to preserve the confidentiality of information protected by LPP.\nThis duty survives the termination of the client relationship. The duty is absolute.\nThe former client is entitled to prevent his former solicitor from exposing him to any avoidable risk, including the increased risk of use of such information to his prejudice by accepting instructions to act for another client with an adverse interest in that matter and to which the information is or may be relevant.\nOnce the former client establishes that the solicitor possesses relevant information that is privileged, the burden shifts to the solicitor to demonstrate that there is no risk of disclosure.\nUnless the court is satisfied, on the basis of clear and convincing evidence, that all effective measures have been taken to ensure that no disclosure will occur, a \"strict approach is unanswerable\" and the solicitor will be restrained from acting for the new client.\n(b) The Faccenda Chicken principles\nFaccenda Chicken v Fowler, another UK case, considered the relationship between employer and employee. It determined that:\nThe obligations between an employer and employee are governed by the contract of employment.\nIn the absence of any express term in the contract, an employee's obligations in respect of the use and disclosure of information are the subject of implied terms.\nDuring the course of employment, there is an implied term imposing a duty of good faith or fidelity on the employee.\nPost-termination, the implied term imposed on the former employee is that he shall not use or disclose any trade secrets or information of a sufficiently high degree of confidentiality as amounts to a trade secret.\nThe burden is on the former employer to identify with precision what trade secrets (or equivalent) he seeks to protect.\nIn deciding whether any particular item of information is to be protected post-termination, the court has to consider all the circumstances of the case, including the nature of the employment and the information itself. In other words the restriction is not absolute.\nBasically Bolkiah applies in relation to a solicitor/client relationship (or an analogous situation) and Faccenda Chicken applied to an employer/employee relationship. Mr. Aitken was an employee of PCCW and also a lawyer. He was not, however, employed as an in-house lawyer.\nThe Arguments\nPCCW wanted the Bolkiah principles to apply. As such they argued that the fact that Mr. Aitken was an employee, not a retained solicitor, was irrelevant. PCCW's stance was that Mr. Aitken was privy to information which was covered by LPP. LPP is a fundamental right (enshrined in our Basic Law) and is the primary absolute and predominant public interest which trumps all other public interest, should there be a clash; including the public interest in maintaining freedom of employment. It contended that Bolkiah (and the relief granted in that case) is concerned with the nature of the information not the nature of the relationship between the parties. Therefore, PCCW argued, as the information which Mr. Aitken had obtained during his employment was privileged, the Bolkiah principles should be applied.\nAlternatively, PCCW argued, Mr. Aitken was in a position \"analogous to\" that of a solicitor.\nOn the other side Mr. Aitken and CSL argued that Bolkiah relief is limited to a solicitor/client relationship only as it is founded, not on the nature of the information, but upon the protection of confidentiality in a fiduciary relationship. In the case of an employer - employee relationship, the governing principles in the protection of confidential information are those set out in Faccenda Chicken.\nIf PCCW was correct then an absolute restriction would apply to Mr. Aitken and PCCW would be entitled to \"take him out of the arena\" with the Restrictive Injunction to ensure there is no risk of inadvertent disclosure of LPP information. If Mr. Aitken's and CSL's submission was correct then Faccenda Chicken sets the correct test and PCCW are only entitled to the non-disputed Non-disclosure Injunction.\nAt the Court of First Instance\nThe judge at first instance (Deputy Judge Au) agreed that Bolkiah applies only to a solicitor/client relationship where confidential and privileged information is imparted under a duty of confidence. Bolkiah is not of general applicability and does not apply in an employer/employee relationship.\nThe judge then considered whether Mr. Aitken was in a position analogous to that of a solicitor whilst employed by PCCW. He decided that although Mr. Aitken had been privy to conferences and discussions which were legal in nature, he did not participate in a professional capacity as a lawyer and, therefore, his role could not be said to be analogous to that of a solicitor.\nThe Restrictive Injunction was discharged.\nDJ Au, on the other hand, was satisfied that there was a serious question to be tried whether Mr. Aitken was privy to certain categories of allegedly confidential information. He therefore granted the Non-disclosure Injunction although re-fashioned it in narrower and more particularised terms than that sought by PCCW.\nAt the Court of Appeal before VP Tang, Le Pichon JA and Stone J\nImmediately after DJ Au's ruling, PCCW mounted an appeal. The Court of Appeal upheld the First Instance decision by a majority (Le Pichon JA dissenting).\nIn the Court of Appeal PCCW relied on Lord Millet's judgment in Bolkiah, that:\n\"It is of the highest importance to the administration of justice that a solicitor or other person in possession of confidential and privileged information should not act in any way that might appear to put that information at risk or coming in to the hands of someone with an adverse interest.\" (emphasis added).\nPCCW asked the Court to read the words \"other person\" widely and that, Mr. Aitken should be wholly removed from his dealings with the specific regulatory issue and associated matters in his current employment with CSL.\nMr. Aitken and CSL took the position that the case is really about \"trade secrets\" (or information of a similarly high standard of confidentiality). As such the correct statement of the law relating to an employee's post-termination duty of confidentiality is that laid down in Faccenda Chicken. Bolkiah has never been applied in an employee/employer situation and the two distinct lines of case law, underpinned, as they are, by very different policy considerations, should not be confused.\nStone J in delivering the lead judgment of the Court of Appeal refused to accept PCCW's interpretation of \"or other person\". In his Lordship's view, the phrase \"or other person\" could only have been intended as a reference to a relationship analogous to a client/solicitor relationship. To apply the Bolkiah remedy to an employer/employer context would create \"a new form of 'servitude or serfdom' whereby the employee is precluded from transport of his acquired skills within the labour market\".\nStone J stated that it is \"precisely the nature of the solicitor/client relationship which gave rise to extraordinary duties, duties which upon no basis properly can fall upon a mere employee, however well qualified.\"\nPCCW's fall-back position, that Mr. Aitken was in any event in an \"analogous relationship\" with his former employer, was also roundly rejected by Stone J.\nSimply put therefore, Mr. Aitken, as a former employee of PCCW, should not be restrained by the very onerous terms of the Restrictive Injunction.\nThat was of course not the end of the legal journey. PCCW appealed again to the Court of Final Appeal.\nAt the Court of Final Appeal before Bokhary PJ, Chan PJ, Ribeiro PJ, Litton NPJ and Hoffmann NPJ\nMuch of the First Instance and the Court of Appeal submissions were echoed in this appeal. By an unanimous decision the Court of Final Appeal dismissed PCCW's appeal.\nPCCW cited a number of cases concerned with maintaining the inviolability of privileged communications against competing public policies (of which transportation of labour skills was but one).\nMr. Ribeiro PJ in delivering the lead judgment pointed out that the appeal was concerned with the nature and scope of relief available to PCCW to maintain the confidentiality of information acquired by Mr. Aitken as a former employee. The issues of LPP were not engaged; in those cases where solicitors have been enjoined against acting for new clients, such relief was founded on the basis of protecting confidentiality in the context of a fiduciary relationship between solicitor and client.\nLord Hoffmann also stated in his judgment that \"there is a very considerable difference between the position of a solicitor and an employee, even though the confidential information which they have obtained may be the same.\" The much relied-on Bolkiah was concerned with relief ordered against a firm for all purpose to be treated as a firm of solicitors. Notably, a solicitor will not be dependant upon one client for his livelihood whereas an employee can only work for one employer at any given time, and chances are his new employer is likely to be in the same line of business and therefore be in competition with the previous one. Mr. Aitken, who falls to be treated simply as an ex-employee, is therefore not subject to the same kind of obligations as were the case in Bolkiah.\nFurthermore, it is well established in employment law that an employee brings to a job his own stock of skill, knowledge and experience and therefore it is important to distinguish between this and an employer's trade secrets (or equivalent) which are entitled to protection. Mr. Bokhary PJ also acknowledged one's freedom of choice of occupation under the Basic Law.\nAs a final point, the Court of Final Appeal specifically left open the question of the relief available against an in-house legal advisor of a company moving to a competitor to work on the other side of a contentious matter or solicitors moving between private practice and in-house roles when acting on both sides of litigation.\nThe proper way for an employer to protect the use or disclosure of confidential information (be it privileged or not) is by means of properly drafted post-termination restrictive covenants. The Bolkiah principles to protect information subject to legal privilege should be narrowly interpreted.\nFor further information, please contact,\nDuncan Abate (duncan.abate@mayerbrown.com)\nLearn more about our Hong Kong office, Employment & Benefits and Litigation & Dispute Resolution practice.\nEmployment Litigation & Counseling\nEmployment & Benefits\nPodcast - Briefing für Personalverantwortliche\n17:45 Minute Listen\nHong Kong Continues its Journey Along the Rainbow-Coloured Road\nHong Kong's New Minimum Wage Effective Since 1 May 2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line308494"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9799948930740356,"wiki_prob":0.9799948930740356,"text":"LADY GAGA – THE CRAZIEST DRESSING SINGER\nby Jegan S in DANCERS, MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMEN, MUSICIANS, SINGERS Tags: achievements, albums, artist, ascii, ascii art, awards, babe, back stage, bio, biography, commercials, dancer, disco heaven, discography, fame, girl, lady gaga, love game, most beautiful, music, on stage, paparazzi, performer, photos, photoshoots, pictures, poker face, sexy, singer, songs, the fame, the fame monster, topless, wallpapers, woman, women, young\nLady Gaga is a theatrical dance-pop performer whose debut single, the international chart-topping hit “Just Dance,” established her as an up-and-coming superstar upon its release in 2008. Born Stefani Germanotta on March 28, 1986, the New York native attended Convent of the Sacred Heart, a private all-girl Catholic school in Manhattan, before proceeding to study music at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts at age 17. Influenced by flamboyant glam rockers such as David Bowie and Freddie Mercury (she would later draw her stage name from the Queen song “Radio Ga-Ga”) as well as ’80s dance-poppers such as Madonna and Michael Jackson, she began playing the piano at a young age and started writing original material as a teenager. In 2007, she began to make a name for herself on the downtown Manhattan club scene with a performance art show billed as Lady Gaga and the Starlight Revue (co-featuring Lady Starlight; born Colleen Martin, a DJ and makeup professional), and music industry insiders began to take note. While Lady Gaga was initially signed to Def Jam in 2007, nothing came of that association, and ultimately it was pop-rap superstar Akon who took her under his wing, signing her to his vanity label Kon Live in association with Interscope Records.\nIn addition to working for Interscope as an in-house songwriter, Lady Gaga began preparing the launch of her solo career. Her debut single, “Just Dance,” was released to radio in April 2008, and her full-length album debut, The Fame, followed in August. Featuring fellow Akon affiliate Colby O’Donis, “Just Dance” slowly gathered momentum throughout 2008’s latter half. The song debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in August, at which time it had already become a massive club hit, but it didn’t reach number one until January 2009. Internationally, the song proved similarly popular, reaching the Top Ten throughout much of Western Europe and beyond. In the wake of Lady Gaga’s international breakthrough success with “Just Dance,” the follow-up single “Poker Face” was an even larger hit, topping singles charts across the board with its combination of pop melodicism and club-worthy production. Two additional tracks — “LoveGame” and “Paparrazi” — also cracked the Top Ten, and The Fame was still enjoying a spot on the Billboard Top 40 when its follow-up, The Fame Monster, appeared in November 2009.\nAlthough originally planned as a bonus disc (to be packaged alongside The Fame in a deluxe edition of Lady Gaga’s debut), The Fame Monster was quickly expanded to eight tracks, thus warranting its own release. Meanwhile, the leadoff single “Bad Romance” became Gaga’s fifth consecutive Top Ten single.\nThe Fame (2008)\nThe Fame Monster (2009)\nASCAP AWARD\n“Just Dance” – Ascap Pop Music Award – Most Performed Songs\n“Paparazzi” – Ascap Pop Music Award – Most Performed Songs\nBET Awards 2010\nVideo Phone with Beyonce, Video of the Year\nBillboard Award\n2009 – Billboard Rising Star\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for Best Hot 100 Artist\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for Best Hot Digital Songs Artist\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for Best Hot Pop Songs Artist\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for Top Dance/Electronic Artist\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for Canadian Hot 100 Artist\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for European Hot 100 songs\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for Best Electronic/Dance album\nBillboard Year End Chart Awards for European Top 100 albums\nLatin Billboard Music Awards for Crossover Artist of the Year, Solo\nBMI Awards\n“Poker Face” – BMI Pop Awards Award-Winning Songs\n“Just Dance” – BMI Pop Awards Award-Winning Songs\n“Love Game” – BMI Pop Awards Award-Winning Songs\nThe Fame – Best international Album\nInternational Female Solo Artist\nInternational Breakthrough Act\nBest International Female Artist – 2010\nBest International Newcomer – 2010\n“Poker Face” – Best International/National Hit of the Year – 2010\nESKA Award for Best New Artist – 2009\nGLAAD Media Awards\nOutstanding Music Artist – 2010\nBest Dance Recording – Pokerface – 2010\nBest Electronic/Dance Album – The Fame – 2010\nJapan Gold Disc Award\nBest New Artist International\nThe three Best New Artist\nMeteor Music Awards\nBest International Female – 2010\nMP3 MUSIC Awards\nLove Game – The RCD Award – Radio / Charts / Downloads – 2010\nMTV Music Awards\nLos Premios MTV Latinoamérica: Mejor Artista Nuevo Internacional\nLos Premios MTV Latinoamérica: Canción del Año\nMTV Europe Music Awards for Best New Act\nBest Dance Video – PokerFace – MTV Japan\nMTV Video Music Award for Best New Artist – Pokerface\nMTV Video Music Award for Best Special Effects – Paparazzi\nMTV Video Music Award for Best Art Direction – Paparazzi\nMuchMusic Video Award for Best International Artist Video – Pokerface\nNME Award for Best Dressed\nNME Award for Worst Dressed\nInternational Revelation of the Year\nFavorite Pop Artist\nFavorite Breakout Artist\nPremios Oye Awards\nThe Fame – Premios Oye for English – Album of the Year\nThe Fame – Premios Oye for English – Best New Artist\nPoker Face – Premios Oye for English – Record of the Year\nQ Awards\n“Just Dance” – Q Awards for Best Video, 2009\nSwiss Music Awards\n“Poker Face” – Swiss Music Award for International Best Song, 2009\n“Just Dance” – Teen Choice Award for Choice Music: Hook Up, 2009\nThe Record of the Year\nPoker Face – The Record Of The Year, 2009\nTMF Awards\nTMF Award for Best Female Artist International\nTMF Award for Best Pop International\nTMF Award for Best New Artist International\nUK Music Video Awards\n“Paparazzi” – UK Music Video Awards for Best International Video, 2009\nVirgin Media Music Awards\n“The Fame” – Virgin Media Music Awards for Best Album\nVirgin Media Music Awards for Shameless Publicity Seeker\n“Poker Face” – World Music Awards for Best Song of the Year\n“The Fame” – World Music Awards for Best Album of the Year\nWorld Music Awards for Best Pop/Rock Artist\nWorld Music Awards for Best New Artist\nWorld Music Awards for Best Selling Artist of America\nCheckout the Collection of pictures and ASCII Art of Lady Gaga from the below link. Download the file and extract it to your PC. To view the ASCII Art that has been stored in the Notepad Text File, Open the text file in Notepad. Then Go to Format and Uncheck WordWrap, then In Format Go to Font and Change the Font to Lucida Console and Set the Font Size to 3 or 4 Pt. Now you could be able to see the ASCII Art. Maximize the window to view in full extent. ENJOY ! !\nhttp://www.4shared.com/file/ZnRf-9MA/Lady_Gaga.html\nJUSTIN BIEBER – THE YOUNG CANADIAN POP STAR\nby Jegan S in DANCERS, MOST BEAUTIFUL MEN, MUSICIANS, SINGERS Tags: artist, atlanta, basketball, billboard, canada, canadian, canadian hot, celine dion, certified, dancer, divorce, down to earth, drummer, favourite girl, future, georgia, guitarist, haiti, hockey, internet, island records, justin, justin drew bieber, LA Reid, lionel richie, love me, mackbook pro, manager, march 2010, most searched, my world, new release, one less lonely girl, one time, parents, pattie mallette, platinum, pop, producer, R&B, release, rihanna, rubber golf club, scooter braun, sean kingston, selena gomez, signature hair style, singer, smallville, star, taylor swift, timberlake, twitter, usher, we are the world, web, young, youtube\nJustin Drew Bieber (born March 1, 1994) is a Canadian pop/R&B singer. He began his professional career on YouTube, where he was discovered by his future manager, Scooter Braun. Braun flew Bieber to Atlanta, Georgia, to consult with Usher and soon signed a record deal with Island.The first part of his two-part debut album My World was released on November 17, 2009. Four successful pre-album singles have been released: “One Time”, “One Less Lonely Girl”, “Love Me”, and “Favorite Girl”, which were Top 15 hits on the Canadian Hot 100 and Top 40 hits on the Billboard Hot 100. This accomplishment made Bieber the only solo artist in Billboard history to have four singles from a debut album chart in the Top 40 of the Hot 100 before the album’s release. The album received positive reviews from critics, and debuted at #6 on the U.S. Billboard 200, selling 137,000 copies in its first week, which was the second best opening release for a new artist in 2009. It also debuted at #1 on the Canadian Albums Chart. As of the fifth week, the album has sold over 522,000 copies in the United States, and has been certified Platinum in Canada. Part II of My World is currently set for a March 2010 release.The craziest gift from a fan that he received was a rubber golf club. Bought a Macbook Pro with his own money and it was one of his biggest purchases. He likes the show “Smallville”. He started out by posting youtube videos in 2007. His debut album was “My World”. His mom, Pattie Mallette, travels with him all the time. He likes to play video games. He has a signature hair style. He met Celine Dion at a New York Knicks basketball game. She approached him and said my son loves your songs. He plays guitar at many of his concerts. He has performed with Rihanna at the Super Bowl Weekend concert in Miami. He likes to play hockey and basketball. He recorded a few songs with fellow singer Sean Kingston. He has one day a week where he just relaxes. He recorded “We Are The World” for Haiti. He got the opening verse which was previously sung by Lionel Richie. His dad still lives in Canada. He wrote the song “Down To Earth” about his parents’ divorce. The executive producer of his first record, My World was LA Reid. He has a twitter which he updates daily.He is good friends with Taylor Swift and Selena Gomez.\nCheckout the ASCII Art of Justin Bieber in the below link. Download the text file. Open it with Notepad. Please use Lucida Console font to view the art in Notepad. Before that in Notepad go to Format and Uncheck the Word Warp and then Go to Font and Reduce the Font Size to 3 to 4 pt. Use only Lucida Console Font.\nhttp://www.4shared.com/document/bGarRZ61/Justin_Bieber_1.html\nhttp://www.4shared.com/document/Xt2f98xk/Justin_Bieber_2.html\nKIM YU-NA – ICE ANGEL OF SOUTH KOREA\nby Jegan S in DANCERS, MOVIE STARS, SPORTS PERSON Tags: 2010, angels on ice, anycall, asan hospital, back injury, Bucheon, campaign, canada, cancer, Daishin Investment Forum, Daishin Securities, donations, donor, fairly on ice, figure skating, grand prix, Gyeonggi do, hauzen, Hyeon Jung Kim, hyundai, i love asia, ice skating, ivy club, J Estina, juvenile, kim, kim yu na, Kookmin Bank, korean air, LG Health Care, LG Household, little yuna, low income family, Maeil Dairies Company, motor company, nike, olympics, Saffron, samsung, seoul, Seoul Boys Town, skating, south korea, sports, sweden, Taean oil spill disaster, toronto, toto lottery company, unicef, universal music, vancouver 2010, vancover, Volunteer Day, young, yu na, yu na kim, yunas haptic\nKim Yu Na was born on September 5, 1990, in Bucheon, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea. Kim Yuna began skating when she was seven. In 2003, at age 12, she became the youngest woman ever to win the senior title at the South Korean Figure Skating Championships. The sport was not popular in South Korea back then though.The Koreans only started to pay serious attention to the young star after Kim won the silver medal at the 2005 Junior Grand Prix Final, the country’s first ever medal in an international figure skating championship.\nKim made her senior international debut at 2006 Skate Canada where she won a bronze medal. She continued to excel in various competitions and won the gold at the 2006/2007 Grand Prix Final in Russia. Kim claimed the world records in 2007 for both the short and long programs under the new ISU scoring system. She only managed a bronze at the 2007 World Championships in Japan though, while successfully defended her title at the 2007/2008 Grand Prix Final in Italy.\nKim again won the bronze medal at the 2008 World Championship in Sweden despite competing with a back injury. She got silver in the 2008/2009 Grand Prix Final in South Korea. Kim’s dominance began to surface in 2009 with a new world record in short program at the 4CC. She set another new record in short programs and overall score enroute to her gold medal at the 2009 World Championship in USA. She was the first female skater to surpass 200 points under the new ISU judging system.\nKim continued to break record after record and won her third Grand Prix Final title in Japan for the 2009/2010 season. Kim broke the world record again with a total of total of 228.56 points, en-route to winning the gold medal at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver.\nKim is a huge celebrity in South Korea, appearing in various commercials e.g. for Nike, Kookmin Bank, Hyundai Motors, Hauzen (profile pic) and Anycall etc. She is also appointed as an ambassador for the 2010-2012 Visit Korea Year.\nKim’s official sponsors are Kookmin Bank, Nike, Korean Air and Hyundai Motor Company. Her other endorsements include Anycall (mobile phone), Hauzen (air conditioner), Lac Vert (cosmetics), Maeil Dairies Co.Ltd (Dairy products), Saffron (fabric softener) and J. Estina (Jewelry). Her skating music and other favorites were compiled in the album Yuna Kim – Fairy On ICE – Skating Music (Universal Music Korea, 2008).\nKim has appeared on multiple commercials in South Korea. She sings in some commercials and also sang in T.V. specials. Her commercial for a new touchscreen haptic phone from Samsung Electronics, dubbed as Yuna’s Haptic (SPH-W7700), debuted in South Korea on May 24, 2009. In the commercial, she plays a rock singer, a teenager, and a writer to show off various features of the phone. Samsung Electronics has sold over one million devices in a record seven months.\nKim has been a generous donor. She has donated more than 2 billion won ($1.7 million) in the last 3 years. Kim has been supporting young figure skaters, as well as promising skaters since 2007. She has also been supporting patients suffering rare diseases and children in need. Below is part of a list of donations made by her.\nJan 2007 – 12 million won scholarships to 6 young skaters after her first advertisement endorsement of Kookmin Bank.\nMay 2007 – 10 million won scholarship to fellow skater Hyeon-Jung Kim after making a contract with LG Household & Health Care advertisement.\nSep 2007 – 200 million won (100 million of her own + 100 million won additional contributions from Ivy Club) in form of school uniforms to low-income-family youths after making a contract with Ivy Club advertisement.\nDec 2007 – 100 school uniforms (worth 20 million won) to youths damaged by Taean oil spill disaster.\nApr 2008 – Visited to Everland with 800 children from Seoul Boys Town on Kookmin Bank Volunteer Day.\nMay 2008 – 50 million won (in addition to contributions from Daishin Securities) to young skaters after giving a talk to public at Daishin Investment Forum 2008.\nMay 2008 – 40 million won worth of one-year provision of Maeil Dairies Company products to low-income-family youths.\nMay 2008 – Participated in the recording of a humanitarian song “I Love Asia” Project to help earthquake victims of Sichuan, China.\nDec 2008 – 100 million won worth of school uniforms to low-income-family youths after renewing her advertisement contract with Ivy Club.\nDec 2008 – Over 1,000 dolls, she received at Grand Prix Final, to juvenile cancer wards in hospitals in metropolitan Seoul area.\nDec 2008 – 50 million won to young skaters at “Little Yuna’ Youth skaters support project” Campaign of Sports Toto Lottery Company.\nDec 2008 – 144 million won, total amount of ticket earnings from the charity ice show “Angels on Ice 2008” to children with rare diseases and juvenile cancer patients.\nApr 2009 – 100 million won worth of dairy products to low-income-family youths through the Seongname Welfare Center of World Vision.\nMay 2009 – Visited Asan Hospital to inquire after juvenile cancer patients on Children’s Day.\nMay 2009 – 100 million won and skate boots while participating in UNICEF Pigotta Doll Project to help children with immunization campaign.\nDec 2009 – Her portrait rights for free to be included in the Christmas seals for tuberculosis eradication.\nJan 2010 – 100 million won through UNICEF to Haiti relief.\nApr 2010 – 40 million won fee for appearing in a radio campaign for the rights of the disabled to Korea Foundation for Persons with Disabilities.\nApr 2010 – 50 million won, some part of earnings from Festa on Ice 2010, to ChunAhn-Häm (sunken Korean battleship) victims who passed away in the ship.\nCheckout the ASCII Art of Kim Yu Na in the below link. Please use Lucida Console font to view the art in Notepad. Before that in Notepad go to Format and Uncheck the Word Warp and then Go to Font and Reduce the Font Size to 3 to 4 pt. Use only Lucida Console Font.\nhttp://www.4shared.com/document/tiyGFNmZ/Kim_Yu_Na_1.html\nhttp://www.4shared.com/document/MQVkxjhr/Kim_Yu_Na_2.html\nCRISTIANO RONALDO – MANCHESTER UNITED’S YOUNGEST SIGNING\n29 Jun 2010 6 Comments\nby Jegan S in MOST BEAUTIFUL MEN, SPORTS PERSON Tags: 2010, aveiro, ball, corner, cristiano, dos, fifa, footbal, foul, funchal, goal, goals, los, madeira, madeira island, madrid, manchester, match, pavillion, penalty, player, portugal, portuguese, referee, ronaldo, santos, shot, sports, sportstar, star, united, young\nCristiano Ronaldo dos Santos Aveiro arrived in Manchester amid a media storm. Manchester United had managed to sign the player without the Press suspecting anything. As the Stock Market was told that the player had been signed, hundreds of journalists flooded up to Manchester to get a proper look at one of Manchester United`s youngest signings.\nRonaldo was born on the 5th February 1985, on the small island of Madeira, which is owned by the Portuguese. Named after Ronald Reagan, due to his father`s respect for the man, few would have gambled that this child would make it to the very top of the Football tree, especially with Madeira mainly being used for farm-land. He has one brother and two sisters, and it is family whom he deems most important in his life at the moment. It was on the dusty back-streets of this small island that Ronaldo learnt his first few tricks, and it was also on this Island that he was first scouted. By the age of twelve Ronaldo had established himself as the best player on the Island, able to use his ball skills and pace to get past full-grown defenders for Andorinha.\nHaving been recognised as a serious talent, all that was left was for the big Portuguese clubs to scrap it out for his signature. Though Porto and Boavista came in for him, he could only ever play for Sporting the club he supported as a boy. He progressed slowly through the youth ranks, although all those who worked with him were impressed with the talent that he had for his age, as well as his maturity.\nAt the tender age of 17, Ronaldo was thrown in at the deep end with his first game against Moreirense. Two goals on his first appearance not only gave him his dream debut, but also endeared him to the fans, who soon learnt to chant for the ball to be passed to him. A goal against title-rivals Boavista also saw him rise to the top of the “Fan`s Favourites” list.\nHis skills were watched closely by all of the big clubs in Europe, including Liverpool and Juventus, in the U-17 European Championships. His dazzling skills put England U-17s out, and everyone who watched felt they had seen something special. At the end of his first season at Sporting he was linked to Liverpool. Though he claimed he was extremely happy at Sporting, he was also flattered by the interest of such a big club, who used to do well in the Premier League.\nSporting finished top in the league, and Ronaldo was hailed as the future of the club, alongside Quaresma, another Portuguese Starlet. As it was, both moved away, with the money on the table to much for the Portuguese club to turn down. Best-friend Quaresma ended up at Barcelona, whilst Ronaldo came to the bright red of Manchester. The deal saw Ronald become the most expensive teenage signing in Britain, with Manchester United paying £12.24million over two seasons, in two equal payments. Those who had not seen him play baulked at the price such a lot of money for someone unproven!\nThose who had seen the Man Utd vs. Sporting friendly just three days before, however, knew that this player was special. Playing for Sporting, Ronaldo had taken the game to the reds, and was the main reason that Manchester United lost 3-1. After the game, all the United players could talk about was how well Ronaldo had played, and they begged Sir Alex to buy him. Sir Alex had been following him for months, but decided that the time was right not least because other clubs were getting increasingly closer to buying him.\nAn so, on 12th August 2003, Cristiano Ronaldo held up the famous Red shirt, with his favourite number 7 (it is hero Figo`s number) for all the press to see. A new star had been born. His first performance for the club was against Bolton. He entered the fray with an hour gone, with United 1 0 up. A standing ovation from the fans at old Trafford did nothing to settle his nerves, but he rewarded the fans for their trust. A man-of-the-match performance followed, and Ronaldo became legend. He had a hand in two of the goals, won an unconverted penalty, and mesmerised the Bolton defence.\nThe next day the media proclaimed him one of the best players ever for United, comparing him with Red-Legend George Best. Much had been seen, but much is still to come.\nCheckout the ASCII Art of Cristiano Ronaldo in the below link. Please use Lucida Console font to view the art in Notepad. Before that in Notepad go to Format and Uncheck the Word Warp and then Go to Font and Reduce the Font Size to 3 to 4 pt. Use only Lucida Console Font.\nhttp://www.4shared.com/document/5SlbdRgS/Cristiano_Ronaldo.html\nCHETAN BHAGAT – THE MODERN INDIAN AUTHOR\nby Jegan S in BUSINESS PERSONALITIES, MOVIE STARS, POETS & AUTHORS Tags: 1 night, 2 states, 3 idiots, 3 mistakes of my life, 5 point someone, achiever, ahmedabad, anusha, art, ascii, atar, author, bhagat, books, call center, call centre, chetan, chetan bhagat, cinema, IIM, IIM-A, IIT, indian, love, marriage, movie, movies, new delhi, one night at call center, publisher, star anchor, star anchor hunt, star news, student, the story, the story of my marriage, writer, young\nChetan Bhagat was born on April 22, 1974 in New Delhi. He is an Indian author who has written Five Point Someone – What not to do at IIT , One Night @ the Call Center, The Three Mistakes of My Life and 2 States – The Story Of My Marriage. He has also written the script of Hello, the Hindi movie based on One Night @ the Call Center. He is married to Anusha, who was his classmate in IIM.Along with Advaita Kala and Karan Bajaj, Chetan Bhagat is considered among the trio of modern Indian writers that have rewritten Indian publishing rules and brought a new scale to the Indian publishing landscape with previously unheard of book sales.\nBhagat attended Army Public School from the year 1978 to 1991, Dhaula Kuan, New Delhi. He studied Mechanical Engineering at the Indian Institute Of Technology (IIT), (1991-1995) Delhi, and then studied at the Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad (IIM) (1995-1997) where he was named “The Best Outgoing Student”.\nHe fell in love with his IIM Ahmedabad classmate Anusha and they eventually got married.[1] A fictionalized version of his love story is given in his book 2 states – The story of my marriage.\nBhagat’s writing style tends to be simple, with linear narratives and vivid storytelling. His protagonists tend to be named after Lord Krishna, like Hari, Shyam, Govind or Krishna. All his books have a number in the title (e.g. ‘five’ in the first, ‘one’ in the second, ‘three’ in the third and ‘two’ in his latest book.) When asked about this Chetan replied “I’m a banker, I can’t get numbers out of my head.” He is a columnist with Dainik Bhaskar & The Times Of India, and writes on political issues.\nChetan Bhagat is a judge on a soon to be hosted Reality show by Star News called Star Anchor Hunt.\nSociety Young Achiever’s award in 2004.\nPublisher’s recognition award in 2005.\nCheckout the ASCII Art of Chetan Bhagat in the below link. Please use Lucida Console font to view the art in Notepad. Before that in Notepad go to Format and Uncheck the Word Warp and then Go to Font and Reduce the Font Size to 3 to 4 pt. Use only Lucida Console Font.\nhttp://www.4shared.com/document/mxLjMM5K/Chetan_Bhagat.html","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1353390"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7004569172859192,"wiki_prob":0.2995430827140808,"text":"HEADLINES Published May13, 2015 By Staff Reporter\nPeople with Celiac Disease May Be at Risk for Nerve Damage\n(Photo : Zeynel Cebeci, Getty Images )\nA very large study of people who were diagnosed with celiac disease has found that the disease appears to be linked with an increased risk of nerve damage. People with celiac were about 2.5 times more likely to be diagnosed with nerve damage (neuropathy) as those without celiac.\nCeliac disease is a disease where the immune system attacks the lining of the small intestine when gluten is eaten. Gluten is a protein found primarily in wheat, but also in barley and rye grain. The association between celiac disease and neuropathy has been known for some time, but the actual risk of neuropathy for people with celiac was not known.\nResearchers at Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, the Karolinska Institut in Stockholm, and Orebro University Hospital in Orebro, Sweden, collected data on biopsies of the small intestine that were done in Sweden between 1989 and 2008. They compared the risk of neuropathy in more than 28,000 people diagnosed with celiac disease with that of nearly 140,000 people who did not have celiac. They found that 198 people with celiac disease (about 0.7%) later were diagnosed with neuropathy, compared to 359 (0.3%) of those without it.\nAlthough the actual risk of developing nerve damage is low, the researchers noted that it might be beneficial for physicians to screen patients who are diagnosed with celiac for nerve damage.\nCeliac affects about 1% of the population of the United States, which is about 1 in every 133 Americans. It is believed that more than 80% of people with celiac are either not diagnosed or are diagnosed incorrectly as having another disease. In children, symptoms of celiac disease include diarrhea, vomiting, bloating, and weight loss as well as failure to grow properly. In adults, the symptoms can include fatigue, bone and joint pain, arthritis, or other symptoms.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1188495"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9180317521095276,"wiki_prob":0.9180317521095276,"text":"Former West Vancouver mayor was wrong to take $75K gift from godmother, panel finds\nPosted By: sherwoodparkweather 17 Views 75K, finds, gift, godmother, mayor, PANEL, Vancouver, west, wrong\nA lawyer and former mayor of West Vancouver committed misconduct when he accepted $75,000 as a gift from one of his clients, a disciplinary committee has found.\nMark Sager, who ran for a return as mayor in 2018, said in an interview last year the gift could be easily explained away: the client in question was his godmother, who wanted to thank him for some legal work he did for her.\nBut the Law Society of B.C. found Sager still broke the rules when he took the money because lawyers in the province cannot accept a gift that is “more than nominal” from a client, unless that client has had independent legal advice concerning the gift.\nReached by phone on Monday, Sager said he had no comment on the law society’s findings. He served as mayor of West Vancouver from 1990 to 1996 and has spent the last two decades heading his own law firm. He lost his most recent bid for mayor in October.\n‘Auntie J’\nThe misconduct surrounds Sager’s relationship with an aunt-like figure he’d known since he was a child.\nThe law society’s decision, posted online Monday, said the woman, identified only as J.B., was a longtime, “very close friend” of Sager’s mother. Sager and his sister grew up with her and called her “Auntie J.”\nIn 2012, J.B. had a fall at her North Vancouver home. Then 83, she was hospitalized and later moved to a care centre in West Vancouver. The decision said she phoned Sager for help six months after her fall, unhappy with the care she was receiving and her overall “predicament.”\nMark Sager previously served as mayor of West Vancouver from 1990 to 1996, when he was in his 30s. He ran for mayor again in 2018, but was unsuccessful. (Facebook)\nThe society said Sager helped rewrite J.B.’s will, represented her in her divorce, and helped her estranged husband buy her out of her home — the house she’d lived in for decades — in the months that followed.\nSager would ultimately be written into J.B.’s new will, while her biological niece was written out, and would receive a $75,000 gift from the money J.B. made on the sale of her home.\nAssistant, associate unaware\nThe society said Sager asked his associate to “step in” regarding J.B.’s will in January 2014 because Sager was “conflicted out” due to his relationship with her.\nBoth Sager’s assistant and his associate said they didn’t realize J.B. wasn’t Sager’s biological aunt, as they only ever heard him refer to her as Auntie.\nSager and his sister were included in J.B.’s new will as her “nephew and niece.”\nJ.B. gave Sager the $75,000 gift that June.\nMark Sager is a founding member and senior partner of Sager LLP, located in the Ambleside area of West Vancouver. A campaign sign for Sager’s unsuccessful bid for mayor can be seen on the building in a Google Streetview photo taken in October 2018. (Google Streetview)\nNearly a quarter of her estate went to Sager when she died on Jan. 21, 2016 at the age of 86. Sager was executor of the will.\nThe law society launched an investigation after J.B.’s younger sister complained in 2017.\nDuring hearings, Sager admitted to what had happened but said it wasn’t professional misconduct. He said he didn’t know he was breaking the rules because they’d only been added to the B.C. Code for lawyers in 2013.\nThe decision said he argued “lawyers should be entitled to a reasonable amount of time to gain familiarity with the new Law Society requirements.”\nThe panel disagreed, saying the case was “not a situation where a rule of very recent vintage caught a lawyer by surprise.”\nThe decision said Sager’s behaviour was a “marked” departure from the standard expected of lawyers in the province.\nA penalty will be decided at a later date.\n[addm2p url=””]\nUSA News Headlines\n[su_feed url=”http://rss.cnn.com/rss/cnn_us.rss” limit=”20″]\nABC NEWS Headlines\n[su_feed url=”http://feeds.abcnews.com/abcnews/usheadlines” limit=”20″]\n🌙Solar Eclipse [2017] (end of the world?)💩\nStampede’s showband hosts world championships and wins them\nOilers sign French defenceman Yohann Auvitu to one-year contract – Edmonton – Canada News\nJuly 10, 2017 sherwoodparkweather 0\nHorror fans can’t get enough scary monsters and super creeps – British Columbia\nOctober 28, 2017 sherwoodparkweather 0\nVictoria, B.C. to introduce dock-free bike sharing service – British Columbia","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1575917"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.562130331993103,"wiki_prob":0.437869668006897,"text":"Presidential Debate Preview: Romney vs. Obama\nBy thekeystonenews on September 19, 2012\nWith the party conventions concluded and less than two months remaining until election day, President Obama and Mitt Romney are turning their attention towards the upcoming debate, the first of three.\nThe debate, scheduled for Wednesday, Oct. 3, will likely include some harsh criticisms between the two candidates, as it is their first meeting and their first opportunity to counter each other’s rhetoric one-on-one.\nIt is likely that President Obama will focus his criticisms on Mitt Romney’s recent gaffes pertaining to his comments about foreign policy in regards to the protests in the Middle East as well as Americans who are exempt from income taxes. Countering that, Romney will likely make the economy the focus of his points against the president.\nThis debate, unlike ones scheduled for later in October, will have no focus point, but will instead cover a broad variety of topics. The subjects of the economy, foreign policy, health care, and education will likely be the most examined and questioned, however other topics are expected to find their way into the discussion.\nJake Horowitz, a political writer and co-founder of policymic.com, predicts that Romney may have an edge entering the first debate due to his recent series of 20 debates in the Republican Primaries, suggesting that President Obama may be a bit out of practice. Horowitz notes, however, that the president is equally likely to shake off the cobwebs and quickly get into the debate state of mind that was lauded for in the 2008 election.\nThe debates will likely be a critical time for the Romney campaign, offering them a chance to bounce back from a recent decline in the polls. After his most recent gaffes, a Gallup tracking poll has him listed as far as six percentage points behind President Obama and predicts that swing states, such as Pennsylvania and Ohio, are currently leaning in the president’s favor.\nThe Presidential debates are scheduled for Oct.3 in Denver, Colo., Oct.16, in Hempstead, N.Y., and Oct. 22, in Boca Raton, Fla., the last of which will focus primarily on foreign policy. The Vice Presidential debate will be held on Wednesday, Oct. 11 in Danville, Ky.\nBy: A.J. Simmons\nSkimpy outfits prevalent on Main Street\nMTV’s Awkward. has a major question to answer","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1040106"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6320220232009888,"wiki_prob":0.6320220232009888,"text":"Paperback X\nHardback X\nPublished (488)\nMonographs (360)\nHandbooks (61)\nResearch Collections (55)\nReference & Dictionaries (5)\nElgar Advanced Introductions (1)\nElgaronline (344)\nInnovation and Entrepreneurship in the Global Economy\nEdited by Charlie Karlsson, Urban Gråsjö, Sofia Wixe\nInnovation and entrepreneurship are the prime drivers in the global economy. This scholarly book identifies some of the key forces behind innovation and entrepreneurship at the same time as it closes the gap between science and technology R&D, innovation, entrepreneurship, productivity growth, and internationalization. The expert contributions explore the underlying forces and add substantial theoretical and empirical knowledge to the current state-of-the-art in several research fields including the economics of innovation and entrepreneurship, regional economics, economic geography and international economics. Learn More\nForecasting Urban Travel\nDavid E. Boyce, Huw C.W.L. Williams\nForecasting Urban Travel presents in a non-mathematical way the evolution of methods, models and theories underpinning travel forecasts and policy analysis, from the early urban transportation studies of the 1950s to current applications throughout the urbanized world. From original documents, correspondence and interviews, especially from the United States and the United Kingdom, the authors seek to capture the spirit and problems faced in different eras, as changing information requirements, computing technology and planning objectives conditioned the nature of forecasts. Learn More\n2016 Paperback Price: $ 65.00 Web: $ 52.00\nInterculturalism in Cities\nEdited by Ricard Zapata-Barrero\nCities are increasingly recognized as new players in diversity studies, and many of them are showing evidence of an intercultural shift. As an emerging concept and policy, interculturalism is becoming the most pragmatic answer to concrete concerns in cities. Within this framework, this book covers two major concerns: how to conceptualize and how to implement intercultural policies. Through the use of theoretical and comparative case studies, the current most prominent contributors in the field examine an area that multicultural policies have missed in the past: interaction between people from different cultures and national backgrounds. By compiling the recent research in Europe and elsewhere this book concludes that interculturalism is becoming both an attractive and efficient new paradigm for diversity management. Learn More\nHandbook of Service Business\nEdited by John R. Bryson, Peter W. Daniels\nService business accounts for more than 75 per cent of the wealth and employment created in most developed market economies. The management and economics of service business is based around selling expertise, knowledge and experiences. This Handbook contributes to on-going debates about the nature of service business and the characteristics of service-led economies by exploring disciplinary perspectives on services, services and core business processes and the management of service business. A series of case studies are also provided. The volume pushes back the frontiers of current critical thinking about the role of service business by bringing together eminent scholars from economics, management, sociology, public policy, planning and geography. Learn More\nHandbook of Manufacturing Industries in the World Economy\nEdited by John R. Bryson, Jennifer Clark, Vida Vanchan\nThis interdisciplinary volume provides a critical and multi-disciplinary review of current manufacturing processes, practices, and policies, and broadens our understanding of production and innovation in the world economy. Chapters highlight how firms and industries modify existing processes to produce for established and emerging markets through dynamic and design-driven strategies. This approach allows readers to view transformations in production systems and processes across sectors, technologies and industries. Contributors include scholars ranging from engineering to policy to economic geography. The evidence demonstrates that manufacturing continues to matter in the world economy. Learn More\nHandbook of Research Methods and Applications in Economic Geography\nEdited by Charlie Karlsson, Martin Andersson, Therese Norman\nThis Handbook provides an overview and assessment of the state-of-the-art regarding research methods, approaches and applications central to economic geography. The chapters are written by distinguished researchers from a variety of scholarly traditions and with a background in different academic disciplines including economics, economic, human and cultural geography, and economic history. The resulting Handbook covers a broad spectrum of methodologies and approaches applicable in analyses pertaining to the geography of economic activities and economic outcomes. Learn More\nMegaregions\nEdited by John Harrison, Michael Hoyler\nBy critically assessing the opportunities and challenges posed by planning and governing at the megaregional scale, this innovative book examines the latest conceptualizations of trans-metropolitan landscapes. In doing so, it seeks to uncover whether megaregions are a meaningful new spatial framework for the analysis of cities in globalization. Situated within the broader contours of global urban analysis, the book draws together a range of thought-provoking contributions from scholars engaged in the study of trans-metropolitan regions. It thereby provides multiple paths of access for those wishing to familiarize themselves with this topical area of global urban studies. Learn More\nThe Regional and Urban Policy of the European Union\nPhilip McCann\nThe regional and urban development policy of the European Union, or more precisely, EU Cohesion Policy, is undergoing change. This development is driven by the enormous transformations in European regions and by shifts in thinking and analysis. The issues raised by the changes to regional and urban development policy in Europe span many academic disciplines and build on different research methodologies. A broad approach is required in order to address these issues and this book explicitly incorporates insights from a range of different disciplines. After examining the major regional and urban features of the European economy and discussing the analytical underpinnings of the current re-design to EU Cohesion Policy, the book also aims to provide a road map of the various EU regional and urban data-sources which are available to researchers and policy-makers. This book is aimed at all economists, geographers, regional scientists, spatial planners, transportation scientists, sociologists, urban studies researchers, environmental scholars, political scientists and policy-analysts who are interested in regional and urban issues. Learn More\nArts, Culture and the Making of Global Cities\nLily Kong, Ching Chia-ho, Chou Tsu-Lung\nWhile global cities have mostly been characterized as sites of intensive and extensive economic activity, the quest for global city status also increasingly rests on the creative production and consumption of culture and the arts. Arts, Culture and the Making of Global Cities examines such ambitions and projects undertaken in five major cities in Asia: Beijing, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Taipei and Singapore. Providing a thorough comparison of their urban imaging strategies and attempts to harness arts and culture, as well as more organically evolved arts activities and spaces, this book analyses the relative successes and failures of these cities. Offering rich ethnographic detail drawn from extensive fieldwork, the authors challenge city strategies and existing urban theories and reveal the many complexities in the art of city-making. Learn More\nThe Economics of Outsourcing\nEdited by Leslie P. Willcocks, Mary C. Lacity\nIn this wide-ranging collection, Professor Willcocks and Professor Lacity examine the economic determinants and outcomes of outsourcing and offshoring at both the firm and country levels. They provide a comprehensive overview of the topic, offering an interdisciplinary perspective, which covers the empirical and theoretical research not only of economists but also of researchers from other disciplines, most notably business strategy, information systems and international business. Learn More\nProperty Rights, Land Values and Urban Development\nLi Tian\nThis book presents an analysis of betterment and compensation issues under the Land Use Rights (LURs) System in China since 1988. The topic originates from the observation of widening inequity and increasing uncertainty associated with the failure of government to adequately address betterment and compensation issues. An analytical framework of institutions and property rights is employed to examine socio-economic impacts under the LURs system, in particular, the role of the state is analyzed to explore the effects of government intervention in land markets. Learn More\nAccessibility and Spatial Interaction\nEdited by Ana Condeço-Melhorado, Aura Reggiani, Javier Gutiérrez\nThe concept of accessibility is linked to the level of opportunities available for spatial interaction (flows of people, goods or information) between a set of locations, through a physical and/or digital transport infrastructure network. Accessibility has proved to be a crucial tool for understanding the framework of sustainability policy in light of best practice planning and decision-making processes. Methods such as cost–benefit analysis, multi-criteria analysis and risk analysis can benefit greatly from embedding accessibility results. This book presents a cohesive collection of recent studies, modeling and discussing spatial interaction by means of accessibility indicators Learn More\nInternational Handbook on Migration and Economic Development\nEdited by Robert E.B. Lucas\nThis Handbook summarizes the state of thinking and presents new evidence on various links between international migration and economic development, with particular reference to lower-income countries. The connections between trade, aid and migration are critically examined through global case studies. Learn More\nAsian-Pacific Rim Logistics\nPeter J. Rimmer\nEncompassing China, Japan, South Korea and Southeast Asia, extending to Australasia and connecting with South Asia, the Asian-Pacific Rim forms the world’s most dynamic economic region. Comprehending the region’s logistical structure and its institutions are of pivotal importance for businesses, researchers and policy-makers. Learn More\nGovernance for Urban Sustainability and Resilience\nJeroen van der Heijden\nCities, and the built environment more broadly, are key in the global response to climate change. This groundbreaking book seeks to understand what governance tools are best suited for achieving cities that are less harmful to the natural environment, are less dependent on finite resources, and can better withstand human-made hazards and climate risks. Learn More\nMigration and Diversity\nEdited by Steven Vertovec\nProcesses of social change brought about by international migration usually entail multiple kinds of diversification affecting ethnicities and identities, languages, gender balances, social statuses, skills and more. Compiled and introduced by a leading figure in the field, Migration and Diversity draws together key social scientific studies addressing varieties of migration-driven diversification. Contributions also examine state responses to, and the wider effects of, the new social, economic and political configurations that arise from migration. Combining empirical and theoretical works, this volume will be useful for undergraduate and graduate students through to professional scholars engaging in some of the most topical issues of today. Learn More\nGlobal Clusters of Innovation\nEdited by Jerome S. Engel\nIn the geography of the global economy, there are known ‘hot spots’ where new technologies germinate at an astounding rate and pools of capital, expertise and talent foster the development of new industries and new ways of doing business. These clusters of innovation are significant drivers of value creation and function as models for economic expansion in both developed and developing countries. This book explores the key attributes of these innovation hubs using case studies from around the world. Learn More\nCities and Private Planning\nEdited by David Emanuel Andersson, Stefano Moroni\nThrough comprehensive case studies of privately planned cities and neighbourhood in Asia, Europe and North America, this book characterizes the theoretical basis and empirical manifestations of private urban planning. In this innovative volume, Andersson and Moroni develop an under-studied aspect of urban planning and re-evaluate conceptions of our urban future. Learn More\nEdited by Stephane Hess, Andrew Daly\nChoice modelling is an increasingly important technique for forecasting and valuation, with applications in fields such as transportation, health and environmental economics. For this reason it has attracted attention from leading academics and practitioners and methods have advanced substantially in recent years. This Handbook, composed of contributions from senior figures in the field, summarises the essential analytical techniques and discusses the key current research issues. It will be of interest to academics, students and practitioners in a wide range of areas. Learn More\nMigration and Freedom\nBrad K. Blitz\nMigration and Freedom is a thorough and revealing exploration of the complex relationship between mobility and citizenship in the European area. Drawing upon over 170 interviews, it provides an original account of the opportunities and challenges associated with the rights to free movement and settlement in Croatia, Italy, Slovenia, Spain and Russia. It documents successful and unsuccessful settlement and establishment cases and records how both official and informal restrictions on individuals’ mobility have effectively created new categories of citizenship. Learn More","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1226859"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9023417234420776,"wiki_prob":0.9023417234420776,"text":"The X-Files 6.19, The Unnatural: “E.T. Steal Home”\nPosted in TV tagged Bounty Hunter, The X-Files at 1:25 pm by Jenn\nI don’t know about you guys, but I do this with my co-workers all the time\nSummary: In Roswell, New Mexico, on July 2nd, 1947, a light is shining over a mound of dirt. But it’s not a UFO, it’s a light on a baseball field. (The boundaries are marked by cacti, and sometimes the balls stick to them.) When a player named Josh Exley comes up to the plate, everyone in the outfield backs up. He hits a foul ball, but an outfielder has trouble finding it. Something out in the darkness tosses the ball back to him.\nThe catcher remarks that he heard the Yankees wanted to recruit Exley, but Exley says he enjoys the quiet of the “cactus league.” The catcher has heard rumors that Exley, who’s black, could be the next Jackie Robinson. Exley says he doesn’t want to be a famous man like Robinson – he just wants to be a man. He hits a home run, his 61st of the season, and his teammates lift him up in victory.\nThe celebration ends when Klan members ride onto the field on horses. Their leader shouts racial slurs at the other black players and mocks the white ones for hanging out with them. The meek pitcher, who’s been having trouble with his throws, gets in some practice by throwing at the Klansmen. One of the coaches unmasks the leader…who’s an alien.\nIn the present, there’s a baseball game, commentated by Vin Scully, on a TV at FBI headquarters. Scully’s annoyed that Mulder has her working on such a nice day. She asks if he’s ever thought about trying to find a life on this planet. Mulder says he’s tried, and that’s why he’s looking elsewhere.\nScully has brought in an ice cream cone – well, a nonfat tofutti rice dreamsicle – and taunts Mulder for spending the day looking through New Mexico obituaries from the 1940s. Why worry about people who died 50 years ago? They should let sleeping dogs lie. The two toss cliché phrases at each other until Mulder grams Scully’s snack from her. It falls on the book he’s been looking at, and Scully sees that he’s secretly been reading up on baseball.\nMulder waxes poetic about the things you can learn from box scores. Some things are the same as they were 50 years ago, like numbers. Scully asks if Mulder’s mother ever told her to go play outside. Mulder gets distracted by a photo of Arthur Dales and rips it out of the book. Scully calls him a rebel for defacing government property.\nMulder goes to Dales’ home (in D.C., not Florida), and is confused when the man there, who’s not Dales, says he is. He explains that he’s Dales’ brother, and for some reason, they have the same name. They also had a sister and a goldfish named Arthur. Dales knows who Mulder is, thanks to his brother; they’ve talked about him a lot (nothing flattering). This Dales isn’t interested in a chat, and he closes the door on Mulder.\nSince Mulder has never given up on a possibly interesting story, he decides to ask some questions through the door. Why is Dales (not the original, as Mulder thought, but the brother he’s speaking to) in a picture with Exley, who disappeared in 1947 after hitting 61 home runs? And what about the third man in the picture, who looks just like the Bounty Hunter? Dales thinks Mulder’s uninterested in baseball, but Mulder is a big fan.\nDales invites Mulder in and looks through some boxes while talking about how “the baseball gods” could answer all of Mulder’s questions about government conspiracies. He asks Mulder if he believes that love and passion could make a man shape-shift. “What exactly has your brother told you about me?” Mulder asks.\nHe wants to know why the Dales brothers didn’t say anything about the Bounty Hunter, if they’ve known about him and colonization plans for 50 years. Dales says that no one would believe him. Mulder’s offended that Dales doesn’t think he was “ripe” enough to be told. Dales finds a coin bank shaped like a baseball player that he says will tell Mulder all he wants to know.\nWe go back in time to June 29th, 1947, when Dales (the brother, not the original, but played by the actor who played the original in Travelers – this episode is confusing) goes to a ballpark to meet Exley for the first time. He works for the Roswell police and has been assigned to serve as Exley’s bodyguard. Exley doesn’t want the protection, but there’s a $500 bounty on his head from the KKK, and Dales isn’t about to let anyone, no matter his race, religion, or nationality – even Canadian! – be murdered if he can prevent it.\nDales is playing on a Negro League team, the Roswell Grays, and they’re on their way to their next game. Dales studies French on the bus. Exley asks Dales if he can get them some police uniforms to play in. Dales jokes that, instead of the Grays, they could be the Black and Blues. The players pretend to be offended, but everyone has a good laugh. Later, after many of the men on the bus have fallen asleep, Dales wakes up during a thunderstorm and checks on Exley. He’s stunned to see that Exley’s reflection in his window looks like an alien.\nIn the present, Mulder thinks Dales is messing with him. “E.T. steal home! E.T. steal home!” he jokes. Dales insists that he’s telling the truth. In fact, all the great baseball players were aliens. That includes Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle, and Willie Mays (“well, obviously,” says Dales). None of the greats fit in on Earth or in any other world. But on the field, they did. Mulder thinks he’s being metaphorical, but Dales says he only has time to be truthful. He gets a medication delivery from a kid he calls Poor Boy.\nBack in 1947, two boys, one black and one white, argue about whether or not a ball Exley hit is worth anything, since he’s not in the majors yet. Dales is in the Grays’ dugout, practically part of the team now. They even share chaw with him (though it makes him sick). There’s a big crowd at the game, so Dales is on the lookout, and he tackles Exley to protect him from what he thinks is a gun. It turns out to squirt water, so Dales says Exley had a bee on him. (This freaking show and freaking bees.)\nLater in the game, Exley gets hit by a pitch, and when his team checks on his mental state, he starts speaking an unrecognizable language. After a moment, he recovers, and when they ask where he’s from, he says Macon. The others don’t give the weird moment a second thought. But Dales goes to collect Exley’s glove and finds an acidic green substance on it.\nDales goes to a police station and calls Exley’s hometown, Macon, to do a background check on him. At the same time, he hands over Exley’s glove for testing. A Macon officer is very interested in Exley’s current whereabouts, as he disappeared five years ago…when he was six years old. The officer is also interested in Exley’s whereabouts because he’s the Bounty Hunter.\nThe two boys who were arguing earlier hang around the Grays’ dugout during their next game. The white one, called Poor Boy, tells Exley that some Yankee scouts are there to watch him. Exley plays poorly in the game, so Poor Boy thinks he’ll lose his chance at playing in the majors. As soon as the disappointed scouts leave, Exley hits a home run.\nOn the bus after the game, Dales confronts Exley for tanking the game, then reveals that he knows Josh Exley isn’t his real name – he took the missing boy’s identity. Exley denies that he’s from Macon, though Dales points out that he said he was after he was hit in the game. Exley says he also spoke in tongues, like he did in church when he was a kid. He says he was joking around.\nDales knows Exley’s trying to stay out of the spotlight because he’s hiding something. But tanking the game means he disappointed the fans, his teammates, and his race. That last one hits Exley hard. Dales is determined to find out his secret, but Exley warns that he’d better be looking into the right secret. In the team’s motel that night, Dales hears some noises from Exley’s room. He picks the lock, lets himself in, and sees an alien. Both of them scream in surprise, and Dales passes out.\nExley revives Dales, who immediately passes out again. Exley gives him water, but that only revives him briefly. “You’re supposed to be a big, bad policeman,” Exley chastises. When Dales is finally conscious, he thinks he’s dreaming. Exley confirms that this is what he really looks like. He shifts into the appearance of a woman, asking if that makes it easier for Dales to handle the revelation. Dales says that makes it weirder. Someone comes in looking for Exley and sees Dales with a hot woman instead.\nOn the bus the next day, Exley quietly tells Dales that his fellow aliens wanted him to keep to himself and not intermingle with humans. Dales guesses that he broke the rules because he came to Earth and fell in love with a woman. Exley laughs and says that he fell in love with baseball. His people don’t laugh or smile, but seeing his first baseball game brought joy out of him. It was the first “unnecessary” thing he’d ever experienced, and he couldn’t make himself go home. The players start a singalong, harmonizing on “Come and Go With Me to That Land.”\nThe bus’ journey turns into a ’40s TV commercial for Gray Bus Lines. The tagline, voiced over by Vin Scully, is “you can go home again.” In the present, Mulder guesses that Exley made himself appear black so people wouldn’t be suspicious not to see him in the majors. He thinks Dales is implying that Exley had something to do with the Roswell crash in July of 1947. Dales tells him to stop jumping to conclusions and “trust the tale.” Things that fascinate us are true. (This, contrary to what Dales said before, is a metaphor.)\nMulder still isn’t sure if Exley was an alien or a hybrid. He admits that he’s an idiot. As the Bounty Hunter appears on the 1940s broadcast on Dales’ TV, Dales says that since Exley had the same characteristics that make a man a man, he was human. Back in 1947, the Bounty Hunter stashes a body in a car trunk, then goes to meet the rest of the team.\nDales learns that the green stuff on Exley’s glove is from a lifeform that isn’t carbon-based. He’s called around to ask questions, but Dales tells him to keep quiet. He just wants the glove back. Exley – or someone who looks like Exley – shows up at the tech’s lab, saying Dales sent him to get his lab. He attacks the tech, then morphs into the Bounty Hunter.\nThe real Exley is at a ball field, and when Dales finds him there, he warns that he’s being accused of murder. Instead of running away, like Dales suggests, Exley wants to toss the ball around for a little while. He reveals that he talked to his family and wants to go home. He doesn’t have the sense of loyalty that would keep him on Earth, playing for humans. His family is still his family. Sirens approach, and Exley decides it’s time to leave. He asks Dales to tell people, including his kids, how good Exley was.\nDales doesn’t cooperate with the local cops, just telling them that Exley said he was going home. Dales refuses to betray Exley, even if it means he’s considered an accomplice or loses his job. After the police leave, Dales finds a map of the desert, with a home plate drawn on it.\nWe revisit the game from the beginning of the episode, and see that everyone fled after the Klan leader was unmasked. It’s the Bounty Hunter, there to kill Exley. Dales drives out there to save Exley, who says that dying would be the right thing to do. The Bounty Hunter is disgusted that Exley would risk the project for a game. Exley takes one last moment of pride in his 61st home run.\nThe Bounty Hunter wants Exley to show his true face in his moment of death. The Bounty Hunter goes first, morphing into an alien. Exley says that the face he’s wearing is his true face; he won’t shift. Dales arrives just as the Bounty Hunter is riding away, having icepicked Exley. Dales doesn’t care that Exley’s blood could harm him – it’s regular red blood, not green acid. Exley laughs, then dies in Dales’ arms. “Come and Go With Me to That Land” plays as current-day Dales remembers the moment. “I got a brother in that land where I’m bound,” the song says.\nScully finds Mulder at a batting cage, having been summoned by a message from “Fox Mantle.” He wants to give her a birthday present, though it’s not her birthday. Mulder knows that she’s never hit a baseball. Scully says no; she’s found more necessary things to do. He shows her how to hold the bat, telling her he’s paying Poor Boy to shag balls and run the pitching machine.\nPoor Boy’s totally going to go home and tell his parents how he saw two FBI agents with their hands all over each other, because…seriously. Mulder helps Scully hit some balls, joking about all the stuff he puts her through. “Shut up, Mulder. I’m playing baseball,” she tells him. Up in the night sky, some of the stars shine brighter than the others.\nThoughts: This episode was written and directed by David Duchovny.\nExley is played by Jesse L. Martin. The second Dales is played by M. Emmet Walsh.\nDarrin McGavin (the original Dales) was supposed to be in the episode but had to step out because he got sick. They wrote in the character of his brother, but I guess didn’t bother to come up with a new name.\nVin Scully (the namesake of Dana Scully, by the way) recorded his part for free because of budget issues.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1459483"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6439424753189087,"wiki_prob":0.6439424753189087,"text":"Comic CONsciousness\nby Tyler and Christo Wilson\n“The great thing about the comics industry is that it’s driven by passion\n…it isn’t driven by money.”\nRoyden Lepp, graphic novelist, The New York Times, 7/28/14\nThe New York Times:\nArmed Animals Don’t Invent Themselves\n‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ Character Creators Fight for Cash and Credit\n“Like millions of moviegoers over the weekend, Bill Mantlo watched “Guardians of the Galaxy,” the Marvel Studios space adventure that sold more than $172 million in tickets worldwide in its first four days of release.”\n“The film’s success is particularly meaningful to Mr. Mantlo, 62, [who watched the film from his nursing home room] a comic-book writer who helped create one of the movie’s main characters: the foul-tempered, gun-wielding anthropomorphic Rocket Raccoon.”\nGroot holding Rocket Raccoon, who was created by Bill Mantlo and Keith Giffen, in “Guardians of the Galaxy.” Photograph from, Marvel Studios and Walt Disney Pictures\nOur very own Boulevardier Brothers have something to say,\nand it’s all about comics, Comic-Con, and yes! it’s Comic-Con season again…\nTYLER: I’ve been investing in comic books since I was 3 years old. Before I could even read I would join Ma and my older brother Christo on the weekly trips to the comic shop, and buy them just for the trip home which was a visual universe of amazing action packed illustrations. There was always a monthly budget for books and comics in our house, our Ma encouraged all varieties of reading, and she is proud today of her, “voracious reader sons.” I favored mostly Marvel titles, like Spider-Man and Iron Man, as I got older I was drawn toward the darker imprints, particularly Vertigo and the Hellblazer books.\nIllustration by Tyler Wilson\nInspired by artists like Tim Bradstreet (Hellblazer) and Mike Mignola (Hellboy), many of my pieces explore the blending of humanity, the occult, and technology. Del Toro on Mignola, “Mike’s body of work is firmly anchored in comic-book and literary traditions of Machen, Lovecraft, Toth, and Kirby. Yet what has been emerging from them is a species all on its own.”\nThe REAL Iron Man, Robert Downey Jr.\nComic books are actually versatile tools, they can be used to articulate views on political and societal shifts, as well as being colorful escapist fantasies. It is the rare author who can successfully combine both of these into a comic that doesn’t become overbearingly self serious or run off the rails (how many times can a character come back from the dead — really?).\nThere are of course some seminal works: Watchmen by Alan Moore, Sandman by Neil Gaiman, The Dark Knight Rises by Frank Miller, (soon to be newly released film Sin City: A Dame to Kill For — August 22, 2014 continues his genre) that manage to not only define entirely new worlds and characters, but to a certain extent hold up a gritty and super powered mirror to some of the real world’s problems. Comics have matured over the years, from their Golden Age beginnings like the jingoistic propaganda of early Captain America and Superman, to cynical and dark dystopian tales like Warren Ellis’ Transmetropolitan or the religiously polarizing and irreverent Preacher by Garth Ennis.\nFrom the Comic-Con website:\nComic-Con International: San Diego began in 1970 when a group of comics, movie, and science fiction fans — including the late Shel Dorf, Ken Krueger, and Richard Alf banded together to put on the first comic book convention in southern California. Comic-Con started as a one-day “minicon,” called San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Minicon, on March 21, 1970 at the U.S. Grant Hotel in downtown San Diego. The purpose of this single day, which included two special guests, Forrest J Ackerman and Mike Royer, and drew about 100 attendees was to raise funds and generate interest for a larger convention. The success of the minicon led to the first full-fledged, three-day San Diego Comic-Con (called San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Con), held August 1–3, 1970, at the U.S. Grant Hotel, with guests Ray Bradbury, Jack Kirby, and A. E. van Vogt. Over 300 attendees packed into the hotel’s basement for that groundbreaking event, which featured a dealers’ room, programs and panels, film screenings, and more…essentially, the model for every comic book convention to follow.\nFrom the beginning, the founders of the show set out to include not only the comic books they loved, but also other aspects of the popular arts that they enjoyed and felt deserved wider recognition, including films and science fiction/fantasy literature. After one more name change (San Diego’s West Coast Comic Convention, in 1972), the show officially became the San Diego Comic-Con (SDCC) in 1973 with the fourth annual event. In 1995, the non–profit event changed its name to Comic-Con International: San Diego (CCI).\nCHRISTO: I’ve always been a comics fan, my Dad inspired me with his 60’s comics collection, and I passed this along to my younger brother Tyler. With 20 years and counting of collecting, I think perhaps the most astounding thing about modern comic books, and the comic industry, is how successful the material has become across the media landscape. To put this is perspective, consider that in 1996, Marvel Comics was bankrupt, and yet today the Disney/Marvel juggernaut is redefining what is possible across movies and television with projects and crossovers of immense scope. But Marvel is hardly the only success story: Robert Kirkman’s The Walking Dead is a cult phenomenon spanning comics, television, and a critically acclaimed episodic video game series. Similarly, Bill Willingham’s modern classic Fables is also now an award winning video game (The Wolf Among Us), as well as (arguably) the inspiration for television hit Once Upon A Time.\nA few Comic-Con facts from mental_floss:\nThe first Masquerade Ball, a fan-made costume and makeup contest, took place in 1974.\nIn 1979, $12,000 in receipts was stolen from the Comic-Con International Treasurer’s home. As a result, the organization behind Comic-Con had to ask fans for donations to pay off the debt.\nSince 2000, San Diego Comic-Con has hosted an annual film festival called the Comic-Con International Independent Film Festival, which highlights the best in genre movie-making.\nDirector Kevin Smith has made guest appearances at San Diego Comic-Con since 1997. In 2007, Comic-Con organizers asked the geek icon to close out Comic-Con Saturday Nights in Hall H with an hour-and-a-half long “Geek State of the Union Address.”\nSan Diego Comic-Con was featured on various TV shows throughout the last decade, including The O.C., Weeds, and Entourage. The comic book convention was also featured on the reality shows Beauty and the Geek and MTV’s Punk’d and The Real World: San Diego.\nCHRISTO: The sheer size, scope, and cross-genre popularity of Comic-Con 2014 is perhaps the strongest evidence that comic books have truly arrived as mainstream culture. You’re equally likely to encounter Joss Whedon surrounded by the Avengers, Firefly browncoats, of Buffy-esque vampires. Guillermo del Toro might be found piloting a 50-story tall Jaeger from Pacific Rim, forestalling the vampire apocalypse in The Strain (itself a trilogy of books, comics, and now a television show), or investigating the paranormal with Hellboy. In short, comic culture is now just culture, and Comic-Con is the epicenter of the new entertainment landscape.\nNote: We encourage all readers to take time and explore the visual feast of unbelievable comic art by each illustrator great in this post…hence all the links, do visit their sites and Wikipedia for an eyeball full!\nby: Tyler and Christo Wilson\nTagged as: a e van vogt, alan moore, Bill Mantlo, captain america, CCI, comic, Comic-Con, comic-con international independent film festival, dark knight rises, del toro, dystopia, fables, forrest j ackerman, frank miller, garth ennis, geek state of the union, golden age comics, guardians of the galaxy, hellblazer, hellboy, iron man, jack kirby, ken krueger, kevin smith, kirby, lovecraft, machen, marvel, mike mignola, mike royer, minicon, Neil Gaiman, once upon a time, preacher, Ray Bradbury, richard alf, rocket raccoon, royden lepp, sandman, SDCC, shel dorf, sin city, spider-man, superman, the wolf among us, tim bradstreet, toth, transmetropolitan, walking dead, warren ellis, watchmen\nPrevious post: Good Days and Bad Hair Days\nNext post: Portrait of a Photographer as a Young Man","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line565933"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8468294143676758,"wiki_prob":0.8468294143676758,"text":"Varner on \"The Guarantee\"\nBy Patrick Stevens The Washington Times - October 26, 2007, 10:43AM\n\\ The senior safety is bright, insightful, gregarious and engaging, a guy with a heck of a future regardless of what he does once he leaves college. He’s also one of the few players you’re certain actually enjoys the give-and-take with reporters. \\\n\\ He’s also honest; not in a tactless, loose cannon way, but in a “I’ve-seen-a-lot-and-this-is-how-it-is” kind of way.\\\n\\ So there was no one better to ask about Clemson tailback James Davis‘ guarantee of a Tiger victory tomorrow at Maryland than Varner, who chuckled when the topic was brought up earlier this week.\\\n\\ “I saw it, but I just laughed about it,” Varner said. “I don’t know. You just can’t guarantee things in this sport. I would never do that because you just don’t do that. That’s a very immature thing to do, to guarantee something like that.”\\\n\\ At that point, the Official Beat Diva cut in from a few seats away and lamented that she hadn’t asked Varner the same question earlier, prompting another set of laughs before Varner continued.\\\n\\ “It’s such an immature thing to do, definitely,” he said. “If you feel that strong about it, then more power to him. I’m not going to sit and guarantee anything because it’s like ‘any given Sunday.’ It’s any given Saturday.”\\\n\\ I told Varner at this point I figured he would probably have a wary view of such theatrics.\\\n\\ “I saw it and I said ‘Wow, that’s pretty bold, buddy,’” Varner said. “I want to see what you do in the game. I’m going to be looking for him. I’m going to be looking for No. 1. Definitely, I want to see if he can back up that and see what he’s going to bring to the table with all that talk. That’s cool. We like that. It’s sitting in the back of our heads.”\\\n\\ “Like you guys needed to be riled up,” I offered, referencing a last-minute 18-17 loss to Virginia last week.\\\n\\ “Thanks. We needed that,” Varner said. “Good. Like we weren’t mad enough. You’ve just really [ticked] us off now. That’s even better.”\\\n\\ The first lesson in all of this is to not engage Varner in a war of words. You’ll lose. Badly.\\\n\\ Tomorrow, we’ll learn if angering Varner and the rest of a wounded team turns out to be a particularly dangerous game for Davis to play. \\\n\\ – Patrick Stevens","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line608319"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8733032941818237,"wiki_prob":0.8733032941818237,"text":"Poverty may have pushed Sien back into prostitution; the home became less happy and Van Gogh may have felt family life was irreconcilable with his artistic development. Sien gave her daughter to her mother, and baby Willem to her brother.[78] Willem remembered visiting Rotterdam when he was about 12, when an uncle tried to persuade Sien to marry to legitimise the child.[79] He believed Van Gogh was his father, but the timing of his birth makes this unlikely.[80] Sien drowned herself in the River Scheldt in 1904.[81]\nAfter the altercation with Gauguin, Van Gogh returned to his room, where he was assaulted by voices and severed his left ear with a razor (either wholly or in part; accounts differ),[note 9] causing severe bleeding.[142] He bandaged the wound, wrapped the ear in paper, and delivered the package to a woman at a brothel Van Gogh and Gauguin both frequented.[142] Van Gogh was found unconscious the next morning by a policeman and taken to hospital,[145][146] where Félix Rey, a young doctor still in training, treated him. The ear was delivered to the hospital, but Rey did not attempt to reattach it as too much time had passed.[140]\nVan Dyke had four children with his first wife, Margie. The pair lived separate lives for years, before officially divorcing in 1984. The actor became involved with Michelle Triola, an ex-girlfriend of Lee Marvin, in the late 1970s. Trioia had been working as Van Dyke's agent's secretary when they first met. Van Dyke stayed with Triola for nearly 30 years, until her death in 2009. In March 2012, the 86-year-old actor wed 40-year-old makeup artist Arlene Silver.\nAmong Van Dyke's high school classmates in Danville were Donald O'Connor and Bobby Short, both of whom would go on to successful careers as entertainers.[10] One of his closest friends was a cousin of Gene Hackman, the future actor, who also lived in Danville in those years.[10] Van Dyke's mother's family was very religious, and for a brief period in his youth, he considered a career in ministry, although a drama class in high school convinced him that his true calling was as a professional entertainer.[10] In his autobiography, he wrote, \"I suppose that I never completely gave up my childhood idea of being a minister. Only the medium and the message changed. I have still endeavored to touch people's souls, to raise their spirits and put smiles on their faces.\"[10] Even after the launch of his career as an entertainer, he taught Sunday school in the Presbyterian Church, where he was an elder, and he continued to read such theologians as Buber, Tillich, and Bonhoeffer, who helped explain in practical terms the relevance of religion in everyday life.[10]\nHe incorporated his children and grandchildren into his TV endeavors. Son Barry Van Dyke, grandsons Shane Van Dyke and Carey Van Dyke along with other Van Dyke grandchildren and relatives appeared in various episodes of the long-running series Diagnosis: Murder. Although Stacy Van Dyke was not well known in show business, she made an appearance in the Diagnosis: Murder Christmas episode \"Murder in the Family\" (season 4) as Carol Sloan Hilton, the estranged daughter of Dr. Mark Sloan.\nDanny (last name May, I'm pretty sure) and Sierra were a pleasure to work with. They had a completely non-pushy yet totally dedicated approach. Their timing was perfect - literally every time we had a question or wanted help, they appeared and LISTENED to our wants and dislikes and guided us like they really cared. They were upbeat and personable and miles ahead of the salespeople we met at other furniture stores in the area. We couldn't be happier with how we were treated.\nVan Gogh worked for Goupil in London from 1873 to May 1875 and in Paris from that date until April 1876. Daily contact with works of art aroused his artistic sensibility, and he soon formed a taste for Rembrandt, Frans Hals, and other Dutch masters, although his preference was for two contemporary French painters, Jean-François Millet and Camille Corot, whose influence was to last throughout his life. Van Gogh disliked art dealing. Moreover, his approach to life darkened when his love was rejected by a London girl in 1874. His burning desire for human affection thwarted, he became increasingly solitary. He worked as a language teacher and lay preacher in England and, in 1877, worked for a bookseller in Dordrecht, Netherlands. Impelled by a longing to serve humanity, he envisaged entering the ministry and took up theology; however, he abandoned this project in 1878 for short-term training as an evangelist in Brussels. A conflict with authority ensued when he disputed the orthodox doctrinal approach. Failing to get an appointment after three months, he left to do missionary work among the impoverished population of the Borinage, a coal-mining region in southwestern Belgium. There, in the winter of 1879–80, he experienced the first great spiritual crisis of his life. Living among the poor, he gave away all his worldly goods in an impassioned moment; he was thereupon dismissed by church authorities for a too-literal interpretation of Christian teaching.\nMany of the comedy films Van Dyke starred in throughout the 1960s were relatively unsuccessful at the box office, including What a Way to Go! with Shirley MacLaine, Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N., Fitzwilly, The Art of Love with James Garner and Elke Sommer, Some Kind of a Nut, Never a Dull Moment with Edward G. Robinson, and Divorce American Style with Debbie Reynolds and Jean Simmons. But he also starred as Caractacus Pott (with his native accent, at his own insistence, despite the English setting) in the successful musical version of Ian Fleming's Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968), which co-starred Sally Ann Howes and featured the same songwriters (The Sherman Brothers) and choreographers (Marc Breaux and Dee Dee Wood) as Mary Poppins.\nThe piece comes back and looks horrible. The fabric was torn and stapled back together unevenly. We called Art Van to complain and were promised to be contacted by the manager. In the meantime we moved and didn't get a chance to call manager back. We called back and were told manager would contact us. Nothing. I finally called the manager, Kathy Smith, today and received the worst treatment I've ever experienced from a store. Right away she had a chip on her should and said because it's been 8 months since original purchase, we couldn't get a replacement and basically it wasn't her problem. I wasn't rude and didn't say anything to anger her but she acted like I was trying to steal from her. I explained that if we could not get the piece replaced (which is ridiculous by itself), could we get a decent discount on the purchase of two new pieces? We need to get the reverse pieces for the new house and were hoping after all the inconvenience, that they could work with us since the original piece looks terrible from being serviced.\nIn Paris in 1901 a large Van Gogh retrospective was held at the Bernheim-Jeune Gallery, which excited André Derain and Maurice de Vlaminck, and contributed to the emergence of Fauvism.[269] Important group exhibitions took place with the Sonderbund artists in Cologne in 1912, the Armory Show, New York in 1913, and Berlin in 1914.[273] Henk Bremmer was instrumental in teaching and talking about Van Gogh,[274] and introduced Helene Kröller-Müller to Van Gogh's art; she became an avid collector of his work.[275] The early figures in German Expressionism such as Emil Nolde acknowledged a debt to Van Gogh's work.[276] Bremmer assisted Jacob Baart de la Faille, whose catalogue raisonné L'Oeuvre de Vincent van Gogh appeared in 1928.[277][note 15]\nThough The Dick Van Dyke Show got off to a slow start, it eventually developed quite a following; Van Dyke won over audiences with his good humor and likeability, and won three Emmy Awards for his work on the series. Decades after the show went off the air, in 1966, it remained a popular program in syndication. Following the show's end in 1966, Van Dyke starred on several other TV series, including The New Dick Van Dyke Show, but none captured the public's heart the way his first sitcom did.\nIn 1944, Paul Van Doren dropped out of intermediate school in 8th Grade at age fourteen when he realized he didn’t like school. He had a strong passion for horses and found his way to the race track where he earned the nickname “Dutch the Clutch”, and for just one dollar he would give you the odds of the race.[3] Paul’s mother, Rena, did not enjoy the idea of Paul being without a job and not in school, so she insisted he get a job at Randy’s, a one-time shoe manufacturer in the US. His job entailed sweeping the floors and making shoes. Paul eventually worked his way up the ladder and became the executive vice president at just 34 years old. Randy’s became one of the biggest shoe manufacturers in the US From Van Doren’s quick success in Massachusetts, he was ordered to turn around a failing Randy’s factory in Garden Grove, California that was losing close to a million dollars each month. Paul and his brother Jim moved their families and settled in Anaheim to help the factory. After just eight months of being in Garden Grove, the factory was functioning better than the one in Massachusetts.[4] Three months after trying to have the Garden Grove factory, Paul decided he wanted to start his own shoe brand.\nAfter his recovery, and despite his antipathy towards academic teaching, he took the higher-level admission exams at the Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp, and in January 1886 matriculated in painting and drawing. He became ill and run down by overwork, poor diet and excessive smoking.[99] He started to attend drawing classes after plaster models at the Antwerp Academy on 18 January 1886. He quickly got into trouble with Charles Verlat, the director of the Academy and teacher of a painting class, because of his unconventional painting style. Van Gogh had also clashed with the instructor of the drawing class Franz Vinck. Van Gogh finally started to attend the drawing classes after antique plaster models given by Eugène Siberdt. Soon Siberdt and Van Gogh came into conflict when the latter did not comply with Siberdt's requirement that drawings express the contour and concentrate on the line. When Van Gogh was required to draw the Venus of Milo during a drawing class, he produced the limbless, naked torso of a Flemish peasant woman. Siberdt regarded this as defiance against his artistic guidance and made corrections to Van Gogh's drawing with his crayon so vigorously that he tore the paper. Van Gogh then flew into a violent rage and shouted at Siberdt: 'You clearly do not know what a young woman is like, God damn it! A woman must have hips, buttocks, a pelvis in which she can carry a baby!' According to some accounts this was the last time Van Gogh attended classes at the Academy and he left later for Paris.[100] On 31 March 1886, which was about a month after the confrontation with Siberdt, the teachers of the Academy decided that 17 students, including Van Gogh, had to repeat a year. The story that Van Gogh was expelled from the Academy by Siberdt is therefore unfounded.[101]\nVincent Willem van Gogh was born on 30 March 1853 into a Dutch Reformed family in Groot-Zundert, in the predominantly Catholic province of North Brabant in the southern Netherlands.[16] He was the oldest surviving child of Theodorus van Gogh, a minister of the Dutch Reformed Church, and Anna Cornelia Carbentus. Van Gogh was given the name of his grandfather, and of a brother stillborn exactly a year before his birth.[note 2] Vincent was a common name in the Van Gogh family: his grandfather, Vincent (1789–1874), who received a degree in theology at the University of Leiden in 1811, had six sons, three of whom became art dealers. This Vincent may have been named after his own great-uncle, a sculptor (1729–1802).[18]\nI am extremely unhappy with the service I was provided. My wife and I just moved, and are on a tight budget. We were in need of a mattress due to having to leave the old one at our old place. After sleeping on an air mattress for a few months we decided it was time to bite the bullet and buy a real one. We went to art van and got a cheaper mattress (due to the tight budget) and told it was not in stock at their location but it was at their Dearborn location, and they would have it shuttled and we could pick it up in 1-2 business days. After they took our card information and charged us they informed us that the mattress wouldn't be ready until February, and we are now going to have to wait 3 weeks.\n\"People say, and I am willing to believe it, that it is hard to know yourself. But it is not easy to paint yourself, either. The portraits painted by Rembrandt are more than a view of nature, they are more like a revelation,” he later wrote to his brother. The works are now displayed in museums around the world, including in Washington, D.C., Paris, New York and Amsterdam.\nVan Dyke grew up in Danville, Illinois, with his parents Loren and Hazel and younger brother, Jerry, who also became an actor. \"Danville was a town of 30,000 people, and it felt as if most of them were relatives,\" Van Dyke later wrote in his autobiography, My Lucky Life In and Out of Show Business. His father, Loren, was often away from the family, working as a traveling salesman for the Sunshine Cookie Company.\nThere are more than 600 letters from Vincent to Theo and around 40 from Theo to Vincent. There are 22 to his sister Wil, 58 to the painter Anthon van Rappard, 22 to Émile Bernard as well as individual letters to Paul Signac, Paul Gauguin and the critic Albert Aurier. Some are illustrated with sketches.[8] Many are undated, but art historians have been able to place most in chronological order. Problems in transcription and dating remain, mainly with those posted from Arles. While there Vincent wrote around 200 letters in Dutch, French and English.[14] There is a gap in the record when he lived in Paris as the brothers lived together and had no need to correspond.[15]\nAfter Van Gogh's death, memorial exhibitions were held in Brussels, Paris, The Hague and Antwerp. His work was shown in several high-profile exhibitions, including six works at Les XX; in 1891 there was a retrospective exhibition in Brussels.[265] In 1892 Octave Mirbeau wrote that Van Gogh's suicide was an \"infinitely sadder loss for art ... even though the populace has not crowded to a magnificent funeral, and poor Vincent van Gogh, whose demise means the extinction of a beautiful flame of genius, has gone to his death as obscure and neglected as he lived.\"[263]","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line992257"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5750190019607544,"wiki_prob":0.4249809980392456,"text":"Category: Grayssen Chronicles\nWhere we Will, We’ll Roam\nFiled under: Grayssen Chronicles — Leave a comment\n“Any plans after we reach our destination?” Sen asked Vanni softly as he stood at the bow of the airship watching the scenery.\n“I’m not sure,” he replied, after a moment. “I figured… I thought that I’d explore. I’d like to… see the world.”\n“The world’s a big place,” Sen pointed out. “The road gets mighty lonely. Might you want some company?”\n“Maybe,” Vanni replied. He looked out over the bow of the airship and smiled. His father had always warned him about trusting strangers. The woman might have an ulterior motive for her offer; but she might just want company on the road.\n“Where are we going?” Oliver asked, joining them.\nVanni spun to face them and waved a hand toward the horizon. “That way,” he declared. “After that… who knows.”\nTags: Oliver, Sen, Vanni\nLonger Ways to Go\nVanni bounded up the gangplank of the airship with a mixture of excitement and anxiety. He carried a violin that he’d purchased with the money he’d earned at the little inn. On his back was a pack full of the provisions that he’d forgotten in his haste to leave home. He wore more serviceable clothes now, instead of the finery he’d worn when he reached the inn.\n“Vanni Galiano?” the steward said as he reached the deck. “You’re one of three musicians on the ship. I’ll take you to your room as soon as the others arrive. For now, feel free to explore but try not to get underfoot.”\n“Yes, sir,” Vanni said. He stepped over to the side, out of the way of a passing airman. Then he looked out over the bow of the ship. Before him lay the great wide blue of the sky. The world seemed to stretch out before him, beckoning him forward. He felt the freedom of the open road and chuckled, as he had to shake his hair out of his face.\n“Might want to cut that,” an androgynous voice said wryly from behind him.\nVanni spun to find a buxom woman of dark complexion standing behind him. He pushed his hair away again and nodded. “Might be a plan,” he agreed. “Vanni Galiano,” he added. “I play violin and piano and sing tenor.”\n“Sentina Cole. My friends call me Sen. I play harp and guitar and sing alto. Classically trained or self-taught?” she asked, not taking his hand.\n“Classically trained,” Vanni returned, tucking his hands behind his back. “And you?”\n“I have formal training,” she replied, offering her hand now. Vanni frowned but shook it as she added, “Sorry, a lot of folks set themselves out as bards when they really don’t have a claim to the title. Being able to pick out a few folksy songs, does not a bard make.”\nVanni grinned and looked away, sharply reminded of his music teacher. The maestro had thought only those educated in music should pursue it as a career. He’d only learned music to please his father and, later, because it was fun. It had never even occurred to him that he could find a career in music until the barkeeper had asked him about his skills. The juxtaposition of the two ideas was intriguing.\n“Are you saying that those who learned in a more traditional manner have no business being bards?” another voice said.\nVanni looked up to find a fair man who appeared a few years older than he was. “If so I fear I must disagree. After all, going back to our roots music was largely a structureless endeavor. It’s a more recent addition, actually.”\n“The only musicians I know are largely untrained and they’re… fun to listen to. They have a sound that’s all their own,” Vanni pointed out. “I suppose because they don’t know how music is ‘supposed’ to sound.” He turned his gaze toward the horizon. “Like when I first started, I figured that I should only play the few folksongs I knew. It wasn’t until later that I began using my more classical music with a less classical audience. I was pleasantly surprised when they liked it.”\n“Just because something is different doesn’t make it bad. It can make it all the more interesting. Variety adds spice to life,” the young man agreed. He held out a hand and said, “Oliver Montgomery, pleasure to meet you.”\n“Vanni Galiano.” He took the offered hand and smiled broadly. “Are you the third musician that they were waiting for?”\n“I am,” Oliver replied. “I play flute and harp. I sing baritone… trending toward the lower end of the register.”\nVanni nodded and added his own vital information. As Sen made her introductions and the ship set out, he gazed out at the horizon. He had a long way to go before he went home again but he thought he would enjoy the journey.\nTempting me Into the Garden\nPhilippe sat up and listened to the soft music that had woken him for a few moments before standing. He walked like someone who was in a trance. He wasn’t quite entranced by the music, but if he let it the song would lull his senses.\nHe followed the song to its source – the garden. It was dark and most of the flowers were closed for the night. There in the gazebo a beautiful red-haired woman stood. It was she who sang so sweetly. He could see that she wasn’t a vampire when she opened her mouth.\n“What are you doing here?” Philippe asked as the song drew to a close.\n“I came for you,” she replied. She held out her hands and without a second thought, Philippe took them.\n“What do you wish of me?” he asked. She set a hand on his eyes and he closed them. Then he sank to the soft earth.\n“You are a vampire who chooses not to feed on humans or even the blood of animals, yes?” she asked.\nHer voice was musical. When she spoke it was as if she sang. Philippe felt compelled to answer truthfully. “Yes,” he murmured.\n“Your brothers are not vampires, true?” she asked.\n“Yes,” he replied softly. “Patrice by virtue of the treatments he underwent as a child and Vanni by birth.”\n“Would you like to be as they are?” she asked. “Do you know what you would lose if you were human?”\n“My gifts over fire. My gift of flight. My strength. My thirst for blood,” he murmured. “But I would be able to be near them without worrying that I’d bite them in a moment of excitement.”\n“Is this a fair trade?” she asked.\n“Yes,” he replied. Then he felt suddenly cold. He couldn’t stop shivering. Then he could but not from warmth. It was as if all the heat was drawn from his body. Then the sensation stopped as suddenly as it had started. Philippe sat up and looked around in shock. He was alone in the garden.\nCurious, he set a finger to his teeth. They were all the same shape. He had no more fangs. He was as human as his brothers. He shivered again – but not from the cold.\nTags: Philippe\nI’ve Waited for You for a Long Time\nVanni frowned and looked all around him. It was dark. There was no moon and the streetlights were too far off to light the cemetery. He didn’t like it. He felt like anyone could sneak up on him.\nAs if the dark thoughts had summoned up trouble, Vanni was surprised by strong arms around his chest. Another hand covered his mouth. He was half-dragged, half-carried over to a ditch that the autumn rains had filled with water.\nSuddenly, he was pushed beneath the water. He struggled to get away; to hold his breath in. In the end, he could do neither. Air escaped in fat bubbles, quickly replaced by murky water. Vanni’s struggles eased as cold filled his chest.\nThen he relaxed. Suddenly he was warm. He sat up in shock and looked around frightfully. “Giovanni,” a familiar voice greeted. “It’s too early. You have to go back.”\n“What?” Vanni looked around and found that he was still sitting in the ditch. Not far off a man was running away as two other ran toward him. He recognized them immediately as his father and godfather. He looked for whoever had spoken and found a girl standing not far off.\n“Giovanni, you have to go back,” she said, pointing to where his father was kneeling on the ground over a lifeless form.\nSuddenly, Vanni recognized the girl. “Lissa?” he said. He stood and took her hands. “Lissa, it’s you,” he said. He leaned against her and smiled. “I’ve missed you.”\n“I’ve always been there but you need to go back. I’ve waited for you for a long time. I can wait a little longer. Your father needs you. Go. I’ll wait,” she promised.\nVanni nodded and suddenly a force caught him up and he was cold again. He was coughing, gagging and vomiting up the water that he’d swallowed and inhaled. Strong hands rubbed his back and soon he relaxed. “Dad?” he whispered hoarsely.\n“Thank Gaia,” the older man said. “Are you hurt, son?”\n“I think I’m alright,” Vanni replied. He rolled over so he could look at his father. “I saw Lissa. She said… she said she’d wait, that it wasn’t my time yet. She said you needed me.”\nSuddenly he was caugh in a bone-crushing embrace. “I do need you, son,” his father murmured. “I don’t say it often. I don’t say it near enough. I take you for granted but I can’t imagine what I would do if something happened to you.”\n“I love you too, Dad,” Vanni whispered.\nTags: Vanni\nThe Dead are Gentle to Us\nVanni looked out over the cemetary with its rows of stones. His brothers stood not far away. His father stood further back. “Well, we’re altogether,” he said softly. “Just like you wanted.”\n“We’re finally a family again,” Philippe added. He took each of his brother’s hands and smiled gently between them. They were a most unusual family. Vanni was a human mage. He was a vampire and Patrice was somewhere in between the two. Still, there was no doubt that they were related. All had their mother’s coloring.\n“The question now is: what will Cris do?” Patrice said.\n“He’s had no problem raising you all these years,” Vanni pointed out.\n“He gave me treatments to subdue my vampire side, Vanni. Those treatments won’t work for Philippe. He’s too old now.”\nThe youngest brother looked at their mother’s grave. “She wanted us to be raised as brothers. Father will respect that. He may be anxious about Philippe being a vampire, but he’ll honor her wishes. He will always love her.”\n“True,” Patrice agreed. He reached over and took Vanni’s hand and smiled. They’d be fine now. They were a family.\nTags: Patrice, Phillippe, Vanni","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line4319"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6605985760688782,"wiki_prob":0.3394014239311218,"text":"Georgia Lottery Raises Historic $1.2B for Education\nGovernor Brian P. Kemp is proud to announce that the Georgia Lottery has transferred its fiscal year (FY) 2019 profits - a total of $1,207,369,000 - to the State Treasury’s Lottery for Education Account, marking the largest annual transfer in the Georgia Lottery’s 26-year history. Now, the total funds raised for education amounts to more than $21 billion.\nPeter Carter: Airline Joint Ventures are Putting Atlanta Front and Center on the Global Stage\nFor Georgians, it has never been easier to travel internationally. Take for example, Delta’s non-stop flight between Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport and Seoul, Korea. This flight was made possible by Delta’s joint venture partnership with Korean Air, which gives travelers convenient access and a seamless experience across the Pacific, with easy connections beyond Seoul to more than 80 additional destinations across Asia.\nYoung Gamechangers to Present Big Ideas to Monroe/Walton County on August 9th\nSince the beginning of the year 45 of Georgia’s brightest young professionals have been working on a project in Monroe/Walton County. They met with community leaders, toured businesses and schools, visited neighborhoods and parks, researched history, and re-imagined the area’s connectivity in their quest to come up with big ideas and innovative solutions to some of the area’s most persistent challenges.\nGeorgia Chamber Completes A Successful Regional Small Business Series\nThe Georgia Chamber of Commerce hosted a six-stop statewide tour throughout the early summer months. The Regional Small Business Series, also known as New Georgia Economy, offered half-day workshops to provide unique insight on the emerging business trends and risks, and the impact to small businesses, innovation and entrepreneurship that the state faces.\nMembers of Georgia Delegation Urge Timely, Effective Implementation of Disaster Relief Funds\nU.S. Senators David Perdue (R-GA) and Johnny Isakson (R-GA) wrote this week to U.S. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue to encourage the Trump administration to work with the Georgia Department of Agriculture to ensure that farmers affected by Hurricane Michael receive needed aid as soon as possible. They applauded Secretary Perdue for his support of disaster aid legislation signed into law on June 6, 2019.\nGeorgia Power Investing Billions in Georgia’s Energy Future; Requests Funding for Grid Improvements, Storm Restoration, Environmental Programs\nGeorgia Power filed a request with the Georgia Public Service Commission to increase customer rates by approximately 7% in 2020 to enable the company to continue making investments in Georgia’s energy future.\nShan Cooper and Frank Blake Elected to Georgia Historical Society Board of Curators\nThe Georgia Historical Society announced that Shan Cooper and Frank Blake have been elected to serve as the newest members of the GHS Board of Curators.\nCurrent Signs of the Times in Corporate Responsibility: A Conversation with Coxe Curry's Ann W. Cramer\nThe goBeyondProfit team had the privilege to sit with Ann and hear her perspective on trends in Corporate Responsibility. Ann has identified several signs of the time based on the Five Corporate Social Responsibility Trends to Watch in 2019, that are published annually by her friend and colleague Tim McClimon, president of the American Express Foundation.\nAllen, Hice Help Secure Ft. Gordon Cyber Instructional Facility Funding\nThe budget process has been out of regular order for several years now. Under normal rules, Congress would pass 12 appropriations measures that form the annual budget. These 12 separate spending bills offer a lot of chances for disagreement and possible partisan wrangling. It is much easier to pass much, much larger bills that combine spending into a package – thus, the “omnibus budget.”\nThe Outlook for the U.S. Housing Market Hits its Highest Point in Three Years\nLast year's sales slowdown, combined with the decidedly mixed data through the first half of 2019, certainly suggested that housing had passed its peak in this cycle. But the latest Health of Housing Markets Report (HoHM Report) from Nationwide Economics sees more positive, sustainable trends for the housing sector for at least the next year.\nGeorgia's Largest Technology Showcase Scheduled for March 2020\nThe premier showcase event for Georgia's technology industry, The Summit, returns March 3rd & 4th, 2020 at the Cobb Galleria in Atlanta to shine a spotlight on the state's industry strengths and gather top leaders and innovative companies at the Technology Association of Georgia's (TAG) annual meeting.\nAT&T Invests Nearly $5.4B Over 3-Year Period to Boost Local Networks in Georgia\nAt AT&T, we’ve invested nearly $5.4 billion in our Georgia wireless and wired networks during 2016-2018. These investments boost reliability, coverage, speed and overall performance for residents and businesses.\nCongressman Tom Graves Introduces Active Cyber Defense Certainty Act\nCongressman Tom Graves (R-GA-14) is concerned about criminal hackers in cyberspace. The Republican Congressman from Ranger, GA teamed with Democrat Congressman Josh Gottheimer (N.J.-05), to introduce a bipartisan bill that gives American businesses and consumers more tools to defend themselves online.\nGMA Convention Guest Speakers Share Unique Roads to Success\nThe GMA 2019 Annual Convention themed: “Cities United: Lead to Succeed.” will take place this week at the Savannah International Trade & Convention Center.\nGeorgia Awarded Gold Shovel for Jobs and Investment\nGovernor Brian P. Kemp announced Georgia was awarded a Gold Shovel by Area Development Magazine for generating the most jobs and investment in the United States for the eight to twelve million population category.\nGeorgia Small Business Leaders Profit from Speakers' Expertise/Experience at U.S. Chamber of Commerce Event\nThis past Wednesday nearly two hundred small business leaders from across Georgia had the opportunity to benefit from attending the U.S. Chamber of Commerce “Small Business Series” held in Atlanta: a notable list of fifteen, experienced peers and experts in the small business market segment shared practical advice, anecdotal narratives, and statistical information to help inspire owners, who might want to incorporate them in their business models and plans.\nGovernor Kemp Makes Historic Appointment for Insurance Commissioner\nGovernor Brian P. Kemp made history by appointing Doraville Police Chief and Brigadier General John King to serve as Georgia’s Insurance Commissioner and Safety Fire Commissioner. King is the first Hispanic Insurance Commissioner and statewide constitutional officer.\nFreight and Logistics Commission will Look at All Options\nDemocrat and Republican lawmakers in Georgia agree that logistics and moving freight across the state will be a key issue when they meet under the Gold Dome again in January 2020. To prepare for those discussions, a Joint Commission of the state House and Senate has been appointed to study and consider different options.\nMatt Arthur: Improve Horizons for Millions of Georgians Outside Metro Atlanta\nMetro Atlanta continues to be the hub of economic activity in Georgia and the Southeast, with no sign of slowing down any time soon. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Atlanta has had a 43% growth in jobs since 1991, more than 20 percentage points higher than the national average. It has the fourth fastest population growth in the nation—nearly six million people live in the metro region.\nSmall Business Hiring and Wage Growth Hold Steady in May\nThe Paychex | IHS Markit Small Business Employment Watch for May shows job and wage growth were essentially unchanged from the previous month. The national jobs index stands at 98.76 and has been relatively stable throughout 2019. Hourly earnings have increased 2.53 percent ($0.67) over the past 12 months, remaining slightly ahead of the 2018 average growth rate (2.49 percent).\nGeorgia Chamber Partners With U.S. Chamber To Host Small Business Series June 12th\nThe Georgia Chamber of Commerce and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce will be partnering to host the Small Business Series on June 12, 2019 from 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Mason Fine Art and Events in Atlanta.\nGeorgia Power Customers to See Credit on June Bills\nThe second of three credits associated with the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 will be applied directly to Georgia Power customers’ bills in June. These credits are a result of the reduction in Georgia Power’s federal corporate tax rate from 35% down to 21%.\nCongress Passes Disaster Relief Bill\nHelp is on the way. Nearly nine months after farmers in South Georgia were devastated by Hurricane Michael, the U.S. House of Representatives approved a $19.1 billion disaster relief bill Monday, sending the measure to President Donald Trump. The legislation was approved 354-58 by Congress.\n10 Most Expensive Places to Retire in the U.S.\nRetirement might be a financial struggle for many retirees, but there is a segment for whom money is not a problem. To help those who like to dream big, Topretirements.com has developed a list of the 10 most luxurious places to retire. Communities where the hardest task is to choose whether it will be the beach club, marina, golf course, or take the plane out for a flight.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1164125"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9387209415435791,"wiki_prob":0.9387209415435791,"text":"Trump Campaign Advisor Details Sept. 2016 Meeting With FBI’s ‘Informant’\nCharlie Neibergall/AP\nThe top Trump campaign official who assembled members of the foreign policy team that became the subject of the FBI’s probe into Russian election meddling went on an Iowa radio show Monday to detail his recollections of meeting with an informant reportedly working for the feds.\nSam Clovis told the Simon Conway Show that he and the informant — an American academic based in Britain — met at a DoubleTree hotel in Virginia just outside of Washington on September 1, 2016. The two sat for coffee and had a “high level” academic discussion about China, Clovis said.\n“It was like two faculty members sitting down in the faculty lounge talking about research,” Clovis, who served as the campaign’s national co-chairman, said. “There was no indication or no inclination that this was anything more than just wanting to offer up his help to the campaign if I needed it.”\nClovis’ name popped up in a story last week about the informant in the Washington Post, which also identified the informant by name Monday evening.\nPresident Trump met Monday with Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein, who’s overseeing Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s probe, as well as FBI Director Christopher Wray and Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats about turning over information about the informant to Congress.\nClovis, on the radio show, alleged that the informant meeting appeared to be “a deliberative and intentional effort on the part of the leadership of the FBI to create something that didn’t exist.”\nThe FBI, he claimed, was trying to “literally like plant evidence or to create an audit trail that would lead investigators on to something, then they would have justification to go back to their FISA warrants and all the other things.”\nHe said that the informant, in an email back and forth setting up the meeting, used his previous contact with Trump campaign foreign policy advisor Carter Page as “bonafides” to get in front of Clovis. Page had met the informant at a July 2016 conference, and was in touch with him on multiple occasions.\nClovis’ lawyer, Victoria Toensing, previously said, according to the Washington Post that the informant had not mentioned his other Trump contacts when reaching out to Clovis. Clovis said he wasn’t sure “where she got that information,” since she had access to the emails setting up the September 2016 meeting.\nToensing, in an phone interview Tuesday with TPM, backed up Clovis’ account. She told TPM that the informant had said in an email to Clovis that Page had recommended that they meet. She also claimed that the informant had told Page when they met at the conference that he was a big fan of Clovis’. Page confirmed Toensing’s account in an email to TPM.\nClovis suggested that the informant then used their meeting to get a meeting with George Papadopoulos.\nThe informant would eventually meet with Papadopoulos in mid-September, according to the New York Times, where he would ask Papadopoulos what he knew about Russia’s efforts to influence the election. (Papadopoulos denied having any insight, according to the Times.)\nClovis said Monday that his meeting with the informant was focused solely on the informant’s China research. Clovis claimed he didn’t think anything of the meeting, as the campaign already a had a “host” of people with China expertise, and that he didn’t even bother to open the attachments that the informant later emailed him on Sept. 27 with more of his research.\n“I took a meeting like this probably once a day — I had somebody like this who would sit down with me,” Clovis said. “Literally dozens of people that had academic credentials that wanted to help and be involved, and I met with them all the time.”\nUpdate: This story has been updated to include Carter Page’s confirmation that the informant told him he was a big fan of Sam Clovis’.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1306874"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6599138975143433,"wiki_prob":0.34008610248565674,"text":"Belarus, UNECE discuss preparation of second Innovation Performance Review\nMINSK, 14 March (BelTA) – The State Committee on Science and Technology (SCST) and the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe discussed the preparation of the second Innovation Performance Review of Belarus, BelTA learned from the SCST press service.\n“Chairman of Belarus’ State Committee on Science and Technology Alexander Shumilin and international experts of the UN Economic Commission for Europe discussed the issues related to the preparation of the next Innovation Performance Review of Belarus (Innovations for Sustainable Development – the review of Belarus),” the State Committee on Science and Technology said.\nThe first project was implemented by the UNECE jointly with the State Committee on Science and Technology in 2010-2011. It was the result of joint work of leading foreign experts and specialists who gave an independent assessment of the status and trends of development of innovation activity in the country.\nThe second review of innovation development is needed to see the progress made since the first project in the light of the changed external conditions. In the second review the experts will pay close attention to the establishment of knowledge and innovation support institutes, innovations in the manufacturing and public sectors, innovative infrastructure, including the development of industrial parks and business incubators.\nThe visit of a delegation of the UNECE experts will be over on 18 March 2016. They are expected to hold a series of meetings in the ministries and departments, and visit a range of enterprises.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line885223"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7379424571990967,"wiki_prob":0.2620575428009033,"text":"This program was offered in the past. This program might be offered again, but to be certain contact the organizing institution of this program. For current programs view all programs, or see the current offer by University of Groningen.\nSearch for New Physics with Low-Energy Precision Tests\nThe unexplained nature of dark matter and energy and the relative abundance of matter and antimatter are just two out of many reasons to expect physics beyond the Standard Model. In an attempt to resolve these issues, a variety of theoretical extensions to the Standard Model were developed. These extensions also predict new phenomena, such as the variation of fundamental constants and symmetry violation beyond allowed by the Standard Model. Sophisticated experiments are needed to detect these phenomena and thereby explore the physics beyond the Standard Model.\nLow-energy precision tests are a very promising alternative to high energy accelerator research in this field. Using a combination of precision table-top experiments, electronic structure calculations and particle-physics theory, the understanding of the foundations of our universe can be tested at energies that effectively surpass those available at the largest particle accelerators. The search for new physics beyond the Standard Model using small-scale experiments is the topic of this summer school.\nLeading experts will provide an overview of both experimental and theoretical aspects of this exciting field of research. Topics will include the status of the Standard Model and its extensions, parity violation, search for the electron electric dipole moment and for variation of the fundamental constants, methods to manipulate and control atoms, ions and molecules, and theoretical approaches. By bringing together enthusiastic scientists and students from different disciplines connected to the search for physics beyond the Standard Model, we hope to foster the development of this field and to encourage future collaborations.\nView all upcoming programs of University of Groningen\nMaster / Graduate\nhousing included\nnew-physics-summerschool@rug.nl\nAll programs of University of Groningen","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line733655"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5636779069900513,"wiki_prob":0.43632209300994873,"text":"What Would The World Be Like If Video Games Didn’t Exist? Boring!\nby Dana · 4 Comments\nHave you ever wondered what would the world be like if video games didn’t exist? For some, a scary thought, for others a matter of indifference. I know it’s a bit silly to wonder about it when video games do exist and we should not dwell on what ifs but I thought that it’d be fun to look into it in one of my posts.\nIn short, there’s no way of knowing. But if video games didn’t exist, there would be other media to consume. However, the world would lose a great art form and many long-lasting friendships would not exist. Let’s look into how video games have changed the world and what it would be like without them.\nWhether you are a fan of video games or not, you have to admit that video games created a whole new culture on top of already established entertainment such as TV, movies and theatre. That brings me straight to point one.\nEntertainment substitutes\nIf video games didn’t exist, people would still stick with what they know: TV, board games, movies, theatre, music, fashion and with the vastness of the internet, social media and entertainment portals like Youtube.\nSome people would pick out a new hobby (sports, musical instruments, crafts, writing, drawing), some would pick up more books as a result. Some people believe that children would be playing outside a lot more but I think that’s debatable. With social media and TV, they could still sit for hours on end, substituting video games for TV shows and youtube videos.\nVideo games as an art\nThose who say that video games aren’t a form of art may have never touched a video game. Like books, movies, comics or TV, video games tell an engaging story with beautiful visuals. Not only that but they make the player a part of the story, allowing them to make decisions that can change the course of the game. Video games can provoke joy, sadness, grief, anger and everything in between, much like other media do. They make you think of your actions and their consequences, make you ask questions and maybe even see the world in a new light.\nNot only that, but video games have inspired many artists to draw or write about their favorite characters, creating derivative works and expanding on the franchise. Just look at the stunning illustration of Ellie from The Last of Us!\nA lot of hardware manufacturers would not be spending billions of dollars on making their products better and better. Graphic cards, while for everyone, are specifically marketed to gamers for great performance and best graphics. This is not limited only to graphic cards but also processors, headphones, gaming keyboards and mice. Technology advancement in this field develops very quickly.\nPlaying video games no longer carry (or should not carry!) the stigma of making people asocial. Nowadays video games can be an activity for the whole family or a group of friends. Not only that, thanks to online multiplayer games, we meet new people, socialize and bond over common interests, creating new friendships.\nMany of these friendships are formed over long distances and in a world where video games wouldn’t exist, we most likely would never meet the same people. The fact that these friendships have been forged online makes them no less valuable or less “real”. I’m very thankful for video games; because of them I’ve met some of my closest friends and also my best friend. In fact, my friend wanted to make a post about his experience meeting friends online, which you can find here.\nOf course there are people who prefer their own company to other people on most days and that’s okay. Being introverted isn’t necessarily a bad thing. And chances are if you’re introverted and love to play video games, you’d be introverted even if they didn’t exist.\nSome people may find the thought that video games can help people ridiculous. There are many ways in which they can:\nCareer choices – some people may find inspiration for their career paths in their favorite fictional characters or even become a video game developer or writer. Sure, such characters also exist in movies, TV and books.\nQuestionable choices – Video games can often help people from making poor life choices (turning to alcohol, drugs to escape)\nAmbition – Video games provide a lot of rewards and achievements, which can motivate people in their careers to strive higher.\nInterest in various subjects – many video games have dealt with history and mythology and as such they made more people interested in these topics better than a school would.\nBattling mental illness – Agoraphobia and anxiety disorder can be very limiting to a person to the point of isolation. With the mobile game Pokémon: GO, people with these disorders report that for the first time in a long time, they look forward to going out among others. Such idea before this may have seemed unfathomable.\nEscape from real life – If a person is going through a tough time, battling depression or even abuse, playing video games can provide an escape, forgetting their problems for a while. I’ve read this touching (and horrifying) story of Scott, whose life was saved by video games by escaping abuse.\nMove more/work out – When you picture a gamer, you just imagine a person sitting down for hours on end. While that may be true for some people, there are also games that promote working out, using motion controllers or Kinect sensors to interact. Such games can be dancing games (Zumba, Dance Dance Revolution) to fitness games on Nintendo Wii.\nCharity – A number of gamers who support various charities are on the rise. Large influencers use their reach to raise money for charity. Youtubers like Markiplier, Pewdiepie, Jacksepticeye, and others have raised millions of dollars for various charities and continue to do so to this day just by live streaming themselves playing a video game. There are charities helping people play video games or making custom controllers for people with limited mobility (for example AbleGamers, Child’s Play). My friend Ian has done 5 or six 24-hour charity live streams, raising a lot of money in the process.\nVideo games made into broader entertainment\nAs I mentioned above, video games are an art form of their own. Video games have been taken and adapted for big screens, into novels and comics.\nNotable examples of movies based on video games:\nSome may argue that these movies were really bad. While that may be true, at least there was a lesson learned from them.\nVideo games are important\nWhatever your stance on video games or gamers in general, the truth is that video games have become a large and integral part of our modern culture. So what would the world be like if video games didn’t exist?\nI dare to say it’d be very different. Characters and stories that we love and play time and time again would not exist and some people would have never met in real life and become friends or even significant others.\nWhat do you think would happen if video games didn’t exist? I’d love to hear your opinion, so make sure to comment down below!\nController photo © by Mack Male @ Flickr\nInternet Friends\nTissues Needed! The Saddest Moments in Video Games\nWhat Are AAA Games? A Guide To Unofficial Terminology\nshannon fowler\nI know my fiancé uses them to destress. He is a plaintive care doctor, and his work is emotionally demanding. Without them he doesn’t bounce back after a really hard day as easy\nYes, that is very true, they’re very good at destressing. Until you can’t move past a certain point in a game and you get stressed even more. 😀 But even then I wouldn’t change it for the world. Thank you for your comment, Shannon! 🙂\nHeather way\nBefore video games, I was obsessed with Monopoly board game and wanted to be the world champ\nEmily Conway\nI have such fun and fond memories with my brother playing video games (particularly Rock Band and the Elder Scrolls: Oblivion) in Elder Scrolls, we would be cracking up as we chased a deer in the woods and punched it to death. If that didn’t exist, I am not sure we would have too much common ground. TV is fine, but it is not interactive and you aren’t working together. There is an element missing from it.\nYour Gamer Name:","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line323181"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7346234321594238,"wiki_prob":0.26537656784057617,"text":"Lark Park at (916) 651-4011\nHANDS-FREE CELL PHONE BILL TO BE HEARD ON ASSEMBLY FLOOR\nSACRAMENTO – Assemblyman Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) announced he will present Assembly Bill 45, which requires cell phone users to use hands-free technology while driving, on the Assembly floor tomorrow, Thursday, May 29, 2003.\nAB 45 passed out of the Assembly Appropriations Committee last Wednesday on a vote of 19 to 6. Earlier this year, the bill passed out of the Assembly Transportation Committee on a vote of 14 to 5, with 1 abstention.\nSimitian is gaining momentum in his effort to make California the second State in the nation to have a hands-free cell phone law on the books. (New York passed a similar law in 2001.) More than 20 state legislators are co-authoring AB 45. The bill also has significant support from law enforcement, Global 500 businesses, and healthcare providers. If AB 45 passes out of the full Assembly on Thursday, it will go to the Senate Transportation Committee next.\nRelated Pages: Public Safety, Press Releases, 2003-2004 Legislation, AB 45: Hands-Free Cell Phones","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1243361"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8825103640556335,"wiki_prob":0.8825103640556335,"text":"Who Is Destroying the Palestinian Dream?\nhttps://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/6214/palestinian-dream\nHamas's totalitarian rule over the Gaza Strip seems to be nearing its end, as the Islamist movement faces increased challenges from various militias in the area. Many Palestinians are worried that Gaza will fall into the hands of Islamic State or Al-Qaeda.\n\"By Allah's will, we will uproot the state of the Jews and you [Hamas] and others will vanish as the Gaza Strip will be ruled by sharia, whether you like it or not.\" — Spokesman for the Islamic State.\nIn public, Hamas leaders do not admit that their movement is being challenged by Islamic State and Al-Qaeda supporters in Gaza. It is more convenient for them to blame \"Israeli occupation\" for the violence, on the pretext that only Israel is interested in removing Hamas from power. This claim, however, has proven to be untrue.\nIt is time for the international community to realize that the Palestinian dream of establishing an independent state is being destroyed by none other than the Palestinians themselves.\nThe Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip, which Palestinians hope will one day become part of a future Palestinian state, is quickly sliding toward anarchy and chaos.\nSince its violent takeover of the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2007, Hamas has maintained a tight grip on the area, home to some 1.7 million Palestinians. But now Hamas's totalitarian rule over the Gaza Strip seems to be nearing its end, as the Islamist movement faces increased challenges from various militias and groups in the area.\nSome of Hamas's rivals belong to more radical terror groups such as the Islamic State and Al-Qaeda-affiliated militias created by salafi-jihadis inside the Gaza Strip. Others belong to the secular Fatah faction, whose members continue to dream of the day when they will be able to topple the Hamas regime and regain control over the Gaza Strip.\nThe radical Islamist terror groups are seeking to overthrow Hamas because they believe that the movement is too \"soft\" when it comes to implementing sharia laws and fighting against Israel. The goal of these groups is to establish an Islamic caliphate in the Gaza Strip and wipe Israel off the face of the earth.\nIn a recent video posted on the Internet, the Islamic State announced that its men would soon reach the Gaza Strip and remove the Hamas \"tyrants\" from power. \"By Allah's will, we will uproot the state of the Jews and you [Hamas] and others will vanish as the Gaza Strip will be ruled by sharia whether you like it or not,\" warned a masked spokesman for the Islamic State.\nPalestinian sources in the Gaza Strip say that the Islamic State has managed over the past few months to recruit hundreds of young men to its ranks. According to the sources, most of the men who joined the Islamic State are former members of the armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, in addition to a number of disgruntled Fatah militiamen who are unhappy with the policies of the Palestinian Authority (PA), and the leader of its Fatah movement, Mahmoud Abbas -- especially his declared opposition to terror attacks against Israel.\nPalestinians waving Islamic State flags attempt to storm the French Cultural Center in Gaza City, in January 2015. (Image source: ehna tv YouTube screenshot)\nLate last year, a salafi-jihadi militia in the Gaza Strip pledged allegiance to Islamic State, posing yet another major challenge to Hamas.\nUntil recently, Hamas leaders used to boast about their movement's success in restoring law and order after years of anarchy and lawlessness under the Palestinian Authority in the Gaza Strip. But the \"utopia\" that Hamas claims to have created is facing an existential threat, as the Gaza Strip witnesses a sharp increase in internal violence. Some Palestinians are even beginning to wonder whether Hamas has already lost control over the entire Gaza Strip.\nThe violence reached its peak last week when a series of simultaneous explosions rocked the Sheikh Radwan neighborhood of Gaza City. The explosions targeted the cars of six senior commanders of the armed wings of Hamas and Islamic Jihad. No casualties were reported.\nThe latest bombings are considered a severe blow to Hamas, particularly in light of the fact that they occurred in an area heavily guarded by its security forces.\nSome reports suggested that the Islamic State was behind the attacks, which came as a shock to Hamas and Islamic Jihad leaders in the Gaza Strip.\nA number of Hamas officials said they did not rule out the possibility that Fatah members were behind the explosions. The officials claim that Fatah has an interest in showing the world that Hamas is not in control of the situation in the Gaza Strip. In the past, Hamas accused Fatah of being behind another wave of bombings that also targeted its men in the Gaza Strip.\nIn public, however, Hamas leaders do not like to admit that their movement is also being challenged by supporters of the Islamic State and Al-Qaeda inside the Gaza Strip. For these leaders, it is more convenient to blame \"Israeli occupation\" for the violence, on the pretext that Israel is the only party interested in removing Hamas from power.\nThis claim, however, has proven to be untrue in wake of public threats by various Palestinian groups against Hamas. The attempt to lay the blame at Israel's door reflects the growing anxiety of the Hamas leadership, which has stubbornly and consistently denied the existence of Islamic State and Al-Qaeda terrorists inside the Gaza Strip.\nHere is what Ismail al-Ashqar, a top Hamas official, had to say about the latest bombings: \"Gaza shall remain secure and calm and stable, and there will be no return to the previous state of anarchy as the occupation and its collaborators wish. The Israeli occupation is fully responsible for the explosions.\"\nAshqar acknowledged that relations between his movement and Fatah were \"very bad and tense,\" especially in the aftermath of the Palestinian Authority's recent crackdown on Hamas men in the West Bank. In recent weeks, according to Palestinian sources, PA security forces in the West Bank have arrested more than 250 Hamas men, on suspicion that they were plotting to undermine President Mahmoud Abbas's regime.\nThe confrontation between Hamas and its rivals inside the Gaza Strip is likely to escalate in the coming weeks and months. Hamas now has so many enemies inside the Gaza Strip that to combat them, it would have to step up its repressive measures. These measures, however, will only lead to more retaliatory attacks by anti-Hamas forces, and plunge the Gaza Strip into a state of increased anarchy and chaos. Many Palestinians are worried that the Gaza Strip will sooner or later fall into the hands of Islamic State or Al-Qaeda.\nIn the West Bank, meanwhile, such a threat does not exist, largely thanks to Israeli security measures against terror infrastructure and cells. The Palestinian Authority, for its part, is also waging a massive campaign against Hamas and other Islamist groups in the West Bank. The PA is not doing this out of concern for the \"peace process\" with Israel; Mahmoud Abbas and his lieutenants know that these Islamists will kill them first on their way to killing Jews.\nThe growing state of anarchy in the Gaza Strip, as well as the continued power struggle between Hamas and Fatah, do not bode well for those who still believe that the creation of a Palestinian state will bring about peace and stability in the region. The way things are going these days, particularly in the Gaza Strip, it seems that a future Palestinian state will be added to the list of Arab countries that are currently witnessing civil wars and bloodbaths.\nIt is time for the international community to wake up and realize that the Palestinian dream of establishing an independent state is being destroyed by none other than the Palestinians themselves.\nFollow Khaled Abu Toameh on Twitter\nRelated Topics: Palestinian Authority\nRecent Articles by Khaled Abu Toameh\nThe Hamas March to Destroy Israel, 2019-07-15\nWhy Palestinians Do Not Trust Their Leaders, 2019-07-11\nPalestinians: \"Hamas Is Not Afraid of Elections\", 2019-07-01\nPalestinians and the Bahrain Conference: Condemning Arabs While Asking for Arab Money, 2019-06-24\nThe Palestinian Leaders' War on Preventing Corruption, 2019-06-17\nDavid M • Aug 3, 2015 at 13:08\nToameh's analysis,as usual, identifies a simmering pot that is not likely to remain quiet for long. Gaza remains an armed camp with Fatah looking for revenge against Hamas' violent takeover just a few years back. The Hamas thugs had fun shooting Fatah knee caps and throwing Fatah loyalists off roofs!\nNow new threats from the likes of ISIL are likely to become reality. Will an unstable Gaza provoke an Israeli response? And what kind of response will it be? Given the nature of ISIL it is hard to see anything but more fighting and blood on Gaza's sand.\nFred Z • Aug 3, 2015 at 11:40\nI see the lads are still missing no opportunities to miss opportunities.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1214481"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6733981966972351,"wiki_prob":0.3266018033027649,"text":"Sarah recently emailed us:\nWhat’s the difference between Irish and Gaelic?? 🙂\nGood question! It’s important to clear up what we means. Here, we’re always referring to the Celtic language of Ireland.\nWhat does Irish mean?\nIn Ireland, people generally refer to the language of Ireland simply as “Irish”. For example, you can ask someone on the street “Do you speak Irish?”, they might answer “Yes, I speak Irish”.\nAs well as calling it Irish, you could be a bit more specific and call it the Irish language.\nWhat does Gaelic mean?\nGaelic is a bit more ambiguous. A lot of the time, it’s used to refer to the related Celtic language spoken in parts of Scotland.\nPeople in Ireland when talking with tourists about the language may also refer to Irish as Gaelic. They would do this to try to make the term less ambiguous. Still, if you simply say “Gaelic”, it’s not absolutely clear if you’re referring to the Irish of Scottish Gaelic.\nIn another post, we went into the differences between Irish and Gaelic.\nWhat does Irish Gaelic mean?\nIrish Gaelic is more specific than Gaelic. It refers specifically to the Irish language.\nThis term is not used within Ireland, but it’s a good compromise if you’re speaking with people who might not know that “Irish” is a language.\nWhat does Gaeilge mean?\nGaeilge is the name for Irish in the Irish language. Béarla is the name for the English language in the Irish language.\nGaeilge is the word where the English language word “Gaelic” is derived from.\nIf you’re speaking with a group of people who are all aware of the Irish language, then you can probably just call it Irish. Also, call it Irish if you’re speaking with an Irish person in Ireland.\nIf you’re outside of Ireland, it’s safe enough to refer to the language as Irish Gaelic. If you you “Gaelic” when referring to the Irish language, this might lead to misunderstandings.\nWatch Related Video\nYou should also enjoy our 10-minute video on Irish vs Gaelic.\nIrish: The Language that Refused to Die\nMake the Irish Language Part of Your Daily Life\nLearn Some Irish Christmas Carols!\n4 thoughts on “Back to basics: What’s Gaelic? What’s Irish?”\nso what if you call it gaelige would this be the most pure form of the word and how is it pronounced?\nGaeilge is just irish in irish like detusch is german in german and Gaeilge pronounced is the Gwale-Ga\nok so i am getting a heritage tatto and im an 8th irish and i want it to say irish in the irish language would i want to put na hÉireann or would i want to put Gaeilge\nSorry Gabriel, we don’t offer translations. But thanks for getting in touch. I suggest asking over at http://www.irishlanguageforum.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1657327"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5951126217842102,"wiki_prob":0.5951126217842102,"text":"Master Class: Jookin with Lil Buck & Ron “Prime Tyme” Myles\nLeader of the dance style known as Jookin, which originated in Memphis, TN, Lil Buck gained mass acclaim for his YouTube collaboration with Yo-Yo Ma in The Swan directed by Damian Woetzel. Lil Buck appeared with Madonna in her 2012 Super Bowl XLVI Halftime Show and now performs with Madonna regularly. He has made guest appearances on The Colbert Report, and in 2017 was featured in two nationally-televised commercials, one for Lexus (during Super Bowl LI) and the acclaimed Apple AirPods spot, which has since received millions of views on YouTube.\nBessie-Award winner, Ron “Prime Tyme” Myles was born in Memphis, TN and specializes in Jookin, a type of freestyle dance developed on the streets of Memphis. Ron has appeared in the feature films Footloose (2011), Frank and Cindy (2014) and Alvin and the Chipmunks: Road Chip (2015). Ron has also starred in several commercials including Beats by Dre, Diet Pepsi (with Sofia Vergara), Kohl’s and Adidas Originals.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line92853"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8368321657180786,"wiki_prob":0.8368321657180786,"text":"Clay in Context at Hope High School\nInstalling the murals at Providence’s Hope High School\nNext week when students return to Hope High School on the East Side of Providence, they’ll walk through an entrance hall that is anything but the ho-hum back-to-school norm. On glazed tile mosaics that cover four square columns in the main lobby, they will see gleaming fish scale patterns, Inca god designs and even an Art-Deco-inspired abstract staircase.\nInstalled in late May, the bold, imaginative Hope High murals represent the culmination of a unique spring semester collaboration between RISD’s Ceramics department, the department of Teaching + Learning in Art + Design (TLAD) and TLAD’s signature after-school studio program for local high school teens, Project Open Door. The project brought six Ceramics majors from RISD and six teens from Hope High School together for a highly complex, physically demanding, multi-phase collaboration—mixing, measuring, firing, sanding and testing colors for hundreds of intricately laid tiles.\n“Everyone rose to the occasion for this project, and in some cases did that in a very emotional way,” says Associate Professor Katy Schimert, who heads the Ceramics department. “The process was incredibly important—coming up with the concept, following through with drawings, colors, the firing of the clay, the installation. But the permanence of the end result is important, too. These students can come back years from now and look at their work, because it will still be there for the community to enjoy.”\nThe mural collaboration began simply enough—when a well-established Ceramics course, Clay in Context, prompted a brand new question in Schimert, who had just arrived at RISD.\n“It was kind of a traditional class where the students went out and did some kind of project. One thing they did for years was make dishes for restaurants,” says Schimert, who taught the course last spring. “But I don’t live in Providence, and I wasn’t sure what I was going to do at all in terms of a project we could do in a public space.”\nSchimert turned to her faculty mentor, longtime TLAD Department Head Paul Sproll, who suggested a project that combined Schimert’s goals for the course with RISD’s commitment to community engagement. “Basically he said, ‘This is great! There’s this high school, and they have a lobby that could really use something like that,’” Schimert says. “And that was it. We had the project and started working with six teens from Hope High School.”\nAs the course began to take shape, the collaboration grew to involve more and more stakeholders at Hope High School, from the art faculty to its custodial staff and its principal, Robert DiMuccio, whose support was instrumental.\n“I was totally blown away by how invested the Hope students got in the whole project,” says Ian Buchbiner 11 CR/MAT 12, a former student teacher at Hope who served as a liaison for the project. “It’s very difficult to get any high school student to sit down for three hours after school just ended, and these kids were so eager to do things like paint tiles or clean up seam lines. They had that sense of ownership, because it’s their school. And now it’s a huge point of pride knowing that Hope students were involved in that.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line596068"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8774638772010803,"wiki_prob":0.8774638772010803,"text":"SMU Law Review\nSMU Scholar\nHome > Dedman School of Law > Law Journals > SMU Law Review > Vol. 3 (1949) > Survey of Texas Law for the Year 1948\nMarvin L. Skelton\nMarvin L. Skelton, Administrative Law, 3 Sw L.J. 282 (1949)\nhttps://scholar.smu.edu/smulr/vol3/iss3/6\nAssociation Home\nDedman School of Law\nAll Issues Vol. 72, Iss. 1 Vol. 71, Iss. 4 Vol. 71, Texas Gulf Sulphur 50th Anniversary Symposium Issue Vol. 71, Iss. 2 Vol. 71, Iss. 1 Vol. 70, Iss. 4 Vol. 70, Iss. 3 Vol. 70, Iss. 2 Vol. 70, Iss. 1 Vol. 69, Iss. 4 Vol. 69, Iss. 3 Vol. 69, Iss. 2 Vol. 69, Iss. 1 Vol. 68, Iss. 4 Vol. 68, Iss. 3 Vol. 68, Iss. 2 Vol. 68, Iss. 1 Vol. 67, Iss. 4 Vol. 67, Iss. 3 Vol. 67, Iss. 2 Vol. 67, Iss. 1 Vol. 66, Annual Texas Survey Vol. 66, Iss. 4 Vol. 66, Iss. 3 Vol. 66, Iss. 2 Vol. 66, Iss. 1 Vol. 65, Iss. 4 Vol. 65, Iss. 3 Vol. 65, Iss. 2 Vol. 65, Iss. 1 Vol. 64, Iss. 4 Vol. 64, Iss. 3 Vol. 64, Iss. 2 Vol. 64, Iss. 1 Vol. 63, Iss. 4 Vol. 63, Iss. 3 Vol. 63, Iss. 2 Vol. 63, Iss. 1 Vol. 62, Special Issue Vol. 62, Iss. 4 Vol. 62, Iss. 3 Vol. 62, Iss. 2 Vol. 62, Iss. 1 Vol. 61, Iss. 4 Vol. 61, Annual Survey of Texas Law Vol. 61, Iss. 2 Vol. 61, Iss. 1 Vol. 60, Iss. 4 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Iss. 4 Vol. 18, Iss. 3 Vol. 18, Iss. 2 Vol. 18, Iss. 1 Vol. 17, Iss. 4 Vol. 17, Iss. 3 Vol. 17, Iss. 2 Vol. 17, Iss. 1 Vol. 16, Iss. 4 Vol. 16, Iss. 3 Vol. 16, Iss. 2 Vol. 16, Iss. 1 Vol. 15, Iss. 4 Vol. 15, Iss. 3 Vol. 15, Iss. 2 Vol. 15, Iss. 1 Vol. 14, Iss. 4 Vol. 14, Iss. 3 Vol. 14, Iss. 2 Vol. 14, Iss. 1 Vol. 13, Iss. 4 Vol. 13, Iss. 3 Vol. 13, Iss. 2 Vol. 13, Iss. 1 Vol. 12, Iss. 4 Vol. 12, Iss. 3 Vol. 12, Iss. 2 Vol. 12, Iss. 1 Vol. 11, Iss. 4 Vol. 11, Iss. 3 Vol. 11, Iss. 2 Vol. 11, Iss. 1 Vol. 10, Iss. 4 Vol. 10, Iss. 3 Vol. 10, Iss. 2 Vol. 10, Iss. 1 Vol. 9, Iss. 4 Vol. 9, Iss. 3 Vol. 9, Survey of Southwestern Law for 1954 Vol. 9, Iss. 1 Vol. 8, Iss. 4 Vol. 8, Survey of Southwestern Law for 1953 Vol. 8, Iss. 2 Vol. 8, Iss. 1 Vol. 7, Iss. 4 Vol. 7, Survey of Southwestern Law for 1952 Vol. 7, Iss. 2 Vol. 7, Iss. 1 Vol. 6, Iss. 4 Vol. 6, Survey of Southwestern Law for 1951 Vol. 6, Iss. 2 Vol. 6, Iss. 1 Vol. 5, Iss. 4 Vol. 5, Survey of Southwestern Law for 1950 Vol. 5, Iss. 2 Vol. 5, Iss. 1 Vol. 4, Iss. 4 Vol. 4, Survey of Southwestern Law for 1949 Vol. 4, Iss. 2 Vol. 4, Iss. 1 Vol. 3, Iss. 4 Vol. 3, Survey of Texas Law for the Year 1948 Vol. 3, Iss. 2 Vol. 3, Iss. 1 Vol. 2, Survey of Texas Law for the Year 1947 Vol. 2, Iss. 1 Vol. 1, Iss. 2 Vol. 1, Iss. 1","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1110480"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5450701713562012,"wiki_prob":0.45492982864379883,"text":"Jim Dauby is President and CEO of Perry-Spencer Rural Telephone Cooperative, d/b/a PSC, in Saint Meinrad, IN. Jim was hired as Controller in 1993 and was subsequently named Assistant General Manager in 1997. In 2001, he assumed the duties as the company’s chief executive. Before his career in telecommunications, Jim served as CFO of Ramsey Financial, Inc. and as a CPA for Coopers & Lybrand.\nJim has dedicated much of his 25 year career in helping lead and shape industry change for the benefit of rural telecommunications providers. He has been very active on numerous boards and committees on national, state, and local levels. For nine years, Jim served on the Board of Directors for the National Telecommunications Cooperative Association (NTCA) and served previously as its Board Chairman. In Indiana, Jim serves on the Indiana Broadband and Technology Association (IBTA) and is past Board Chair. Jim serves on the Board of Directors of the Indiana Exchange Carrier Association (INECA), having previously served as its President. He is also currently Board President of the Indiana Video Network, LLC (IVN), and is Vice Chairman of the Intelligent Fiber Network’s (IFN) Management Committee. Locally, Jim is President of the Board of Cooperatives ONE, LLC, a partnership between PSC, Southern Indiana Power and Dubois Rural Electric Coop.\nJim graduated summa cum laude with a B.S. in Business from Indiana University and is a Certified Public Accountant. Jim enjoys writing on industry issues and has made numerous presentations on behalf of the industry.\nBeck’s Hybrids\nCommunity Health Network\nWabash Valley Power Alliance\nState of Indiana\nMarshall County REMC & RTC Communications\nBerry-IT\nOutside Plant (OSP) Project Manager\nNetwork Engineer III","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line980639"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8113253712654114,"wiki_prob":0.8113253712654114,"text":"PEW Survey Results\nBy Khalid khokar\nTerrorism an American concept, says Fazl\nUK-based terrorists biggest threat to US: CIA\nTerrorism never defined\nBy Asif Haroon Raja\nUnited States and England, Safe-Havens for the Terrorists?\nBy Adnan Gill\nRelated Speakout\nMusharraf rules out military solution of terrorism\nPakistan's stability synonymous with world security: President Zardari\nPakistan will fight terrorism with iron fist, says Gilani\nU.S. Deputy Secretary of State to visit Pakistan next week\nUS should not underestimate strength of Muslims: Afgan\nRelated News Poll\nDo you think recent suicide blasts are a reaction against Lal Masjid operation?\nPEW Research Center (a US nonpartisan \"fact tank\" that provides information on the trends shaping the world) has conducted a survey of International attitudes on terrorism and has released its new findings. From the perspective of global war on terrorism, the report revealed that the support for suicide bombing and Osama bin Laden has been dramatically reduced since 2002 in Muslim countries allied with the United States. In Indonesia, Turkey and Morocco, 15 percent or less of the population back suicide bombers, and in Lebanon, the number has almost halved, to 39 percent of those polled. Meanwhile, confidence in Osama bin Laden has also plunged in Indonesia, Morocco, Turkey and Lebanon, the support for democracy is rising throughout the Islamic world, Pew found. But, startlingly, the survey showed increase in the popularity in Pakistan; - of the man who masterminded the mass murders of Sept. 11. \"Pakistan has seen increases in its population's already substantial backing for Osama (more than 50 percent support him, meaning about 75 million people\". The Pew quoted.\nThe report smacks of biasness and lacks objectivity in measuring the valid and reliable attitudes of the people of Pakistan. Pakistan is emerging as a tolerant and moderate Muslim state. Majority of Pakistanis are moderate and appreciate the thesis of enlightened moderation propounded by President Gen Pervez Musharraf. However, very few are extremists sitting on the fringe of the bordering area. So, therefore, it is misconstrued by western media that the imprint of every major act of terrorism invariably passes through Pakistan. Pakistan consistently denies giving the militants any type of moral, diplomatic and political support. Pakistan condemns terrorism in its all forms and manifestations. Already, Pakistan has handed over as many as 700 al Qaeda operatives into US custody including some high value targets in the al Qaeda leadership such as Khaled Sheikh Mohammad, Abu Zubaydah, and recently Abu Faraj al-Libbi. About 70,000 Pakistani troops have been deployed on the bordering areas along side Afghanistan to contain Al-Qaeda element on the Western front. Pakistan Army coupled with the security forces had fought vigorously against foreign terrorists, who had taken shelter in the Waziristan area of the Federally-Administered Tribal Areas (FATA), losing nearly 230 officers and men. Most recently, Pakistan security forces have rounded up about 600 suspected militants and Islamic clerics in a week-long crackdown that followed the July 7 London attacks. Of those arrested, 295 belonged to militant groups banned by President Pervez Musharraf in the past three years. The remaining 300 detainees included clerics, mosque prayer leaders and others taken into custody for inciting anti-Western and sectarian hatred through sermons and provocative literature.\nPresident General Pervez Musharraf's resolve to confront terrorism and extremism, is not adequately picked up by the western media especially survey organizations, rather they are dependent on the information of few NGOs already biased to the governmental efforts. The President has outlined a number of steps he intends to take, like setting of a December deadline for the registration of madrassas. Registration and careful monitoring may lead to some controls on funding and links with militant organizations. One thing that sparks controversy over Pakistan's selfless effort to curb terrorism is the dichotomous statements between the government and the ruling party. The President criticizes madrassas, the minister for religious affairs and the PML chief give them a clean chit. This indicates a sense of confusion at the highest levels. Some of it may be due to a difference of opinion between those who favour appeasement of religious parties as a way to neutralize them and those who want stronger action. It only gives wrong signals to the western societies - who often expect more from Pakistan on the war on terror. The President Gen. Pervez Musharraf has put a stop to the tide of hate-filled messages advocated by seminaries. Progress on Madrassa reform is difficult and dangerous, as raids on Madaris were pitting people against people, therefore, it may take a while.\nDespite all positive efforts, it is regrettable the foreign media and key opinion-makers has refused to dislodge its venomous stance against the Government. Pakistan has made positive and substantive contribution in the fight against terrorism. It has paid the heavy price and has come a long way in rooting out the scourge of terrorism. Various research agencies must take a stock of the aspiration of the majority of the people of Pakistan who believe in democracy and civil liberties. Islam plays a greater role in politics and it is believed that's a good thing. Cautiousness is the right attitude to take toward the Pew findings. Nevertheless, we have to deal with the world as it is, not as we would like it to be. There is a lot of work left to be done.\nReader Comments:\nMr Khokar are you sugesting Pew is biased against Pakistan?But its not biased against Turkey, Lebanon, Indonesia, Morocco and rest of the muslim world? Why the hell should it decide to get 'prejudiced' when it comes to Pakistan? Could it be that its findings are true? I think so. Just look at the articles on Paktribune, most are directed against the West.Many of writers seem to take pleasure in peeling the hypocracy of the West. OBL hardly gets any negative attention. Considering that Pakistan is in a mess, every day some innocent is tortured to death by Police but all our writers seem to be concerned about is death of Charles Mennez in London. We have a Mennenz happening in Pakistan every day, which of course non of our writers seem to think worth talking about.\nHow is the poor oppressed in Pakistan? Yet everybody is busy talking about Western oppression. The elite have the entire country intoxicated with the wrongs of West - After all that covers up whats being done to 10s of millions in Pakistan every day. Do we have justice in Pakistan? No, so should we not be sorting that out then babbling about whats happened in London or Washington, after all the millions of poor in our villages lead miserable lives which are not going to change one bit despite what happens in London or USA.\nRabid articles against the West are not going to change anything inside Pakistan. The principle inside Pakistan all poor and the weak know is 'Might is right' and then we have the galls to expect the West to drop its 'might is right'?\nN. Khan, Pakistan\t- 24 August, 2005\nWashington, DC: Surprise has been expressed at the lack of reaction in the Muslim world at the impending demolition of the house of the Holy Prophet (peace be upon him) by the Saudi authorities.\nAn op-ed article in Toronto Star, Canada's widely-circulated daily, by Tarek Fatah, a Pakistani-Canadian Muslim activist and broadcaster, finds it incomprehensible that while the demolition of the Babri Mosque by Hindu zealots at Ayodhya continues to remain an emotive issue with Muslims, what the Saudi authorities plan to do has evoked no protest at all.\nFatah writes, “What makes this demolition worse is the fact that the home of the Prophet is to make way for a parking lot, two 50-storey hotel towers and seven 35-storey apartment blocks; a project known as the Jabal Omar Scheme, all within a stone's throw of the Grand Mosque. Yet despite this outrage, not a single Muslim country, no ayatollah, no mufti, no king, not even a Muslim Canadian imam has dared utter a word in protest. Such is the power of Saudi influence on the Muslim narrative.”\nThe writer wonders if the lack of a response is because Muslims have become so overwhelmed by the power of the Saudi riyal that they have lost all courage and self-respect. Or is it because they feel a need to cover up Muslim-on-Muslim violence, Muslim-on-Muslim terror or Muslim-on-Muslim oppression? He notes that one man who is standing up to the demolition plan is Saudi architect Dr Sami Angawi, who is leading “a one-man campaign.” to save the sacred and historic edifice. He told a London newspaper, “The house where the Prophet received the word of God is gone and nobody cares ... this is the end of history in Mecca and Medina and the end of their future.”\nAccording to Fatah, “The cultural massacre of Islamic heritage sites is not a new phenomenon. It is said that in the last two decades, 95 per cent of Mecca's 1,000-year-old buildings have been demolished. In the early 1920s, the Saudis bulldozed and leveled a graveyard in Medina that housed the graves of the family and companions of Muhammad. Today, the religious zealots in Saudi Arabia are not alone.\n”Commercial developers have joined hands with them and are making hundreds of millions in profits as they build ugly, but lucrative high-rises that are shadowing the Grand Mosque known as the Kaaba. Today Saudi petrodollars have the ability to silence even its most vocal critics, but when all is said and done, history will render a harsh judgment on those who try to wipe out its footprints and steal the heritage of all humanity.”\nashah, Pakistan\t- 29 August, 2005","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line421006"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5316665172576904,"wiki_prob":0.5316665172576904,"text":"Putting this on a recent thread here where it’s more likely to be seen in a quick fashion….\nSeveral things just to update folks.\nFirst, many thanks to all those who sent along research suggestions and offerings to be of assistance on the project I can’t talk about.\nI’ve been swamped with deadlines and unable to reply to any of the public notes and private emails, but as soon as I can get my head above water, be assured that I’ll be in touch with many of you.\nSecond, as noted in the original thread before I hijacked it, yes, the plan at the moment is that I will be at Comic Con San Diego this year, primarily doing my thing on Thursday and Saturday afternoons.\nThere is a *chance* mind you, it’s just a slim chance but to be honorable I must mention it that a work situation *may* preclude my appearance there. Or it may not. I’ll know more by the end of next week, and for now as far as I know, everything’s on target for me to be at SDCC. If that changes, I’ll be sure to let everyone know as far in advance as possible.\nOne final note re: recent discussions on TMoS and more Lost Tales.\nB5:TLT was commissioned at a $2 million budget to, yet one more time, “test the waters” for B5. We did what we could with that, and that was that. As we did with Rangers, which also suffered from not having a lot of money because of concerns about “is there really a B5 audience?” Which is, of course, a foolish question from a studio that has never really understood what it has in B5.\nOf late, there have been more discussions from WB about doing more DVDs, again at a low cost, or a cable thing, again with minimal investment.\nSo for the last few months, I’ve been giving this whole subject a lot of quiet thought. And I’ve come to a conclusion.\nB5 as a five year story stands beautifully on its own. If anything else is to be continued from that story, it should be something that adds to the legacy of B5, rather than subtracts from it.\nAs well intentioned as Rangers and TLT were, as enticing as it was to return to those familiar waters, in the end I think they did more to subtract from the legacy than add to it. I don’t regret having made them, because I needed to go through that to get to the point where I am now psychologically, but from where I sit now, I wouldn’t make them again.\nSo I’ve let everyone up here know that I’m not interested in doing any more low-budget DVDs. I’m not interested in doing any low-budget cable things or small computer games. The only thing I would be interested in doing regarding Babylon 5 from this point on is a full- featured, big-budget feature film.\nIt’s that or nothing.\nAnd if it’s nothing, I’m totally cool with that because the original story stands on its own just fine. I’m not lobbying for it, I’m not asking fans to write in about it (nor should you) because such campaigns never really have much impact…that’s simply the position I’ve taken up here. Lord knows I don’t lack for other things to do these days. I’m busier on more prestige projects with terrific people and great film-makers than at any other time in my career.\nAt the end of the day, for me, it’s not just a matter of getting more B5. It’s a matter of getting more *good* B5 that respects what came before it and doesn’t have to compromise visually or in terms of action. The original show deserves better than that, the surviving cast members deserve better than that, and the fans who have supported it over the years definitely deserve better than that. A lot better.\nSo I’ve drawn that line in the sand, and I’m happy living on whichever side of that line the universe puts me. Just thought you should know, ‘cause it’s your show too.\nSci-Fried: Star Wars Christmas\n“Babylon 5” Now Available on Amazon Prime\nMore on “Pawn of the Dead”\nBabylon 5 Comes to Phoenix Comicon\nRick says\nwell this sucks beyond words, the situation obviously, not his reasoning. he’s talking about getting more money out of a studio that makes the Harry Potter franchise to a profit of millions and yet it took them 5 hit films to FINALLY decide to split book 7 into two movies. the saddest part of all this is that the idiots at warner who decide these things don’t care if we liked Lost Tales or not, just that we paid them to see it.\nMike H (Stark in 2nd Life) says\nI’m glad he chose quality over quantity. I loved getting a new taste of B5 with TLT, but he’s right. Better to end it than to run it into the ground with work that isn’t up to par with the original. Having said that though, here’s to a new big budget film sometime in the near future!\nMike Tuck says\nI have mixed feelings about the recent post from JMS. On one hand, I’m sad that we will not get another “Lost Tales” DVD. While I didn’t like last year’s “Lost Tales” as much as you guys did, I still somewhat enjoyed having two new stories in the B5 universe (even though I thought that they were both mediocre) . I also had hopes for future DVD stories to be better, especially the much-talked about Garibaldi story which was to feature a lot more special effects and action. On the other hand, I have to agree somewhat with JMS’s decision not to make any more Lost Tales.\nI think that The Lost Tales and LOTR were nowhere near as good as the best seasons of the B5 series and, therefore, I agree with JMS that they “Subtracted from the legacy”. However, I still don’t know that the reason that they were not as good has a whole lot to do with the lower budget as JMS suggested. After all, didn’t he and his crew produce some of the best science fiction television ever made on a shoestring budget week after week for five years?! I hate to slam JMS (whom I think is, usually, a great writer), but I think the problems with Lost Tales and LOTR being less than great lie mostly with the writer.\nIt seems to me that JMS lost his mojo after the fourth season of the series. I’ve been somewhat disappointed in everything B5-related that he has done AFTER season 4. I know the reasons why season 5 seemed directionless and uneventful: He was told by the distribution company that season 4 was the end and to finish it up, thus leaving season 5 stories seeming like an afterthought or an extremely extended and unnecessary epilogue to the main story. He also had SOME excuses for “Crusade” not being what it could have been – the creative “tug-of-war” between JMS and TNT hurt and killed the show before it had time to grow. But what was his excuse on “Legend of the Rangers”? As far as I know, he was given free reign by the Sci Fi Channel on that pilot, but he delivered a mediocre (at best) movie. Also, from what I read of the summary of the plot for the proposed feature film “The Memory of Shadows”, it didn’t sound like it would have been a home run either. And finally, last year’s Lost Tales was also disappointing and odd (for me, at least). The devil-in-human-guise story, while well-acted, seemed totally out-of-place for the B5 universe. Also, the Sheridan tale had some truly funny dialogue and was more B5-appropriate, but ultimately, seemed uneventful and unnecessary.\nSo, JMS hasn’t exactly been “hitting them out of the ballpark” since the end of season 4. It seems as if he has lost interest in Babylon 5 and only keeps making more stories to earn a paycheck or to try to satisfy hungry fans (maybe both). His heart doesn’t seem like it’s in it anymore. He pretty much said himself that he is satisfied with the completed 5-year story and doesn’t seem too interested in doing any more now that he is getting big-budget feature film jobs. MAYBE with a bigger budget he could tell a more epic story like we were accustomed to during the best seasons of B5, but that remains to be seen.\nI know I will probably stir controversy with my comments, but I felt it had to be said. I was THE biggest fan of Babylon 5 during its best years and couldn’t wait to see the next episode every week, but I’m getting tired of being constantly disappointed with sub-par B5 stories. I want to get back the excitement and epic storytelling of seasons 3 and 4, or even the unexpected satisfaction from a handfull of good episodes from seasons one and two. But since 1998, all we seem to get is more “season 5 – level” stuff.\nSo, in conclusion, I suppose I have to agree somewhat with JMS on this. If you can’t tell a good or great story, then why bother at all? I don’t hold out much hope for a big-budget B5 feature film, as Warner Bros will not pony up the dough for one. They also wanted to re-cast the TMOS movie, and that doesn’t sit well with me either. I can’t see anyone else in these roles. I don’t really see the money coming from any other outside interests in the future without ultimately falling through like the “Memory of Shadows” deal. I hope that I am wrong. I would love to see a B5 feature film as long as it has the feel of seasons 3 and 4. On another tangent, it is UNFAIR that Joss Whedon can get a feature film made of a failed series that only aired for about 7 episodes before being canceled due to low ratings (“Firefly”/ “Serenity”), while JMS can’t get a feature film made of a low-rated (but much beloved) series that lasted for 5 years and 110 episodes!! It doesn’t make much sense to me. (Sorry, “Firefly” fans. I watched that show for 6 or 7 episodes, but hated it. ) In the end, I guess that Whedon has more pull in Hollywood than JMS does (although I don’t know why). Isn’t JMS having dinner with the big boys now? It also seems unfair that other low-rated cult favorites such as Stargate SG-1 and even Futurama will continue on making direct-to-DVD films, while B5 will simply fade away into obscurity. Unfortunately, it seems that B5 will always be just a footnote in science fiction history. Anyway, I will miss Babylon 5. I don’t think that there will ever be another sci-fi series that I will love as much as I loved it.\nNeil Ottenstein says\nThe critical issue here, is what is Summer going to do with the podcast intro now?\nBrad Bowyer says\nWhen TLT was coming out he said that if WB was intertested and TLT does well then he has ideas for more TLT volumes. Now all of a sudden he changes his mind?\nThis is nothing but a slap in the face to fans. We bought the DVD, supported the franchise as best we can in the hope that we would get more content. Now he trashes the very thing we supported by saying it diluted the franchise?\nFine JMS … go and pout, take you ball and go home. You’ve pretty much just lost yourself a fan with an arrogant attitude like that. Why would we want to support any of your future projects? After all … you’ll just say they were crap down the road.\nBrad Bowyer,\nBrad, I fully understand your position. But, let’s take a look at WB’s “interest”. The videocassettes sold out when they were released. The DVD sets are perennial strong sellers. TLT has had strong sales. All this despite WB’s lack of effort in promotion and merchandising. The BestBuy event that Jeffrey covered only points out how disinterested WB is in the show.\nAlso recall that TLT was to be three interlocking stories, but budget constraints forced the elimination of what, by all accounts, was to be the most ambitious (read: expensive) story of the lot. That also indicates low interest on the part of WB. What more would JMS need to do to finally make WB understand what they have in their hands?\nMike, you are entitled to your opinion, and I’m glad you feel comfortable enough to share it here. I would point out that a shoestring budget for a 22-episode season for a series is still bigger than the shoestring budget for a one-off direct-to-DVD piece. The series budget allowed them to build interesting sets and locales; the TLT budget allowed them to build ten pillars that had to double for station and Minbari cruiser interiors. I’m thoroughly convinced the sock puppet thing was JMS’ arrow at WB – “you want cheap? Here’s cheap!”\nPlease, in no way construe my comments as a JMS apologist. The tone in his message is quite arrogant. I understand and accept his feelings about B5 as the creator; but I think he underestimates the fans’ emotions. I’d be happy with JMS approved novels (like for Crusade, in Valen’s name!). I don’t think LotR or TLT “tarnished” the legacy of B5 in any way. Were they great? No. But they certainly weren’t unwatchable.\nYou want tarnish, look at the last ten years of Star Trek offerings. That’s tarnish.\nNeil – looks like Summer’s gonna have to re-record the intro AGAIN….\n“When TLT was coming out he said that if WB was interested and TLT does well then he has ideas for more TLT volumes. Now all of a sudden he changes his mind?”\nhe changed his mind because he’s tired of trying to make quality product without proper financial support from Warner.\nColin says\nMy feelings were mixed at first but the more that I think about it the more upset I get. Frankly I feel like I just got smacked in the face be a man who has gotten plenty of my hard earned money over the years and you can bet that I will look twice before giving him anymore.\nJMS has been stringing future Lost Tale info out since before th e the release of the first and now only installment. He has a point about legend of the Rangers but I don’t think his point with Lost Tales is valid sure it’s not as strong as the best of Babylon 5 but it’s far better then the worst of it so I don’t think you can say that it takes anything away as a hole. I think that it might add something to it. Had JMS come right out and said that he did not want to do anymore DVDs right after the release I would have understood but he went on about how another one was in the works and had even said that he wanted to try to get other people in to write in the future.\nNow I understand that he is mad with WB for not stepping up and putting money behind it right now but why not try to get more money placed into a DVD start small and work up try to get say a 10,000,000 budget for the next one and then move up from there why is it a movie or nothing? This rings even more true given the current state of the economy, Paramount has had to pull back funding on Transformers and Star Trek which every one knows will pull in big money, and if big names like that are having problems what chance does Babylon 5 have?\nThe great maker had what I feel is a great mistake.\nPaul Hahn says\n“I know the reasons why season 5 seemed directionless and uneventful: He was told by the distribution company that season 4 was the end and to finish it up, thus leaving season 5 stories seeming like an afterthought or an extremely extended and unnecessary epilogue to the main story.”\nThis is an oft-repeated canard. The wrapping-up was done more by truncation than compression, so by and large the storylines in season 5 were the ones originally intended, and not tacked-on. If he had known he had a guaranteed fifth season, the fourth-season finale/cliffhanger would have been “Intersections in Real Time”, which ended up not that far from the end of the season the way things actually happened.\nA far greater contributing factor to the lameness of early season 5 was jms losing all his notes for that half-season, at the same convention at which he tried unsuccessfully to get Claudia Christian to sign back on. Housekeeping trashed them, he tore the place apart looking for them (including dumpster-diving) to no avail, and he ended up having to reconstruct those storylines as best he could from memory. Suddenly losing Ivanova didn’t help either.\nAll this can be searched on jmsnews.com.\n“Now all of a sudden he changes his mind? This is nothing but a slap in the face to fans.”\nThe real slap in the face to fans was Warner forcing him to do TLT on next to no budget, when the jms/B5 combo has proven itself a safe investment many times over. I heard plenty of fans complain about the limited scope of TLT, which was obviously a result of the lack of money. Arrogant? Hardly. In my view it was an admirable, honorable decision.\nOver in rec.arts.sf.tv.babylon5.moderated plenty of us have expressed disappointment, but not one that I recall has disagreed that this was the right decision.\nI agree with Rick.\nWhat some people don’t get is that the TLT ‘extras’ with the sock puppets were a rather pointed dig at WB. From what I’ve heard, when given the budget for TLT, JMS’s response was along the lines of “For that kind of money you can hire sock puppets, not actors.” At the panel at SDCC last year both JMS and Doug Netter said that any future Lost Tales would have to have a bigger budget.\nJMS posted that before the writer’s strike WB started talking about another Lost Tales disk but refused to commission a script since they thought there’d never be a writer’s strike. From what I gathered at the Seattle con in May, there’ve been other meetings since the strike was settled.\nMaybe to us the decision is sudden but it may be JMS’s way of telling them that he’s tired of having his time wasted and that B5 shouldn’t need to keep proving itself repeatedly.\nI agree with Jan, Rick, and the Great Maker. If there was ever a time to go to WB and lay it all out, now is the time. They know how well the DVD’s have sold. We all know that JMS has other projects out there that are going to get the funding to make them great.\nWB wants more Lost Tales. It’s time for them to put their money where their mouth is. B5 is a proven product. JMS is a proven product. I don’t want another rubber suit monster. More B5 if only we get proper funding so we can see what the show would have been like if they would have had a proper budge all long. Jerry Doyle has a nationally syndicated radio show. I think JD was supposed to be in the next set, right? JMS has plenty of projects on his table. Both guys probably both would love to do more B5, but it has to be worth our wild.\njerry doyle was supposed to be in the third, cancelled story-to be set on Mars. If memory serves, he was even under contract – until WB forced the story cut. His subsequent comments were rather curt and seemed to indicate that he was through with B5.\nAnd i’ll also point out, to all those who have given their hard-earned money to JMS, he’s hardly grown fat and lazy on that income.\nvakie says\nAll you people claiming JMS ‘changed’ his mind, seem to forget or simply missed what he was saying all along after TLT came out: that if there is to be more TLT, it will have to be at a bigger budget or they won’t do it, because what they had to work with was simply not enough. Frankly, even the CGI people worked overtime without pay to get things right, just because they were B5 fans.\nSo this is not a huge surprise to me, because this possibility came to mind when I heard that. I just hoped those people at WB wouldn’t be total mental cases and they would see the light, but I guess not. This is all on WB, not JMS.\nAnd yeah, the whole sock puppet thing came from the moment WB told him what kind of budget he would have to work with. JMS replied, “for that kind of money I can do it with sock puppets, but not real actors.”\nBrandon Atkinson says\nHey all greetings from Canada.\nI agree with many here, WB screwed JMS over royally… Yeah they want more lost tales stuff but now it’s time to\n(you certainly got enough out of me with the DVD set’s before the huge price drops! seasons 1-4 between $100 Canadian Dollars and $150! Season 5 was $65 (right after Andreas Katsulas died, to put my purchases in to context) and the movie box was around $80, TLT was $40, haven’t bought Rangers yet (might not since Scifi messed that up quite spectacularly!))…\nAt the very least double the budget (triple would help greatly).\nhowever, WB doesn’t get B5 whatsoever… they never have. And so its time for JMS to move on, perhaps somone from MGM (Stargate SG-1, Atlantis, and many other shows i forget right now)is reading about this…\nTHEY KNOW HOW TO TO STUFF PROPERLY!\nAlas, JMS has said that MGM is the worst he’s ever worked with, and would never work with them again.\nHe worked with them on Jeremiah, and apparently hated the experience (with MGM, not with Jeremiah).\nG'Kwal says\nSo I’ll keep looking forward. At least some comics or canonized books would be nice, as I don’t think, that someone would pay for a movie.\nBut should a movie will come, about anything of babylon with JMS and some of the old crew, I’ll see it in the first weekend for getting the quota up (and I hate this crowding absolutely)\nBrother Ambrose says\nI got the feeling that this was not a total surprise to the Vorlon, and it did not surprise me, either. JMS and his ego could only handle being ignored for so long. Since he is now garnering attention from other aspects in his creative output, he would naturally want to apportion his time there. I, too, was disappointed at the Lost Tales DVD but kept quiet about it in hopes of its being the beginning of a steadily improving series.\nJMS, as a creator, probably saw it as the first and the lowest rung on the journey of making the Lost Tales. He imagined that the next one would be better in every respect. (Wouldn’t you?) When the hoped-for support from the studio did not come, he probably imagined that he and it would be stuck in this low-budget DVD world for a long time. This level is very close to the world of fan-based production, which in most cases is relegated to sector not by for by profit. He would not be comfortable in this, and what career writer or producer would? So he cut himself off.\nHowever, as a writer, he could have expressed himself better if he intended that fans could step in, a la Paramount and Star Trek. He concluded with “’cause it’s your show too.” This would seem to be inconsistent with the “closed door” attitude of the rest of his message. I think it’s easy to read arrogance into this post, but I suspect that arrogance is only one side of his three edged sword. It seems that the Great Maker still enjoys being cryptic, and so we must wait.\nLeave a Reply to Brother Ambrose Cancel reply","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1574304"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8377625346183777,"wiki_prob":0.8377625346183777,"text":"For other places with the same name, see Hopewell, Virginia (disambiguation).\nHopewell is an independent city surrounded by Prince George County and the Appomattox River in the Commonwealth of Virginia. As of the 2010 census, the population was 22,591.[5] The Bureau of Economic Analysis combines the city of Hopewell with Prince George County for statistical purposes.\nCity of Hopewell\nThe \"Big H.\" Gateway to the City of Hopewell.\nLocation in the State of Virginia\nJasmine Gore\n• Independent city\n10.83 sq mi (28.05 km2)\n0.47 sq mi (1.23 km2) 4.9%\n50 ft (15.2 m)\nUTC-5 (EST)\nwww.hopewellva.gov\nHopewell is in the Tri-Cities area of the Richmond Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA).\nCity PointEdit\nMain article: City Point, Virginia\nThe city was founded to take advantage of its site overlooking the James and Appomattox Rivers. City Point, the oldest part of Hopewell, was established in 1613 by Sir Thomas Dale. It was first known as \"Bermuda City,\" which was changed to Charles City, lengthened to Charles City Point, and later abbreviated to City Point. (At this time, Bermuda, the Atlantic archipelago, was considered part of the Colony of Virginia and appeared on its maps.) Hopewell/City Point is the oldest continuously inhabited English settlement in the United States, Jamestown no longer being inhabited.\n\"Charles City Point\" was in Charles City Shire when the first eight shires were established in the Colony of Virginia in 1634. Charles City Shire soon became known as Charles City County in 1637. In 1619 Samuel Sharpe and Samuel Jordan from City Point, then named Charles City, were burgesses at the first meeting of the House of Burgesses.\nThe burgesses separated an area of the county south of the river, including City Point, establishing it separately as Prince George County in 1703. City Point was an unincorporated town in Prince George County until the City of Hopewell annexed the Town of City Point in 1923.\nDuring the American Civil War, Union General Ulysses S. Grant used City Point as his headquarters during the Siege of Petersburg in 1864 and 1865. Grant's headquarters, which President Lincoln visited, were located at Appomattox Manor, one of the three plantations of Richard Eppes, who cultivated wheat and other grains and held 130 slaves at the beginning of the war.[6][7][dead link]\nHis property included most of the present day city of Hopewell and Eppes Island, a plantation across the James River from City Point. Richard Slaughter, a former slave of Eppes, escaped to a Union ship during the Civil War,[8] as did all but 12 of Eppes' 130 slaves, choosing freedom.[7] Slaughter recounted his life story for a Works Progress Administration interviewer in 1936.[8]\nThe City Point Railroad, built in 1838 between City Point and Petersburg, was used as a critical part of the siege strategy. It is considered the oldest portion of the Norfolk and Western Railway, now a part of Norfolk Southern.\nHopewell Quaker originsEdit\nSamuel Janney in his \"History of Friends,\" says, \"Alexander Ross about the year 1732, having obtained a grant for One hundred thousand acres of land in the Colony of Virginia, situated near Opequan Creek a tributary of the Potomac; a settlement was soon after begun there by Alexander Ross, Josiah Ballenger, James Wright, Evan Thomas and other Friends from Pennsylvania, and Elk River in Maryland. Under authority of Chester Quarterly Meeting they established in 1744 a Monthly Meeting, called Hopewell, which thus became a branch of Phila. Yearly Meeting.\" 10 acres was deeded to the Quakers April 2, 1751 for a Meeting House which afterwards became \"Hopewell.\" This deed of 1751 is the first appearance of the Quakers in the old County. However, it is possible that the Hopewell described by Janney as a Virginia Quaker settlement is actually to the northwest of the Hopewell which is the subject of this entry.[9] The Hopewell Friends Meeting House (Frederick County, Virginia) describes the Janney settlement.\nHopewell FarmEdit\nHopewell, part of the Eppes' plantation, was developed by DuPont Company in 1914 as Hopewell Farm, an incorporated area in Prince George County. DuPont first built a dynamite factory there, then switched to the manufacture of guncotton during World War I.\nNearly burned to the ground in the Hopewell Fire of 1915, the city prospered afterward and became known as the \"Wonder City\" as the village of Hopewell grew from a hamlet of 400 in 1916 to a city of more than 20,000 people in a few short months. Unlike most cities in Virginia, Hopewell was never incorporated as a town, but it was incorporated as an independent city in 1916.\nAfter DuPont abandoned the city following World War I, moving its manufacturing facilities elsewhere and specializing in other products, Hopewell briefly became a ghost town until 1923 when Tubize Corporation established a plant on the old DuPont site. The same year, the city of Hopewell annexed the neighboring town of City Point, which enabled it to expand and thrive. The Tubize plant was later acquired by Firestone Tire and Rubber Company and was a major employer in Hopewell for decades. Allied Chemical and Dye Corporation and Hercules Chemical also established plants on portions of the old DuPont site.\n20th century populaceEdit\nAs early as its incorporation, Hopewell was a city of industrious migrants. Immigrants from Bohemia (now the western lands of the Czech Republic),[10] Italy, and Greece[11] populated the city, working in factories and opening small businesses. Others migrated from other parts of Virginia and neighboring states of North Carolina and West Virginia to work in Hopewell's industries.\nAs was the case in most southern cities, African Americans in Hopewell were subject to Jim Crow segregation until the success of the Civil Rights Movement. The picturesque theater in the middle of town, the Beacon Theater, only allowed Blacks in the balcony.[12] In August 1966, the Ku Klux Klan confronted the Reverend Curtis Harris and other Black Hopewell citizens when they attempted to petition the city manager to find an alternate location for a landfill that was going to be opened in the middle of a Black neighborhood.[13][14] Hopewell public schools were desegregated under court order in 1963, following Renee Patrice GILLIAM et al v. School Board of the City of Hopewell, Virginia.[15]\n1935 bus tragedyEdit\nHopewell made national news when, on December 22, 1935, a bus plunged through the open draw of the Appomattox River Drawbridge on State Route 10 just outside Hopewell's city limits. Only one of the 15 occupants of the bus survived. The modern twin spans of the Charles Hardaway Marks Bridges were built to replace that bridge and cross the river nearby.\nUrban renewalEdit\nLike many cities, Hopewell embarked on an urban renewal plan in the 1960s in an attempt to revitalize its downtown retail area. The plan was a failure because many of the retail businesses that had been located downtown moved elsewhere to new shopping centers being developed outside the city limits in Petersburg, Chester, and Prince George County.\nHowever, a new urbanization is occurring and many long vacant storefronts are now refurbished and occupied. Several others are now under construction. Further, the City invested $12 million in a new beautiful state of the art flagship library for the busy Appomattox Regional Library System, the Maude Langhorne Nelson Library. The Library has a cyber cafe, extensive YA and children's collections, and a replica of the historic, 1600s-era frigate ship, Hopewell, installed as a centerpiece.[16][17] The City also restored the Beacon Theater, which was built in 1928, and there are 70 or more concerts and other events annually. Some performers in the past two years have been The Temptations, The Four Tops, Vince Gill, Travis Tritt, Clint Black, Amy Grant, The Average White Band, Vanilla Ice, The Commodores, Pure Prairie League, Delbert McClinton, and many more. New plantings and street beautification projects have been put into place, to attract more businesses and shoppers to the East Broadway area.\nRecent historyEdit\nSmokestacks rise from Hopewell's skyline\nHopewell is located at the confluence of two historic rivers, the Appomattox and the James. From many points in the city, beautiful views of the rivers or the tidal marshes are seen. The river access makes the area popular with waterfowl hunters and freshwater fisherman; it is particularly known for excellent catfishing.[18][19]\nHopewell is the location of several large chemical plants owned by the Honeywell Corporation, Ashland, Evonik Industries, as well as a Green Plains Inc. ethanol plant and paper mill owned by WestRock. Such industries have required the city and residents to deal with many environmental issues over the years, particularly as they learned more about the effects of the industries. The Kepone debacle of the 1970s received the most national attention.\nKepone (or Chlordécone) was an insecticide produced by Allied Signal Company and LifeSciences Product Company in Hopewell. The improper handling and dumping of the substance into the nearby James River in the 1960s and 1970s drew national attention to its toxic effects on wildlife. As a result of the contamination the James River from Richmond to the Chesapeake Bay was closed to fishing for over a decade. The product was similar to DDT and is a degradation product of Mirex. In 2009, Kepone was included in the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants, which banned its production and use worldwide.\nThe Federal Correctional Complex, Petersburg (FCC Petersburg), two federal prisons which house 3400 inmates, are located just outside the Hopewell city limits, in Prince George County[20][21]\nIn 1977, Hopewell again made the national news due to another accident involving a drawbridge when the tanker S.S. Marine Floridian outbound under the command of a James River pilot suffered a steering malfunction just after dawn on February 24 that caused it to veer out of the channel and hit the Benjamin Harrison Memorial Bridge just east of town. The accident caused serious damage to the bridge and it was closed for months.\nIn 1983, Hopewell again received negative publicity from the national news media when it was discovered that Evelyn Rust Wells, an elderly woman, had been held captive and terrorized in her home in the City Point section. Her captors, mostly male teenagers under 18, cashed her Social Security checks at local grocery stores. A local grocer noted a change in purchases from when neighborhood kids assisted Wells, and called the police. They investigated and freed Wells who was by then severely malnourished.[22]\nAlthough still an important industrial city, Hopewell has struggled with transitions through loss of jobs due to plant closures, changes in residential housing patterns, and the costs of environmental clean-up. Much of its middle class population moved to neighboring Prince George and Chesterfield Counties for newer housing during the suburban expansion of the 1960s and 1970s. The city's housing stock is dominated by relatively small homes with a significant percentage being offered as rental properties. Of these, many were hastily constructed over a century ago by DuPont to house plant workers during the First World War.\nHopewell has encouraged re-development along its waterfront areas along the James and Appomattox Rivers, in the downtown area, and the City Point Historic District, as well as the sites of several long vacant industrial plants. Due to its hasty construction as a mill town during the First World War, Hopewell had a large number of kit homes that were hauled in and erected in neighborhoods laid out by DuPont known as \"A Village\" and \"B Village\". The city has a surviving group of Sears Catalog Homes, with several available for exterior viewing on a self-guided tour. The city also has numerous Aladdin Kit Homes; at one time, it may have had the most such homes in the nation. Because residents moved to newer houses and the Aladdin Homes were abandoned and deteriorated, many have been razed.[citation needed]\nSince 1994, Hopewell has been twinned with Ashford, Kent, U.K.[citation needed]\nIn late 2012, press reports indicated the city had the highest rate of violent crime on a per capita basis in the state.[23]\nThe former Hopewell High School, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, was renovated from 2009-2010 and now serves as an apartment building.\nIn September 2010, a series of explosions occurred at a controversial new ethanol plant that had recently been constructed on a long vacant site formerly occupied by a Firestone plant. In 2007, former Hopewell Mayor and civil rights leader Curtis W. Harris, had marched against the proposed ethanol plant being built in Hopewell with support from the national Southern Christian Leadership Conference.[24] The plant had not yet become fully operational when the explosions occurred. There was no loss of life due to the accident but shortly after the explosion Osage BioEnergy, the owners of the $150 million facility, announced that the plant was for sale. Although the facility was sitting idle through 2013 with the city of Hopewell taking legal action to recoup unpaid taxes on the property, the facility was eventually purchased by another firm and operations were restarted in 2014.[25] In 2015 the troubled ethanol plant closed again for a second time after less than a year in operation with its owners citing a lack of profitability as the reason for the shutdown.[26] The plant has since been purchased and re-opened by Green Plains Inc. of Omaha, Nebraska.\nHopewell has come to the attention of AAA because some of its members have complained that Hopewell is a speed trap for its practice of citing drivers for speeding along a 1.7 mile stretch of Interstate 295, nicknamed the \"Million Dollar Mile\" by disgruntled drivers. AAA, claimed in a press release that Hopewell employs 11 sheriff's deputies working in 14-hour shifts to patrol less than two miles of the highway that lie within the city limits of Hopewell. However, this statistic has been denied by the sheriff of Hopewell, who was baffled as to where that information was generated as he said the deputies working on I-295 only work eight-hour shifts.[27] This practice, which it has been claimed, annually generated $1.8 million in revenue from speeding tickets, of which 75% were issued to out of state drivers, triggered a court clash between the Commonwealth's Attorney and the city prosecutor, and elicited an official ruling from the Attorney General of Virginia.[28] Sheriff Luther Sodat said that the almost two-mile stretch of highway \"is a safety issue for Hopewell.\"[27] Virginia's urban interstates have a fatality rate about one-third the Statewide rate for all roads combined.[29][30]\nAccording to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 10.8 square miles (28.0 km2), of which 10.2 square miles (26.4 km2) are land and 0.5 square miles (1.3 km2) (4.9%) is water.[31]\nClimate data for Hopewell, Virginia (1980-2010)\nAverage high °F (°C)\n(8.8) 51.2\n(29.7) 89\nAverage low °F (°C)\n(−2.7) 28.8\nAverage precipitation inches (mm)\n(110) 4.5\nSource: USA.com[32]\nNeighborhoodsEdit\nCity Point – annexed in 1923\nCity Point National Cemetery\nChesterfield County, Virginia - north\nPrince George County, Virginia - east, south, west\nCharles City County, Virginia - northeast\nPetersburg National Battlefield Park (part)\n1930 11,327 710.8%\n1950 10,219 17.7%\n1980 23,397 −0.3%\nEst. 2017 22,621 [2] 0.1%\n1790-1960[34] 1900-1990[35]\n1990-2000[36] 2010-2012[5]\nAs of the census[37] of 2000, there were 22,354 people, 9,055 households, and 6,075 families residing in the city. The population density was 2,182.3 people per square mile (842.9/km²). There were 9,749 housing units at an average density of 951.7 per square mile (367.6/km²). The racial makeup of the city was 47.1% White, 43.5% Black, 0.8% Asian, 0.4% Native American, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 1.2% from other races, and 1.8% from two or more races. 3.7% of the population were Hispanic or Latino of any race.\nThere are 9,055 households, out of which 32.1% have children under the age of 18 living with them, 40.6% were married couples living together, 21.2% had a female householder with no husband present, and 32.9% were non-families. 27.6% of all households were made up of individuals and 11.2% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.43 and the average family size was 2.94.\nThe age of the population is spread out, with 26.7% under the age of 18, 9.1% from 18 to 24, 28.6% from 25 to 44, 21.0% from 45 to 64, and 14.6% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 35 years. For every 100 females, there are 87.7 males. For every 100 women aged 18 and over, there were 82.2 men.\nThe median income for a household in the city was $39,156, and the median income for a family was $49,730. Males had a median income of $34,849 versus $25,401 for females. The per capita income for the city was $21,041. About 15.8% of families and 17.73% of the population were below the poverty line, including 21.6% of those under age 18 and 10.4% of those age 65 or over.\nThe following are schools in the Hopewell, Virginia school division.\nHigh schoolEdit\nHopewell High School\nMiddle schoolEdit\nCarter G. Woodson School\nElementary schoolsEdit\nDupont Elementary School\nHarry E. James Elementary School\nPatrick Copeland Elementary School\nAll of the schools above are accredited by the Virginia Board of Education and by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Hopewell City Schools consistently rank near the bottom of the state in Standards of Learning (SOL) scores, graduation rates, and student discipline.\nCharter and technologyEdit\nAppomattox Regional Governor's School for the Arts And Technology Petersburg, VA, Open to students entering the 9th grade, with approval of passing through the admittance process.\nLibrariesEdit\nAppomattox Regional Library serves as the library system for Hopewell, Virginia.\nNotable peopleEdit\nFind sources: \"Hopewell, Virginia\" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)\nNelson Barclift, choreographer and dancer, was born in Hopewell.[38]\nSam Bass, artist, graduated from Hopewell High School.[39]\nRobert Bolling, American settler and planter, and his wife, Jane Rolfe, lived at Kippax Plantation, in what was then Prince George County, in the 17th Century.[40]\nSamuel Face, American inventor, was born in City Point.[41]\nPeter Francisco, soldier in the American Revolutionary War, found abandoned on the docks at City Point[42]\nWilliam Haines, actor and interior designer, ran a dance hall in Hopewell in 1914 while in his early teens.[43][44]\nCurtis W. Harris, minister, civil rights activist, 1st African-American mayor of Hopewell[45]\nSteven R. Taylor, Politician, was a previous mayor of Hopewell[46]\nDorothiea Hundley (aka Seka), adult film actress, attended Hopewell High School.[citation needed]\nCharles Hardaway Marks, Virginia politician, was born in Hopewell.[47]\nMonsanto Pope, former defensive tackle for the Denver Broncos\nRebecca Beach Smith, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia\nMediaEdit\nThe Hopewell News, locally managed and operated by HPC Media, was an 8,000 circulation twice-weekly newspaper that covers local news, sports and events of interest to the communities of Hopewell, Enon and Prince George. [2] For more than 90 years, The Hopewell News served the greater Hopewell and Prince George communities. The paper was shut down on Jan. 18, 2018. HPC Media also published the News-Patriot newspaper covering Colonial Heights and communities in Southeastern Chesterfield County.\nThe climate in this area is characterized by hot, humid summers and generally mild to cool winters. According to the Köppen Climate Classification system, Hopewell has a humid subtropical climate, abbreviated \"Cfa\" on climate maps.[48]\n2016 43.1% 3,885 52.4% 4,724 4.4% 399\n2008 43.6% 4,149 55.5% 5,285 0.9% 90\n1992 47.5% 3,818 35.6% 2,863 16.9% 1,361\n1948 28.8% 570 62.7% 1,242 8.5% 169\n1920 29.5% 41 69.8% 97 0.7% 1\n1916 10.7% 3 85.7% 24 3.6% 1\nNational Register of Historic Places listings in Hopewell, Virginia\nConstructs such as ibid., loc. cit. and idem are discouraged by Wikipedia's style guide for footnotes, as they are easily broken. Please improve this article by replacing them with named references (quick guide), or an abbreviated title. (May 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this template message)\n^ \"2017 U.S. Gazetteer Files\". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved Mar 28, 2019.\n^ a b \"Population and Housing Unit Estimates\". Retrieved March 24, 2018.\n^ \"American FactFinder\". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on 2013-09-11. Retrieved 2008-01-31.\n^ \"US Board on Geographic Names\". United States Geological Survey. 2007-10-25. Retrieved 2008-01-31.\n^ a b \"State & County QuickFacts\". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved January 6, 2014.\n^ Bowman, Shearer Davis. \"Conditional Unionism and Slavery in Virginia, 1860-1861: The Case of Dr. Richard Eppes\", Virginia Magazine of History and Biography 96 (January 1988): 31-54, accessed 13 June 2012\n^ a b https://icecreamtrikehire.co.uk\n^ a b \"Autobiography of Richard Slaughter\", pp. 46-49, Born in Slavery: Slave Narratives from the Federal Writers' Project, 1936-1938, American Memory, Library of Congress, accessed 13 June 2012\n^ Early Settlements of Friends in the Valley of Virginia, by Kirk Brown The West Virginia Historical Magazine Quarterly, Volumes 3-5 https://books.google.com/books?id=6_QxAQAAMAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false\n^ \"The Bohemians in Virginia 1880s - 1930ish\". Marie Blaha Pearson - A Bohemian Journey. Retrieved 3 April 2018.\n^ \"Appomattox Regional Library System Historic Newspapers -- Microfilm Image Viewer\". appomattoxcl.archivalweb.com. Retrieved 3 April 2018.\n^ Making the American Dream Work : A Cultural History of African Americans in Hopewell, Virginia, Lauranett L. Lee (auth), Hampton, Va. : Morgan James Pub., 2008\n^ Ibid.\n^ Interview with Curtis Harris http://dig.library.vcu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/voices/id/4\n^ \"332 F.2d 460 - Renee Patrice GILLIAM and Reuben Lemuel Gilliam, Jr., infants, by Reuben L. Gilliam and Joy T. Gilliam, their father and mother and next friends, et al., Appellees, v. SCHOOL BOARD OF the CITY OF HOPEWELL, VIRGINIA, and Charles W. Smith, Division Superintendent of Schools of the City of Hopewell, Virginia, and E. J. Oglesby, Alfred L. Wingo and E. T. Justis, constituting the Pupil Placement Board of the Commonwealth of Virginia, Appellants\". www.freelawreporter.org. Archived from the original on 2018-04-04. Retrieved 3 April 2018.\n^ Institute of Museum and Library Services, 2014 ARLS \"Archived copy\". Archived from the original on 2016-11-04. Retrieved 2016-11-09. CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)\n^ Official Website of the City of Hopewell http://hopewellva.gov/library/\n^ See Tidal River Blue Catfish https://www.dgif.virginia.gov/waterbody/james-river-tidal/\n^ \"Cat fishing out of Hopewell\". pierandsurf.com. Retrieved 3 April 2018.\n^ \"FCI Petersburg Medium\". bop.gov. Retrieved 3 August 2015.\n^ \"FCI Petersburg Low\". bop.gov. Retrieved 3 August 2015.\n^ \"Woman freed after two months\", New York Times, 31 January 1983, Section A, p. 10\n^ 25 years after her rape claims sparked a firestorm, Tawana Brawley avoids the spotlight, by Michael Gartland,New York Post\n^ \"2001 Honorees - Curtis W. Harris\". Dominion. Archived from the original on 2008-03-15. Retrieved 2008-02-02.\n^ Johnson, Katherine (22 September 2014). \"Plant has produced over 11 million gallons of ethanol\". The Progress-Index. Retrieved 17 November 2015.\n^ a b \"Putting brakes on I-295 tickets?\". The Hopewell News. Archived from the original on 2015-07-04. Retrieved 24 June 2015.\n^ \"VA Legislative Agenda\". cqrcengage.com. Retrieved 3 August 2015.\n^ \"Table FI-30 – Highway Statistics 2013 - Policy - Federal Highway Administration\". www.fhwa.dot.gov. Retrieved 3 April 2018.\n^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpt8-HcEYy8\n^ \"Climatological Information for Hopewell, Virginia\", USA.com, 2003. Web: [1].\n^ \"U.S. Decennial Census\". United States Census Bureau. Archived from the original on April 26, 2015. Retrieved January 6, 2014.\n^ \"Nelson Barclift\". Internet Broadway Database. 2019. Retrieved March 30, 2019.\n^ correspondent, RANDY HALLMAN Special. \"NASCAR artist Sam Bass, a Hopewell High grad, holding auction in N.C. after filing for bankruptcy\". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved 2019-02-19.\n^ \"UK Archaeologist Locates 17th Century Merchant's House, Plans Excavation With Students\". www.uky.edu. Retrieved 3 April 2018.\n^ \"Samuel Face biography, list of Samuel Face inventions\". Edubilla.com. Retrieved 2019-02-19.\n^ \"Peter Francisco\". American Battlefield Trust. 2017-01-26. Retrieved 2019-02-19.\n^ Terry (2015-10-24). \"Gay Influence: William \"Billy\" Haines\". Gay Influence. Retrieved 2019-02-19.\n^ \"WISECRACKER: The Life and Times of William Haines, Hollywood's First Openly Gay Star\" by William J. Mann | Kirkus Reviews.\n^ \"Rev. Dr. Curtis Harris\". Legacy.com. December 16–17, 2017. Retrieved February 2, 2019.\n^ Lazo, Luz. \"Hopewell mayor leaving office\". Richmond Times-Dispatch. Retrieved 2019-02-19.\n^ 'Charles Hardaway Marks-obituary,' Hampton Daily Press, November 17, 2004\n^ \"Hopewell, Virginia Köppen Climate Classification (Weatherbase)\". Weatherbase. Retrieved 3 August 2015.\n^ Leip, David. \"Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections\". uselectionatlas.org. Retrieved 3 April 2018.\nCoordinates: 37°17′25″N 77°18′12″W / 37.290399°N 77.303371°W / 37.290399; -77.303371\nRetrieved from \"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Hopewell,_Virginia&oldid=905541587\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line7813"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9136233925819397,"wiki_prob":0.9136233925819397,"text":"Kobach has asked Schmidt to rule on whether a new state law allowing concealed carry in most public buildings applies to polling places on Election Day.\nThroughout the state, polling sites are often situated in places where guns are not usually allowed, such as churches, schools, universities and charity organizations.\n“We’ve invited the attorney general to weigh in before we issue any guidance to the counties,” Kobach said.\nAs a general rule, guns have been prohibited from polling places to prevent voter intimidation or interference with elections, Kobach said.\nHe said now there’s “some ambiguity in the law” over whether Kansas polling places – rented or borrowed by counties just for election days – would be considered “leased” property under the concealed-carry law.\nIf they are, the law mandates that licensed gun owners must be allowed to carry their weapons on the premises, unless the county files a detailed security plan for each site and provides protective measures such as metal detectors and guards to run them.\nBrad Bryant, elections director in the Secretary of State’s Office, said it would be impractical to try to provide that level of security.\n“Counties aren’t going to buy all that equipment to use for one day,” he said.\nBryant updated election commissioners and county clerks from throughout the state on the issue during a Kansas Association of Counties convention in Wichita last week.\n“Our understanding right now is that a building, a facility, that is owned or leased by a municipality, including for a polling place, would be subject to the (concealed carry) law,” he said. “When you lease a private property, it becomes a municipal property on Election Day, that’s our understanding.”\nBryant said the request for an attorney general’s opinion has a series of detailed questions about the legal status of properties used for polling places and if it matters whether the county pays to use the site or gets it for free.\nHe said the office is also asking whether it makes any difference if there’s a written contract or just a verbal agreement allowing use of the property.\nPublic officials usually request an attorney general’s opinion on legal questions that have not been decided by a court. The opinions don’t carry the force of law but can be used as guidance by agencies until an issue is tested.\nWeapons in polling places has been an issue that has flared periodically in other states. Nationally, there have been numerous charges of voter intimidation from both sides of the political spectrum because of advocates stationing themselves at and around polling places carrying weapons and/or wearing security uniforms.\nKobach said if someone displays or brandishes a weapon at a Kansas polling site, they could be prosecuted under other laws banning voter intimidation.\nTwo state legislators who attended Bryant’s speech said the idea of guns at the polls is unsettling, even if they aren’t openly displayed.\n“That’s scary,” said Sen. Oletha Faust-Goudeau, D-Wichita, the ranking minority member on the Senate elections committee. “We really are going back to the Wild Wild West.”\nRep. Tom Sawyer of Wichita, ranking Democrat on the House elections committee, said he foresees difficulties in finding adequate polling sites if weapons have to be allowed.\nHe predicted some churches and nonprofit groups that open their property for voting sites in Sedgwick County may have second thoughts if they have to allow guns in their buildings.\n“It’s hard enough as it is to come up with a building that’s going to be open all day and that’s handicapped-accessible,” he said.\nSedgwick County doesn’t use school buildings for polling places, although many counties in Kansas do. Most local polling stations are in churches – and they appear to be split on the question of guns in their buildings.\nIf the ruling is that guns have to be allowed, Grace Presbyterian Church would have to talk about it in a meeting of the Session, the church’s governing body, said Martin Burch, executive pastor.\nThe church serves as a polling place for the Crown Heights area of east Wichita.\n“We wouldn’t just automatically continue,” Burch said. “I don’t know how that decision would go.”\nFirst Mennonite Brethren Church, which serves as a polling place in northwest Wichita, probably wouldn’t have a problem with concealed carry on Election Day, said executive pastor John Oelze.\n“We’d still welcome the polling place either way, I’m sure,” he said.\nSedgwick County Commissioner Richard Ranzau, a leading local proponent of gun rights, said he doesn’t think concealed-carry permit holders would cause problems at the polls.\nBut he said he’d be uncomfortable forcing private institutions whose property is occasionally used for a public purpose to accept guns in their buildings if they don’t want them there.\n“I’m not sure that the law would apply to those,” he said.\nThe law is intended for “when we lease buildings and put people in them for a long time,” he said.\nHe said he hopes the concealed-carry law can be clarified with regard to polling sites before the 2014 elections in August and November.\n“Obviously in general I support the law,” he said. But, he added, the polling-place issue “is something that is going to have to be sorted out at the state level.”\nIndependence police investigating early morning shooting at Gates Bar-B-Q\nCommunity Center in Prairie Village\nBy Glenn E. Rice\nSo far this year, more than a dozen teens have been killed in shootings in the Kansas City area. Leaders say more is needed to address the issues of gun violence among youth.\nWoman admits role in crashing car into KCK sports store to steal shotguns and rifles\nVideo shows masked suspects in shooting of Gates Bar-B-Q worker in Independence","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1107484"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9442790746688843,"wiki_prob":0.9442790746688843,"text":"Coast Guard boat overturns off NYC, crew safe\nFrank Franklin II\n
A Fire Rescue vessel passes a Coast Guard vessel that has overturned Thursday, Feb. 25, 2016, in the Queens borough of New York. Authorities say the Coast Guard vessel overturned while assisting a fishing boat that ran aground in an inlet off New York City. (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
\nNEW YORK (AP) — Authorities say a Coast Guard vessel overturned while assisting a fishing boat that ran aground off New York City.\nFive Coast Guard crew members and seven fishermen escaped without serious injury during the incident early Thursday off the Rockaway Peninsula in Queens.\nThe Coast Guard crew members, wearing protective gear, swam to shore. A helicopter with a rescue basket was used to lift fishermen to safety.\nCoast Guard spokeswoman Ali Flockerzi says an overnight storm may have been a factor. She says the 25-foot Coast Guard boat was hit by 10 to 12 foot waves.\nThe Coast Guard got a distress call at 2 a.m. from the 76-foot fishing boat, the Carolina Queen III. The fishing boat initially was taking on water. Its crew got that under control, then ran aground. The boat eventually came to rest in shallow water just off the beach.\nThis story has been corrected to show that the rescue occurred on the Atlantic side of the Rockaway Peninsula and not in an inlet.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line348571"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9020431041717529,"wiki_prob":0.9020431041717529,"text":"HOME • META SEARCH • TRANSLATE\nList of shipwrecks in September 1942 Information\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_shipwrecks_in_September_1942\nTable of Contents ⇨\nThe list of shipwrecks in September 1942 includes all ships sunk, foundered, grounded, or otherwise lost during September 1942.\n28 29 30 Unknown date\nList of shipwrecks: 1 September 1942\nCrown City United States The 5,433- gross register ton, 410-foot (125.0 m) motor vessel was wrecked on the coast of Sledge Island in the Bering Sea off the west-central coast of the Territory of Alaska. Much of her cargo – foodstuffs, mobile machinery, Quonset huts, clothing, coal, ore, gasoline, airplane parts, and a deck load of lumber – was salvaged. [1]\nIlorin United Kingdom World War II: The coaster was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of Guinea off Legu, Gold Coast ( 5°00′N 1°00′W / 5.000°N 1.000°W / 5.000; -1.000) by U-125 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 33 of her 37 crew. [2]\nPurga Soviet Navy World War II: The Uragan-class guard ship was sunk in Lake Ladoga by German aircraft. [3]\nU-756 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 57°41′N 31°30′W / 57.683°N 31.500°W / 57.683; -31.500) by HMCS Morden ( Royal Canadian Navy) with the loss of all 43 crew.\nGazon United Kingdom World War II: The freighter was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of Aden north of Cape Guarafui ( 13°01′N 50°41′E / 13.017°N 50.683°E / 13.017; 50.683) by I-29 ( Imperial Japanese Navy). [4]\nHMS LCP(L) 83 Royal Navy The landing craft, personnel (large) was lost on this date. [5]\nOktyabr Soviet Navy The auxiliary gunboat was sunk on this date. [6]\nPassat Germany World War II: The tanker was bombed and sunk at Saint-Nazaire, France in an Allied air raid. The wreck was raised and scrapped in 1949. [7]\nRostov-Don Soviet Navy The auxiliary gunboat was sunk on this date. [8]\nPB-35 Imperial Japanese Navy World War II: The patrol boat, a former Momi-class destroyer, was bombed and sunk off Santa Isabel Island ( 07°16′S 158°03′E / 7.267°S 158.050°E / -7.267; 158.050) by a US Army Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress aircraft of the 11th Bomb Group. 92 crewmen were killed. [9]\nRTShch-124 Soviet Navy The K-15/M-17-class river minesweeping launch was sunk on this date. [10]\nSperrbrecher 164 Bitsch Kriegsmarine World War II: The Sperrbrecher struck a mine and sank in the North Sea off Schiermonnikoog, Friesland, Netherlands. [11]\nTeikyu Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk off Kinkasan Harbour, Honshū ( 42°08′N 141°15′E / 42.133°N 141.250°E / 42.133; 141.250) by USS Guardfish ( United States Navy). One crewman was killed. [12]\nU-222 Kriegsmarine The Type VIIC submarine collided in the Baltic Sea off Pillau, West Prussia ( 54°25′N 19°30′E / 54.417°N 19.500°E / 54.417; 19.500) with U-626 ( Kriegsmarine) and sank with the loss of 48 of her 51 crew. [13]\nArnon Palestine World War II: The coaster was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea 5 nautical miles (9.3 km) north of Tartus, Syria by U-375 ( Kriegsmarine). All crew survived. [14]\nChita Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk at Kinkasan Harbour by USS Guardfish ( United States Navy). [12]\nDonald Stewart Canada World War II: Convoy LN-7: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of St. Lawrence ( 50°32′N 58°46′W / 50.533°N 58.767°W / 50.533; -58.767) by U-517 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her 20 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMCS Shawinigan and HMCS Trail (both Royal Canadian Navy). [15]\nF 355 Kriegsmarine The Type A Marinefahrprahm was sunk on this date. [16]\nHollinside United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 3 nautical miles (5.6 km) of Cape Sines, Portugal (approximately 38°N 19°W / 38°N 19°W / 38; -19) by U-107 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of the 51 people on board. Survivors were rescued by Spanish trawlers. [17]\nKaimei Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk off Kinkasan Harbour, Honshū ( 40°14′N 141°51′E / 40.233°N 141.850°E / 40.233; 141.850) by USS Guardfish ( United States Navy). [18]\nMiriam Palestine World War II: The sailing ship was shelled and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea 5 nautical miles (9.3 km) north of Tartus, Syria by U-375 ( Kriegsmarine). All crew survived. [19]\nOcean Might United Kingdom World War II: The Ocean ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 0°57′N 4°11′W / 0.950°N 4.183°W / 0.950; -4.183) by U-109 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of four of her 54 crew. Survivors reached land in their lifeboats. [20] [21]\nOktyabr Soviet Navy World War II: The gunboat was torpedoed and sunk in the Black Sea off the Taman Peninsula by S 27, S 28, S 72 and S 102 (all Kriegsmarine). [11]\nPenrose United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 3 nautical miles (5.6 km) off Cape Sines (approximately 38°N 19°W / 38°N 19°W / 38; -19) by U-107 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of her 45 crew. Survivors were rescued by a Spanish trawler. [22]\nProletari Soviet Union World War II: The tug was torpedoed and sunk in the Black Sea off the Taman Peninsula by S 27, S 28, S 72 and S 102 (all Kriegsmarine). [11]\nRostov-Don Soviet Navy World War II: The gunboat was torpedoed and sunk in the Black Sea off the Taman Peninsula by S 27, S 28, S 72 and S 102 (all Kriegsmarine). [11]\nS 27 Kriegsmarine World War II: The E-boat was sunk in the Black Sea off the Taman Peninsula by one of her own torpedoes. [11]\nSalina Palestine World War II: The sailing ship was shelled and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea 5 nautical miles (9.3 km) north of Tartus, Syria by U-375 ( Kriegsmarine). All crew survived. [23]\nTenyu Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk off Kinkasan Harbour by USS Guardfish ( United States Navy. [24]\nU-162 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type IXC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean north east of Trinidad ( 12°21′N 59°29′W / 12.350°N 59.483°W / 12.350; -59.483) by HMS Pathfinder, HMS Quentin and HMS Vimy (all Royal Navy) with the loss of two of her 51 crew.\nU-705 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Bay of Biscay ( 46°42′N 11°07′W / 46.700°N 11.117°W / 46.700; -11.117) by an Armstrong Whitworth Whitley aircraft of 77 Squadron, Royal Air Force with the loss of all 45 crew. [25]\nUSS Wakefield United States Navy The troopship caught fire in the Atlantic Ocean. She was taken in tow by Foundation Frankin ( Canada) on 5 September and beached at McNab's Cove, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada on 8 September. Refloated on 14 September, eventually towed to Boston, Massachusetts, where she was declared a constructive total loss but was repaired and returned to service.\n41 Soviet Union World War II: The barge was torpedoed and sunk in the Black Sea off the Taman Peninsula by S 27, S 28, S 72 and S 102 (all Kriegsmarine). [11]\nAmatlan Mexico World War II: The tanker was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of Mexico ( 23°27′N 97°30′W / 23.450°N 97.500°W / 23.450; -97.500) by U-171 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of ten of her 34 crew. [26]\nKashino Imperial Japanese Navy World War II: The ammunition ship was torpedoed and sunk in the South China Sea off the east coast of Formosa ( 25°45′N 122°42′E / 25.750°N 122.700°E / 25.750; 122.700) by USS Growler ( United States Navy). [27]\nPadenna Italy World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea approximately 45 nautical miles (83 km) north of Tobruk, Libya by HMS Thrasher ( Royal Navy). [28]\nPolluce Regia Marina World War II: The Spica-class torpedo boat was sunk by British aircraft north of Tobruk, Libya. [29]\nHSwMS Sjöborren Swedish Navy The Sjölejonet-class submarine collided with Virginia ( Sweden) and sank in the Baltic Sea off the east coast of Sweden. [11]\nAlbachiara Italy World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk off Derna, Libya by HMS Traveller ( Royal Navy). [30]\nUSS Gregory United States Navy World War II: The high-speed transport, a former Wickes-class destroyer, was sunk in the Pacific Ocean near Guadalcanal by the destroyers Hatsuyuki, Murakumo and Yūdachi (all Imperial Japanese Navy).\nUSS Little United States Navy World War II: The high-speed transport, a former Wickes-class destroyer, was sunk in the Pacific Ocean near Guadalcanal by the destroyers Hatsuyuki, Murakumo and Yūdachi (all Imperial Japanese Navy).\nLord Strathcona Canada World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in Conception Bay, Newfoundland ( 47°35′N 52°29′W / 47.583°N 52.483°W / 47.583; -52.483) by U-513 ( Kriegsmarine). All 44 crew survived. [32]\nMyrmidon United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean south east of Cape Palmas, Liberia ( 0°45′N 6°27′W / 0.750°N 6.450°W / 0.750; -6.450) by U-506 ( Kriegsmarine). All 245 people on board were rescued by HMS Brilliant ( Royal Navy). [33]\nSaganaga United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in Conception Bay, Newfoundland ( 47°35′N 52°29′W / 47.583°N 52.483°W / 47.583; -52.483) by U-513 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 30 of her 44 crew. [34]\nAeas Greece World War II: Convoy QS-33: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Saint Lawrence River ( 49°10′N 66°50′W / 49.167°N 66.833°W / 49.167; -66.833) by U-165 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of her 31 crew. [35]\nAnshun United Kingdom\nThe wreck of Anshun in Milne Bay.\nWorld War II: The cargo ship was sunk in Milne Bay by gunfire from the light cruiser Tenryū ( Imperial Japanese Navy) in a night attack. Two American gunners were killed. [36]\nBritannic Finland World War II: The cargo ship struck a mine and sank in the North Sea off Aalborg, Denmark. [11]\nHelen Forsey United Kingdom World War II: The schooner was shelled and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 500 nautical miles (930 km) east south east of Bermuda ( 28°35′N 57°35′W / 28.583°N 57.583°W / 28.583; -57.583) by U-514 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of her six crew. [37]\nJohn A. Holloway Canada World War II: Convoy GAT 2: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Caribbean Sea north of Gallinas Punta, Colombia ( 14°10′N 71°30′W / 14.167°N 71.500°W / 14.167; -71.500) by U-164 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 24 crew. [38]\nNo. 44 Soviet Navy The G-5-class motor torpedo boat was lost on this date. [39]\nTaika Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the South China Sea off the east coast of Formosa by USS Growler ( United States Navy). She split in two and sank in two minutes. [27]\nTurkian Egypt World War II: The sailing ship was shelled and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea 20 nautical miles (37 km) off Khan Yunis by U-375 ( Kriegsmarine). All 19 crew survived. [40]\nTuscan Star United Kingdom World War II: The cargo liner was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 300 nautical miles (560 km) south west of Cape Palmas, Liberia ( 1°34′N 11°39′W / 1.567°N 11.650°W / 1.567; -11.650) by U-109 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 51 of the 114 people on board. Survivors were rescued by Otranto ( United Kingdom). [41]\nUSS YP-74 United States Navy Carrying a unit of Seabees, the yard patrol boat sank in Unimak Pass in the Aleutian Islands with the loss of four lives after colliding in fog with the merchant cargo ship Derblay ( United States). [42] [43]\nMount Pindus Greece World War II: Convoy QS-33: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of St. Lawrence south of Anticosti Island, Quebec, Canada ( 48°50′N 63°46′W / 48.833°N 63.767°W / 48.833; -63.767) by U-517 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of her 37 crew. [44]\nMount Taygetus Greece World War II: Convoy QS-33: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of St. Lawrence south of Anticosti Island ( 48°50′N 63°46′W / 48.833°N 63.767°W / 48.833; -63.767) by U-517 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of her 28 crew. [45]\nOakton Canada World War II: Convoy QS-33: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of St. Lawrence south of Anticosti Island ( 48°50′N 63°46′W / 48.833°N 63.767°W / 48.833; -63.767) by U-517 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her twenty crew. Survivors were rescued by HMCS Q083 ( Royal Canadian Navy). [46]\nPuchero Panama The cargo ship was driven ashore at Punta Herrero, Mexico ( 19°18′N 87°27′W / 19.300°N 87.450°W / 19.300; -87.450) and was declared a total loss. The wreck was broken up in 1943. [47]\nHMCS Raccoon Royal Canadian Navy World War II: Convoy QS-33: The armed yacht was torpedoed and sunk in the Strait of Belle Isle ( 49°01′N 67°17′W / 49.017°N 67.283°W / 49.017; -67.283) by U-165 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 37 crew. [48]\nTor II Faroe Islands World War II: The trawler was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean south of Iceland ( 62°30′N 18°30′W / 62.500°N 18.500°W / 62.500; -18.500) by U-617 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 18 of her 21 crew. [49]\nOcean Venture United Kingdom World War II: The Ocean ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 37°05′N 74°46′W / 37.083°N 74.767°W / 37.083; -74.767) by U-108 ( Kriegsmarine). [50]\nTynningö Sweden World War II: The cargo ship struck a mine and sank in the North Sea off Borkum, Lower Saxony, Germany. [11]\nHenca Netherlands World War II: The coaster was bombed and sunk in the English Channel by aircraft of 263 Squadron, Royal Air Force. She was on a voyage from Cherbourg, France to Alderney, Channel Islands. [11]\nK-2 Soviet Navy World War II: The K-class submarine struck a mine and sank in Tanafjord. [11]\nMAS 571 Regia Marina World War II: The MAS 552-class MAS boat was bombed and sunk at Yalta by Ilyushin Il-4 aircraft of the Soviet Naval Air Force. [51] [52]\nUSCGC Muskeget United States Navy World War II: The weather ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 53°00′N 42°30′W / 53.000°N 42.500°W / 53.000; -42.500) by U-755 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 121 people on board. [54]\nPeiping Sweden World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 23°50′N 50°10′W / 23.833°N 50.167°W / 23.833; -50.167) by U-66 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her 34 crew. [55]\nUSS YP-346 United States Navy World War II:The yard patrol boat was shelled and sunk in the Solomon Islands off Tulagi by Sendai ( Imperial Japanese Navy). [56]\nZhan-Tromp Soviet Union World War II: The tanker was torpedoed and sunk at Novorossiysk by S 102 ( Kriegsmarine). [11]\nFor the loss of the Dutch cargo liner Alhena on this date, see the entry for 28 January 1941.\nList of shipwrecks: 10 September 1942\nAmerican Leader United States World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 800 nautical miles (1,500 km) west of Cape Town, South Africa ( 45°44′7″S 9°46′1″E / 45.73528°S 9.76694°E / -45.73528; 9.76694) by Michel ( Kriegsmarine). [57]\nArno Regia Marina ( Red Cross): World War II: The hospital ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea by Royal Air Force aircraft 40 nautical miles (74 km) north east of Ras el Tin, Libya.\nElisabeth van Belgie Belgium World War II: Convoy ON 127: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 51°30′N 28°25′W / 51.500°N 28.417°W / 51.500; -28.417) by U-96 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 56 crew. [58]\nEmpire Oil United Kingdom World War II: Convoy ON 157: The tanker straggled behind the convoy. She was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean ( 51°23′N 28°13′W / 51.383°N 28.217°W / 51.383; -28.217) by U-659 ( Kriegsmarine). She was then torpedoed and sunk the next day by U-584 ( Kriegsmarine). All 53 crew were rescued by HMCS Ottawa and HMCS St. Croix (both Royal Canadian Navy). [59] [60]\nHaresfield United Kingdom World War II: The freighter was torpedoed and sunk in the Arabian Sea ( 13°05′N 54°35′E / 13.083°N 54.583°E / 13.083; 54.583) by I-29 ( Imperial Japanese Navy). [4]\nHMS MGB 335 Royal Navy World War II: The Fairmile C motor gunboat was shelled and sunk in the North Sea by Kriegsmarine surface vessels. [61]\nSveve Norway World War II: Convoy ON 127: The tanker was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by U-96 ( Kriegsmarine). All 39 crew were rescued by HMCS Sherbrooke ( Royal Canadian Navy). [63]\nZuiun Maru Japan World War II: The coaster collided with Kuroshio Maru ( Imperial Japanese Army) whilst in convoy from Moji to Takao, Formosa and sank. [64]\nHMCS Charlottetown Royal Canadian Navy World War II: Convoy SQ 30: The Flower-class corvette was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of St Lawrence 11 nautical miles (20 km) off Cap-Chat, Quebec by U-517 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of eight of her 64 crew.\nCornwallis Canada World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk at Bridgetown, Barbados ( 13°05′N 59°36′W / 13.083°N 59.600°W / 13.083; -59.600) by U-514 ( Kriegsmarine). She was raised, repaired and returned to service in August 1943. [65]\nDelães Portugal World War II: The schooner was shelled and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 50°03′N 29°32′W / 50.050°N 29.533°W / 50.050; -29.533) by U-96 ( Kriegsmarine). All 54 crew survived. [66]\nEmpire Dawn United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was shelled and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean south west of Cape Town, South Africa by Michel ( Kriegsmarine). The attack continued after ship surrendered. Michel's captain, Helmuth von Ruckteschell was convicted of a war crime over this incident.\nFjordaas Norway World War II: Convoy ON 127: The tanker was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean ( 51°16′N 29°08′W / 51.267°N 29.133°W / 51.267; -29.133) by U-218 ( Kriegsmarine) and was abandoned by her crew. She was later reboarded and reached the Clyde on 15 September. Subsequently repaired and returned to service in December 1942. [67]\nHelgeland United States The 82-ton, 76-foot (23.2 m) halibut schooner was seen for the last time at Port Vita ( 58°03′50″N 153°04′20″W / 58.06389°N 153.07222°W / 58.06389; -153.07222 (Port Vita)) on Raspberry Island in the Territory of Alaska′s Kodiak Archipelago. She subsequently disappeared with the loss of her entire crew of 10. [68]\nHindanger Norway World War II: Convoy ON 127: The cargo ship was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean ( 49°39′N 32°24′W / 49.650°N 32.400°W / 49.650; -32.400) by U-584 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 40 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMCS Amherst ( Royal Canadian Navy), which scuttled the ship. [69]\nHokushu Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sun in the Pacific Ocean off the Marshall Islands by USS Narwhal ( United States Navy). [70]\nJussi H. Finland World War II: Continuation War: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk by a S-13 ( Soviet Navy) off Öregrund, Sweden ( 60°21′N 18°00′E / 60.350°N 18.000°E / 60.350; 18.000). [71] [72]\nKanto Maru Imperial Japanese Navy World War II: The aircraft transport was torpedoed and sunk in the central Makassar Straits, 30 nautical miles (56 km) northwest of Kendari, Celebes, Netherlands East Indies ( 03°15′S 118°27′E / 3.250°S 118.450°E / -3.250; 118.450) by USS Saury ( United States Navy). 13 passengers and 26 crewmen killed. [73] [74]\nYayoi Imperial Japanese Navy\nYayoi under attack\nWorld War II: The Mutsuki-class destroyer was bombed and sunk 8 nautical miles (15 km) northwest of Vakuta Island in the Solomon Sea ( 08°45′S 151°25′E / 8.750°S 151.417°E / -8.750; 151.417) by Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress and North American B-25 Mitchell aircraft of the United States Army Air Forces and Lockheed Hudson aircraft of the Royal Australian Air Force; 68 crewmen were killed and 83 survivors were rescued by the destroyers Isokaze and Mochizuki (both Imperial Japanese Navy) from Normanby Island on 26 September. [75]\nBonden Finland World War II: Continuation War: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk by Shch-309 ( Soviet Navy) south of Mariehamn, Åland ( 59°55′N 19°54′E / 59.917°N 19.900°E / 59.917; 19.900). [11] [76]\nEmpire Moonbeam United Kingdom World War II: Convoy ON 127: The cargo ship straggled behind the convoy. She was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean by U-211 ( Kriegsmarine). She was then torpedoed and sunk by U-608 ( Kriegsmarine) at 48°55′N 33°38′W / 48.917°N 33.633°W / 48.917; -33.633 with the loss of three of her 55 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMCS Arvida ( Royal Canadian Navy). [59] [77]\nHektoria United Kingdom World War II: Convoy ON 127: The whale factory ship, a former White Star Line ocean liner, straggled behind the convoy. She was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean by U-211 ( Kriegsmarine). She was then torpedoed and sunk by U-608 ( Kriegsmarine) at 48°55′N 33°38′W / 48.917°N 33.633°W / 48.917; -33.633 with the loss of one of her 85 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMCS Arvida ( Royal Canadian Navy). [78]\nHera Finland World War II: Continuation War: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk by Shch-308 ( Soviet Navy) north of Åland ( 60°56′N 19°06′E / 60.933°N 19.100°E / 60.933; 19.100). [11] [79]\nIda S. Italy World War II: The sailing vessel was sunk La Maddelena, Sardinia by HMS Sahib ( Royal Navy). [11]\nLaconia United Kingdom World War II: Laconia Incident: The troopship, carrying British and Polish troops, civilians and Italian prisoners of war, was torpedoed and sunk in the South Atlantic near Ascension Island by U-156 ( Kriegsmarine). Approximately 1,600 killed, 1,100–1,500 rescued by Vichy French ships.\nNiyo Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was bombed and sunk off Burma by Royal Air Force aircraft. [80]\nRobert Bornhofen Germany World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed (or mined) and sunk in Porsangerfjord, Norway ( 70°43′N 25°58′E / 70.717°N 25.967°E / 70.717; 25.967). [81]\nStanvac Melbourne Panama World War II: The tanker was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean off Trinidad ( 10°30′N 60°20′W / 10.500°N 60.333°W / 10.500; -60.333) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 49 crew. [82]\nTrevilley United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 4°30′S 7°50′W / 4.500°S 7.833°W / -4.500; -7.833) by U-68 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of the 53 people on board. Two survivors were taken by U-68 as prisoners of war. Others were rescued by Cubango ( Portugal) and Dumont d'Urville ( Vichy French Navy) or reached land in their lifeboat. [83]\nU-88 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Arctic Ocean south of Spitzbergen, Norway by HMS Faulknor ( Royal Navy) with the loss of all 46 crew.\nWoensdrecht Netherlands World War II: The tanker was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean south west of Trinidad ( 10°27′N 60°17′W / 10.450°N 60.283°W / 10.450; -60.283) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of the 74 people on board, a survivor from Cressington Court ( United Kingdom). Survivors were rescued by two United States Navy patrol boats. U-515 fired three more torpedoes at Woensdrecht, which broke in two. The stern section sank and the bow section was towed to Trinidad. The ship was declared a total loss. [84]\nAfricander Panama World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The freighter was sunk by a torpedo from an aircraft off the Lofoten Islands. [85]\nEmpire Beaumont United Kingdom World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Arctic Sea by aircraft of KG 26, Luftwaffe.\nEmpire Lugard United Kingdom World War II: Convoy TAG 5: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 12°07′N 63°32′W / 12.117°N 63.533°W / 12.117; -63.533) by U-558 ( Kriegsmarine). All 47 crew were rescued by Vilja ( Norway). [59] [86]\nEmpire Stevenson United Kingdom World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Barents Sea off Bear Island, Norway ( 76°10′N 10°05′E / 76.167°N 10.083°E / 76.167; 10.083) by Luftwaffe aircraft. [59]\nJohn Penn United States World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The Liberty ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Barents Sea ( 76°00′N 10°00′E / 76.000°N 10.000°E / 76.000; 10.000) by Luftwaffe aircraft. [87]\nLima Sweden World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Liberia ( 2°35′N 11°22′W / 2.583°N 11.367°W / 2.583; -11.367) by U-506 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her 33 crew. [88]\nMacbeth Panama World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The freighter was damaged by two torpedoes from a German Heinkel He 111 off the Lofoten Islands and was scuttled by convoy escorts. No casualties. [89]\nNimba Panama World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 10°41′N 60°24′W / 10.683°N 60.400°W / 10.683; -60.400) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of twenty of her 32 crew. Survivors were rescued by USS Barney ( United States Navy). [90]\nOcean Vanguard United Kingdom World War II: The Ocean ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 10°43′N 60°11′W / 10.717°N 60.183°W / 10.717; -60.183) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 11 of her 51 crew. Survivors were rescued by Braga ( Norway). [50] [91]\nOliver Ellsworth United States World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The Liberty ship was torpedoed and damaged in the Greenland Sea ( 76°10′N 10°05′E / 76.167°N 10.083°E / 76.167; 10.083) by U-408 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 70 crew. Survivors were rescued by Copeland ( United Kingdom and HMT St. Kenan, which scuttled the ship. [92] [93]\nOregonian United States World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Barents Sea off Bear Island, Norway ( 76°00′N 09°30′E / 76.000°N 9.500°E / 76.000; 9.500) by Luftwaffe aircraft.\nPatrick J. Hurley United States World War II: The tanker was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 950 nautical miles (1,760 km) north east of Barbados ( 22°59′N 46°15′W / 22.983°N 46.250°W / 22.983; -46.250) by U-512 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 4 gunners and 13 of her crew. 22 survivors were rescued by Etna ( Sweden on 19 September, and 23 by Loch Dee ( United Kingdom) on 2 October. [94]\nStalingrad Soviet Union World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Greenland Sea ( 75°52′N 7°55′E / 75.867°N 7.917°E / 75.867; 7.917) by U-408 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 21 of her 88 crew. Survivors were rescued by Royal Navy minesweepers. [95]\nStone Street Panama World War II: Convoy ON 127: The cargo ship straggled behind the convoy. She was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 48°18′N 39°43′W / 48.300°N 39.717°W / 48.300; -39.717) by U-594 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 13 of her 52 crew. Survivors were rescued by Irish Larch ( Ireland). [96]\nSukhona Soviet Union World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The freighter was sunk by torpedoes from a German Heinkel He 111 northwest of Bear Island, Norway. [97]\nSuriname Netherlands World War II: Convoy TAG 5: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Caribbean Sea ( 12°07′N 63°32′W / 12.117°N 63.533°W / 12.117; -63.533) by U-558 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 13 of her 82 crew. Survivors were rescued by a United States Navy ship. [98]\nVilja Norway World War II: Convoy TAG 5: The tanker was torpedoed and damaged in the Caribbean Sea ( 12°15′N 62°52′W / 12.250°N 62.867°W / 12.250; -62.867) by U-558 ( Kriegsmarine). The 34 crew abandoned ship but later reboarded her and sailed to Port of Spain, Trinidad, rescuing the survivors from Empire Lugard ( United Kingdom) on the way. Vilja reached New Orleans, Louisiana on 16 January 1943 and was declared a constructive total loss. She was scrapped in July 1944. [99]\nAlabastro Regia Marina World War II: The Acciaio-class submarine was sunk off Algiers, Algeria ( 37°28′N 04°34′E / 37.467°N 4.567°E / 37.467; 4.567) by a Short Sunderland flying-boat of No. 202 Squadron RAF. [100]\nAtheltemplar United Kingdom World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The tanker was torpedoed and damaged in the Greenland Sea south of Bear Island, Norway by U-457 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her 61 crew. Survivors were rescued by Copeland ( United Kingdom) and HMS Offa ( Royal Navy). HMS Harrier ( Royal Navy) attempted to scuttle the ship, but was unsuccessful. Atheltemplar was later shelled and sunk at 76°10′N 18°00′E / 76.167°N 18.000°E / 76.167; 18.000 by U-408 ( Kriegsmarine). [101]\nHMS Coventry Royal Navy World War II: Operation Agreement: The C-class cruiser was bombed and damaged in the Mediterranean Sea north west of Alexandria, Egypt, by Junkers Ju 87 aircraft of the Luftwaffe. She was scuttled by HMS Zulu ( Royal Navy).\nF 159 Kriegsmarine The Type A Marinefahrprahm was sunk on this date. [102]\nHarborough United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 40 nautical miles (74 km) east of Galera Point, Trinidad ( 10°03′N 60°20′W / 10.050°N 60.333°W / 10.050; -60.333) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of five of her 50 crew. [104]\nI / 43 Kriegsmarine World War II: The flak boat was sunk at Tobruk, Libya by shore-based artillery. Survivors were taken as prisoners of war.\nHMS ML 352 Royal Navy World War II: Operation Agreement: The Fairmile B motor launch was sunk in the Mediterranean Sea off Tobruk, Libya by Italian Macchi 202. [105]\nHMS ML 353 Royal Navy World War II: Operation Agreement: The Fairmile B motor launch was sunk in the Mediterranean Sea off Tobruk, Libya.\nHMS MTB 308, HMS MTB 310,\nand HMS MTB 312 all Royal Navy World War II: Operation Agreement: The Elco 77' PT boats were bombed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea by Luftwaffe or Italian aircraft. [81]\nHMS MTB 314 Royal Navy World War II: Operation Agreement: The Elco 77' PT boat was ran aground and abandoned, possibly sunk, off Tobruk. Salvaged by the Germans and put in German service as RA-10 ( Kriegsmarine). [106]\nMary Luckenbach United States World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The freighter blew up and sank 600 nautical miles (1,100 km) west of North Cape, Norway ( 76°00′N 16°00′E / 76.000°N 16.000°E / 76.000; 16.000) during a German air attack when her cargo of 1,000 tons of TNT exploded. All 24 gunners and 41 crewmen were killed. [107]\nNojima Maru Japan World War II: The ammunition transport ran aground off Kiska, Alaska Territory, United States, and was wrecked. [11]\nHMCS Ottawa Royal Canadian Navy World War II: Convoy ON 127: The C-class destroyer was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 47°55′N 43°27′W / 47.917°N 43.450°W / 47.917; -43.450) by U-91 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 114 of her 183 crew.\nHMS Sikh Royal Navy World War II: Operation Agreement: The Tribal-class destroyer was shelled and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea off Tobruk with the loss of 115 of her 190 crew.\nSperrbrecher 142 Westerbroek Kriegsmarine World War II: The Sperrbrecher struck a mine and sank in the English Channel off Ostend, West Flanders, Belgium. [11]\nU-589 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Arctic Ocean by a Fairey Swordfish aircraft of 825 Squadron, Fleet Air Arm based on HMS Avenger and also by HMS Onslow (both Royal Navy) with the loss of all 44 crew. [108]\nWacosta United States World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The freighter was disabled by concussion from the explosion of Mary Luckenbach ( United States), later sunk with out casualties by German torpedo bombers west of North Cape, Norway ( 76°05′N 16°00′E / 76.083°N 16.000°E / 76.083; 16.000). [109]\nHMS Zulu Royal Navy World War II: Operation Agreement: The Tribal-class destroyer was bombed and damaged in the Mediterranean Sea off Tobruk by Macchi C.200 aircraft of the Regia Aeronautica. She sank the next day.\nBoston Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship collided with USS Seal ( United States Navy) in the Pacific Ocean off Palau and sank. [110]\nBreedijk Netherlands World War II: The cargo ship was torpeoded and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 5°05′S 8°54′W / 5.083°S 8.900°W / -5.083; -8.900) with the loss of two of the 52 people on board. Survivors were rescued by Cubango ( Portugal), Royal Navy vessels or reached land in their lifeboats. [111]\nInger Elisabeth Norway World War II: Convoy SQ-36: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 4 nautical miles (7.4 km) off Cap-des-Rosiers, Quebec, Canada ( 48°49′N 64°06′W / 48.817°N 64.100°W / 48.817; -64.100) by U-517 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her 26 crew. [112]\nKioto United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean east of Tobago ( 11°05′N 60°46′W / 11.083°N 60.767°W / 11.083; -60.767) by U-514 ( Kriegsmarine). She went aground at Columbus Point. U-514 shelled her the next day and she burnt out with the loss of twenty of her 74 crew. Survivors were rescued by Trinidad ( Trinidad). [113]\nHMS LCP(L) 29, Royal Navy The landing craft, personnel (large) was lost on this date. [114]\nHMS LCP(R) 617 Royal Navy The landing craft, personnel (ramped) was lost on this date. [115]\nUSS O'Brien United States Navy World War II: The Sims-class destroyer was torpedoed and damaged in the Pacific Ocean near Guadalcanal by I-19 ( Imperial Japanese Navy). She sank on 19 October between Suva, Fiji and Pago Pago, American Samoa due to damage inflicted. All crew were rescued.\nR 66 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Räumboot struck a mine and sank in the Gulf of Finland. [11]\nRavens Point United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was sunk at Gibraltar by Italian frogmen. [11]\nSaturnus Netherlands World War II: Convoy SQ-36: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of St. Lawrence 4 nautical miles (7.4 km) off Cap-des-Rosiers ( 48°49′N 64°06′W / 48.817°N 64.100°W / 48.817; -64.100) by U-517 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 36 crew. [116]\nSonderberg Germany World War II: The factory ship was bombed and severely damaged at Cherbourg, France by Douglas Boston aircraft of 107 Squadron, Royal Air Force. Gutted by fire, she was subsequently scuttled as a blockship in June 1944. The wreck was dispersed by explosives in January 1947. [117]\nSørholt Norway World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 10°45′N 60°00′W / 10.750°N 60.000°W / 10.750; -60.000) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of seven of the 38 people on board. Survivors were rescued by Royal Navy motor torpedo boats. [118]\nStar No. 71 United States The 39- gross register ton, 61.4-foot (18.7 m) scow sank off the Territory of Alaska. [119]\nU-261 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean west of the Shetland Islands, United Kingdom ( 59°50′N 9°28′W / 59.833°N 9.467°W / 59.833; -9.467) by an Armstrong Whitworth Whitley aircraft of 58 Squadron, Royal Air Force with the loss of all 43 crew. [120]\nUSS Wasp United States Navy\nWorld War II: The Wasp-class aircraft carrier was torpedoed and damaged in the Pacific Ocean near Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands by I-19 ( Imperial Japanese Navy) with the loss of 193 of her 2,167 crew. She was scuttled by USS Lansdowne ( United States Navy).\nCommercial Trader United States World War II: The Design 1099 cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 75 nautical miles (139 km) east of Trinidad ( 10°30′N 60°15′W / 10.500°N 60.250°W / 10.500; -60.250) by U-558 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of ten of her 38 crew. [121]\nEmpire Soldier United Kingdom World War II: Convoy ON-127: The cargo ship was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean east of St. John's, Newfoundland ( 47°35′N 51°44′W / 47.583°N 51.733°W / 47.583; -51.733) in a collision with Tanker F. J. Wolfe ( United Kingdom). [122]\nJoannis Greece World War II: Convoy SQ 36: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence ( 49°10′N 67°05′W / 49.167°N 67.083°W / 49.167; -67.083) by U-165 ( Kriegsmarine). All 32 crew survived. [123]\nOcean Honour United Kingdom World War II: The Ocean ship was torpedoed, shelled, and sunk in the Gulf of Aden ( 12°48′N 50°50′E / 12.800°N 50.833°E / 12.800; 50.833) by I-29 ( Imperial Japanese Navy). 15 crewmmen and 5 Gunners killed. Her Captain, 29 crewmen and 3 Gunners rescued from a remote Island by R.A.F. aircraft. [4]\nHMS Talisman Royal Navy World War II: The T-class submarine struck a mine and sank in the Sicilian Passage with the loss of all 63 crew. [81]\nU-457 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Barents Sea ( 75°05′N 43°15′E / 75.083°N 43.250°E / 75.083; 43.250) by HMS Impulsive ( Royal Navy) with the loss of all 45 crew. [124]\nAstrid Denmark World War II: The cargo ship struck a mine and sank in the Skaggerak 15 nautical miles (28 km) south east of the Hals Lighthouse. Her crew survived. She was salvaged in 1943. [125]\nCarbonia Italy World War II: The cargo ship was bombed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea, 4 nautical miles (7.4 km) off Hammamet, Tunisia by British aircraft. [11] [18]\nKarpfanger Germany World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk by Handley Page Hampden aircract of 489 Squadron, Royal New Zealand Air Force south of Egersund, Norway. Twenty-three survivors were rescued by M 5209 ( Kriegsmarine). [11] [126]\nMae United States World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 41 nautical miles (76 km) north of Georgetown, British Guiana ( 8°03′N 58°13′W / 8.050°N 58.217°W / 8.050; -58.217) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 41 crew. Survivors were rescued by Gypsum King ( United Kingdom and Sørvangen ( Norway). [127]\nPeterton United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean north west of the Cape Verde Islands, Portugal ( 18°45′N 29°15′W / 18.750°N 29.250°W / 18.750; -29.250) by U-109 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of nine of her 43 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMS Canna ( Royal Navy) and Empire Whimbrel ( United Kingdom). [128] [129]\nRostro Italy World War II: The salvage vessel was sunk with gunfire by HMS United ( Royal Navy) off Zliten, Libya. [130]\nV-39 Giovanna Regia Marina World War II: The auxiliary submarine chaser was sunk with gunfire by HMS United ( Royal Navy) off Misurata, Libya. [131]\nHMT Waterfly Royal Navy World War II: The naval trawler was bombed and sunk in the English Channel off Dungeness, Kent by Axis aircraft. [132]\nF 533 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type C Marinefahrprahm was bombed and sunk in the Black Sea by Soviet Naval Air Force Ilyushin Il-4 aircraft. [133] [134]\nFZ-3 Kriegsmarine World War II: The minesweeping boat was bombed and sunk in the Black Sea by Soviet Naval Air Force Ilyushin Il-4 aircraft. [135]\nSS Kentucky United States World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The freighter was attacked by German aircraft and sunk by aerial torpedo without casualties 35 miles (56 km) off Cape Kanan, Soviet Union. Survivors were rescued by two British minesweepers. [136]\nNorfolk Canada World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean north east of Georgetown, British Guiana ( 8°36′N 59°20′W / 8.600°N 59.333°W / 8.600; -59.333) by U-175 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of six of her 19 crew. Survivors were rescued by Indaucha ( Spain). [137]\nOlaf Fostenes Norway World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 44°56′N 41°05′W / 44.933°N 41.083°W / 44.933; -41.083) by U-380 ( Kriegsmarine). All 36 crew were rescued by HMS Firedrake ( Royal Navy). [138]\nHMS Alouette Royal Navy World War II: The naval trawler was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 10 nautical miles (19 km) west of Cape Espichel, Portugal by U-552 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 17 of her 44 crew. [139]\nMonte Gorbea Spain World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 60 nautical miles (110 km) east of Martinique ( 14°55′N 60°00′W / 14.917°N 60.000°W / 14.917; -60.000) by U-512 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 52 of the 77 people on board. [140]\nHMS Pentland Firth Royal Navy World War II: The naval trawler was sunk in the Atlantic Ocean off of the Ambrose Lightship off Sandy Hook, New Jersey ( 40°25′N 73°55′W / 40.417°N 73.917°W / 40.417; -73.917) in a collision with USS Chaffinch ( United States Navy). [141]\nQuebec City United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 2°12′S 17°36′W / 2.200°S 17.600°W / -2.200; -17.600) by U-156 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of five of her 46 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMS Decoy ( Royal Navy). [142]\nShirogane Maru Imperial Japanese Navy World War II: The Kogane Maru-class transport was torpedoed and damaged in the Bougainville Strait, 11 miles east of Lulaui Point, Bougainville ( 06°33′S 156°05′E / 6.550°S 156.083°E / -6.550; 156.083) by USS Amberjack ( United States Navy). Three crewmen were killed. The ship was towed to Buin and beached on 20 September and abandoned on 16 October 1942. [143] [144]\nWichita United States World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 300 nautical miles (560 km) northeast of Barbados by U-516 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 50 crew. [145]\nEmpire Hartebeeste United Kingdom World War II: Convoy SC 100: The Design 1013 cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 56°20′N 38°10′W / 56.333°N 38.167°W / 56.333; -38.167) by U-596 ( Kriegsmarine). All 46 crew were rescued by Norhauk and Rio Verde (both Norway).\nHMS Leda Royal Navy World War II: The Halcyon-class minesweeper was torpedoed and sunk in the Greenland Sea south west of Spitsbergen, Norway by U-435 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 45 crew, whilst providing escort duties for Convoy QP 14. Survivors were rescued by Rathlin and Zamalek (both United Kingdom). [81] [146] [147]\nM 4448 Antoine Henriette Kriegsmarine World War II: The auxiliary minesweeper struck a mine in the Bay of Biscay and sank or was beached. [11] [148]\nReedpool United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 240 nautical miles (440 km) south east of Trinidad ( 8°58′N 57°34′W / 8.967°N 57.567°W / 8.967; -57.567) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of five of the 58 people on board. Survivors were rescued by Millie M. Masher ( United Kingdom). [149]\nSilver Sword United States World War II: Convoy QP 14: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Greenland Sea ( 75°52′N 0°20′W / 75.867°N 0.333°W / 75.867; -0.333) by U-255 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of one of her 64 crew. Survivors were rescued by Rathlin and Zamalek (both United Kingdom). [150]\nHMS Somali Royal Navy World War II: Convoy PQ 18: The Tribal-class destroyer was torpedoed and damaged in the Greenland Sea ( 74°40′N 2°00′W / 74.667°N 2.000°W / 74.667; -2.000) by U-703 ( Kriegsmarine). She was taken under tow by HMS Ashanti ( Royal Navy), but broke her back and sank four days later at 69°00′N 15°30′W / 69.000°N 15.500°W / 69.000; -15.500) with the loss of 67 of the 105 people on board.\nDiamant Kriegsmarine Originally she sailed under a Belgian flag, the ship was wrecked on the Dogs Nest rocks outside St Helier harbour, Jersey, Channel Islands [151] [152]\nAgnes United States The 10- gross register ton, 33.6-foot (10.2 m) fishing vessel was destroyed by fire off Brothers Island ( 57°18′N 133°50′W / 57.300°N 133.833°W / 57.300; -133.833 (Brothers Island)) in Frederick Sound in the Alexander Archipelago in Southeast Alaska. [153]\nAquila Regia Marina World War II: The auxiliary minesweeper was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea by HMS Unruffled ( Royal Navy) off Tunisia. [154]\nKoei Maru Imperial Japanese Navy World War II: The net tender was torpedoed and sunk in the Pacific Ocean south of Truk South Pacific Mandate ( 06°54′N 151°51′E / 6.900°N 151.850°E / 6.900; 151.850) by USS Trout ( United States Navy). [155]\nLiberia Vichy France World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea by HMS Unruffled ( Royal Navy) off Tunisia. [156]\nPredsednik Kopajtic Yugoslavia World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 8°30′N 59°30′W / 8.500°N 59.500°W / 8.500; -59.500) by U-175 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her 31 crew. [157]\nHMS St. Olaves Royal Navy The Saint-class tugboat was wrecked off Duncansby Head, Scotland. [158]\nTone Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the East China Sea, east of Shanghai, China ( 31°18′N 123°27′E / 31.300°N 123.450°E / 31.300; 123.450) by USS Grouper ( United States Navy). [159]\nU-446 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine struck a mine and sank in the Gulf of Danzig off Kahlberg, East Prussia. She was raised on 8 November, repaired and returned to service. [160]\nApuania Italy World War II: The ship was bombed and damaged at Ras Hammamet, Tunisia by British aircraft. She was declared a total loss. [11]\nBellingham United States World War II: Convoy QP 14: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Greenland Sea west of Jan Mayen, Norway ( 71°23′N 11°03′W / 71.383°N 11.050°W / 71.383; -11.050) by U-435 ( Kriegsmarine). All 75 crew were rescued by Rathlin ( United Kingdom) or the convoy's escort ships. [161]\nEsso Williamsburg United States World War II: The tanker was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean 500 nautical miles (930 km) south of Cape Farewell, Greenland ( 53°12′N 41°00′W / 53.200°N 41.000°W / 53.200; -41.000) by U-211 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 60 crew. The drifting wreck was torpedoed and sunk on 3 October at 55°00′N 33°00′W / 55.000°N 33.000°W / 55.000; -33.000 by U-254 ( Kriegsmarine). [162]\nRFA Grey Ranger Royal Fleet Auxiliary World War II: Convoy QP 14: The Ranger-class tanker was torpedoed and sunk in the Greenland Sea west of Jan Mayen ( 71°23′N 11°03′W / 71.383°N 11.050°W / 71.383; -11.050) by U-435 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of six of her 39 crew. Survivors were rescued by Rathlin ( United Kingdom). [163]\nKano Maru Imperial Japanese Navy World War II: The transport was torpedoed and damaged by USS Grunion ( United States Navy), with only one of three torpedoes that hit actually detonating, off Kiska, Alaska, on 31 July 1942. She was towed to Kiska Harbor, and remained there until she was washed ashore and wrecked by a storm on 22 September 1942 1 1⁄2 miles (2.4 km) southwest of Kiska Harbor. [164]\nLeonardo Palomba Italy World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed, shelled and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea 8 miles (13 km) off Kuriat, Tunisia by HMS Unruffled ( Royal Navy). [165]\nOcean Voice United Kingdom World War II: Convoy QP 14: The Ocean ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Greenland Sea ( 71°23′N 11°01′E / 71.383°N 11.017°E / 71.383; 11.017) by U-435 ( Kriegsmarine). All 89 people on board were rescued by HMS Seagull ( Royal Navy) and Zamalek ( United Kingdom). [50] [166]\nPaul Luckenbach United States World War II: The freighter was torpedoed and sunk in the Indian Ocean 800 miles (1,300 km) off the coast of India ( 10°03′N 63°42′E / 10.050°N 63.700°E / 10.050; 63.700) by I-29 ( Imperial Japanese Navy). [4]\nRTShch-121 Soviet Navy The K-15/M-17-class river minesweeping launch was sunk on this date. [167]\nAthelsultan United Kingdom World War II: Convoy SC 100: The tanker was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean south east of Cape Farewell, Greenland ( 58°42′N 33°38′W / 58.700°N 33.633°W / 58.700; -33.633) by U-617 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 51 of her 61 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMS Nasturtuim ( Royal Navy) and HMCS Weyburn ( Royal Canadian Navy). [168]\nB D Co. No. 5 United States The 37-ton, 49-foot (14.9 m) scow foundered in the Bering Sea near Sledge Island ( 64°29′N 166°13′W / 64.483°N 166.217°W / 64.483; -166.217 (Sledge Island)), Territory of Alaska. [169]\nBruyère United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 250 nautical miles (460 km) south west of Freetown, Sierra Leone ( 4°55′N 17°16′W / 4.917°N 17.267°W / 4.917; -17.267) by U-125 ( Kriegsmarine). All 51 crew were rescued by HMS Decoy, HMS Petunia and HMT Sir Wistan (all Royal Navy). [170]\nLindvangen Norway World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 9°20′N 60°10′W / 9.333°N 60.167°W / 9.333; -60.167) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 15 of her 23 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMS Helene ( Royal Navy). [171]\nHMAS Siesta Royal Australian Navy The patrol boat suffered an explosion and burned to the waterline at Fremantle, Australia. Four of her crew were injured.\nTennessee United Kingdom World War II: Convoy SC 100: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean south east of Cape Farewell ( 58°40′N 33°41′W / 58.667°N 33.683°W / 58.667; -33.683) by U-617 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 15 of her 35 crew. Survivors were rescued by USCGC Ingham ( United States Navy) and HMS Nasturtium ( Royal Navy). [172]\nVibran Norway World War II: The refrigerated cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 42°45′N 42°45′W / 42.750°N 42.750°W / 42.750; -42.750) by U-582 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 56 people on board. [173]\nAntinous United States World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean south east of Trinidad ( 8°58′N 59°33′W / 8.967°N 59.550°W / 8.967; -59.550) by U-515 ( Kriegsmarine). She was abandoned by her 48 crew but was later reboarded. She was taken in tow by HMS Zwarte Zee ( Royal Navy) but was torpedoed and sunk on 25 September by U-512 ( Kriegsmarine). All crew survived and were rescued by HMS Zwarte Zee. [174]\nDefoe United Kingdom The cargo ship exploded, caught fire and was abandoned off Rockall, Inverness-shire. She was on a voyage from Manchester, Lancashire to Famagusta, Cyprus. [175]\nEverett United States The dredge was lost at Cape Pankof on Unimak Island in the Aleutian Islands. [176]\nFiume Italy World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Aegean Sea 7 nautical miles (13 km) south east of Rhodes, Greece by Nirefs ( Hellenic Navy). [177]\nJohn Winthrop United States World War II: Convoy ON 131: The Liberty ship straggled behind the convoy. She was torpedoed, shelled and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 56°00′N 31°00′W / 56.000°N 31.000°W / 56.000; -31.000) by U-619 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 52 crew. [87] [178]\nLosmar United States World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Indian Ocean east of One and a Half Degree Channel 08°06′N 74°23′E / 8.100°N 74.383°E / 8.100; 74.383 by I-165 ( Imperial Japanese Navy). 3 crewmen killed in the sinking and 24 did not survive before being rescue. [180]\nPenmar United States World War II: Convoy SC 100: The cargo ship straggled behind the convoy due to damaged steering gear. She was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 58°12′N 34°35′W / 58.200°N 34.583°W / 58.200; -34.583) by U-432 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of her 62 crew. Survivors were rescued by USCGC Bibb ( United States Navy). [181]\nRoumanie Belgium World War II: Convoy SC 100: The cargo ship straggled behind the convoy. She was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 58°10′N 28°20′W / 58.167°N 28.333°W / 58.167; -28.333) by U-617 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 42 of her 43 crew. The survivor was taken on board U-617 as a prisoner of war. [182]\nSphinx Egypt World War II: The sailing ship was shelled and sunk in the Mediterranean Sea off Tiros, Lebanon by U-561 ( Kriegsmarine). [183]\nWest Chetac United States World War II: The Design 1013 cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 100 nautical miles (190 km) north of Georgetown, British Guiana ( 8°45′N 57°00′W / 8.750°N 57.000°W / 8.750; -57.000) by U-175 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 31 of her 50 crew. Survivors were rescued by USS Roe ( United States Navy). [184]\nBoston United Kingdom World War II: Convoy RB 1: The passenger ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean east of Cape Farewell, Greenland ( 53°23′N 27°54′W / 53.383°N 27.900°W / 53.383; -27.900) by U-216 ( Kriegsmarine). All 65 crew were rescued by HMS Veteran ( Royal Navy). [185]\nEmpire Bell United Kingdom World War II: Convoy UR 42: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 62°19′N 15°27′W / 62.317°N 15.450°W / 62.317; -15.450) by U-442 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of ten of her 41 crew. Survivors were rescued by Lysaker IV ( Norway).\nHMS LCV 798 Royal Navy The landing craft, vehicle was lost on this date. [186]\nNavigator Finland World War II: The cargo ship struck a mine and sank in the Baltic Sea off Trelleborg, Sweden. [187]\nTeibo Maru Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed, shelled and sunk in the South China Sea east of Saigon, French Indochina ( 10°31′N 109°31′E / 10.517°N 109.517°E / 10.517; 109.517) by USS Sargo ( United States Navy). [188]\nU-253 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type VIIC submarine struck a mine and sank in the Atlantic Ocean northwest of Iceland ( 67°00′N 23°00′W / 67.000°N 23.000°W / 67.000; -23.000) with the loss of all 45 crew. [189]\nVledderveen Netherlands World War II: The cargo ship struck a mine and sank in the Öresund. [187]\nHMAS Voyager Royal Australian Navy World War II: The W-class destroyer ran aground off Timor ( 09°15′S 125°45′E / 9.250°S 125.750°E / -9.250; 125.750) on 23 September. Discovered by the Japanese on 24 September and bombed beyond repair under the circumstances. Scuttled on 25 September. Crew rescued by HMAS Kalgoorlie and HMAS Warrnambool (both Royal Australian Navy). [190]\nI-33 Imperial Japanese Navy The B1 type submarine sank at Truk due to a loss of buoyancy from a bungled retrimming attempt while being repaired. 33 crewmen killed. Raised 29 December 1942. Towed to Kure for repairs in March 1943. Repairs finished 1 June 1944. She sank again in the Iyo Nada near Kure, Japan during diving trials 16 June 1944. [191]\nM-60 Soviet Navy World War II: The M-class submarine was sunk by a mine of a flanking barrage laid by the minelayers Amiral Murgescu, Regele Carol I and Dacia ( Royal Romanian Navy). [192]\nNew York United Kingdom World War II: Convoy RB 1: The passenger ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 54°34′N 25°44′W / 54.567°N 25.733°W / 54.567; -25.733) by U-91 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 54 crew. They are named on the Tower Hill Memorial, Commonwealth War Graves Commission. [193] [194]\nTambour Panama World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 8°50′N 59°50′W / 8.833°N 59.833°W / 8.833; -59.833) by U-175 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of eight of her 32 crew. Survivors were rescued by Thalatta ( Norway). [195]\nHMS Veteran Royal Navy World War II: Convoy RB 1: The V-class destroyer was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean by U-404 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 134 crew, and 63 of the 65 survivors from Boston ( United Kingdom). The two survivors from Boston were rescued by New Bedford ( United States). [185]\nYorktown United Kingdom World War II: Convoy RB 1: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 550 nautical miles (1,020 km) west of the Butt of Lewis ( 55°10′N 18°50′W / 55.167°N 18.833°W / 55.167; -18.833) by U-619 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 18 of her 60 crew. Survivors were rescued by HMS Sardonyx ( Royal Navy). [196]\nFrancesco Barbaro Italy World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Ionian Sea off Navarino, Greece by HMS Umbra ( Royal Navy). [11]\nGazelle Kriegsmarine The patrol boat collided with Themis ( Norway) and sank off Lervik, Norway. [197]\nRadio United States The 76- gross register ton, 74.8-foot (22.8 m) fishing vessel was wrecked on a reef in Shuyak Strait ( 58°29′N 152°36′W / 58.483°N 152.600°W / 58.483; -152.600 (Shuyak Strait)) between Shuyak Island and Afognak Island in the Kodiak Archipelago. Her crew of nine survived. [198]\nStephen Hopkins United States World War II: The Liberty ship and the auxiliary cruiser Stier ( Kriegsmarine) shelled and sank each other in the South Atlantic Ocean at 28°08′S 11°59′W / 28.133°S 11.983°W / -28.133; -11.983. The survivors of Stephen Hopkins reached Brazil in lifeboats a month later. During combat with Stier and the month-long ordeal in the lifeboats that followed it, 41 of the 55 men aboard Stephen Hopkins – 32 of 40 civilian crewmen and nine of the 15-man United States Navy Armed Guard detachment – died. [199]\nStier Kriegsmarine World War II: The auxiliary cruiser and the Liberty ship Stephen Hopkins ( United States) shelled and sank each other in the South Atlantic Ocean ( 28°08′S 11°59′W / 28.133°S 11.983°W / -28.133; -11.983). Two of her crewmen were killed. Survivors were rescued by the cargo ship Tannenfels ( Kriegsmarine). [200]\nU-165 Kriegsmarine World War II: The Type IXC submarine was depth charged and sunk in the Bay of Biscay ( 47°00′N 5°30′W / 47.000°N 5.500°W / 47.000; -5.500) by a Vickers Wellington aircraft of 311 Squadron, Royal Air Force with the loss of all 51 crew. [201]\nAlcoa Mariner United States World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 20 nautical miles (37 km) off the mouth of the Orinoco River, Venezuela ( 8°57′N 60°08′W / 8.950°N 60.133°W / 8.950; -60.133) by U-175 ( Kriegsmarine). All 54 crew were rescued by Turret Cape ( Canada). [202]\nAntonico Brazil World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean off the mouth to the Marowijne River ( 5°30′N 53°30′W / 5.500°N 53.500°W / 5.500; -53.500) by U-516 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 16 of her 40 crew. [203]\nHMS LCP(R) 1019 Royal Navy The landing craft, personnel (ramped) was lost on this date. [204]\nLagés Brazil World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Amazon Estuary 75 nautical miles (139 km) north of Salinas ( 0°13′N 47°47′W / 0.217°N 47.783°W / 0.217; -47.783) by U-514 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of three of her 49 crew. She was salvaged, repaired and returned to service post-war. [205]\nNefco No. 2 United States The 30- gross register ton, 55.4-foot (16.9 m) scow sank off Naked Island ( 60°40′N 147°25′W / 60.667°N 147.417°W / 60.667; -147.417 (Naked Island)) in Prince William Sound on the south-central coast of the Territory of Alaska. [206]\nOzório Brazil World War II: The Design 1074 cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Amazon Estuary 75 nautical miles (139 km) north of Salinas ( 0°03′N 47°45′W / 0.050°N 47.750°W / 0.050; -47.750) by U-514 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of five of her 39 crew. She was salvaged, repaired and returned to service post-war. [207]\nTamon Maru No. 6 Japan World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Pacific Ocean south of Hokkaido by USS Nautilus ( United States Navy). [11]\nBaron Ogilvy United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean south west of Cape Palmas, Liberia ( 2°30′N 14°30′W / 2.500°N 14.500°W / 2.500; -14.500) by U-125 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of eight of her 40 crew. Survivors were rescued by Mouzinho ( Portugal). [208]\nEmpire Avocet United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean off Liberia ( 4°05′N 13°23′W / 4.083°N 13.383°W / 4.083; -13.383) by U-125 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of two of her 56 crew. Two survivors were taken on board U-125 as prisoners of war, the rest were rescued by HMS Cowslip ( Royal Navy).\nFranz Rudolf Germany World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Baltic Sea by Shch-310 ( Soviet Navy). [11]\nLifland United Kingdom World War II: Convoy SC 101: The cargo ship straggled behind the convoy. She was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean ( 56°40′N 30°30′W / 56.667°N 30.500°W / 56.667; -30.500) by U-608 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of all 29 crew. [209]\nRegistan United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 140 nautical miles (260 km) off Barbados ( 12°37′N 57°10′W / 12.617°N 57.167°W / 12.617; -57.167) by U-332 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of 16 of her 54 crew. Survivors were rescued by Rio Neuquen ( Argentina). [210]\nV 312 Hanseat Kriegsmarine The Vorpostenboot ran aground and was wrecked. [211]\nUSS YC-898 and USS YC-899 United States Navy The non-self-propelled covered lighters sank while under tow off Key West, Florida. [212]\nAlipore United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed, shelled and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean north east of Georgedtown, British Guiana ( 7°09′N 54°23′W / 7.150°N 54.383°W / 7.150; -54.383) by U-516 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of ten of her 83 crew. Survivors were rescued by the fishing schooner United Eagle ( British Guiana). [213] [214]\nAmiral Pierre Vichy France World War II: Battle of Madagascar: The cargo ship was intercepted in the Indian Ocean off Madagascar by HMAS Nizam ( Royal Australian Navy) and was scuttled. [81] [215]\nCamila Panama World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and damaged in the Indian Ocean by I-166 ( Imperial Japanese Navy). She was beached on the Indian coast and was subsequently declared a total loss. [11]\nKumsang United Kingdom World War II: The passenger ship was torpedoed and sunk in the Atlantic Ocean 300 nautical miles (560 km) south of Freetown, Sierra Leone ( 4°07′N 13°40′W / 4.117°N 13.667°W / 4.117; -13.667) by U-125 ( Kriegsmarine) with the loss of four of the 114 people on board. [216]\nHMS MGB 18 Royal Navy World War II: The BPB 70'-class motor gun boat was shelled and sunk by Kriegsmarine surface ships off Terschelling, The Netherlands. [217]\nSiam II United Kingdom World War II: The cargo ship was torpedoed and damaged in the Atlantic Ocean south west of Monrovia, Liberia ( 3°25′N 15°46′W / 3.417°N 15.767°W / 3.417; -15.767) by U-506 ( Kriegsmarine). She was sunk by a coup de grâce in the early hours of 1 October. All 39 crew were rescued by Nagpore ( United Kingdom). [218]\nUnknown date\nList of shipwrecks: Unknown date 1942\nGene United States The 8- gross register ton, 32.5-foot (9.9 m) motor cargo vessel was wrecked on Rye Island on the south-central coast of the Territory of Alaska. [219]\nNo. 64 Soviet Navy The Sh-4 Type motor torpedo boat was lost sometime in September. [220]\nPSB&D Co. #6 United States The 247- gross register ton, 92-foot (28.0 m) cargo scow was lost at Unimak Bight ( 54°35′N 164°10′W / 54.583°N 164.167°W / 54.583; -164.167 (Unimak Bight)) off Unimak Island in the Aleutian Islands. [221]\nSmeraldo Regia Marina The Sirena-class submarine was lost in the Mediterranean Sea. Last report was received on 16 September off Sollum. [222]\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (C)\n^ \"Ilorin\". Uboat. Retrieved 22 February 2012.\n^ \"Soviet Union torpedo boat class Storm\". Warshipsww2. Archived from the original on 13 September 2014. Retrieved 13 September 2014.\n^ a b c d \"Imperial Submarines\". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 16 September 2014.\n^ \"LCP,LCP(S), LCP(L), LCP(R) Landing Craft, Royal Navy\". Navypedia. Retrieved 29 October 2016.\n^ \"Converted merchant ships, Auxiliary Gunboats of WWII, USSR\". Navypedia. Retrieved 6 October 2016.\n^ \"Norwegian Victims of Pinguin\". Warsailors. Retrieved 5 May 2012.\n^ \"Japanese Patrol Boats\". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 2 September 2013.\n^ \"K-15/M-17 class minesweeping launches, USSR\". Navypedia. Retrieved 27 September 2016.\n^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Rohwer, Jürgen; Gerhard Hümmelchen. \"Seekrieg 1942, September\". Württembergische Landesbibliothek Stuttgart (in German). 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Retrieved 6 March 2012.\n^ a b \"Growler (SS-215)\". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 28 December 2011.\n^ \"Belgian Merchant A-G\" (PDF). Belgische Koopvaardij. Retrieved 30 September 2010. [ permanent dead link]\n^ \"Italian torpedo boat class Spica\". Warshipsww2. Archived from the original on 11 September 2014. Retrieved 11 September 2014.\n^ \"Albachiara cargo ship 1904-1942\". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 5 September 2014.\n^ \"Lord Strathcona\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Myrmidon\". Uboat. Retrieved 27 March 2012.\n^ \"Saganaga\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Aeas\". Uboat. Retrieved 6 March 2012.\n^ Gill, G. Hermon (1968). Royal Australian Navy 1939-1942. Australia in the War of 1939–1945. Series 2 – Navy. 2. Canberra: Australian War Memorial. p. 172. Archived from the original on 2013-09-27.\n^ \"Helen Forsey\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"John A. Holloway\". Uboat. Retrieved 6 March 2012.\n^ \"G-5 class motor torpedo boat, USSR\". Navypedia. Retrieved 19 September 2016.\n^ \"Turkian\". Uboat. Retrieved 19 March 2012.\n^ \"Tuscan Star\". Uboat. Retrieved 23 February 2012.\n^ \"Official Chronology of the US Navy in WWII\". Ibiblio. Retrieved 5 September 2013.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (Y)\n^ \"Mount Pindus\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Mount Taygetus\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Oakton\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ Jordan, Roger (1999). The world's merchant fleets, 1939. London: Chatham publishing. p. 453. ISBN 1 86176 023 X.\n^ \"HMCS Raccoon\". Uboat. Retrieved 6 March 2012.\n^ \"Tor II\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 April 2012.\n^ a b c \"Ocean Ships V-W\". Mariners. Retrieved 6 January 2012.\n^ \"Soviet torpedo bomber victories during WWII\". Sovietempire.com. Retrieved 2 April 2019.\n^ a b \"Italian motor torpedo boat Type MAS 552\". Warshipsww2. Archived from the original on 2014-09-10. Retrieved 9 September 2014.\n^ \"USS Muskeget (WA 48)\". Uboat. Retrieved 19 April 2012.\n^ \"Peiping\". Uboat. 16 February 2011.\n^ \"USS YP-346\". Navsource. Retrieved 3 April 2019.\n^ Captain George Duffy. \"The Dreadful Saga of the MV American Leader and Her Crew\". American Merchant Marine at War USMM.org. Retrieved 26 February 2012.\n^ \"Elisabeth van Belgie\". Uboat. Retrieved 21 February 2012.\n^ a b c d Mitchell, W H; Sawyer, L A (1995). The Empire Ships. London, New York, Hamburg, Hong Kong: Lloyd's of London Press Ltd. p. not cited. ISBN 1-85044-275-4.\n^ \"Empire Oil\". Uboat. Retrieved 9 April 2012.\n^ \"MGB 335 of the Royal Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 10 August 2013.\n^ \"M/T Sveve\". Warsailors. Retrieved 8 February 2012.\n^ \"KUROSHIO MARU: Tabular Record of Movement\". Combined Fleet. Retrieved 5 October 2015.\n^ \"Cornwallis\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Delães\". Uboat. Retrieved 21 February 2012.\n^ \"Fjordaas\". Uboat. 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Retrieved 11 April 2012.\n^ \"Ship model of SS Lady Brenda\". Bonhams. Retrieved 22 March 2012.\n^ \"Suriname\". Uboat. Retrieved 8 April 2012.\n^ \"Vilja\". Uboat. Retrieved 8 April 2012.\n^ \"US Submarine losses, WWII- Italian casualties\". history.navy.mil. Retrieved 14 September 2013.\n^ \"Harborough\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"ML 352 of the Royal Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 14 August 2013.\n^ \"MTB 314 of the Royal Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 14 August 2013.\n^ \"SS Mary Luchenbach cargo ship 1919-1942\". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 14 September 2014.\n^ \"U-589\". Uboat. Retrieved 9 April 2012.\n^ \"Official Cronology of the US Navy in WWII\". Ibiblio. Retrieved 14 September 2014.\n^ \"Seal\". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 30 December 2011.\n^ \"Breedijk\". Uboat. 16 February 2011.\n^ \"D/S Inger Elisabeth\". Warsailors. Retrieved 24 January 2011.\n^ \"Kioto\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Saturnus\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Norwegian Victims of Pinguin, Capture of the Norwegian Whaling Fleet, Jan. 14, 1941\". Warsailors. Retrieved 5 May 2012.\n^ \"M/S Sørholt\". Warsailors. Retrieved 8 February 2012.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (S)\n^ \"Commercial Trader\". Uboat. Retrieved 8 April 2012.\n^ \"Empire Soldier cargo ship 1929-1942\". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 16 September 2014.\n^ \"Joannis\". Uboat. Retrieved 6 March 2012.\n^ \"Karpfanger (5605682)\". Miramar Ship Index. Retrieved 29 March 2012.\n^ \"Mae\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"WWI STANDARD BUILT SHIPS L - W\". Mariners. Retrieved 8 May 2011.\n^ \"Peterton\". Uboat. Retrieved 23 February 2012.\n^ \"Rostro (5604105)\". Miramar Ship Index. Retrieved 11 July 2012.\n^ \"HMS United(P44) of the Royal Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 17 September 2013.\n^ \"ROYAL NAVY VESSELS LOST AT SEA, 1939-45 - BY NAME, NAIAD (light cruiser) to ZULU (destroyer)\". Naval History. Retrieved 15 October 2011.\n^ \"SS Kentucky [+1942]\". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 17 October 2013.\n^ \"Norfolk\". Uboat. Retrieved 7 March 2012.\n^ \"M/S Olaf Fostenes\". Warsailors. Retrieved 1 February 2012.\n^ \"Alouette\". Uboat. Retrieved 6 April 2012.\n^ \"Monte Gorbea\". Uboat. Retrieved 31 March 2012.\n^ \"ASW Trawler HMS Pentland Firth\". Uboat. Retrieved 19 September 2013.\n^ \"Quebec City\". Uboat. Retrieved 29 February 2012.\n^ \"Amberjack\". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 28 December 2011.\n^ \"Japanese Transports\". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 19 September 2013.\n^ \"Wichita\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"HMS Leda (J-93) (+1942)\". Wrecksite. Retrieved 16 October 2011.\n^ \"HMS Leda (J 93)\". Uboat. Retrieved 25 March 2012.\n^ \"Hitler's forgotten flottillas, Kriegsmarine security flotillas\". Googlebooks. Retrieved 25 March 2019.\n^ \"Reedpool\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Silver Sword\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 March 2012.\n^ \"SS Diament [+1942]\".\n^ \"War diary\".\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (A)\n^ \"HMS Unruffled of the Royal Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 21 September 2013.\n^ \"Trout\". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 31 December 2011.\n^ \"Liberia cargo ship 1905-1942\". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 21 September 2014.\n^ \"Predsednik Kopajtic\". Uboat. Retrieved 7 March 2012.\n^ \"HMS saint Olaves of the Royal Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 21 September 2013.\n^ \"Grouper (SS-214))\". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 28 December 2011.\n^ \"Bellingham\". Uboat. Retrieved 25 March 2012.\n^ \"Esso Williamsburg\". Uboat. Retrieved 9 March 2012.\n^ \"Grey Ranger\". Uboat. Retrieved 25 March 2012.\n^ \"Japanese Transports\". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 31 July 2013.\n^ \"Leonardo Palomba cargo ship 1899-1942\". wrecksite.eu. Retrieved 22 September 2014.\n^ \"Ocean Voice\". Uboat. Retrieved 25 March 2012.\n^ \"Athelsultan\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 April 2012.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (B) Retrieved 11 September 2018\n^ \"Bruyère\". Uboat. Retrieved 22 February 2012.\n^ \"D/S Lindvangen\". Warsailors. Retrieved 26 January 2011.\n^ \"Tennessee\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 April 2012.\n^ \"M/S Vibran\". Warsailors. Retrieved 8 February 2012.\n^ \"Antinous\". Uboat. Retrieved 31 March 2012.\n^ \"Defoe\". The Yard. Retrieved 27 February 2017.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (E)\n^ \"RHS Nereus of the royal Hellenic Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 24 September 2014.\n^ \"John Winthrop\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 April 2012.\n^ \"LCP,LCP(S), LCP(L), LCP(R) Landing Craft, Royal Navy\". Navypedia. Retrieved 12 September 2016.\n^ \"Imperial Submarines\". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 25 August 2014.\n^ \"Penmar\". Uboat. Retrieved 24 March 2012.\n^ \"Roumanie\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 April 2012.\n^ \"Sphinx\". Uboat. Retrieved 8 April 2012.\n^ \"West Chetac\". Uboat. Retrieved 7 March 2012.\n^ a b \"Boston\". Uboat. Retrieved 9 March 2012.\n^ \"LCV and LCV(P) Landing Craft, Royal Navy\". Navypedia. Retrieved 29 October 2016.\n^ a b \"Two Vessels Mined Off Sweden\". The Times (49351). London. 26 September 1942. col C, p. 3.\n^ \"Sargo\". Dictionary of American Naval Fighting Ships. Navy Department, Naval History and Heritage Command. Retrieved 28 December 2011.\n^ \"HMAS Voyager of the Royal Australian Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 25 September 2013.\n^ \"Imperial Submarines\". Combinedfleet.com. Retrieved 26 September 2013.\n^ Mikhail Monakov,Jurgen Rohwer, Stalin's Ocean-going Fleet: Soviet Naval Strategy and Shipbuilding Programs, p. 266\n^ \"New York\". Uboat. Retrieved 20 February 2012.\n^ \"New York\". www.benjidog.co.uk. Retrieved 8 February 2016.\n^ \"Tambour\". Uboat. Retrieved 7 March 2012.\n^ \"Yorktown\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 April 2012.\n^ Michael Emmerich (25 June 2003). \"Gazelle\". German Naval History. Retrieved 17 October 2012.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (R)\n^ \"Stier HSK 6 Auxiliary Cruiser\". Wehrmacht-history.com. Retrieved 27 September 2013.\n^ \"U-165\". Uboat. Retrieved 6 March 2012.\n^ \"Alcoa Mariner\". Uboat. Retrieved 7 March 2012.\n^ \"Antonico\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Lages\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (N)\n^ \"Ozório\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Baron Ogilvy\". Uboat. Retrieved 22 February 2012.\n^ \"Lifland\". Uboat. Retrieved 13 April 2012.\n^ \"Registan\". Uboat. Retrieved 16 March 2012.\n^ \"V-312 (Hanseat) (+1942)\". Wrecksite. Retrieved 18 October 2015.\n^ \"Casualties, Navy & Coast Guard ships WWII\". history.navy.mil. Archived from the original on 10 April 2014. Retrieved 15 September 2014.\n^ \"WWI STANDARD BUILT SHIPS A-K\". Mariners. Retrieved 8 May 2011.\n^ \"Alipore\". Uboat. Retrieved 1 April 2012.\n^ \"Amiral Pierre (1120848)\". Miramar Ship Index. Retrieved 3 December 2012.\n^ \"Kumsang\". Uboat. Retrieved 22 February 2012.\n^ \"MGB 18 of the Royal Navy\". Uboat. Retrieved 30 September 2013.\n^ \"Siam II\". Uboat. Retrieved 27 March 2012.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (G)\n^ \"Sh-4 Type motor torpedo boats, USSR\". Navypedia. Retrieved 15 September 2016.\n^ alaskashipwreck.com Alaska Shipwrecks (P)\nShip events in 1942\nShip launches: 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947\nShip commissionings: 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947\nShip decommissionings: 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947\nShipwrecks: 1937 1938 1939 1940 1941 1942 1943 1944 1945 1946 1947\nShipwrecks 1939–45, by month\nRetrieved from \" https://en.wikipedia.org/?title=List_of_shipwrecks_in_September_1942&oldid=899197119\"\nLists of shipwrecks by year\nMaritime incidents in September 1942\nLIST OF SHIPWRECKS IN SEPTEMBER 1942\nYoutube | Vimeo | Bing |\nPOPULAR INDEXES\nGoogle | Yahoo | Bing\nMeta Search Engine | Map | Travel Reviews","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line96489"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9871312975883484,"wiki_prob":0.9871312975883484,"text":"Chloe Sevigny Talks ‘American Horror Story: Asylum’\nChloe Sevigny Talks American Horror Story: Asylum\n— November 7th, 2012\nAmerican Horror Story is one of the few shows on the air where fans will be treated to a new cast of characters each season. This year, the show moved to the East Coast insane asylum Briarcliff, where one of the patients is the nymphomaniac Shelley, played by Chloë Sevigny. The actress recently held a conference call to discuss her role on American Horror Story: Asylum, which continues with \"I Am Anne Frank\" Wednesday, November 7 at 10 PM ET on FX. The actress first discussed what drew her to the show.\n\"I guess it was having watched the first season and just being a fan of the show. I just thought it was so rich, the production design and costumes and how much detail went into it and I just thought it was wildly entertaining. I was hoping the second season would be as much so. I didn't get to read any scripts prior to signing on, so I was kind of going in on blind faith hoping that it would be what I wanted it to be and it's proven so.\"\nShe also revealed that the wealth of female characters in the asylum was also a selling point.\n\"I think with this season, he's exploring different things from the first like you said before. I think there's a lot of really good characters, how women are accused of being this, that, and the other thing. I think it's like they're wildly represented in the season. As a woman, as a female viewer I like that pitch.\"\nThe actress talked about the shocking revelation that Shelley lost both of her legs on the operating table, and the challenges that brings to her performance.\n\"I think she's pretty pissed off. I think she feels pretty helpless and I think in the beginning you kind of like not so much rooting for her. You think she's this bad girl and then see her helping Evan's character and ... character trying to escape and you realize that she's pretty selfless in that regard. I think after she gets in the clutches of the evil doctor, I think you're then kind of more rooting for her and hoping that she can escape or find a way out. So I think the character goes through a lot. The audience goes through a lot with the character. The prosthetic pieces that they put on made it impossible to straighten my legs, so I had to keep my legs bent all day and I had to be wheeled around in a wheelchair and I was feeling quite helpless. It was a strange feeling to have to need assistance to do lots of different things. And that was probably the most challenging part, feeling kind of helpless in that way. \"\nShelley is diagnosed as a nymphomaniac, although the actress herself doesn't exactly believe there is such an affliction.\n\"I don't know if people truly are addicted to that. There's so much talk about it as of late. I think that she was a little wild and her husband had it within his power to commit her and I think kind of once she's in there, she kind of goes with it to come to who she is and how she identifies herself. So I think that she probably yes really likes sex. All the reaction, I don't know if she's quite a real nymphomaniac.\"\nShe also teased that Arden (James Cromwell) has some intriguing plans in store for Shelley.\n\"I guess it's kind of under wraps, but yes, he transforms her into something else. I don't how much more dialogue I have. There's lots of gurgling. You see her transformed into something, something not so pleasant to look at.\"\nThe actress also said she surprised herself during an early scene where she touches herself during a fight at the asylum.\n\"I found myself like during that scene where Kit is fighting in the first episode, like her being turned on by the violence. Like oh my God I'm really like going for it with this part, so I guess I surprised myself in that sense, in that scene.\"\nYou can watch Chloë Sevigny as the nymphomaniac Shelley in American Horror Story: Asylum, which continues with \"I Am Anne Frank\" Wednesday, November 7 at 10 PM ET on FX.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1745732"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.888798713684082,"wiki_prob":0.888798713684082,"text":"Back to OCA\nOpening Ceremony of the 18th Asian Games in Jakarta and Palembang\nOCA General Assembly and day one of competition at 2018 Asian Games\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day two of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day three of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day four of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day five of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day six of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day seven of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day eight of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day nine of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Day 10 of competition\nJakarta Palembang 2018: Closing Ceremony\n42 sports and 484 events will be contested at the 2018 Asian Games.\nA total number of 462 medal sets will be awarded at the 2018 Asian Games across 47 sports.\nForty-five nations are set to participate at the 2018 Asian Games.\nThe 2018 Asian Games will mark the second time that Indonesia has hosted the event with Jakarta having done so in 1962.\nThe 2018 Asian Games will be the 18th edition of the event, which was first held in 1951 in New Delhi.\nChina go into the 2018 Asian Games as the all-time medal count with 2,976 - 1,355 gold, 928 silver and 693 bronze.\nVenues at the 2018 Asian Games will be divided into four clusters, located in South Jakarta, North Jakarta, Jakarta's suburbs and in Palembang.\nPalembang is a 47-minute flight from Jakarta.\nThe Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, built for when Jakarta hosted the 1962 Asian Games, will host athletics and the Opening and Closing Ceremonies at the 2018 Asian Games.\nThe Athletes' Village for the 2018 Asian Games will be located in North Jakarta.\nIndonesia’s President Joko Widodo inaugurated the Gelora Bung Karno Stadium, which will host athletics and the Opening and Closing Ceremonies at the 2018 Asian Games, in January 2018.\nBridge, jet ski, jujitsu, kurash, paragliding, pencak silat, sambo, skateboarding and sport climbing are all set to make their Asian Games debut at Jakarta-Palembang 2018.\nAthletics is a compulsory sport has featured at all 17 previous editions of the Asian Games.\nThe Asian Games basketball tournaments were seen as the unofficial Asian championships until the Asian Basketball Confederation Championship was formed in 1960.\nBridge will become the fourth mind sport to appear at the Asian Games when it makes its debut at Jakarta-Palembang 2018, following in the footsteps of chess, go and xiangqi.\nIndia has won all nine of the gold medals awarded in kabaddi since the sport made its Asian Games debut in 1990.\nA total of 13,000 volunteers will be required for the duration of the 2018 Asian Games, including some 2,000 in Palembang.\nVolunteer roles are available for high-profile duties such as protocol assistants, National Olympic Committee assistants and liaison officers.\nVolunteers at the 2018 Asian Games will wear specially designed, distinctive, eye-catching uniforms.\nThe Opening and Closing Ceremonies of the 2018 Asian Games, at the Gelora Bung Karno Stadium in Jakarta, will feature around 10,000 performers.\nThere will be a 5,000-strong paid workforce on duty during the 2018 Asian Games.\nThe trio of animal mascots chosen for the 2018 Asian Games are bird of paradise \"Bhin Bhin\", single-horned rhinoceros \"Kaka\" and Bawean deer \"Atung\".\nThe first Asian Games to introduce a mascot was New Delhi 1982 when Appu, an elephant, was chosen.\nAice, Samsung, Asia Pulp Paper and Danone Aqua are all official sponsors of the 2018 Asian Games.\nSsangyong Information and Communications Corp, Canon, Pocari Sweat and Indofood are all official partners of the 2018 Asian Games.\nIndonesia signed a Host City Contract for the 2018 Asian Games in Jakarta and Palembang during the Olympic Council of Asia General Assembly in Incheon in 2014.\nJakarta is the capital of Indonesia and located on the northern coast of West Java.\nJakarta is home to nine million people.\nJakarta was officially proclaimed the national capital of Indonesia in 1949, four years after the country’s independence from The Netherlands.\nJakarta has hosted the Southeast Asian Games more than any other country in the region, having staged the multi-sport event in 1979, 1987, 1997 and 2011, when they co-hosted with Palembang.\nPalembang is the seventh-largest city in Indonesia.\n2018 Jakarta Palembang Asian Games Medals Table\nChina 132 92 65\nJapan 75 56 74\nKorea, Republic Of 49 58 70\nIndonesia 31 24 43\nBalich Worldwide Shows to create Opening and Closing Ceremonies at 2018 Asian Para Games\nBalich Worldwide Shows will create and produce the Opening and Closing Ceremonies of the 2018 Asian Para Games in Indonesia, it has been announced.\nThe Italian firm, involved in 20 Olympic and Paralympic Ceremonies including at Sochi 2014 and Rio 2016, will work alongside the Indonesian group Royalindo Convention International to create the shows.\nThe 2018 Games in Jakarta will be the third edition of the Asian Para Games and will run from October 6 to 13.\nThe Opening Ceremony will be held in the Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium and will celebrate the “spirit of one country”, it is claimed.\nIt will celebrate the importance “that Indonesia is a multitude of different individuals”.\nThe Opening Ceremony will be held in Jakarta's Gelora Bung Karno Main Stadium, which also hosted the Ceremonies of the 2018 Asian Games ©Getty Images\nBalich said in a statement it would be an “honour” to help create the Opening and Closing Ceremonies of this year’s event.\nThe 2018 Asian Games has already taken place across Jakarta and Palembang, having run from August 18 to September 2.\nChina topped the medals table with 132 golds, 92 silvers and 65 golds.\nChina also finished top of the medals table at the last Asian Para Games in 2014, where they won 174 golds, 95 silvers and 48 bronze medals.\nThis year's Asian Para Games are already set to break records, according to organisers.\nThe Organising Committee have announced they are expecting nearly 3,000 athletes to compete, more than any other previous edition.\nThere will also be more nations competing, 43, and more medals on offer, 568, than at any other Asian Para Games.\nBack to Jakarta Palembang 2018 home page\nSeptember 2018: Ternate welcomes Asian Para Games flame\nSeptember 2018: IWBF announce team of international technical officials for 2018 Asian Para Games\nSeptember 2018: Records broken before Asian Para Games even begin\nAugust 2018: IWAS training held for technical officials and referees in Jakarta\nJune 2018: Organising Committee holds celebration to mark 100-days-to-go until 2018 Asian Para Games","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1444331"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.780375599861145,"wiki_prob":0.780375599861145,"text":"Home Brand DS Performance Formula E DS Techeetah 2018-2019 Season 5\nDS Techeetah 2018-2019 Season 5 Formula E\nBack to listBack to list\nDS TECHEETAH HEADS TO MONACO TO EXTEND ITS CHAMPIONSHIP LEAD\nThe ninth round of the ABB FIA Formula E 2018/2019 Season sets sail in Monaco on 11 May 2019. DS TECHEETAH enter the round as championship leaders for the Teams, with drivers André Lotterer and Jean-Éric Vergne in second and sixth place respectively in the Drivers' championship.\nThe famous Monaco circuit plays host to the all-electric street racing series for the third time in championship history. The two DS E-TENSE FE19 Gen2 cars will battle it out with the 20 other Gen2 cars on an adapted street circuit in the municipality across 12 turns and 1,765 km.\nMark Preston, DS TECHEETAH Team Principal: “We head to Monaco seven points ahead of our nearest rival so it’s still a very close championship order. Both of our drivers are in a good position for the drivers’ title and André also is current leader of the voestalpine European races.\n“We’re once again in a fortunate position to be leading the Teams’ championship and be in the mix for the Drivers’ one, and it’s all down to our incredible team. In all my years in motorsport, I’ve never seen a group of people this passionate and dedicated. We may be a small team, but we’re a very efficient one.”\nXavier Mestelan Pinon, DS Performance Director: “We’re in the middle of a very intense part of the season right now. We’re working at full speed on the development of the season six and seven powertrain whilst competing at the forefront of season five. We’re currently leading the Teams’ championship and we want to fight in Monaco to keep this intact. At that stage in the season, the battle is very close, and all the points matter. We are here to win the titles.”\nAndré Lotterer #36: “I’m super excited to drive the DS E-TENSE FE19 around the Monaco track for the first time this week. I’ve lived in Monaco since 2012 but I’ve never raced here so that will be a first. It will be amazing to wake up at home, have a coffee on the balcony and then walk down to the track, it’s not many times in your career you get to do that. “I’m incredibly motivated to have a good result in Monaco. I’ve had two second places now so it’s time to turn that into a first place. As a driver, winning is all that you think about. You live and breathe it so being close yet so far really triggers you to wanting it even more and I will give it all I got. It’s all about every single little point as the championship is a numbers game in the end of the day and we can’t take any gambles.”\nJean-Éric Vergne, #25: “With five races to go, it’s getting really exciting now. With eight different winners in eight races, anything is possible. Monaco is a track I enjoy driving and it helps that I’ve driven here before. Just like the Grand Prix circuit, the Formula E circuit is super tricky to overtake on so it will be as important as ever to qualify well. All my focus will be on putting it all together to ensure I grid at the top.”\nABOUT DS TECHEETAH\nDS TECHEETAH Formula-E team is a Chinese racing team in the all-electric street racing series, ABB FIA Formula E. The team is owned by SECA (Shanghai) Limited.\nThe team won the 2017/2018 Drivers' Championship title with Jean-Éric Vergne and together with André Lotterer, the team secured second place in the Teams' Championship in the 2017/2018 season of Formula E.\nHeading into the 2018/2019 season e of the all-electric championship, TECHEETAH has partnered with DS Automobiles to become DS TECHEETAH.\nABOUT CHINA MEDIA CAPITAL (CMC)\nChina Media Capital (\"CMC\"), founded and chaired by Ruigang Li, is one of the most prestigious names in media and entertainment investment and operation in China and global markets. CMC has created and grown a number of champions and emerging leaders in the sectors of media and entertainment, Internet and mobile, and life style, covering film, television, music, sports, location-based entertainment, financial media, financial data service, online-video, smart TV, advertising, social network, game, online-education, e-commerce, O2O and etc.\nABOUT SECA\nHeadquartered in Shanghai, SECA is a leading Chinese sports marketing and management company specializing in sports talent representation, event management and content/IP development. The company's investors include China Media Capital (CMC) Holdings and member of NBA Hall of Fame, Yao Ming.\nABOUT DS AUTOMOBILES\nDriven by the avant-garde spirit and backed by an exceptional heritage of the 1955 DS, DS Automobiles, launched in 2015, aims to embody French luxury savoir-faire in the automotive industry. DS Automobiles is the PSA Group's Premium brand.\nDesigned for customers seeking personal expression and eager for the latest technologies, the second-generation DS models combine refinement and advanced technology. With the SUVs DS 7 CROSSBACK and DS 3 CROSSBACK, the DS brand is launching a range of six worldwide vehicles, all offered in electrified versions under the E-TENSE signature.\nFor its demanding customers, DS Automobiles has created \"ONLY YOU, the DS experience\", its exclusive service program for a unique brand experience.\nPresent in 32 countries, the DS brand has created and is developing an exclusive distribution network that includes 400 DS STORES and DS SALONS throughout the world in early 2019.\nFollow all DS news on www.DSautomobiles.com @DS_Official\nUK PRESS CONTACT\nKevin Jones – Head of Communications, DS Automobiles - UK Communications\n+44 (0)2476 884215 / +44 (0)7880 786596 / kevin.jones@DSautomobiles.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line2787"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7344017028808594,"wiki_prob":0.7344017028808594,"text":"Home Economy New Chinese mega-resort in Bahamas points way to future\nNew Chinese mega-resort in Bahamas points way to future\nBaha Mar, a $3.5 billion seaside gambling resort, will be the largest such development in and around the Caribbean. Given the boost in Cayman’s tourism numbers and demographics of the Islands’ visitors, the giant hotel and casino is not expected to have much of an impact here.\nThe tourism industry of an island nation near Cuba and only a short flight from the United States is about to make worldwide news with the opening of a $3.5 billion seaside gambling resort that will become the largest such development in and around the Caribbean.\nAnd by the way, the travel and hotel executives and financiers readying their announcement, chilling bottles of celebratory Champagne and preparing to count proceeds from hundreds, even thousands of new paying visitors don’t have anything to do with the Cayman Islands.\nThey are, in fact, investors in and employees of Baha Mar, a 1,000-acre super-resort on New Providence island in the Bahamas, a warm, sunny stroll from the Commonwealth’s biggest city, Nassau.\nThe build-out has been somewhat slow going, and, as with many projects in the Caribbean, developers say, the grand opening has been moved back over and over, and deadlines have been reset time and again. But then, the scope of this particular development is vast. Within the coming months, after the construction dust settles and the roar of earth movers fades, the sprawling site will include:\nSome 3,000 feet of manicured beach\nA convention, arts and entertainment center comprising 200,000 square feet of flexible space, along with a 30,000-square-foot gallery exhibiting the largest collection of Bahamian art in the island chain\nThe 100,000-square-foot Baha Mar Casino, described as the largest gaming center in the Caribbean\nAn attached 1,000-room luxury hotel, the Baha Mar, replete with ocean views and spas, and corridors that zip people onto the gaming floor\nThe Grand Hyatt at Baha Mar, a 700-room resort hotel\nAn 18-hole, 72-par Jack Nicklaus Signature golf course\nThe Rosewood 200-room beach-view hotel with 5,000-square-foot ballroom\nThe SLS Lux 300-room hotel, including private residences and luxury amenities\nThe Melia Nassau Beach Resort, an existing 694-room hotel that is undergoing renovation\nResidential condominiums priced as high as $10 million\nAn ocean of swimming pools amid a grove of slender palm trees\nAnd 40 restaurants, bars and lounges encompassing shops and kiosks, all filling 74,000 square feet of what the developers call “the Bahamian Riviera.\nBeyond its array of architectural, cultural, commercial, culinary and entertainment features, Baha Mar also has an unexpected genesis.\nWhat has been rising over a wedge-shaped plot since 2011 is the first major resort site conceived, largely financed and designed by both private and state investors from China.\nBaha Mar could become the very place that connects the rapidly expanding Asian economic behemoth with one of the great outdoor playgrounds of the Western world – the Caribbean.\nOver the last couple of years, this sun-kissed basin between Central America and the Atlantic Ocean, from Florida to the Colombian and Venezuelan coasts, has seen leisure travel heat up from the world’s economic chill. Cruises are more numerous, flights more frequent, and hotel occupancy higher than in the previous seven years, studies show. The Cayman Islands have benefited as well.\nNot a threat to Cayman tourism\nDoes the addition of a giant gambling resort near Nassau threaten tourism prosperity in the rest of the Caribbean? Ken Hydes, president of the Cayman Islands Tourism Association, thinks not.\n“To tell the truth, I haven’t thought much about this development in the Bahamas,” he said. Hydes and the CITA board are confident the visitor economy in Cayman is on sound footing, without mega-resorts or mega promotion budgets – and without gambling.\nIn part, that’s because the travelers Cayman has always attracted still seek a Cayman-like experience, not that of Las-Vegas-by-the-sea. CITA and the government’s Tourism Department have focused on marketing to their traditional demographic niche.\nThat niche is changing, Hydes acknowledges. Just as the Bahamas expects a flood of visitors from the world’s largest emerging nation, China, “We’ve been seeing more Russians and other Eastern Europeans visiting here” as they move up the economic ladder, he said.\n“We’re seeing all kinds of change in this industry, but we’re not threatened by it. I’d be more worried about Baha Mar if I were running Atlantis.”\nHe was referring to the other Bahamas jumbo-resort with a casino, Atlantis on Paradise Island.\nWith all the developments, “We think the Caribbean is going to benefit from growth in leisure travel in the years to come,” Hydes said.\nThe Cayman Islands Department of Tourism also welcomes the gambling resort to the region’s tourism mix. Director of Tourism Rosa Harris said the department “has been aware of the Baha Mar project for many years,” adding, “its introduction will no doubt bring new travelers to the Caribbean.”\nShe expressed similar confidence to Hydes that “we are able to deliver on a brand experience that cannot be duplicated anywhere else in the world. We call it ‘Caymankind.’”\nIn short, Harris said, Baha Mar is no threat to Cayman’s tourism success, which has increased significantly in recent years.\nSimilarities, differences\nTechnically, the Bahamas archipelago doesn’t rise from the Caribbean Sea. The Commonwealth’s 700-plus islands lie solidly in the Atlantic Ocean. But the demographic mix, economy, culture and political alliances make it a longtime member of the Caribbean community. In fact, its British heritage and principal economic features – dependency on tourism and offshore banking are aspects it has in common with Cayman.\nAnd, in recent history, the visitors who have come to enjoy these two paradises have come from the same places – the U.S., Canada and the U.K., as well as the rest of Western Europe.\nCross-cultural experiment\nTravel industry experts, like those at STR, the Nashville, Tennessee-based global brand benchmarking company focused on hotel and travel brands, hint that Baha Mar might be a giant cross-cultural experiment that could change international leisure travel.\n“There is this huge rising middle class in China,” notes Bobby Bowers, senior vic president of operations at STR. “It’s only natural that with the Chinese building this big resort in the Caribbean, they will reach out and try to encourage some of their own people, the ones with more wealth and their relatively new freedom to travel internationally, to vacation in the Caribbean.”\nIndeed, a year-old report from Oxford Economics, which studies and consults on travel, said China, chief among some other emerging nations, will become the driving force of the travel industry through the mid-2020s.\nNow that an international economic crisis has loosened its grip on leisure spending, some citizens of emerging countries like Brazil, Russia, India, Indonesia and, of course, China, the biggest of them all, will find the means to roam the globe. Plus, as Bowers said, “Along with their increased wealth, middle class people in China finally have more freedom to travel, too.”\nTravel agency giant Amadeus, which helped finance the 2014 Oxford Economics study, said China’s global travel could become a full 20 percent of the total by 2023, crowding the industry beyond what we can now imagine.\nFor Chinese interests to own and run a gambling resort on the scope of Baha Mar would seem to be part and parcel of this international trend in travel – and a good bet for the resort’s owners.\nChina’s role in Bahamas resort\nChina flexed its muscles in many ways during the development of the huge Bahamas resort. In negotiations over how the multi-billion-dollar project would proceed, the Chinese government and companies insisted that they would ship more than 4,000 Asian workers to live in barracks near Nassau and toil at the construction site.\nChina has used this labor model for a range of projects and in other locales, including in Sri Lanka and Angola.\nThat was a feature the developers wanted in their deal with the Bahamian government, and it was one to which the host nation agreed, despite the Bahamas having an unemployment rate of 15.7 percent at the beginning of 2015. Further, on the more urbanized island of New Providence, where Baha Mar has been under construction, the unemployment rate reached 16 percent this year.\nThe Tribune newspaper in the Bahamas reported yet worse economic news: “Youths between 15 and 24” – the ages of many of the construction workers on New Providence – “continued to face a considerably higher rate [of unemployment].”\nThe paper said that recent data put the unemployment rate for young workers at 31 percent. Meanwhile, at the peak of construction, a study showed that 70 percent of the resort’s labor was made up of foreign nationals, most of them the then-4,200 Chinese brought there by the main contractor, China State Construction Engineering Corp.\nHowever, a 2,900-room resort community requires a lot of resident workers year after year, not just the ones who build the structures.\nKimberly Hanson, a spokeswoman for the Dallas, Texas-based Rosewood Hotel Group, which has a small luxury hotel on the Baha Mar property, said, “We expect visitors from all over the world there, but we do expect lots of Chinese visitors.” Thus, the flow of Chinese nationals as guests, lured to the Caribbean by promotional messages, could make it easy to discount the economic contributions of a few thousand construction workers for a couple of years.\nBaha Mar executives also think the China connection will aid the resort in its cross-island competition with Atlantis. Just weeks ago, Brookfield Asset Management, with majority ownership of Atlantis, announced the departure of its top executive, George Markantonis. His replacement, Paul Burke, now serves as president and managing director.\nIn its published statement about the transition, Atlantis said nothing about the towering Baha Mar buildings taking shape just a few miles away. Markantonis, who left for a job in Las Vegas, expressed his “full confidence the property will continue to flourish under Paul’s leadership.” Meanwhile, the new mega-resort was chugging toward its launch.\nOpening delayed\nThere remains the issue of when, exactly, Baha Mar will open to guests. In 2014, the promise was that the Rosewood, the Grand Hyatt and the Baha Mar Casino & Hotel would open by December 2014, in time for most of the development to reap a fine harvest from the high-impact winter season. Delays shifted the opening to early March, then to late March and now to early May. Rosewood’s Hanson said that is still the target for launching the resort.\nThe Grand Hyatt says likewise, and so does Baha Mar management.\nBut why all the delays? Labor issues surfaced for one thing. In January, a hotel workers union voted to strike over compensation. Restaurant and bar management companies along with financial executives and bureaucrats back in China wanted to reduce their gratuities below the standard 15 percent, negatively effecting their wages. The dispute went on for months.\nA group of 60 Chinese workers marched on Nassau’s central business district, protesting that some of them had not been paid in months. Another delay.\nDay-to-day decisions that, in the Chinese central-government manner, had to be deferred to functionaries in Beijing caused yet further slowdowns. Pretty soon the bitter cold 2015 winter in much of Canada and the Midwest and Northeast United States gave way to signs of spring, when the get-away-to-the-Caribbean season becomes a memory.\nAfter initial delays, resort executives set March 27 as opening day. On March 25, executives blamed construction managers for more delays. “Subsequently,” they said in a statement, “it has become clear that the contractor has not completed the work with an attention to detail consistent with Baha Mar standards of excellence.” Hence, the latest delay until early May.\nAlso, resort managers said not all four new hotels are guaranteed to open in May. The Grand Hyatt, they said, may open “shortly thereafter,” and renovations on the fifth hotel will continue for an indeterminate time.\nThe loss of business of its once-planned first high season will cost the development tens of millions, resort executives say. Plus, the setbacks have won Baha Mar some unkind digs.\nA hotel industry blog, “Hotel Chatter,” gave the resort a backhand award for “worst Hotel Hype,” saying its continuing delays seriously undercut the project’s credibility and made it appear bush-league.\nBut then, common wisdom has it that the Chinese have shown themselves to be patient people. By the end of 2015, another winter will be taking hold, and tourists from cold-climate centers of wealth will be thinking about getting in a round of golf in the Caribbean sunshine or snorkeling and diving in warm waters.\n“We think we see diversity in our clientele now,” said Maria Ruiz, a nighttime desk clerk at a tourist hotel in Miami Beach. “We’ve got Brazilians, loads of Latin Americans, Russians, Indians, Japanese, Saudis, Nigerians.\n“But in a just a few years, you can bet we’ll be checking in people from absolutely everywhere, Chinese by the thousands, Indonesians, Vietnamese,” she said. “International travel is going to make the world flatter than ever.”\nThe Cayman Islands will benefit from that flatter world too. Bobby Bowers, with the consulting firm STR, said,\n“We track the occupancy of hotels all over the Caribbean – and other places, too,” he said. “[Tourism] was up last year. It’s up this year.\nAnd there’s building going on throughout the region.”\nCayman tourism on the rise\nAs reported in the Cayman Compass earlier this year, 2014 was a successful year for Cayman Islands tourism and was reflected across the region with almost every island in the Caribbean seeing an increase in visitation in what officials describe as the “best ever year” for the industry. Overall tourism arrival figures for the Caribbean were up just over 5 percent in 2014.\nThe Cayman Islands, which had a record year, was one of the top performers, seeing gains of just over 10 percent. Further, the Cayman Islands accounted for 1.4 percent of the 26 million visitors to the Caribbean in 2014.\n“Last year, we received more visitors than ever before – recording our fifth straight year of growth – and visitors spent more money in the Caribbean than they ever did before,” CTO chairman Richard Sealy said in a state of the industry report. The report indicates that tourists spent US$29.5 billion in the region last year.\nAir and cruise arrivals continue to set record levels in Cayman, and the outlook is positive again for this year.\nThe Caribbean Tourism Organization anticipates tourism growth to continue, forecasting a further 5 percent increase across the region in 2015.\nCompass reporter James Whittaker contributed to this article.\nAccommodations at ‘the new Riveria.’\nBaha Mar Hotel and Casino\nPaul Burke, president of Atlantis\nKen Hydes\nRosa Harris\ncayman islands department of tourism\ncayman islands tourism association\nPrevious articleWork permits have no negative impact on Caymanian employment\nNext articleDart, beyond Camana Bay","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1374960"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6611564755439758,"wiki_prob":0.33884352445602417,"text":"« Guest opinion: Lee County st... Reimbursement vote improper...»\nGuest opinion: Junior Achievement volunteers offer much to SW Florida students\nThe term \"philanthropy\" is often made in reference to monetary donations, but sometimes, it's not just about cutting a check.\nYes, financial assistance is critical, but time is just as important. Eight years ago, I joined a group of successful business, government and nonprofit leaders who offer their time and valuable insight to students through Junior Achievement of Southwest Florida.\nJunior Achievement is our way to share tricks of the trade with aspiring business leaders, life lessons we wished someone told us when we were teenagers or pre-teens. It can be advice on picking a college major, why it's important to have a savings account or how to be a leader and winner in life.\nBrandon Box\nTen years ago, I started working at IBERIABANK as a commercial banking intern. A decade later, my responsibilities as executive vice president and market president for the Sarasota and Fort Myers markets are vastly different. Yes, I've worked hard in advancing to this position so quickly in my career, but I didn't do it alone. I had help along the way, wisdom and guidance from my colleagues, friends and local business leaders who took the time to guide me down this path.\nWith my background in banking, most of my discussions with students center around money. Their financial decisions - good and bad - can change their lives for better or worse. Many students don't have a financial expert living in their home, and Money Management 101 isn't part of the standard school curriculum. That's why I help explain debt load, lending and borrowing, the importance of saving, basics of budgeting, paying for college and one element that seems to trip up most Americans - credit card debt.\nMy advice boils down to making sound financial decisions. Don't spend money that you don't have.\nFollowing our discussions in the classroom, students often pull me aside for questions about complex or personal issues like bankruptcy, foreclosure and options for parents who are out of work. It's questions like these that must be answered, and it's exactly why Junior Achievement is such a critical program for our youth.\nOn April 25, Junior Achievement of Southwest Florida will recognize two of my colleagues who graciously have given their time to the organization and area schoolchildren. Pason Gaddis, co-founder and CEO of Florida Media Group, LLC, and Gary Griffin, P.E., president and CEO of B & I Contractors, Inc., will be inducted into the 2018 Business Hall of Fame, Lee County. Since it was established in 1999, the Business Hall of Fame has recognized outstanding entrepreneurs and role models who demonstrate a strong commitment to the community and our next generation of leaders.\nI invite you to share in this fantastic event and help make a difference in the lives of local students. The Business Hall of Fame event will take place Wednesday, April 25, at the Hyatt Regency Coconut Point Resort & Spa, 5001 Coconut Road in Bonita Springs. A cocktail reception at 5 p.m. kicks off the event, followed by dinner at 6:30 p.m. and the induction ceremony.\nTo reserve tables, purchase individual tickets or become a sponsor, call the Junior Achievement office at 239-225-2590 or visit www.JASWFL.org. Proceeds benefit local Junior Achievement programs.\nBrandon Box is executive vice president and market president for IBERIABANK's Sarasota and Fort Myers markets. Box is a regular volunteer for Junior Achievement and serves on the JA Hall of Fame board of directors.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1760968"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.897075355052948,"wiki_prob":0.897075355052948,"text":"Scandalous vote result annulled in North Caucasus\nPublished time: 4 Dec, 2009 13:50 Edited time: 4 Dec, 2009 20:38\nMayoral election results have been annulled in the city of Derbent, in Russia’s Dagestan, the first such case in the North Caucasus and the first time a vote’s outcome has been cancelled not in favor of the ruling party.\nOn December 3, the Derbent city court in the Republic of Dagestan nullified the results of the October 11 election, which was marked by a number of scandals and violations.\nAccording to official results, Felix Kaziahkmedov from the pro-Kremlin United Russia party won the mayoral seat for a second term with 67.5 per cent of the vote.\nThe action against the outcome of the vote was brought by three other candidates for the mayor’s post, including Kaziahkmedov’s main opponent, former prosecutor of the republic Imamali Yaraliev. The court ruling was based on Elkhan Kazimov’s and Salikh Ramazanov’s complaints, whilst the court hearing on Yaraliev’s complain is yet to be held.\nIt’s most likely that that the court’s decision will be appealed by the opposite side and the case will be brought before the Supreme Court, Yaraliev’s representative told gzt.ru.\n“In the lawsuit we filed, we presented proof that the elections were held with serious violations of the law – there was administrative pressure. For no reason, citizens were robbed of their right to vote. In other words, their constitutional right,” Khadir Yusupov is quoted as saying.\nAccording to official data, out of 36 polling stations in Derbent, only 23 opened on the Election Day. Yusupov, however, claims 20 polling places had their doors opened for the voters.\n“Moreover, they [the polling stations] repeatedly interrupted their work, explaining it by different reasons, including a bomb threat,” he said. Yusupov also added that there were cases when voters were expelled and said that evidence of that was provided to the court.\nSo far, the only reaction issued from Russia’s Central Election Commission has been a short statement on its website saying that the Derbent court’s decision can be appealed within 10 days.\nEarlier, the CEC Chairman Vladimir Churov said that after the voting in Derbent, eight criminal cases were launched, including alleged bribery of electors by one of the candidates, forged ballots and threats to a chairman of one of local election commissions.\n“It was not easy to hold elections there by a long way,” he said in an interview with “Rossiyskaya Gazeta” paper. The situation in Derbent is really complicated because of political infighting among the candidates and a “special economic situation”, he said back in October\nShow case?\nThe Derbent case is, in a way, unique and some are calling it “symbolic”. So far, despite opposition protests and claims of violations, no other October 11 election results have been annulled.\n“Court decisions like that are generally pretty rare,” political analyst Aleksandr Kynev is quoted as saying by Kommersant daily. It’s the first time ever in the North Caucasus – “where elections are always held with violations”- that the vote result has been cancelled.\nThe federal power, he said, intended to show that outrageous violations did not slip through the cracks and that consequences will follow even when United Russia candidates are involved.\nSome other observers go even further, saying that the Derbent case is a bad sign for Dagestan President Mukhu Aliyev, since he failed to prove he controls the situation in the republic. Aliyev’s term ends in February 2010 and chances that he will remain the Dagestan’s leader are not that high now.\nEarlier, a court in Moscow ordered a ballot recount and the city election committee filed a request to instigate a case against certain wrongdoings. The reason for the recount was a complaint by Sergey Mitrokhin – the leader of the opposition party Yabloko – who discovered that not a single vote had been cast for his party in the Khamovniki District in central Moscow where he and his family voted.\nOpposition protests\nOn October 11, about 7,000 elections for local and municipal legislatures of all levels were held in 76 of 83 constituent parts of the Russian Federation, most of them very small scale though. United Russia’s victory in almost all regions didn’t come as a surprise and the Communist Party came second in most elections, but, as usual, with a huge gap between them.\nThree days after the voting day, in protest against the election results, all three opposition parties – The Communists, the Liberal Democrats and Fair Russia – refused to take part in the State Duma session and walked out of the lower house of parliament. They claimed widespread voting irregularities and demanded an urgent meeting with President Medvedev.\nTwo days later, the Liberal Democrats and the Fair Russia party ended their boycott, whilst the Communists remained defiant, demanding an investigation into alleged vote-rigging.\nIn order to calm the opposition, Medvedev held a meeting with the three parties’ representatives on October 24 – three days earlier than the meeting was initially scheduled for.\n“There are special rules in the Constitution for disputing voting results. This is essential. There can be no electoral system without it,” Dmitry Medvedev said.\nFollowing the meeting, the Russian leader asked the CEC chief to look into the alleged fraud claims.\nThere have been very few cases in Russia’s modern history when city or regional vote results have been annulled.\nFirst post-Soviet local elections held in Chechnya\nTwo opposition parties end boycott\nRussian parliamentary protest lingers into second week\nElection inconsistencies to no effect\nOpposition wants answers from president\nElection fraud claims must be investigated - Medvedev\nUnited Russia party should change itself – Russian president\nElections in Ukraine restrict revolutionary icon\nUkrainian minister loses same job twice in two days\nBelarus opposition fail to find common ground ahead of race for presidency","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1345478"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7538802623748779,"wiki_prob":0.7538802623748779,"text":"Ryan D. Lewellyn\nCarlos P. Evans\nMax J. Myers\nLindel R. Larison\nTyson Williams\nFinance & Accounting Team\nChief Financial Officer | Founding Partner\nMr. Myers has more than 20 years of experience in the Energy sector. In his role as CFO of Tall Oak Midstream, Mr. Myers is responsible for leading the finance, accounting, risk management and capital formation aspects of Tall Oak Midstream. Prior to forming Tall Oak, Mr. Myers was treasurer of OGE Energy Corp. In this role he had oversight responsibility for cash management, corporate finance, insurance and corporate development. OGE owns the regulated utility OG&E and has a 50 percent governance interest in Enable Midstream Partners.\nPrior to joining OGE in 2005, Mr. Myers was with Westar Energy in Kansas as director of finance and corporate development. While at Westar, he spent three years in France, where he managed Westar's unregulated investment in Protection One Europe.\nMr. Myers has an undergraduate degree in business with a concentration in geology and a Master of Business Administration degree, both from the University of Kansas. He currently serves on the KU Business School's Dean's Advisory Board. In Oklahoma City he currently serves as the Treasurer of Allied Arts and is a member of the Board of Junior Achievement of OKC, where he is a former Chairman of the Board. Mr. Myers previously served on the Board of Directors of the Oklahoma School of Science and Mathematics. Mr. Myers and his wife Janie have two boys and live in Edmond, Oklahoma.\nWebsite by TEN|10 Group\nCopyright © 2019 Tall Oak Midstream\n2575 Kelley Pointe Parkway, Suite 340","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line441857"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5004963874816895,"wiki_prob":0.5004963874816895,"text":"Case Name EEOC v. FEDERAL EXPRESS CORPORATION aka FEDEX EE-TN-0042\nDocket / Court 98-2235GA ( W.D. Tenn. )\nState/Territory Tennessee\nCase Type(s) Disability Rights-Pub. Accom.\nEqual Employment\nOn March 9, 1998, the Washington D.C. and Memphis offices of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed a lawsuit under Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act against Federal Express Corporation in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Tennessee. The EEOC alleged ... read more >\nOn March 9, 1998, the Washington D.C. and Memphis offices of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed a lawsuit under Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act against Federal Express Corporation in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Tennessee. The EEOC alleged that the defendants had violated the rights of the complainant by discriminating against him on the basis of his deafness.\nOn July 9, 1998, the complainant intervened in the lawsuit, but on January 12, 1999, he agreed to a stipulated dismissal of his private claims against the defendants. On April 8, 1999, the parties reached a consent decree. Under the terms of the decree, the defendants were prohibited from discriminating or retaliating against any individual who complained of discrimination. The defendants agreed to revise their recruitment and application practices to accommodate applicants who were hearing impaired. The defendant also agreed to post notice of employment discrimination laws in a conspicuous place for their employees. Within 30 days of the execution of the consent decree, the defendant agreed to write a letter to the Regional Attorney in this litigation detailing all measures that they took to comply with the decree.\nJustin Kanter - 02/22/2008\nDiscrimination Prohibition\nFollow recruitment, hiring, or promotion protocols\nOther requirements regarding hiring, promotion, retention\nPost/Distribute Notice of Rights / EE Law\nRetaliation Prohibition\nUtilize objective hiring/promotion criteria\nAccommodation / Leave\nDisability (inc. reasonable accommodations)\nPrivate Party intervened in EEOC suit\nAmericans with Disabilities Act (ADA), 42 U.S.C. §§ 12111 et seq.\nDefendant(s) Federal Express Corporation\nNature of Relief Injunction / Injunctive-like Settlement\n2:98-cv-02235-jsg (W.D. Tenn.)\nEE-TN-0042-9000.pdf | Detail\nStipulated Order of Dismissal as to Intervening Plaintiff, Robert H. Cook, Jr. [ECF# 28] (W.D. Tenn.)\nOrder on Plaintiff's Motion to Compel [ECF# 36] (W.D. Tenn.)\nConsent Decree [ECF# 55]","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line413398"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9506264328956604,"wiki_prob":0.9506264328956604,"text":"Britain's Stateless Citizens\nby Daniel Simpson\nAn ongoing crime ignored by U.S. media\nDiego Garcia: The Special Relationship's Dirty Secret\nCRAWLEY, England - Allen Vincatassin is an immigrant with a difference: he wants to go back to where he came from but the British government won't let him. So he's importing his compatriots instead.\nFive hundred have joined this exodus since the chilly September dawn that greeted Vincatassin and the 18 friends and relatives he'd persuaded to trade tropical sunshine for a one-way ticket to Gatwick airport, where they hunkered under strip lighting by the toilets while he badgered officials to find them a hotel. The letter he'd received from London a few days earlier failed to deter him. \"There is no question of our offering any temporary accommodation or other means of short term financial support,\" a Foreign Office minister had insisted. No matter. After three days of belligerent phone calls and eating out of cans, they were given 30 pounds each for food and rooms in the airport Travelodge. Vincatassin's audacity had paid off; their bills were covered for six months until they'd cobbled together enough cash between them to decamp to suburbia.\nThis was no asylum-seeking stunt, however, and it drew none of the usual tabloid newspaper hysteria about refugees exposing Britain as a \"soft touch\". All 19 carried British passports, thanks to an Act of Parliament offering them the right to settle in a country they'd never seen, although its flag still flies over the coral atolls they called home until their families were expelled to make way for an American military base. For decades, these dispossessed exiles have demanded the right to return to their islands in the Indian Ocean, but to no avail. Most remain where the retreating British Empire dumped them: in the shantytowns of Mauritius and the Seychelles. Appeals for assistance have gone unheeded since 1982, when a meagre payout was authorised on the condition it would never be repeated.\n\"The passport came as a lifejacket,\" Vincatassin reflects. A short man of 35, given to grandiloquence, he puffs out his chest and surveys the living room of a squat terraced house he shares with his wife and brother in Crawley, a drab commuter belt New Town, barely five miles from the London runway where they landed three years ago. \"It was like enlightenment for me and I said, yes! At least if we are on their doorstep they'll have to do something.\"\nNot all of his fellow islanders are impressed by Vincatassin's quest to secure welfare payments for new arrivals to a community dispersed across the cul-de-sacs and crescents of Crawley's post-war housing estates. To some, it's a distraction from their ongoing struggle to resettle the depopulated Chagos archipelago and, as such, a symptom of identity crisis. The disputes over how best to seek redress from the British establishment reflect conflicting notions of what it means to be Chagossian; whether suffering is something to escape or to exhibit, whether a felicitous future lies in reviving a bygone way of life or in making the most of present opportunities.\nOlivier Bancoult, chairman of the Mauritian-based Chagos Refugee Group and claimant in a legal challenge to Britain's decree that the islands should remain uninhabited, is clear on how he sees it. \"Here is not our country,\" he said during a recess at his High Court hearing in London, which he's flown in from Port Louis to attend. \"If Allen Vincatassin cared about his fundamental right to return to his homeland, he should have taken up the case against the British government, not come here and settled.\"\nOf the two-dozen Chagossian visitors shivering alongside Bancoult in the court's public gallery this winter, just three speak enough English to have more than the faintest idea what's going on. The case unfolding beneath them turns on arcane constitutional principles and its two judges have no power to send them home, but might just reinstate a theoretical right of return that Bancoult's lawyers have already established once, before the government revoked it. Anything further-reaching is almost unthinkable: the island of Diego Garcia hosts a precious Pentagon outpost and the United States remains as opposed to the presence of indigenous people as it was when it ordered Britain to deport them 40 years ago.\n\"Our view,\" wrote Eric Newsom, assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs, in a letter to British officials in 2000, \"is that any settlement of a resident civilian population even on the outer islands of the archipelago would significantly degrade the strategic importance of a vital military asset unique in the region to both our governments.\" In other words, forget about it. Four years later, Britain duly obliged. Although the High Court had ruled in November 2000 that the original expulsion of the Chagos islanders constituted \"an abject legal failure\", ministers simply reinstated the law that banished them, only this time it was even tougher. Magna Carta be damned; \"No person has the right of abode,\" declared the July 2004 ordinance. To bypass Parliament, which would almost certainly have slapped down the legislation, the government used the Queen's ancient Prerogative power as a rubber stamp. As Britain has no written constitution, it is now up to the courts to determine whether, as the government insists, Her Majesty still has the right to do whatever she pleases to her subjects in colonial dominions.\n\"There is no precedent that we have been able to find in statute, case law, or indeed in history for what has been done,\" argues Bancoult's barrister, Sir Sydney Kentridge, who made his name defending Nelson Mandela and Steve Biko in their struggles against apartheid. Kentridge's opposite number says he has \"a knockout blow\", however, in the form of an 1865 statute granting the Queen unlimited power under colonial law unless Parliament expressly forbids a particular course of action. Regardless of which side the judges take when they hand down their decision later this year, the losing party is almost certain to appeal. An eventual Chagossian victory would be virtually meaningless in any case, the islanders' solicitor concedes, because it would change nothing in practice. \"I don't see any hope that the government will take anything approaching a humane view or what one might call a rational view of these people's rights,\" regrets Richard Gifford, a London lawyer who has devoted much of the past eight years to preparing Bancoult's two cases and an unsuccessful class action for compensation. \"I think they've made a policy decision: the exercise is simply to serve their master as best they can.\"\nThe United States itself has long since washed its hands of its role in what the Washington Post described in 1975 as an \"act of mass kidnapping\". Even if there were no legal duty to recompense the Chagossians, the chairman of a House of Representatives committee stressed later the same year, \"it is certainly not a glorious chapter in the compassion of the United States to deny responsibility for those people.\" Three decades later, following Bancoult's initial victory in London, an American attorney filed a lawsuit against a string of secretaries of defence, from Robert McNamara to Donald Rumsfeld, but a judge ruled they had immunity against litigation by foreigners. Either way, both the Pentagon and the State Department lay the blame for what happened at Britain's door and refer probing questions to Whitehall. \"Every time the British government feels uncomfortable they point the finger at the United States and every time the American government feels uncomfortable they point it at the United Kingdom,\" says Bancoult's Washington lawyer, Michael Tigar, who is appealing the decision against his client. \"The two parties acted in concert all along the way.\"\nUndeterred by all the stonewalling, Olivier Bancoult swears he'll never give up. An electrician by trade, he sill lives within walking distance of the tin-shack slum where he grew up in Mauritius, juggling his campaigning work with appointments to read meters. His family lost its hut on the Peros Banhos atoll, 100 miles north of Diego Garcia, when he was four. After a cart ran over his youngest sister's leg, Bancoult, his eight siblings and their parents boarded a boat for the nearest hospital, 1,000 miles away in Port Louis. When they tried to return home, they learned the local shipping company had cancelled all departures. Their island was officially off-limits; it had been \"sold\" to the U.S. military. This was depopulation by stealth: like hundreds of others in the late 1960s, the family had inadvertently signed up for a one-way passage. Their possessions were lost, their future bleak. Bancoult's father, an unskilled coconut farmer like his peers, failed to find work in Mauritius and died within a few years. One of his sisters set herself ablaze in despair. Two brothers drank themselves to death. \"Animals have better treatment than us,\" he protests. \"We have never asked for the closure of the base. As far as we are concerned we should just have the same rights as all human beings.\"\nFighting talk and faith may not be enough to sustain the expectations generated by Bancoult's original success in court. Five years on, fewer and fewer Chagossians believe they'll ever set foot on their islands again. \"Many people want to move here,\" their leader acknowledges over dinner at his suburban hotel, \"but the ticket from Mauritius is very expensive. Life in London is very expensive.\" Supporters in Britain chipped in to pay for Bancoult and his party to fly over to watch the case; another local sympathiser cooked the chicken and rice they're devouring in a corner of the hotel restaurant; all they've eaten since the morning are the leftovers they pocketed from the breakfast table. One of their number is here to stay; unlike most of the other Chagossians in the room, Jean-Paul Selmour is not wearing a woolly hat; he's acclimatising. \"I think England will become my second country,\" he says. \"I will take any job I can find. My 12-year-old daughter wants a better education.\"\nMost mornings, from first light, Crawley's extravagantly named central artery plays host to impromptu gatherings of Chagossians. Singularly lacking in greenery, The Boulevard is landscaped out of concrete and tarmac and flanked by poky discount retailers. In the shadow of the T.J. Hughes department store, and its prominently displayed sales pitch: \"Because everybody loves a bargain\", two recent immigrants swap job-hunting tips. An open-air public telephone stands beside the bench where they've congregated; across the street lies an employment agency specialising in temporary work. Dieson Tiatous, a sprightly 19-year-old, has just finished his first night shift at a bakery. Already, he's looking for something different. \"It was the same thing all night – very boring,\" he says. \"I went to this office now,\" he nods in the direction of the agency, \"and I asked them if they have other work and they told me yes, come back at one o'clock. Every day I need to come here in the morning and afternoon. I like it here but it's difficult to find a job.\"\nApart from the language barrier – Chagossians speak a Creole dialect and many, especially the elderly, are illiterate – there's paperwork to process and bureaucracy to negotiate. Enter Allen Vincatassin, pioneer of the Crawley community and now a one-man citizens' advice bureau, dispensing the insights he's gleaned from his own struggle to navigate his way around the system. Whether you need a translator, a new house, or guidance on getting a national insurance number, Vincatassin's your man. And he's indignant at the rumours that he charges for his services. \"It's my mission,\" he says. \"I help this community and I do it with joy.\" It's not just Chagossians who benefit, either. Other immigrants seek him out, so well established is his reputation as a fixer at the local social security office. \"Everybody knows Allen,\" the duty manager says. When his mobile phone rings, Vincatassin flips into a different gear. \"Do you have any witnesses?\" he asks a woman from the Cayman Islands, who's just been evicted by her landlord and wants help finding temporary accommodation. \"Is it your first year in the country? Tell them that you don't know the rules on how it works here.\"\nJudging by the religious references that pepper his speech, including a self-conscious comparison of himself to Moses, Vincatassin derives much of his inspiration from his Catholic faith, bequeathed to Chagossians in part by their original colonial masters, the French. The rest seems to stem from the memory of his grandfather Michel, who put his name to the first attempt to claim compensation from Britain in 1975. \"Every time my grandfather talked about the islands, he would cry,\" Vincatassin recalls. \"I remember one day he stopped me and said Allen, if there is one thing that you need to do, the most important thing in your life and that's where success lies, it's to fight for this cause.\"\nMichel Vincatassin's writ against the British government was filed on the strength of an eviction notice. As a supervisor on the Diego Garcian coconut plantation, he'd been summoned by the island's administrator and told there'd be no work once the Americans arrived: everyone still remaining would have to leave. Michel insisted on having the order in writing; when a prominent Mauritian lawyer got wind of this document several years later, he contacted Michel and took up the appeal. Although Britain had awarded the Chagossians £650,000 in 1973, the money was paid to the Mauritian government, which waited five years to pass it on. Inflation had eaten away most of its value in the meantime and nobody had given any thought to the housing projects it was supposed to fund. After protracted legal hearings and a series of rejected offers, Britain eventually agreed to a second payout of £4 million in 1982, provided Michel Vincatassin dropped his case. He reluctantly agreed. There was another proviso, however: to qualify for compensation, the Chagossians had to sign a document waiving their rights both to future claims and to return to their islands. Debate has raged ever since as to whether they understood the papers they marked with inky thumbprints. Either way, at less than £3,000 a head, the payout was a pittance, considering the indebted and impoverished state of its recipients.\n\"If you're thirsty, the first glass of water that appears before you, you are going to drink,\" muses Allen Vincatassin. \"You won't take into consideration whether there is any poison in it.\" Arguments such as these drew little sympathy from the British legal establishment when the Chagossians filed a fresh suit in 2002. \"Justice does not require an obviously unmeritorious case to be allowed to proceed,\" ruled the judge who threw out the claim, dismissing testimony from witnesses who swore they had no clue what they were supposed to have renounced. \"Ill-treatment does not require a hopeless case to be allowed to continue.\" Mindful of these damning statements, Vincatassin has focused his attention on a different form of financial assistance: benefit payments.\nUnder the 1948 National Assistance Act, a cornerstone of Britain's welfare state, local authorities are obliged to house adults \"who by reason of age, illness, disability or any other circumstances are in need of care and attention which is not otherwise available to them.\" This was the safety net that caught Vincatassin when he landed at Gatwick: West Sussex County Council stepped in to foot his bills. It set an expensive precedent that's cost more than £750,000 as fellow nationals flock to the same destination. Many recent arrivals have found work at the airport itself and the vast majority have settled within a 10-mile radius. Since more than 5,000 Chagossians remain eligible to relocate to the United Kingdom, local politicians are worried about the long-term implications. \"Plainly the British government owes the Chagos islanders a substantial moral debt,\" says Crispin Blunt, the Conservative MP for Reigate and Banstead, \"but if repaying this debt is left to a very small proportion of the British population then the goodwill these people deserve may rapidly dissipate.\"\nVincatassin agrees this is a concern, although he reports no hostility from Crawley residents. He's taking the government to court later this year to appeal against its ruling that Chagossians need to live here for six months before they're eligible to sign on for unemployment benefit and other centrally administered welfare payments, as he himself has done. Having been awarded full British citizenship in 2002, the islanders should be entitled to the same rights as UK natives, he argues: \"I'm a British islander born on Diego Garcia, therefore a British Diego Garcian.\" When the council sought to cut its costs by offering people plane tickets back to Mauritius, Vincatassin was incensed. \"I said if you want to send us back, send us back to Diego Garcia,\" he recalls. \"If you can't send us there then we will settle here.\"\nParadise is a vision debased by countless package holiday brochures, but the U.S. Navy wasn't exaggerating when it dubbed Diego Garcia \"Fantasy Island\". Its vast deep-water lagoon, framed by a palm-clad horseshoe of coral limestone, offers \"unbelievable recreational facilities and exquisite natural beauty,\" a Pentagon website boasts; living conditions on \"the Best Kept Secret in the Navy\" are described as \"outstanding\". Of this the former inhabitants are well aware. They once led simple lives there, husking the bountiful supply of coconuts and drying their kernels in kilns to yield a substance called copra, which they ground in donkey-driven mills to extract an oil used in cosmetics and confectionary. Although they owned no title to their land, the plantation managers let them build houses where they liked, providing sheets of tin and wooden planks, straw for the roofs and the stone that paved their floors, as well as rations of rice and corn. They kept chickens, pigs and goats, planted sweet potatoes and manioc in the fertile soil and cooked fresh fish over fires on the beach. Many never had to buy anything except clothes.\nLife was not always so idyllic, however: the original Chagossians were slaves, imported from east Africa by French plantation owners. After defeating Napoleon in the early 19th century, Britain took control of the 65 \"Oil Islands\", as the archipelago was then known, and supplemented the workforce with contracted labourers from its newly acquired colonies in Mauritius and the Seychelles. When slavery was abolished, these groups inter-married and their children mostly remained on Diego Garcia and the neighbouring clusters of atolls, Peros Banhos and Salomon. By the 1960s, when American strategists were scouring the Indian Ocean for a foothold to replace bases the British could no longer afford, the permanent population of the Chagos islands had swelled to about 2,000. This was unacceptable to military planners, who feared they would be obliged, under Chapter XI of the United Nations Charter, to honour their \"sacred trust … to develop self-government\" for these people, thereby handing them the power to veto a foreign presence. Once the United States had decided to build what it euphemistically termed \"an austere communications facility\" on Diego Garcia, diplomats preoccupied themselves with the question of how to rid the island of its inhabitants without attracting worldwide condemnation.\n\"We must surely be very tough about this,\" declared Sir Paul Gore-Booth, the permanent under-secretary at Britain's Colonial Office, in a 1966 briefing. \"There will be no indigenous population except seagulls.\" A junior colleague appended a hand-written note to this document, presumably amused at its wit: \"Unfortunately along with the birds go some few Tarzans or Men Fridays whose origins are obscure and who are being hopefully wished on to Mauritius.\" A £3 million backhander and the promise of independence secured the latter objective; the Chagos islands were duly hived off and reconstituted as the British Indian Ocean Territory, complete with its own flag: a bastardised Stars and Stripes featuring a Union Jack in the top left corner, 13 blue-and-white wavy bars and a palm tree embellished with a crown. Reclassifying the resident population as Mauritian migrant workers was more complicated, but Britain's willingness to \"make up the rules as we go along\", to quote a Foreign Office legal adviser, ensured it was done. In return, Washington rewarded Harold Wilson's Labour government with a $14 million discount on the Polaris nuclear missile system, which the Prime Minister had previously pledged not to buy. These agreements were concealed from Parliament and Congress, while officials concocted \"a whopping fib\", as one memo put it, to tell the United Nations. All that remained was to evict the islanders.\nIt would be difficult to find a Chagossian who could not recount in detail what happened next, regardless of whether it actually happened to them; their \"deracinement\", or uprooting, defines them as a people. It was a piecemeal process, drawn out over five years, in part to keep the plantations active for as long as possible so the cost of removing the workforce might be defrayed. Rations were gradually run down to persuade people to leave and those who ventured offshore found it impossible to return. Eventually, in 1971, a ship docked at Diego Garcia to evacuate those who remained. Before their eyes, the island's administrator demanded that their dogs, numbering around a thousand, be rounded up and poisoned with strychnine. So gruesome was the sight of the animals' plight, however, that he changed his mind and ordered them to be shot by an advance detachment of U.S. Navy Seabees, who had landed earlier in the year to bulldoze a runway. When this proved too difficult to accomplish quickly, the dogs were herded into a shed used to dry copra and gassed with exhaust fumes from military vehicles. Distraught, the Diego Garcians boarded their boat with a few bags of possessions and crammed into the hold for a 10-day voyage in the company of a cargo of fertiliser. Two years later, the Peros Banhos plantation closed and the final group of islanders set sail for Port Louis, where they, like the others, were simply left on the wharf to fend for themselves.\n\"The Chagossian cultural identity is all about suffering,\" stresses Steffen Johannessen, a Norwegian anthropologist who spent a year living with exiles in Mauritius. \"In order to change their situation they have to expose it, because they're dependent on other people to help them.\" Most Mauritians treat \"les Ilois\", as the islanders are known in Creole, with disdain. On arrival, they received no practical assistance to integrate themselves into local society; nobody provided training that might have helped them find work. It is hardly surprising that many turned to drugs and prostitution, or that \"sadness\" is blamed for a spate of deaths and suicides in the 1970s. The communal sense of grief can take on a life of its own, as the Chagossians found to their cost when the judge who dismissed their compensation claim accused witnesses of falsifying evidence. \"There was an element of 'collective' or 'folk memory',\" he ruled. \"Stories went round which became lodged in people's minds as events which had happened and then as events which they had witnessed.\"\nFor a while, a few years back, it seemed their luck might finally be turning. After declining to appeal a High Court judgement that invoked Tacitus (\"They make a desert and call it peace\") to declare the expulsions unlawful, the British government agreed in 2000 to investigate how to repopulate the archipelago's outer islands. The first phase of their study concluded resettlement was only feasible if the Chagossians had transport links to the outside world. Diego Garcia's 2.5-mile runway is reserved for the stealth bombers and B-52s stationed on what U.S. officials regard as \"an all but indispensable platform\" for policing the world. Without another airstrip elsewhere, it would be difficult to exploit the islands' tourist appeal, although they're already a popular yachting stopover. It's rare to find less than a dozen boats moored in the lagoons of Peros Banhos and Salomon, where they're allowed to lay anchor for months at a time on payment of daily fees to British officials. An organisation funded by the Foreign Office even publishes a leaflet suggesting visitors step ashore. \"There is nowhere in the world like Chagos,\" it proclaims. \"Get out and look for yourself.\"\nThe islanders themselves yearn for such an opportunity. For five years they've been waiting for Britain to honour a promise to let 100 of them visit the graveyards where, in a uniquely Chagossian tradition, they buried their umbilical cords beside the bodies of their ancestors. On five separate occasions, a date has been set, only for the trip to be cancelled at the last minute. In the meantime, phase two of the feasibility study on their resettlement concluded it would cost too much. The report ignored potential funding from a €20 billion European development budget for overseas territories and said rising sea levels caused by global warming would make human habitation \"highly precarious\". There are no plans to evacuate Diego Garcia, however, where two thirds of the 3,500 personnel at \"Camp Justice\" are Filipino civilians hired to work on the base. Chagossians who apply for jobs there are routinely rejected, as are their requests to return to the eastern half of the island, a designated nature reserve unused by the military. For them, the options are limited: lives of penury in Mauritius and the Seychelles or a struggle to escape by whatever means possible. \"If I were Chagossian,\" ventures a retired British diplomat, \"I would make for the UK and derive all the benefits of living here, with a future for myself and my children.\"\nEven the Grande Dame of the struggle has lost hope. Tired of wrestling policemen and starving herself on the British ambassador's lawn, Charlesia Alexis has come to Crawley to die. She spends her days sleeping, or squinting at the television in a Turkish-run guesthouse under the flight path into Gatwick. \"I don't have a future, that's why I say the future is here,\" she announces, as if addressing a crowd. \"What else can I do? The British government owes me.\" At the age of 71, she may be little more than a figurehead, albeit one with the thickset neck and splayed nostrils of a prize fighter, but she remains an inspiration and a whack of her palm is still enough to shake a table. \"When I met Charlesia at the airport I had goose bumps,\" remembers Allen Vincatassin, who is helping her apply for a pension that will buy plane tickets for her family. \"I had tears in my eyes because she represents the old battles.\" Back in the 1970s, a return to her birthplace on Diego Garcia seemed as improbable to Alexis as it does today, but the hunger strikes and street protests she coordinated persuaded British officials to improve their original compensation offer. She sees her decision to move here in the same light. \"I have come to open a door for my children so they can join me,\" she explains. \"If they don't, their children will always have problems.\"\nVincatassin agrees. \"This is the place they should have sent us originally,\" he says. \"That decision would have been wrong too, but at least the islanders who are in the UK are in a better position.\" Over the past three years, he's personally welcomed seven parties of Chagossians to this enclave on the outskirts of London; others have arrived independently after learning of the example he set. \"My role is to force the authorities to do what needs to be done,\" he stresses. Instead of spending more than £1.5 million on fighting the islanders in court, the government could have paid for their airfares and taught them all English, argues Xavier Siatous, who arrived in Crawley last summer, and promptly ran up a £600 phone bill speaking to the children he left behind. It's a moot point, but one that would resonate with Chagossians in Mauritius who can't afford to take advantage of their right to full British citizenship. Were it possible to resettle the islands tomorrow, only a minority of exiles would be likely to return, primarily the 900 or so survivors who were born there. Four decades on, even they are divided. \"You can't undo a crime against humanity,\" says Siatous, once a fisherman on Peros Banhos. \"When something like this happens you look for the way to go back, but really you have to find the way forward.\"\nCharlesia Alexis still dreams about her island every day. A diet of fresh seafood would cure her diabetes instantly, she quips. But her days of shouting: \"Give us back our Diego!\" are past. Instead, she writes songs about her loss and awaits the free bus pass that will come with her pension. Her latest composition describes the journey to Britain, which was funded in part by royalties from a CD she recorded a couple of years ago. \"Here, I will get my compensation,\" her husky lament concludes. \"I will eat until I die.\" Although she's lonely without her three remaining children, and the 16 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren they've spawned, she prefers life in Crawley to the hardships of Mauritius and believes the other islanders would be wise to follow her. \"I'm not saying they're leaving hell and coming to heaven,\" she cautions. \"It's kind of purgatory here unless you can speak the language.\" For now, she copes by looking forward to a reunion with her family, although the memory of her mortality is never far away, and with it her fear that the campaign she started will wither once she's gone. \"It's very sad,\" she reflects, looking vulnerable for the first time since she lowered herself into a chair. \"To struggle you need natives, but we're dying every month. In a few years there won't be any native Chagossians left.\"\nPhoto in header by Steffen Johannessen\nUPDATE (March 2015)\nTo keep in touch with this story, and to help, consult the UK Chagos Support Association.\nFake Financial Times\nInspired by The Yes Men, I printed a fake Financial Times. Its satire had serious messages. Working for Reuters and the New York Times, I saw how governments and big business skew the news. Journalistic objectivity is a myth. Unless reporters set agendas themselves, they serve someone else’s. It’s “objective” to take dictation from officials, but disputing what they say is seen as “biased”. This limits how we think about alternatives. If they're framed as they look to those who run the world, not much changes.\nPosted in Writing, World\ntagged with Chagos","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1148271"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9766409993171692,"wiki_prob":0.9766409993171692,"text":"Where is McMafia filmed? - Complete and updated filming locations for the BBC series\nThe new BBC eight-part drama is based on the book by The Guardian journalist Misha Glenny. McMafia is a thriller about how corporations are becoming international criminal organisations. You can expect a cocktail of money-laundering, drugs, violence and -of course- Russian mafias.\nIranian-British screenwriter Hossein Amini directs the series, starring James Norton as Alex Godman (Grantchester, War & Peace). Most actors have a background that matches the country of their character. This way, the cast is composed by a multicultural troupe with Aleksey Serebryakov, Maria Shukshina, David Dencik, Merab Ninidze, Juliet Rylance, Oshri Cohen, Karel Roden and Caio Blat.\nThis expensive production has travelled all over the world. McMafia was filmed primarily in England and Croatia, but the filming location list also includes Russia, India, Turkey, Israel, Qatar, Czech Republic, Serbia, Slovenia, Belize and Egypt:\nOnly in London 75 different locations were used. Lancaster House in the West End is a 19th century mansion that doubled as the Palace of Versailles in France. Image courtesy of BBC and Andrew - Map\nThe exterior shots were filmed at the Waddesdon Manor country house in Buckinghamshire.\nImage courtesy of BBC and National Trust - Map\nThe top-floor restaurant Sky Garden served as the venue for the Sydney Bloom Foundation event.\nImage courtesy of BBC and Martin Pettitt - Map\nIn the first episode a charity gala is held at the Victoria & Albert Museum (image with director Hossein Amini and James Norton at the John Madejski Garden). Image courtesy of BBC and Giles Moss - Map\nA scene was filmed at Hyde Park with the Royal Albert Hall providing the backdrop.\nImage courtesy of BBC\nThe Victorian pub Crocker's Folly (24 Aberdeen Pl) was used in the 7th and 8th episodes.\nImage courtesy of BBC and Edwardx - Map\nSome scenes were filmed in the luxurious hotels The Langham (pictured) and the The Dorchester, in central London. Image courtesy of BBC and Andrew - Map 1 - Map 2\nMcMafia was also filming in the British Museum, Heathrow Airport and Ravenscourt Park tube station. According to The Guardian, Alex and Rebecca's place was set in a real Victorian house in Wandsworth, south London.\nImage courtesy of BBC and Mike Peel - Map\nMcMafia Filming Locations in Croatia\nThe next filming locations are set in Croatia, although none of the action takes place in this country. Depending on the context of the episode, Zagreb is doubling as Moscow, Prague and Tel Aviv. Several scenes were filmed at the landmarks of the city: St. Mark's Church (pictured), Kamenita Vrata, Dverce Palace, the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Strossmayer Square and several streets in the center.\nThe party in Moscow from the seventh episode takes place in the Mestrovic Pavilion, also known as the Home of Croatian Artists. Image courtesy of BBC and Diego Delso\nThe crew was also shooting in one of the most beautiful cemeteries in the world, Mirogoj.\nImage courtesy of BBC and Atlas of Wonders\nSome other locations across the country include the Hotel Milenij in Opatija. Boat scenes where filmed around the Rovinj Riviera. Also, according to a local newspaper, the production was filming for a couple of days in the Port of Koper (Slovenia). Image by Google Maps\nThe house of Israeli businessman Semiyon Kleiman (David Strathairn), were shot at Golden Rays Luxury Resort in Primosten near Sibenik. Image by Google Maps\nThe hotel in the French Riviera from the 3rd episode is the Villa Dalmacija in Split.\nImage courtesy of BBC - Map\nAlso it would be interesting to see if we can recognise the moonlike landscape of the unique island of Pag, that can be used for scenes in barren and desertic countries. Image Public Domain\nA production unit was filming on location during a week in the city of Mumbai (India).\nImage by courtesy of BBC\nStablishing shots were filmed in Moscow (pictured, one of the Seven Sisters: the Moscow State University), Prague, Cairo and other minor filming locations. Image by courtesy of BBC\nBelgrade doubled as Moscow on episode 8. Alex goes out the metro near the iconic Hotel Moskva, and later on walks in the popular street Kneza Mihaila. Image by courtesy of BBC and Jorge Láscar\nCan you help to improve this article about the filming locations of McMafia? To complete and correct this report, any feedback, info or images that you may have are more than welcome, thank you!\nFor further information we recommend the original book by Misha Glenny that inspired the series, McMafia: A Journey Through the Global Criminal Underworld . It is also available as an audiobook:\nIn the 5th episode Hotel Amber in Tel Aviv is actually Hotel Ambasador in Opatija/Croatia.\nRichard_Gough February 4, 2018 at 2:16 PM\nThe circular building at the end of episode 7 is the House of Artists in Zagreb, Croatia\nRa Moon February 5, 2018 at 10:57 AM\nThanks, updated!\nClive O as Doctor Fixit February 6, 2018 at 3:47 PM\nI believe that the scenes in the cafe where Alex and his dad met the\nguy from the Russian embassy in ep7 was shot at Crockers Folly, Aberdeen Place London NW8.It's a Victorian/Edwardian pub now a Lebanese restaurant\nI was at a party there recently.\nPaul Eyre February 13, 2018 at 7:12 AM\nThanks you’re absolutely right - looks amazing !\nRa Moon February 14, 2018 at 11:05 PM\nCool, thanks for your help!\nWhere is the bar that Alex father and the Russian embassy guy meet in episode 8\nGlobalEagle February 20, 2018 at 9:53 AM\nIn the opening sequence, there is a desert (urban) coastline, looks like it could be somehere in the Gulf - where is it?\n...found it: it's Doha, looking south.\nI recognized the White Palace in Belgrade Serbia. I believe it was used in the episode when Alex and Vadim were signing an agreement.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line20704"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5025247931480408,"wiki_prob":0.5025247931480408,"text":"Sir Peter Bazalgette: \" The Empathy Instinct\" | Talks at Google\nSir Peter Bazalgette in conversation with VP Comms, Peter Barron. Sir Peter was instrumental in creating the independent TV production sector in the United Kingdom. He was Chief Creative Officer at Endemol, President of the Royal Television Society, Deputy Chairman of the National Film School, Chair of Arts Council England, and is now Chair of the UK broadcaster ITV. He’s spent his career arguing for the role and importance of the arts and creative expression.\nHe joined us at Google to talk about his new book, The Empathy Instinct, which seeks to address the essential question of how we create a more civil society when so many of us are divided.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1381568"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.899387001991272,"wiki_prob":0.899387001991272,"text":"One hundred days of broken promises – Troy\nPosted on July 13, 2011 in News\nNo amount of spin will disguise the fact that Fine Gael and Labour have reneged on a litany of election promises within their first 100 days in office, according to Fianna Fáil TD Robert Troy.\nDeputy Troy commented, “The Fine Gael/Labour Government set themselves the deadline of 100 days for the delivery of a series of election promises. It was the Fine Gael Leader Enda Kenny who set the time-frame of 100 days, in which his Government could be judged on their performance. But now we are 100 days on and a litany of promises, which were unleashed to secure the maximum number of votes, have been broken.\n“Over the past 100 days, we have seen some spectacular u-turns from Ministers who were elected to office on the basis of the promises they made. There has been immense public concern about Finance Minister Michael Noonan’s refusal to rule out hikes in income tax, Education Minister Ruairí Quinn’s u-turn on college fees, and the confusion over extra household and water charges next year.\n“The Minister for Social Protection Joan Burton has rowed back on protecting social welfare rates and child benefit, causing serious concern among Donegal families who are fearful of cuts to payments next year. Despite the clear pledge in the Programme for Government that Fine Gael and Labour would protect social welfare rates, Minister Burton refused to stand by this commitment when questioned in the Dáil by Fianna Fáil this week.\n“On jobs, Fine Gael and Labour also promised to set up a NewERA company with billions in funding and ready to create 100,000 jobs. Where have these promises disappeared to?\n“These issues affect every single family in the country, and each of them represents a key promise made by Fine Gael and Labour during the general election campaign in a bid to win votes. Now that they are in Government, they are only too willing to forget these promises.\nDeputy Troy concluded: “In reality, it is early days. We would not be judging this Government on its first 100 days in office if they hadn’t set this deadline themselves. Enda Kenny set out a list of 25 solemn promises for delivery in 100 days, and unfortunately he and his Government colleagues have ignored most of them.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1593685"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.566975474357605,"wiki_prob":0.433024525642395,"text":"United Nation’s World Interfaith Harmony Week\nIn News by February 7, 2012\nFEB 13 Posted by youthpeacecouncil\nBy Robin Marsh\nLast night Universal Peace Federation -UK held a meeting in Parliament to remember the Holocaust, to examine the dynamics of forgiveness, reconciliation and remorse. This was held to comemorate the UN’s World Interfaith Harmony week. There were many precious contributions and stirring testimonies.Chaired by Rev. Dr. Marcus Braybrooke, President of World Congress of Faiths, the event featured presentations by Marina Cantacuzio, founder of the Forgiveness Project, Jack Lynes, Chair of Harrow Bereavement Care and a leading member of the Jewish community for interfaith, Shaykh Dr Hazim Fazlic, a Bosnian Imam now in Birmingham, Ruth Barnett, a Holocaust & Genocide Educator as well as a Kindertransport child, Jack Corley, Chairman of the Universal Peace Federation-UK and Sukhbir Singh who introduced the Forgiveness Charter on behalf of Bhai Mohinder Sahib Singh, spiritual leader of Guru Nanak Nishkam Sewak Jatha – Birmingham UK.\nImam Dr Abduljalil Sajid JP attended the meeting and presented a paper on ‘Forgiveness and Reconciliation: From an Islamic Perspective’ to accompany the report.\nMarina Cantacuzio writes on her website, ‘Forgiveness is an inspiring, complex, exasperating subject, which provokes strong feeling in just about everyone. Having spent all of 2003 collecting stories of reconciliation and forgiveness for an exhibition of words and images which I created with the photographer, Brian Moody, I began to see that for many people forgiveness is no soft option, but rather the ultimate revenge. For many it is a liberating route out of victimhood; a choice, a process, the final victory over those who have done you harm. As Mariane Pearl, the wife of murdered journalist Daniel Pearl, said of her husband’s killers, “The only way to oppose them is by demonstrating the strength that they think they have taken from you.”\nThe exhibition tells some extraordinary stories – stories of victims who have become friends with perpetrators, murderers who have turned their mind to peace building.\nAs I talked to friends, colleagues and strangers about this exhibition, I noticed that forgiveness cuts public opinion down the middle like a guillotine. There are those who see forgiveness as an immensely noble and humbling response to atrocity – and then there are those who simply laugh it out of court. For the first group, forgiveness is a value strong enough to put an end to the tit-for-tat settling of scores that has wreaked havoc over generations. But for the second group, forgiveness is just a copout, a weak gesture, which lets the violator off the hook and encourages only further violence. This is why we called the exhibition, The F Word. For some people forgiveness is a very dirty word indeed.\nShe added in her paper on ‘Forgiveness’, ‘Forgiving someone does not mean you reconcile with them, it means taking hold of your painful emotions and deciding to let them go. (It means) a refusal to let the pain of past dictate the path of the future healing the memory of the harm, but not erasing it (not forgive & forget). If F is a struggle for understanding, then it’s a realisation that, “if I had lived your life perhaps I would have made your choices”. Forgiveness is not forgetting that something painful happened. By forgiving the people who hurt you, you do not erase painful past experiences from your memory. Those experiences have a great deal to teach you, both about not being victimized again and about not victimizing others.’\nJack Corley explained Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s perspective on ‘Forgiveness and Reconciliation’ particularly in his meeting with the late North Korean President Kim Il Sung. He also elucidated the principles behind the forgiveness earned by Jacob from his older Brother Esau.\nHe added that gestures are very important in higher levels of forgiveness, reconciliation and peace building. He highlighted the visit of Queen Elizabeth II to Ireland in 2011 that won her great respect from the Irish people. The 1977 visit of Anwar Sadat to the Israeli Knesset was a gesture that opened the way to peace between two nations that had been frequently at war.\nHe asked where the religious leaders were when there are efforts for peace? Universal Peace Federation’s founder Rev. Dr Sun Myung Moon has promoted the establishment of an Interreligious Council at the UN. There religious leaders, who business is peace, centred on the wisdom of their faith built up over many generations, can take an innovative approach from politicians whose agenda and focus is different.\nThe Universal Peace Federation seeks reconciliation on many levels. However as we are now sitting in Parliament we do want to urge our political leaders to establish or maintain the moral foundation that is necessary for peace and reconciliation. (Full Speech)\nRev Dr Marcus Braybrooke introduced the evening with a prepared speech saying, ‘Interfaith Harmony week is so important. Sadly so often in the past religious exclusivism and contempt for the other has been a contributory factor in the genocidal killings that scar human history. It is time for people of faith to make deep apology to members of other faiths whom they have hurt and offended as Pope John Paul II did at the Western Wall in Jerusalem It is also vital that as people of faith we work together for a more just and peaceful world. Some people have expressed surprise that we should link a belated observance of Holocaust Memorial day and World Interfaith Harmony Week. At first, I felt the same, but increasingly I have seen how appropriate it is. Rightly in a time of silence we shall remember the six million Jews and many others who died in the Holocaust and many more who have been slaughtered in terrible genocides – especially we pray for comfort to those whose family members died, and those who were injured.But perhaps the least we can do in memory of the voluntary and involuntary sacrifice of so many people is to pray and act to ensure that such horrors are never repeated.This is why Interfaith Harmony week is so important. Sadly so often in the past religious exclusivism and contempt for the other has been a contributory factor in the genocidal killings that scar human history. It is time for people of faith to make deep apology to members of other faiths whom they have hurt and offended as Pope John Paul II did at the Western Wall in Jerusalem It is also vital that as people of faith we work together for a more just and peaceful world\nIn a speech entitled HOLOCAUST MEMORIAL DAY, INTERFAITH HARMONY, FORGIVENESS AND HEALING, Ruth Barnett explained that ‘Forgiveness is an extremely complex issue which I see very much in terms of an individual process of self-acceptance. By this I mean acceptance of the aspects of our self that we would rather not own.’\n‘Reverend Braybrooke opened the evening by expressing the horror we all feel at the utter brutality and depravity of what was perpetrated in the Holocuast – and, sadly, in so many genocides and atrocities since. Expressing horror at such evil is natural and human but at the same time locates the atrocities outside ourselves. Forgiveness begins, in my opinion, by owning the capacity in oneself (which is part of every human being) for acting in this same evil manner. Only by owning our darkest thoughts, urges, ideas and interest in evil, are we in a position to take control and choose not to act violently but responsibly, not to retaliate or exact revenge but to seek understanding through dialogue.\n‘We need to develop the courage to care and the will to act before it is too late when atrocities against humanity are developing. In my opinion, the Holocaust could have been prevented if the Armenian Genocide, perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks under cover of WWI, had been brought to justice and closure. In the 50 years after the end of WWII, silence and disbelief inhibited the process of Holocaust acknowledgement and healing, which is even now not yet complete. This has created impunity for further violence and genocides, further traumatisation and retreat into ignorance and indifference.’\n‘A part of the Holocaust has yet to be fully acknowledged, memorialised, compensated and closure through acceptance of the survivors. At least half a million Sinti and other Gypsies were deliberately murdered by the Nazis for the same reason that Jews were murdered – because the Nazis decided they could not fit into the Aryan ‘master-race’. Since 1945 Roma/Gypsy/Travellers have been persistently and increasingly persecuted, evicted, deported, their homes torched or bull-dozed, and murdered Gypsies not considered important enough by police to find the perpetrators. We have another genocide emerging under our noses all over Europe, including England. Are we going to develop the Courage to Care and the Will to intervene this time? Or are we going to allow the persecution and injustices suffered by Gypsies to continue until the massacres begin?’\nImam Dr Abduljalil Sajid commented in his paper, ‘Forgiveness and Reconciliation: An Islamic Perspective’ that, ‘The God, Allah is the ultimate power Who can forgive. Forgiveness means closing an account of offense against God or any of His creation. However, forgiveness must meet the criteria of sincerity. God, the All-Knowing, has the knowledge of everything including whatever a person thinks but does not express in words or deeds. An offense may be against (a) a person, (b) a group of persons or society, (c) other creation of God such as animals, plants, land, atmosphere, bodies of water and the life therein, and (d) God, Allah. Muslims understand that an offense against the creation of God is an offense against God.’","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1280906"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8131705522537231,"wiki_prob":0.8131705522537231,"text":"UPDATED — In Wake of Vegas Massacre, Massachusetts Lawmakers On Verge of Passing “Bump Fire Stock” Ban\nBy State House News Service | October 11, 2017, 12:48 EDT\nPrinted from: https://newbostonpost.com/2017/10/11/in-wake-of-vegas-massacre-massachusetts-lawmakers-on-verge-of-passing-bump-fire-stock-ban/\nLas Vegas Police Department file photo of the room where gunman Stephen Paddock allegedly carried out his massacre. (Contributed)\n(4:30 p.m. update — the House has passed this legislation)\nBy Matt Murphy\nSTATE HOUSE NEWS SERVICE\nSTATE HOUSE, OCT. 11, 2017…..Legislation banning devices known as bump stocks that may have been used in the Oct. 1 Las Vegas massacre and can enable a semi-automatic weapon to fire like an automatic weapon is expected to surface for a House vote Wednesday afternoon, according to a senior House official.\nFollowing the Las Vegas shooting, Rep. David Linksy filed legislation to ban bump stocks in Massachusetts, as well as high-capacity magazines that carry more than 10 rounds of ammunition. That legislation has not emerged for a public hearing yet, but Linsky has filed an amendment to a $123 million budget bill that the House plans to take up on Wednesday afternoon.\nThe amendment does not address high-capacity magazines but would ban the possession or sale of any device “which attaches to a rifle, shotgun, or firearm, except a magazine, that is designed to increase the rate of discharge of the rifle, shotgun or firearm.”\nThose who violate the proposed law would face a mandatory minimum sentence of three years in state prison, with a 20-year maximum allowable sentence.\nBump stocks are devices that can be used to modify semi-automatic weapons to get them to act as automatic weapons. The stock uses the recoil action of the firearm to slide the weapon back and forth allowing it to fire rapidly. The devices escape the state’s ban on automatic weapons because the user’s finger technically remains on the trigger, pulling to initiate each shot.\n“I’ve yet to find any legitimate reason for someone to own a bump stock or any other device that turns semi-automatic rifles into automatic rifles. Frankly, I can’t come up with a legitimate reason,” Linsky said.\nThe Gun Owners Action League, which is the local affiliate of the National Rifle Association, has so far raised no objections to banning bump stocks. House and Senate Republicans have also said they support the measure.\nAnd Gov. Charlie Baker said last week he would sign such a bill if it landed on his desk.\nSocialists Call For Abolishing Prisons\n$15 Minimum Wage, Paid Family and Medical Leave Pass…\nConversion Therapy Ban Fails in Massachusetts Legislature","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line286402"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.622005045413971,"wiki_prob":0.37799495458602905,"text":"Alaska Could be the First State to Allow On-Site Marijuana Consumption\nFight at Unlicensed Dispensary Over Free Sample Hospitalizes Man\nCalifornia Ad Campaign Targets Unlicensed Marijuana Dispensaries\nCannabis Banking in California is One Step Away From Being Legalized\nCanadian Dispensaries Can’t Keep CBD In Stock\nJeff Chiu/AP Photo\nHome » News » Alaska Could be the First State to Allow On-Site Marijuana Consumption\nCertain cities have allowed on-site consumption but Alaska is on the road to becoming the first place where it is permitted statewide.\nAlaska could be close to making marijuana history. More specifically, it could soon become the first state to allow for on-site cannabis consumption at dispensaries. State lawmakers are currently looking at a bill that would make this type of on-site consumption legal. But given that the bill is still in the early stages of legislation, it’s unclear whether or not on-site consumption will become a reality.\nAlaska Considering New Marijuana Laws\nYesterday, lawmakers in Alaska approved rules that could allow people to legally consume weed at state-approved dispensaries.\nBefore the proposal becomes law it still needs to pass through a few other rounds of review and approval. Most notably, the Alaska Department of Law will need to do a thorough review of the new rules.\nBut if the bill is eventually passed into law it will introduce a number of new changes. For starters, dispensaries that receive state and local approval will be allowed to have a separate space set aside for consumption.\nCustomers will then be able to go the shop, purchase weed or other weed products, and then consume their purchases in the consumption space.\nAt this point, the proposal would allow dispensaries to establish separate consumption rooms. Additionally, weed shops could also allow customers to smoke weed or consume edibles in outdoor spaces like rooftops or patios.\nIf the bill passes into law, Alaska will be the first state to establish a legal framework for on-site dispensary consumption. Currently, there are certain locations in different parts of the country that allow for on-site consumption. But nothing at the statewide level.\nRegulations and Restrictions for On-Site Consumption\nOf course, as with any cannabis regulations, the new laws come with a number of new regulations and requirements. For starters, shops will be required to apply for a special license for on-site consumption.\nIn order to receive approval, dispensaries must meet the following requirements:\nConsumption spaces must be separated from the retail portion of the shop.\nCustomers will only be allowed to consume products purchased at that dispensary.\nCustomers who want to consume at the shop can only purchase up to one gram of flower or edibles with no more than 10 mg of THC.\nShops must have a smoke-free room where employees can monitor consumption spaces.\nOutdoor consumption places must not interfere with neighboring buildings.\nIndoor consumption rooms must have their own ventilation systems.\nThe scent of weed cannot reach beyond the shop’s property line.\nEven though the new bill is being considered at the state level, USA Today reports that local jurisdictions will still be able to ban on-site consumption. Additionally, local governments can also institute their own specific requirements or restrictions.\nCurrently, there are 76 cannabis retail shops in Alaska. At this point, it’s unclear how many of those shops might choose to apply for an on-site consumption license.\nEither way, the question of on-site consumption has been on the table for a while now in Alaska. The issue first picked up traction in 2016. Then, last year, the idea was abandoned.\nBut this time around things could be different. At least for now, the bill for on-site consumption has cleared its first legislative hurdle. It will now move on to additional reviews by multiple lawmaking bodies.\nRelated Topics:Alaska, Dispensary, Featured, Public Consumption\nBy Tim Kohut 07/12/2019\nThat's over 4,000 pounds of the good stuff.\nA Denver CO was caught allegedly trying to smuggle a burrito with all the fixings into...\nThere was apparently a 60 percent spike in sales during the holiday.\nThe crackdown on businesses selling CBD foods and drinks is beginning.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line890221"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5441848039627075,"wiki_prob":0.5441848039627075,"text":"Saint Mother Théodore Guérin\nFeast Day October 3\nToday people fly from Paris to New York City on the Concorde in hours. In 1840 Saint Mother Théodore Guérin left France on July 27. She and five other Sisters of Providence traveled by ship, train, steamboat, canal boat, and horse-drawn carriage. They arrived in Vincennes, Indiana, on October 22. The journey across the ocean took 26 days, going overland and by river another six weeks.\nWhy did the sisters make this long, difficult journey? The bishop of Vincennes begged the superior of the Sisters of Providence in France to send sisters to open schools and to care for poor sick people. Forty-two-year-old Sister Theodore was chosen to lead the group. When the sisters arrived, they went directly to the log cabin chapel in the deeply forested hills. There Mother Theodore dedicated their mission to Mary, and named it St. Mary-of-the-Woods.\nPioneer life is very hard. The sisters struggled to survive the first winter in a drafty little farmhouse. It was very cold, they were very poor, and food was scarce. They worked hard at learning English. By the following summer, they welcomed their first student. Within a year they opened three schools. Other young women saw the good work they were doing and joined them.\nThe community dealt with many difficulties. Once a fire destroyed their barn and the harvested crops. They faced prejudice against Catholics, especially Catholic religious women. But they persevered. When Mother Theodore died 16 years after the community was founded, the sisters had many schools, two orphanages, and two pharmacies to dispense free medicines to the poor.\nAs a girl, Mother Theodore was named Anne-Thérèse. She was home schooled by her mother. Her father was an officer in the French navy. When Anne Thérèse was 10 years old, she knew that she wanted to be a nun. Anne-Thérèse liked to go to the rocky shore near her home to pray. When she was 15, her father was killed by bandits on his way home. After that, Anne-Thérèse took charge of the house and garden, and cared for her sick mother and younger sister.\nShe joined the Sisters of Providence when she was 25 years old. For years she taught and received a medal of honor for excellence in teaching. She also studied medicine in order to care for people who could not afford a doctor. Then she was assigned to America. She thought there must be someone else who would be much better suited for the job.\nMother Theodore always told her sisters, “Put yourself gently into the hands of Providence.” Mother Theodore Guerin was declared Blessed in 1988 and canonized in 2006. She was the right person for this incredible journey after all.\nDraw Your Prayer Place\nRemind the children that when Mother Theodore was a child, she liked to pray on the rocky shore near her home. Ask them to think about their favorite place to pray, and then have each student draw a picture of himself or herself in that place.\nMake Up Skits\nUnlike some educators of her time, Mother Theodore believed in gentle discipline for her students. Ask the children to think of common infractions in the classroom and act out skits showing how they could be corrected with fairness and gentleness.\nfrom Saints and Feast Days, by Sisters of Notre Dame of Chardon, Ohio\nImage credit: Mother Theodore Guerin by unknown artist, unknown date. Public Domain via Wikimedia.\nThis Week's Stories\nSaint Kateri Tekakwitha\nKateri Tekakwitha, the Lily of the Mohawks, was a Mohawk Indian. Learn about Saint Kateri Tekakwitha’s life as a Christian.\nBlessed Anne-Marie Javouhey\nImagine a Mother Teresa in the France of Napoleon’s day and you will have a picture of Anne-Marie Javouhey.\nSaint Bonaventure’s feast day is July 15. Read his story here.\nOur Lady of Mount Carmel’s feast day is July 16. Read about it here.\nSaint Camillus de Lellis\nSaint Camillus de Lellis’s feast day is July 18. Read his story here.\nSaint Macrina\nSaint Macrina’s feast day is July 19. Read her story here.\nSaints Main Page","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1622688"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5641868710517883,"wiki_prob":0.5641868710517883,"text":"BWW Review: HOW I LEARNED WHAT I LEARNED at Pyramid Theatre: An Evening of Reflection\nby DC Felton\nBroadwayWorld.com Jun. 9, 2019\nHave you ever taken the time to look back at the people who have influenced your life? What has those influences taught us? They teach us what to do and what not to do. Pyramid Theatre's production of \"How I Learned What I Learned,\" which opened on June 8, ask us to do just that. But they ask in a unique way, by letting us look at a playwright telling the stories that influenced the plays he wrote. That playwright is one of America's most prolific playwrights, August Wilson.\nAugust Wilson was born in April 1945 in Pittsburgh, PA. He dropped out of High School in 1960. He would later receive an honorary high school diploma. He started working different odd jobs he could find, which you hear about in the play. Eventually, August became a poet, which led him down the path of becoming a playwright. He is best known for his series of 10 plays, known as the Pittsburgh Cycle. Each of the plays in this series centers around the African American experience in a different decade of the 20th century. Some of the most known plays in this series are \"Fences\" and \"The Piano Lesson.\" His play \"Fences\" is listed as the first show produced by Pyramid Theatre.\nIn the lead role of Troy Maxon in Pyramid's production of \"Fences\" was Aaron Smith. So it was very fitting that he played the role of August Wilson for this production. Aaron expertly weaves his way through this 90-minute play telling stories from August Wilson's life. He does an amazing job of bringing out the humor in the show but also brings heart to the challenging lessons he learned in his life. One of the lessons is that something is not always better than nothing. This is a story about August Wilson's mother winning a washing machine. I don't want to give the story away, but it is the part of the show that to me showed how rooted Aaron was in the performance. The way he delivered the story showed his full range of emotions as an actor.\nThe acting was not the only highlight of the evening. I found myself enjoying the projections used as part of the play. The projections are used to tell the tiles of each section of the show. They come up as though they are being written on a typewriter, which considering the author talking about his life, was very fitting. As the show goes on, the titles became a character. Some of them told exactly what was going to happen and others the theme of what August was about to discuss. There is one moment where the title of a section is humorously skipped over.\nThe most poignant and timely lesson came from the night for me came at the beginning of the show. August talks about a job where he was mowing lawns and a lady whose lawn was mowing didn't want him mowing her lawn because of the color of his skin. His boss at the time told him to just go on to the next yard to mow. His boss could have said if he doesn't mow your lawn then it isn't going to be mowed but chose to send him on. The lesson he took from this, was that the people were good honest American's but due to the way they grew up and how they learned, they became the people they were today. It made me think about how quick we are to judge people today. We often think people are terrible if they have an opposing view from us, but how often do we take the time to think about how they came to that view.\nThere are many more things that people can learn from the life of August Wilson. \"How I Learned What I Learned,\" challenges us to take a look at not only ourselves but the people around us and ask how we got to the place we are today. I appreciate Pyramid Theatre Company for presenting us with this story and with this challenge. As this show continues over the next few weeks, if you have not seen it, I would recommend that you make plans to. Performances will continue June 14 and 21 at 7:30 PM and June 23 at 2:00 PM. To find out more about this production, visit http://pyramidtheatre.org/how-i-learned-what-i-learned\nRelated Articles View More Des Moines Stories Shows\nBWW Review: NEWSIES at Des Moines Playhouse: A New Generation is Giving Audiences Something to Believe in.\nBWW Review: WOZZECK at Des Moines Metro Opera: A Thought Provoking Work of Art\nBWW Review: LA BOHEME at Des Moines Metro Opera: A Breathtaking, Beautiful and Tragic Production\nBWW Review: CANDIDE at Des Moines Metro Opera: A Beautiful Kaleidoscope That Makes the Best of all Possible Shows\nFrom This Author DC Felton\nDavid Felton has been involved in theatre since his middle school production of The Wizard of Oz. Throughout high school he stayed onstage, and once (read more...)\nBWW Review: THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG at Des Moines Performing Arts, An Evening of Theatre That Goes Right!\nBWW Review: MACBETH at Iowa Stage: The Joy of Seeing Shakespeare Performed Outside\nReview: THE PLAY THAT GOES WRONG at Des Moines Performing Arts, An Evening of Theatre That Goes Right!\nDES MOINES SHOWS More\nDISNEY'S FROZEN JR\nTHEATRE CEDAR RAPIDS (8/2 - 8/3)\nSOUTHWEST IOWA THEATRE GROUP (7/26 - 7/26)\nNORTH SCOTT HIGH SCHOOL (3/27 - 4/5)\nMirrorbox Theatre (11/14 - 11/16)\nBURLINGTON COMMUNITY HIGH SCHOOL (11/15 - 11/17)\nDes Moines Email Alerts","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line265475"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5380890369415283,"wiki_prob":0.5380890369415283,"text":"Trevor Dunbar\nSamuel Ellison\nDana Giordano\nKaitlin Goodman\nChristian Harrison\nErika Kemp\nKatie Newton\nElaina Tabb\nJacob Thomson\nMasters Racing Team\nProgram Tiers\nBAA.ORG\nMay 14, 2019 Comments Off on B.A.A. Runners Ramble on at the USATF Masters 10K Championships Featured, News\nB.A.A. Runners Ramble on at the USATF Masters 10K Championships\nKarolyn Bowley repeats her runner-up finish in the Women’s Masters USATF 10K Championships.\nIn 2018, Karolyn Bowley was new to the B.A.A. team and just getting her feet wet in the New England Masters racing scene at age 49. Since her 2nd place finish in 2018 at the USATF Masters 10k Championships, Bowley has been posting noteworthy performances in the 45-49 age division showing off her range of ability from placing 4th in the 2019 New Balance Indoor Grand Prix Masters Mile in 5:10.91 to her 2:55:01 personal best in the marathon at Hartford last fall.\nThe 2019 edition of the James Joyce Ramble proved to be her best performance of the past year lowering her personal best in the 10k from 37:38 to 37:17. While Bowley was able to beat last year’s winning time of 37:19, younger legs prevailed with Melissa Hardesty of Binghamton winning the women’s Masters 10k in 37:06. Still, a gutty performance by Bowley as she prepares to move into a new age category this summer.\nThe B.A.A. Masters Men were also runner-up finishers in the 2018 10k team competition behind rival CMS. The B.A.A. and CMS Masters Men are constant companions on the New England team racing circuit with no shortage of talent on either side. In this year’s race, Kevin Castille, of Baton Rogue, ran away from the competition finishing 1st in 30:47 and ninety seconds ahead of the runner-up finisher and former B.A.A. athlete, Eric Blake of West Hartford. Blake, who turned 40 in January, stayed ahead of the 2017 and 2018 Masters 10k winner, David Angell to finish in 32:17.\nB.A.A.’s Brendan Prindiville was the first of the three B.A.A. team scorers to finish in 4th place with a time of 33:14. David Bedoya who finished 5th in 2018 crossed the line in 6th place this year in 33:28, the exact finish time Bedoya clocked in 2018. Andy Gardiner who missed the Boston Marathon this year due to a late season injury used his marathon training strength to finish strong with a top ten place in 9th overall in 33:44 and good for 1st place in the 50+ senior division. With three in the top ten, the B.A.A. Masters returned the 10k team title to the B.A.A. Running Club.\nWhile the team scoring for National USATF Masters races only count the top three, notable performances were notched by two new, and former, B.A.A. runners. Chris Georgules who recently returned to racing finished 11th in 33:49 and Donal O’Sullivan, recently relocated back to Mass, finished 12th in 33:58. Both Georgules and O’Sullivan ran for the B.A.A. in the early 2000 years. Welcome back!\nThe B.A.A. was also represented by Harry Carter who won the 80-84 age division finishing in 56:03 and part of the B.A.A. Men’s Senior Team finishing in 7th place. Also on the team were Dennis Herman who finished in 49:30 and Kevin Grant in 52:22.\nIn the James Joyce Ramble 10K Open race, B.A.A.’s Eric Ashe finished in 30:53 in the runner-up position behind Hugh Armstrong of Providence, RI. In the women’s race, B.A.A.’s Ashley Busa placed third overall in 37:16. Nicole Borofski made her 10K debut finishing in 38:21 good for 5th place overall.\nCongrats to all of the B.A.A. athletes competing in the Ramble 10K!\nNews (View All)\nOlympic Trials Marathon Warm-Up: Bo Waggoner and Matt Fischer\nSeven Team B.A.A. Athletes Compete in the USA Olympic Team...\nB.A.A. High Performance Team in Mammoth Lakes\nB.A.A. Athletes Qualify for the 2016 US Olympic Marathon Trials...\nB.A.A. Runners Cruise at Fast Westfield 5K\nB.A.A. Running Club Competes in the 123rd Boston Marathon\nB.A.A. Athletes Race to Top Finishes at the B.A.A. 5K\nB.A.A. competes in the 31st Annual Jim Kane Sugar Bowl...\nB.A.A. Masters and Open Athletes Compete in James Joyce Ramble...\nOlympic Trials Marathon Warm-Up: Rachel Hyland\nB.A.A. Athletes Shine on Rainy Day at Hartford Marathon and...\n185 Dartmouth Street, 6th Floor\nE-mail: teambaa@baa.org\nInterested in joining the B.A.A. Running Club?\nInquire here\nBoston Athletic Association\nCongrats to #TeamBAA’s @EricAshe, Alex Taylor, Dan Harper, and @mhackett95 for achieving the Olympic Marathon Trial… https://t.co/zX8IEkSfQ6\nVimeo Feed\nThe B.A.A. from Boston Athletic Association on Vimeo.\nLearn what the B.A.A. is all about, and what our mission represents.\n© 2018 B.A.A. Running Club | Designed and developed by romanelli communications","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1610528"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6611046195030212,"wiki_prob":0.33889538049697876,"text":"Copyright Insanity: The Need To Get Licenses Just To Demonstrate A Legal Point\nLatest Thing To Blame On Google? Koi Thieves\nA Brief History Of Intellectual Property In China And India\nfrom the ups-and-downs dept\nWed, Jul 1st 2009 3:45pm — Kevin Donovan\nThis is the second post in a series of posts looking at the question of intellectual property rights in both China and India. We'll be adding new posts to this series each week for the next few weeks.\nTo fully understand why increased intellectual property in China and India is unnecessary and objectionable, it helps to understand the relationship intellectual property has with economic development. Historically, intellectual property has generally increased with economic development, but the relationship is not straightforward. Although there is no reliable cross-country index of intellectual property policy, in large part due to the difficulty of quantifying concepts like enforcement quality, some trends are discernable. When a country is poor, IP is unnecessary for a host of reasons, not the least of which is the limited access to productivity enhancing technologies that intellectual property brings and the domestic inability to innovate in a commercially viable manner. But instead of constantly increasing with wealth, IP actually falls with an initial increase in wealth before dramaticaly growing (Maskus 2000). As a country develops, it obtains imitative abilities that make legal prohibition on copying foreign technologies an artificial obstruction to economic growth. However, with further global integration and increased domestic innovative capabilities, patent protection tends to increase. However, China and India have both realized that their relative poverty makes access to technology a more pressing concern, justifying relaxed IP standards.\nIndia's On-Again, Off-Again Relationship With Intellectual Property\nIndia' colonial status brought with it patent legislation, so by 1911 India's IP regime conformed with developed world status (Graff 2007). However, seeking to develop a domestic pharmaceutical industry, in 1970, India abolished patents on pharmaceutical products. This allowed domestic firms to imitate and adapt foreign therapeutic inventions. The policy was a success: the 2,237 licensed drug manufacturers in 1969-1970 grew to 16,000 by 1991-1993, production of drugs grew at an average rate of 14.4% per year from 1980 to 1993, India became a net exporter of pharmaceutical products, and the market share of foreign multinational corporations (MNCs) dropped from 80-90% to 40% (Fink 2005). In 1995, six of the top ten pharmaceutical firms in India were domestic, and employment in the sector had reached half a million people (Lanjouw 1997).\nHowever, to gain access to the global market enabled by the World Trade Organization, India had to ratify the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs), the most influential treaty on global intellectual property. Doing so included introducing full product patents on pharmaceutical innovations, extending all patents from 5-14 years to 20 years, and accepting limitations on compulsory licensing (Abramson 2007). Observers noted that this was likely to lead to a loss of consumer surplus (Chaudhuri et al.). However, the government agreed against its wishes to TRIPs for the additional benefits of WTO membership (Lanjouw 1997). Under TRIPs regulations, patenting has accelerated in India (Dahlman 2005).\nChina As The Late Bloomer\nChina was a latecomer to intellectual property. Its first patent law came into effect in 1985, followed by a copyright law in 1990 (Graff 2007). However, since then, the pace of progress has been rapid; it has now joined all major international IP treaties (Maskus 2005). Its patenting activity is increasing rapidly, too, with domestic firms nearly doubling the number of patents they received in the past four years (“Chinese firms…”). China’s Patent Office now leads the world, reviewing 800,000 applications in 2008, and in 2009, domestic firms are poised to receive more patents than foreigners for the first time ever (“Battle of Ideas”). Chinese firms are also receiving more patents abroad: in 1999 they only won 90 patents in America, but by last year they had increased that number to 1,225, demonstrating a desire to use their inventions globally (“Battle of Ideas”).\nChinese intellectual property, however, is still frequently critiqued. Enforcement is notoriously weak with the United States citing “rampant counterfeiting and piracy problems.” Strikingly, according to the USTR, China was the origin for 67% of seizures of counterfeit goods at the American border in 2008. In response to these and other concerns, China has recently updated its patent laws, increasing statutory damages and expanding the investigative power of the patent office (Lim 2009).\nIn the next post, we'll take an extended look at the case made for stronger intellectual property in China and India.\nOther posts in this series:\nDo China And India Really Want Stronger Intellectual Property?\nWhy Might China And India Want To Strengthen National Intellectual Property Policy?\nWhy Increased IP In China And India Is Likely To Disproportionately Benefit The Developed World\nIn China And India, Stronger Intellectual Property Is Unnecessary\nThere Is No Harmony In A Patent Thicket\nThe Way Forward On Intellectual Property For China And India\nFiled Under: china, developing nations, india, intellectual property, patents\nThinking Of Privacy As A Property Right Will End Badly\nChinese Border Agents Now Installing Malware On Foreigners' Cellphones\nSony, Microsoft, Nintendo Say Trump Tariffs Will Make Game Consoles Hugely More Expensive\nEU Intellectual Property Office Produces Dumbest Propaganda Film Ever, Pretending Without IP There Is No Creativity\nMichael L. Slonecker, 2 Jul 2009 @ 8:32am\nRe: Re: not creative?\nNo one can seriously argue that countries such as China and India possess potentially significant \"intellectual wealth\". At this point in time, however, they have not as yet realized the full advantage of such wealth. In some regards they seem to resemble post-war Japan through the early 60's, i.e., their R&D capabilities lag far behind the major industrialized nations.\nA first step towards parity with such other nations necessarily involves the establishment of basic manufacturing capabilities, with the growth of R&D capabilities to follow after implementation of the former. Thus, \"copycapting\" and \"free riding\" on the work of those in other nations is only natural in their growth towards becoming a major force in the international market for new products.\nIt should be readily apparent that any country embarking on the above course will at first be quite reluctant to embrace IP rights to the full extent expressed in current international treaties. At the same time, however, that reluctance will have to be reassessed as and when such a country desires a \"seat\" at the \"table\".\nSimply put, and like it or not, at some time in the future, and likely sooner than later, I expect both India and China to adopt national laws that afford significantly more substantive protection than is now the case. Until this happens they will continue to be viewed askance by the major industrial powers, and will consistently encounter difficulties having their products imported into other nations. Call it \"protectionism\" if you will, but this is simply a fact of life.\nMerely as an aside, I find it somewhat interesting that a pharmaceutical manufacturer of generic drugs in India, despite having built its business based on the manufacture and sale of generics, is just starting to secure patents in India and other industrialized countries in which it seeks to conduct business. The same can be said of businesses situated in China.\nInsider Shop - Show Your Support!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1068864"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8744370937347412,"wiki_prob":0.8744370937347412,"text":"The Presidency has confirmed the release of abducted students of Government Girls’ Science and Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State.\nThe girls were abducted by the terrorists sect, Boko Haram, sect on February 19.\nThe Senior Special Assistant to the President on Media and Publicity, Garba Shehu, confirmed this when contacted.\nShehu promised to give further details on the development later.\n“Yes, the girls are being transported to safety. We will give details later. We thank God,” he said.\nThe girls’ release came exactly one week after President Muhammadu Buhari visited the school where they were kidnapped.\nBuhari had during the visit last Wednesday reassured parents of the abducted schoolgirls that the Federal Government will not rest on its oars, until their wards are safely brought back home.\nThe President, who was accompanied by Governor Ibrahim Gaidam of Yobe State, said he had directed full scale aerial surveillance and investigation to ensure that the girls were returned safely.\n“I have read the full report of what happened in Dapchi. As I received the report, I was saddened and I am praying that God will continue to console you,” he said.\nBuhari also said government will ensure that the Boko Haram menace is totally brought to an end.\n“Boko Haram was in control of many local councils in Borno and some parts of Yobe State before we came. Now it has resorted to using young girls for suicide missions in mosques, churches and motor parks.\n“We will not spare their members. We will ensure that Boko Haram meets its waterloo. By the will of God, I have directed the police and reinforced them, and the army and air force to keep searching until the children are returned alive,” he said.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line76294"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6138413548469543,"wiki_prob":0.38615864515304565,"text":"About Energy & Power\nEnergy & Power (EP) is the first and only full-fledged fortnightly magazine that deals with the much cried energy and power sector in Bangladesh. Since its inception on June 16, 2003, EP is working very hard to\na) Develop public conscientious on sustainable and even development of energy sector;\nb) Assist the policy makers in assuming pragmatic policy for balanced development of the energy sector;\nc) Continue supply of information among public; and\nd) Develop a group of reporter in its field.\nTraditional sources of energy have adverse affects on environment. In order to minimize such affect the concept of environment friendly energy solution has been developed. Energy sector leaders are considering as many options as possible including use of renewable energy as well as optimum utilization of the energy.\nBangladesh is an energy deficit country like other countries in the region and most of the people do not have adequate access to the energy and power. The country is completely dependent on fossil energy source; at the same time, it is one of the most inefficient energy using countries in the world by all means.\nIt lacks of efficiency in planning, management, generation, distribution, load management and even at end user level consumption.\nIn spite of the above drawbacks, issues relating to utilization of renewable energy, exploring alternative use of energy, planned use of environment friendly energy are significantly undermined in Bangladesh.\nThe biggest challenge of Bangladesh is to find a path for balanced growth of its energy sector. Despite of its resource constraints, EP dynamically strives to provide with flow of energy sector information and create public awareness; so that the policymakers get guideline and platform for the sustainable development of energy sector in Bangladesh.\nEP believes that public enlightenment is the forerunner of justice and the foundation of democracy. The duty of a journalist is to further those ends by seeking truth and providing a fair and comprehensive account of events and issues. Strive to serve the public with thoroughness and honesty. Professional integrity is the cornerstone of a journalist's credibility.\nEP editorial policy is to share a dedication to ethical behavior and uphold the Zero Conflict of Interest principles and highest standards of practice.\nEP believes into\nSeek truth and report the same\nMinimize harm to the concerned\nAct independently\nAvoid conflicts of interest, real or perceived; and disclose unavoidable conflicts in public\nBe accountable to readers, well-wishers and people of Bangladesh\nAdmit mistakes and correct them promptly\nPolicy Campaign\nEP now steps into it 16th years of publication.\nFor last 13 years, apart from publication, the EP worked on campaign programs to promote renewable energy, energy efficiency, environment and energy conservation.\nEP also started a green campaign. In this connection, the EP is working with the government and development partners like GTZ, UNDP and others.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line9610"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5844590067863464,"wiki_prob":0.5844590067863464,"text":"Gideon’s Army at Guantanamo\nby Phil Hirschkorn\nDespite enormous logistical and legal hurdles, defense attorneys for high value detainees at the Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, military prison, say they press on for the judgment of history, if not for a fair turn before the embattled military commissions that substitute for trials in federal court.\nAttorneys for alleged 9/11 attack planners Khalid Shaikh Mohammed (KSM) and Ramzi Bin al-Shibh and alleged USS Cole bombing plotter Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri described their challenges to an audience gathered by the Center on National Security at Fordham Law School in Manhattan on Wednesday night.\nEven though all the defense attorneys are vetted and cleared to access Top Secret documents, they agree that secrecy remains the root of most delays and dysfunction.\n“If you sat down to design a system and said, ‘I want to create a legal system where everything will move slowly, glacially,’ you would design this,” said Richard Kammen, who represents al-Nashiri. For example, if Kammen, who is based in Indianapolis, wants to read a classified court document, he must travel to a secure facility in Washington, D.C. to do so. Once, Kammen said, he was ordered to respond to motions he was not allowed to read.\nEven when the attorneys are at Guantanamo to meet in person with their clients, a detainee’s own words are considered secret.\n“We were told that anything that came out of client’s mouths were considered to be ‘presumptively classified,’” said Jason Wright, who represented KSM until this August. “This phrase ‘presumptive classification’ is something that has never existed before in the laws of the United States.”\nTo make sure he understood, Wright, a former Army JAG, received a power point presentation at Guantanamo.\n“I had a briefer who told me, when you meet with your high value detainee, you have to treat everything that he says as presumptively classified – every word, every utterance, every gesture,” Wright recalled.\n“I said, ‘Hypothetically, what if he told me he liked peanut butter sandwiches? Is that classified?’”\n“Yes,” he was told.\nWright said, “What country in the world believes it can actually classify someone’s thoughts and beliefs? What they’re classifying were the words that would come out of their mouths about the torture experiences.”\nWright, Kammen, and James Harrington, who represents Bin al-Shibh, see a persistent effort to block any disclosures about detainee mistreatment, particularly when the detainees were held overseas in CIA custody.\n“Virtually all the restrictions we operate under are designed to protect CIA information,” Kammen said. “The government takes the position that even we can’t be trusted with it.”\nInstead, defense attorneys have been provided vague summaries of their client’s past interrogations and statements. How vague? As an example, Kammen shared his itinerary of the previous 48 hours – flying on Tuesday, October 28, from his home in Indianapolis to Chicago for a presentation at Loyola University. After spending the night there, on Wednesday, he flew to New York for meetings related to his Guantanamo case during the day and then attended the Fordham panel in the evening.\nKammen said, “The summary would probably read something like this: ‘On a day in the fourth quarter of 2014, Rick left his home and went from one place to another place, and then he went onto a third place, and then he returned.’ Literally that’s how general the summaries are.”\nHarrington believes the information about detainee torture is being kept secret to protect officials who carried it out or allowed it to happen.\n“Whether it’s the people who engaged in the torture, many of whom were assured by their government that if they did these things no one would ever know, and they would never be prosecuted,” Harrington said. “We want to believe still that this [country] is the shining city on the hill. This is a real black hood put over the light.”\nAt Guantanamo, everywhere the defense attorneys go seems to be bugged. Microphones at the defense tables have picked up their conversations. Fake smoke detectors in attorney-client meeting rooms hid eavesdropping microphones. During a hearing, someone off site set off an alarm when his agency thought classified information had been revealed. Just as bad, Harrington believes, is the lack of indignation over these discoveries by the military commission judges.\n“I cannot imagine a federal judge who would let somebody – anybody – interfere with his or her domain, which is the courtroom, that he or she did not know about and did not sanction for approval,” Harrington said.\nEven getting to Guantanamo is not easy. Charter flights from south Florida to Cuba leave you stuck there for a week, because the planes go down only on Monday and return only on Friday. Compounding that, according to Michel Paradis, an attorney in the DOD’s office of chief defense counsel, is the alphabet soup of agencies that control different parts of the base – the courtroom, the detainee center, lodging.\n“Every single time you go to Guantanamo, you spend about a day – a full working day — simply getting the keys to your office, or the badges you need to get where you are going, to get a car to so you can drive around this base,” Paradis said.\nDespite the hassles, the defense attorneys find the work purposeful and important. Standing up to the government and holding it accountable, even when top al Qaeda members are the clients, is what they signed up for.\nKammen said, “These cases will be reviewed in history – 10, 20, 30 years from now. The question that’ll be asked is, ‘Were the lawyers doing what lawyers are supposed to be doing? Were they telling the truth?’ And I hope when they look back on me, they’ll say, ‘Yeah, that guy was in there, and he was fighting.”\nParadis added, “In some respects, we are the immune system for the American justice system. We caught a disease after September 11th, which led us to torture, which led us to give up our values.”\nParadis recently argued an appeal of the one life sentence that has resulted from a Guantanamo military commission. He said, “Trying to heal the legal system, if that doesn’t sound too trite, I think does motivate me.”\nAl-Nashiri,\nGuantanamo,\nGuest Author,\nRamzi Bin al-Shibh\nPhil Hirschkorn\nFellow at the Center on National Security at Fordham Law School and New York-Based Journalist covering Al Qaeda and terrorism trials for 15 years\nJuly 10, 2019 by Ryan Vogel\nDeprivation and Despair: The Crisis of Medical Care at Guantánamo\nJune 26, 2019 by Scott Roehm\nFor the Military Commissions, a Fork in the Road on Torture\nMay 6, 2019 by Scott Roehm\nAl-Nashiri III: A No Good, Very Bad Day for U.S. Military Commissions\nApril 16, 2019 by Steve Vladeck\nShifted Burdens: The U.S. as Detainer of Last Resort\nFebruary 26, 2019 by Benjamin R. Farley\nThe Status of Guantanamo 17 Years In\nJanuary 11, 2019 by Rita Siemion and Patricia Stottlemyer\nThe “ISIS Beatles” and “Non-Territorial” Application of the European Convention of Human Rights\nDecember 17, 2018 by Antonios Tzanakopoulos\nRear Admiral Hutson: Why Senators Should Vote No on Kavanaugh\nSeptember 14, 2018 by John D. Hutson, Rear Admiral, JAGC, USN (Ret.)\nGuantanamo is No Answer–But Here’s What Can Work\nAugust 31, 2018 by Tess Bridgeman, Joshua Geltzer and Luke Hartig\nBrett Kavanaugh and the Risk of a Return to Torture\nAugust 10, 2018 by Jamie Mayerfeld\nHow the U.S. and EU’s Cooperation with Sudan Rubberstamps Bad Behavior\nJuly 30, 2018 by Mohammed Osman","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line38677"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6369948983192444,"wiki_prob":0.6369948983192444,"text":"AGIG plans additional development at WA facility\nThe Australian Gas Infrastructure Group (AGIG) will undertake new expansion works at its Tubridgi Gas Storage Facility in Western Australia.\nAGIG announced it will complete a seismic survey and expand the injection and withdrawal capacity of the facility to 90 TJ/d and 60 TJ/d respectively.\nThe seismic survey will produce detailed 3D mapping of the location’s underground reservoir, which sits approximately 550 m below the surface, in order to define the maximum storage volume of the area and de-risk any additional wells that may be installed in the future.\nAGIG Chief Customer Officer Andrew Staniford said developing the facility was an essential operation.\n“The new expansion works are a necessary part of ensuring that AGIG can continue to meet market demand in the longer term and provide our customers with the flexibility they require to meet their energy requirements,” he said.\n“These latest projects further increase our role as an owner and operator of critical infrastructure in the state and demonstrate AGIG’s confidence in WA as an investment destination.”\nLocated in WA’s northwest, the Tubridgi Gas Storage Facility was redeveloped and commissioned by AGIG in 2017 at a cost of $74 million.\nThe facility is the largest of its kind in the state and the third largest in Australia.\nFor more information visit the AGIG website.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1478149"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9908420443534851,"wiki_prob":0.9908420443534851,"text":"NATO puts pressure on Afghanistan to sign troop agreement\nBy By David S. Cloud\nBRUSSELS -- The U.S. and its European allies on Wednesday turned up the pressure on Afghanistan to authorize foreign troops on its territory after 2014, even as officials acknowledged that they may have to wait for President Hamid Karzai's successor to resolve the standoff.\nAt the opening of a two-day NATO meeting, Secretary-General Anders Fogh Rasmussen warned that all alliance troops serving in Afghanistan would follow the U.S. in withdrawing at the end of the year if Kabul refuses to sign an agreement with Washington.\n\"If there is no agreement, there will be no NATO troops in Afghanistan after 2014,\" he said. \"This is not our preferred option, but it might be the unfortunate outcome if the security agreement is not signed.\"\nThe warning from NATO was closely coordinated with the White House and came a day after President Obama told Karzai in a telephone call that the U.S. was planning for a complete withdrawal over Karzai's refusal to sign the troop agreement.\nNATO has been negotiating a separate agreement with Afghanistan that would authorize other countries to keep troops there after this year, but alliance officials have said from the beginning that the deal was contingent on Afghanistan concluding an accord with the U.S.\nThe stalemate over the troop agreement has frustrated the White House and the Pentagon, but it has taken even more of a toll in Europe, where the idea of keeping troops in Afghanistan after this year is even more controversial than it is in the U.S.\nA senior NATO official said Italy, Germany and Turkey, each of which had pledged to play small but important roles in the post-2014 mission, face deadlines starting later this summer for getting parliamentary approval for the mission and the funds to carry it out.\nAllied countries thus may not be able to wait as long for a decision on whether foreign troops will remain as the United States, which could delay until as late as October and still get its remaining troops out of the country by the end of December, officials said.\nOn Thursday, U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and other NATO ministers are expected to approve guidance for alliance planners to begin preparing for possible full withdrawal later this year, officials said.\nThe U.S. has about 33,000 troops in Afghanistan, though the number will drop substantially over the summer, officials say, leaving a small force in place that will take over the post-2014 mission or depart completely. There are about 19,000 troops from other countries.\nU.S. officials say they are increasingly resigned to waiting until Karzai leaves office after elections to choose a successor this spring, in hopes that the new Afghan leader might sign the deal. In a clear sign of growing exasperation with Karzai, Rasmussen also raised that possibility Wednesday.\n\"It appears that President Karzai is not ready to sign a security agreement,\" he said. \"We are ready to engage with a new president.\"\nBut officials concede that even that option is not foolproof, because the elections could drag on for months due to runoffs and the possibility of contested results. Nor is there any guarantee Karzai's successor would sign the agreement.\nThe U.S. and Afghanistan reached a draft bilateral security agreement in November, laying out the terms for keeping U.S. troops in the country past 2014, when all combat troops are to be withdrawn.\nMarine Corps Gen. Joseph F. Dunford Jr., the top commander of U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan, is proposing a plan that would keep around 10,000 U.S. troops in Afghanistan until the end of 2015, with 5,000 NATO and other international troops based in the north and west of the country as part of a NATO mission, officials said.\nMost of the troops would be limited to training and advising Afghan units, though a portion of the U.S. forces would be designated for counter-terrorism operations against the remnants of Al Qaeda and its affiliates. White House officials have been exploring the possibility of a smaller troop presence but no decisions have been made, officials said.\ndavid.cloud@latimes.com\nTwitter: @DavidCloudLAT","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line270972"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5079241991043091,"wiki_prob":0.5079241991043091,"text":"Fast-Growing Law Firm Expands in Downtown Baltimore\nOffit Kurman is closing its Owings Mills offices and moving its Baltimore-area team of attorneys into a single location in downtown Charm City.\nAdrian Maties\n300 East Lombard St.\nOffit Kurman, one of the fastest-growing law firms in the Mid-Atlantic, is closing its Owings Mills offices and moving its Baltimore-area team of attorneys into a single location in downtown Charm City.\nOffit Kurman’s new home will occupy the entire 20th floor of the Class A office tower located at 300 East Lombard St. The location offers 16,650 square feet of renovated space and will house 28 attorney offices, eight paralegal offices, 12 administrative stations, and five conference rooms. Twenty-two of the company’s attorneys will work there.\nThis is Offit Kurman’s second expansion in the Baltimore area. The law firm posted a video of its new home on its Youtube account.\nThe office building changed owners at the start of the year, just a few months after hitting the market. PWA Real Estate LLC, a Pittsburgh private equity firm, purchased the property for $38.3 million, from Ireland-based CMC Investments. The rapid sale was a direct result of the former owner’s management strategy. CMC acquired the 237,000-square-foot office building in 2004 for $40 million, and invested an additional $2 million to renovate the asset. In 2014, the company signed leases with new and old tenants for about 100,000 square feet of space, bringing the tower’s occupancy to 91 percent.\nPhoto & video credits: Offit Kurman\nCMC Investments\nOffit Kurman\nPWA Real Estate LLC\nBaltimore Luxury Community Nabs Refi Loan\nLuxury MD Senior Housing Welcomes Residents","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1605205"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7309887409210205,"wiki_prob":0.7309887409210205,"text":"City ›\nWell past the strike of midnight, Austin City Council votes to decrease housing occupancy limit\nPhoto Credit: Caleb Kuntz | Daily Texan Staff\nAustin City Council\ncouncilman\nPublished on February 14, 2014 at 4:09 am Last update on March 22, 2014 at 2:43 pm\nBy Amanda Voeller\nAt approximately 2:30 a.m. Friday, Austin City Council approved an initial vote to limit the number of adults who are not related to each other allowed to live in a residence built on single-family zoned property.\nIn a 6-1 vote, council members voted to amend city code to limit “stealth dorms” — groups of six or more adults, often students, living together in a single-family house. If the council makes the same decision over two more rounds of votes in the coming weeks, the legal limit of unrelated adults living together will be reduced to four.\nAccording to The Austin-American Statesman, the measure would only affect homes built in the future, while homes that currently house six unrelated people would be unaffected.\nIn November, councilman Chris Riley said the council has received various complaints from residents in areas near stealth dorms, which mainly exist north of campus. Those in favor of decreasing the occupancy limit say stealth dorms result in overfull trash cans and a lack of street parking, which can have detrimental effects on other residents’ lives.\nOpponents of the measure have cited affordability problems and lack of student housing options as reasons not to limit students’ living options. Councilman Bill Spelman, who also serves as a professor in the LBJ School of Public Affairs, was the only councilman who voted against the ordinance.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line528938"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5032011866569519,"wiki_prob":0.5032011866569519,"text":"Chirac says he opposes NATO force in Lebanon\nFrench President Jacques Chirac said Monday that NATO should not lead a proposed international force in Lebanon, saying the alliance is seen in the region as a \"the armed wing of the West.\" \"As far as France is concerned, it is not NATO's mission to put together such a force,\" Chirac was quoted as telling Le Monde newspaper in an interview, adding, \"Whether we like it or not, NATO is perceived as the armed wing of the West in these regions, and as a result, in terms of image, NATO is not intended for this.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line235494"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8943318128585815,"wiki_prob":0.8943318128585815,"text":"Danny Boyle's 'Yesterday' Gets First Trailer; Here's Everything We Know\nFebruary 12th 2019, 1:38 pm\nDanny Boyle's music-themed comedy has nabbed a title, Yesterday. Its rather startling premise has also come into focus with the release of its first trailer. Read onward for all we know about the movie.\nAfter an automobile accident during a \"mysterious global blackout,\" a struggling musician discovers that he is the only person on the planet who remembers The Beatles. His \"original\" songs then cause a worldwide sensation, straining his longtime friendship with a young woman.\nWho stars?\nHimesh Patel plays Jack Malik, the musician who can't believe he is suddenly the only person who remembers The Beatles. Lily James portrays Ellie, Jack's childhood best friend, a school teacher who fears she may be left behind in the wake of his unexpected fame. Kate McKinnon stars as a crafty music industry agent who swoops in to capitalize on Jack's \"original\" songs. Ed Sheeran also stars.\nWho wrote the screenplay?\nRichard Curtis, probably best known for Love, Actually. His other credits include Four Weddings and a Funeral, Notting Hill, About Time and many others.\nWho directed?\nDanny Boyle. He won an Oscar for directing Slumdog Millionaire and has also earned Academy Award nominations for writing and producing 127 Hours. More recently, he directed Steve Jobs and T2 Trainspotting. He previously tackled unexpected fortune in his delightful family film Millions.\nWhen can we see it?\nThe film is set for release on June 28, 2019.\nWatch the first trailer below.\nNext Article by Fandango Staff\nWatch 'A Madea Family Funeral' Clip: Why Is This Man Smiling?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line129403"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6917299628257751,"wiki_prob":0.30827003717422485,"text":"Aaron Burr\n3rd Vice President of the United States\nMarch 4, 1801 – March 4, 1805\nfrom New York\nPhilip Schuyler\n3rd Attorney General of New York\nRichard Varick\nAaron Burr Jr.\n(1756-02-06)February 6, 1756\nNewark, New Jersey, British America\nStaten Island, New York, U.S.\nPrinceton Cemetery\nDemocratic-Republican\nTheodosia Bartow Prevost\nEliza Jumel (m. 1833)\n7 or more including:\nAaron Burr Sr. (Father)\nEsther Edwards (Mother)\nPrinceton University (BA)\nContinental Army\n• Battle of Quebec\n• Battle of Monmouth\nAaron Burr, Jr. (February 6, 1751, – September 14, 1836) was an American politician, Revolutionary War hero and the third Vice President of the United States (1801 – 1805). He was born in Newark, province of New Jersey. Burr fought in the American Revolutionary War, reaching the rank of Colonel. After the war, Burr was a leader of the Democratic-Republican Party and served in the New York State Assembly, as New York State Attorney General, and as a United States Senator before serving as Vice President.\nBurr killed Alexander Hamilton in a duel in 1804, when Burr was still Vice President.\nBurr conspired to form a new country in Mexico. He wanted to be present if and when Spain and Mexico went to war. Some people, including President Thomas Jefferson, who had picked a different Vice President for his second term, saw Burr's actions as treason. However, in 1807 Burr was found innocent of the charges. He was often thought of by his enemies as unreliable. Burr died in 1836.\nVice Presidents of the United States\nJohn Adams · Thomas Jefferson · Aaron Burr · George Clinton · Elbridge Gerry · Daniel D. Tompkins · John C. Calhoun · Martin Van Buren · Richard Mentor Johnson · John Tyler · George M. Dallas · Millard Fillmore · William R. King · John C. Breckinridge · Hannibal Hamlin · Andrew Johnson · Schuyler Colfax · Henry Wilson · William A. Wheeler · Chester A. Arthur · Thomas A. Hendricks · Levi P. Morton · Adlai E. Stevenson · Garret Hobart · Theodore Roosevelt · Charles W. Fairbanks · James S. Sherman · Thomas R. Marshall · Calvin Coolidge · Charles G. Dawes · Charles Curtis · John Nance Garner · Henry A. Wallace · Harry S. Truman · Alben W. Barkley · Richard Nixon · Lyndon B. Johnson · Hubert Humphrey · Spiro Agnew · Gerald Ford · Nelson Rockefeller · Walter Mondale · George H. W. Bush · Dan Quayle · Al Gore · Dick Cheney · Joe Biden · Mike Pence\nCabinet of President Thomas Jefferson (1801–1809)\nAaron Burr (1801–1805) • George Clinton (1805–1809)\nJames Madison (1801–1809)\nSecretary of the Treasury\nSamuel Dexter (1801) • Albert Gallatin (1801–1809)\nSecretary of War\nHenry Dearborn (1801–1809)\nLevi Lincoln, Sr. (1801–1804) • Robert Smith (1805) • John Breckinridge (1805–1806) • Caesar A. Rodney (1807–1809)\nSecretary of the Navy\nBenjamin Stoddert (1801) • Robert Smith (1801–1809)\nRetrieved from \"https://simple.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Aaron_Burr&oldid=6581472\"\nAmerican revolutionaries\nPoliticians from New York","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line904294"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.703114926815033,"wiki_prob":0.29688507318496704,"text":"Jason Openo\nIt's NOT all relative!\nby Jason Openo\nLast night’s presenter is conducting her research from a relativist ontology. I believe a relativist ontology is an illogical, self-refuting orientation. The proof: no one lives as a relativist.\nOnce upon a time, I was facilitating an Instructional Skills Workshop. One of the new instructors going through the course was a long-term paramedic (an expert), and their 10-minute mini-lesson was on making triage decisions in emergency situations. When her lesson began, she explained: “You are at a crash site. You have to find, diagnose, and determine who is going to get medical attention. There are four index cards in this room. You have to find them. On the back of each index card are indicators that will tell you how to determine (a) whether they have a chance to live with immediate attention, (b) if they have a chance to live with moderate attention (1-2 hours), or (c) if they are likely to die no matter what you do. You need to make these decisions quickly and you should direct your attention to those who have the best chance of survival. In the next three minutes, I will tell you what to look for, and you will have five minutes to find the casualties and make your decisions. Then we will have a short debrief.”\nShe quickly outlined the criteria to look for, and we listened intently and took notes. Then she said, “Go save some people,” and we launched into action. We matched the likelihood of survival indicators to the four patients, and we sorted them accordingly. We followed the instructions perfectly. Person 1 needed immediate attention – without it, they were likely to die. Person 2 could wait a couple of hours (broken bones). Person 3 showed weak vital signs, meaning they were unlikely to survive. Person 4 showed signs they were near death and no intervention was possible.\nAnd then the instructor revealed:\nPerson 1 was a drunk driver who was seriously injured, but with the right attention would likely survive.\nPerson 2 was the drunk driver’s passenger. They had broken bones and potential internal injuries, but based on their vital signs would likely survive without immediate attention.\nPerson 3 was an in utero child near term. Even with an emergency C-section, they were unlikely to live.\nPerson 4 was a pregnant mother with a serious head injury.\nThe lesson, as the instructor revealed at the debrief, was not actually about identifying vital signs. It was about making professional judgments. It was applied ethics for paramedics. It was about making the moral judgment to save the life of a person you might hate. The point of the lesson was that paramedics have to transcend habitually inherited value systems and just see the body, not the person. They needed to be able to look past their instinctual inclinations about who should be saved. As we sat in a state of shock, the instructor said she believed saving people you didn’t want to save is an unexplored part of post-traumatic stress disorder in paramedics, but there was no way to prove this.\nIt was the best ISW lesson plan I have ever seen, and it proves no one lives as a relativist.\nFoucault, in The Order of Things, said that truth was an “arbitrary play of power and convention.” The argument that all truth is arbitrary and relative has been a powerful argument. The eminent historian Paul Johnson believes relativism was misappropriated from science but is the dominant ideology of modernity. Einstein saw moral relativism as a disease and social pandemic that led him to say towards the end of his life that he sometimes wished he had been a simple watchmaker (Johnson, 1992, p.4).\nRelativism is powerful until you dare to ask Foucault: “You say all truth is arbitrary. Is your presentation itself true?” (Wilber, 1995, p. 29). Relativists exempt themselves from the very criteria they apply to other value systems. They make truth claims that deny all truth claims, except the privileged stance of relativism, itself a truth claim. It is worth listening to Ken Wilber at length on this point.\nNobody is denying that many aspects of culture are indeed different and equally valuable. The point is that that stance itself is universal and rejects theories that merely and arbitrarily rank cultures on an ethnocentric bias (which is fine). But because it claims that all ranking is either bad or arbitrary, it cannot explain its own stance and the process of its own (unacknowledged) ranking system. And if nothing else, unconscious ranking is bad ranking, by any other name. And the relativists are very bad rankers.\nIn short, extreme cultural relativity and merely heterarchical value systems are about as dead as any movement can become. The word is out that qualitative distinctions are inescapable in the human condition, and further that there are better and worse ways to make our qualitative distinctions.\nIn many ways, we want to agree with the broad conclusions of the cultural diversity movements: we do want to cherish all cultures in an equal light. But that universal pluralism is not a stance that all cultures agree with; that universal pluralism is a very special type or ranking that most ethnocentric and sociocentric cultures do not even acknowledge; that universal pluralism is the result of a very long history hard-fought against dominator hierarchies of one sort or another. (pp. 29-30)\nOnly when we admit that universal pluralism is a value stance can judgment systems such as nursing ethics, Cultural Safety and Human Flourishing make any sense. They are not all relative. The values of tolerance and appreciation for diversity are not values simply relative to our particular cultural circumstance. They represent some of the most highly evolved ideas of humankind, ideas that are still evolving and not universally shared across the globe. The individual human being, no matter who they are or where they are, matters. From the relativist perspective, however, if all value systems are equally valid, then all value-based decisions are equally worthless.\n\"Someone once remarked that the two great errors in moral philosophy are the belief that we know the truth and the belief that there is no truth to be known\" (Wilson, 1993, p. 12). Without pretending to know the truth or be in possession of a dogmatic truth, we can affirm that we know quite a bit about what contributes to human flourishing and what does not. There should never come another day or time when the idea of Residential Schools makes sense or can be justified. It was wrong and will always be wrong. It’s NOT all relative. What if we encountered, as Wilson absurdly suggests as a philosophical counter-example, a society that believed torturing babies produced better crops?\nAbsurd, yes, but it is a variation of this absurdity that explains why feminists and those fighting for social justice have completely given up on relativist ontologies. Bloland (1995) describes the inevitable endpoint of relativist ontology very well:\nIf there are no legitimate bases for rewarding the privileged in our society, there are also no foundational standards for rewarding marginal groups. There are no grounded assumptions or moral grounds from which marginal groups can claim privilege. From this postmodern perspective, there is no compelling reasons for controlling groups to give grounds to others. (p. 529)\nAn uninformed opinion becomes as valuable as an enlightened opinion, and who needs nurses at that point? The death of values also means the death of expertise, and so let’s bring back leeches and bloodletting!\nBloland suggests that the only course of action left is to \"listen and listen very hard and long to the 'other'” (p. 553), and in listening, create space for dialogue. I listened hard to the presentation last night and offer this in the spirit of dialogue. I hope the last night’s presenter will give up relativist ontology and choose instead to stand on these values of tolerance, diversity, and universal pluralism.\nDone. Axe ground. I am stepping off the soap box.\nBloland, H. (1995). Postmodernism and higher education. Journal of Higher Education, 66(5).\nJohnson, P. (1992). Modern times: The world from the Twenties to the Nineties. New York, NY: HarperCollins.\nWilber, K. (1995). Sex, ecology, spirituality: The spirit of evolution. Boston, MA: Shambhala Publications, Inc.\nWilson, J. Q. (1993). The moral sense. New York, NY: The Free Press.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1023609"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5493760704994202,"wiki_prob":0.45062392950057983,"text":"Home / Articles / New Orleans Promotions / New Orleans Events\nJazz Fest 2019: Top Picks for Friday, April 26\nHEADLINER DECISION:\nSantana vs. The Revivalists\nThis is a particularly tough choice, at least for me. The Revivalists are hometown heroes, whom I first saw open the Gentilly Stage years ago. The funk-infused rock band has gradually built a name for themselves far outside of our city, but it's hard to easily pick them over the other option here. Santana is a legend and a guitar god that can mix Latin rock, voodoo elements, and great jams. He's also been at the game for decades, which means he absolutely knows what he's doing.\nVERDICT: The Revivalists are great and will be around for years to come, but Santana is a legend in the music world, whose time performing is finite. Go with Santana. -Landon Murray\nREMAINING PICKS:\nThe Subdudes\nGentilly Stage, 1:50 p.m. - 2:50 p.m.\nThis New Orleans rock group, formed in 1987, is prepared to take the stage with an abundance of hits off their 11 albums. Swampy jazz combines with New Orleans rock to create The Subdudes' unique sound. The band has taken several hiatuses throughout their career, so don't miss out on this chance to see them!\nHaitian Rara Parade with DjaRARA\nThis traditional Haitian festival music makes its way to Jazz Fest and features DjaRARA, a band dedicated to preserving Haitian culture and inspiring Haitian Americans with rich, traditional folklore music. Don't miss the bamboo trumpets and metal drums parading around the Fair Grounds.\nBefore the release of their upcoming fourth album, The Head and The Heart prepares to blow away Jazz Fest-goers. This indie-folk band, formed in 2011, is best known for their songs \"Down in the Valley,\" \"Rivers and Roads,\" and their new single \"Missed Connection.\" Don't miss this six-person band hitting the stage with their beautifully catchy tunes.\nThe Dirty Dozen Brass Band\nCongo Square Stage, 4:05 p.m. - 5:05 p.m.\nAfter 40 years and 12 studio albums, countless tours, and several collaborations, The Dirty Dozen Brass Band makes its way to the Congo Square Stage with its blend of jazz, funk, soul, and R&B. The seven-member brass band started cookin' up their \"musical gumbo\" in 1977 and have been dominating the New Orleans jazz scene since. In other words, don't miss the chance to see them perform!\nDarlingside\nSheraton New Orleans Fais Do-Do Stage, 4:40 p.m. - 5:40 p.m.\nWhat band has a mascot? Darlingside, best known for their indie sound and hailing from Boston, is proud to claim the Unicorn of Friendship as their mascot. The four-person band is bound to add a layer of calmness and unity to the sure-to-be hectic Jazz Fest. If you need a break from the craziness or if you're dying to listen to a different kind of sound, check them out.\nCongo Square Stage, 5:45 p.m. - 7 p.m.\n\"The Man\" is another act that you'd be crazy to miss! After coming alive with his timeless hit \"Wake Me Up,\" featuring Avicii, Aloe Blacc has released his third album and has proven that he is able to capture the complexities of human emotion in his songwriting. His upbeat, fun, and meaningful songs are sure to leave you in a good mood.\nOld-Fashioned Hand-Made Ice Cream Sandwiches by Francofonte on Wheels\nIf you need some time away from the sweaty crowds and loud bands, head on over to Heritage Square to cool off with a hand-made ice cream sandwich, guaranteed to put a smile on your face. This delicious ice cream sandwiched between two cookies is unlike any other Jazz Fest dessert and is perfect for a refreshing snack.\nCrawfish Strudel by Cottage Catering\nFood Area II\nThis Jazz Fest favorite is an absolute must-try! Who doesn't love crawfish or strudel? Cottage Catering combines them both in a simple and delicious pastry. Craving a dessert? Their white chocolate bread pudding is a perfect end to this quick and delicious Jazz Fest meal.\nHand-built Acoustic Guitars by Steve Walden\nTent F\nWe're sure that all this Jazz Fest music has you itching to learn how to play an instrument yourself, just to see if you have the potential to be the next act on stage. Look no further than Steve Walden's hand-built acoustic guitars. With one of these carefully crafted instruments, you'll be sure to discover your hidden musical talent.\nMore From New Orleans Events\nNew Orleans Spring Festivals Guide\nMargarita Mix Off\nNew Orleans' Blues and Culture with a Blueberry twist\nIndulge yourself at the 10th Annual New Orleans Oyster Festival\nTreme/7th Ward Arts and Culture Festival Second-lines into Memorial Day Weekend\nNew Orleans Greek Festival Continues a Great Tradition This Upcoming Memorial Day Weekend\nHave a Boatload of Fun on the Sunset Party Cruise\nBest of the Big Easy 2019 Voting!\nPrepare Yourself for the Third Annual Top Taco New Orleans\nJazz Fest 2019: Top Picks for Saturday, May 4\nClick Here For Your 2019 New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival Map!\nLakeside 2 Riverside: Upcoming New Orleans Events in April\nHow Jazz Fest Evolved from Local Celebration to Major Production\nNew Orleans Events\nTales of the Cocktail 2019: 17 Years of Growth and Purpose\nTales is more than just fun-it's also an industry conference and reunion for professionals and cocktail enthusiasts. Seminars cover relevant topics: how to finance and open a bar, building a cocktail menu, the history and modern usage of citrus, handling your social media, making...\nNOLA Caribbean Festival Kicks Off June 20!\nThe New Orleans Caribbean Festival looks to put a fun-filled close on Caribbean Heritage Month. The festival will take place across four activity-packed days from June 20-23 with the main two days of the festival being held at Central City BBQ. Guests will get to experience live music, performances, international DJs, local chefs, art vendors, kids activities, salsa dancing and more. The fun begins on Thursday, June 20, with the...\nAnderson .Paak and The Free Nationals are Coming to the Big Easy\nJune 8th, 2019 is going to be lit and here's why. Anderson .Paak and The Free Nationals will be in the Big Easy bringing their funky energetic-soulful sound to Champion Square. Led by Anderson .Paak, he announced the 2019 tour \"Best Teef in the Game Tour,\" on his social media platform. The band is set to hit stages in 21 different cities across North America. The tour will include rapper Earl Sweatshirt, rapper Noname, and...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line345091"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5211707353591919,"wiki_prob":0.5211707353591919,"text":"The Ecosystems Center was founded in 1975 as a year-round research center of the MBL. Its mission is to investigate the structure and functioning of ecological systems, predict their response to changing environmental conditions, apply the resulting knowledge to the preservation and management of natural resources and educate both future scientists and concerned citizens.\nBecause the complex nature of modern ecosystems research requires a multidisciplinary and collaborative approach, Ecosystems Center scientists work together on projects bringing expertise from a wide range of disciplines to bear on a variety of questions. Center scientists are currently conducting more than 50 research projects all over the world, many in collaboration with colleagues at other institutions.\nClick the links below to learn more.\nLong-Term Ecological Research (LTER)\nThe National Science Foundation established the Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) Network in 1980 to support research on long-term ecological phenomena in the United States. There are 28 LTER sites that represent diverse ecosystems and research emphases. Two LTER projects are based at the Ecosystems Center: Arctic and Plum Island. In addition, researchers at the center are actively involved in research at the Harvard Forest LTER.\nThe long-term goal of Arctic LTER project is to understand and predict the effects of environmental change on arctic landscapes. To achieve this goal the Arctic LTER studies the ecology of the surrounding tundra, streams, and lakes. We hope to gain an understanding of the controls of ecosystem structure and function through long-term monitoring and surveys of natural variation of ecosystem characteristics, through experimental manipulation of ecosystems for years to decades and through synthesis of results and predictive modeling at ecosystem and watershed scales.\nThe Plum Island Ecosystems LTER (PIE LTER), located in northeastern Massachusetts, is an integrated research, education and outreach program with the goal of developing a predictive understanding of the long-term response of watershed and estuarine ecosystems to changes in climate, land use and sea level and to apply this knowledge to the wise management and development of policy to protect the natural resources of coastal zones.\nIncreases in soil temperatures associated with global warming have the potential to accelerate soil organic matter decay and alter nutrient cycling patterns in forested ecosystems. By increasing soil temperatures we can explore the effects of global warming in our forests, we can examine ecosystem responses to warming and the resulting feedbacks to the climate system. At the Harvard Forest LTER site we have established soil warming studies in a range of forest types and soil conditions on various spatial and temporal scales examining the implications of global warming on different ecosystem processes.\nOther Research Projects\nEcosystem Modeling. The foundation of any science is an underpinning theoretical structure that ties together the components and processes that are addressed by the science. This foundation is particularly important in ecology because of the extraordinary complexity of ecological systems. At The Ecosystems Center, we use mathematical models both for formulating theories and for making quantitative predictions based on them. The models we have developed include the Terrestrial Ecosystem Model (TEM), the Multiple Element Limitation model (MEL), and models to address how microbial communities are structured by their use of energy and nutrients and how these environmental “microbiomes” and the ecosystem services they provide change subject to environmental pressures. We use these models to study how organisms optimize resource acquisition from their environment, how various ecosystems around the world are likely to respond to elevated CO2, climate warming, changes in precipitation, and disturbances like wildfire and clear cutting. We also use these models to assess the potential of the biosphere to mitigate climate change through carbon sequestration. To develop these models, we rely on field and laboratory data collected by Ecosystems Center scientists and our colleagues around the world. Our model results help guide future field and laboratory studies, and inform resource use and environmental policy.\nSince 1978, the Oceanic Flux Program (OFP), funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), has continuously measured particle fluxes in the deep Sargasso Sea. The OFP is the longest running time-series of its kind, and has produced a unique record of temporal variability in the “biological pump,” a term applied here to material transfer from the surface to the deep ocean resulting from the interplay between physical, biological and chemical processes.\nOur Terrestrial Isotope Biogeochemistry research group has developed a compound specific biomarker technique utilizing ablated leaf wax particles in aerosols to directly measure terrestrial photosynthetic discrimination on large spatial scales.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1291629"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6296560764312744,"wiki_prob":0.6296560764312744,"text":"Closed Captioned / Drama / Family / Gay / Lesbian Interest\nOut In The Dark\nOut in the Dark is as much a political and societal commentary as it is an original romantic story. Compelling and intimate, Michael Mayer's taut first feature follows a border-crossing relationship between an Israeli lawyer and an increasingly desperate Palestinian student.\nNimer, an ambitious Palestinian student in the West Bank, dreams of a better life abroad. One fateful night in Tel Aviv, he meets Roy, an Israeli lawyer, and the two fall in love. As their relationship deepens, they are both confronted with the harsh realities of a Palestinian society that refuses to accept Nimer for his sexual identity, and an Israeli society that rejects him for his nationality. When Nimer?s close friend is caught hiding illegally in Tel Aviv and sent back to the West Bank where he is brutally murdered, Nimer is to choose between the life he thought he wanted and his love for Roy.\nDirector: Michael Mayer\nProducer: Michael Mayer\nProducer: Lihu Roter\nWriter: Michael Mayer\nReleased: Nov 05 2013\nAdded: Oct 27 2015\nMaysa Daw\nLoai Noufi\nAlon Pout\nJameel Khouri\nNicholas Jacob\nMichael Aloni\n4 Reviews for Out In The Dark\nReview by Kelly Burkhardt\nBy: Kelly Burkhardt\nIn-House Review - Jul 30 2013\nOut in the Dark, the debut feature from director Michael Mayer, is simply brilliant. The film, centering on race and sexuality, follows a young, affluent and ambitious Palestinian grad student and a Jewish lawyer who fall in love.\nThe ad... Read More\nThe adorable Nimr (Nicholas Jacob) crosses the border to study and occasionally to meet his friends at a gay nightclub in Tel Aviv. One night, he is introduced to the handsome and wealthy Roy (Michael Aloni) and an instant attraction ensues.\nWhile Tel Aviv is ostensibly more accepting of Palestinians being present, Nimr's homeland is not. He struggles to keep the peace with his Muslim family - especially his brother, who is now a member of a radical, extremist anti-Palestinian organization. Despite being surrounded by all of these weighty (and sometimes dangerous) obstacles, the budding couple cannot help but fall immensely in love.\nEverything soon comes to a gripping head. Nimr is to choose between the life he once dreamed of... or Roy, his true love.\nFrom the opening scene to the final frame, Out in the Dark is a timely and poignant film that should not be missed!\nReview by chromo_man\nBy: chromo_man\nThis film has so much for which to recommend it: a sweet romance developing between handsome strangers, mixed with political intrigue and several types of familial dramas, stirred into a tasty cocktail. Something for everyone.\nFilmmakers t... Read More\nFilmmakers take note: The fourth star I am giving is partially for having perhaps the best subtitles I have ever seen. While I cannot vouch for how well they translate the words actually being spoken onscreen, they were large and clear and readable throughout the film, and contained none of the painful grammatical errors found in far too many foreign films; nor did they disappear before they could be read. Note: the small subtitles in the trailer for the film are NOT the same great subtitles as those in the film itself\nReview by NightTim\nBy: NightTim\nThis is one of the best gay films I've ever seen. It has a lot of moving parts: love story, social/political commentary, and thriller, all woven together in a poignant, complex drama. I thought it was touching, sexy and exciting, tragic, maddening,... Read More\nThis is one of the best gay films I've ever seen. It has a lot of moving parts: love story, social/political commentary, and thriller, all woven together in a poignant, complex drama. I thought it was touching, sexy and exciting, tragic, maddening, frightening, and tension-filled.\nThe basic storyline is not new: someone falls in love with a person from the wrong side of the tracks (in this case, something the families on both sides feel). But the Palestinian/Israeli divide makes it modern and relevant, and it brings to life the conflict we usually only read about in the papers.\nBoth Nimr (Nicholas Jacob - how did he get that name??) and Roy (Michael Aloni) are beautiful to look at, and it makes every minute of the film a viseral pleasure to watch. For some reason, though both characters are shirtless in plenty of scenes, Jacob's body is the only one we usually get to see. It would have been nice to see more of Aloni's - but Jacob is beautiful enough for the both of them.\nThe love scenes are some of the best I've seen in gay films - meaning not that the sex was scorching hot and animalistic, but that it was so tender and real and aching that it was hard to believe these were two actors. (They just have to be boyfriends in real life!) If it's sex you want, porn is cheap and plentiful. This, however, is rare on film.\nIt starts out as a fun, flirty, harmless love story but then turns dark as the political and social realities surface and become undeniable. Then this viewer found himself forgetting to breathe as the stakes became clear and danger and desperation took over as drivers of the story. The loose ends are not tied up neatly at the end, but it's enough to know that Nimr makes it.\nUnforgettable, especially as we know this is not just a made-up story but reality in the Middle East, where being gay can literally be a life or death issue. Twenty bucks and two hours well-spent.\nHard-hitting and highly recommended.\nWe hear so much about the Israel/Palestine situation that we begin to think that the two peoples will never get along. We see here that this is not true. This is the story of a romantic relationship between an Israeli lawyer and a Palestinian graduat... Read More\nWe hear so much about the Israel/Palestine situation that we begin to think that the two peoples will never get along. We see here that this is not true. This is the story of a romantic relationship between an Israeli lawyer and a Palestinian graduate student who has a permit to study in Israel. (There are some in the pink washing camp who will claim that Israel does not allow Palestinians to study within her borders and that is simply not true). Each man has to deal not just with his sexuality but also with his family because of whom he loves. There are the personal issues like language, class, nationality, religion and culture and these are difficult enough without adding the broader problems of the political situations because the two men are involved with one-another despite the tensions between Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories. (I must admit that the word \"occupied\" bothers me a great deal because it seems to be something new-what were once the spoils of war are now considered occupied territories.\nNmir and Roy, our two lovers quite naturally are at the center of the film and they become the symbols of the two sides-each wanting peace and security but also were slow to understand that their futures are bound together. There is no blame on either side in the film nor is there examination of righteousness on either side. Each side is looked at honestly whether dealing with Palestinian fanaticism or the use of power by the Israel Defense and security services. (This is an achievement for director Michael Mayer who as an Israeli could easily have taken sides). There is even a hint here that each side may play into the hands of the other and this is something we have not seen much of. We do, however, feel a pervading sense of fear and we are surely aware of the toll fear can take.\nFor a love story this is both gritty and gorgeous. While the tension of the situation is felt throughout the film (keep in mind that we have all been tempered by Romeo and Juliet stories), so is the love that the men share. There is a figurative and literal darkness almost throughout the entire film but there is also love-not just between Nimr and Roy but between the men and their families.\nMichael Aloni is Roy Shaefer, the young Israeli lawyer and his ability to show the entire range of emotions is brilliant. He lives in a state of hopelessness yet he thinks that Israel will eventually do right by coming to terms with her Palestine problem. Nicholas Jacob is stunning as Nimr and this is his first film role. Interesting that his parents are Arab/Italian and he grew up between Haifa and Nashville and is not gay. His role requires him to deal with demons, the kind of which we will never experience but which he does not let take him over. The other actors also do fine jobs-Alon Oleartchik (whom you may remember as a band member of Keveret and whose name came to prominence with the Poogy stories) is Roy's father who suffers from conflicting emotions about his son, Alon Pdut is excellent as an Israeli security officer who has become cold because he is worried about the future of his country, Jamil Khouri plays Nimr's brother who is caught up in the terror movement and Loai Nofi as a stereotypical yet Palestinian gay Arab gives a wonderful cameo.\nI found myself so involved in the film that I am having difficulty writing about it. The love story of Nimr and Roy is super intense and we see this against the backdrop of the political situation. Roy and Nimr leads us to believe that they are living for themselves and for each other and this is in contrast to the sad picture of what is going on around them.\nThe real beauty of the film is that it is for everyone and sexuality and Israel/Palestine politics do not matter. This is first and foremost a love story. The ending is ambiguous and purposefully so. While there is no resolution there are signs of hope and let's face it, we all live for hope. Michael Meyer has united taboo with politics to give us a new way of looking at the Middle East. He examines if it is possible to remove the personal self from one's ideological background and political identity and does this though Palestinian psychology student Nimr who develops a romance with Jewish lawyer Roy.\nAt first the two guys flirt and it all seems okay but then Roy brings Nimr home and introduces him to his parents by telling them that this is new boyfriend. This horrifies Nimr as well since at home he is not out of the closet. Mayer sees the idea of self as a union and mixture o social and political environments that deal with both reality and love. I can continue writing all day about the film but whatever I say does not do justice to the film and I urge everyone who can to see it.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1307496"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7982423305511475,"wiki_prob":0.7982423305511475,"text":"Watch Alicia Keys, Beyoncé and Other Celebrities Describe 23 Ways You Could be Killed If You’re Black\nBy Melissa Chan\nAlicia Keys, Beyoncé and a group of other celebrities describe 23 ways a black person could be killed in the U.S. in a new video that urges Americans to sign a petition that calls on Congress for “radical transformation,” including funding for healthcare, education and criminal justice reform.\nThe nearly two-dozen musicians and actors, including Chris Rock, Rihanna, Taraji P. Henson and Pharrell Williams, use real-life incidents to highlight the various ways black people have died in the country.\nThe video, a collaboration between Mic.com and the We Are Here movement, begins with Keys saying, “failing to signal a lane change,” when referring to the death of Sandra Bland, who last summer was arrested during a routine traffic stop in Texas and later died in police custody. Her death was ruled a suicide.\nThe deaths mentioned in the video also include the recent fatal police shootings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile, alongside the other high-profile killings of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, Freddie Gray, Tamir Rice and the nine black people shot dead inside a Charleston church last year.\n“The time for change is now,” Keys says at the end of the video. “We demand radical transformation to heal the long history of systemic racism so that all Americans have the equal right to live and to pursue happiness.”\nThe petition specifically asks for the government to direct $150 billion toward education, healthcare, housing, employment and nutrition in “poor communities” over the next decade, as well as an “overhaul” of the criminal justice system.\n[Mic]","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line309809"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7909595966339111,"wiki_prob":0.7909595966339111,"text":"The Ride to Creston Station\nJun 18, 2016 | People, South Napa County\nBy Marie Bowen\n1876 Parcel Map\nTracing the California Pacific Railroad (later Southern Pacific) tracks across the 1876 and 1895 “Official Map of Napa County,” one often encounters railroad depots named for nearby residents, past or present: Buchli, Thompson, Trubody, Bale, and others, depending on which map you’re viewing. But names of other stations whose origins long since forgotten are worthy of research. One of those is Creston, a station located in the southeasterly portion of Napa County and found on both official maps. The station, in fact, lay along part of what we know as Jameson Canyon Road, with the next westerly stop being Napa Junction.\nThe 1876 and 1895 maps show the station to be near or within acreage owned by a R. A. Brownlie. After some digging I discovered him to be Robert A. Brownlee. Slocum & Bowen’s 1881 book History of Napa and Lake Counties devoted several pages to Mr. Brownlee, a Scottish stonemason born in 1813. He arrived in New York in 1836 and from there went to Arkansas, where he helped build what are now several historic landmarks in Pulaski County. After arriving in California during the Gold Rush, he mined for a time in Mariposa County and subsequently married Annie Lamont. By 1857 the family had settled “fourteen miles north of Vallejo” on an 1,100-acre wheat and barley farm. Slocum & Bowen also noted that “The line of railroad to Sacramento from South Vallejo passes his gate.” Could this be Creston Station? I did more research online and found a few references to Creston Station as an unincorporated area in Napa County and Creston Station Ranch along Jameson Canyon Road – over which the Land Trust received from the ranch’s owners an easement in 2003.\nBrownlee family, courtesy California Historical Society\nReferring back to Brownlee family trees at Ancestry.com, I learned that his home, described by Slocum & Bowen as a “magnificent two-storied building,” was called Sunnyside Farm and was, indeed, Creston. He and Annie’s seven children were born there. One of Robert and Annie’s sons-in-law, Thomas Urquhart, was a Southern Pacific dispatcher who was buried at Tulocay Cemetery after his death on November 19, 1897. Additionally, various mentions of the Brownlee family were found in the Napa Register, including one entry on August 31, 1937, which noted that the sister of George Brownlee was visiting the family home at Creston. And, foretelling Creston’s semi-anonymous future, a front-page article in the Register’s January 5, 1943, edition stated, “The Worswick Construction Company has stopped work on the state highway near Creston in the Jamison [sic] Canyon…until spring.”\nI knew the property owners who had provided the 2003 Land Trust easement had names other than Brownlee. Could I find the link between those owners and the Brownlee family and thus feel sure that Creston Station Ranch was the former Sunnyside? Yes, and easily. Thanks to Napa County Recorder’s online Official Records-Public Index, I found the 1945 Deed from Robert Lamont Brownlee, surviving son of Robert and Annie, to one of the property owners named in the 2003 news article.\nI have not, however, learned why California Pacific Railroad named the station “Creston” when its Vallejo-Suisun route was completed in June 1868. Ancestry.com records showed no families in the area with the surname Creston. The Brownlee family owned the surrounding land pre-railroad, and, had the station been named “Brownlee,” this entire search would have been considerably shorter. Bill Bryson’s book Made in America provides an entire chapter on sources of place names, noting that a vice president of Milwaukee Railroad had the task of naming communities to be built along the Milwaukee line, including Othello, Ralston, and Purina. It is possible that Creston was intended to become a community, which it did to a small extent, and that someone, somewhere, within the California Pacific Railroad hierarchy bestowed the name.\nBryson, Bill. MADE IN AMERICA. New York: Perennial/HarperCollins Publishers, 2001\nDelaplane, Kristin. “Railroad brings Solano on track in 1860s.” Historical Articles of Solano County Online Database, January 7, 1996\nEtter, Patricia A. “Robert Brownlee.” The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture (online), January 3, 2007\nNapa Register, August 31, 1937, and January 5, 1943\nNapa Valley Register, February 3, 2003, “Land Trust Holdings Spread,” and September 7, 2006, “Land Trust Donors are Neighbors”\nOfficial Maps of the County of Napa, 1876 and 1895\nSlocum, Bowen & Co. HISTORY OF NAPA & LAKE COUNTIES. San Francisco: Slocum, Bowen & Co., 1881","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1459205"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5306035280227661,"wiki_prob":0.4693964719772339,"text":"Stranded by Dani Pettrey\nWhen Her Friend Goes Missing,\nEvery Minute Counts\nDarcy St. James returns to Alaska to join a journalist friend undercover on the trail of a big story. But when Darcy arrives, she finds her friend has disappeared. Troubled by the cruise ship's vague explanation, Darcy uses her cover as a travel reporter to investigate further.\nThe last person Gage McKenna expects to see during his summer aboard a cruise ship leading adventure excursions is Darcy. And in typical Darcy fashion, she's digging up more trouble.\nHe'd love to just forget her--but something won't let him. And he can't help but worry about her as they are heading into more remote regions of Alaska and eventually into foreign waters. Something sinister is going on, and the deeper they push, the more Gage fears they've only discovered the tip of the iceberg.\nDani Petrey is a fairly new author on the Christian fiction market, having her first book just come out in May of 2012. In my personal opinion, she is one of the best new authors to have come along in recent years.\nShe had me hooked with her first book, Submerged, which is also the first book in this series, Alaskan Courage, and she has only gotten better with each book. This third book, Stranded is the best yet. I like it when an author has the same characters in a series, focusing more on different ones in each book, but using them all. In the last book, she started setting up for this book. In Stranded, she picks up Darcy and Gage's story where she left off in Shattered.\nStranded has all of the suspense, drama, great plot and characters, and romance Dani has had in her previous novels, but it is even better than the other two. The setting is on a cruise ship, which I think would be more of a challenge, but Dani shows she can write a great book in any setting.\nDani is one of the authors who is not afraid to make her books Christian and have her characters struggle with issues of faith. I found myself relating a lot to that of Gage in this story, and appreciate her addressing struggles of faith and showing through fiction that not everyone gets it as easily as some of us do.\nThis book also addresses an issue we all need to be made more aware of: the human trafficking issue.\nI could not have enjoyed this book any more than I did. I devoured every page and read it through in the same day I received it in the mail. I give it 5 stars out of 5 stars. This is a Christian suspense masterpiece.\nDani Pettrey is a wife, homeschooling mom, and author. She feels blessed to write inspirational romantic suspense because it incorporates so many things she loves--the thrill of adventure, nail biting suspense, the deepening of her characters' faith, and plenty of romance. She and her husband reside in Maryland with their two teenage daughters. Visit her website at www.danipettrey.com.\nDaniPettrey\nhttp://www.facebook.com/DaniPettrey\nhttp://www.danipettrey.com\nStranded is available from Bethany House Publishers.\nThanks to the author and Bethany House for the review copy.\nLabels: Book Review, Christian fiction, Dani Pettrey, read-in-one-sitting book, suspense/mystery\nRaw Edges by Sandra Bricker\nThis week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing Raw Edge Abingdon Press (September 17, 2013) by Sandra D. Bricker\nFor more than a decade, Sandra D. Bricker lived in Los Angeles. While honing her chosen craft of screenwriting in every spare moment, she worked as a personal assistant and publicist to some of daytime television's hottest stars. When her mother became ill in Florida, she walked away from that segment of her life and moved across the country to take on a new role: Caregiver.\nThe Big 5-OH! was released by Abingdon Press in the Spring of 2010, and the novel was very well-received, garnering a couple of nibbles from Hollywood.\nAlways the Baker, Never the Bride was released by Abingdon Press in September 2010. With its phenomenal reviews, the novel spawned a series of three more books based on the popular cast of characters at The Tanglewood Inn, a wedding destination hotel in historic Roswell, Georgia. The series cemented Sandie's spot in publishing as a flagship author of Laugh-Out-Loud romantic comedy for the inspirational market.\n\"Being allowed to combine my faith and my humor with my writing dream,\" says Bricker, \"well, that's the best of all worlds, as far as I'm concerned!\"\nGrayson McDonough has no use for teal ribbons, 5k runs, or ovarian cancer support groups now that his beautiful wife Jenna is gone. But their nine-year-old daughter Sadie seems to need the connection. When Annabelle Curtis, the beautiful cancer survivor organizing the memory quilt project for the Ovacome support group, begins to bring out the silly and fun side of his precious daughter again, Gray must set aside his own grief to support the healing of Sadie’s young heart. But is there hope for Gray’s heart too along the way?\nIf you would like to read the first chapter of Raw Edge, go HERE.\nWatch the book trailer:\nThe 40 Most Influential Christians\nLearn From the Greatest Teachers and Thinkers in Christian History\nThe Bible is the bedrock of Christian belief, yet how Christians think and talk about God, the Bible, and faith has been shaped by influential thinkers from the first century right up through the twentieth. In this book, Dr. Daryl Aaron tells the powerful stories of forty who have helped us better understand what we believe and why we believe it.\nWith insight--and some surprises--Dr. Aaron explores the lives and most important teachings of these giants of church history, from Justin Martyr and Augustine to Martin Luther, John Calvin, Dietrich Bonhoeffer, and many others, underscoring how their teaching has influenced the church--for better or, occasionally, for worse.\nLet your faith be strengthened as you encounter those who paved the way for us, often risking their lives for the sake of the very beliefs we hold today.\nI'm not sure I agree with the author on all forty people in this book being the most influential Christians, but it is an interesting read. Each chapter is dedicated to a different person, and most are around six pages in length, though a few are longer.\nSome of the people in the book are people I have never heard of, hence my statement that I am not sure some of them belong in the book. I studied church history and don't remember hearing of some of them, but it was still interesting reading about them and about what they contributed to Christianity. Even with the people I am familiar with, I learned some new things about.\nThis isn't a book you would read rapidly through, but one you would read a chapter or two at a time. The author did a great job of compiling information, putting the people in order that they came in\nhistory, and making it and interesting and helpful book.\nDaryl Aaron earned his ThM at Dallas Theological Seminary and his PhD at Graduate Theological Foundation. He spent fourteen years in pastoral ministry before becoming a professor of biblical and theological studies at Northwestern College. He lives with his wife in Mounds View, Minnesota.\nThe 40 Most Influential Christians is available from Bethany House Publishers.\nThanks to Bethany House for the review copy.\nFatal Tide by Lis Wiehl and Pete Nelson\nIn East Salem, the elite St. Adrian’s Academy is at the nexus of a satanic apocalypse—and the fatal tide is rising.\nWhen Hieronymus Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights is reunited with the pagans who commissioned it, a dark prophecy begins to unfold in East Salem, beginning with a savage double-murder by hellish creatures straight out of the painting itself. The lone survivor of the attack, a seventeen-year-old Brit, finds sanctuary at Tommy Gunderson’s home—and the place is soon surrounded by demons who seem to be biding their time…but for how long?\nTommy’s pond has been contaminated with Provivilan—an insidious drug that could transform New York City’s children into an army of violence-addicted murderers. But for an occult cabal in the upper echelons of Linz Pharmaceuticals, contaminating the water supply is just part of an ancient conspiracy against all of humankind.\nAs the clouds gather, Tommy and Dani realize they must infiltrate Linz and St. Adrian’s to stop the dissemination of Provivilan. Even then, it could take a tangible eruption of the battle between angels and demons to save humanity from the supernatural evils that have been summoned to East Salem.\nThe three books in this series have been my favorite books that Lis Wiehl has written. They have also been the most Christian, so that may play into why I like them the best. Of the three books in this series, this one was the best and most exciting, in my opinion.\nThe authors brought back the same characters from the other two books, and in this book the stakes are higher and the danger more prevalent.\nI took me a few pages to remember what had happened in the last book, but I quickly got caught up. This book brings everything to a head and conclusion, and ends the series in a very satisfying way.\nI really like the combination of these two authors. I have read all of Lis Whiehl's books, and she has used different co-authors, and I think Pete Nelson is her best choice yet. The writing style is better, the plot better and more complex.... I thoroughly enjoyed this series, and especially this last book. As with the other books, there were appearances by angels and demons, and people physically fought some demonic creatures, which I know we don't actually do, but it was a neat way to show that spiritual warfare is very real.\nThere were a couple of words in this book that are inappropriate for a Christian book, but they weren't as bad as some I have run onto. Overall, this was an awesome book.\nLis Wiehl is a New York Times best-selling author, Harvard Law School graduate, and former\nfederal prosecutor. A popular legal analyst and commentator for the Fox News Channel, Wiehl appears on The O'Reilly Factor and Imus in the Morning, and was co-host with Bill O'Reilly on the radio for seven years.\nPete Nelson lives with his wife and son in Westchester, New York. He got his MFA from the University of Iowa Writers' Workshop in 1979 and has written both fiction and non-fiction for magazines, including Harpers, Playboy, Esquire, MS, Outside, The Iowa Review, National Wildlife, Glamour, Redbook. He was a columnist for Mademoiselle and a staff writer for LIVE Magazine, covering various live events including horse pulls, music festivals, dog shows, accordion camps and arm wrestling championships. Recently he was a contributing editor and feature writer for Wondertime, a Disney parenting magazine. He's published twelve young adult novels, including a six-book series about a girl named Sylvia Smith-Smith which earned him an Edgar Award nomination from the Mystery Writers of America. His young adult non-fiction WWII history, Left For Dead (Randomhouse, 2002) about the sinking of the USS Indianapolis won the 2003 Christopher award as was named to the American Library Association's 2003 top ten list. His other non-fiction titles include Real Man Tells All (Viking, 1988), Marry Like a Man (NAL, l992), That Others May Live (Crown, 2000) and Kidshape (Rutledge Hill, 2004). His novel The Christmas List was published by Rutledge Hill Press in 2004. He wrote, with former army counterintelligence agent Dave DeBatto, a four book series of military thrillers, including CI: Team Red (2005), CI: Dark Target (2006), CI: Mission Liberty (2006) and CI: Homeland Threat (2007) published by Time-Warner. A More Unbending Battle; The Harlem Hellfighters' Struggle for Democracy in WWI and Equality at Home, was published in 2009 by Basic Civitas books. His novel, I Thought You Were Dead, will be published by Algonquin in 2010. He also has two CDs out on the Signature Sounds label, the first entitled The Restless Boys Club (1996), the second called Days Like Horses (2000).\nFatal Tide is available from Thomas Nelson Publishers.\nUnlimited by Davis Bunn, an interview, and giveaway\nSimon Orwell is a brilliant student whose life has taken a series of wrong turns. At the point of giving up on his dreams, he gets a call from an old professor who has discovered a breakthrough in a device that would create unlimited energy, and he needs Simon's help.\nBut once he crosses the border, nothing goes as the young man planned. The professor has been killed and Simon is assaulted and nearly killed by members of a powerful drug cartel.\nNow he must take refuge in the only place that will help him, a local orphanage. There, Simon meets Harold Finch, the orphanage proprietor who walked away from a lucrative career with NASA and consulting Fortune 500 companies to serve a higher cause.\nWith Harold's help, Simon sets out on a quest to uncover who killed the professor and why. In due time, he will discover secrets to both the worldchanging device and his own unlimited potential.\nOccasionally I run across a book that sounds good, and upon reading it I find it far better than I had anticipated from the book description, and this is one such book. I have read several of Davis Bunn's books in the last few years and have yet to be disappointed. They are full of action and suspense, and Unlimited was not exception.\nThe plot of the book is about people trying to make unlimited energy from unused energy. I loved the characters, setting, and plot for the story, and especially liked the main character, Simon. He is a young man who has made some bad choices in life, and it seems nothing is going right for him, but as the book progresses, we see God can change and save even a misfit like him.\nDavis Bunn did a great job of describing scientific and technological terms in language that is easy to understand and be interesting to the reader. I was far from bored while reading this book. A lot happened, and it was written in a way to be very believable and likely to happen.\nThe book has it all: action, suspense, bad guys, good guys, romance, corrupt politicians, and God working things out for those who serve Him.\nInterestingly, this story is based on true events. Davis Bunn has done a great job of putting the events in a fictional novel and coming up with a book definitely worth reading. And as an added benefit, I learned a lot.\nDavis Bunn is a four-time Christy Award-winning, best-selling author now serving as writer-in-residence at Regent's Park College, Oxford University in the United Kingdom. Defined by readers and reviewers as a “wise teacher,” “gentleman adventurer,” “consummate writer,” and “Renaissance man,” his work in business took him to over 40 countries around the world, and his books have sold more than seven million copies in sixteen languages.\nUnlimited is Davis’s first screenplay to be released as a major motion picture. The book, Unlimited, is a novelization of the screenplay.\nThe inspiration behind the Unlimited film and novel is Harold Finch's book, Success: Four Keys to Unlock Your Unlimited Potential. Download a free copy of Success here: http://unlimitedthemovie.com/4-keys-book/.\nUnlimited is available from Broadman and Holman Publishing.\nI received a complimentary copy of Unlimited from B&H Publishing Group in exchange for my honest review.\nRead the first three chapters here.\nMovie trailer:\nQ and A with Davis Bunn\nThe storyline in Unlimited is inspired by true events. What actual events inspired the story?\nHarold Finch was formerly the founder and CEO of the first management-leadership consulting groups in the US. In the mid-seventies he sold the company to H&R Block for over a hundred million dollars—back when a hundred million actually meant something. Answering God’s call, he has spent the past three decades traveling the world, teaching his concepts for free and helping underprivileged children learn that they do indeed have both a purpose in God’s eyes, and the potential to succeed. His experiences form the basis for this story.\nWhat ignited your idea for the characters to create a device that would convert raw wasted energy into useable power?\nI actually wrote the screenplay for the film before writing the novel. This happens occasionally—Godfather and Love Story were both conceived in this order. While working on the film script, the producer and Harold and I were discussing what might work as a basis for the story’s suspense element. We were looking for something that had the means of revealing this ‘unlimited’ potential in people. I don’t actually remember who first came up with the idea of wasted energy, but soon as it was said, we all jumped on it.\nSimon Orwell, the protagonist in Unlimited, is a brilliant, cynical electrical engineering student who finds danger irresistible. Did you model his character traits after yourself or anyone you know?\nAlas, we all know a Simon. These days, this type of person is all too common. An individual with huge potential, who allows himself or herself to become distracted by the multitude of temptations that basically define modern life. And yes, I do know several such people. Some turn this into hugely productive directions, thank goodness. Usually to do so requires divine help, a clarification of focus, and strength they must reach out and ask to receive.\nArmando Vasquez and Harold Finch are important mentors in Simon’s life. Who has been a critical mentor in your life, Davis? How has that person encouraged you to push beyond the boundaries of what you thought possible?\nThere have been several such mentors, for which I remain extremely grateful. One such person is Carol Johnson, who recently retired as editor-in-chief at Bethany House Publishers. Carol has been instrumental in my becoming the best writer I could be, and continues to act as a sounding board for new ideas and characters. Another, I am happy to say, is Harold Finch. His lessons on combining God’s teachings with lifelong aims have been a genuinely rewarding experience with far-reaching results.\nMany of the characters in the story are orphans. What parallels do you see between the orphans in the story and real-life spiritual orphans?\nA beautiful question. While researching the core components of this story, orphanage leaders repeatedly stressed the need to teach orphans to believe in themselves and their natural abilities. Too often they see themselves as lost, without purpose, without a role to play, without chances, without love. What made this story work, I think, is how Simon Orwell shares these same feelings about himself. And how he comes to realize God is the only one to fill this need.\nMany people believe they must wear a mask to hide the parts of themselves they are ashamed of. How is this story about removing that mask?\nSo much of life remains hidden away. The darker elements of a life without God only amplify this falseness. Simon has spent so much of his life, so much of his energy and time, in hiding. As the story unfolds, he discovers that an essential element of arriving at his full potential is being honest with himself. This is where the mask is most damaging, and also where it is often hardest to release. We seek to hide the truth, even when we know the act is a lie in itself. And the mirror we require to see the truth about ourselves is the one that God offers, in infinite patience, in gentle love.\nThe title, Unlimited, has multiple layers of meaning. What does that title mean to you?\nUnlimited was the title brought to me by the film’s producers. When I first began working on this story, it was just that, a title. But as I grew to know Harold, and heard him teach, and read his lesson plan, and then actually applied what he has come to call his ‘Dynamic Life Retreat’ (see Harold full teachings on his website, HaroldFinch.com) I have come to agree with them in their choice. Bringing God into the equation of life’s direction, success, and reaching full potential does reveal the true meaning of Unlimited.\nHow can readers find you on the Internet?\nMy website and blog are at www.davisbunn.com\nSubscribe to my blog’s feed (to get my latest posts via e-mail or through your feed reader) at http://feeds.feedburner.com/DavisBunn\nSign up for my e-newsletter (for subscriber-only giveaways and advance notice of my upcoming novels): http://www.davisbunn.com/news.htm\nFacebook Author Page: facebook.com/davisbunnauthor\nPinterest: http://pinterest.com/davisbunn/ -- check out my “Scenes from Unlimited” board.\nTwitter: @davisbunn - http://twitter.com/davisbunn\nYou could win a $50 Fandango gift card plus UNLIMITED, Davis Bunn's new suspense novel. Ten additional winners will receive a copy of UNLIMITED. Enter right now by clicking this link: http://woobox.com/mp5qew. You can enter once per email address per day. Rack up bonus entries by sharing the contest with your Facebook and Twitter friends! If you don’t have a Pinterest account, enter by filling out the form on the Official Rules page here http://bit.ly/15vTr8u.\nEnter on facebook here: http://woobox.com/mp5qew\nLabels: Book Review, Christian fiction, Davis Bunn, read-in-one-sitting book, suspense/mystery\nDangerous Passage by Lisa Harris\nShe's dedicated her life to ending violence. But has she moved too deep into a treacherous world?\nWhen two Jane Does are killed on the outskirts of Atlanta, Georgia, detective and behavioral specialist Avery North discovers they share something in common--a magnolia tattoo on their shoulders. Suspecting a serial killer, Avery joins forces with medical examiner Jackson Bryant to solve the crimes and prevent another murder. As they venture deep into a sinister criminal world, Avery and Jackson are taken to the very edge of their abilities--and their hearts.\nDangerous Passage exposes a fully realized and frightening world where every layer peeled back reveals more challenges ahead. You'll be hooked from the start.\nI have only read one book by this author before I read this one, and remember thinking it was OK, but nothing spectacular. Maybe it is because she has more writing under her belt, but this book was a terrific read. In addition to being a great suspense novel, the author tackles the human trafficking issue, which is something we all need to be aware of and learn more about.\nI liked everything about this book: plot, characters, setting. This book is classified as romantic suspense, but that part of the book took a back seat to the action and suspense, and was not overdone at all, and it wasn't all wrapped up in a neat package at the end either. As with many books like this one, I had a hard time putting it down and read it in one sitting.\nThis is the first book in a series, and I look forward to reading the other books that will follow. The author has a plot going on that will cover at least one more book, and has me hooked, waiting to see\nhow it will work out.\nLisa Harris is an award-winning author with more than 400,000 copies of her works in print. She was a 2011 Christy Award finalist for Blood Ransom and lives in Mozambique together with her husband, Scott, and their three children. Visit her website at www.lisaharriswrites.com.\nAvailable September 20 from Revell Publishing, a division of Baker Books Publishing.\nFired Up by Mary Connealy\nThis week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing Fired Up (Bethany House March 1, by Mary Connealy\nMary Connealy writes romantic comedy with cowboys. She is a Christy Award Finalist, a Carol Award Finalist and an IRCC Award finalist.\nThe Lassoed in Texas Series, Petticoat Ranch, Calico Canyon and Gingham Mountain. Petticoat Ranch was a Carol Award Finalist. Calico Canyon was a Christy Award Finalist and a Carol Award Finalist. These three books are now contained in one large volume called Lassoed in Texas Trilogy.\nThe Montana Marriages Series, Montana Rose, The Husband Tree and Wildflower Bride. Montana Rose was a Carol Award Finalist.\nCowboy Christmas—the 2010 Carol Award for Best Long Historical Romance, and an Inspirational Readers Choice Contest Finalist.\nThe Sophie's Daughters series. Doctor in Petticoats, Wrangler in Petticoats, Sharpshooter in Petticoats.\nShe is also the author of; Black Hills Blessing a 3-in-1 collection of sweet contemporary romances, Nosy in Nebraska, a 3-in-1 collection of cozy romantic mysteries and she's one of the three authors contributing to Alaska Brides with her Carol Award Winning historical romance Golden Days.\nRollicking Wild West Adventure and Romance from Bestselling Author Mary Connealy\nDare Riker is a doctor who saves lives, but someone seems determined to end his. It may have something to do with the traitors he dealt with during the Civil War, or it might be related to the recent incident with Flint Greer and the ranch. Whoever the culprit is, he or she seems really fired up, and Dare can't let his guard down for a moment, which is a challenge, since right now he's trying to win the heart of the recently widowed Glynna.\nGlynna Greer came west as a mail-order bride and ended up in a bad situation. Now her husband, Flint, is dead, and she's determined to care for her son and daughter on her own. She wants to believe Dare Riker is as decent as he seems, but she's terrified to lock herself into another marriage. She plans to support her small family by opening a diner--never mind that cooking is not her greatest talent. The men in Broken Wheel, Texas, are so desperate for home cooking that they seem willing to overlook dried-out beef and blackened biscuits.\nGlynna can't help but notice that danger follows Dare wherever he goes. There's the avalanche. And then the fire. But things really get out of hand when someone plunges a knife from Glynna's diner into Dare's back. Are Flint's cronies still plotting revenge? Is Glynna's son engaged in a misguided attempt to protect his mother? Is a shadowy outsider still enraged over past injustices? And can Dare survive long enough to convince Glynna to take another chance on love?\nIf you would like to read the first chapter of Fired Up, go HERE.\nBorn of Persuasion by Jessica Dotta\nThis week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing Born of Persuasion Tyndale House Publishers, Inc. (September 1, 2013) by Jessica Dotta\nBorn in the wrong century–except for the fact that she really likes epidurals and washing machines–Jessica Dotta writes British Historicals with the humor like an Austen, yet the drama of a Bronte.\nShe resides lives in the greater Nashville area—where she imagines her small Southern town into the foggy streets of 19th century London. She oversees her daughter to school, which they pretend is an English boarding school, and then she goes home to write and work on PR. Jessica has tried to cast her dachshund as their butler–but the dog insists it’s a Time Lord and their home a Tardis. Miss Marple, her cat, says its no mystery to her as to why the dog won’t cooperate. When asked about it, Jessica sighs and says that you can’t win them all, and at least her dog has picked something British to emulate.\nThe year is 1838, and seventeen-year-old Julia Elliston’s position has never been more fragile. Orphaned and unmarried in a time when women are legal property of their fathers, husbands, and guardians, she finds herself at the mercy of an anonymous guardian who plans to establish her as a servant in far-off Scotland.\nWith two months to devise a better plan, Julia’s first choice to marry her childhood sweetheart is denied. But when a titled dowager offers to introduce Julia into society, a realm of possibilities opens. However, treachery and deception are as much a part of Victorian society as titles and decorum, and Julia quickly discovers her present is deeply entangled with her mother’s mysterious past. Before she knows what’s happening, Julia finds herself a pawn in a deadly game between two of the country’s most powerful men. With no laws to protect her, she must unravel the secrets on her own. But sometimes truth is elusive and knowledge is deadly.\nIf you would like to read the first chapter of Born of Persuasion, go HERE.\nThe Machine by Bill Myers\nFor ages 8 to 14, Truth Seekers is a fast-paced, thoughtful, and funny new series using a 21st century approach to sharing ancient Bible truths.\nIn book one, The Machine, twin siblings Jake and Jenny have just lost their mother and are not thrilled about moving to Israel to stay with their seldom seen archaeologist dad. They don’t yet understand how “all things work together for good to those who love God.” But they will when a machine their father invented points them to the Truth.\nThis is the first book in The Truth Seekers series, and the first part of it is taken up with setting up the story and giving information about the main characters, twins Jake and Jen.\nI'm obviously an adult, and this book is geared for ages 8-14, but I found the book very entertaining and interesting. I could see my 12 year old nephew loving the story. It is funny, and has a lot of gadgets and wacky inventions that are used in the story. The book also deals with the issue of trusting God, and one of the main characters struggles with that especially.\nThis book is a great beginning to what has the makings of being a very good series of books for this age group. I would recommend it.\nBill Myers is an accomplished writer and film director whose work has won more than sixty national and international awards including the C. S. Lewis Honor Award. Among his best-selling releases for kids are The Incredible Worlds of Wally McDoogle and The Forbidden Door. He has sold more than eight million books and videos and lives with two cats, two kids, one dog, and one wife near Hollywood, California.\nThe Machine is available from Broadman and Holman Publishing.\nLabels: Book Review, Christian fiction, Juvenile fiction/kid's books\nShades of Mercy by Anita Lustrea and Caryn Rivendara\nThis week, the Christian Fiction Blog Alliance is introducing Shades of Mercy River North; New Edition edition (September 1, 2013) by Anita Lustrea\nCaryn Rivendara\nAuthentic. That’s the word heard over and over when women describe Anita Lustrea. She is a popular speaker at women’s conferences and retreats, and an amazing communicator as co-host of the award winning Midday Connection radio broadcast. Her deep desire is to communicate freedom to women and help them nurture and care for their soul. Anita is the co-author of “Come to Our Table: A Midday Connection Cookbook” and “Daily Seeds from Women Who Walk in Faith”, a Devotional for women. Her first solo venture as an author releases in November, 2010, “What Women Tell Me: finding freedom from the secrets we keep.” Anita and her husband, Mike Murphy, a pastor, along with her teenage son John live in the Chicago suburbs. When she’s not traveling or speaking, you can find her reading and drinking a venti hot tea at her local Starbucks.\nCaryn is a sought-after writer and speaker. She’s the author of four books—Shades of Mercy: A Maine Chronicle (River North, September 2013), Known & Loved: 52 Devotions from the Psalms (Revell, April 2013), Grumble Hallelujah (Tyndale House, September 2011), and Mama’s Got a Fake I.D. (WaterBrook Press, March 2009)–and a regular contributor to Christianity Today’s Her.Meneutics as well as columnist for Re:Frame Media’s ThinkChristian blog. She has written dozens of magazine article. Her work has appeared in such publications as Christianity Today, Relevant, FamilyLife, and Engineering and Mining Journal (you read that right). Caryn leads workshops and speaks at conferences and church groups across the country. She’s also a regular guest on Moody Radio’s Midday Connection with Anita Lustrea and Melinda Schmidt and has been featured on such radio shows as The John and Kathy Show, Changing Worldviews/WOMANTalk with Sharon Hughes, I Thought She Said with Faith Daly, The Paul Edwards Program with Paul Edwards, and Talk from the Heart with Rich Buhler, among many others. Caryn also appeared on The Harvest Show. Caryn earned a B.A. in English from Calvin College and attended the University of Chicago’s publishing program. She lives in the western suburbs of Chicago with her husband, Rafael, her three kids, a rescued pit bull terrier, two hermit crabs, and several tank fulls of who-knows-what-kind-of fish. Caryn and her family are members of Elmhurst Christian Reformed Church in Elmhurst, Illinois, where Caryn recently joined the worship staff.\nIt's 1954 and the world-even the far Northwoods of Maine-is about to change. But that change can't happen soon enough for fourteen-year-old Mercy Millar. Long tired of being the \"son\" her father never had, Mercy's ready for the world to embrace her as the young woman she is-as well as embrace the forbidden love she feels. When childhood playmates grow up and fall in love, the whole community celebrates. But in the case of Mercy and Mick, there would be no celebration. Instead their relationship must stay hidden. Good girls do not date young men from the Maliseet tribe. At least, not in Watsonville, Maine. When racial tensions escalate and Mick is thrown in jail under suspicion of murder, Mercy nearly loses all hope-in love, in her father, and in God himself.\nIf you would like to read the first chapter of Shades of Mercy, go HERE.\nCritical Pursuit by Janice Cantore\nOfficer Brinna Caruso has built a reputation at the precinct as the cop to call when a child goes missing. For Brinna, it’s personal because she was once one of them. Brinna and her K-9 search and rescue dog, Hero, will stop at nothing to find a missing child, no matter the stakes.\nDetective Jack O’Reilly isn’t ready to return to his homicide duties, after losing his wife to a drunk driver. He’s on the downside of his career, and bent on revenge, when he’s assigned as Brinna’s partner. While on patrol, Jack struggles between his quest for personal justice and his responsibility to those around him, especially his partner.\nSkeptical of Jack’s motives, Brinna isn’t sure she can rely on her new partner, whose reckless abandon endangers the safety of those around him. But when a man surfaces with an MO similar to the criminal who abducted Brinna twenty years earlier, Brinna and Jack must cast aside previous judgments and combine efforts to catch the kidnapper, and finally allow Brinna the peace stolen from her as a child.\nJanice Cantore is a fairly new author, with this being just her fourth book on the Christian market, but she has quickly become one of my favorite authors. The fact that she was a police officer for several years makes the police action in her books all the more believable.\nAs with her other books, this book is full of action, drama, suspense, and police action. It was lacking in romance, though there were signs that may come in the sequel.\nI like it when a Christian author isn't afraid to actually have Christian content and a Christian message in their books, and this one had a great message. The two main characters both struggled in different ways and for different reasons, the question of there being a God, and if there is, why He allows suffering and doesn't always intervene and answer prayers the way that we want Him to. This theme played a big part in the book, and the author did as good of a job addressing that question as she does with writing a great suspense novel. I don't want to give too much away, but one of them is dealing with it much better at the end of the book, and the other one seems more open to it, but it isn't tied up in a neat bow.\nI did read the book in one sitting, and loved it. It dealt with a tough crime: crimes against children, but it wasn't graphic and it was handled well. The book was a great suspense novel worth reading, but it is also a great reminder that there are evil men in this world who are intent on kidnapping and molesting young children, and we can't be too careful with the kids in our life. The book was also a great reminder that God is good, and it is men's evil deeds who cause us pain and harm, not God.\nNote: Critical Pursuit was previously published with another publisher under the title Kevlar Heart.\nJanice Cantore is a retired Long Beach police officer who now writes suspense novels to keep readers engrossed and leave them inspired. Her twenty-two years of experience on the force lend authenticity to her stories. Her Pacific Coast Justice series has met with critical acclaim. Critical Pursuit is the first book in her latest series. Visit Janice's website at www.janicecantore.com and connect with her on Facebook.\nCritical Pursuit is available from Tyndale House Publishing.\nThanks to Tyndale for the review copy.\nLabels: Book Review, Christian fiction, favorite authors, Janice Cantore, read-in-one-sitting book, suspense/mystery\nUnlimited by Davis Bunn\nTrapped by Irene Hannon\nA runaway teen, a desperate sister, and an intrepid PI determined to discover the truth\nWhen Laura Griffith's sixteen-year-old sister disappears on a frigid February day, leaving only a brief note behind, Laura resolves to do whatever it takes to track down the runaway teen. That includes recruiting ATF agent turned private investigator James Devlin to help. Dev knows time is of the essence with runaways--just forty-eight hours can mean the difference between recovery and ruin.\nBut the deeper he and Laura dig, the more Dev begins to suspect that something sinister is at work in the girl's disappearance. And in the icy winter weather, the trail is going cold . . .\nIn her latest thrilling read, queen of romantic suspense Irene Hannon outdoes herself with a fast-paced tale of fear, deception, and just the right dose of romance.\nChristian suspense is my all time favorite genre', and Irene Hannon is one of my favorite authors who writes it.\nThis is the second book in the Private Justice Series, and like the first book, it does not disappoint. This book centers on another of the trio of investigators, \"Dev\". He is investigating the disappearance of a teenager. The book had a slow start, but quickly became the nail biter Irene is known for. It turned out to be an excellent read that kept me turning the pages as fast as I could read them. And when I say it had a slower start, I don't mean it was boring. It just took a while for the stage to be set.\nI liked the fact that the book showed what was going on with the missing girl and those who were looking for her.\nAs with all of Irene's books, there was also romance in the book, but it was not overdone and was a secondary part of the story. I thoroughly enjoyed the book, and am looking forward to the third book in the series.\nIrene Hannon is the author of more than 35 novels, including the bestselling Heroes of Quantico and Guardians of Justice series. Her books have been honored with two coveted RITA Awards from Romance Writers of America, a Carol Award, a HOLT Medallion, a Daphne du Maurier Award, and two Reviewers' Choice Awards from RT Book Reviews magazine. Booklist also included one of her novels in its \"Top 10 Inspirational Fiction\" list for 2011. She lives in Missouri.\nFor more information about her and her books, Irene invites you to visit her website at www.irenehannon.com.\nAvailable August 2013 at your favorite bookseller from Revell, a division of Baker Publishing Group\nLabels: Book Review, Christian fiction, favorite authors, Irene Hannon, read-in-one-sitting book, suspense/mystery\nThe Promise by Dan Walsh and Gary Smalley\nOne home, two hearts, and the power of a promise kept . . . For the last five months, Tom Anderson has been without a job, a fact he's been hiding from his wife Jean--and everyone else. He leaves each morning, pretending nothing has changed, and spends his disheartening day rotating through coffee shops and the library, using their wifi to search job listings online. The stress of keeping this secret is beginning to put serious strain on his marriage.\nBut Tom's not the only one hiding something. Jean Anderson has a secret of her own--one that will seriously complicate their situation. Will the promises they made on their wedding day hold firm?\nI don't read a lot of Christian fiction books outside of the suspense genre', but Dan Walsh is one author whose books fall into that exception. When faced with the decision to read one of his books or a suspense novel, I'll pick his book any day.\nThis is book two in a new series by Dan and relationship expert Gary Smalley. These books aren't simply good fiction. They are filled with great relationship advice.\nThe first book, The Dance, centered on Jim and Marilyn Anderson and their failing marriage. This book centers on their oldest son, Tom, and the issues he is facing. I like a series as they usually have the same characters in all of the books and you get to know and love them more, so that alone makes this series appealing. The Promise deals with more issues in marriage, and also deals with the issues between a father and his children. Through a fictional story, the authors show how a father's action and approval or disapproval can and does affect his children, even as adults.\nI devoured The Promise just as much as if it were a suspense novel. It is a very gripping story and has the ability to change people and help their relationships.\nAnd there may be a woman on the cover, but this is a book for men and women, and both should read it.\nDan Walsh is the bestselling author of several books, including The Dance and The Promise with Gary Smalley, as well as The Unfinished Gift, The Discovery, and The Reunion. He has won three Carol Awards, and two of his novels were finalists for RT Book Reviews Inspirational Book of the Year for 2011 and 2012. A member of American Christian Fiction Writers, Dan served as a pastor for twenty-five years. He lives with his wife in the Daytona Beach area, where he's busy researching and writing his next novel. Visit www.danwalshbooks.com for more.\nGary Smalley is one of the country's best known authors and speakers on family relationships. He is the bestselling and award-winning author or coauthor of 16 books, along with several popular films and videos. He has spent over 30 years learning, teaching, and counseling, speaking to over 2 million people in live conferences. Smalley has appeared on national television programs such as Oprah, Larry King Live, Extra, The Today Show, and The Sally Jessy Raphael Show, as well as numerous national radio programs. Gary and his wife, Norma, have been married for 49 years and live in Branson, Missouri. They have three children and six grandchildren.\nLabels: Book Review, Christian fiction, Dan Walsh, favorite authors, read-in-one-sitting book\nUnlimited by Davis Bunn, an interview, and giveawa...\nShades of Mercy by Anita Lustrea and Caryn Rivenda...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line9148"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6962108612060547,"wiki_prob":0.3037891387939453,"text":"(The Pharaoh said,) “Then, we will most certainly produce before you... (Tā-Hā 20:58-59)\nby Fethullah Gülen on 27 December 2012 . Posted in Sūrah Tā-Hā\nفَلَنَأْتِيَنَّكَ بِسِحْرٍ مِثْلِه۪ فَاجْعَلْ بَيْنَنَا وَبَيْنَكَ مَوْعِدًا لَا نُخْلِفُهُ نَحْنُ وَلَۤا أَنْتَ مَكَانًا سُوًىقَالَ مَوْعِدُكُمْ يَوْمُ الزّ۪ينَةِ وَأَنْ يُحْشَرَ النَّاسُ ضُحًى\n(The Pharaoh said,) “Then, we will most certainly produce before you sorcery like it. So appoint a meeting between us and you, which neither we nor you will fail to keep, in an open, level place convenient (to both of us).” (Moses) said: “The meeting will be on the Day of the Festival, and let the people assemble in the forenoon.” (Tā-Hā 20:58–59)\nHow many dazzling lights and mysteries flow into our spirits from the verses above, the first addressee of which was Prophet Moses, peace be upon him. Having had a mysterious experience of speaking to God in the valley of Tuwa in the Sinai, having seen his staff change into a snake and his right hand become a shining hand, and having felt his theoretical certainty transformed into experienced certainty, this exalted Prophet had perfect confidence in and reliance on his Lord. Therefore, when the Pharaoh challenged Moses to a contest against the sorcerers of Egypt, Moses was perfectly sure that he would defeat the Pharaoh’s sorcerers regardless of what they would do. Hence, based on his Prophetic insight, Moses made the offer, “The meeting will be on the Day of the Festival, and let the people assemble in the forenoon.” Through this counterchallenge, Moses meant the following:\nThe competition which would distinguish right from wrong or truth from falsehood should not take place behind walls; rather, it should occur in an open, level place where people would be able to watch and witness.\nThe competition should take place on a festive day so that whoever wanted to watch it could come.\nForenoon was the most convenient time for such an encounter. It is a time when people are free from exhaustion and drowsiness and feel energetic and vigorous. Also, it is the best time for minds to think and judge.\nThus, in order to watch the competition between Moses and the sorcerers, the people of Egypt came to the meeting area in crowds in the early morning on the Day of Festival. Sorcery was a popular and esteemed occupation in Egypt at that time. Sorcerers were not ordinary people; they were the intellectual elite of the time, who could contact jinn and who had certain knowledge of spiritism or spiritualism and parapsychology. Therefore, their defeat in the face of Moses and their possible conversion would mark the beginning of a revolution in the country in favor of belief. And so it came to pass. Having understood that the miracles God created at the hand of Moses were not magic or sorcery, the sorcerers believed in Moses’ Message immediately despite the Pharaoh’s threats that he would hang them and cut off their hands and feet alternately.[1] Many among the common people who witnessed the submission of the elite to Moses came to belief, and doubts about their own religion appeared in the hearts of many others. The goal was achieved and absolute unbelief was broken. People in general came to the point where they felt hesitant to choose between Moses and the Pharaoh, who had made his subjects ascribe Divine power to him, telling them that he knew no god for them but himself.\nThe most significant point drawing our attention in this verse is the time and place which Moses chose for that important encounter. There are important lessons in this event that today’s Muslims will learn. First of all, a believer should never despair because of the lack of or shortage in material necessities. They should use the credit that God granted them carefully without wasting it. As the proverb says, “killing two birds with one stone,” a Muslim should always plan to be able to achieve not only two but hundreds of results with one action and search for the ways to succeed in doing so. Consider how, according to God’s usual practice, a seed buried in the earth grows into an ear containing hundreds of seeds of the same kind or into a tree producing hundreds of fruits. Thus should we try to act in a way that we sow one grain but harvest seven, seventy, or even seven hundred in return and in the name of serving belief, the Qur’ān, our nation, and the whole of humanity. This was what Moses did. When, having left the Pharaoh’s palace and come into the open, he expressed himself in front of all people and on a proper day in full trust in and reliance on God, he was able to influence thousands of people with one act, making many among them his followers.\nThis is what the Qur’ān teaches us by means of Moses, while the Sunnah of Prophet Muhammad, upon him be peace and blessings, contributes to our understanding with a different event:[2]\nAccording to a report from the Prophet, upon him be peace and blessings, a tyrant attempted to kill a young believer, who never agreed to return to the tyrant’s faith. He was thrown down from the top of a mountain, yet he came back walking. Then he was thrown into the roaring waves of a sea, but he was saved and returned. Whatever they did to kill that young believer, it proved useless. In the end, the young man said: “If you gather all the people together and shoot an arrow at me saying, ‘In the name of the Lord of this boy’, then you will be able to kill me.”\nA believer should always think like this young man: “You will die in any case, and these furious people will not let you live. Therefore, you should not go to the next world at a small cost.” Indeed, a believer should make plans to be able to do something for the sake of their cause even in their last moment as they go to their Lord. However valuable it is, even the desire for martyrdom is of little significance compared to a life lived with this consideration. In other words, believers should always think about what they can do at every moment of their life on behalf of their religion, nation, and humanity. The young man in the example would have only been martyred if he had died when he had been thrown down from the top of a mountain or into the waves of a sea. He would most possibly have gained his eternal life of happiness in the other world, but his reward would have been limited only to himself. However, after he was martyred in front of the people in the way he told, he caused hundreds of people to embrace belief. Thus he both served his cause and the conversion and eternal happiness of many others.\nTo conclude, Muslims should know the value of the Religion with which they are favored and the value this Religion has gained them. They should be aware of the fact that this universe has been created for them, with all that it contains at their service. Therefore, aware of their exceptional value, they should not leave this world in return for a low price. Their consideration should be as follows: “I am leaving the world, but I should leave a world which has found its true orbit—which has achieved its goal of creation. My death should also be a mysterious key to open the doors of Paradise for me, and while my personal tiny light is being distinguished, innumerable new lights should begin to shine.”\n[1] See Sūrah Tā-Hā 20:71.\n[2] Muslim, Zuhd, 73; Tirmidhī, Tafsīru Sūrah 85:2.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line993902"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.909259557723999,"wiki_prob":0.909259557723999,"text":"EVENTS Event Archive GRAND PRIX MANILA 2015\nMEET TZU CHING KUO\nPosted in GRAND PRIX MANILA 2015 on January 3, 2015\nBy Chapman Sim\nArchive Twitter\nConsidered to be one of the best in Asia Pacific, it would seem that Tzu Ching Kuo knows a thing or two about Standard. After all, he did just win a Pro Tour Qualifer last Sunday in his hometown, qualifying him for Pro Tour Dragons of Tarkir.\nIt seemed like a great opportunity to have a quick chat with Kuo about the state of Standard, as well as the story of how he became the player that he is today.\nTzu Ching Kuo\nKuo's resume is more than startling. World Magic Cup 2012 Champion. Ten Grand Prix Top 8s. Top Pro Points in Asia Pacific. Most Nationals Top 8s and most National Champion titles. Level 50 Archmage.\nSome also consider him the best player to have never made it to the Sunday Stage of the Pro Tour. Ever since Owen Turtenwald won his first (and second) Grand Prix, Kuo is now tied with Eric Froehlich as the player with the most Grand Prix Top 8s without a win. Not sure if praise or mild mockery.\nRegardless, while songs are frequently sung and tales frequently told about him, few people know who is the person behind the menacing facade and how he grew to become the player he is today.\nKuo has always been a Spike, the type of player who plays solely to win. Most gamers in their infancy are drawn to the beauty of Scaled Wurms and the like. But not Kuo. In his very first sanctioned tournament, he was already armed with a hardcore Tier 1 deck. A relentless predator whose motivation is to win. To go for the throat like a hunting dachshund. He didn't make Top 8 of that one, but he had tasted blood.\nKuo's very first deck contains a three-card combo that produces as many Pegasi as you want!\nKuo fondly recalls the first of his ten Grand Prix Top 8 fifteen years ago, at Grand Prix Taipei 2000. At that time, a relative-unknown, he shocked the local community when he broke into the Top 8 alongside superstars such as Tsuyoshi Fujita, Alex Shvartsman and Satoshi Nakamura. \"RecSur\" was his weapon of choice, a deck utilizing the classic combo Recurring Nightmare and Survival of the Fittest.\nThe cornerstone of Kuo's very first Grand Prix Top 8 Constructed Deck.\n\"I remembered I was paired against Alex Shvartsman, the man with the most lifetime Grand Prix Top 8s at that time. It was very scary to an amateur like me but the matchup was so good I thought there was no way I could lose.\"\nBut he did.\nOutplayed. Outclassed. Ousted.\nExperience and skill does count in this game.\nUp until then, Kuo still considered himself to be a casual player. Only attending local events such as National Championships and local Grand Prix, Kuo seldom ventured abroad and was far from being the road warrior that he is today.\nMost of his victories at that time were all on local soil. His second and third Grand Prix Top 8 came a year later in Kaohsiung and Taipei, and he quickly rose to prominence. Kuo went on to win his first of five National Champion titles in 2002, and made the Top 8 three consecutive times in 2004, 2005 and 2006. With this series of victories, he cemented his place as the best Taiwanese player of the era, a reputation he has been able to uphold even until today.\n\"I've also won a lot of Pro Tour Qualifiers in the past. Back then, cash awards of USD$375 or USD$500 were given out instead of travel awards. I usually kept the cash prize and never ventured to Europe or the States, playing only a couple of Pro Tours in Japan.\" To this day, he regrets his decisions to not have attended all the Pro Tours that he could have.\nAfter a couple of quiet years in addition to crashing out at Pro Tour Nagoya 2005, he was disheartened to the point where he shared with some of his friends that he wanted to quit the game, and drown his sorrows in online gaming.\nOld friends meet each other in the Featured Match Area at Grand Prix Yokohama.\nUnder the encouragement and inspiration of Chen Liang, Kuo decided to stay in the game but it was not until 2009 that he decided to give this whole \"Pro Player\" affair his best shot. Unknown to the rest of the world, this confidant and good friend of Kuo's was actually the brains behind most of Kuo's winning Constructed decks. A Grand Prix Top 8 competitor himself, Chen often built and tuned Kuo's weapons of choice and they playtested together regularly.\nThe road was not easy for him and it was a few seasons of wrenching misses. He ended his very first professional season at 29 points, one point short of achieving the Gold Level equivalent. Despite being a brilliant attempt for a first-timer, Kuo was disgruntled. How typical of a Spike!\nTzu Ching Kuo at Grand Prix Kobe 2009, making his sixth Grand Prix Top 8. He lost to eventual champion Tomoharu Saito in the elimination rounds.\nHis next season was similarly impressive, but equally heartbreaking. Kuo finished with 38 points, two points short of the Platinum equivalent. Regardless, his consistency on the Pro Tour is not something to be sneezed at, finishing two seasons at Silver, three at Gold and the 2012 season at Platinum in the past six seasons.\nMagic World Cup Champions 2012\n2012 also happened to be the pinnacle of his career. He scored his highest lifetime Pro Tour finish at Pro Tour Avacyn Restored. That event was miraculous, literally. Kuo started off 1-4 and was on the brink of elimination. He went on to rattle off 11 straight wins to finish 10th and locked up Platinum for that season. That year, he also won the very first Magic World Cup.\nDespite being slightly past his heyday, Kuo remains passionate about the game and hopes to run the tables today in Manila. Kuo feels like he has given so much of his life to the game and can't walk away just yet. At least not now.\n\"I am a part of Magic and Magic will always be a part of me. Forever.\"\nComplete coverage of Grand Prix Manila\nUNCHARTED REALMS\nThe Guardian Ari Levitch\nAnafenza's fate has been less kind in this Tarkir, but no less grand…\nArt Descriptions of the Not-Khans Blake Rasmussen\nThe descriptions that drove the art of the non-khans of Tarkir in Dragons of Tarkir.\nGet an alternative-art promo of Disdainful Stroke!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line570430"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9427133798599243,"wiki_prob":0.9427133798599243,"text":"Carson Valley Bridge Club welcomes all players\nActivities & Events | January 11, 2014\nby Caryn Haller\nchaller@recordcourier.com\nAl Walker of Gardnerville plays bridge on Friday.\nShannon LItz | The Record-Courier\nWith each new hand dealt on Monday, a silence fell over the room as close to 30 players put their best bridge faces on.\nThe Carson Valley Bridge Club started Jan. 3, and welcomes all duplicate bridge players.\n“It’s open to anybody. There’s no restrictions other than being able to play bridge,” club manager Al Walker said. “We’d love to have people come. Everybody plays for fun. We have players ages 60-97.”\nWalker, 70, played card games such as euchre, Pinochle, cribbage and poker most of his life, and took up bridge two years ago after a friend introduced him to it.\n“I fell in love with the game. It’s the most sophisticated of all the games. There’s more to it,” he said. “I’m the least experienced player in our unit. If you’ve never played bridge, there would be a significant amount of time you’d have to put into it to learn. A person who’s played other bidding games could pick it up easier.”\nBridge is a trick playing game that involves four players — with two partners forming each team.\nEach hand progresses through four phases — dealing the cards, the auction (or bidding), playing the hand, and scoring the results. The concept of bidding involves each player identifying the strength of their hand — hearts, spades, clubs or diamonds — and trying to communicate that strength to their partner. Once partners win the “bid,” they need to take a certain number of “tricks” in order to win the hand.\nThe highest-finishing players are awarded specified numbers of masterpoints, which are recorded with the American Contract Bridge League, a national governing body for competitive bridge. Most players value the increase in their masterpoint total as a measure of their success at the game. Unlike the Elo rating system developed for chess, the masterpoint system is strictly one of accumulation. A player’s masterpoint total can never decline.\n“The goal for people joining the game is to become a life master,” Walker said. “It’s a tradition of the game as a sign that you are a good player.”\nThe Carson Valley Bridge Club uses the duplicate bridge method of scoring, where the luck of getting a series of good hands doesn’t necessarily mean a better score.\n“The bidding and play of the game are basically the same as party or contract bridge,” Walker said.\nSilver Life Master Thelma Nelson, 97, credits playing bridge to keeping her mind sharp.\n“I started when I was 15, and I directed games for 40 years in San Dimas, Calif.,” Nelson said. “It’s good for old people because you exercise your mind. For young people, it’s good for them because they learn mathematics and reasoning.”\nBob Meyer, 75, has played bridge for 50 years.\n“This is a disease you don’t want to catch,” he joked. “You’ll never master the game. It’s a continuous challenge.”\nThe Carson Valley Bridge Club meets 1 p.m. Mondays and noon Fridays at 1321 Waterloo Lane in Gardnerville. Cost is $7 per game.\nFor more information on playing bridge, visit http://www.acbl.org, or call Walker at 265-5638.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1291735"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5353423953056335,"wiki_prob":0.5353423953056335,"text":"Sign In With Your TV Provider\nYou’re just a few clicks away from the show you want to watch. Please sign in with your TV provider to watch this episode and other great programs.\nSeason 5 • Episode 14\nIn the early hours of May 1st, 2010, Jersey City escort Shannan Gilbert goes missing on the shores of Long Island. Police launch a search through the dense underbrush, and what they find hidden in the weeds will spark a gruesome investigation.\n43 min|TV-PG|Premiered 04/10/2012\nWhat Happened to Devin Bond?\nIn the early morning hours of March 31, 2017, 16-year-old Devin Bond got out of bed and walked out of his Murfreesboro, Tennessee, home. He was never seen nor heard from again.\nWhere is Savannah Spurlock?\nAt 2:30am on January 4, 2019, 22-year-old mother Savannah Spurlock called her mother to tell her she was leaving the bar where she had enjoyed a much-deserved night out. Savannah told her mother she'd be home soon, but she was never seen again.\nIs Jesse Ross Still Out There?\nOn November 21, 2006, 19-year-old Jesse Ross was attending a Model United Nations conference in Chicago. Jesse called his parents to tell him he was having a great time. They would never hear or see their son again.\nHas Akia Eggleston Vanished?\nOn the morning of May 3, 2017, 8-months-pregnant Akia Eggleston was excited to finally get out of her home to attend her baby shower. However, when the 22-year-old was hours late, loved ones rushed to her home to find Akia gone without a trace.\nWill Tara Calico Ever Be Found?\nOn September 20, 1988, Tara Calico left her home to go on a bike ride she took almost every morning. When she didn't return home, her mom anxiously drove along Tara's usual bike route, but never finds her. 30 years later, Tara is still missing.\nThe Darkest Winter\nIn 1976, the first of four children is abducted and murdered in the suburbs of Detroit. After more than 30 years the families of the four murdered children and Detroiters like J. Reuben Appelman are determined to find the Oakland County Child Killer.\nChildren of the Snow\nQueens, NY, 1965. Two children are found dead. The cops are convinced the parents Eddie and Alice Crimmins are guilty. Even after two trials both condemning Alice, it will take years to unravel the mystery of who killed Eddie and Missy.\nA Crime To Remember\nThe Career Girl Murders\nNew York, NY, 1963. Two young women are brutally murdered in their Upper East Side apartment. If these girls aren’t safe, who is? The NYPD is under pressure to solve the high-profile case but make a tragic misstep while investigating.\nJudge, Jury, Executioner\nWest Palm Beach, FL, 1955. Esteemed Judge Curtis Chillingworth and his wife say goodbye to friends at a dinner party and are never seen again. Police unravel a tale of corruption and evil that leaves Florida in shock.\nDenver, CO, 1955. United Airlines Flight 629 explodes in mid-air, killing everyone aboard. Crash investigators wonder if it was an accident at all. What follows is the discovery of the first-ever act of murder-by-airplane-bombing in the U.S.\nA New Kind of Monster\nMichigan, 1967-69. A series of young females from Michigan universities are murdered one by one. The young women of Southeastern Michigan are terrified and the police commence a massive hunt for the monster they call The Co-Ed Killer.\nWho Killed Mr. Woodward?\nNew York, NY, 1955. Ann and Billy Woodward are the darlings of New York society when tragedy strikes after a drunken dinner party. Billy lies in a pool of his own blood. Ann pulled the trigger by accident...or so she says.\nLies, Lawns & Murder\nIn North Carolina, a retired Vietnam veteran sells off a piece of his land to a young family. No one can predict the modern day Hatfield McCoy neighbor feud that will ensue and the midnight shootout that will end it.\nFear Thy Neighbor","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1240751"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6900907158851624,"wiki_prob":0.30990928411483765,"text":"BREAKING: Targeted Killing at Oregon High School\nPosted at 2:53 pm on June 10, 2014 by Bob Owens\nTroutdale Police Chief Scott Anderson : 1 student and gunman dead at Reynolds High School #koin6news #RHShooting\n— KOIN News (@KOINNews) June 10, 2014\nReynolds High School, the only high school in Troutdale, Oregon, is the scene of the nation’s most recent school shooting. The situation is now believed to be stable.\nThe Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement that the situation is now stabilized at Reynolds High School in Troutdale.\nScott Anderson, the chief of the Troutdale Police Department, confirmed the deaths and called the events a “tragic day” for the community.\nTroutdale Sgt. Carey Kaer told Fox News that the victim was a male student and the shooter was a teenage male, but it is not known whether the gunman was a student at the school.\nKaer said the victim was shot inside the school’s gymnasium and the shooter’s body was located by a police robot in a bathroom. He added that there are no other victims or current threats to the public.\nIt will be some time, of course, before the details of this incident are known, and we can expect for their to be copious amounts of misinformation and spin dished out as fact.\nHere is what we do know.\nAt this time, there is no evidence to suggest that this was an attempted mass murder or spree killing. It appears to have been a targeted killing. That the attacker’s body was found in a bathroom suggests that this was a murder/suicide (for reasons that psychiatrists or psychologists would likely better explain, public murderers seem to prefer some privacy for their own suicides) .\nPerhaps the attacker left behind something explaining the decision to target this one student. If so, we should know in the days ahead.\nTags: OregonSchool Shooting","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1471890"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6770718097686768,"wiki_prob":0.32292819023132324,"text":"You are here: Home / *Articles of the Bound* / American Communists Travel to Cuba to Increase Support for Castro Dictatorship\nAmerican Communists Travel to Cuba to Increase Support for Castro Dictatorship\nMarch 26, 2015, 11:11 am by Trevor Loudon Leave a Comment\nFrom left, Alberto Prieto, (Communist Party of Cuba International Relations Department), Zenobia Thompson, Camila Valenzuela, Fernando Gonzalez, Kenia Puig (ICAP president), Josh Leclair, John Bachtell\nA delegation from the Communist Party USA, led by new National Secretary John Bachtell, recently visited Cuba. On Feb. 27th, the delegation stopped by the the Cuban Intelligence connected Cuban Institute for Friendship with the Peoples to “discuss building friendship, cooperation and people to people exchanges in light of the Dec. 17 announcement to reestablish diplomatic relations between the U.S. and Cuba.”\nAmong those who warmly greeted the delegates were Fernando Gonzalez, one of the infamous “Cuban 5” who was jailed in the U.S. in 1998 as part of a “mission to monitor right-wing Cuban terrorist activities in Miami being directed against Cuba.” Several people died as a result of Gonzalez’s espionage.\nAccording to Bachtell:\nWe found Gonzalez warm, gracious and eager to speak about exploring ways to build friendship with the U.S. people. He also shared stories about his time in U.S. prisons, the people he met and the extraordinary solidarity he and the Cuban 5 received over the years.”\nThe most important thing to say, to express on my behalf, my family and relatives, is my deep gratitude to the CPUSA because of the years of participation in the struggle, the solidarity you accorded us during the time we were in prison and for our liberation.\nYou were side by side with us. Even when things look dark, there’s always a bright side. No one wants that experience (of imprisonment). It gave us the chance to experience the best of the U.S. people and those we worked with for many years, side by side in that fight.\nGonzalez made it clear that the Castro regime made no concessions in return for Communist Party connected President Barack Obama‘s diplomatic recognition of the dictatorship.\nDuring the second round of negotiations between the U.S. and Cuba we haven’t made any concessions. And with the return of all the Cuban Five it was a great victory for the Cuban people and all friends in the U.S. who have participated in struggle and for friendship between our countries.\nDiplomatic recognition of Cuba is a “win win” for Marxists, both in Washington DC and Havana.\nSoon Obama “crony capitalists” will be able to export more American jobs to Cuban sweatshops, while Cuban communists can more easily export spies, revolutionaries and drugs to the United States.\nFiled Under: *Articles of the Bound*, *In the Searchlights*","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line527827"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7340463995933533,"wiki_prob":0.7340463995933533,"text":"Corporate & Incentive Travel/\nCanada: Foreign Yet Familiar\nCanada: Foreign Yet FamiliarMay 8, 2019\nOur Neighbor Brings to Mind a Single Idea for Planners, But it Has a Lot More to Offer Than Clichés By Sara Churchville\nOur Neighbor Brings to Mind a Single Idea for Planners, But it Has a Lot More to Offer Than Clichés\nFairmont Chateau Lake Louise offers 36,000 sf of flexible meeting and event space as well as stunning views and world-class skiing in the winter. In the summer, attendees can participate in activities such as hiking, canoeing and more.\nWe had to change from Mounties — [they’re] not sexy enough,” says Chantal Sturk-Nadeau, executive director, Business Events Canada, says of Canada’s image. “It’s not just the landscape and nature. That was not resonating enough with [attracting] meetings. We had to change the story: Why would you choose Canada over the US? Why and how?”\nSo Business Events Canada (BEC), a division of Destination Canada, set out to organize strategic partnerships with meetings organizations such as Meeting Professionals International (MPI), the Society for Incentive Travel Excellence (SITE) and incentive houses. BEC also created priority economic sectors to align with certain cities and lure meetings that would lead to foreign investment — and the other way around.\n“It’s a long game to attract the C-suite, not just the day-to-day of where meetings are hosted to grow business in Canada,”\nChantal Sturk-Nadeau\nJust an hour and a half from New York City by air, Montréal feels like a European getaway but with a much more favorable exchange rate. Even in the heart of winter, the 2.5-mile Promenade Fleuve-Montagne walkway calls on attendees to bundle up for a walking tour from the river to the mountain thanks to clear signage all along the route.\nFor foodies, there is dry-aged beef at Maggie Oakes in Old Montréal, longtime favorite Schwartz’s Deli for smoked meats and Au Pied de Cochon for an upscale, playful version of Québécois specialties beyond poutine. The restaurant offers an especially popular traditional sugar shack meal during maple syrup season.\n“It’s an electric city that’s got a great vibe,” says Jeffrey M. Weinman, principal, Summit Event Management, Inc. His client of 17 years, a Fortune 100 company, in August was looking for a “new and exciting destination that would motivate, be easy to work with and have cultural areas” for an incentive meeting of some 400 attendees and their spouses.\nMontréal fit the bill, and not just anywhere in Montréal: Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth. “We did a site inspection, and it was the best value for that fit. One property would have been a better value dollar-wise, but the flow wouldn’t have worked. It was important to get that ‘wow’ factor.”\nThat factor involved, as it so often does, getting the food and beverage (F&B) right by spending time with the chef to “touch on things Montréal is famous for and that we know our people like.” Results: buckets of fresh, hot French fries made with different types of potatoes; a make-your-own poutine station with several gravies, cheese curds and pulled pork; and a grilled cheese night with various cheeses and fillings in a panini maker.\nAt the welcome reception, performers from Montréal-based Cirque Éloize put on a show in the hotel’s 21st-floor C2 Space, with its windows that overlook the city, a roof deck, patio and removable furniture for an arrangement that can accommodate up to 220 attendees.\n“We set it up reception-style, with a stage, a contortionist and juggler. The entertainment right away as you walk in was a woman with a giant Hula-Hoop, then a rolling skating duo on a 6-foot [high] circular stage.”\nFor the general welcome reception, Weinman and the hotel agreed to combine rooms with multimedia takes on old and modern Montréal on pillars, walls and ceilings. “They were wonderful in making it appetizing for us,” he says. “It just set the weekend; it was the exclamation point on the weekend.”\nHe also provided attendees with a Passport MTL card good for 48 hours so they could experience the city in their own way, with free unlimited transportation and 28 attractions discounted or free.\nWeinman says the people of Montréal, both in the meetings industry and the residents themselves, seem very welcoming and open.” They immediately change to English from French; no attitude about not speaking the language,” he says. “[I’m] hearing from the C-levels what a great job we’ve done and how much people are enjoying it; watching people’s reactions to everything that’s going on — that makes all the work worth it.”\nThe Vieux-Québec area’s undisputed shining city on the hill continues be the Fairmont Le Château Frontenac, which under various management has been wowing visitors since it opened in 1893. For a 250-attendee convention of doctors in June 2018, the F&B team whipped up a themed menu where each course and cocktail was based on a Beatles song. There was soup in a 1970s beer can, Sergeant Pepper beef, Lady Madonna trout and a cake the shape and color of a yellow submarine. The G7 meeting of seven industrialized democracies, as it happens, was in town at the same time, creating more security without actually interrupting the festivities.\n“I used to work with the Canadian Embassy in Paris; this evening reminded me of this,” a planner summed up. “If you think it’s something a hotel can’t do, Frontenac can do it.”\nAlso in Old Québec is the Hôtel Manoir Victoria, with 156 rooms and meeting/banquet space for 175 attendees. The onsite restaurant, Chez Boulay-Bistro Boréal, serves cuisine it describes as “Nordic” — local Québec fish, duck terrine, blood pudding and bison tartare.\nAnother hotel, The Relais & Châteaux Auberge Saint-Antoine has several meeting rooms as well as jazz nights at its Bar Artéfac.\nThe Québec City Marriott Downtown is, like the rest of Old Québec, within walking distance from the Québec City Convention Centre. The center can accommodate up to 9,000 attendees and connects by underground walkway to the Hilton Québec and Delta Hotels by Marriott Québec. After a day of meetings, attendees can amble over to the Plains of Abraham or Le Musée du Chocolat, which offers history and artifacts of chocolate making going back 200 years. Get the chocolate, of course, at the adjacent chocolatier, Érico.\nPlanners looking for an unusual incentive space can do as a Portland, OR-based IT start-up did for its September 2018 annual retreat of 65 attendees: stay at a monastery. Le Monastère des Augustines is a converted monastery built in 1639 that offers a complimentary breakfast, yoga and meditation, and “cozy” monks’ cells. It has Wi-Fi, but no TVs.\n“[The IT start-up attendees] were looking for something a little more exotic, boutique, with a full buyout, that has more character than a generic hotel,” the planner says of the group. “They chose Québec City as the right mix of a small, walkable place but at same time enough variety about the property.”\nSome of that variety included La Revanche, a snacks, beer and board games spot in the old city, as well as a nearby BeaverTails food truck serving up Canadian “queues de castor” — large, flat pastry in the shape of the rodent’s tail to which any number of sweet topping and/or fillings can be applied. As a team-building exercise, curling was the sport of choice, with a rink, workshop and tournament outside; in September, that was still possible.\nThe monastery has a chapel area that can be used as a meeting space, along with a restaurant, catering and banquet menus that can provide, as it did for this group, a poutine station.\n“We were surprised how affordable things were,” the planner noted. Still, he acknowledges that the language barrier, lack of “lift” comparable to other cities and weather unpredictability can be a challenge for some. “Québec has a very rich and palpable personality; take advantage of the fact that it’s a unique destination — language, food, people, history — do the best to unearth and share that.” Planner tip: “The safety net of a local DMC helps with transfers, so you don’t have to do it in Québécois French.”\nWith 192,000 sf of meeting space 20 minutes from Ottawa International Airport, and a bridge leading directly to the 492-room Westin Ottawa and gigantic CF Rideau Centre shopping mall, the Shaw Centre is probably Ottawa’s most obvious draw for meeting planners. It can and will host anything from a Parent & Child Show to a Cannabis and Hemp Expo (complete with a bake lounge) with the same degree of verve. The center’s four levels all overlook the city’s Rideau Canal, which during Canada’s frigid winters famously transforms into the Rideau Canal Skateway. Attendees can glide along the world’s largest skating rink — it’s 4.8 miles long — for 24 hours a day in season.\nThe Delta Hotels by Marriott Ottawa City Centre provides just more than 24,000 sf of meeting space. Though it’s not specifically offered as such, an enterprising planner might find the outdoor rooftop terrace just the thing for a small gathering in kind weather.\nCher, Def Leppard and Michael Bublé are just a few of the 2019 headliners at the Canadian Tire Centre, about a 15-minute drive from the downtown area. Among the sports bars and casual dining spots at the hockey arena is The Vault, the private dining space in the members-only Club Red steakhouse that promises select attendees some face time with the chef and sommelier. The nearby Sens House Sports Bar & Grill in the Byward Market offers fans who can’t make the hockey match an authentic arena experience; this one complete with a 1,500-sf portion of the dining room with a retractable roof and floor-to-ceiling windows.\nOttawa is also home to the National Gallery of Canada, which will soon exhibit among many other things, the portraits of Paul Gauguin and International Indigenous Art Exhibition 2019, and home to the National Arts Centre, celebrating 50 years.\nTips from a planner who has met often in the city: “Morning runs along the Ottawa River over the bridges are what makes Ottawa, Ottawa. The airport is well-designed but busy; consider flying to Montréal and driving in.”\nHome to Canada’s three largest hotels — the 1,590-room Chelsea Hotel, Toronto; the 42-story, 1,377-room Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel; and the 1,365-room Fairmont Royal York — Toronto has also become a kind of watchword for “multicultural.”\nThat’s one of its many draws for Brianna Mark, CMP, senior event planner, Internal Communications, with Mozilla Corporation. “Even if not backed by fact, people feel safer traveling into Canada than the U.S.,” she says, an especially important consideration for Mozilla, where some 50 percent of employees work remotely all over the world.\nTo keep people connected, Mozilla holds an “all hands” event every June and September, remassing its far-flung workers for five days of togetherness. In June, some 1,400 attendees will converge in Toronto, where Mozilla has one of its nine offices.\n“The exchange rate is always in our favor,” Mark says. “There’s really good airlift from most of our destinations, the airport to the core is easy and the city is walkable and safe. Toronto is on our list every single time we source. It’s a natural fit; a cultural match for flying people from all over the world.”\nShe says she appreciates how responsive Tourism Toronto is, and is a fan of Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel, where she convened the semiannual meeting a few years ago. “When we did a site visit, they pulled out all the stops with a bunch of people in fox outfits (Mozilla’s logo) greeting us and specific elevators with branding. It showed that they took time to know us and our brand.”\nFor Mark, who has food allergies, negotiations about food come foremost. “We want everyone to eat something they want and something they can [eat]. Part of that is working really closely and making sure we understand the ingredients and things are properly labeled.” She offered build-your-own buffets at every meal and specified a gluten-free buffet with dedicated accoutrements.\nIsn’t this rather expensive? Not necessarily. “I go in with my budget, and I let them propose something. I find that hotels want to deliver as much as I want them to deliver, so the more info I give them up front, the better. You’d be surprised what they can come up when you allow them to be creative.”\nElsewhere in Toronto, the 65-story, 260-room former Adelaide Hotel Toronto has been up-marketed to The St. Regis Toronto. The hotel has more than 100 new suites, a new design of the common spaces and an ornate restaurant, LOUIX LOUIS, serving craft cocktails and a sumptuous take on American cuisine such as a burger topped with brie, foie gras and tomato compote while overlooking Lake Ontario from its perch on the 31st floor.\nThe CN Tower’s LookOut Level observatory has a new glass floor one level up from the original that offers a vertiginous look straight down to complement the floor-to-ceiling “Window Walls.”\nIn other venue action, the Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto recently moved into a 55,000-sf former industrial space, and Four Seasons Hotel Toronto remains a hot spot thanks to its Café Boulud and, from the same chef, a bar and charcuterie space called d|bar.\nTwo words: Aurora Sky. The 800,000-sf space is the world’s largest legal cannabis production facility — 100,000 kilos per year when fully operational, and it has recently moved into producing hemp as well. The city views this facility as part of its next wave in economic expansion.\nEdmonton EXPO Centre, with 522,000 sf, and the now-named Edmonton Convention Centre (known for decades as the Shaw Conference Centre until its naming rights ended in 2018), with 150,000 sf, are the city’s convention hubs. The city’s 12,000 rooms in 55 hotels offer plenty of options for meetings of all sizes.\nThe La Ronde restaurant on the 24th floor of the 307-room Chateau Lacombe Hotel offers attendees a revolution every 88 minutes, accompanied by views of the Saskatchewan River and, if diners choose, a Chateaubriand for Two on Wednesdays or, on Thursdays, Steak Diane and Cherries Jubilee. Planners have 14,000 sf of event space to manipulate.\nAnother venue within walking distance of the Edmonton Convention Centre, the Quarter Note Hotel Edmonton Downtown, features 150 blockable rooms for a total of 255, and nearly 9,000 sf of meeting and event space, including banquet space for 240.\nWinters see the Silver Skate Festival in Hawrelak Park. Along with the expected skating and ice sculptures, highlights of the festival include the opportunity for attendees to cook “bannock” — a Native American fry bread — over an open fire.\nBetween a four- and five-hour drive south and a little west — about 470 km — sits the venerable Fairmont Chateau Lake Louise. Built more than 100 years ago as a base for outdoor enthusiasts and skiers, the resort offers 36,000 sf of flexible meeting and event space.\n“I would live there. If it were up to me, I would hold every meeting there.” That’s how Jason Gross, assistant vice president, travel, Captive Resources feels about Vancouver, where he regularly holds meetings at Fairmont Waterfront, Fairmont Pacific Rim and Rosewood Hotel Georgia. But a group of some 350 entrepreneurs — nearly 600 attendees including spouses — who meet every January and June wanted to visit St. Thomas in the Caribbean for their January 2018 meeting. Hurricanes Irma and Maria had other plans, so as Gross scrambled for a new place, he naturally looked north. Available was the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver, a venue he’d seen years ago, and not with great excitement.\n“At this time, we had no other options. We were a little hesitant; we’re used to being on the waterfront, not the city center, so it wasn’t something that we jumped at,” Gross says. What began as a last resort soon became a favorite. “They blew it out of the park,” he says. “It was as close to a perfect meeting as we’ve ever had. We are now choosing them over the [Fairmont] Waterfront.”\nIn the planning stages, the hotel didn’t take advantage of the bind he was in, he says, and he didn’t feel put upon even though the hotel had the upper hand in negotiations. They were responsive, contracting went completely smoothly and they returned emails. It also didn’t hurt that the hotel looked completely different — “night and day” — from when he’d last seen it in 2015, thanks to a $55 million renovation of the common areas, lobbies, restaurants and the addition of 8,000 sf of meeting space in a dedicated wing, all within walking distance of the Vancouver Convention Centre.\nAnd on the attendee front, no long lines at the check-in, no complaints about the rooms — even though the rooms were of varying layouts and square footage. “They must have been that good, that clean, that fresh,” Gross speculates.\nHe organized a president’s dinner onsite in the British Columbia ballroom for 400 people using standard menus with only slight changes — “there was zero push back when we asked for surf and turf.”\nThe group also ate at the onsite restaurant, Notch8 Restaurant & Bar, which serves “very modern/slightly upscale, Canadian-geared farm to table,” including fresh Dungeness crab. “I heard the greatest compliment: ‘I would go to it even though it’s in another hotel’,” he says. He also steered attendees to Chambar, a Belgian and seafood restaurant in Downtown Vancouver; and the sustainable seafood restaurant Blue Water Cafe.\nAttendees had plenty of time to take in many of the sights of the region. They took the North Shore tour, visiting Stanley Park with its rainforest, Grouse Mountain, and Capilano Suspension Bridge Park; went on a Discover Vancouver bus tour that included the Olympic Village and some popular craft beer spots; made time for the Sea to Sky Gondola sightseeing tour; and browsed in the Museum of Anthropology and the Botanical Garden at University of British Columbia. By far the most popular outing, requiring a second round for foodies, was the tour of the Granville Island Public Market.\nNow, there’s talk of returning in 2022.\n“Vancouver as a destination; go for it and don’t look back,” Gross says. “When it comes to activities, live music and nightlife, it’s the best total package destination we go to. They really understand group business.” Most of his attendees are not from big cities, he says, so a place like Toronto strikes them as too big. But “nature in Vancouver with a strong urban core really speaks to people.”\n“Nothing says Calgary better than the Stampede,” says one planner who held his annual convention there in August 2018 with 900 franchisees and families of a U.S. auto industry company.\nThe ‘hot-diggity-dog’ excitement of the rodeo held in this city in the Mountain Time Zone infects some 1 million people every July. His group stayed in three hotels connected via walkway to the Calgary TELUS Convention Centre — the Hyatt Regency Calgary, the Fairmont Palliser and the Calgary Marriott Downtown Hotel.\nHis group does a charity 5K walk every year, working closely with Tourism Calgary to find “a safe and interesting route” that included the Calgary Tower, home of the Sky 360 Restaurant & Lounge, which revolves once per hour 510 feet up, the scenic walking path along Bow River and Canada Olympic Park. The dream of the Olympics is still alive as the city mulls bidding to host the 2026 Olympics.\nBMO Centre at Stampede Park, the larger of the city’s convention centers, offers 500,000 sf of event space. Plans in 2016 to create even more meeting space by demolishing the Stampede Corral have so far come to nothing; one of the local hockey clubs plans to play a “Corral” series in the space this year.\nAnd the $245 million, oval-shaped architectural marvel that is the Calgary Central Library opened late last year, levitating over a public plaza below and beckoning with meeting spaces and conference rooms.\b C&IT\nCorporate & Incentive Travel Magazine\nMeetings Biz Buzz e-Newsletter","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line811184"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7336953282356262,"wiki_prob":0.7336953282356262,"text":"What’s Ryan’s Story?\nRyan Thewes, a native of southern Indiana, graduated from the Ball State University College of Architecture and Planning in 2000. While in school, Ryan studied the architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, which made a strong impression on his development as a designer. He felt a kinship with Wright’s ideas on architecture, which seemed to closely resemble his own. Ryan was inspired by Wright’s bold use of geometry, veneration of nature and his ability to integrate a building with its site. Wright called his work “Organic Architecture,” which came from his belief that a building’s essence or character should derive from the design process in the same way a living organism grows from a seed–logically and naturally from the inside out.\nAfter Ryan graduated, he broadened his education of organic architecture by working for the late Don Erickson, an architect in Chicago, and Robert Green, an architect practicing in the Atlanta area; both successful former apprentices of Frank Lloyd Wright.\nIn 2002, Ryan accepted a job with architect Bart Prince in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Prince, well known for his fantastic if not surreal designs often featured in magazines such as Architectural Digest, had been an apprentice, friend and design partner of the maverick architect and educator Bruce Goff. Although Prince and Goff were both influenced by the work of Wright, they translated many of his principles in entirely new and dramatic directions. Ryan’s apprenticeship with Prince allowed him to expand his own vision of organic architecture—starting his first architectural commissions while living in New Mexico.\nIn 2006, Ryan and his wife Shay, moved to Nashville, Tennessee, where he set up his own architectural practice. Ryan continues to press the boundaries with award winning Organic and Modern structures that are unique to the area. His designs have received national as well as world wide attention and have been featured in many online and print media sources. He has also been recognized widely for his advancements in green construction and the green building industry, with his focus on building science and performance.\nRyan is a licensed architect in the states of Tennessee, Kentucky, and Georgia and is a member of the National Council of Architects Registration Board.\nNichiha Modern Home Trends February 27, 2019\nDwell – Top 5 Homes of the Week August 30, 2018\nLive Laugh Love Nashville – Ryan Thewes Architect September 16, 2017\nTweets by @ThewesArchitect\nRyan Thewes, Nashville Modern Architecture\n165 Lelawood Circle\n© Ryan Thewes Architect 2017\nsocial_twitter\tsocial_facebook\tsocial_instagram\tsocial_googleplus","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line62148"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.838699996471405,"wiki_prob":0.838699996471405,"text":"Composer: York, Barbara\nwith Piano. 1. Out and About 2. In 3. Up and Thro\nCustomize Directions\n1 x Shipped - Directions + $20.00\n1 x Downloadable - Directions + $20.00\nBarbara York (b. 1949, Winnipeg, Canada) has been working in both Canada and the U.S. for over 45 years as a concert accompanist, choral and theatrical music director and composer. Her score and lyrics for the Canadian musical Colette won a Dora Mavor Moore Award (Canada’s version of a Tony) in 1981. She has received commissions from two Canadian symphony orchestras (Mississauga and Saskatoon), the Boise State University Symphonic Winds and the Boise State Symphony Orchestra, plus numerous private groups and soloists in both the US and Canada.\nShe has presented compositions at three World Saxophone Congresses and at the 2003 International Double Reed Symposium. Her 50-minute scripted, children’s piece, A Butterfly in Time was nominated for a Canadian “Juno Award” for recordings in 2006 and is available through Amazon.com and elsewhere on the Children’s Group label. Her first tuba piece, Sea Dreams, was on the required repertoire list for the International Tuba Euphonium Association’s 2004 Young Artists Competition in Budapest. In 2006, Barbara, won the Harvey Phillips Award for Euphonium in Chamber Music at the International Tuba Euphonium Congress. Her Concerto for Tuba and Orchestra was recorded by Tim Buzbee with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra and is available internationally through Albany Records.\nAs an accompanist, Barbara plays regularly at school, university and professional concert venues throughout the United States and Canada, has recorded for CBC Radio and has premiered numerous works for other composers at International congresses. Barbara lives in Pittsburg, KS where she works part-time as a staff accompanist at Pittsburg State University.\nYork, Barbara\nPiano, Tuba\nSolo and Piano","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line418742"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.912002682685852,"wiki_prob":0.912002682685852,"text":"Kurt Schrader & Neal Dunn\nCompare the voting records of Kurt Schrader and Neal Dunn in 2017-18.\nKurt Schrader\nRepresented Oregon's 5th Congressional District. This is his 5th term in the House.\nRepresented Florida's 2nd Congressional District. This is his 1st term in the House.\nKurt Schrader and Neal Dunn are from different parties and disagreed on 61 percent of votes in the 115th Congress (2017-18).\nSept. 7, 2018 — Community Safety and Security Act\nJuly 13, 2018 — Unfunded Mandates Information and Transparency Act\nJuly 12, 2018 — Reclamation Title Transfer and Non-Federal Infrastructure Incentivization Act\nJune 8, 2018 — Making appropriations for energy and water development and related agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2019, and for other purposes\nNov. 8, 2017 — Hydropower Policy Modernization Act of 2017\nNov. 7, 2017 — Save Local Business Act\nSept. 28, 2017 — Control Unlawful Fugitive Felons Act of 2017\nJuly 19, 2017 — Promoting Interagency Coordination for Review of Natural Gas Pipelines Act\nMarch 22, 2017 — Small Business Health Fairness Act\nMarch 16, 2017 — Veterans 2nd Amendment Protection Act\nMarch 2, 2017 — Regulatory Integrity Act\nFeb. 7, 2017 — Disapproving the rule submitted by the Department of the Interior relating to Bureau of Land Management regulations that establish the procedures used to prepare, revise, or amend land use plans pursuant to the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976\nJan. 12, 2017 — SEC Regulatory Accountability Act\nJan. 11, 2017 — Regulatory Accountability Act of 2017\nDec. 21, 2018 — Alaska Remote Generator Reliability and Protection Act\nJuly 18, 2018 — Rothfus of Pennsylvania Amendment No. 85\nJuly 18, 2018 — McMorris Rodgers of Washington Amendment No. 46\nJuly 18, 2018 — Supporting the officers and personnel who carry out the important mission of the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement\nMay 18, 2018 — Banks of Indiana Amendment No. 31\nNov. 8, 2017 — Rush of Illinois Amendment No. 4\nNov. 1, 2017 — Pearce of New Mexico Amendment No. 7\nNov. 1, 2017 — O’Halleran of Arizona Amendment No. 3\nNov. 1, 2017 — Khanna of California Amendment No. 2\nNov. 1, 2017 — Providing for consideration of the bill (H.R. 2936) Resilient Federal Forests Act and for other purposes\nOct. 25, 2017 — Johnson of Georgia Part A Amendment No. 3\nSept. 13, 2017 — Polis of Colorado Amendment No. 76\nSept. 7, 2017 — Grijalva of Arizona Amendment No. 18\nSept. 7, 2017 — Austin Scott of Georgia Part B Amendment No. 92\nJuly 19, 2017 — Tsongas of Massachusetts Part A Amendment No. 1\nJuly 19, 2017 — Tsongas of Massachusetts Part B Amendment No. 2\nJune 21, 2017 — Providing for consideration of H.R. 1873, the Electricity and Reliability and Forest Protection Act; and H.R.1654, the Water Supply Permitting Coordination Act\nMay 25, 2017 — Jackson Lee of Texas Part B Amendment No. 1\nMay 24, 2017 — Huffman of California Amendment No. 2\nMay 24, 2017 — Esty of Connecticut Amendment No. 1\nFeb. 28, 2017 — Plaskett of Virgin Islands Amendment No. 4","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1477795"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5953242778778076,"wiki_prob":0.5953242778778076,"text":"26/04/2017 3:14 PM AEST | Updated 02/05/2017 2:03 PM AEST\nMen Are Killing Themselves To Be 'Real Men'\nSuicide has the highest gender disparity of any cause of death in Australia.\nBy Emily Verdouw\nIn Australia, we're at a crisis point with suicide.\nThe stigma of mental illness not only works to keep people suffering in silence but can blind us to its symptoms. Indeed, eight Australians now take their own lives every day.\nYou do not need to be diagnosed with a mental illness to come face-to-face with suicidal thoughts. A relationship breakdown, losing a job or any significant moment could suddenly have you on the edge.\nAnd while no particular part of our society is left untouched, no one person exempt from the mental and physical aches that life can bring, men are three times more likely to take their lives than women.\nOne of the central drivers is in the way we define what it means to be a man in Australia, explains Dr Michael Flood, sociologist on men and masculinities.\nSUBSCRIBE AND FOLLOW HEALTH\n\"It's broken down a little, so it's shifted in some ways in Australia and it's uneven across Australia. But there's still a powerful ideal of what it means to be a man,\" he told HuffPost Australia.\n\"It's the idea that to be a man is to be tough, to be strong, to be invulnerable, to be heterosexual, to be in control, to avoid feelings and so on.\n\"If we teach men to always be tough, to be stoic, to not show pain, then we stuff up men's physical and emotional health, we limit men's friendships with other men and women, we limit men's relationships and we limit men's participation in society.\"\nTo limit men's ability to talk about how they're feeling is to interrupt their ability to seek help when they confront mental health challenges, or when they have suicidal thoughts.\nThis idea of what it means to be a man and its interference in help seeking was a key finding in a study from BeyondBlue and the Black Dog Institute, who researched the drivers behind men's suicide attempts.\n\"All of the men we interviewed, spoke to growing up in a culture where the message was implicit that they should not be speaking about their feelings,\" Dr Andrea Fogarty, research fellow at Black Dog Institute, told HuffPost Australia.\nAnd for those who confront and overcome suicide, sharing their story of recovery can go a long way in helping others to make a different decision when it comes to those moments where everything seems to much, and they don't understand why.\nEspecially for men.\nLifeline is exploring Australia's suicide crisis with business and community leaders at the #StopSuicide Summit on May 1, in partnership with HuffPost Australia and Twitter Australia.\nIf you need help in a crisis, call Lifeline on 13 11 14. For further information about depression contact beyondblue on 1300224636 or talk to your GP, local health professional or someone you trust.\nEmily Verdouw Associate Video Editor, HuffPost Australia\nMORE: headstart health hpvideo society\nSUBSCRIBE TO THE HEALTH NEWSLETTER","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1007086"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8322240710258484,"wiki_prob":0.8322240710258484,"text":"| Publication July 19, 2017 |\nCalifornia Supreme Court Ruling on Right to Statewide Discovery in PAGA Actions Is Not as Bad for Employers as It Looks\nBy Ramon A. Miyar and Jaime D. Walter\nIn a blow to the defense bar—and, in particular, retail employers—the California Supreme Court, in Williams v. Superior Court (Marshalls of CA, LLC), S227228 (July 13, 2017), held that there is nothing unique about claims filed under the California Labor Code Private Attorneys General Act of 2004 (PAGA) that would justify restricting the scope of discovery under California law. The Supreme Court reversed a decision of the California Court of Appeal that would have precluded PAGA plaintiffs from obtaining the contact information of other potentially aggrieved employees beyond the discrete location at which they work(ed) without first making a threshold evidentiary showing that (a) they were aggrieved employees and (b) they had knowledge of systemic statewide Labor Code violations. Rather, to justify disclosure of the contact information of all employees in California, the Supreme Court found that it is sufficient for a named plaintiff to allege that the at-issue violations occurred, that plaintiff himself or herself was aggrieved, and that the defendant employer had a systemic, statewide policy that caused injury to other employees across California.\nWhile the decision deprives employers of the ability to limit the scope of discovery to some extent, the holding in Williams is actually quite narrow and should not be read as a carte blanche invitation to propound unlimited statewide discovery without any preliminary showing of good cause. The Supreme Court emphasized that its decision was limited to the particular facts before it—i.e., interrogatories seeking the contact information of similarly situated (allegedly aggrieved) nonexempt employees throughout the State of California. It specifically noted that its decision did not apply to other discovery devices—including requests for production, where, the Court noted, a statutory good-cause requirement exists.\nSeparately, the Supreme Court found that privacy objections typically will not merit altogether withholding contact information. In reaching this conclusion, the Court expressly endorsed the reasoning of Belaire-West Landscape, Inc. v. Superior Court, 149 Cal. App. 4th 554 (2007), noting that, in general, any concerns about keeping contact information private are adequately addressed through the issuance of a Belaire-West-style notice of the claims to employees, and permitting them an opportunity to opt out from disclosure of their contact information.\nThe takeaway? Absent unusual circumstances, be prepared to turn over contact information for all potentially aggrieved employees, but continue to push back with respect to any overbroad discovery requests that seek statewide information prematurely.\nProcedural History and Background\nPlaintiff Michael Williams (“Williams” or “Plaintiff”) was a retail worker for defendant Marshalls of CA, LLC (“Marshalls”). In 2013, Williams sued Marshalls under PAGA, alleging that Marshalls failed to provide Williams and other similarly situated (i.e., aggrieved) employees meal and rest periods under Labor Code sections 226.7 and 512. Slip op. at 2.\nAt an early stage of discovery, Williams propounded on Marshalls two special interrogatories seeking the name, address, telephone number, and company employment history of each nonexempt California employee during the alleged statutory period. Id. at 3. Marshalls responded that there were 16,500 employees, but it refused to provide their contact information on the grounds that the request (a) exceeded the scope of permissible discovery because it sought information beyond Williams’ particular store and job title; (b) was unduly burdensome because Williams sought private information without first showing that he himself was an aggrieved employee or that any other similarly situated employees were aggrieved as alleged in the complaint; and (c) invaded the privacy of third parties under California Constitution, article I, section 1. Id. at 3.\nWilliams moved to compel disclosure of the contact information of Marshalls’ nonexempt employees statewide. The trial court granted Williams’ motion in part and denied it in part. Id. at 3. It ordered Marshalls to provide the contact information of other employees, but only at the Costa Mesa location at which Williams worked, subject to an opt-out notice under Belaire-West. As to the remaining 130 store locations, the court denied Williams’ request for contact information but left open the door for a renewed motion after Williams sat for at least six hours of deposition and established that there was some evidentiary basis for his allegations of a statewide, unlawful practice of violating the Labor Code. Id. at 4.\nThe Court of Appeal affirmed the ruling. See Williams v. Superior Court, 187 Cal. Rptr. 3d 321 (2015). Relying on statutory language that requires that requests for production be justified by “good cause” (Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 2031.310(b)(1)), the Court of Appeal reasoned that Williams’ request for statewide contact information was premature. Id. at 325. Specifically, it found that Williams had failed to “evince any knowledge of the practices of Marshalls at other stores [or] any fact that would lead a reasonable person to believe he knows whether Marshalls has a uniform statewide policy.” Id. (emphasis added). Absent such a threshold showing, the Court of Appeal held Williams was not entitled to the contact information of employees beyond his store location. Alternatively, the Court of Appeal held that because his request for contact information implicated third-party privacy interests, Williams “must demonstrate a compelling need for discovery” by showing “the discovery sought is directly relevant and essential to the fair resolution of the underlying lawsuit.” Id. at 327.\nReversal by the Supreme Court\nThe Trial Court Abused Its Discretion by Limiting Discovery to Plaintiff’s Store Location\nThe California Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeal’s decision, holding that the trial court had abused its discretion by requiring Williams to demonstrate good cause for the production of contact information. In sweeping terms, the Court noted, “The disclosure of the names and addresses of potential witnesses is a routine and essential part of pretrial discovery. Indeed our discovery system is founded on the understanding that parties use discovery to obtain names and contact information for possible witnesses as the starting point for further investigations ... ” Slip op. at 10 (quoting Puerto v. Super. Ct., 158 Cal. App. 4th 1242, 1249-50 (2008)) (internal citations and quotation marks omitted). While recognizing that “in a particular case there may be special reason to limit or postpone a representative plaintiff’s access to contact information for those he or she seeks to represent[,] ... the default position is that such information is within the proper scope of discovery, an essential first step to prosecution of any representative action.” Slip op. at 11.\nThat the action was a PAGA action and not a putative class action did not change the outcome. According to the Court, nothing in the text of PAGA requires a particular threshold of evidentiary weightiness “beyond the requirements of nonfrivolousness generally applicable to any civil filing.” Id. at 12; see also Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 128.7. Moreover, although restricting access to confidential information could help curb abuses by plaintiffs or plaintiffs’ counsel, such protection is unnecessary. Class certification requirements exist to protect the due process rights of absent litigants because class actions result in the final adjudication of the private, personally held claims of absent plaintiffs. PAGA actions, by contrast, are public rights of action brought on behalf of the state. No such private due process concerns are at issue and, in any event, Court approval is necessary in order for any final settlement to be binding.\nMore relevant to the Supreme Court was the fact that the statutory scheme “imposes no obligation” on parties propounding interrogatories to establish good cause or show an evidentiary basis for their claims. Slip op. at 19. Although Code of Civil Procedure section 2031.310(b)(1) requires that demands for inspection, copying, or sampling be supported by good cause, no such requirement exists for interrogatories.\nThe Court rejected Marshalls’ argument that not requiring good cause would lead to unwarranted “fishing expeditions.” It noted that the California Legislature was aware of such a risk when it granted a broad right to discovery and that it “granted such a right anyway, comfortable with the conclusion that ‘[m]utual knowledge of all the relevant facts gathered by both parties is essential to proper litigation.’” Id. at 20.\nAccording to the Court, that the eventual proper scope of Williams’ representative action was uncertain did not render his statewide request for contact information premature. “[A] party may proceed with interrogatories ... precisely in order to ascertain that scope.” Id. at 20 (citing Union Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Super. Ct., 80 Cal. App. 3d 1, 9-12 (1978)).\nThis was not to say that Marshalls could not have delayed or modified the scope of discovery had it adduced evidence of the administrative burden of producing this information, or made a proper, timely motion to modify the timing and sequence of discovery. Crucially, the Court noted that the burden was on Marshalls to support its “undue burden” objection with evidence of the amount of work that would be required to respond. Id. at 18. The Court found that Marshalls had failed to produce any evidence showing that the production of contact information on a statewide basis would be burdensome and instead chose to rely solely on legal arguments as to the scope of discovery. The Supreme Court also noted that Marshalls failed to file a motion pursuant to Code of Civil Procedure section 2019.020, to modify/set a special sequence or timing for discovery, and that it therefore had no occasion to determine whether the production of statewide contact information might have been properly delayed on that basis. Id. at 19-20.\nA Belaire-West-Style Opt-Out Notice Is Sufficient to Protect the Privacy Interests of Non-Party Employees\nThe Supreme Court also reversed the alternative basis for the Court of Appeal’s ruling—i.e., Marshalls’ objection that the disclosure of contact information would invade the privacy rights of the third-party employees under Article I, section 1 of the California Constitution. In weighing the privacy rights of employees, the Court found that the appropriate balancing test to employ is that under Hill v. National Collegiate Athletic Ass’n, 7 Cal. 4th 1, 35 (1994) and Pioneer Electronics (USA), Inc. v. Super. Ct., 40 Cal. 4th 360, 370-74 (2007). Under the test established by those cases, the party asserting a privacy right must establish (a) a legally protected privacy interest, (b) an objectively reasonable expectation of privacy in the given circumstances, and (c) a threatened intrusion of that interest that is serious. Id. at 22. Assuming these threshold requirements are met, the party seeking the information must establish countervailing interests served by disclosure sufficient to overcome the proffered privacy interest. The court must then balance the competing considerations.1\nIn the context of the contact information of other potentially aggrieved employees in a wage-and-hour representative action, the Court found that the employees had a legally cognizable privacy interest, but that the final two factors—i.e., a reasonable expectation of privacy and a serious intrusion—were not satisfied. The Court expressly endorsed the Belaire-West reasoning, holding that the balancing of interests falls in favor of disclosure of the contact information of putative class members in wage-and-hour class and representative actions. The issuance of a Belaire-West-style notice, which provided notice of the nature of the claims at issue and an opportunity for employees to opt out of the disclosure of their contact information, was sufficient to protect the privacy interest in the employees’ contact information. Id. at 27-32.\nPrior to Williams, the restriction of the scope of pre-certification discovery to the specific location at which the named plaintiff worked was a key device in limiting discovery costs and burdens at the early stages of a class action. The Supreme Court’s reasoning in Williams will make it significantly more difficult for employers to avoid disclosure of the names and contact information of all putative class members/potentially aggrieved employees in wage-and-hour class actions/representative PAGA actions.\nThat said, it is critical to view the decision as limited to the record that was before the Court. The decision applied only to interrogatories seeking contact information and did not foreclose the possibility, based on appropriate facts, of postponing the disclosure of contact information. It acknowledged, moreover, that requests for production, which were not at issue in Williams, must be supported by good cause. It stands to reason, therefore, that at an early stage of discovery, legitimate bases exist for limiting the scope of pre-certification document productions to the location at which a plaintiff works.\nIn addition, it bears noting that in opposing Williams’ motion to compel, Marshalls failed to provide specific evidence supporting the administrative burden and cost it would be under to produce statewide contact information for 16,500 employees. Likewise, the Court specifically noted that Marshalls had failed to bring a motion under Code of Civil Procedure section 2019.020 for the Court to set a specific sequence and timing for discovery.\nAccordingly, while Williams creates a less hospitable discovery framework for employers at the early stages of discovery, it is not a fundamental re-ordering of discovery procedures as we know them. Employers can still avail themselves of a full array of tools to oppose overbroad requests and manage the timing and scope of pre-certification discovery.\n1 The Supreme Court found that the Court of Appeals erred in requiring Williams to show a “compelling interest” sufficient to justify disclosure of contact information. It noted that a compelling interest is necessary where the interest at issue is one fundamental to personal autonomy; otherwise, where a lesser interest is at stake, the Hill and Pioneer Electronics framework applies, “with the strength of the countervailing interest sufficient to warrant disclosure of private information varying according to the strength of the privacy interest itself, the seriousness of the invasion, and the availability of alternatives and protective measures.” Slip op. at 28.\nWage and Hour Class Actions","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1526275"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9784782528877258,"wiki_prob":0.9784782528877258,"text":"The day’s top national and international news\nDoctors Find Brain Abnormalities in Patients of Mysterious Cuba Embassy Attacks\nPhysicians, FBI investigators and U.S. intelligence agencies have spent months trying to piece together the puzzle in Havana, where the U.S. says 24 U.S. government officials and spouses fell ill starting last year in homes and later in some hotels\nBy Josh Lederman\nPublished Dec 6, 2017 at 3:25 AM | Updated at 8:23 AM PST on Dec 6, 2017\nThe Sound Heard By Americans in Cuba Attacks\n//www.nbclosangeles.com/multimedia/The-Sound-Heard-by-Americans-in-Cuba-Attacks-450646943.html\nThe Associated Press has obtained a recording of what some U.S. embassy workers heard in Havana as they were attacked by what investigators initially believed was a sonic weapon. (Published Thursday, Oct. 12, 2017)\nDoctors treating the U.S. embassy victims of suspected attacks in Cuba have discovered brain abnormalities as they search for clues to explain hearing, vision, balance and memory damage, The Associated Press has learned.\nIt's the most specific finding to date about physical damage, showing that whatever it was that harmed the Americans, it led to perceptible changes in their brains. The finding is also one of several factors fueling growing skepticism that some kind of sonic weapon was involved.\nMedical testing has revealed the embassy workers developed changes to the white matter tracts that let different parts of the brain communicate, several U.S. officials said, describing a growing consensus held by university and government physicians researching the attacks. White matter acts like information highways between brain cells.\nLoud, mysterious sounds followed by hearing loss and ear-ringing had led investigators to suspect \"sonic attacks.\" But officials are now carefully avoiding that term. The sounds may have been the byproduct of something else that caused damage, said three U.S. officials briefed on the investigation. They weren't authorized to discuss it publicly and demanded anonymity.\nUS Expels 15 Diplomats Following Havana Attacks\nThe United States expelled 15 of Cuba's diplomats Tuesday to protest its failure to protect Americans from unexplained attacks in Havana.\n(Published Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2017)\nPhysicians, FBI investigators and U.S. intelligence agencies have spent months trying to piece together the puzzle in Havana, where the U.S. says 24 U.S. government officials and spouses fell ill starting last year in homes and later in some hotels. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Wednesday he's \"convinced these were targeted attacks,\" but the U.S. doesn't know who's behind them. A few Canadian Embassy staffers also got sick.\nDoctors still don't know how victims ended up with the white matter changes, nor how exactly those changes might relate to their symptoms. U.S. officials wouldn't say whether the changes were found in all 24 patients.\nBut acoustic waves have never been shown to alter the brain's white matter tracts, said Elisa Konofagou, a biomedical engineering professor at Columbia University who is not involved in the government's investigation.\nJudges to Decide on Bond Hearings for R. Kelly Indictments\n\"I would be very surprised,\" Konofagou said, adding that ultrasound in the brain is used frequently in modern medicine. \"We never see white matter tract problems.\"\nCuba has adamantly denied involvement, and calls the Trump administration's claims that U.S. workers were attacked \"deliberate lies.\" The new medical details may help the U.S. counter Havana's complaint that Washington hasn't presented any evidence.\nTillerson said the U.S. had shared some information with Havana, but wouldn't disclose details that would violate privacy or help a perpetrator learn how effective the attacks were.\nTillerson: Cuba Responsible for Acoustic Attack Probe\nSecretary of State Rex Tillerson said the White House holds Cuba responsible for finding out who carried out the accoustic attack on American personnel in Havana.\n(Published Friday, Aug. 11, 2017)\n\"What we've said to the Cubans is: Small island. You've got a sophisticated intelligence apparatus. You probably know who's doing it. You can stop it,\" Tillerson said. \"It's as simple as that.\"\nThe case has plunged the U.S. medical community into uncharted territory. Physicians are treating the symptoms like a new, never-seen-before illness. After extensive testing and trial therapies, they're developing the first protocols to screen cases and identify the best treatments — even as the FBI investigation struggles to identify a culprit, method and motive.\nDoctors treating the victims wouldn't speak to the AP, yet their findings are expected to be discussed in an article being submitted to the Journal of the American Medical Association, U.S. officials said. Physicians at the University of Miami and the University of Pennsylvania who have treated the Cuba victims are writing it, with input from the State Department's medical unit and other government doctors.\nFeds: Fake Passport, Diamonds Found in Epstein's NYC Safe\nBut the article won't speculate about what technology might have harmed the workers or who would have wanted to target Americans in Cuba. If investigators are any closer to solving those questions, their findings won't be made public.\nThe AP first reported in August that U.S. workers reported sounds audible in parts of rooms but inaudible just a few feet away — unlike normal sound, which disperses in all directions. Doctors have now come up with a term for such incidents: \"directional acoustic phenomena.\"\nMost patients have fully recovered, some after rehabilitation and other treatment, officials said. Many are back at work. About one-quarter had symptoms that persisted for long periods or remain to this day.\nEric Kayne/AP Images for Humane Society of the United States\nEarlier this year, the U.S. said doctors found patients had suffered concussions, known as mild traumatic brain injury, but were uncertain beyond that what had happened in their brains. Concussions are often diagnosed based solely on symptoms.\nStudies have found both concussions and white matter damage in Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans who survived explosions yet had no other physical damage. But those injuries were attributed mostly to shock waves from explosions. No Havana patients reported explosions or blows to the head.\nOutside medical experts said that when the sample of patients is so small, it's difficult to establish cause and effect.\n\"The thing you have to wonder anytime you see something on a scan: Is it due to the episode in question, or was it something pre-existing and unrelated to what happened?\" said Dr. Gerard Gianoli, an ear and brain specialist in Louisiana.\nAs Cuba works to limit damage to its reputation and economy, its government has produced TV specials and an online summit about its own investigation. Cuba's experts have concluded that the Americans' allegations are scientifically impossible.\nThe Cubans have urged the U.S. to release information about what it's found. FBI investigators have spent months comparing cases to pinpoint what factors overlap.\nU.S. officials told the AP that investigators have now determined:\nThe most frequently reported sound patients heard was a high-pitched chirp or grating metal. Fewer recalled a low-pitched noise, like a hum.\nSome were asleep and awakened by the sound, even as others sleeping in the same bed or room heard nothing.\nVibrations sometimes accompanied the sound. Victims told investigators these felt similar to the rapid flutter of air when windows of a car are partially rolled down.\nThose worst off knew right away something was affecting their bodies. Some developed visual symptoms within 24 hours, including trouble focusing on a computer screen.\nThe U.S. has not identified any specific precautions it believes can mitigate the risk for diplomats in Havana, three officials said, although an attack hasn't been reported since late August. Since the Americans started falling ill last year, the State Department has adopted a new protocol for workers before they go to Cuba that includes bloodwork and other \"baseline\" tests. If they later show symptoms, doctors can retest and compare.\nBreakingMan Gets 2nd Life Sentence, 419 Years for C'ville Attack\nDoctors still don't know the long-term medical consequences and expect that epidemiologists, who track disease patterns in populations, will monitor the 24 Americans for life. Consultations with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are underway.\nAP Medical Writer Lauran Neergaard contributed to this report.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line188215"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6399964690208435,"wiki_prob":0.3600035309791565,"text":"Who is Grace Cirocco?\nGrace Cirocco is a life and marriage coach, a transformational retreat facilitator and the author of the Harper Collins best-selling classic, Take the Step, the Bridge Will be There available in several languages around the world. Grace’s mission is to empower, inspire and heal and she does so with great gusto and charm whether it’s through her writings or at one of her experiential workshops. Grace’s warmth and enchanting style catalyzes people into meaningful action beckoning them to cross the river of change. Grace’s message is to know thyself and live authentically and courageously; to heal the dark side and reach for the luminous places not only within ourselves, but in one another.\nAt GRACE CIROCCO INC., she offers educational and therapeutic workshops and retreats as well as customized seminars for the private and public sector. Grace has a wealth of experience in designing and teaching quality training programs. She has delivered her presentations to tens of thousands of people on three continents. She works with Wellness committees and organizational leaders to create out-of-the-box customized presentations. Her philosophy that the heart must be engaged in what we do coupled with research that the brain is plastic allows her to gently nudge people towards greater personal responsibility, meaning, and empowerment. Grace’s style is direct but loving, charismatic yet practical, wise but also entertaining and she has received numerous standing ovations in her twenty-five year speaking career. Her recent clients include Johnson & Johnson, Ontario Public Health, and McMaster University. For a complete list of clients click here. Check out her Keynotes.\nGrace is LIFE COACH specializing in Relationship Intervention. Her Couples Retreat held in her home town of Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario attracts couples from all over North America. It has been so successful that Grace has gained a wide reputation with marriage therapists in Canada and the US who regularly refer their most “difficult cases” to Grace. Her overwhelming success with couples has to do with a unique healing process that she has pioneered (Emotional Brain Therapy, EBT™), which helps couples heal from trauma and negative emotions stuck in the emotional part of the brain. Grace has been practising this unique form of Emotions-focused therapy long before university researchers discovered that traditional talk therapy is not effective when working with couples. In the past eleven years, over 1200 couples have graduated from Grace’s Relationship Renewal Retreat and hundreds of couples who came to her in absolute crisis today credit Grace for “saving their marriage”.\nGrace is impatient for change. Her speciality is transformation. Using an integrated approach with traditional and non traditional therapies, Grace has helped transform the lives of thousands of men and women at her Intensive Retreats. Her programs for men and women are simply “life changing” and many organizations have paid for their staff to attend. Even the Government of Canada has sent public servants who have been on short term disability (stress leave) to Grace’s intensives with outstanding results. Just read some of Grace’s amazing testimonials to see the difference she has made in the lives of so many men and women!\nEducation & Affiliations: Grace holds a Bachelor of Arts (Honours) degree in Philosophy from Queen’s University at Kingston (Canada) and has completed graduate studies in Ethics and Philosophy at the University of Western Ontario. Grace has studied Psychology, Neuroscience and Neuroplasticity as well as a wide variety of traditional and holistic healing modalities including Cognitive Therapy, Neuro-Linguistic-Programming, Mindfulness, Energy Medicine and Energy Psychology including EFT (Tapping). Some of the people Grace has learned from are Psych-K Founder Robert Williams, EFT Founder, Gary Craig, Dr. Norman Doidge, Dr. Bruce Lipton, Donna Eden, and David Feinstein. Grace is a graduate of the Certified Coach Intensive with CoachVille and is a member of the International Coaching Federation. Grace is a also a member of the Association for Comprehensive Energy Psychology and the Canadian Association for Integrative and Energy Therapies.\nGrace’s most recent project is a Wellness Center in downtown St. Catharines which offers leading edge technology to help people live with less pain and more vitality and health.\nSee Grace on Video\nInterview with Grace\nGrace is Loved By Women’s Groups: Many women’s organizations have invited Grace to deliver her empowering keynotes and workshops at conferences, educational events or special celebrations in Canada and the United States. Some of these organizations include Athena International, Georgian Court University, Delta Kappa Gamma International, National Charity League,The Rosie Fund Board, Women in Action of Washington, Association of Administrative Assistants, Women in Motion, Women Entrepreneurs of Canada, Women with Vision, Canadian Women’s Foundation, Canadian Association of Women Executives, Company of Women and Administrative Professionals Conference and many more.\nGrace is the only Canadian author invited to contribute an essay in the best selling book, If Women Ruled the World supported and endorsed by Marie C. Wilson of the White House Project. All profits from the sale of this book go to help women’s charities. Grace is a mentor to her own daughter and women of all ages and sits on the board of several women’s organizations. Twelve years ago, Grace founded the “Goddess Club”, a monthly women’s circle focusing on emotional and spiritual growth which has become a beautiful and loving community of women supporting women. Regulars will drive hundreds of miles each month to attend Grace’s monthly workshops.\nGrace has authored a number of CD programs including: Journey to the Self: Finding Meaning in a World of Change, Cultivating Gratitude, a meditation program to alleviate stress and negativity as well as Connecting with Your Spiritual Guide.\nMedia Attention: Grace has been interviewed on national radio and television talk shows, including CBC TV, CBC Radio, CTV, City TV, CHCH TV, TLN, CFRB Radio 1010 and many private radio stations across Canada and the United States about her best selling book and her work. Grace has been a columnist for Business Woman Canada, and HEART: Women’s Business Journal, as well as various trade journals. Grace’s articles and ideas have appeared in national newspapers, magazines and many internet newsletters and sites.\nGrace is a former faculty member with the Canadian Management Centre having participated in their Management and Leadership Courses as well as designing training courses and keynotes for their corporate clientele. Grace started her speaking career by working as an International Seminar Leader with Fred Pryor Resources, the world’s largest one-day seminar company. She delivered hundreds of seminars to business professionals in Canada, the U.S., Australia, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. Grace was well loved by her attendees boasting one of the highest “satisfied customers” ratings in the company.\nFormer Life: Grace Cirocco is a former broadcast journalist with CBC Radio having worked as a reporter, editor and producer for CBC National News and Current Affairs programming in Toronto and Calgary. In 1988 she received an award of distinction in broadcasting for her coverage of the Calgary Winter Olympics. She also worked in private radio in San Diego, California where she produced a three-hour business and financial show whose listening market was estimated at 20 million people. She brought the show, “Money Matters” from #10 in the ratings to #1 in just a few months.\nPersonal: Grace has been married to her best friend for over 30 years, and together they have raised a son and a daughter. She lives in her beloved Niagara peninsula and sees clients in her downtown St. Catharines, ON office.\nGrace is not associated with any speakers bureaus. To book her for an event, call her directly at 905-688-0868 or email her.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1278133"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5968223214149475,"wiki_prob":0.5968223214149475,"text":"Journalism and Mass Communication Faculty HandbookAll www.kent.edu\nJournalism and Mass Communication Faculty Handbook\nMatters of School Governance and Related Procedures\nClose Matters of School Governance and Related Procedures Overview\nRevision of the Handbook\nFaculty Instructional, Professional and Ethical Responsibilities\nFaculty Workload\nRTP Criteria and the Criteria and Processes Relating to Other Faculty Personnel Actions\nClose RTP Criteria and the Criteria and Processes Relating to Other Faculty Personnel Actions Overview\nReappointment, Tenure, Promotion for Tenure-Track and Full Time Non-Tenure Track Faculty\nCriteria, Performance Expectations and School Procedures Relating to Merit Awards\nClose Criteria, Performance Expectations and School Procedures Relating to Merit Awards Overview\nOther School Guidelines\nClose Other School Guidelines Overview\nStructure and Organization of the School\nClose Appendix Overview\nReappointment for Tenure-Track Faculty\nThe policies and procedures for reappointment are included in the University Policy Register 6-16 and Addendum C of the Tenure-Track Collective Bargaining Agreement (TT CBA). Each academic year, reappointment guidelines for faculty are distributed by the Office of the Provost. These guidelines will be given to all tenure-track faculty and Ad Hoc Committee members. Tenure-track faculty members are reviewed by the Department’s Ad Hoc Reappointment Committee.\nFor tenure-track faculty, reappointment is contingent upon demonstration of appropriate progress toward the requirements for tenure. Performance expectations develop from initial letters of appointment, any additional written initial expectations and the Director’s annual reappointment letters. These expectations of individual faculty members may differ significantly, given each faculty member’s experience, background and assignments. In annual reappointment materials, the faculty member must establish and articulate both short- and long-term goals, then document progress toward meeting those goals. Specific concerns expressed by the Ad Hoc Reappointment Committee members and/or the Director in annual reappointment reviews during the probationary period must be addressed by the faculty member in subsequent reappointment reviews.\nAccording to the University Policy Register (6-14) and Addendum B of the TT CBA assistant professors following the traditional tenure clock are granted or denied tenure by March 15 of their sixth year. However, if an assistant professor carries some years of credit toward tenure, he or she could be eligible earlier. The maximum credit toward tenure is typically two years, but “in extraordinary circumstances” additional credit may be granted at the time of appointment after consultation with the Faculty Advisory Committee. Faculty members appointed as either associate professors or professors have a three-year probationary period before they are eligible to apply for tenure.\nFor faculty members following the traditional tenure clock for Assistant Professors, the review after completion of three (3) full years in the probationary period at Kent State University is particularly critical. Upon completion of the third year of the probationary period, faculty reviewing a candidate for reappointment should consider the record of the candidate’s achievements to date. This record should be considered a predictor of future success. The hallmark of a successful candidate is compelling evidence of positive development in teaching, scholarly/creative activity, and service, per the criteria detailed in this section of the Handbook.\nIf concerns about a faculty member’s performance are raised during the reappointment process, the Ad Hoc Reappointment Committee and the Director shall provide detailed, prescriptive comments to serve as constructive feedback. If such concerns arise during a review that occurs after completion of three (3) full years in the probationary period, the Director and the candidate’s mentor, in consultation with the FAC, will advise and work with the candidate on a suitable, positive plan for realignment with the School’s tenure and promotion expectations; however, the candidate is solely responsible for her/his success in implementing this plan. Failure to meet performance expectations or failure to satisfactorily address concerns expressed by the Ad Hoc Reappointment Committee or by the Director may result in a negative reappointment recommendation to the Dean.\nTolling Policy\nFrom time to time, personal and/or family circumstances may arise that require a probationary faculty member to request that her/his probationary period be extended. Upon request, a faculty member may be granted an extension of the probationary period, which has been traditionally called “tolling” or “stopping the tenure clock.” The University policy and procedures governing modification of the faculty probationary period are included in the University Policy Register. (See University Policy Register 6-13)\nTenure and Promotion for Tenure-Track Faculty\nThe policies and procedures for tenure and promotion are included in the University Policy Register 6-14 and 6-15 and in Addenda A and B of the TT CBA. Each academic year, tenure and promotion guidelines for Kent and Regional Campus faculty are distributed by the Office of the Provost. These guidelines will be given to all tenure-track faculty and Ad Hoc Committee members.\nTenure and promotion are separate decisions. The awarding of tenure must be based on convincing, documented evidence that the faculty member has achieved:\n1. a strong record of effective instruction and curricular engagement\n2. a significant body of scholarly/creative work that has undergone meaningful peer review and that has had a demonstrable impact on her/his discipline and profession, meeting or exceeding expectations as defined in initial appointment letters and other written initial expectations and in annual reappointment letters (See below for further detail.)\n3. a track record of effective service relevant to the mission of the School and to the mission of the University\nTenure considerations may include evaluation of accomplishments prior to arrival at Kent State University, but primary emphasis should be on work conducted while on the tenure track. Such considerations also may include grant proposals submitted but not funded, proposals pending, creative works and papers “in review” or papers “in press,” graduate students currently advised, and any other materials that may reflect on the candidate’s potential for a long-term successful career. The tenure decision is based on all of the evidence available to determine the candidate’s potential to pursue a productive career.\nPromotion, on the other hand, is based solely on a candidate’s accomplishments completed during the review period.\nCandidates for promotion to Associate Professor must meet all the qualifications for tenure. They must also show potential for a career likely to achieve national/international recognition, as evidenced by the body of work presented in the promotion file.\nPromotion to Professor recognizes the highest level of university achievement and national/ international prominence. Evidence for this prominence includes:\n1. sustained excellence in teaching and service;\n2. a record of scholarly/creative activity in highly significant venues that has undergone meaningful peer review and that has had a demonstrable and sustained impact on the candidate’s discipline and profession;\n3. a record of substantial prominence in and impact on the field.\nExternal funding for scholarly/creative activity or programmatic support also provides strong evidence of prominence and external validation of excellence. Many factors and criteria, both subjective and objective, are considered in recommending a faculty member for tenure and advancement in academic rank. The overall evaluation of a candidate for tenure and promotion shall include consideration of the faculty member’s personal integrity and professional behavior, as recognized by the University community. A sound ethical approach to all aspects of teaching, research, publication, and the academic profession are expected of all who seek tenure and promotion in the School.\nCriteria for Tenure and Promotion for Tenure-track Faculty\nThe School of Journalism and Mass Communication hires tenure-track faculty at the assistant professor level, generally with a terminal degree of either a Ph.D., J.D., or a M.F.A.; or a master’s degree with significant professional experience, as determined by the search committee in consultation with the Director and Dean.\nFaculty are expected to develop a strong track record in the classroom, as exhibited by responsiveness to teaching evaluations from professional colleagues and teaching peers, as well as students, professional improvement and industry engagement as appropriate. Criteria for the evaluation of teaching are listed in Table 1 in the Appendix to this Section of the Handbook. Course revision is defined as making a substantial modification to a course, such as addition of distance learning options or multi-media instruction, formally proposing to change course content/format, etc. Other information, such as written comments from students, colleagues within and beyond the School, College, or University administrators shall be considered when available. Peer reviews and summaries of Student Surveys of Instruction (including all student comments) must be submitted as part of a candidate’s file for reappointment, tenure and promotion. Copies of representative syllabi, examinations, and other relevant teaching material also should be available for review.\nScholarly/Creative Work\nThe School’s tenured and tenure-track faculty are expected to be engaged in endeavors that support the School’s mission. It is expected that these activities will lead to presentation and then to publication in quality scholarly or professional venues. Evaluation criteria are listed in Table 2 in the Appendix to this Section of the Handbook.\nThe quality of the work and the venues are important components in tenure and promotion decisions. Tenure is granted with the expectation that the faculty member will continue to be engaged at the same or a higher level of quality.\nGiven the School’s professional mission, published journalism of the highest quality qualifies as published research, using standards defined in more detail below.\nPublication, for purposes of this document, is used in the broadest sense to include multiplatform distribution to defined audiences in print, web, audio, video, or mobile formats. Considering the proliferation of open-access information and audience-generated content, we anticipate that scholarly/creative activity may be published and evaluated in new ways, such as online or in other digital venues. It is up to the tenure or promotion applicant to assess and document how his or her work is significant in leading professional change. Such documentation must include meaningful peer review conducted in a detached and dispassionate manner.\nGenerally, the School expects tenure-track faculty to build a body of scholarly, journalistic, and/or creative work that:\na. shows substantial and consistent engagement by exhibiting focused growth that is documented by professional evaluations or assessments.\nb. extends to publication or presentation in appropriate professional or academic venues as defined below.\nc. engages peer or juried review or other evidence of detached, dispassionate vetting by peers or recognized experts as defined below.\nd. creates a positive recognition and reputation for those scholarly and creative endeavors, leading in time to national recognition measured by citations or letters of recognition, invitations to present or publish, awards and honors, or other documented means.\ne. aids communities and media organizations in better understanding their roles in a democratic society and/or advances the body of knowledge about the processes, economics, uses, effects, freedoms, and responsibilities of professionals and audiences of journalism and mass communication. The School recognizes the importance of faculty working in and with emerging media and technologies. Such work is essential to the future of media-related businesses and organizations. We also encourage faculty to build partnerships locally, regionally, and nationally.\nThe School defines service as administrative service within the university, professional service through academic and professional associations and provision of professional expertise to public and private entities beyond the university.\nService activity is expected and required; however, service of any magnitude cannot be considered more important than a candidate’s teaching and scholarly/creative responsibilities. Nonetheless, a faculty member’s willingness to make contributions to the overall progress of the School is an important measure of the faculty member’s fitness for tenure or promotion.\nContributions as a University citizen include service to the School, the College, and the University as outlined in Table 3. The merits of University service should be evaluated as to (1) whether or not the candidate chaired the committee listed and (2) the importance of the service to the mission of the unit served. Other components of citizenship include active participation in School events, such as faculty- undergraduate- and graduate-student recruitment, seminars, and department meetings, etc.\nAdditional components of service include public outreach and professional or academic service. These may differ in their importance among faculty members, depending on each faculty member’s duties and responsibilities within the School.\nExpectations in service for promotion to Professor are higher than for promotion to Associate Professor.\nNote on external funding and collaboration\nThe School recognizes and supports the value of teaching, scholarly/creative, or service endeavors that generate external funding, particularly when the work is aligned with the goals and missions of the School, College, University, or our professions. Similarly, collaboration among colleagues within the School, College, and University and other universities is encouraged.\nEvaluation tables and documentation examples\nThe text in this section and the tables in the Appendix to this section are designed to facilitate assessing performance of candidates being evaluated for tenure and promotion. During the probationary period, these tools should be used for developmental assistance and projection of future success in achieving tenure and promotion and for determining the faculty member’s qualification for reappointment.\nTables 1, 2, and 3 in the Appendix provide worksheets for use in the evaluation of candidates. For promotion from Assistant to Associate Professor, the faculty member must meet the criteria for at least a “very good” evaluation in scholarly/creative activity and at least a “very good” evaluation in teaching. University citizenship must at least meet the minimum School criteria as outlined in Table 3. These same categories and assessment tools apply for tenure decisions.\nA candidate for promotion to Professor must meet the criteria for an “excellent” evaluation in either scholarly/creative activity or teaching and no less than “very good” in the other category. Service must exceed the minimum School criteria. A candidate for promotion to Professor may not have equal activity in scholarship, teaching and service, as he/she becomes more specialized.\nGiven the wide range of venues in which scholarly/creative work may be published or presented, faculty are expected to provide clear documentation regarding publication or presentation of scholarly/creative work. Such documentation should include an assessment of its quality, impact or contribution to the body of professional or scholarly knowledge.\nConference papers and presentations, for example, generally do not carry equal weight with published articles or creative work. Original scholarship or journalism based on original reporting or research, for example, generally would be weighted more heavily than analysis or review of another’s work. In collaborations, the contributions of each author should be clear.\nAssessment may be through traditional scholarly peer-review processes, demonstrated by client or external colleague evaluation, or adjudication (e.g., critical reviews, letters from acknowledged experts). Examples of acceptable assessment are provided below. Reviews by close colleagues and collaborators do not carry the same weight as dispassionate reviews by more objective, detached, external colleagues.\nFor peer-reviewed articles, faculty are expected to document:\nquality of the publication\nimpact of the article\nFor peer-reviewed paper sessions, faculty are expected to document:\nsignificance of the organization\nindication of how paper or presentation may advance to publication\nFor invited papers or presentations, faculty are expected to document:\nthe significance of the organization\nsignificance of the presentation, cited in a letter from the person who extended the invitation\naudience for the paper or presentation\nBooks also represent scholarly/creative activity. The relative weight depends on such factors as the original research behind the text, the importance of the book to the field and the candidate’s role as single author, multiple author or editor. Faculty are expected to document:\ncopies sold\nreviews or other evaluations\nFor articles in professional media, faculty are expected to document:\nthe circulation of the publication\ndescription of audience\nsignificance of the article, cited in a letter from the supervising editor, when available\nother external validation such as awards or contests\ncitations, references\ndescription of the reporting, research and/or creative process used to produce the article\nFor articles and blogs online, faculty are expected to document:\nunique visitors or other accepted measures\nsignificance of the organization that owns the web site\nsignificance of the work, cited in a letter from the supervising editor, critical reviews or other evidence or in the case of a blog, qualified outside resources\nother documented citations\nFor video/broadcast work in professional reporting or production, faculty are expected to document:\nselection for distribution by a television station, network or online\nsignificance of the work, cited in a letter from the supervising producer, when available\nassessment through professional or academic awards competitions\nreviews from relevant professional or academic experts.\nIn addition to reporting/writing/producing, the practice of journalism encompasses such creative activities as editing, photography, and design for print and digital media. These are to be vetted in a similar fashion to the three preceding examples.\nThe practice of public relations, on behalf of businesses and/or nonprofit organizations, encompasses:\nConducting formal communication audits and/or research initiatives.\nDeveloping strategic public relations campaigns or programs that produce measurable results.\nDeveloping and executing substantial public relations initiatives such as websites, social-media campaigns, large-scale events, etc.\nProviding senior-level counsel leading to the adoption of more effective and ethical public relations practices.\nAlthough the School puts the highest value on original research and creative activity, the following also are valued as part of a candidate’s portfolio: book reviews, grant proposals, as well as reviewing manuscripts and programs.\nFaculty also may apply their expertise as advisers or consultants in significant problem-solving activities for an organization and may create workshops and seminars for professional audiences. Candidates will be expected to provide evaluation and impact of their work.\nBecause of the heavy teaching responsibilities for tenure-track faculty members at the regional campuses, expectations for scholarly and creative activity will not be as great as they are for faculty on the Kent campus.\nNegative Decisions on Reappointment, Tenure and Promotion\nIn the event of negative decisions on reappointment, tenure or promotion, the School of Journalism and Mass Communication will follow the procedures described in the TT CBA and the University Policy Register.\nFull Time Non-Tenure Track Appoint, Renewal and Promotion\nAppointment and Renewal of Full Time Non-Tenure Track Faculty\nAssignments for full time non-tenure track (FTNTT) faculty vary widely. Terms for renewal are explained in Article X of the Collective Bargaining Agreement for Full Time Non-Tenure Track Faculty (FTNTT CBA). Criteria are developed by the academic units. Documentation guidelines for FTNTT Full Performance Reviews are provided in the FTNTT CBA, Addendum B. For regular FTNTT faculty, formal third-year reviews are required. For FTNTT faculty in JMC, evaluation should follow standards for teaching and service in Tables 4 and 5. Evaluation criteria for professional development are outlined in the next section and standards are noted in Table 6. For FTNTT faculty with duties other than teaching, evaluation appropriate for their assigned duties will be developed.\nPromotion of Full Time Non-Tenure Track Faculty\nFaculty may apply for promotion in the third year of a cycle of three one-year appointments.\nThere are six academic ranks for FTNTT faculty members: Lecturer, Associate Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Assistant Professor, Associate Professor and Professor. Criteria for promotion are set forth in Addendum C of the FTNTT CBA. Candidates are eligible for promotion to Associate Lecturer or Associate Professor after completing five consecutive years as an FTNTT and successfully passing one three-year performance review. They are eligible for promotion to Senior Lecturer or Professor after five full years in rank as an Associate Lecturer/Associate Professor. They will be assessed on their performance of assigned duties, professional development and university citizenship. See the FTNTT CBA, Addendum C, Section 1, Paragraph F for a more complete statement of criteria.\nAccording to the FTNTT CBA, evidence of “significant and continuous accomplishments in Performance, Professional Development, and Professional and Creative Activity” is required for promotion. Contributions in university citizenship will help the candidate’s file and may be required. The Provost ultimately makes promotion decisions after receiving recommendations from the college Dean. The Dean is advised by the Non-Tenure Track Promotion Advisory Board, whose members review the candidates’ files.\nCriteria for Promotion of Full Time Non-Tenure Track Faculty\nThe School of Journalism and Mass Communication hires most full time non-tenure track faculty at the assistant professor level, generally with a terminal degree of either a Ph.D., J.D., M.F.A., or a master’s degree with significant professional experience, as determined by the search committee in consultation with the Director and Dean.\nFull time non-tenure track faculty generally teach more than tenure-track faculty, and they are evaluated primarily on their track record in the classroom, as exhibited by responsiveness to teaching evaluations from professional colleagues and teaching peers, as well as students, professional improvement, and industry engagement as appropriate. This rigorous review is detailed in Table 4 of the Appendix to this Section of the Handbook.\nFull time non-tenure track faculty in JMC who have service obligations specified on their workload statements or letters of appointment are expected to provide service to the school. A faculty member’s willingness to make contributions to the overall progress of the School is an important measure of the faculty member’s fitness for promotion.\nContributions as a University citizen include service to the School, the College, and the University as outlined in Table 5. The merits of University service should be evaluated as to (1) whether or not the candidate chaired the committee listed and (2) the importance of the service to the mission of the unit served. Other components of citizenship include active participation in School events, such as faculty- undergraduate- and graduate-student recruitment, seminars and department meetings, etc.\nExpectations in service for promotion to Senior Lecturer/Professor are higher than for promotion to Associate Lecturer/Associate Professor. The former requires that the candidates exceed service expectations. The latter requires that the candidates meet them.\nIn addition to showing significant success in teaching, full time non-tenure track faculty candidates for promotion must show they have accomplished a great deal professionally. Given that the areas for professional development within JMC are broad, professional development is evidenced via the effective alignment of activities to the workload statement/appointment letter. Examples might include (but are not limited to) professional awards, active roles in professional organizations, or publication / appearance / presentations in an industry specific outlet, or creative works relevant to the field. Table 6 in the Appendix to this Section of the Handbook outlines evaluation criteria.\nExpectations in professional development for promotion to Senior Lecturer/Professor are higher than promotion to Associate Lecturer/Associate Professor. The former requires that the candidates exceed professional development expectations. The latter requires that the candidates meet them.\nOther Faculty Personnel Actions\nAppointment and Employment Procedure and Regulations of the School of Journalism and Mass Communication\nIn accordance with the definition in the University Policy Register, the sum of a faculty member’s “teaching, research, and/or administrative responsibilities and assignments constitutes full-time employment (one hundred percent full-time employment) at Kent State University.” JMC faculty include employees who are either tenure-track (those both tenured and probationary) or full time non-tenure track at the Kent and regional campuses.\nGraduate student appointees who are assigned responsibility for sections of structured courses are considered members of the instructional staff for the period they have such classroom or laboratory responsibilities.\nFaculty Additions and Replacements\nShould a faculty position become available, after approval of the Dean and Provost, the Director will convene a search committee from among the full-time faculty members, though members may also come from other schools, departments and the student body. This committee will institute a formal search, in line with University, College, Equal Opportunity Commission and Affirmative Action regulations.\nWhen any candidate is interviewed on campus, all faculty members shall have the opportunity to meet with the candidate and express their confidential observations and recommendations, either written or oral, to the Director. The Director will consider these observations and recommendations, and, after formal consultation with the search committee and the FAC, nominate a candidate to the Dean.\nFormal letters of appointment for both probationary tenure-track and full time non-tenure track faculty shall be formulated, stating terms and expectations for the individual faculty member in teaching, scholarly/creative activity and service, so that he or she may be positively considered for reappointment, tenure, and promotion. This is normally done at the time of hiring.\nThe letters must be approved and agreed to by the Dean, the Director, and the faculty member and may be revised with the permission of the faculty member. Ultimate approval of letters of appointment is the responsibility of the Provost. In addition to the formal letters of appointment, the Director and the new faculty member, in consultation with an assigned mentor, may develop additional written expectations for specific teaching, scholarly/creative activity, and service in the initial year of work.\nGraduate Faculty Membership\n1. Graduate faculty membership shall be assigned to those faculty members with appropriate educational backgrounds, who have produced scholarly/creative activity of sufficient quality and consistency to merit professional recognition and who are effective in providing the appropriate training for graduate students (or have the potential for providing such training).\n“Appropriate educational background,” as it relates to the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, normally shall mean possession of the doctorate or terminal master’s degree. It also may mean possession of a non-terminal master’s degree with significant professional experience. Appropriate degrees vary within mass media-related disciplines and across the country, depending upon the emphases of the program and the academic/professional expertise of the faculty member.\nScholarly/creative activity of sufficient quality to merit professional recognition as it relates to JMC should be interpreted through Tenure and Promotion criteria described in this section.\nGraduate Faculty Status for Kent Campus Faculty Members\nGraduate Faculty status for Kent Campus faculty members is obtained by preparing documentation (application and supporting data sheet) and submitting it to the Graduate Faculty Committee of the School for evaluation and recommendation to the Director, who in turn recommends to the College Dean and to the Associate Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies.\n2. The following statuses may be recommended for a graduate faculty member:\na. Associate Member, Level 1 (A1): May teach graduate courses and serve on master’s thesis and project committees.\nb. Full Member, Level 1 (F1): May do the above and may direct projects and comprehensive exams at the master’s level. Before serving as a sole director of a project, the member must first co-direct two projects with a graduate faculty member eligible to be the sole director of a project. Before serving as a sole director of an exam, the member must first co-direct two exams with a graduate faculty member eligible to be the sole director of an exam.\nc. Full Member, Level 2 (F2): May do the above and may direct theses. Before serving as a sole director of a thesis, the member must first co-direct two theses with a graduate faculty member eligible to be the sole director of a thesis.\nd. Full Member, Level 3 (F3): May do the above and may serve on doctoral committees and co-direct doctoral dissertations.\ne. Full Member, Level 4 (F4): May do the above and may direct a doctoral dissertation.\nCriteria for Membership in the Graduate Faculty\nGeneral criteria for membership is set forth in the University Policy Register (6-15.1).\n1. In JMC, a Full Member (Level F1) of the Graduate Faculty:\na. Must possess a doctorate or other appropriate terminal degree and demonstrate the potential for substantial scholarly research or creative activity, or\nb. Must possess a master’s degree and significant professional experience and a record of substantial and sustained professional publication or creative activity, or\nc. Must possess a bachelor’s degree, along with significant and prominent professional experience in his or her field and an outstanding record of professional publication or creative activity.\n2. A Full Member (Level F2) of the Graduate Faculty:\na. Must hold a doctorate or equivalent terminal degree appropriate to the faculty member’s teaching and research discipline, and must demonstrate a substantial and sustained record of appropriate scholarly research or creative activity, or\nb. Must hold a master’s degree for which a thesis was written, along with significant professional experience in his or her field, and must demonstrate a substantial and sustained record of appropriate scholarly research or creative activity.\na. Must meet all criteria for Level F2, and\nb. Must demonstrate a significant record of graduate teaching, advising, and research direction, including experience in directing or co-directing graduate-student research, and\nc. Must have demonstrated significant scholarly or creative activity in the past five years, and\nd. Must demonstrate a significant record of professional involvement.\nb. Must demonstrate a significant record of research direction, including experience in directing or co-directing graduate student research, and\nc. Must demonstrate a current and continuing record of scholarly or creative activity, and\nd. Must demonstrate a continuous record of significant professional involvement.\n5. An Associate Member of the Graduate Faculty:\nb. Must possess a master’s degree and significant professional experience, and demonstrate the potential for substantial scholarly or professional research or creative activity, or\nc. Must possess a bachelor’s degree plus significant and prominent professional experience and must demonstrate the potential for outstanding professional publication or creative activity.\n6. Temporary Graduate Faculty Member: This status shall be assigned to a faculty member whose participation in the graduate program is desired by the graduate department for a limited period or for a limited objective. Normally, this status should be assigned to lead to the appropriate instruction of a graduate course for a semester or appropriate service on a graduate examination committee, a thesis committee, or a dissertation committee. Upon the completion of the temporary assignment, the status of Temporary Graduate Faculty Member is withdrawn.\nSummer Teaching\nWhile summer teaching is not included as part of regular 9-month faculty contracts and appointments, faculty wishing to teach during the summer will be given the opportunity to do so, primarily on the basis of program need and secondarily on the basis of available financial resources. Generally, all faculty members shall be consulted by the Director and/or sequence coordinators concerning their desire to teach during the summer. The Director follows the guidelines and procedures for summer employment set forth in Article IX, Section 4 of the TT CBA and Article IX, Section 2 of the FTNTT CBA.\nEvaluation of Teaching\nFormal student evaluations, using KSU-mandated evaluation questions, plus additional questions devised by the School, are conducted for each course taught during regular academic semesters by full- and part-time faculty. Results of the evaluations are made available to the individual faculty member, along with the average score for courses in the appropriate norming group. Evaluations are public records.\n1. Travel:\nFaculty are encouraged to attend professional and academic meetings and conferences for professional enrichment. Attendance at such meetings is considered an authorized absence, provided that appropriate arrangements have been made for class coverage. The required forms for this type of leave are available from the Director. The form must be completed and approved before the faculty member’s leave.\n2. Leaves of Absence:\nLeaves of absence, including sick leave, shall follow College and University regulations as stated in the University Policy Register 6-11 and must be approved by the Dean. Appropriate documentation must be completed by all concerned parties.\n3. Professional Improvement Leave for Tenure-Track Faculty:\nFaculty professional improvement leave may be available to all those who qualify, in accordance with regulations and provisions in the University Policy Register 6-12 and 6-12.101. Faculty members requesting a faculty professional improvement leave must submit a proposal to the FAC and the Director for review, after which it is reviewed by the College Advisory Committee, the Dean and other appropriate University officials and committees. Final approval comes from the Provost and is subject to available funding.\n4. Professional Development Leave for FTNTT Faculty\nFull time non-tenure track faculty may apply for leaves of absence for professional development according to the provisions of the FTNTT CBA, Article XVI, Section 2.\nFaculty Grievance and Appeals\nA. University Procedures\nKent State University maintains a formal grievance and appeals procedures established by the TT CBA (Article VII) and the FTNTT CBA (Article VII).\nB. School Procedures for Informal Resolution\nThe faculty and the Director are encouraged to maintain open communication to the extent that formal University grievance and appeals procedures will normally not be required. To this end, the following procedure is recommended for the internal arbitration of a faculty grievance, should it be necessitated:\nStep 1: The grieving faculty member shall meet with his/her sequence coordinator, and a reasonable effort shall be made to resolve the grievance.\nStep 2: If the grievance is not resolved in Step One, the faculty member may elect to bring his/her grievance before the FAC, which shall make an advisory recommendation to the Director.\nStep 3: If the grievance is not resolved in Step Two, the faculty member shall meet with the Director who will make a final effort to resolve the grievance at the School level.\nShould the issue remain unresolved at the School level, the Director’s Office will notify the Dean regarding the unresolved grievance and the results of the informal actions that have occurred in Steps One through Three.\nIn regard to the above procedure, it is important to note the following from the University Grievance and Appeals Procedure: “Any settlement, withdrawal, or other disposition of a grievance at the informal stage shall not constitute a binding precedent in the settlement of similar complaints or grievances.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line906452"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6077946424484253,"wiki_prob":0.6077946424484253,"text":"Living and Working in Glasgow in 2019\n2. Working in Glasgow\n3. Financial Services in Glasgow\n4. Education in Glasgow\n5. Living in Glasgow\n6. Moving to Glasgow from Abroad\n7. Culture in Glasgow\nYou most likely know Glasgow as one of the friendliest cities on earth or for its reputation as the former shipbuilding capital of the world.\nBut what you might not know is that Glasgow is one of the best places to live and work in the UK.\nScotland’s biggest city, Glasgow is known for its rich history, excellent shopping and vibrant nightlife.\nDynamic and ever-changing, both residents and visitors never fail to be impressed by what the city has to offer.\nAs one of Europe’s leading financial centres, financial services also play a key role in the city, with some of the biggest companies in the sector having a presence in Glasgow.\nIf you are considering a move to Glasgow, this guide should give you a flavour of what the city has to offer its residents.\nKey Info:\nGlasgow sits at the heart of Scotland’s only metropolitan region of 1.8 million people, while the population of the greater Glasgow region is around 2.3 million – making up 41% of the entire population of Scotland.[1]\nLanguage: English is the main language with Scots, British Sign Language and Gaelic as recognised languages. Other languages spoken in the city including Spanish, Urdu, Mandarin and Polish. Strong numbers of foreign language speakers including Asian, Eastern European and Western European languages.\nCurrency: Pound Sterling (GDP)\nTime Zone: UTC+00:00\nClimate: Temperate. Glasgow benefits from long summer days with as much as 17 hours of sunlight. However, winter days tend to be much shorter and darker. There are on average 170 days of rainfall and between 15-20 days of snowfall in Glasgow.[2]\nSimilar to the rest of the country, the weather in Glasgow can sometimes be unpredictable and it’s not uncommon to experience all four seasons in one day.\nNo matter what career path you choose to pursue, Glasgow is one of the top places to work in the UK.\nThe city’s workforce combines the strong Scottish work ethic with the friendliness of its residents. This had made it an attractive location and some of the biggest companies in Scotland have a base in Glasgow.\nGlasgow has the largest economy in Scotland, with a GDP of 41.6 billion in 2013. Glasgow contributes approximately £20.74 billion GVA to the Scottish economy annually. 19,000 companies make their home in Glasgow, generating an annual turnover of £38 billion.[3]\nThere are plenty of opportunities and there has never been a better time to work in Glasgow, with the number of vacancies advertised having risen by 52% since 2016.[4]\nResidents in Glasgow benefit from an average monthly take-home salary of £1,814[5] which is higher than the UK average.\nFormerly one of the world’s leading manufacturing hubs, Glasgow has moved away from a production-based economy to a service-based one, with up to 84% of jobs in the service sector.[6]\nGlasgow Chamber of Commerce recently identified six key sectors for the city: low carbon industries; financial and business services; life sciences; engineering; tourism, and education.[7]\nBut the city is also developing in some of its newer growth sectors, such as software development and biotechnology. The tech sector in Scotland is worth £3.9bn with digital tech turnover per employee reaching £80,000.[8]\nGlasgow has particular strength in space tech, as the city rockets towards becoming a world leader. CBRE ranked Glasgow 2nd in the UK in its annual Tech Cities survey.\nGlasgow is at the forefront of healthcare and innovation across the UK and Europe. Glasgow is also the biggest media hub in Scotland and has an excellent creative sector.\nGlasgow is one of the top places to work in the UK.\nTax and Employment Benefits\nEmployment benefits offered in Glasgow vary depending on your employer but are likely to include leave from work, sick pay, maternity pay and a pension.\nThe average working week for a full-time job is between 37 and 40 hours a week. Those working full-time are entitled to at least 28 days of paid holiday each year. If you work part-time, you are also entitled to paid holiday each year.\nWhile it’s not compulsory, many organisations also close for public and bank holidays as an added incentive. Many bank holidays in Scotland are different to the rest of the UK.\nIf you’re pregnant, you may be eligible for maternity pay from your employer. Statutory Maternity Pay (SMP) allows you to take time off work both before and after your baby is born. SMP is paid for up to 39 weeks from when you take leave from your job. Your partner is also entitled to up to two weeks of paternity leave – in addition to another 26 weeks if you decide to return to work early.\nIf you are eligible, the government will pay you a State Pension when you reach the national retirement age – normally between 60-65 years old. However, the amount you’re eligible for depends on the number of years you have paid National Insurance from your salary in the UK.\nThe majority of people working in Scotland have tax and National Insurance payments automatically deducted from their weekly or monthly pay. The amount of Income Tax and National Insurance you pay depends on several factors including how much you earn.\nIf you are not a UK national, you will need to apply for a National Insurance number from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) and give it to your employer.\nThe financial services industry in Scotland is booming, and Glasgow is no exception. One of Europe’s top 20 financial centres, there are 40,500 jobs related to the financial services centre sector in Glasgow.[9] This makes up almost 10% of total employment in the city.[10]\nFinancial services are a rapidly growing sector in Glasgow, with plenty of jobs and investment. Since the creation of the International Financial Services District (IFSD), there has been over £1 billion invested and more than 15,000 new jobs.\nGlasgow is the location of choice for some of the biggest names in the sector. There are over 3000 companies operating in this sector.[11]\nMost of Glasgow’s finance sector is based around the IFSD. This includes companies like JP Morgan, Morgan Stanley, Barclays and BNP Paribas. Glasgow is a base for major global corporations in the financial and services sector, such as Barclays Wealth, Aon and others.\nThe second largest financial hub in Scotland, Glasgow’s main strengths lie in general insurance, asset administration, legal services and accountancy.\nScotland has a long and distinguished history in banking. You will find many long-established and newer challenger banks in Glasgow including The Royal Bank of Scotland, Clydesdale Bank, Tesco Bank, TSB, Bank of Scotland, Lloyds Banking Group and Barclays.\nGlasgow is also a base for many international banks such as the Bank of China, BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, Santander and State Bank of India.\nWith 8,000 people working within the banking field in Glasgow, the city is the perfect place to build your banking career.\nGlasgow is one of Europe's top 20 financial centres.\nScotland has a significant concentration of life and pensions activity, accounting for 27% of employment in the sub-sector in Britain.[12]\nGlasgow is Scotland’s insurance hub, employing 8,500 people across hundreds of businesses.\nAllianz, Axa, Zurich, Hiscox Plc, Aviva and Direct Line Insurance are just some of the big names located in Glasgow.\nAsset servicing is a key growth area in Glasgow’s financial services industry. Scotland is now a leading European centre for asset servicing offering a comprehensive range of services, including: custody, securities servicing, investment accounting, performance measurement, trustee administration, shareholder services, compliance, client management and retail fund administration.\nThree out of the top ten largest asset servicing organisations operate in Glasgow. They are BNP Paribas, JP Morgan and HSBC.\nScotland is a renowned centre of excellence in investment management with its origins dating back to the nineteenth century.\nThe sector encompasses a broad mix of large institutional and smaller businesses that deliver a wide variety of innovative investment services to institutional and personal clients around the world.\nWhile this sector is smaller than that of Edinburgh, Glasgow maintains a high quality of asset management expertise.\nGlasgow has a large community of professionals providing services to the financial services industry. There are over 13,000 people working in legal and accounting services, and over 4,500 in management consulting.\nThe UK has high quality professional and support services; it has the largest and most developed market in Europe for legal services, management consulting and accounting.[13] These three sectors contributed £20.1bn, £14bn and £26.8bn respectively to UK output in 2017.\nThe Scottish legal sector is consistently strong. Corporate and commercial areas of law firms will continue to be busy, and in-house functions of financial sector companies will continue to grow.\nAccounting and finance is also an area of expertise in Glasgow. Many leading companies have a presence in Glasgow or neighbouring city Edinburgh. The great bio-diversity of businesses ensures a steady flow of opportunity in this sector.\nScotland’s financial services industry benefits from an extensive chain of providers that deliver the wide spectrum of business services required by businesses operating in the Glasgow financial sector.\nThis includes companies offering services such as outsourcing, human resources, business consultancy, and technology.\nWith over 6,000 people working in this area in Glasgow, there are plentiful opportunities with a variety of companies supporting the financial sector.\nNamed a “fintech powerhouse” by Fintech Scotland, the digital tech sector in Glasgow is growing at a rapid pace. Over the past decade there has been over £37 million worth of investment in Scottish fintech[14] and significant further investment is anticipated.\nThere are currently 12 fintech companies in Glasgow[15] and many of the world’s largest financial institutions have technology teams located in Glasgow, such as JP Morgan’s Technology Centre.\nThe city also plays a key part in the development of the Scottish fintech industry. Strathclyde University was the first in the UK to offer a masters course in fintech.\nThe future of the Glasgow fintech sector is bright as Scotland aims to become one of the world’s top five fintech hubs. The next 12 months will see the emergence of a more broadly connected fintech ecosystem across Scotland[16] and it is expected that 15,000 new roles will be created over the next 10 years.[17]\nScotland is famous for its first-class education system. It is one of the most highly educated countries in Europe and among the most well-educated in the world, with over 55% workforce educated to at least degree level.[18]\nThe city’s excellent educational system is one of the driving forces behind its talented workforce. 46% of all Glaswegians in employment are educated to degree level, making the city's workforce one of the best qualified in the UK.\nGlasgow has a reputation for educational excellence and provides a wide range of options across all levels. The city’s institutions of higher and further education graduate around 20,000 individuals per annum ensuring a healthy talent pipeline.\nGlasgow's Universities\nGlasgow is home to four universities: the University of Glasgow, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow Caledonian University and the University of the West of Scotland. The city also hosts the Glasgow School of Art and the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.\nThe University of Glasgow, one of the oldest in the world, is globally recognised as a top-class institution. Business schools at the University of Glasgow and the University of Strathclyde are both triple accredited – only 1% of business schools worldwide hold this accreditation.\nThe Glasgow city region has the largest student population in Scotland and the second highest in the UK. More than 185,000 students from 140 countries live and study here.\nThousands of students graduate each year with qualifications directly relevant to the needs of the financial services industry. Glasgow also has the highest student retention rate of any city in the UK, with over half staying to build their careers in the city.\nThe University of Glasgow is one of the oldest in the world.\nFurther and Higher Education Colleges\nThere are 6 further and higher education colleges across the Glasgow city region offering a wide range of courses and diplomas.\nThree are located in the city centre - City of Glasgow College, Glasgow Kelvin College and Glasgow Clyde College – and a further three colleges are in the wider Glasgow region – West College Scotland, South Lanarkshire College, New College Lanarkshire.\nIndependent and State Schools\nGlasgow has a rich variety of renowned schools catering for a full range of educational needs, spanning the state and independent sectors.\nThe city council provides 149 primary schools and 29 secondary schools for children up to the age of 18. The city council has also undertaken a massive modernisation initiative, with nearly all schools in Glasgow newly built or renovated.\nGlasgow also offers 14 independent schools, and three specialist schools; the Glasgow School of Sport, the Dance School of Scotland and the Glasgow Gaelic School.\nPre-school early learning and childcare\nPre-school early learning and childcare aims to encourage children aged between two and five years old to learn and develop in a caring and nurturing setting. All children can get a free part-time place at a council nursery, or funding towards a place at a private one.\nYou can find local nurseries and read about alternative childcare options for two to five-year olds on the Glasgow City Council's website.\nThe standards of living in Glasgow are consistently ranked among the best in the UK and the world. Glasgow was ranked 3rd highest in UK and 48th in the world for quality of life in 2018.[19]\nThere are excellent transport, housing and living options in the city with something to suit all lifestyles and budgets.\nGlasgow has a wide range of facilities and has more green space per mile than any other city in the UK with over 70 parks in and around the city.\nAs Scotland’s biggest city, Glasgow has excellent transport links, both in the city and to the rest of the UK and world.\nNot only is the city easy to navigate on foot but cyclists can enjoy more than 301km of cycle lanes connecting the city, which a great way to explore and get a feel for the city.\nGlasgow is the only city in Scotland with an underground network. There is a frequently running and easy to use Subway system connecting different parts of the city.\nGlasgow is served by two main railway stations, Central Station and Queen Street Station, and has the largest suburban rail network in the UK outside of London. There are also excellent rail links to the rest of the country with 8 trains per hour to Edinburgh and 23 trains per day direct to London, taking around 4hrs 30 mins.\nGlasgow Airport is Scotland’s principal long-haul airport. You can fly direct to North America, Europe, Asia and the Middle East, as well as frequent domestic flights.\nGlasgow is also well connected by road. The main motorway route is the M8, connecting the city centre to the M74, M77 and M80.\nNot only are there excellent facilities in Glasgow, it is also an affordable place to live in comparison to other cities in the UK. Living costs are 26% lower than London.[20] In the Independent’s 2015 list of the Best Places in the UK to Make a Living, Glasgow placed 32 out of 64 in the cost of living rank.\nOut of 20 major cities across the UK, Glasgow offers young professionals the highest level of disposable income.[21] Expatistan ranks Glasgow as the 9th most expensive city out of 15 in the UK.\nComparison site Numbeo estimates a litre of milk costs £0.85 while a pint in your neighbourhood pub will come in at around £3.84. Two cinema tickets will cost about £20 in Glasgow and the average monthly gym membership costs £26.24.\nThe National Health Service (NHS) offers free healthcare services to people with a visa allowing them to live the UK for at least one year\nYou need to be registered with a GP to receive NHS treatment (you can find your nearest GP here).\nServices covered include:\nMedical advice from a doctor\nEmergency and non-emergency medical treatment in a hospital\nMedicines prescribed by your GP\nThere also companies offering private healthcare and health insurance, which is more expensive but may lead to quicker, more comprehensive treatment and aftercare.\nDental care is provided by the NHS, with check-up appointments covered for those over 18. Additional dental treatment is not fully NHS funded and prices vary depending on the service and treatment required.\nPrivate dental care is also available, with many dental practices in Glasgow offering both private and NHS services.\nHousing Hunting\nWhether you are looking to rent or buy a home in Glasgow, there is a wide variety of choice. Glasgow boasts an excellent range of housing options. From trendy apartments on the River Clyde to Victorian flats in Glasgow's west end and easily commutable suburbs, there is something for everyone.\nPopular areas include:\nWest End – made up of any area west of Charing Cross, Glasgow’s West End includes the sought-after areas of Dowanhill, Kelvingrove and Hyndland. The Finnieston area of Glasgow was voted the hippest place to live in Britain.\nOne of the most desirable parts of the city, there is a mix of large period houses and flats. Popular with students, professionals and families, there is something for everyone although this popularity can be reflected in the prices.\nFurther west of the city centre, places to keep an eye out for are Scotstoun, Knightswood and Anniesfield. These areas are attractive for buyers and renters alike, with a good balance of reputation and affordability.\nNorth – Bearsden and Milngavie are some of the most sought-after areas outside of Glasgow city centre. Bearsden has the lowest social housing of any Scottish town and has featured in the top 10 wealthiest areas of the UK.[22]\nBoth areas are popular spots for commuters who prefer less hustle and bustle and more green spaces.\nCity Centre – right in the heart of the city and one of Glasgow’s oldest areas, the Merchant City has a mix of modern flats with an abundance of bars, restaurants, and boutiques right on your doorstep.\nJust a short walk from the city centre is Glasgow’s East End which has been undergoing a regeneration. Many homes in this area are purpose-built and more affordable for those starting on the property ladder.\nSouth – areas located south of the River Clyde such as Whitecraigs and Giffnock in East Renfrewshire. These areas are perfect for those seeking detached houses and bungalows.\nGiffnock has a wide variety of properties, lots of shops and restaurants within walking distance and excellent schooling.\nMany choose to live outside the city, in the towns and villages from which the city is easily commutable.\nAlthough prices in rural Britain have been falling in the last years, the cost of living in the Scottish countryside is still up to 40% higher than in many British cities.[23] The reason for this is that living in remote areas of Scotland is more expensive when it comes to the costs of commuting, clothing, food, and household goods.\nLiving standards in Glasgow are consistently ranked among the best in the UK.\nThe cost of buying property in Glasgow is around 72% lower than London, 9% lower than Manchester and 11% lower than Edinburgh.[24]\nWhile most properties are sold through estate agents or solicitors, you can also buy privately from the owner – though you will still need the help of a solicitor to do the legal work.\nZoopla.com and rightmove.co.uk are popular resources for those looking to buy property in Glasgow and the surrounding areas.\nPrice levels for property in Glasgow vary but the average sale price is as follows:\nDetached - £265,113\nSemi-detached - £167,665\nTerraced - £171,760\nFlat - £134,209[25]\nGlasgow also offers very competitive rental costs compared to other UK cities.\nThe average monthly rental cost is £771[26] , and the average monthly cost per number of rooms is as follows:\n1 bed flat - £583\n3 bed flat - £1,037\nPopular resources for finding rental properties in Glasgow include:\nZoopla.com\nCitylets.com\nMost rental properties are furnished flats, though houses and unfurnished properties can also be found.\nMany letting agencies and private landlords will usually require a deposit, which is returned at the end of the tenancy.\nIt is also worth noting that most rental properties in Glasgow usually do not include utility bills, Wi-Fi or council tax within the monthly rent. These are additional costs.\nAll residential properties in Scotland are subject to Council Tax. Council Tax is a local tax, with annual receipts contributing directly to the funding of local services. In Scotland, all residential properties are assigned to one of eight bands (from A to H), based upon the value of that property.\nGlasgow council also a range of discounts and exemptions for those who qualify. More information on Council can be found at the Glasgow City Council website.\nGlasgow is an attractive location for people from all over the world and is known for being an extremely welcoming city to move to.\nThe fDi Intelligence Quality of Life ranks Glasgow higher than Los Angeles and Rome. Glasgow benefits from shorter commuting times, lower living costs and better work-life balance than other cities around the world.\nWith excellent national and international transport links, Glasgow is well connected to the rest of the globe. North America can be reached in as little as five hours and mainland Europe in over an hour.\nMeetup.com, InterNations.org and Facebook groups are great ways to connect with other expats in Glasgow and find out about events.\nVisa and immigration requirements\nScotland is governed by the same visa rules and legislation as the rest of the United Kingdom, though there are several special business visa categories to ensure Scotland remains a competitive destination for investment.\nIf you are from a country outside the European Economic Area (EEA), you will need a visa to live and work in Scotland. The UK Government website allows you work out which visa you require based on your nationality and reason for coming to the UK.\nThere are a number of options open to people who require a UK visa. The two most common categories are Tier 1 and Tier 2. \"Skilled worker visas\" (Tier 2) address the needs of skilled laborers and employees. There’s also a separate sub-category for intra-company transfers. \"High value workers\" fall into the Tier 1 category.\nThe process will need to be started at least 3 months prior to your move to Glasgow and it is worth noting that there can be substantial fees.\nMore information on the different UK visa classifications and how to apply can be found on the UK Government website.\nEU Nationals working in Scotland & Brexit\nThe Scottish Government continues to welcome EEA nationals in Scotland as the status of Europeans living and working in Scotland has not changed.\nHowever, if you want to stay in the UK beyond 31 December 2020, you need to apply to the EU Settlement Scheme. The scheme will be fully open by the end of March 2019 and you will have until 30 June 2021 to apply. If you have been a resident in the UK for more than 5 years you will be eligible for settled status. If you have been a resident for less than 5 years you will be eligible for pre-settled status.\nIn the meantime, it remains open to EEA nationals and their family members living in Scotland to apply for documentation from the UK Home Office that certifies their right to live and work in the UK. This can be done by applying for an EEA Registration Certificate (known as an EEA Residence Card), a Permanent Residence Card, or even British nationality depending upon your circumstances.\nIt is recommended that you sign up for email alerts from the Home Office regarding EU Nationals working in Britain for the most up to date information.\nNamed \"the UK's Coolest City” by National Geographic Traveller magazine, you will never be short of things to do in Glasgow.\nThe city centre’s Style Mile is a hotspot for shopping lovers and Experian's annual retail vitality index has named Glasgow as offering the best shopping in the UK outside of London for several years.\nGlasgow also has a thriving food and drinks scene and some of the best nightlife in Scotland. Glasgow is a UNESCO City of Music - the only one in Scotland - and there can be as many as 130 music events taking place in the city each week. [27]\nThere are 20 museums and galleries throughout Glasgow, most with free entry. There include the Kelvingrove Museum & Art Gallery, The People’s Palace, the Hunterian Museum and The Riverside Museum. Other great places to visit in Glasgow are the Science Centre, Glasgow Green the Botanic Gardens, Glasgow Cathedral and the Necropolis.\nGlasgow is famous for it's cultural scene.\nGlasgow is famous for its excellent sports events and for being home to local, national and international sports teams across a vast number of sports.\nThe city hosted the 2014 Commonwealth Games to a resounding success. In 2020 Glasgow will be one of the host cities of the UEFA Euro 2020 football tournament.\nThroughout the year, Glasgow hosts a number of festivals and special events, including Celtic Connections, The Glasgow Film Festival, Glasgow International Comedy Festival and Glasgow Mela.\nOutside of Glasgow\nWhile there is plenty to do in the city, Glasgow provides an excellent base to explore the rest of Scotland too. Some of the world’s most beautiful scenery, like Loch Lomond and the Trossachs, can be reached in as little as an hour.\nScotland’s other cities, such as Edinburgh, Dundee and Stirling can be easily reached by train, bus or car and each offer a range of things to do and see, including the newly opened V&A museum in Dundee.\nWhile Glasgow may be Scotland’s second city, it certainly is not second best. Combining excellent facilities and infrastructure, world-class talent and some of Scotland’s best companies, Glasgow is fast becoming one of the top places to live and work in the UK.\nWith over 300 years of expertise in financial services, Glasgow is the perfect place to develop your career and to work for some fantastic companies.\nGlasgow has something for all tastes and lifestyles with a thriving cultural scene and many desirable places to live.\nBut one of Glasgow’s biggest attributes is its residents, who are some of the friendliest in the whole of the UK. The pride Glaswegians have for their city is infectious. Anyone moving there will soon be sharing this same passion for life in Glasgow.\nHopefully you will now have all the necessary information to make a smooth transition into Glasgow life.\nFinancial and Professional Services Recruitment –\nContact Core-Asset\nLiving and Working in Edinburgh in 2019\nHow to Find Your Dream Financial, Accounting or Legal Job\nWhat to Take to a Job Interview (And What to Leave at Home)\nAnatomy of a Successful CV\n5 Benefits of Becoming a Contractor\n7 career paths for newly qualified accountants\nLooking to move jobs?\nBrowse through our live vacancies","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1347719"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7622014880180359,"wiki_prob":0.7622014880180359,"text":"Home » Events » 70th Venice International Film Festival\n70th Venice International Film Festival\n28 Jul 2013 | Redazione Portale di Venezia\n28 August 2013 10:00 to 7 September 2013 23:00\nSpeech by the Director of the 70th Venice International Film Festival\nAlberto Barbera\nSome people say that “history runs, cinema walks, and festivals mark time.” This cruel synthesis summarizes a certain widespread impatience with contemporary cinema and with what, until a short while ago, had been considered invaluable opportunities for promoting new movies and meeting new filmmakers. There are greater nuances in Paul Schrader’s comment, “It’s a changing world. Festivals are both more and less powerful than they used to be. More powerful because they come across like the new museum and art gallery curators. Less powerful because the exclusiveness of participating at festivals has been weakened by new, direct channels of distribution.” This problem scarcely bothers the public, a faithful and constant presence flocking by the thousands to the large and small festivals that continue to pop up here and there, often replacing events whose life cycle has come to an end.\nHowever, with a touch of pride it can be claimed that, while this year’s Venice Film Festival might not provide any answers, it does supply a few indications as to why festivals are still necessary and how they can adapt themselves to this new situation. In drawing up the list of films to offer our audience this year, we have tried to keep in mind the growing fragmentation and schizophrenia that seems to affect the universe of images in motion. These images are characterized by progressively contrasting production methods and by no means coherent models of reference; they explore the new potential offered by digital technology and are open to experimentation with new distribution and promotional platforms. But festivals are still burdened by economic complications, by the reduction of financial resources which once seemed almost unlimited, by new promotional strategies, and by the difficulty of overcoming the opaque resistance of the world of communication.\nThe Festival’s four sections – Competition, Out of Competition, Orizzonti, and Venezia Classici – are like a snapshot of the present state of contemporary cinema: intentionally stratified and varied.\nThere are established filmmakers whose participation is both proper and logical, since they represent the reason we love cinema and serve as a guarantee of its continuity.\nThere are debut directors and those in search of that hoped-for triumph, to which the Festival can contribute, sometimes decisively so, thanks to the prestige and the authority conferred by its selections.\nThere are the so-called genre films, for which no form of bias can exist but which are not always easy to position within the programming of important festivals.\nThere are documentaries, which are progressively gaining importance in the Festival’s scheduling, to the point that two are participating in the Venice 70 Competition. This “first time ever” is not only in recognition of the quality of these films, but of modern cinema’s gradual overlapping between fiction films and documentaries, a sign of an acknowledged identity that reflects shared creative processes. This is also an indication of aesthetic and linguistic enrichment, which appears to be to the benefit of all.\nThere are restored films and documentaries about cinema which indicate the growing importance of investments (in every sense of the word: cultural, aesthetic, emotional, distributing) in the immense patrimony and heritage of the cinema of the past, bringing it back into circulation to nourish the knowledge of young spectators, encourage the vocation of new directors, and enhance our education with cultural and linguistic reference points that should not be disregarded.\nThere are shorts, a valuable training ground for the filmmakers of tomorrow, to which the Festival has always ascribed the same artistic dignity as feature films, not confining them within a “reserve” but inserting them with full rights in the programming of the Orizzonti section.\nThere is the Film Market, improved and enlarged, with more services and areas at the disposal of commercial professionals, after the gratifying reception the first Market received last year.\nAnd then, there is the Sala Web, the web theatre that was launched last year and that offers the virtual audience of the web the opportunity to watch, in streaming, the films of the Orizzonti section simultaneously with their official presentation at the Lido.\nAnd, of course, there are also new entries. The first is represented by the three feature films made in conjunction with Biennale College Cinema, the project that supports, develops, and finances first films. The project was launched last year and is now concluding its first edition with concrete and positive results. The names of the twelve filmmakers selected for the second edition will be announced during the Festival.\nThe second new entry is the special project Final Cut in Venice, which provides economic support for the post-production of four African films which will be chosen during a special Film Market workshop reserved to producers, buyers, distributors, and programmers of international festivals, in order to encourage possible coproduction partnerships and market access.\nThe Venice Film Festival is turning seventy, the first time in the history of the Seventh Art that a festival has achieved this venerable age. This birthday will be celebrated in an imaginative way, thanks to the contribution of seventy filmmakers from all over the world who have accepted our invitation to make a micro-film lasting between 60 and 90 seconds. All these films will be projected during the Festival, and can be watched in streaming on the special website that has been created by the Biennale di Venezia, as can forty clips from historical newsreels that have been chosen and restored by the Istituto Luce Film Archives.\nThus, the past and the future of cinema symbolically join hands, in an edition of the Festival that looks to the future, in the conviction that its mission is far from over.\nFestival Director","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1575815"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7848429083824158,"wiki_prob":0.7848429083824158,"text":"Former Lincoln Tokyo nightclub owner fined £144k for putting lives at risk\nPhoto: The Lincolnite\nThe owner of the former Tokyo nightclub in Lincoln has been found guilty of putting lives of staff and customers at risk and fined £143,952.30.\nAaron Mellor, 44, of Deans Gate in Manchester, was on October 5, at York Crown Court, found guilty of fifteen charges of failing to comply with fire safety requirements at his Tokyo nightclubs in Lincoln and York.\nAs previously reported, the Tokyo nightclub in Lincoln was inspected in April 2014, where fire safety officers from Lincolnshire Fire and Rescue closed the basement area after serious concerns were raised about access to emergency exits, lack of emergency lighting and inadequate signage.\nOn the inspection, Paul Mead of Lincolnshire Fire and Rescue, said: “Fire exits were blocked by chairs, tables and bags of rubbish and the emergency exit signs pointed in the wrong direction.\n“One of the fire escape doors at the club had to be kicked and subsequently broken by a member of staff in order to open it.\n“If a fire had occurred some people would not have reasonably been able to escape due to the fire exits not being available.”\nAs well as visits to the nightclub in Lincoln, Fire Safety officers from North Yorkshire Fire and Rescue visited Tokyo in York on numerous occasions.\nThey found the emergency lighting system, fire alarm and fire detection system not to be working.\nThe property’s fire risk assessment was also not adequate and there was sleeping accommodation found on the premises.\nFor the Lincoln charges, Mellor was fined £66,000 and ordered to pay £44,504 in prosecution costs.\nFor the York charges, Mellor was fined £10,000 and Tokyo Industries (One) Limited was fined £30,000. Charges were £23,448.30.\nPaul Mead added: “This is the first time in the country that two Fire and Rescue services have acted together to successfully bring a prosecution against a company and business operator, when offences have taken place in different counties.\n“It sends a clear message out to owners of this type of venue that when they put company profit before public safety, we will take action.\n“We continue to work with other agencies in an attempt to improve safety standards.\n“Many of the business premises that we visit are conscientious about fire safety matters. However, some of the buildings which are brought to our attention because of fire incidents or complaints, turn out to have serious fire safety concerns which endanger those working in or visiting it.\n“We would encourage all business owners and those with responsibility for any premises, where the fire safety order applies, to ensure that they are aware of the legislative obligations they need to comply with, including having an up-to-date fire risk assessment.”\nFears grow for missing man who may be in Lincolnshire\nLincoln bodybuilder powers to victory in British finals\nWarehousing, Boston Road, Horncastle","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1631072"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6199558973312378,"wiki_prob":0.3800441026687622,"text":"To find out more about cookies, what they are and how we use them, please see our privacy notice, which also provides information on how to delete cookies from your hard drive.\nChina Services Group\nFinancial reporting and accounting advisory services\nAccounting Standards for Private Enterprises\nAccounting Standards for Not-for-Profit Organizations\nPublic Sector Accounting Standards\nTax planning and compliance\nUS corporate tax\nUS personal tax\nSuccession & estate planning\nTax Reporting & Advisory\nBusiness Consulting and Technology\nBusiness Risk Services\nCreditor updates\nForensics and dispute resolution\nRecovery and reorganization\nConstruction, real estate & hospitality\nConstruction, real estate & hospitality Home\nEnergy and natural resources Home\nGrant Thornton LLP Canada\nDo trusts still make sense in light of the new tax rules?\nMichael Stubbing 04 Dec 2018\nRecent changes in tax legislation have affected the way that trusts can be used, as well as the information they are required to report. Many have speculated that these changes have limited the usefulness of trusts as a tool for holding assets, but there are still many advantages to setting up a trust.\nWhat has changed?\nLimits on income splitting\nThe extension of the income splitting rules that came into effect on January 1, 2018 has made certain business owners question their current corporate structure. This is because the manner in which shares are held (i.e. through a holding company or through a trust) will affect whether the income received will be subject to tax on split income (TOSI), which imposes tax at the highest marginal rate on certain types of income.\nFor example, where shares of a private corporation (meeting the definition of a “related business” for the purposes of TOSI) are held by a family trust, and an inactive spouse and inactive adult children are beneficiaries of the trust, none of the family members will be able to exempt themselves from TOSI through the use of the “excluded shares” exemption (which may be available to taxpayers owning shares with at least 10 percent of the votes and value of a corporation). That’s because this exemption requires that the shares be held by the individual directly. As a result, taxpayers who own shares of a private corporation through a family trust will need to look to the other TOSI exclusions to alleviate the potential tax burden.\nFor some taxpayers this is an undesirable result, as the remaining exclusions typically require a certain level of involvement within the business, either through labour or capital contribution, while the “excluded shares” exemption allows individuals to receive income from a corporation simply on the basis of share ownership.\nNew reporting requirements\nAnother way that the advantages of using a trust may be limited in the future is through the new reporting requirements that will come into effect in 2021. These new rules will require that certain types of trusts file a T3 return more frequently and provide more personal identification information relating to beneficiaries, settlors and protectors of the trust.\nThe impact here is that by increasing these reporting requirements, the government will now have more information at its disposal regarding Canadian property and those who are entitled to it.\nFor example, where residential property is owned by a bare trust, the trust will now be required to file an annual T3 return that will notify the government when beneficiaries of the trust—in other words, those who are entitled to the property—change. This increased information is likely to form the basis for future tax changes. At the very least, it is sure to lead to additional scrutiny of taxpayers.\nAdvantages to using a trust\nWhile these changes mean that some of the advantages to using a trust may be limited, there are still multiple tax and non-tax advantages to using a trust.\nMultiplication of the Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (LCGE)\nFrom a tax perspective, one of the major remaining benefits of using a trust—when it comes to holding shares of a private corporation in particular—is that by having multiple beneficiaries to the trust, it is possible to effectively multiply the LCGE on the disposition of shares of a qualified small business corporation (QSBC).\nMultiplying the LCGE will allow each family member that is a beneficiary to the trust to shelter from tax $848,252 (in 2018) of any gain that has been allocated to them on the sale. A family of four would therefore be able to jointly shelter $3.39 million in gains from tax through the use of a trust, which provides a significant tax advantage.\nMaintaining QSBC status of shares\nIn light of the new income splitting rules, it is helpful to ensure that your private corporation meets the criteria for being considered a QSBC. This is due to the fact that taxable capital gains on the disposition of QSBC shares are exempt from TOSI. Where a private corporation is not considered a QSBC (as a result of holding a large value of passive assets), a trust can be a helpful tool for purifying the corporation to meet the definition.\nFor example, a trust with a corporate beneficiary could be introduced (through a reorganization) as a shareholder of an operating company (Opco). Opco could then pay dividends to the trust, which would then allocate the income to the corporate beneficiary, thus allowing for constant purification of Opco using inter-corporate dividends.\nFind out more about the new tax rules [ 287 kb ]\nAlso appears under...\n© 2019 Grant Thornton LLP - A Canadian member of Grant Thornton International Ltd - All rights reserved. \"Grant Thornton” refers to the brand under which the Grant Thornton member firms provide assurance, tax and advisory services to their clients and/or refers to one or more member firms, as the context requires. Grant Thornton International Ltd (GTIL) and the member firms are not a worldwide partnership. GTIL and each member firm is a separate legal entity. Services are delivered by the member firms. GTIL does not provide services to clients. GTIL and its member firms are not agents of, and do not obligate, one another and are not liable for one another’s acts or omissions.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1295073"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9061211347579956,"wiki_prob":0.9061211347579956,"text":"Ebola outbreak over, but vigilance must remain, experts warn\nBy Tom Murphy on\t 14 January 2016 0\n(UNMIL/Emmanuel Tobey)\nThe Ebola outbreak in West Africa is over. More than 42 days passed since the last case in Liberia, marking the end of the outbreak that killed more than 11,000 people. The World Health Organization made the official announcement today, but it was accompanied by warnings that cases may emerge in the region and the wider lessons learned must be put into action to prevent another health crisis of this magnitude.\n“We are now at a critical period in the Ebola epidemic as we move from managing cases and patients to managing the residual risk of new infections,” said Dr. Bruce Aylward, the World Health Organization’s (WHO) special representative for the Ebola response, in the announcement. “The risk of re-introduction of infection is diminishing as the virus gradually clears from the survivor population, but we still anticipate more flare-ups and must be prepared for them. A massive effort is under way to ensure robust prevention, surveillance and response capacity across all three countries by the end of March.”\nWhat began as an infection of a child in Guéckédou, Guinea, became a deadly outbreak that infected more than 28,000 people. It spread across Guinea and into Sierra Leone and Liberia. Single cases were discovered in the U.S. and Nigeria, leading to global concerns that the outbreak could spread beyond West Africa. Doctors Without Borders was among the first international groups that responded to the outbreak. Both they and Samaritan’s Purse increased their operations and made vocal calls for more support. Unfortunately, governments and the U.N. were slow to meet the need at the moment when the spread of the virus was spiraling out of control.\n(Economist)\n“Throughout the epidemic, I witnessed how communities were ripped apart,” Hilde de Clerck, a Doctors Without Borders epidemiologist who worked in Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, said in a news release. “Initially, the response from the global health community was really paralyzed by fear. It was a horrible experience being left on our own and constantly running behind the wave of the epidemic. But it was very empowering to see how extremely dedicated all the national staff were, and fortunately other international actors eventually got involved. For the next epidemic, the world should stand ready to intervene much faster and more efficiently.”\nReviews of what happened during the outbreak exposed the major problems of the health systems in all three countries, as well as the shortcomings of the international community. The WHO came under some of the most intense criticism for its handling of the crisis from the onset. A road map outlined by an independent group of global health experts focused heavily on the reforms that the WHO needs to undertake in order to better prepare it for the next global health crisis.\nAnd while celebrations are taking place across the world now that the outbreak is over, concerns remain that new cases could emerge. Liberia was declared Ebola-free just a few months ago, before a flare-up reset the clock. There have been 10 such flare-ups at the end of the outbreak, due largely to the persistence of the virus in survivors. It is likely more cases will be found and the rhetoric from leaders indicates that precautions are being taken to ensure the virus does not spread.\nWith the outbreak behind the countries, they all must now look to the long road of recovery. The outbreak cost roughly $2.2 billion to the economies of the three countries, according to estimates from the World Bank.\n“Ebola has exacted an enormous toll on Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone. It has not only taken thousands of lives, it has devastated economies, health systems, social structures and families—reversing many years of development gains,” Jim Kim, head of the World Bank, said in a news release. “Ebola’s scars will not soon fade, especially for survivors and their families, and for the heroic health workers who cared for the infected.”\nEfforts will now focus on ways to recover the economic losses and build up the woeful health systems that struggled to manage the crisis. The heroic response by health workers and volunteers in the countries showed the resilience inherent in the region. Getting back to normal life will not be easy, particularly for the 17,000 Ebola survivors who face health problems from the Ebola and social stigma.\n“Today is a day of celebration and relief that this outbreak is finally over,” Joanne Liu, president of Doctors Without Borders, said in a news release. “We must all learn from this experience to improve how we respond to future epidemics and to neglected diseases. This Ebola response was not limited by lack of international means but by a lack of political will to rapidly deploy assistance to help communities. The needs of patients and affected communities must remain at the heart of any response and outweigh political interests.”\nDoctors Without Borders Ebola Guinea Liberia Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders MSF sierra leone WHO World Health Organization\nShare. Reddit Twitter Facebook Google+ Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email\nPrevious ArticleNews in the Humanosphere: Taliban attack targets polio vaccine workers, killing 15\nNext Article News in the Humanosphere: Islamic State behind deadly Indonesia attacks\nTom Murphy is a New Hampshire-based reporter for Humanosphere. Before joining Humanosphere, Tom founded and edited the aid blog A View From the Cave. His work has appeared in Foreign Policy, the Huffington Post, the Guardian, GlobalPost and Christian Science Monitor. He tweets at @viewfromthecave. Contact him at tmurphy[at]humanosphere.org.\nBy Tom Murphy 30 June 2017\nBy Lisa Nikolau 20 June 2017\nTraveling exhibit seeks to build U.S. empathy for refugees","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line236207"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7358174324035645,"wiki_prob":0.26418256759643555,"text":"Tag Archives: fame\nDavid’s Steleae: The Psalms as Public Memorials and Private Prayers\n“I will tell of the marvellous things You have done.” Psalm 9:1b\n“I will exalt You, Lord, because You have rescued me.” Psalm 30:1a\nA stele is “an upright stone slab or pillar bearing an inscription or design and serving as a monument, marker, or the like.” [Source: Dictionary.com] They were widely used in the Near East millennia before David, and well after his time. It was standard practice for kings to have steles and statues of themselves made as positive propaganda to support their reign. However, David didn’t follow this practice. In line with the *ten commandments, he didn’t have himself pictured with a representation of YHWH behind him, neither did he carve his achievements in stone. Apart from the book of Samuel and 1 Chronicles, the only memorials we have to David are his Psalms, some of which could be likened to victory steles, and others which have an interesting function.\nRoughly half of all the Psalms that are attributed to David were sent to the choir director and made public, and 50% of those Psalms were written when he was in great distress. We don’t know how the other Psalms were used, but it is possible that the ones which have not been specifically marked as “for the choir director” were in his personal collection, then organised into books after his death. His Psalms which are marked as prayers: 17, 86, and 142, were notably not sent to the choir director.\nSome of the Psalms that were made public had national themes: Psalm 60 was written while David grappled with Israel’s failures in the battle in the Valley of Salt, and is noted as being useful for teaching; the wording of Psalm 67 is a mix of a prayer and a benediction; and Psalm 58 is an outspoken challenge to the people of Israel on justice [see the final chapter below for clarification]. David also sent Psalm 53 to the choir director, making a public statement of faith with “only fools deny God.”\nUsing my own classification of the Psalms (I get lost in the theological classifications, so I divided them further for my own use), these are the victory Psalms that David wanted sung before the Lord:\nPsalm 9: I will tell of all the marvellous things You have done.\nPsalm 18: When rescued from Saul and the enemies in that period of time.\nPsalm 20: May the LORD answer all your prayers.\nPsalm 21: How the king rejoices in Your strength, O LORD!\nPsalm 30: Weeping may last through the night, but joy comes with the morning.\nThe Psalms of joy and wonder, plus David’s statements of faith that were sent to the choir director include Psalms 8, 11, 19, 62, 65, 66, 67, 53 and 58.\nOne thing which occurred to me when looking at which Psalms were attributed to specific events and could be considered memorials, is that there are no Psalms specifically linked to David’s most notable victories such as killing Goliath, bringing the Ark of the Covenant into Jerusalem, or his battle achievements. He didn’t mention God’s special covenant with Him, or his plans to build the temple; (neither did David ask for it to be named after him.) This is a testament to David’s humility, despite the moral dips which occurred with Bathsheba and the census.\nThe stone tablet with the code written on it. This was placed in a public space so that all could read it.\nGod is always the focus of David’s songs, which is another significant difference between him and any other ruler. He never claims honour or victory for himself. For an example, read the **Code of Hammurabi which has massive chunks at the beginning and end, glorifying and justifying the rule of Hammurabi. For example: “Hammurabi, the prince… making riches and increase, enriching Nippur and Dur-ilu beyond compare… who conquered the four quarters of the world, made great the name of Babylon…who enriched Ur; the humble, the reverent, who brings wealth…”\nDavid’s work shows that he was transparent in how he talked about his life in public and that he wasn’t hung up on appearances. He freely admitted his faults and struggles and the glory for his successes always went to the Lord. Psalm 51, which speaks of his correction by Nathan over Bathsheba, and how sin affected him, was made public. Whether that was to address his sin because it was public knowledge, or whether it was to be used as a teaching aid to strengthen the faith of the people and encourage righteousness, or both, I honestly don’t know.\nPsalm 3, which was about when he fled from Absalom, Psalm 34 where he escaped from Philistine territory feigning madness and Psalm 52, where he was betrayed by Doeg to Saul, weren’t marked for use by the choir director either. Not using Psalm 52 appears odd, as all the other betrayal Psalms were publicly sung. Perhaps it wasn’t copied or notated correctly, or perhaps David had some private reason for not sending it on? I wish I knew.\nThese are the Psalms which have a definite event associated with them and could be considered a form of victory stele.\n7 – concerning Cush of the tribe of Benjamin\n18 – rescued from all enemies and Saul [PUBLIC]\n30 – dedication of the temple / house [PUBLIC]\n54 – betrayed by Ziphites [PUBLIC]\n56 – seized at Gath [PUBLIC]\n57 – when fled from Saul and went to the cave [PUBLIC]\n59 – soldiers watching his house [PUBLIC]\nThe last point of interest is David’s request that two Psalms which relate to persecution by Saul, (57 and 59,) be sung to the tune “Do Not Destroy.” Knowing the old title attached to that melody would add a clear message to the Psalm, which would be noted by anyone knowing that piece of music. Other Psalmists also requested the same for their work.\n“Do Not Destroy” is also the melody which was selected for Psalm 58: “Justice—do you rulers know the meaning of the word?” In Bible Hub’s interlinear Bible, “ruler” is elem, or congregation. [Strongs Number 482] It is a masculine word, which is culturally correct as the assembly of believers was all male in David’s time. Some Bibles say gods, some say sons of men. There is no correct consensus. It is a source of profound frustration to me that words such as this are so poorly translated in our Bibles, and a reminder to dig deeper to find the true meaning of the Word of God.\n*“You shall not make for yourself an image in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing love to a thousand generations of those who love me and keep my commandments.” Exodus 20:4-6\n**The Code of Hammurabi translated by L.W. King http://www.general-intelligence.com/library/hr.pdf and the Louvre Museum’s page on it: http://www.louvre.fr/en/oeuvre-notices/law-code-hammurabi-king-babylon\nPosted in 2017, David's Life, Psalms, Research\t| Tagged Absalom, achievements, BathSheba, betrayal, Cush, David, distress, ego, en, ensi, escape, event, fame, Gath, Hammurabi, honour, humility, king, King David, life events, memorial, orthostat, private, propaganda, Psalm, public, Saul, stele, teaching, themes, victory, worship, Ziphites | Leave a comment\nBiblical Celebrity: the Hazard of Fame Based Thinking\nA year ago, if you had asked me what I will say to King David when I meet him face to face, I would have had trouble finding an answer. I expected to be really nervous! It’s because he’s so famous. He’s a King and he’s… well, he’s David. I also have no idea what I am going to say to Jonathan, or Moses, or Esther, or Paul… and I kind of want to hide from the prophets, because I feel so inadequate beside them. Can you relate to that?\nMy instinctive reaction prods me into assessing about how much the worldly values of celebrity culture have crept into how I perceive Biblical heroes. The sad answer is, the secular image of fame has influenced my thinking far too much. Celebrity fills a spiritual void in the secular world. It gives lost people aspirational role models, regardless of whether they are saints or sinners. Who doesn’t want to be comfortably wealthy, good looking, healthy, happily married and successful? In moderation, I could take it.\nFor that matter, as Christians, who doesn’t want to be like David? Don’t we want to slay giants, rule nations and live a spiritually successful life? Of course we do! I own kosher salt with David’s name on it, and many secular and Christian movies and books have been written, using David as a symbol of success. God did promise David fame, but it has gotten way out of hand. [Ref. 2 Samuel 7:9] As with secular celebrities, we get caught up in all the glamour, excitement and intrigue of David’s life, and we can easily, unconsciously make the fleshly mistake of treating him like a famous person, not like the servant of the Lord that he is.\nFame has nasty connotations. We all know who Oprah Winfrey is, but as much as we may relate to her and want to be like her, we know that we cannot be her. That is the unconscious lesson we apply when we look at any celebrity. “If only we could… but we can’t.” David is of such a calibre that we look at him in awe. We see him as an impossible person to equal, let alone beat. This can stop us from trying to follow his lead in spiritual areas and that should never happen. David should motivate us to imitate him through prayer, praise, studying the Word, submission to God, obedience, fasting and adoring the Lord. That is the pivotal core of every area of David’s success; he didn’t win because he was brave and strong, it was because he daily practiced those things, thus the Lord was able to use him.\nPlease stop there and read those last seven words again: “the Lord was able to use him.” There is the real problem that Biblical celebrity causes: when we look at David and all he achieved, we stop looking at the simplest of facts: that GOD did it THROUGH David. As David submitted to God he became God’s channel and all the success he had, really was God’s… and David readily, publicly, often admitted that. (See The Anti-King: David and Humility link below.) But our culture teaches us to look at the man and not the boring, routine factors that shaped him, so we lose this humble perspective.\nEphesians 1:19-21 proves we can be like David: “I also pray that you will understand the incredible greatness of God’s power for us who believe him. This is the same mighty power that raised Christ from the dead…” God’s power worked through David as it worked through Jesus and Paul and now, all of us. Think of how much more we could grow if we caught hold of that truth and stopped looking at the people in our Bible as elite celebrities that we cannot be like. We must focus on how they allowed God to work through them, as we CAN copy that successfully. If we imitate David’s spiritual habits, God can carry out His perfect Will through us, which is our ultimate goal. We need a God fixation, not a hero-seeking one. (Please also read The Habits That Built King David’s Faith, the link is below.)\nDavid was a humble man. He would never want to be seen as a celebrity, as he delighted in placing his focus on the Lord. For our thinking to be swept away by the glory and glamour of kingship and success, is to to negate every precept that the Psalms teach us. David’s words through the Psalms always push us in the direction of the Lord as the answer, we need to go in that direction and stop being distracted by wanting to be a giant slayer, or a king ourselves. It makes me sad when I hear Christians say how much they want to rule and reign with Christ, over and above them telling me how much they love to pray or hear God’s voice. We’re aching for fame and big, visible success: the things that are most likely destroy us; and in wanting them, we ignore building our character and making ourselves usable by the Lord.\nWe need a reality check that pulls these worldly standards out of our heads! You have heard it before, Romans 12:2 “Don’t copy the behaviour and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect.” (New Living Translation)\nAnything the Lord does in your life won’t look like it did in David’s and it shouldn’t. God’s love for you is so great, He will give you what is going to fit, bless and build you and the people around you. You don’t need to battle Philistines, when you can conquer your own fears and hurts. You don’t need to liberate a nation, when you can bless people around you and move them towards Jesus. We’re not judged on not being like David, we’re judged on whether or not we did what the Lord asked US to do. So let’s get our heads out of the bright lights and go about our work with our eyes fixed on Jesus. It’s exactly what David would also advise you to do.\n“Trust in the Lord and do good;\ndwell in the land and enjoy safe pasture.\nTake delight in the Lord,\nand He will give you the desires of your heart.\nCommit your way to the Lord;\ntrust in Him and He will do this:\nHe will make your righteous reward shine like the dawn,\nyour vindication like the noonday sun.\nBe still before the Lord\nand wait patiently for Him…” Psalm 37:3-7a\n– The Habits That Built King David’s Faith\n– The Anti-King: David and Humility\n– How to Kill Giants: Searching for the Deep Secrets Behind King David’s Success\nPosted in 2016, Food for Thought, Scripture\t| Tagged awe, balance, Bible heroes, bravery, celebrity, David, fame, famous, fasting, giant, giant slayer, goals, hero, humility, imitate, King David, obedience, praise, prayer, renew mind, role model, self-esteem, shyness, strength, study, submission, Warrior, worldliness","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line748652"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7052503824234009,"wiki_prob":0.7052503824234009,"text":"Bill Cosby ordered to give deposition in sexual abuse lawsuit\nBy: Reuters |\nPublished: August 6, 2015 9:41:49 AM\nBill Cosby has been ordered to give a sworn deposition in a lawsuit brought by a woman accusing the comedian of plying her with alcohol and sexually abusing her at the Playboy Mansion in Los Angeles when she was 15 years old.\nIt marks the first time Bill Cosby, 78, has been directed to testify under oath in response to a complaint of sexual misconduct against him since a deposition he gave in a separate Pennsylvania case he settled out of court nine years ago.\nThe latest order, made public on Wednesday, a day after a Los Angeles Superior Court judge entered it, requires Bill Cosby to submit under oath to questions from the lawyer of his Los Angeles accuser, Judy Huth, on Oct. 9. Now in her 50s, Huth must likewise answer questions from his attorneys on Oct. 15.\nHuth gained somewhat of a tactical advantage from the judge’s decision compelling Bill Cosby to go first.\nThe precise times and places were not revealed, but Huth’s lawyer, Gloria Allred, has said she expects to depose Bill Cosby in Massachusetts, where he resides.\nThe way for the depositions, a key part of the discovery process in civil litigation, was cleared when the California Supreme Court last month denied Bill Cosby’s petition to review the case, dealing a final blow to his efforts to fend off Huth’s lawsuit.\nHer complaint, brought in December 2014, charged that Bill Cosby sexually abused her by putting his hand down her pants and then “taking her hand in his hand and performing a sex act on himself without her consent.”\nHuth alleged the encounter occurred days after she and a female friend met Bill Cosby at a park where he was filming a movie. According to her account, Bill Cosby invited the girls the following weekend to his tennis club, where they all had drinks together before he led them on to the Playboy Mansion.\nBill Cosby’s attorney Martin Singer has called Huth’s allegations false and “defamatory”.\nHuth is one of more than 40 women who have come forward in the past year to say that they were raped or molested by Bill Cosby after he gave them alcohol or drugs in incidents dating back decades.\nIn 2006 Bill Cosby reached a confidential settlement for an undisclosed sum with a former Temple University employee, Andrea Constand, who accused him of sexual assault. Parts of the deposition he gave in that case were made public last month.\nHuth’s complaint is one of at least four pending civil suits against Bill Cosby stemming from such accusations.\nHowever, Allred has said Huth’s is the only one seeking damages for the alleged misconduct itself, citing repressed psychological injuries that she claims were only discovered in the last three years, and therefore are allowed under the statute of limitations.\nThe other plaintiffs are suing for defamation instead.\nBill Cosby has never been criminally charged. He and his lawyers acknowledge marital infidelity on his part but have consistently denied allegations of criminal wrongdoing.\nBill Cosby’s wife deposed for second time in defamation suit\nBill Cosby sued an accuser of sex assault and her attorneys\nBill Cosby’s accuser drops sexual assault lawsuit\nBill Cosby arrives in court as lawyers push to get charge dropped","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line371124"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8900335431098938,"wiki_prob":0.8900335431098938,"text":"The TimesCenter, New York\nGathering the industry’s most influential people to share intelligence and spark discussions that will help shape the future of sport.\n#LEADERS17\nBuyer:Seller\nBrands Represented\nWorld Class Speakers\nSports Represented\nBrands 11%\nRights Holders 29%\nFederations 17%\nLeagues 5%\nAttendee Job Titles\nOwner 5%\nCEO/MD 32%\nDirector 26%\nManager 8%\nMeet 700 senior influencers in sport\nWe control who is in the room so the most relevant people attend\nThe highest ratio of buyers to suppliers\n60+ global brand directors\nPrecision crafted programme with laser sharp insight and world class story telling\nSpeakers from all over the world\nThe only truly global Summit on US soil\nWho's Speaking?\nTod Leiweke\nSebastian Coe\nInternational Association of Athletics Federations\nJoe Harlan\nVice Chairman and Chief Commercial Officer\nTed Leonsis\nFounder, Majority Owner, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer\nMonumental Sports & Entertainment\nAnthony Noto\nGary Bettman\nTina Davis\nManaging Director of Global Sponsorships and Marketing\nFrancesco Calvo\nJessica Greenwood\nVP Content and Partnerships\nR/GA\nChristian Seifert\nCrane Kenney\nAndrew Barroway\nMajority Owner, Chairman and Governor\nStephen Pagliuca\nCo-Chairman, Bain Capital & Co-Owner\nElyssa Byck\nDirector Of Business Strategy\nChloe Gottlieb\nEVP Executive Creative Director US\nJoe Puglisi\nDirector Of Branded Content\nThe Players’ Tribune\nMark Wright\nVP Media Services and Sponsorships\nDavid A. Scott\nPresident/CEO, Comcast Spectacor & Governor\nOn July 24, 2015, it was announced that Leiweke would become the COO of the NFL. He will be the first NFL COO since commissioner Roger Goodell took over in 2003. As the NFL’s COO, Leiweke will oversee business operations for the league and will work directly with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell to increase the popularity of the sport globally. Tod previously served as CEO of Tampa Bay Sports and Entertainment and has led the transformation of the NHL’s $145million Tampa Bay Lightning off the ice, more than doubling the team’s season ticket base and increasing overall attendance by 20%. Prior to taking up this role, Tod spent 7 years as CEO of the NFL’s Seattle Seahawks and Vulcan Sports & Entertainment, also overseeing all aspects of the Portland Trail Blazers and Seattle Sounders FC. He also served as president of First & Goal Inc., which operates Qwest Field and Qwest Field Event Centre for the state of Washington. He was recognised for his efforts in 2009, being named CEO of the Year by the Puget Sound Business Journal and also by the Seattle Sports Commission.\nSebastian Coe is President of the International Association of Athletics Federation (IAAF), Executive Chairman of CSM Sport and Entertainment and one of the world’s most high profile sportsmen having been a competitor, sports administrator, event organiser, campaigner, media commentator, and a life-long sports fan. He was Chairman of the London Organising Committee for the Olympic Games and Paralympic Games, having previously been Chairman of the London 2012 bid company and was Chairman of the British Olympic Committee in the lead up to and during the unprecedented medal success of Team GB at the Rio Olympic Games.\nSeb set 12 world records during his athletic career and at the Olympic Games in Moscow in 1980 he won Gold in the 1500m and Silver in the 800m a feat that he repeated in Los Angeles in 1984.\nSeb retired from competitive athletics in 1990 and became a conservative MP and Private Secretary to William Hague. In 2002 he was made a Peer. He received a Knighthood in the 2006 New Year’s Honours List and received a Companion of Honour in the 2013 New Year’s Honours List.\nIn addition to a number of other roles in sport Seb is also Pro-Chancellor of Loughborough University where he studied as an undergraduate, a Non-Executive Director of VitalityHealth & Life Group of Companies and serves as an Ambassador for BMW. He is a Member of the Laureus World Sport Academy and a Consultant for his beloved Chelsea Football Club.\nJoe E. Harlan is Vice Chairman and Chief Commercial Officer for The Dow Chemical Company, a global material science company with 2016 annual sales of $48 billion.\nAs Chief Commercial Officer, Harlan drives Dow’s global Marketing and Sales strategy and organization. He also has executive oversight of the Company’s presence in North America,\nHarlan joined Dow in September, 2011, bringing three decades of diverse geographic, business, operational and customer experience to the organization from 3M Corporation where he was Executive Vice President of the Consumer and Office business. In 2012, he added executive oversight of Dow’s Chemicals, Energy and Performance Materials businesses and oversight responsibility for Dow Asia Pacific. He was named to his current role in 2014 and expanded his geographic responsibilities in 2015.\nPrior to 3M, Harlan spent 20 years with the General Electric Company (GE), where he held various finance, business development, and operational roles in their Plastics, Appliance and Medical Systems businesses, eventually serving as vice president and CFO of GE Lighting. In 2001, Harlan joined 3M as Vice President, Financial Planning. He then spent two years in Japan with Sumitomo 3M Limited, its Japanese subsidiary, where he served first as executive vice president, and then as president and chairman of the board. He became executive vice president of the 3M Electro and Communications business based in Austin, Texas, in 2004. He was named to his most recent position in 3M in 2009.\nTed Leonsis is the founder and chairman of Monumental Sports & Entertainment, which owns and operates three professional sports teams (Washington Capitals, Washington Wizards and Washington Mystics) and the Verizon Center. He also serves on the board of governors for the NBA and NHL.\nTed is the co-founder of Revolution Growth, a fund investing in disruptive businesses that can change the world. Ted is also an investor, a member of the board of directors and co-CEO of Groupon. He also serves on the board of directors at AddThis, American Express and Georgetown University.\nIn 2008 Ted founded SnagFilms, which enables online audiences to watch, share and support documentary films. SnagFilms grew out of Ted’s experience as a producer of award-winning documentary films, including Nanking, which won Peabody and Emmy awards.\nDavid Levy is president of Turner, overseeing the company’s leading portfolio of domestic entertainment, sports, kids and young adult brands, including TBS, TNT, Cartoon Network, Adult Swim, Boomerang, truTV, Turner Classic Movies, Bleacher Report and ELEAGUE, the company’s entry into the red hot esports category. He also leads Ad Sales and Distribution, the company’s two primary U.S. domestic revenue divisions, and has oversight of Turner Sports.\nSince assuming executive leadership of the company’s domestic portfolio in 2013, the Turner networks have maintained top competitive rankings in key metrics for TNT, TBS, Adult Swim, truTV and Cartoon Network, as well as a leading portfolio of digital brands, including Bleacher Report.\nHe has led a significant expansion in digital media for Turner including the company’s acquisition of Bleacher Report and acquiring a majority stake in streaming video pioneer iStreamPlanet. In 2016, Turner launched FilmStruck, the company’s first U.S. domestic subscription video-on-demand service.\nMr. Levy has been instrumental in deepening and expanding Turner’s sports media rights. Turner’s premium sports content includes partnerships with the NBA, the NCAA for the Division I Men’s Basketball Championship, Major League Baseball and the PGA.\nHe has received many accolades during his career, including induction into the Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame.\nAnthony is COO at Twitter, overseeing the company’s business operations as well as its revenue generating organizations including global advertising sales, global partnerships, business development, live content, data, revenue product, and MoPub.\nAnthony also continues to serve as Twitter’s CFO, a position he has held since July 2014, as the company looks for a new CFO. As CFO, he oversees the company’s financial operations, corporate development and strategy. Prior to joining Twitter, Anthony was a partner and the Head of the Technology, Media and Telecom Investment Banking Group at Goldman Sachs & Co. from 2010 to 2014.\nFrom 2008 to 2010, Anthony was Chief Financial Officer of the National Football League. He led the league through the financial crisis and many of the key deals that transformed its media business. From 1999 to 2007, he served in various roles at Goldman Sachs, including Partner in the Equity Research division, the lead Internet analyst, and the lead Media and Entertainment Equity Research analyst.\nAnthony holds a B.S. in Mechanical Engineering from the United States Military Academy and an M.B.A. from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.\nGary Bettman has served the National Hockey League as Commissioner since February 1, 1993 and has guided the world’s top professional hockey league through more than two decades of growth on and off the ice. Record revenues, record attendance, more media platforms and numerous fan-friendly and community-minded initiatives are just a few examples of the ways Commissioner Bettman has brought the NHL to a broader audience.\nCommissioner Bettman has fostered unprecedented economic stability for the League’s Member Clubs. League revenues have increased more than tenfold during Commissioner Bettman’s tenure and franchise values have increased exponentially.\nOn the ice, the NHL’s competitive balance may be unrivalled in professional sports: Combined with the strongest Collective Bargaining Agreement in sports and the implementation of rules designed to accentuate the speed, skill and creativity of the players, a different team has earned the most historic trophy in professional sports – the Stanley Cup – every year since 1998.\nA calendar of innovative events, including iconic outdoor games, has driven fan engagement and sponsor participation to unprecedented levels. Charity, community service and diversity also have been at the forefront of Commissioner Bettman’s tenure. Hockey Fights Cancer has raised millions in support of cancer research and awareness. Mr. Bettman also prioritized grass-roots initiatives that bring hockey to youngsters. In addition, the NHL in 2013 signed an historic partnership agreement with the “You Can Play Project” which is dedicated to ensuring equality, respect and safety for all athletes, without regard to sexual orientation.\nTina started her career at advertising agency Wieden + Kennedy and came to Citi in 2005 as the VP of North American Advertising. In 2011, Tina took on an enhanced role when Citi first decided to get involved in the Olympics ahead of the London Games.\nAfter the 2012 Games, Tina built out an entire new group to oversee all of Citi’s sponsorship efforts – the Games, Citi Field, Presidents Cup, the Citi Open, Harlem EatUp and more. She was promoted to Managing Director, Corporate Sponsorship and Marketing at the bank late last year.\nTina holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science from UCLA.\nFrancesco Calvo is FC Barcelona’s new Chief Revenue Officer, having previously working as Commercial Director and Chief Revenue Officer at Juventus FC. Calvo worked for many years at the prestigious Italian club, where he has gathered in-depth knowledge of the football business, the generation of income and sponsorship deals.\nCalvo was put in charge of the Juventus’ commercial plans and strategies, generation of income, financial sustainability, licenses and the implementation and development of new digital platforms. Calvo has also held managerial positions at Philip Morris International and Marlboro Motorsports Global Communication, and his representation of these companies led to his involvement in the business side of such events as the World F1 Championship and Moto GP\nJess runs R/GA’s activation strategy team, which is a home for hybrid thinkers with deep knowledge of content and social, contemporary communications planning, and strategic media partnerships. The activation strategy team is charged with bringing bottom-up cultural insights into the creative process, and delivering the work in the most relevant way possible. Over the last four years, Jess has overseen strategy for a broad spectrum of work for clients including Nike, Verizon, Tiffany and Google.\nOne of the first journalists to make the leap into brand strategy, Jess joined R/GA from Contagious Magazine, where she oversaw the editorial team and hatched Insider, the company’s strategic consultancy. Following a stint in the Creative Partnerships team at Google, she returned to R/GA to build out this new approach to strategy.\nJess is a founder member of Papel e Caneta, a global collaboration between strategists across the world to solve some of society’s toughest problems; moonlights as designer of her own fashion line, and is a committed karaoke ringleader.\nChristian has been CEO at the German Bundesliga since 2005 where he oversees the strategic orientation and overall leadership of the DFL and has led the league to record revenues in every area of the business. He currently also serves as Vice President of the German Football Association and as a member of the board of the League Association. Prior to joining the Bundesliga, Christian spent five years at KarstadtQuelle New Media AG, latterly as Chief Executive Officer, and 2 years as Director of Marketing (Central Europe) for MTV Networks.\nFrank McCourt is an American businessman, Chairman and CEO of McCourt Global and current owner of the French football club Olympique de Marseille. Prior to purchasing Olympique de Marseille, Frank owned the Los Angeles Dodgers from 2012 to 2014. In 2004, he purchased a controlling interest of the Dodgers from Fox Entertainment Group, owned by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation and sold the team in 2012 for an historic $2.15 billion. In 2008, McCourt bought the operating rights to the Los Angeles Marathon. McCourt’s group changed the route of the Marathon so that it would start at Dodger Stadium. His “Stadium to the Sea” course revitalized the Marathon and in 2010 it drew the largest field in the history of the race. On top of his ownership of the LA marathon and Olympique de Marseille, McCourt has a 50% stake in the Global Champions Tour which brings together the top 30 riders in the FEI Jumping World Rankings and recently launched Global Champions League, an innovative league of franchised showjumping teams.\nCrane Kenney is a Major League Baseball executive with the Chicago Cubs, serving as their President of Business Operations. He formerly served as president of the Cubs in 2010 and 2011. The Cubs won back-to-back World Series championships in 1907 and 1908, becoming the first major league team to play in three consecutive World Series, and the first to win it twice. Most recently, the Cubs won the 2016 National League Championship Series and 2016 World Series, which ended a 71-year National League drought and a 108-year World Series championship drought, both of which are record droughts in Major League Baseball. The 108-year drought was also the longest such occurrence in all major North American sports. Since the start of divisional play in 1969, the Cubs have appeared in the postseason eight times through the 2016 season.\nAndrew Barroway became the Majority Owner, Chairman and Governor of the Arizona Coyotes on December 31, 2014.\nMr. Barroway is the Managing Partner of Merion Investment Management LP, an event driven hedge fund that currently manages more than $1 Billion. Merion was founded in January 2009. Barroway graduated from the University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1991.\nStephen Pagliuca is a Managing Partner and Executive Committee Member of the Boston Celtics. As a Managing Partner and Chairman of the Basketball Committee, Pagliuca has focused on enhancing the development and improvement of the Celtics basketball operations. Mr. Pagliuca also serves as a member of the NBA Board of Governors and the NBA Competition Committee.\nPagliuca currently is a Managing Director of Bain Capital. He has helped build Bain Capital into a leading global private equity firm with approximately $80 billion capital under management.\nPagliuca received a B.A. from Duke University where he also played freshman basketball, and an M.B.A. from the Harvard Business School.\nHe is currently the Chairman of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, Chairman of the Boston Celtics Shamrock Foundation, Co Chair of the Inner City Scholarship Fund and serves on the international board of The Right To Play, a worldwide children’s development group that utilizes Olympic athletes to promote children’s health and safety. He is also a Trustee of the Bain Capital Children’s Charity.\nPagliuca is a member of the Board of Directors of Gartner Group, Burger King, HCA (Hospital Corporation of America) and Warner Chilcott. Pagliuca has been active in youth basketball from kindergarten to the AAU level. He and his wife, Judy, with their four children are longtime Massachusetts residents.\nElyssa Byck joined BuzzFeed in 2014, and serves as the Director of Global Business Strategy. She develops and implements growth opportunities to drive revenue; shaping the company’s business strategy. She also manages strategic initiatives and most recently was tapped to oversee the NBCUniversal business partnership. Before joining BuzzFeed, Byck worked at OMD and focused on digital and social initiatives for clients such as Warner Bros. and Frito Lay. She studied the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University and lives in New York City.\nChloe is a strategic creative leader skilled in creating connected experiences for global clients and their customers. As R/GA’s Executive Creative Director, US, she works alongside Taras Wayner to guide hundreds of multidisciplinary teams toward the creation of breakthrough products, services, and communications for global brands such as Nike and Samsung.\nIn her previous role at R/GA, Chloe built the largest Experience Design team at any global agency. Happiest when collaborating at the intersection of storytelling, design, and technology, she has been applying her unique skills as a mentor in the R/GA Accelerator program, where she helps emerging startups in the Internet of Things space develop their branding, customer experience, and communications.\nChloe was named one of the “Most Creative People in Advertising” by Business Insider in 2014 and 2015. Her work for Nike, Nokia, Verizon, Alvio, and the Ad Council has garnered the industry’s most esteemed awards at top competitions including the Cannes Lions, One Show Interactive, the CLIOs, the ADC Annual Awards, and the ANDYs. Chloe has been named a New York Times Digital Scholar and published an article on data-driven motivation in Business Week.\nPrior to R/GA, Chloe expanded her expertise at Razorfish, where she engaged in deep ethnographic and insight-related engagements, working on diverse brands from Condé Nast (embracing social networks on Flip.com) to Mercedes-AMG (creating an immersive, user-driven experience on Mercedes-AMG.com).\nJoe Puglisi used to head up Creative strategy for BuzzFeed and has an obsession with how content spreads. Currently figuring out how to make that happen for native advertising in the BuzzFeed Creative department, educating and assisting always-on partners.\nWorking with a variety of brands and their agencies to better their social voice and run programs on BuzzFeed, including, GEICO, General Electric, SC Johnson, Pepsi, MillerCoors, AirBnB, Durex, Showtime, HBO, Netflix, AMC, Quiznos, and more.\nAt heart a storyteller, writer, editor, creative content specialist in the media business space having previously worked as a music critic/journalist for a video production website as their main editorial outlet, with a focus on music. Joe has recently moved to Players Tribune where he is now Director Of Branded Content.\nMark manages all national and local media investments on behalf of the AT&T business units which includes national TV, 3-screen content, paid search and social networks. He extends the company’s brand reputation among key stakeholders and strengthens AT&T’s competitive advantages.\nMark oversees sponsorship strategy and negotiation efforts across sports entertainment. He leads numerous key sponsorship initiatives including the naming rights of the AT&T Stadium, the AT&T Pebble Beach National Pro-Am, the NCAA Men’s Basketball Championship, College Football Playoff and Championship, The Masters Tournament and the Tribeca Film Festival.\nPrior to joining AT&T, Mark served as Vice President, Media, Sports and Entertainment Marketing for Anheuser-Busch, Inc., where he directed media planning for the company’s beer brands and managed sports, entertainment and local marketing efforts.\nSports Business Journal has named Mark both the “29th Most Influential Executive in Sports” and the “16th Most Influential Person in the NFL.” He was also one of Advertising Age’s Media Mavens.\nDavid Scott is President and Chief Executive Officer of Comcast Spectacor, and serves as Governor of the Philadelphia Flyers for the National Hockey League. As CEO, Scott is responsible for the growth and optimization of Comcast Spectacor’s three core businesses: the National Hockey League’s Philadelphia Flyers; the Wells Fargo Center Complex; and Spectra, a hospitality firm specializing in Venue Management, Food Services & Hospitality, and Ticketing & Fan Engagement.\nSince his arrival, Scott has propelled Comcast Spectacor’s business operations and winning culture behind a unified go-to-market approach and a renewed commitment to operational excellence and client satisfaction. His primary focus is shaping and developing Comcast Spectacor’s strategic vision for sustainable, long-term growth.\nIn 2015, Scott spearheaded a complete re-branding of Comcast Spectacor’s wide-ranging client solutions into Spectra, a singular and cohesive business unit that offers an unmatched blend of integrated services. Spectra’s innovative and tight coordination of hospitality offerings present incremental revenue opportunities for clients and enhanced experiences for fans visiting more than 400 venues, primarily in North America.\nScott joined Comcast Spectacor as President and COO in December 2013 following a 20-year tenure at Comcast Cable. Scott served as Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Comcast Cable from 2005-2013. During his time as CFO, Comcast acquired approximately five million new customers and launched Digital Voice and Home Security under the Xfinity brand, as well as Comcast Business Class Services.\nProgramme Teaser\nHow the NFL Dominates Sunday\nGrowing America’s Number 1 Sport\nThe Rise of OTT\nGrowing Live Sports on Twitter\nEstablishing Truly Strategic Partnerships\nMaking Your Brand Stand Tall in A Crowd\nInvesting in Sport\nPutting Your Money Where Your Mouth Is\nWe continually craft and refine the agenda leading up to the event. If you'd like to know more about what we have planned, please get in touch.\nView Company Details\nNolan Partners\nNolan Partners is the global leader in retained executive search for sports business and sports performance. The firm has completed over 500 placements across 25 sports and six continents.\nNolan Partners specializes in Board of Director, VP, Director, and C-level assignments. The firm’s client portfolio includes Chicago Cubs, PGA, Milwaukee Bucks, Liverpool FC, Arsenal FC, Williams F1, Oakland A’s, and the USTA.\n601 S. Figueroa Street\nOMNIGON\nOMNIGON is a team of digital strategists, artists and technologists working exclusively in the areas of consumer loyalty, audience growth and digital content delivery. Since its founding in 2008, OMNIGON has established itself as a market leader, focused on helping clients achieve returns on the strategic, creative and technical investments they’ve made. OMNIGON, headquartered in New York and with teams in Los Angeles, London, Toronto, Kiev and St. Petersburg, works with celebrated, global brands including the PGA TOUR, AS Roma, the German Football Association (DFB), NASCAR, the United States Golf Association, Verizon INDYCAR, and CONCACAF, among countless others.\nGetty Images works with over 200,000 contributors and hundreds of image partners to provide comprehensive coverage of more than 130,000 news, sport and entertainment events, impactful creative imagery to communicate any commercial concept and the world’s deepest digital archive of historic photography.\nGrabyo\nGrabyo is the premium video editing and publishing platform built for live, social and mobile. Our vision is to bring premium live sports, entertainment and news to audiences of billions, regardless of geography, media platform or device.\nGrabyo allows rights holders to take ownership of content, exploit emerging online channels and drive new monetization opportunities such as branded content, sponsored social video highlights, live streams, and premium OTT services. Grabyo’s customers and technology partners are at the forefront of the rapidly evolving video industry.\nClients include LaLiga, Wimbledon, FIA Formula E, The Premier League, BT Sport, Real Madrid CF and BeIn Sports USA.\nHotelPlanner\nHotelPlanner.com is the leading provider of online services in the global group hotel marketplace, and an established resource for group event planners and hotel partners alike. Today, HotelPlanner.com provides its group travel technology expertise to over 4,200,000 group event planners globally while servicing $7 billion in group hotel booking requests in 2017 and an estimated $10 billion in 2018.\nHotelPlanner.com’s Pro Sports Team clients most notably include, the Washington Redskins Professional Bowlers Association, and partnership with USA TODAY Sports Active Alliance. On an international scale, clients include, Clipper Round the World Yacht Race, European Professional Golfers (EuroPro), Triple Crown Sports, Matchroom Sport, Super League (Rugby), AFC Wimbledon, Euroleague Basketball, Millwall F.C., Hella Verona F.C., and Swansea F.C.\nhttps://www.hotelplanner.com/\nSport Business Journal\nTagboard is a software platform that uses the hashtag to aggregate social media for end-users, brands, agencies and marketers, displaying content from multiple networks in a comprehensive and engaging visual format. Tagboard’s turnkey solutions allow marketers to leverage powerful tools designed to filter positive influence, amplify engagement, and showcase branded experiences through social curation and integration. End-users can self-discover, interact with, and join the discussion all within a single, easy-to-use feed. Tagboard helps some of the biggest brands in the world play a more active role in the social conversation by encouraging their audiences to share their experiences on a branded, moderated platform. Based in Redmond, WA, Tagboard has discreetly pioneered hashtag marketing since 2012.\nwww.tagboard.com\nThe TimesCenter\nWe have secured the most competitive hotel rates in association with our Online Accommodation Partner HotelPlanner.com. Please click here to secure your room.\nIf you have a question for our team, please email [email protected] with your query and we will be happy to help.\nWould you like to attend The Sport Business Summit?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1574811"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.549321711063385,"wiki_prob":0.549321711063385,"text":"Christie Rossiter, SAYiT\nGay and bisexual men are over four times as likely to have attempted suicide in their lifetime as heterosexual men\n— The conversation\nwww.pexels.com\nThere are a multitude of poorer health outcomes and indicators for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender plus (LGBT+) people. In recent years there have been significant advances in securing equality for LGBT+ people. However, the remaining differences, not least in relation to mental health and wellbeing, are starkest in the levels of suicide and self-harm. There are higher levels of drugs and substance misuse amongst LGBT+ people as well as poorer sexual health and social isolation (especially for younger and older people).\nAs well as having longstanding mental health problems lesbians, gay men and bisexuals are more likely to have bad experiences with nurses and doctors in a GP setting. Of these sexual orientations, bisexual people experience the highest rates of reported psychological or emotional problems. This may in part be due to experiencing “double discrimination”; homophobia from heterosexual people as well as being stigmatised by the gay and lesbian communities as not being “properly gay” (biphobia). People who are transgender have a plethora of unique barriers and challenges to accessing the GP and other health services, which results in further health disparities.\nFor example, a barrier for a trans male asking for help is that they are experiencing typically female health issues such as menstruation complexities and health issues around female anatomy. Another example is lesbian women reporting the frustration at repeatedly being asked if they are pregnant because they have answered in the affirmative to being sexually active.\nLGBT Definitions\nDefinitions- Click here to find out more\nPossible health problems\n• Lesbian, gay and bisexual people are at least twice more at risk of suicide attempts than the general population. Gay and bisexual men are over four times as likely to have attempted suicide in their lifetime as heterosexual men\n• Lesbian, gay and bisexual people are 1.5 - 3 times more likely to experience depression, anxiety and substance use.\n• Across all age groups, lesbian, gay and bisexual people are up to seven times more likely to use substances; longer substance use than heterosexuals. Lesbian and bisexual women are at high risk of substance dependence\n• RaRE report in 2015 by PACE: 70% of young lesbian, gay and bisexual people and 89% of young trans people had considered suicide, in adults this is 84% but drops to drops to 3% post transition\nWhy Is LGBT+ Health Important?\nIt is estimated that between 3 and 7% of the population are lesbian, gay, bisexual or trans, yet LGBT+ communities remain poorly understood. Eliminating LGBT+ health disparities and enhancing efforts to improve LGBT+ health are necessary to ensure that LGBT+ individuals can lead long, healthy lives.\nMake sure GP/health services clearly extend to LGBT+ people. Do this by creating a safe, inclusive and diverse working environment that encourages respect and equality for all and a space that values and recognises the differences between sexual orientation and gender identity and proactively addresses these\nExtend training on LGBT+ issues to all staff members and medical students to increase provision of culturally competent care\nUse gender neutral terms, such as ‘partner’ and don’t make assumptions\nMake links with LGBT+ organisations and consider advertising services at these places. Leadership and collaboration is key across organisations, for example voluntary and community sector, local businesses, local council, GPs, and hospitals. No single organisation can effect real change at scale on its own\nCollecting sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) data in health-related surveys and health records in order to identify LGBT+ health disparities\nAppropriately inquiring about and being supportive of a patient's sexual orientation and gender identity to enhance the patient-provider interaction and regular use of care\nChristie Rossiter is Charity Manager at SAYiT, South Yorkshire’s largest award winning youth LGBT+ charity.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1647022"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.915527880191803,"wiki_prob":0.915527880191803,"text":"The Walking Dead Season 2: Episode 1 – All That Remains Review\nBy Peter Parrish December 19, 2013 0\nThis review contains at least one honking great spoiler for The Walking Dead Season 1. If you don’t want to see that, stop reading. I’ll be avoiding descriptions of specific events in Season 2, but may still touch on aspects of this first episode that you would rather not know. Okay, that’s the end of the warning!\nThe big problem with the episodic format is that it’s difficult to offer a definitive critique that will stand up to the release of the rest of the series. Episode 1 of The Walking Dead’s second season is one fifth of the game, which, in any other circumstances, would make this article a preview. Telltale’s heavy focus on character and narrative makes this even more of an issue, as the full realisation of (say) the Lee/Clementine story arc was only possible to see in retrospect.\nThat explains why the individual episodes of the first Walking Dead season one received more cautious review scores in comparison to the full, five episode release. The game grew in stature as it progressed, but it was impossible to judge properly until it was complete.\nTerrible things are happening and Clementine is afraid.\nSo, I have to look at All That Remains in more specific terms. How well does it continue The Walking Dead narrative that Telltale established with season one? Does it provide a compelling set-up for further episodes? And how does the change in protagonist from Lee to Clementine affect matters?\nThe glib answers to those questions would be “pretty well,” “mostly” and “in some interesting ways.” Telltale had a relative blank slate to work with in the first season, but this follow-up comes with certain expectations and baggage.\nAll That Remains is as much a post-script to season one as it is set-up for season two. Clementine’s remaining ties to the old group are cut, and she’s driven into a situation with a new, suspicious community. Between those two events, we also have some scenes where our heroine has to fend for herself. All of this is squeezed into an episode lasting just over an hour and a half.\nIt provides plenty of powerful, gut-battering moments, but leaves you with a sense that the rapid pace has been somewhat to the detriment of properly introducing a new cast.\nTerrible things are happening and Clementine is upset.\nThat, of course, is something which will doubtless be rectified over the course of The Walking Dead’s forthcoming episodes. Nonetheless, All That Remains feels closer to a post-script running immediately into a prologue, rather than a self-contained episode.\nStill, it’s one hell of a post-script/prologue combo. Few titles can compete with The Walking Dead when it comes to setting up and executing moments of stomach-sinking, eye-averting grimness. In this opening episode, the rare pieces of brevity must be snatched at and held dear, because the rest is unrelenting bleakness. Clementine is really put through the wringer, to the extent that I worry slightly where Telltale might opt to go if they feel the need to ramp up the deep hurting even further. For anybody wondering whether the developer would wimp out on the depictions of on-screen Clem-death for the various “game over” sequences, here is your answer: nope.\nThat should hopefully give you enough incentive to do your best in the usual quick-time, use-item-in-reach-A-on-zombie-body-part-B mini-games that constitute a fair amount of the player input in these titles. If anything, this season of The Walking Dead seems to be shying even further away from being anything approaching a point-and-click ‘puzzle’ game. There are set-ups that appear as though they could be from a traditional adventure puzzle (multiple objects in a single room with a clear objective) but they no longer require any major logistical reasoning.\nTerrible things are happening and Clementine is steadfast.\nMoments of player interaction now seem to work purely as beats of pacing; quieter periods, where you’re not having to make a quick dialogue choice or hoof it away from danger in quick-timey style. Those who abandoned The Walking Dead for its lack of wide-ranging player interaction will not be won back by anything in All That Remains.\nMost, though, play Telltale’s series for its character conflicts, plot progression and dialogue choices, with only a side-order of occasional clicking on stuff. In All That Remains, an action that may once have been part of a puzzle instead becomes a chance for the player to choose and reflect on how “their” Clementine is coping with Lee’s death, or her present circumstance.\nPerhaps the biggest success for this new season is the way in which it handles Clem’s move from strong supporting character and Lee’s moral compass, to the lead role itself. To say that not many videogames would even attempt to make a ten year old girl their protagonist, let alone do it well, is an understatement.\nThe Walking Dead takes a couple of liberties with Clem’s capabilities, but these can perhaps be justified by her exposure to the harsh realities of the game’s universe. In fact, the episode even makes a point of juxtaposing Clementine’s world-weary pragmatism with the naive, sheltered existence of another, older girl.\nTerrible things are happening and Clementine is alarmed.\nClementine makes one particularly foolish (and unavoidable) mistake early in the episode that most will notice instantly, though it’s impossible to prevent. In that sense it’s frustrating, but it serves as a formative experience and reinforces the idea that Clem, not matter how smart and savvy she may be, is still a child.\nDuring her lonelier moments, Telltale occasionally give Clementine one monologue too many (when looking at a photo of a happy family, for example, I’m not sure I need the line “they look like they were a happy family,”) but these missteps are rare and the majority of Clem’s lines hit the right sort of tone. Towards the latter parts of the episode, it’s possible to manipulate the adults with your youth in ways that would never have been open to Lee. Where once you may have been guarding your actions for fear of what Clementine might learn from you, now you’re deciding precisely how she’s putting those survival lessons into action.\nI played through the first season of The Walking Dead on the 360, so it wasn’t possible for me to fully interpret what impact (if any) the choices I’d made there were having on this episode. It was a little annoying, actually, not to be able to simply tell the game which choices I’d made before (rather like the comic book opening in Mass Effect 2.) Instead, those options were randomised.\nA couple of incidents were raised through conversation, but it didn’t appear to extend much further than that.\nTerrible things are ha … hold on, this doesn’t look so bad. Terrible things WILL happen though. You mark my words.\nWhile we’re on the subject, people are still reporting issues with season two being unable to detect a saved game from season one (or the 400 Days DLC.) This technical issue has plagued the PC version of the game since it was launched, and it would be outrageous if the very same bug remains in the code of season two.\nTelltale had further technical problems delivering the game to those who’d purchased it directly through the company site. Unnecessary DRM, while not on the scale of the SimCity debacle, prevented people who owned the game from actually being able to play it. Meanwhile, the Steam version was working as intended. The lack of support during this incident, and particularly the unresolved saved game issues from season one, do not reflect well on the developer.\nAll That Remains shows that The Walking Dead can survive the departure from Telltale of lead writer Sean Vanaman and co-lead developer Jake Rodkin. It’s a confident release that uses the expectations established by season one to peer at the zombie apocalypse through a younger pair of eyes. The running time of 90 minutes is too brief to do justice to the attempted arc of post-script to prologue to full introduction, but while new cast members are too lightly sketched at present, Clementine herself is skillfully established in the lead role. That achievement, alongside some significant moments of poignancy, mean this first episode is an uneven but broadly successful opener.\nPeter Parrish\nSunset gets first official screenshots\nBy Tim McDonald January 7, 2015 0\nDisney Interactive Layoffs Now Total 280\nBy Paul Younger March 15, 2011 0\nThe Division Agents Journey trailer explains what it’s all about\nBy Paul Younger January 13, 2016 0","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line394318"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5636834502220154,"wiki_prob":0.4363165497779846,"text":"Alex Rodriguez Dropped Out of a Feud With Kylie Jenner Before It Really Got Started\nHunter Biden Is the Best Thing That Could Happen to Joe Biden\nRachel Dodes\nYet Another Famous Rocker Tells the Trump Campaign to Screw Off\nElizabeth Warren’s Big Wedding Faux Pas\nKenzie Bryant\nJay-Z and Beyoncé’s Obama Fund-raiser Seemingly Better Than George Clooney’s in at Least One Way\nLast night at the 40/40 Club in New York, the sports club co-owned by Jay-Z, the hip-hop artist and wife Beyoncé hosted the president and approximately 100 guests for what we originally anticipated would be the candidate’s coolest campaign fund-raiser yet. While we cannot comment on whether this expectation was realized—because the White House press-pool report disappointingly fails to note whether the 40/40 Club’s catwalk, 18-foot-tall illuminated champagne tower, and custom pool tables were utilized—we can say that it was notably better than George Clooney’s May fund-raiser in one capacity.\nReaders of the Hollywood Blog may remember how, following the Oscar winner’s $15 million gala at his home in L.A., the press pool cattily dismissed the event’s ambiance: “the tented setting on [Clooney’s] b’ball court was just so-so.” Triumphantly, Jay-Z and Beyoncé did not earn such middling reviews. Instead, the write-up matter-of-factly describes the couple’s sports-club affair as taking place in a “large, dark glassy room” filled with donors, who paid $40,000 each, wearing suits and dresses, and sitting on sofas. The reports continues, “Small tables of wine, champagne and finger food, including sliders, were in front of them.”\nThe president had a more effusive assessment of his hosts, with whom he is apparently on nickname basis:\nLet me just begin by saying to Jay and Bey, thank you so much for your friendship. We are so grateful. Michelle and Malia and Sasha are mad at me because they are not here. (Laughter.) That doesn’t usually happen. Usually they’re like, we’re glad you’re going—we don’t need to go. But every time they get a chance to see these two they are thrilled, partly because they are just both so generous, particularly to my kids. And Malia and Sasha just love both of them.\nBeyoncé couldn’t be a better role model for our daughters because she carries herself with such class and poise—(applause)—and has so much talent. And Jay-Z now knows what my life is like. (Laughter.) We both have daughters, and our wives are more popular than we are. (Laughter and applause.) So we’ve got a little bond there. (Laughter.) It’s hard, but it’s okay. It’s okay. (Laughter.)\nLast night Obama also appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman, where he discussed the violence in Libya, Mitt Romney’s most recent damning tapes, and his weight (180 pounds.)\nBeyoncé and Meghan Markle Will Be in the Same Place at the Same Time on Sunday\nTrump “Purges” Pollsters Who Revealed He’s Losing to Biden\nElizabeth Warren Is Surging—And the Trump Campaign Is Taking Notice\nMeghan Markle and Beyoncé Have Now Met; the Internet Survives, Barely","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1125051"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9502149820327759,"wiki_prob":0.9502149820327759,"text":"Dunfermline Abbey celebrates 200 years since discovery of the Bruce's tomb\nThis week Dunfermline Abbey will hold a series of commemorative services and events to mark the 200th anniversary of the discovery of Robert the Bruce's tomb.\nFormer head teacher called to be Kirk's first ever Hub Minister\nThe Church of Scotland has recruited a former secondary school head teacher to become its first ever Hub Ministries co-ordinator.\nModerator reflects on the season of Lent\nRt Rev Dr Derek Browning reflects on the season of Lent and suggests that instead of or as well as giving something up, we take up something positive\nYouth Moderator - fear must be challenged to secure 'real peace'\nThe Moderator of the National Youth Assembly of the Church of Scotland speaks candidly about how building interfaith relationships help to overcome fear, suspicion and bring people together to strive for peace.\nStrangers attend community funeral for asylum seeker\nStrangers have attended a funeral for an asylum seeker whose death has left her 10-year-old son an orphan and facing an uncertain future.\nFormer Moderator welcomes new proposals to tackle homelessness\nA former Moderator of the General Assembly has welcomed a new Scottish Parliament report on combating homelessness.\nTributes paid to \"pioneer\" first woman parish minister\nThe Church of Scotland’s first female Minister of Word and Sacrament, the Rev Euphemia (Effie) Irvine, has died.\nKirk members in Aberdeen honoured for giving more than 1,000 years of service\nPeople in Aberdeen are being honoured for giving 1,059 years of service to the Church of Scotland.\nPupils vow to ensure lessons of Srebrenica are never forgotten\nA former Moderator of the General Assembly has congratulated pupils for highlighting the Srebrenica genocide as part of an event to mark Holocaust Memorial Day.\nFive ministers tell us how they celebrated the launch of the Year of Young People\nWe asked churches up and down the country to tell us how they marked the launch of the Church of Scotland's Year of Young People, and here's some of the responses.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line28784"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6045212745666504,"wiki_prob":0.3954787254333496,"text":"Catherine McKenzie\nLisa C. Risi serves as the Chief Operating Officer and Chief Financial Officer for The Breast Cancer Research Foundation, since July 2012, following an interim CFO role at the American Lung Association.\nIn her current role, she is responsible for Finance, Administration, Human Resources and Information Technology and plays an important role in Strategic and Operational planning.\nLisa served as the CFO for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society from January 2009 through March 2012. Ms. Risi began with the MS Society in March 1997 as the Accounting Manager. She was promoted to Controller in September 2000 and served as Vice President of Finance from January 2003 to May 2005.\nMs. Risi also served the Society as Chief Operating Officer of the New York City chapter where she was responsible for Finance, Administration, Information Technology, and Volunteer Development from December 2005 through December 2008.\nPrior to joining the National MS Society, Ms. Risi worked in Ernst & Young’s financial services audit group and as Audit Manager for Citibank’s Investment Banking Division. She also managed the accounting department for Hilton International’s US based real estate development subsidiary, London and Leeds.\nMs. Risi has family and friends who have been affected by MS and she has a deep commitment to finding a cure and ensuring the quality of life for all people with MS today.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line103022"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9612104892730713,"wiki_prob":0.9612104892730713,"text":"What are the commercial effects of terrorism?\nTwo University of Queensland students have developed a framework to determine the short-term and long-term commercial effects of terrorism thanks to a scholarship established by UQ alumni.\nBachelor of Commerce (Honours) student Jake Sullivan and Bachelor of Econometrics (Honours) Zi Yin focused on the September 11 attacks and the consequences of these attacks for financial markets as part of a research project with UQ’s Australian Institute for Business and Economics (AIBE).\nThe students each received a $5625 Matthew McLennan and Richard Howes Outstanding Honours Collaboration Scholarship, which encourages teamwork between high-performing Honours students from the UQ Business School and School of Economics at UQ.\nMr Sullivan said the framework might help some people recognise effects of terrorism that they may not have considered before and highlighted some areas for further research in the area.\n“One of the long-term effects we consider is a so-called “terror tax” – whereby terrorism raises the cost of doing business through higher insurance premia, expensive security precautions and larger wage costs to compensate at-risk employees,” he said.\n“This scholarship says a lot about the culture here at UQ and that people who go on to have such great success feel compelled to share their success with people at the School is in no small part attributable to the School’s teaching staff.”\nMr Yin said the biggest benefit of the scholarship was being able to work with someone who approached problems in a different way.\n“Without this scholarship, I wouldn’t have had the chance to explore this topic and work with someone with different skills to me,” he said.\n“I have learned a lot in terms of applying econometrics theory into the practice question, for example how time series modelling could be used to estimate the effect of terrorism into different industries.\nAIBE Director Professor John Mangan said the scholarship recognised top performing business and economics students.\n“By receiving this scholarship, it sets the students apart, and it provides them with an opportunity to work on current topics in business and economics and to work collaboratively on a piece of work, which is similar to the working environment.”\nFollowing graduation, Jake will start a position at the Commonwealth Treasury in Canberra.\nZi has applied for a PhD in econometrics with various universities in the US and the UK with the plan to pursue a career in academia.\nMatthew McLennan and Richard Howes (both UQ alumni) donated gifts for The Matthew McLennan and Richard Howes Outstanding Honours Collaboration Scholarship, which was established in 2014 and awarded annually to two students.\nAIBE leverages world-class collaborative research capabilities across the UQ Business School, School of Economics and TC Beirne School of Law. The focus for the institute is on Australian and global innovation with new horizon research addressing industry’s current needs and future challenges.\nUQ graduate cohort to hit 250,000 this December\nStrong relationships the secret to valedictorian’s success\nPrivacy & Terms of use | Feedback | Updated: 16 Nov 2018","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line73305"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7647697925567627,"wiki_prob":0.7647697925567627,"text":"Rivard Report (https://therivardreport.com/smog-expert-says-focus-on-specific-sources-to-cut-air-pollution/)\nSmog Expert Says Focus on Specific Sources to Cut Air Pollution\nBy Brendan Gibbons | October 18, 2018\nMore on Environment & Nature\nSubscribe to Environment & Nature\nBonnie Arbittier / Rivard Report\nBexar County has failed to meet air quality standards set by the EPA.\nLowering San Antonio’s ozone levels might require sleuthing out specific sources of pollution instead of imposing widespread measures across the city, a scientist who helped improve Houston’s air quality told City Council members.\nHarvey Jeffries, who served as science adviser to a Houston air-quality group, spoke about air pollution in San Antonio at a City Council meeting Wednesday. The City’s Metropolitan Health District has hired Jeffries to study where Bexar County’s ozone pollution comes from and how to reduce it.\nIf true, Jeffries’ conclusions could mean that current efforts to deal with the ozone issue, such as banning idling by trucks and closing a coal plant, might not be as effective as some had hoped.\nJeffries’ first report came three months after the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced that Bexar County’s air quality no longer meets federal standards for ozone, a key component of smog that’s been tied to asthma, other chronic lung conditions, and premature deaths.\nRelated: Bexar County’s Air Officially Too Polluted To Meet EPA’s Ozone Standard\nBrendan Gibbons / Rivard Report\nHarvey Jeffries, a professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, has studied Houston’s air quality.\nA professor for 44 years at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Jeffries has studied air quality issues extensively, especially in Houston. In the early 2000s, scientists in Houston found that occasional belches of air pollution from chemical plants, tanks, and barges made a big difference in ozone levels.\n“I’ve always had an interest in other parts of Texas after spending lots of time in Houston,” Jeffries said at the meeting. “It’s interesting to find out that many of the underlying scientific issues that we’ve examined in Houston apply to many other parts of Texas.”\nThe City paid Jeffries’ company, Othree Chemistry Research and Service, $45,000 for the first phase of his study and recently approved another $45,000 for a second phase.\nWhere does ozone originate?\nOzone forms when nitrogen oxide emissions interact with volatile organic compounds in the presence of heat and sunlight. Nitrogen oxides most often come from vehicle exhausts, power plants, industrial sites, cement plants, and other combustion-related sources. Volatile organic compounds are tied to chemical use, chemical storage tanks, and gas stations, to name a few sources.\nInstead of using computer models to study where San Antonio’s ozone comes from, Jeffries used measurements of pollution levels and weather patterns taken every hour in the years 2012, 2015, and 2016. He did this for 17 air-monitoring sites around the city.\n“I actually look at the observations hour by hour, detail by detail – everything,” he said.\nSan Antonio has 21 air-monitoring sites, but only three that measure ozone levels for regulatory purposes: one at Calaveras Lake on the Southeast Side, one near John Marshall High School on the Northwest Side, and one just inside the southern fence of Camp Bullis on the far North Side.\nWind patterns make a huge difference in what these monitors record, Jeffries found. Almost every high-ozone day in San Antonio was characterized by winds that shifted in direction in a full or three-quarters circle throughout the day.\nAt the Camp Bullis air monitor, at least half of the days in the year feature those circular wind patterns. But in 2012, for example, only 18 of those days were high-ozone days.\nThat means you need both the right wind conditions and the right chemistry for high-ozone days, Jeffries said.\nOverall, Jeffries found that on days when the Marshall High and Camp Bullis monitors pick up high ozone, morning winds are often coming from the north-northwest, the opposite direction of the city’s core.\nBecause of a lack of data, Jeffries could only speculate on the exact source of certain ozone-forming chemicals, but his suggestions for possibilities included storage tanks, road construction, and a wastewater treatment plant at Camp Bullis.\n“I don’t understand what the heck is up there,” Jeffries said. “It’s weird, whatever it is, but it certainly comes from that quadrant up there.”\nCouncilmen Clayton Perry (D10), a retired Air Force lieutenant colonel, and Manny Pelaez (D8) exchanged glances when Jeffries brought up the Army training base.\nScott Ball / Rivard Report\nCouncilwoman Ana Sandoval (D7)\n“We don’t go and dictate terms to Camp Bullis, ever,” Pelaez said. “They’re our lifeblood here in town. … In fact, what we try to do is make sure that their missions are as easy to accomplish as possible. I want to make sure that’s not on the list – go and push them around.”\n“No,” Metro Health Director Colleen Bridger replied.\nCouncilwoman Ana Sandoval (D7), who once worked for an air-quality agency in California’s San Francisco Bay Area, called Jeffries’ conclusions “potentially good news.”\n“What it means to us as policymakers is we don’t have to implement some citywide or even countywide measure right now to find a reduction in ozone,” she said. “We can use a scalpel and look at that area where the wind is coming from.”\nDifferent studies, different conclusions\nMuch of the discussion revolved around how different Jeffries’ conclusions are from those reached by the Alamo Area Council of Governments (AACOG).\nIn the past, local officials have heard how AACOG’s computer modeling of ozone suggests that nearly 80 percent of the ozone in San Antonio’s air in 2017 came from outside the San Antonio metro area, as AACOG Executive Director Diane Rath testified before a U.S. House committee in June.\nTexas Gov. Greg Abbott’s staff cited AACOG studies frequently in letters to the EPA, arguing San Antonio should not face additional regulations in part because of air pollution wafting in from elsewhere, including “foreign sources.”\nRelated: EPA To Weigh ‘Pollution From Foreign Sources’ In Regulating Air Quality\nBut Jeffries said Wednesday that ozone being formed in the morning near Camp Bullis is coming from only about 12 to 18 miles away.\n“So you’re not looking at Mexico – it’s the wrong direction,” he continued. “You’re not even looking at some of the other states – wrong direction. You’re not looking at Austin. You’re not looking at Houston.”\n“You’re looking at something over there,” he continued, pointing to the north.\nRath called Jeffries report “interesting” but said she questioned the validity of certain sections that compared San Antonio to Houston.\n“We are so different from Houston,” Rath said. “We don’t have the petrochemical industry, we don’t have refineries, and our topography is very, very different. … I’d just like more insight into his conclusions.”\nJeffries said the two cities have similar circular wind patterns, but said the pollution in their air does have little in common.\nCurrent policies might not help\nThe chemistry of ozone formation is extremely complicated. It’s often difficult for policymakers to figure out whether to try to reduce nitrogen oxides or volatile organic compounds and, if so, by how much, Jeffries said.\n“There’s a case if you’re a policymaker, you’re gonna go out and spend a billion dollars and reduce [nitrogen oxides], and the ozone problem’s going to get worse,” he said. “That makes this very difficult to deal with.”\nFlickr CC / Paul Sableman\nLocal ordinances to improve air quality include a ban on heavy truck idling.\nSo far, state and local officials have focused mostly on reducing nitrogen oxides. This includes local ordinances banning heavy truck idling, CPS Energy’s planned closure of its Deely coal-fired generators, and the pursuit of $73 million in Volkswagen settlement funds to convert vehicles from diesel to more efficient fuels.\nRegardless of their effect on ozone, those strategies remove other types of air pollution and cut down on greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change, Bridger said.\nJeffries said data on volatile organic compounds is scarce for San Antonio. He suggested using an infrared camera to survey for plumes of pollution in the area, as has been done in Houston.\n“We’re not talking about large quantities,” he said. “It could be one guy up there with some particular thing. … You could have a tank that’s sat there forever and nothing shows up, and one day a hole appears in it, and all kinds of [pollution] show up.”\nThe City has issued a request for information for potential consultants to propose how they might address volatile organic compounds, Bridger said.\nDisclosure: CPS Energy is a Rivard Report business member. For a full list of supporters, click here.\nAbout Brendan Gibbons\nBrendan Gibbons is the Rivard Report's environment and energy reporter.\nMore by Brendan\nMetropolitan Health District","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line907823"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5383102297782898,"wiki_prob":0.4616897702217102,"text":"The Schachter Law Firm\nSchachter and firm\nBreaking up is hard to do. Divorce, child custody, child support – these are not easy. David Schachter can help. He’ll negotiate these tough experiences with you and see you through to the other side.\nSpecializing in divorce and family law, The Schachter Law Firm, LLC strives to steer clients through trying times while offering judicious advice along the way. For Attorney David Schachter, being genuine and accessible is of the utmost priority.\n“Every day I have an opportunity to help people get through one of the most difficult experiences of their life,” said Schachter. “I’m grateful to be of service during the challenging transition of divorce.”\nThe trust Schachter has fostered in his past and present clients has helped the firm grow exponentially since its founding in 2013. Furthermore, the empathy and wisdom provided through the firm’s services has led The Schachter Law Firm to be voted one of Savannah’s best divorce law firms year after year.\n“I found David to be knowledgeable, efficient, and quick to respond with great attention to detail,” wrote one client. “His staff was professional, understanding and always accommodating to our schedule. Trust David’s judgment and listen to his advice.”\nSchachter affirms that he is no miracle worker, and while pleasing both parties is a prime concern, neither person is going to get everything they want. But at The Schachter Law Firm, LLC you are guaranteed to receive excellent service and outstanding representation. Compassion will be on your side.\nThe Schachter Law Firm is known for its accessibility and responsiveness, the team provides wise counsel in and out of court\nAt Case Western Reserve Law School, David Schachter specialized in family law and studied under well-established family lawyer Andrew Zashin. Upon graduation, however, Zashin urged him not to go into family practice, stating that Schachter would “have his heart broken time and time again.”\nFor two years following his graduation, Schachter heeded his mentor’s advice and mostly handled real estate cases, contract disputes, and commercial law. But that time away from family law only reaffirmed his desire to pursue it.\n“I really like helping people and having opportunities to make a difference in people’s lives,” said Schachter. “And for me, practicing family law is the best way to do that professionally.”\nBut the personal qualities needed to succeed in his endeavor of opening a successful firm were not things he learned from a textbook. Schachter’s dedication, work ethic, and perspective were instilled in him by past family hardships. All 4 of his grandparents are survivors of the Holocaust, 3 of which were imprisoned at the infamous concentration camp, Auschwitz. Their ability to overcome such adversity is a quality he strongly admires and aspired to put forth in himself.\nIn 2010, Schachter and his wife, Julia, a Savannah native, returned to the Hostess City, where Schachter had previously practiced. Upon his return, he began to work exclusively in family law which has remained his focus ever since. A divorce is a compromise, and Schachter’s familiarity with both agreements and negotiations were advantageous in building his trusting clientele and upstanding reputation.\nIn 2013, The Schachter Law Firm, LLC was born and his reputation as an efficient, genuine, and courteous attorney continues to grow.\nTo read more about The Schachter Law Firm, subscribe now or pick up the June/July issue of South magazine.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line366730"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6043921113014221,"wiki_prob":0.6043921113014221,"text":"Former Liberty University VP Raises Concern After Calling for Meeting With ‘Your Holiness’ to Unite Evangelicals, Catholics\nBy Heather Clark on August 11, 2017 28 Comments\nConcerns are being raised as Johnnie Moore, the former vice president of communications for Liberty University—which heralds itself at the world’s largest Christian university—and travel assistant to President Jerry Falwell, Jr., recently sent a letter to Roman Catholic leader Jorge Bergoglio, also known as “Pope Francis,” to request a meeting to discuss Moore’s objection to “efforts to divide Catholics and Evangelicals.”\nMoore, who serves as a member of President Trump’s evangelical advisory board, wrote to Bergoglio following the publication of an article in La Cattolica Civilitas—written by Catholic priest Antonio Spadaro and Presbyterian minister Marcelo Figueroa—that condemned what they perceived as a joining together of American Catholics and Evangelicals in an “ecumicism of hate” against immigrants, Muslims and others different from them.\n“The panorama of threats to [Evangelicals’] understanding of the American way of life have included modernist spirits, the black civil rights movement, the hippy movement, communism, feminist movements and so on. And now in our day there are the migrants and the Muslims,” the article read.\nIt said that some professing Catholics are now seemingly “using tones much closer to Evangelicals” when it comes to various social issues, and have apparently united on the subjects.\n“Both Evangelical and Catholic Integralists condemn traditional ecumenism and yet promote an ecumenism of conflict that unites them in the nostalgic dream of a theocratic type of state,” Spadaro and Figueroa asserted. “This meeting over shared objectives happens around such themes as abortion, same-sex marriage, religious education in schools and other matters generally considered moral or tied to values.”\nThe men asserted that this type of ecumenism is different than that exemplified by Bergoglio in terms of other religions and those different from him, which is rather “an ecumenism that moves under the urge of inclusion, peace, encounter and bridges.”\nIn an article published by Fox News, Moore said that the “caustic language” in the Civilitas piece concerned him, as he “cannot imagine that the article’s authors understand the beautiful relationship that Catholics and Evangelicals have had in the last thirty years in the United States.” He said that he believes the collaboration between the two has produced much good in the world.\n“Together, we have worked in pursuit of the fall of communism, led a vast resurgence of pro-life sentiment in the United States, and we have fought for religious liberty here and abroad. Our humanitarian collaboration has also saved millions of lives among the poor and persecuted,” Moore wrote.\nHe therefore wrote to Bergoglio, who Moore referred to as “Your Holiness,” to request a meeting between Catholic and Evangelical leaders to discuss concerns about those who cause division, and to dialogue about how the two groups can work together. Moore said that “God put it on [his] heart” to write to the Roman Catholic leader.\n“I speak for many Evangelicals when I say that we have looked upon your appointment with great gratitude to God and with great optimism for the new spirit that you have brought to the Catholic Church,” the letter read, which also noted that Moore feels “all the respect in the world” toward the pontiff. “Your commitment to the poor and to pastoral ministry and your efforts to build bridges and to spread the doctrine of mercy around the world have been a light and hope to us all.”\nHe said that in the midst of religious persecution, as well as political polarism, that “we have also witnessed efforts to divide Catholics and Evangelicals.”\n“We think it would be of great benefit to sit together and to discuss these things,” Moore wrote. “Then, when we disagree we can do it within the context of friendship. Though, I’m sure we will find once again that we agree far more than we disagree, and we can work together with diligence on those areas of agreement.”\n“We feel like this conversation is an urgent one, and I will bring a half dozen or so of our denominational heads and significantly influential Evangelicals for our time together,” he said. “We would also like to use the time to meet with various other high level officials throughout the Vatican to find ways in which we can cooperate on matters of great concern to us all, especially as it relates to refugees, the poor and the persecuted.”\nHowever, Mike Gendron of Proclaiming the Gospel Ministries—a former Roman Catholic of more than 30 years who now teaches Christians how to evangelize Catholics—told Christian News Network that he is deeply troubled by Moore’s endeavor. He outlined several aspects of Moore’s letter that he found to be cause for concern.\n“Moore’s request for a meeting with a pope who has blasphemed the triune God by stealing His titles—Holy Father, Head of the Church, and Vicar of Christ—is deplorable,” Gendron stated.\nHe bristled at Moore’s reference to Bergoglio as ‘Your Holiness.'”\n“By the authority of God’s Word, we can see that the pope is under divine condemnation for preaching another gospel (Gal.1:6-9),” Gendron stated. “The pope’s gospel denies the sufficiency of Jesus Christ and His finished work of redemption by adding sacraments, good works, law keeping and indulgences for salvation.”\nHe also found Moore’s desire to combat division between Evangelicals and Catholics to be demonstrative of “the disturbing ignorance among many Evangelicals concerning Church history.”\n“The division between Evangelicals and Catholics took place five hundred years ago when the Roman Catholic Church sealed her departure from the Christian faith by deliberately and dogmatically rejecting the gospel of Jesus Christ at the Council of Trent,” Gendron outlined. “Her apostasy is well documented by over 100 infallible anathemas that condemn Evangelicals who do not believe Rome’s corruption of the gospel.”\nHe said that God does not need His children to link with those teaching and propagating error in order to combat evil in the world.\n“Moore’s attempt to unite Evangelicals and Catholics is playing into the pope’s agenda to rebuild the religious tower of Babel,” Gendron opined. “Our sovereign and omnipotent Lord does not need the help of unbelievers to fight the social and cultural wars. There is something much more important at stake and that is the purity and exclusivity of the Gospel. More than ever we need to contend for the faith because divine division in truth is far better than satanic unity in error.”\nFormer Liberty University VP Raises Concern After Calling for Meeting With ‘Your Holiness’ to Unite Evangelicals, Catholics added by Heather Clark on August 11, 2017","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1018522"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7638965845108032,"wiki_prob":0.7638965845108032,"text":"Glasgow celebrates its busiest-ever May for conferences as over 22,000 delegates flock to the city\nJune 11, 2018 Business Tourism\nGlasgow experienced its ‘busiest-ever’ May for conferences after more than 22,000 delegates flocked to the city for a range of business events.\nCity coffers were boosted by an estimated £25.5 million in local economic impact making it a record for business tourism, according to Glasgow Convention Bureau (GCB).\nIt began with the arrival of 7,000 attendees at the All Energy Conference and Exhibition, swiftly followed by two major medical meetings held at the SEC, attracting a combined total of over 8,000 delegates.\nOther venues across the city were also busy with conferences as the University of Strathclyde’s Technology & Innovation Centre welcomed 1,000 delegates to the Annual Conference of the European Marketing Academy.\nAileen Crawford, Head of Conventions at Glasgow Convention Bureau, said: “Glasgow is recognised as one of the world’s leading conference cities with business tourism featuring as a key pillar within the city’s Tourism and Visitor Plan to 2023. Glasgow’s reputation for innovation, the strength of our knowledge hub economy and the strong partnerships which exist between businesses and academic institutions set us apart from other potential host cities. This enables us to successfully bid to secure prestigious meetings to our city.”\nSimilarly, both the Scottish Event Campus (SEC) and Strathclyde University’s Technology and Innovation Centre, the city’s two major conference venues, celebrated their busiest-ever May.\nKathleen Warden, Director of Conference Sales at the Scottish Event Campus, said: “The Scottish Event Campus has successfully delivered major conferences in the past month, including the World Federation of Hemophilia and the European Sports Traumatology, Knee Surgery and Arthroscopy Congress, and has accounted for 76% of all delegates in the city in May. These conferences take many years to secure, often against tough international competition, so we feel immensely proud to take these events from bid to delivery. Not only do these events demonstrate the value of the venue in delivering economic impact for the city, they help to internationalise the city’s reputation, and the SEC is proud to work with the many stakeholders involved in bringing these events to Glasgow.”\nDesigned to accelerate the way in which researchers in academia and industry ‘collaborate and innovate together’, Strathclyde University’s Technology and Innovation Centre officially opened for business in March 2015 and has secured a number of venue awards and industry recognition as a centre of events excellence. Last month, it hosted 68 events and welcomed a total of 3,624 delegates – a 55% increase on May last year and a 277% increase on May 2016.\nGordon Hodge, Head of Conferencing and Events at the University of Strathclyde, said: “We’re delighted to have played our part in Glasgow’s busiest May ever, which is a real testament to the collaborative approach that continues to win a wide range of high-profile, influential business events for Glasgow. What makes us truly unique at Strathclyde is our Technology & Innovation Centre (TIC), which is much more than an award-winning city-centre conference venue. It’s first and foremost our world-class research hub, a facility where our academics work in partnership with industry and the public sector on solutions to many of society’s ‘wicked problems’. Combining our research activity with flexible event spaces that are available all year round, TIC is a place where new innovations are showcased; where new relationships are forged; where the seeds of future collaborations are sown; and where ideas become legend.”\nOther developments in the city inclyde the opening of the Clydeside Distillery, the first whisky distillery to be built in Glasgow in over a century, and the launch of the first new-build Radisson RED hotel in Europe.\nPreviousPrevious post:ICCA UK & Ireland Chapter unveils new leadership\nNext Next post:Edinburgh events start-up aims to end ticket fraud with cutting-edge blockchain platform","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line707829"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5460472702980042,"wiki_prob":0.5460472702980042,"text":"Home / cars / gt-r / john abraham / launches / nissan / Nissan launches 2017 GT-R in India at INR 1.99 cr\nNissan launches 2017 GT-R in India at INR 1.99 cr\nVivek Manjarekar 12/02/2016 cars , gt-r , john abraham , launches , nissan Edit\nMumbai, 2nd December 2016: Nissan today launched their flagship sports car - the 2017 Nissan GT-R in India. The GT-R goes on sale for the first time in the country priced at INR 1.99 Crore, ex-showroom, New Delhi in European spec Premium Edition.\nThe 2017 edition of the legendary GT-R series features a new signature V-motion grille and an upgraded interior. Speaking on the occasion, Guillaume Sicard, President – Nissan India Operations, said, “The GT-R is a very special car for Nissan and we are delighted to add it to our Indian line-up for the first time in its history. It is the epitome of Nissan’s technology and design, and demonstrates our brand promise of 'Innovation and Excitement'. It also continues our commitment to our Indian customers to offer an evolving range of dynamic and exciting new models. The GT-R will give a great boost to the Nissan brand in India and is guaranteed to turn many heads.”\nPresenting the new car in India, Hiroshi Tamura, Nissan Motor Corporation’s Chief Product Specialist for the GT-R, said, “We have continued to push the GT-R’s performance boundaries to the outer limits making it even more potent than before. At the same time, we have also added refinement to take the driving pleasure to an entirely new level. India is a new market for the GT-R and we’re proud to bring what we feel is the ‘ultimate GT’, possessing amazing performance, comfort and a rich racing heritage”.\nIn keeping with GT-R’s image, deliveries of the new model started with Bollywood action star and Nissan Brand Ambassador, John Abraham, receiving the keys to his very own GT-R.\nExcited about the latest addition to his garage, Abraham said, “I have had my heart set on the GT-R from the first time I saw one. I consider it to be an embodiment of myself on four wheels - powerful, muscular and fast. When I drove a GT-R earlier this year I knew I had to have one, and today my dream has come true.”\nThe 2017 Nissan GT-R is produced at Nissan’s state of the art plant in Tochigi, Japan, and will be brought to India as a CBU (Completely Built-up Unit). It will be sold exclusively through the Nissan Dealership in Noida, National Capital Region (NCR). This dealership will also house India’s first Nissan High Performance Centre (NHPC), which will be solely responsible for the service of the car.\nNissan started taking orders for the GT-R in India in September this year and deliveries to customers who have already booked will be among the first lucky group to receive one.\nAbout the 2017 Nissan GT-R\nNissan unveiled the new 2017 GT-R at the New York International Auto Show in March this year, highlighted by an exciting new look both inside and out, as well as major driving-performance enhancements and key new features. They represent the most significant changes made to the model since it was introduced in 2007.\nThe new GT-R’s exterior gets a complete makeover across the front end. The new matte chrome finish “V-motion” grille represents one of Nissan’s latest design signatures. It has been enlarged to provide better engine cooling and now features an updated mesh pattern.\nA new hood, which flows seamlessly from the grille, has been significantly reinforced, contributing to stability during high-speed driving. A freshly-designed front spoiler lip and front bumpers with finishers situated immediately below the headlamps give the new GT-R the look of a pure-bred racecar, while generating high levels of front downforce.\nThe GT-R’s familiar wind-cutting shape defines its profile, but the side sills have been pushed out to improve air flow. The rear of the car also received a thorough makeover. While the GT-R’s hallmark four-ring taillights remain, look closely and you’ll notice new bodywork to help improve air flow, as well as side air vents next to the quad exhaust tips.\nAlso, the belt line that separates the lower black section from the body panel has been heightened to make the car look wider and more aggressive from the rear. These exterior changes don’t result just in a sportier-looking car, but an aerodynamically efficient one, with less drag but retaining the same amount of downforce as the current GT-R to keep the car stable at high speeds.\nStep into the cabin, and you’re greeted by a premium interior that is befitting a high-performance sports car of this caliber. The entire dashboard and instrument panel are new and covered with high-quality leather artfully stitched together with TAKUMI precision. The shape of the dashboard adopts a “horizontal flow” that delivers a sense of high stability for the car’s front-seat occupants, while the line from the instrument cluster to the center console provides a distinct driver-oriented environment for those behind the steering wheel.\nThe center dashboard layout has also been improved and simplified. Integrated controls reduce the number of switches from 27 in the previous model to only 11 in the 2017 model. An enlarged 8-inch touch-panel monitor features large icons on the display screen to make it easy to operate. A new display command control on the carbon-fiber center console allows easy operation.\nThe shift paddles are now mounted to the new steering wheel, allowing drivers to change gears in mid-turn without having to take their hands off the wheel. The paddles themselves, along with the ventilation controls, have improved feel and better sound when engaged or adjusted.\nThe GT-R’s 3.8-litre V6 24-valve twin-turbocharged engine - each unit handcrafted by its own TAKUMI technician - now delivers 565 hp of power at 6800 rpm and 637Nm of torque. The improved output, which are the result of individual ignition-timing control of the cylinders and extra boost from the turbochargers, allow the new GT-R to have better acceleration in the mid- to high-ranges (3200 rpm and above).\nIt comes mated to a 6-speed dual-clutch transmission that features smoother shifts and less noise. That familiar GT-R tone also has been upgraded with an engine that has never sounded better. The resonance of the new titanium mufflers and Active Sound Enhancement (ASE) enhance the driving experience during acceleration.\nThe GT-R has always been regarded as one of the world’s best handling machines, and for 2017, its cornering abilities have become even better. A more rigid body structure and new suspension result in better stability through quick lateral transitions and higher overall cornering speed. Providing the grip are sticky 20 inch tires, wrapped around new “Y-spoke” machine-finished forged aluminum wheels.\nThe everyday supercar\nDespite all the performance enhancements, the 2017 GT-R is the most comfortable model to date, with a new sense of elegance and civility that one would rarely find in such a high-performance supercar. The new GT-R exhibits a smoother ride quality than the outgoing model, and its cabin remains much quieter at all speeds and new sound absorption materials. New for the 2017 GT-R are fresh colors inside and out that complement the car’s sophisticated character.\nIn India, the GT-R will be offered in the European spec Premium Edition and will be available in Katsura Orange (new for 2017), Vibrant Red, Pearl Black, Pearl White, Racing Blue, Gun Metallic and Ultimate Silver. The choice of interior trim includes Red, Tan, Ivory & Black.\nAbout Vivek Manjarekar\nThanks for reading our post. We at MotorZest always strive to bring you the best news and quality reviews on cars & bikes in India. Do follow us on our social media platforms to have great conversations!\nArjun 9 December 2016 at 12:32\nThat is too much expensive!\nSuyash Kaul 16 December 2016 at 18:59\nToo much special too\nHonda showcases Self-Balancing Motorcycle at CES 2017 | Video\nLas Vegas: In a global debut at CES 2017, Honda has unveiled its Moto Riding Assist technology, which leverages Honda’s robotics te...\nDifference Between Ex-Showroom Price and On-Road Price Of A Vehicle\nWhen you go to buy a car or a two-wheeler at the showroom two prices would be quoted ex-showroom and on-road. The price you actually pay...\nEMIFreeCar.com - Buy Your Dream Car at just 25% of the Total EMI Cost\nAre you planning to buy your dream car? But couldn’t buy it since it is out of your budget and you can’t afford the EMIs with y...\nRaw Power, Value For Money & Can Touch 163 kmph | Pulsar 200 NS User Review By Sanchit Bhatnagar\nHello Riders, I am Sanchit Bhatnagar, 26 years old from New Delhi. I am a professional football player and working with Dalmia Bhara...\nHero offers 5 year Warranty on all its motorcyles - Don't be fooled\nAmid weak automobile market to boost its sales and maintain supremacy in the 2-wheeler automobile market in India, HeroMotoCorp has introdu...\n2013 Bajaj Pulsar 200 NS - Specs\nBikes Used By Salman Khan In The Movie 'Kick'\nBeing the brand ambassador for Suzuki Motorcycle India, Bollywood actor Salman Khan is often seen riding Suzuki two-wheelers in most o...\nTVS Motor Company launches India's first Ethanol based motorcycle\nTVS India today created a benchmark in the industry by launching India’s first Ethanol based motorcycle – TVS Apache RTR 200 Fi E100 p...\nCopyright © 2015 MotorZest / Template Designed By : ThemeXpose","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1597155"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.873060405254364,"wiki_prob":0.873060405254364,"text":"Police, organizers report no major problems in first two days of Dogwood Festival\nGregory Phillips Staff writer\nApr 28, 2013 at 12:01 AM Apr 28, 2013 at 5:23 AM\nPolice and organizers reported no major problems through the first two nights of the Fayetteville Dogwood Festival.\n\"It's business as usual,\" said Carrie King, the festival's executive director, Saturday night. \"Our vendors are happy, our sponsors are happy, and our patrons are happy.\"\nFive young men were cited for trespassing in downtown the first two days of the festival, as police followed through on a warning mailed earlier in the week to about 50 suspected gang members.\nPolice said threats of violence between gangs prompted the letters from festival organizers, which warned the recipients to stay away or face citations.\nPolice said organizers had the power to bar citizens from downtown because they are essentially renting the area for the festival.\nTwo were cited for second-degree trespassing in Festival Park on Friday night. Another three were cited by 9 p.m. Saturday.\nAll were from Fayetteville and were 18 to 20 years old.\nMagistrates reported a handful of other misdemeanor arrests involving drunkenness and domestic disputes. Police reported no major incidents.\n\"It's not over yet,\" King said, \"but so far it's been a great day and a great evening.\"\nThe festival wraps up today at 6 p.m.\nStaff writer Gregory Phillips can be reached at phillipsg@fayobserver.com or 486-3596.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1732195"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6047362089157104,"wiki_prob":0.6047362089157104,"text":"The Assassin Gambit\nBy William R. Forstchen\nRead by George Newbern\nWilliam R. Forstchen Audible Studios on Brilliance Audio\nThe Gamester Wars Series: Book 2\nRuntime: 10.04 Hours\nCategory: Fiction/Science Fiction\nPublisher: Audible Studios on Brilliance Audio Publisher: Audible Studios on Brilliance Audio\nAlexander the Great. Napoleon. The Forty-Seven Ronin. Long dead, but the future still rides on their successes at war!\nFirst there was war, then there were wargames, growing more and more realistic until the games themselves surpassed war as mankind’s most popular sport. But with no blood, guts, or glory, boredom began to set in and strategy lost its edge. Something was needed to bring fresh excitement to an old, old game. And so the past was mined for the greatest warriors and generals history had to offer: Napoleon, Alexander, the Forty-Seven Ronin, assassins from ancient Persia—all brilliant at either combat or at tactics and strategy.\nIt was just a game—until mock war turned real on an unimaginable scale, and only those legendary warriors could turn the tide …\nAuthor Bio: William R. Forstchen\nWilliam R. Forstchen has a PhD from Purdue University with specializations in Military History and the History of Technology. He is a Faculty Fellow and Professor of History at Montreat College. He is the author of fifty books, including the New York Times bestselling John Matherson series, the Lost Regiment series, and the award-winning young adult novel We Look Like Men of War. He has also authored numerous short stories and articles about military history and military technology.\nRuntime: 10.04","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line888847"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7552738785743713,"wiki_prob":0.7552738785743713,"text":"Dancing for Life – The Place is 50!\n22 hours ago by Wonderful News\nIn Autumn 2019, The Place enters its sixth decade as a driving force for dance development pushing the art form forward. Looking to the future with a global vision of a world with more dance, The Place will invest in independent artists, expand impact locally and internationally and continue its pioneering dance education and research.\n“The Place is a landmark institution that has led innovation in contemporary dance in the UK and internationally for five decades. Its illustrious alumni and staff team have irrefutably shaped the world of contemporary dance as we know it today. The Place sees no barriers to dance and its ultra-special, incubatory environment is designed to power imagination through dance like no other in the world. The love for dance and artistic expression so dutifully gifted by our founders Robin Howard and Sir Robert Cohan has endured over this time and we are truly energised in the pursuit of our global vision to engage more people with dance over the next 50 years.” – Clare Connor, Chief Executive\nINVESTING IN INDEPENDENT ARTISTS\n“Over The Place’s 50 year history we have supported the journey of many of the UK’s greatest contemporary choreographers. The next decade will see us make a new, era-defining commitment to connect the breadth of creativity in today’s independent dance makers to more people and places than ever before.” – Eddie Nixon, Artistic Director Over the next two years, The Place is investing £700,000 to expand its producing and touring within the UK and internationally to become a producing house for a large and diverse pool of independent artists. This year, The Place will work on ambitious new productions from artists including Requardt and Rosenberg, Avant Garde Dance, Lost Dog and Sivan Rubenstein and commission the development of 36 other new performances. In September 2019, The Place will launch a new Commissioning Studio. This pioneering fundraising programme supports The Place’s commitment to create high profile professional opportunities, empowering independent artists to create ground-breaking work.\nEXPANDING IMPACT LOCALLY AND INTERNATIONALLY\n“This is a momentous time for The Place as we look to the next 50 years through a global lens, strengthening existing relationships and fostering new ones. Our ambition to lead the dance sector forward on local, national and International scales is a strategic priority for all activity planned in our 10-year vision.” – Martin Hargreaves, Director of Undergraduate Studies Spring 2020 will see the second of a three-year partnership with the Korean Cultural Centre and Korean Arts Management Service to showcase Korea’s eclectic and dynamic dance scene through the Festival of Korean Dance in London. Building on international dance networks, The Place and LCDS will further develop their partnerships with the Merce Cunningham Trust, USA, Beijing Dance Academy, China, and School of the Arts, Singapore to create new opportunities for research, knowledge exchange, student progression and international artist networks. The Richard Alston Dance Company (RADC) will embark on its Final Edition tour across the UK and overseas, including an At Home season at The Place with special guest Siobhan Davies, founding member of the London Contemporary Dance Theatre. The final RADC performances will be celebrated at Sadler’s Wells on 7 & 8 March 2020. The Place’s investment in touring will then focus on supporting independent artists to bring their work to national and international audiences in small, mid-scale and outdoor venues. The Place continues to be a partner in the Rural Touring Dance Initiative bringing outstanding performance to over 70 venues in all corners of the country connecting more people to dance.\nLCDS – Theo Clinkard. Photo by Camilla Greenwell\nEDUCATION AND INNOVATION\n“Dance brings out the very best in people, it allows people to explore their inner passion and The Place is very much the environment for that exploration.” – Vicky Evans, Programme Manager, Centre for Advanced Training (CAT) The pioneering MA Screendance offers the only Masters Programme in the world specialising in dance filmmaking and exploring the intersections between choreography and moving image. Through research and opportunities such as the student led and curated Screendance Festival: Framerush (Spring 2020), trailblazing students lead and shape this flourishing art form. This anniversary year will further build on the artistically rich Collaborations (5&6, 10-12 DEC); a programme of student work devised together with design and film students from longstanding partners University of the Arts London and composers from Guildhall School of Music & Drama. The shared sense of invention in these inspiring opportunities supports the next generation of artist-collaborators. Over the summer, The Place will offer 18 independent artists a research residency through the Choreodrome programme, a development opportunity to explore new artistic territory, allowing for experimentation and innovation. Choreodrome now includes a Startin’ Point Research Residency Commission for artists whose work is rooted in dances of the African diaspora, conceived by changemaker Hakeem Onibudo in 2018. Other highlights this year include:\n• Touch Wood, a series of bite-size extracts of new work being developed over the summer (3 – 6 SEP 2019)\n• students from LCDS present work created in response to the Leonardo Da Vinci drawings exhibition at the Queen’s Gallery in Buckingham Palace (10 OCT 2019)\n• Richard Alston at Home, featuring legendary dancer/choreographer Siobhan Davies and a brand-new commission for LCDS students (27–30 NOV 2019)\n• RADC’s final performance at Sadler’s Wells (7 & 8 MAR 2020)\n• The Little Prince, a magical dance adaptation of the classic children’s tale (17 – 24 DEC 2019) • Place’s Youth Dance Platform: around 150 young people from London take to the stage at The Place over two days (FEB 2020)\n• Splayed Festival, exploring disruptive femininities (27 APR – 2 MAY 2020)\n• Camden Primary Schools Festival featuring work by 12 local primary schools and over 600 local children (SUMMER 2020)\n• Changing the Face of British Dance. 50 years of London Contemporary Dance School a book by Henrietta Bannerman tracing the history of LCDS from its trailblazing role in establishing a British Contemporary Dance scene, to the globally renowned dance training institution it is today (launching spring 2020)\nChampioning the value of dance in all its forms, this anniversary year will run under the tagline ‘Dancing for Life’. Inviting the dance community to join the celebration of The Place’s history and what dance means to them, a year-long social media campaign will collect #BestPlaceMoments (theplace.org.uk/bestplacemoments). The memories will be used to populate a commissioned visual artwork to be displayed in the building from 2020.\nHere’s to the next 50 years!\nTags: LCDS, London contemporary dance, The Place, The Place UK\nWonderful News\nRocio Chacon\nWhat’s on dance! London’s May Dance List is here….\nChoreodrome 2019 artists announced\nWhat’s on dance! London’s April Dance List is here….\nWOMAN SRSLY TAKEOVER Wildlife in Strange Waters “resonates with immense force in our bodies, in all bodies”\nWhat’s on dance! London’s March Dance List is here….","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1068953"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.546222448348999,"wiki_prob":0.453777551651001,"text":"Rebuilding body parts with lab grown cartilage\nin: Science & Technology News\nReconstructed body parts such as noses and ears, which have been grown in a lab, could soon be available to patients needing surgery. Swansea researchers hope to be the first in the world to start using it on humans within three years.\nThe process involves growing someone’s cells in an incubator and then mixing them with a liquid which is 3D printed into the jelly-like shape needed.\nIt is then put back in an incubator to grow again until it is ready.\n“In simple terms, we’re trying to grow new tissue using human cells,” said Prof Iain Whitaker, consultant plastic surgeon at the Welsh Centre for Burns and Plastic Surgery at Morriston Hospital.\n“We’re trialling using 3D printing which is a very exciting potential modality to make these relatively complex structures.\n“Most people have heard a lot about 3D printing and that started with traditional 3D printing using plastics and metals.\n“That has now developed so we can consider printing biological tissue called 3D bio-printing, which is very different.\n“We’re trying to print biological structures using human cells, and provide the right environment and the right timing so it can grow into tissue that we can eventually put into a human.\n“It would be to reconstruct lost body parts such as part of the nose or the ear and ultimately large body parts including bone, muscle and vessels.”\nThe team of surgeons are working with scientists and engineers who have built a 3D printer specifically for this work.\nProf Whitaker, who is also the chairman of plastic and reconstructive surgery at Swansea University’s medical school, said the project started in 2012 but research in the field has been going on for more than 20 years.\nHe said the work would have to be tested on animals and go through an ethics process before being used on humans.\n“The good news in the future is, if our research is successful, within two months you’d be able to recreate a body part which was not there without having to resort to taking it from another part of the body which would cause another defect or scar elsewhere,” he added.\nCells are taken from a tiny sample of cartilage during the initial operation and grown in an incubator over several weeks\nThe shape of the missing body part is scanned and fed into a computer\nIt is then 3D printed using a special liquid formula combined with the live cells to form the jelly-like structure\nReagents are added to strengthen the structure\nIt is put into an incubator with a flow of nutrients to supply the cells with food so they can grow and produce their own cartilage\nThe structure will then be tested to see if it is strong enough to be eventually implanted into patients\nImage Credit / Article via bbc.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line791771"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8521386981010437,"wiki_prob":0.8521386981010437,"text":"Johansson Confirmed As Assistant Coach\nSunday, 09 April 2017, 17:00\nRANGERS FOOTBALL CLUB is delighted to confirm Jonatan Johansson as an assistant coach at the Club.\nCurrently working as assistant manager with Finland’s national team, Jonatan brings a wealth of experience to the role and his extensive knowledge of Scottish football will be invaluable to the new management team.\nJohansson spent three successful years at Ibrox between 1997 and 2000 – scoring 25 times in 71 appearances – with 18 of his strikes coming during the Treble-winning campaign of season 1998-99.\nJohansson’s career began in Finland with Pargas IF before switching to TPS and FC Flora ahead of his move to Glasgow and he also enjoyed a productive spell in the English Premier League with Charlton Athletic followed by a loan spell at Norwich City.\nMalmo in Sweden was his next destination but he returned to Scotland to feature for Hibs and St Johnstone before ending his playing career back at TPS in 2011.\nAs a coach, Jonatan spent three years in charge of Motherwell’s under-20 side – between 2012 and 2015 – before landing the Finland number two job in December.\nHe retired with 106 full international caps for his country and is looking forward to taking up his new role with the Light Blues.\nArticle Copyright © 2018. Permission to use quotations from this article online is only granted subject to appropriate source credit and hyperlink to www.rangers.co.uk\nPedro Caixinha\nJJ Impressed By Hungry Gers 15 November 2017\nJJ Pleased With Gers Workout 9 November 2017\nClub Statement 26 October 2017\nReaction: Pedro Caixinha 25 October 2017\nClub Statement 22 May 2016\nClub Statement 7 December 2017","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1039942"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9435319304466248,"wiki_prob":0.9435319304466248,"text":"Do babies feel pain in the first trimester? New study shows incredible nerve development\nThat the nervous system develops sooner than thought could have implications for whether babies feel pain in the early weeks. Image: Just The Facts.\nAlthough there's no logical reason why a human lack of capacity to feel pain justifies ending the life of an unborn baby, it's a common argument for why abortion is acceptable in the early stages of pregnancy. However, the prevailing wisdom that babies don't feel pain in the first trimester may have to be re-examined, as Live Action reports.\nAdult-like nerves\nA study published in the Journal Cell on 23 March 2017 reveals that the nervous system of embryos and foetuses may be greatly more developed than was previously believed. Entitled \"Tridimensional Visualization and Analysis of Early Human Development\" the study shows that unborn babies in the first trimester have \"adult-like\" patterns of nerves. Researchers \"combined whole-mount immunostaining, 3DISCO clearing, and light-sheet imaging to start building a 3D cellular map\" and found that \"the adult-like pattern of skin innervation is established before the end of the first trimester, showing important intra- and inter-individual variations in nerve branches.\"\nIt's too early to conclude that the system of nerves observed in embryos and fetuses would allow the infant in development to feel pain. However, this new research shows that the nervous system develops much sooner than had previously been thought, which could point to pain sensitivity.\nWhat evidence is there for foetal pain?\nFor now, it's almost conclusively provable that preborn babies can feel pain at 20 weeks gestation, although they respond to touch as early as eight weeks. There is also increasing evidence that unborn babies can feel pain much earlier than 20 weeks — possibly as early as five weeks. Some evidence exists to show that foetal pain may be even worse in the first trimester, due to the uneven maturation of foetal neurophysiology.\nNews in brief:\nAbortion activist given 500k of taxpayers money to write book calls for midwives to perform surgical abortions.\nThe Citizens’ Assembly is due to vote this weekend on whether to recommend any change to the State's abortion laws\nNorthern Ireland abortion pills raid woman Helen Crickard won't be charged\nPregnant mum who declined life-saving cancer treatment to save her unborn baby dies three days after giving birth\nSpiked:Why pro-choice students must stop silencing pro-life speakers\nNew push for euthanasia legislation in Scotland\nIndependent:The UK's absence of legal euthanasia forces people to travel to other nations for the right to die\nLeave a message here, or call us on 020 7091 7091\nPlease Click(*)\nSociety for the Protection of Unborn Children. 3 Whitacre Mews, Stannary Street, London, SE11 4AB, United Kingdom\n© Society for the Protection of the Unborn Child 2018","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1156108"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9882699251174927,"wiki_prob":0.9882699251174927,"text":"Swift Names Pérez-Tasso CEO\nPérez-Tasso will take over from current CEO Gottfried Leibbrandt, who will step down in June.\n@miyadavid\nGlobal payments messaging utility Swift has named Javier Pérez-Tasso as its new chief executive, following an internal and external search to find a replacement for current CEO Gottfried Leibbrandt, who will retire in July after 14 years at the organization.\nPérez-Tasso, who has been with Swift for almost 25 years, was most recently CEO of Swift Americas and UK region. He will take up his position on July 1.\nPérez-Tasso joined Swift in 1995 as an analyst before working his way up to chief marketing officer where he was responsible for developing Swift’s five-year strategy, Swift 2020. The strategy focuses on the firm’s cross-border payments program, expansion into financial crime compliance and a larger presence in market infrastructure.\nHe became CEO of the Americas and UK region in 2015, based in New York. Once he moves into his new role, Pérez-Tasso will relocate to Swift’s headquarters in Belgium.\n“[Pérez-Tasso’s] record of impressive leadership, coupled with his in-depth understanding of the company and its business, means that he is expertly positioned for this new role. I am confident that his appointment will ensure that SWIFT can continue to build on its tradition of excellence and innovation in support of the global financial community, while also enabling the acceleration of its endorsed strategy,” says Swift chairman Yawar Shah in a statement.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line355550"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5043742656707764,"wiki_prob":0.49562573432922363,"text":"The museums in Alabama vary from historical institutions that help modern generations reconnect with the areas rich past to locations that help foster appreciation for the local environment and the natural resources it produces.\nThe Birmingham Civil Rights Institute was created to document and present to the public the long history of the black community's struggle for equality in Birmingham and throughout the South. BCRI's permanent exhibitions allow visitors to take a self-guided journey through the story of blacks and whites in Birmingham. From the period of segregation following WWI through integration in the 50's and on to the landmark the civil rights movement of the 1960's, these exhibits give the public a chance to understand Birmingham's significance in Civil Rights history. The Institute's Education Department facilitates Outreach Presentations for schools and community organizations throughout the greater Birmingham metropolitan area.\nwww.bcri.org\nAnniston Museum of Natural History - (Pell City/Anniston)\nThe seven exhibit halls of the Anniston Museum of Natural History vary from a representation of the African wilderness to artifacts from ancient Egypt to a full-scale replica of an Alabama cave. The museum also features one of the nation's oldest ornithological collections, with more than 400 mounted specimens of North American birds (including some that are now endangered and extinct). The hands-on learning continues with nature trails, a children's discovery room, and art exhibits.\nwww.annistonmuseum.org\nRosa Parks Museum\nBy all standards just an ordinary woman before the morning of December 1st, 1955, Rosa Parks's refusal to give her bus seat to a white man became one of the most recognizable and unifying images of the Civil Rights Movement. The Rosa Parks Library and Museum on Troy University's Montgomery campus details the history of the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the Civil Rights Movement as a whole. The museum also honors the courage of the stand that Rosa Parks took against inequality.\nwww.troy.edu/rosaparks\nMann Wildlife Learning Museum\nA great educational resource for children, the Mann Wildlife Learning Museum gives visitors a unique chance to get up close to a wide variety of preserved North American wildlife. Feel the soft fur of a massive grizzly bear, the soft belt of a fox's back or the rigid antlers of the mighty moose. Each of the animals is shown in recreations of their natural habitat to enhance the experience.\nwww.mannmuseum.com\nGulf Coast Exploreum Science Center\nLocated in downtown Mobile, the Gulf Cost Exploreum is a regional science center designed to educate and entertain children and adults alike. Interactive exhibits teach children many about many core scientific areas such as chemistry, simple mechanics and biology. In addition to the exhibits, the Exploreum also features an amazing IMAX theatre.\nwww.exploreum.net\nThe Rosenbaum House Museum\nAn architectural treasure by the master of modern design, Frank Lloyd Wright, the house was originally built for newlyweds Stanley and Mildred Rosenbaum in 1939. Wright even designed an addition to the home in 1948 when the family grew to include four sons. The house is the only structure in the entire state of Alabama designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. It is one of the best examples of Wrights Usonian Style, and is the only Wright-designed house in the southeast that is open to the public.\nwww.wrightinalabama.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line534553"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5252946019172668,"wiki_prob":0.47470539808273315,"text":"Stephen Aryan\nTag Archives: boom studios\nGood Comics – Part 1\nI’ve been reading comics for so long, I sometimes forget how difficult it is, and how intimidating it can be, to walk into a comic shop, or browse in a book shop, or search online, and pick up a comic worth reading. Yes, it’s all subjective and what I think qualifies as a ‘good’ comic, other people might loathe and think is boring and dull. There are other opinions out there, but hey, it’s my website.\nIf you’re interesting in buying any comics, either from this list or anywhere else, please support your local comic shop. The Comic Shop Locator will help you find your nearest, and even if it is too far away to drive or walk, many will deliver comics to you through the post. Please support your local comic shop if at all possible. The website is for comic shops around the world.\nRecommending the Wrong Thing\nThere are now so many comics out there, it can very hard to know where to start. Far too often when I hear that someone wants to get into comics people will point them towards classic superhero titles, the most well known stories which people may have heard about, such as Watchmen, or The Dark Knight Returns, which I think is a terrible idea. Because they’re complex stories, steeped in the genre and the mythology and history of comics, and in the case of DKR it’s steeped in decades of the character’s history. New readers can understand the stories, and they may enjoy them, but I think they will have far less of an emotional impact. Also, and most importantly, why always recommend superheroes?\nComics are a medium not a genre\nSuperheroes are just one genre. Comics are a medium. That’s worth repeating, because sometimes when I mention that I read comics people say, oh like The Beano and The Dandy (which are children’s comics) or comic strips (Garfield, Marmaduke, etc.), or they say like Spider-man. It’s the same as when someone says they read fantasy books and people say oh, you mean like Lord of the Rings, or now, the new touchstone is Game of Thrones. The attitude towards comics is changing, but every time I think we’re moving away from the stereotype of comics being one thing, a stranger comes out with the same old chestnut. Or they insist on saying graphic novel, as if comics are a dirty word and graphic novels are something completely different. Then I wince and realise we’re still decades away from more widespread understanding.\nFor every genre there is a comic book\nIf nothing else, please remember that there is a comic for every single genre you would find in a book shop. Every one, and many that blend genres together too. With all of that preamble out of the way, below is a short list of different comics from a range of genres. I’ve split them into Complete Series (which are finite stories available as several trade paperbacks or hardcover collections in some cases), and Ongoing Series. Also, this is only part one, as there are a lot of great comics available right now, so I will add to this list with other posts in the future.\nSleeper – An espionage story where a man named Holden Carver goes undercover in a dangerous international crime organisation, in an attempt to destroy it from the inside. Several people in the story have powers, but there are no capes and tights. These are dark, sometimes subtle and nasty powers, such as the ability to twist the mind, to confuse, or in Holden’s case, store up pain and then inflict it on others. To be clear, this is very much a crime and espionage comic, not a superhero comic. The main problem for Holden is that the only person who knows he was going deep under cover is now in a coma. All of his former friends and colleagues think he has turned and is now a villain and terrorist. So the story is really about how far can he go, how much can he do, supposedly in the name of good, before he becomes evil? Is he just pretending that he doesn’t enjoy what he does and his new life? And is he just acting or does he really care about some of the people he now works beside every day? A brutal, adult story, full of twists and turns.\nY: The Last Man – One day Yorrick wakes up to find that every other male mammal and human male on the planet has died. This is an epic road trip and adventure story across a transformed modern day America where he, and a small group of friends, try to unravel the mystery, but also survive in this brave new world. All major industry has effectively ended and society has collapsed, and out of the ashes of the old world, new tribes are emerging. New ways of looking at the future and how to remake the world, but of course, everyone has different ideas. Also does it matter who you were in the old world when everything you knew is gone? Who is Yorrick and why was he spared?\nPreacher – This is the story about a man named Jesse Custer and his two friends, Tulip and Cassidy, an Irish vampire. Jesse has lost his faith in God and he wants answers. This is a very violent, very bloody, very wordy, road trip across modern day America. The writer is well known for over the top antics and this is full of extremes, but he doesn’t do it just to be naughty or to show off. Beneath the language and blood, there is a story about faith, friendship, honour, love, doing the right thing and family. During Jesse’s search they get into all sorts of trouble with serial killers, angels, demons, immortal killers and Jesse’s insane and very dangerous family. It’s over the top and wordy, a Tarantino film is probably the easiest shorthand description, but with a lot more substance and heart.\nEx-Machina – Mitchell Hundred is the newly elected Mayor of New York, but once he was a superhero known as The Great Machine. This is in our world, one without superheroes and this is not a superhero comic. It’s a political action story about modern society and trying to do the right thing in a world that is infinitely more complex than it used to be. Mitchell was an ordinary civil servant until something exploded when he was at work on the Hudson river. The device didn’t kill him, and was probably alien in origin, but it did change him. It made him able to speak to and control machines. As the Great Machine, he saved many people, but also realised his inadequacies and the limitations of being a superhero, as it was reactive and done one person at a time. This comic covers a whole host of hot topics from racism, to sexist, art, homophobia, the media, and it also looks at power and how it corrupts.\nSweet Tooth – Most of the world’s population has been wiped out by a terrible disease. No one knows the cause or why it happened. Since then, the only children being born are human animal hybrids, kids with tails, wings, feathers, or in the case of the story’s main character Gus, he has antlers. Gus is raised in seclusion by his very religious father, who has told him how evil and dangerous the world is outside. When Gus’s father succumbs to the disease Gus finds himself thrust into the new world. At the other extreme is Jepperd, a tough old man who seems born to survive in this post apocalyptic world. Jepperd and Gus make an unlikely pair, and what follows is a touching and sometimes harrowing story about living versus surviving. Beautifully drawn and written by Jeff Lemire, the last single issue has been published and the last trade paperback collection is out later this year. So technically it’s all a complete series.\nScalped – A gritty, crime and noir series set on a modern day Native American reservation. After years of living off the reservation, Dashiell Bad Horse comes home. The rez is awash with organised crime, drugs and gambling and Bad Horse has not come back to make friends. Minor spoiler, but it is very early on and critical to the story, he is actually an undercover FBI agent investigating a murder. While the very basic premise may sound slightly similar to Sleeper, this is a very very different comic. Sleeper is espionage and this is a straight crime comic. Bad Horse struggles to cope with the two sides of his life being together in one place, staying loyal to the Bureau, while also getting hip deep in rez politics. At times the rez feels like the wild west, as they have their own laws and operate in a bubble in some ways, and many of the characters and stories are tinged with despair. If you like gritty cop shows, shows like The Wire, where it’s full on but clearly going somewhere and not just for show, I’d recommend this.\nStrangers in Paradise – This is one of my favourite comic book series ever, so I’m bias. However, I will try not to gush too much. This is best described as a slice of life story about an unorthodox love triangle, mixed with some crime aspects, but ultimately it’s a massive sprawling story about life and love. It’s a contemporary story set in the real world, with no magic or super powers, and the story focuses on two girls who meet in high school, one of who harbours a lot of secrets. As the story develops and with flashbacks to their time in school, we learn about Katina’s dark past, Francine’s daily struggles with her weight, finding a job she likes, and dealing with difficult men in her life. David is the third side of the triangle, and he loves Katina, but there again he is keeping secrets and he is far more than just an arty student type. It’s quite a complex story to describe without spoiling, but this is definitely an adult comic, exploring adult themes of sexuality, love, passion, crime, fear, family and pain. There are guns and the occasional murder, a crime syndicate, a plane crash, break-ups and tears, but mostly it is a story about three people. I say people rather than characters, because they are so well developed, both emotionally and physically. I don’t want this to sound like a bleak read, because it isn’t, and all of the dark is balanced with humour and comedy. As I say it is difficult to describe and this can be a bit of a marmite book for some people. Terry Moore wrote and drew the series and no one draws women like him. They look like real people. Fat, thin, tall and short, every character looks realistic. Overall, a remarkable book and it’s why I have a special print from the series on my study wall.\nBon e – Back when self publishing comics was a radical and new idea, long before the internet opened up and digital, print on demand and web comics made it even easier to reach your audience, three men were creating comics. Terry Moore (Strangers in Paradise), Dave Sim (Cerebus) and Jeff Smith, writer and artist of Bone. Like all of them, Bone was originally printed in single issues but is now available in giant collections. This is an all ages comic full of wild, wacky and very inventive ideas, wonderful characters, and adventure. It’s about the journey of three little bald headed, cartoony characters through a fantastical world. It’s light, silly, and a refreshing and fun story. It has won numerous comic book awards and is very highly regarded.\nSaga – An epic space opera with unusual spaceships, magic, bounty hunters, sex planets, giants, sentient planets, dinosaurs, and animal headed aliens. Two lovers, from different sides of a conflict, are tired of war, and trying to get out with their new born baby, who is loathed by many for being a cross-breed. This comic is for adults only due to the language, violence and other adult sexual content. It’s a huge tale that is gradually unfolding, and it is told from a very unique perspective, as the narrator is the child being born at the start of the first issue. The main story follows the girl’s parents as they try to escape and start a new life. A quick touchstone is Lord of the Rings meets Romeo and Juliet, although to me, it’s more like Star Wars meets Romeo and Juliet. The story is clearly influenced by many comics, films and TV from the SFF world and it’s a thrilling, interesting and exciting adventure where you have no idea what is going to happen next and what is around the next corner. There are no limits, each issue ends on a cliffhanger and you care about the main characters. One trade paperback is out now, plus you can get single issues or digital copies.\nChew – This is a story set in the modern world where a bird flu epidemic killed millions of people and this has resulted in the ban on all chicken and chicken like meat. Speak Easy diners sell black market chicken and the enforcement of the ban has resulted in the Food and Drug Administration FDA branch of the Government becoming incredibly powerful. Tony Chu is a cop who has an unusual talent, he is a cibopath, which means he gets psychic impressions of whatever he eats and know their history. So if he eats a burger, he will see the cow being cooked, then ground up, then killed, and so on all the way back to it grazing happily in the field. Everything he eats gives him the same mental imagery, except beets, so he eats them a lot. This is, in the most loose terms, a detective comic, but it is incredibly dark and with lots of black humour. It has lots of weird and wacky characters, as Tony’s ability is not the only one, and all of the other abilities are related to food in some way. Overall this is an incredibly funny comic but it is very odd and I admit, not to everyone’s taste.\nThe Sixth Gun – This is a mix of several genres where the sum is far greater than its parts. It’s a spooky and creepy horror western with supernatural elements, where six guns bestow unnatural powers on the people who wield them. For the longest time they were in the hands of some terrible people, with some fairly unpleasant results (I’m being fairly vague on purpose so I don’t spoil the fun!), but now they’re after the 6th gun and they want to find their leader, General Hume. At the beginning of the story it focuses on several groups trying to track and then retrieve the 6th Gun, which has now fallen into the hands of the heroine Becky. She and Drake Sinclair, a man with an unpleasant past trying to make amends, are thrown together as they try to outsmart and outmanoeuvre the dangerous group of killers on their heels. This story has touches of magic, ghosts, unnatural dark powers, legendary weapons steeped in a dark and twisted history, and bags and bags of fun. It’s bright, colour, explosive and a really great and exciting read. I love westerns, and the supernatural, and this is the perfect blend of the two. It’s not really suitable for kids, despite the style of art, and so far there are four trade paperback collections available. With each chapter the story and the world expands, but there is a resolution, so the writer is not just stringing you along. It’s one of the most unique and interesting comics I’ve read in quite a while.\nSpider-Man – Miles Morales – I’m being careful about the number of superhero comics I put on this list, because the market is dominated by them, also it’s hard to know where to start sometimes when a comic has been going for decades, and as I said, they’re just one genre in the medium. However, if you want to read a Spider-Man comic then I would suggest you start with this one because it is fairly new and you can read it without knowing much about what came before. It is also suitable for younger readers, probably anyone ten and over I would say. I’ve put Miles Morales because this is about a new Spider-man called Miles. He is a modern kid and the story is set today, so he has the internet and a mobile phone and a whole set of new issues to deal with as a child growing up in the 21st century. It’s about a boy who is given great powers and how he copes with the responsibility that comes with them and what he chooses to do. It’s very refreshing as well because there is very little you need to know before picking this up and a quick internet search would fill in any blanks. The story plays with familiar archetypes for those who have read Spider-Man before, so there are lots of nice Easter eggs for us older readers, but you don’t need to know any of that to enjoy the series. A really entertaining, fresh and fun comic about a new hero in the making and the decisions he makes. There are several trade paperback collections available already.\nManhattan Projects – This series is written by Jonathan Hickman, who I think is one of the most interesting writers to have come into the comics industry in the last ten years. He has big ideas. I mean epic. He did a long run on the Fantastic Four that wrapped up last year that was one big story with lots of interlocking pieces. He’s doing the same sort of grand story on The Avengers right now, and he’s talked about in interviews how the idea he pitched was pretty big, and will unfold over several years. He also has a vivid imagination and this comic, and all of his other creator owned comics, demonstrate that fact. The story revolves around the idea that the term ‘Manhattan Project’ was actually an umbrella under which several weird and wonderful scientific experiments were being developed by leading scientists from all over the world. This story includes nasty and dark scientific ideas, touches of sci-fi, aliens and creating portals to other worlds and parallel dimensions, historic figures re-imagined and twisted slightly through a lens. It mixes small touches of fact with a lot of fiction, so at one point we see Einstein working on something that is far beyond what most people would assume. It is one of the most unpredictable comics I read and jammed full of strange ideas. If you like shows like Eureka and Fringe, where lots of different things are jammed together and strange geniuses are walking to the beat of their own drum, then this is for you. I like alternate history stories, or stories that suggest a secret history of the world that most people don’t know about, and this is both of those really. It’s a lot fun and two trade paperback are available.\nAll Star Western – A self explanatory title. It’s focuses on different characters in a western setting, and although technically it is a DC comic, don’t expect any superheroes or people with super powers. There are amusing Easter eggs, such as famous names that will later come to mean something in 200 years time in DC comics continuity, like Arkham, but these are proper, down and dirty, six gun, stories of crime, passion, greed, lust, envy, hatred and bravery. Some of the characters don’t talk about their feelings, they shoot them in the street and move on. They have goals and objectives and the law can only do so much in a country so big, so people turn to those on the edges of the law, bounty hunters and men of action with a conscience. The story focus on Jonah Hex, a scarred and famous bounty hunter and man with iron principles, and the back up stories have other characters. A really solid western comic, and if you enjoy the Hex stories and want more of him, then you can dig out lots of Jonah Hex trade paperbacks.\nMorning Glories – Six very different and exemplary students are chosen to attend the prestigious Morning Glories academy. They’re known for being excellent and all are delighted by this opportunity, until on the first day one of the teachers tries to drown everyone. This story is a giant mystery and a huge puzzle box that is slowly being unravelled. I’m delighted to say the writer knows how it ends and where the story is going. He is not doing a Lost, and has explicitly said this in interviews. None of the students remember how they arrived at the school as they were unconscious, so no one knows where it is. After several attempts on their lives, often at the hands of teachers but sometimes other students, they begin to realise they’re being tested and challenged for some greater purpose. The story involves ghostly apparitions, time travel (maybe), conspiracies, cults, and a whole host of other elements I won’t spoil. If you like mysteries, and complex intriguing stories, if you like TV shows like The Prisoner, with people trapped and having their strings pulled, then I would definitely recommend Morning Glories. Three trade paperbacks are currently available. Definitely an adult story for adult readers, despite having teen protagonists.\nElephantmen – In a distant future, a twisted and deranged scientist, working for a powerful corporation, created some human / animal hybrids using African animals. These bulky and incredibly dangerous children are trained from birth to be soldiers and brutal killers, denied freedom of thought and essentially brainwashed into believing they are unkillable machines. When the UN discovers what has been going on the programme is shut down, but not before the Elephantmen inflict heavily casualties. They are released, given independence and they try to live normal lives. Some of them are loathed, some become celebrities, some powerful businessmen, some just want to disappear and some can’t shake off their past and they become dangerous criminals and rulers of the underworld. This comic has a real Blade Runner vibe to it, as when you look at the art there is a lot of dark shadows, bright neon lights and signs, and a blending of many modern and historic elements to create a future that is a mix of many cultures. The story focuses on different characters, including Hip Flask, a hippo hybrid who is a private eye, Ebenezer Hide, who is an Elephantman, who works with Hip from time to time, and Obadiah Horn a rhino hybrid who is now a successful businessman. The artwork in this book is simply amazing, gorgeous painted covers by Ladronne, and the colours are so important. The stories are a mix of genres, but ultimately about these unusual and rather remarkable outsiders who are trying to find a place in the world. An incredible and unique comic book. Five big trades are currently available.\nWell done if you’ve made it this far. This post turned out to be much longer than anticipated. I’m going to do this again at some point, but if you would like me to recommend comics from a particular genre, then let me know in the comments section.\nFiled under Comics\nTagged as boom studios, comic shop locator, comics, dark horse comics, dynamite entertainment, genre, image comics, independent comics, local comic shop, medium, oni press, top shelf comix, vertigo comics, wildstorm comics\nStephen Aryan ·","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line397383"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7138615846633911,"wiki_prob":0.7138615846633911,"text":"Five star cruise ship puts in at Nha Trang\n(Oct 17, 2010) The Diamond Princess cruise ship, carrying 2,500 international tourists from 47 countries and territories, anchored at Nha Trang Bay in the central coastal province of Khanh Hoa on October 14.\nFestival of Asian Children’s Art held in Hanoi\n(Oct 14, 2010) The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and the National Federation of UNESCO Associations in Japan opened the Mitsubishi Asian Children’s Enikki Festa 2010-2011 in Hanoi on October 13.\nGerman, Vietnamese artists exhibition in Hanoi\n(Oct 14, 2010) An art exhibition called “Deutschland shop – Vietnam branch” by a group of German and Vietnamese artists opened at Goethe Institute, Hanoi on October 12.\nExhibition named “Imperial Citadel of Thang Long – the 1000-year history from the earth’s entrails”\n(Oct 13, 2010) On October 2, the opening ceremony of the exhibition on typical vestiges of Thang Long – Hanoi with the theme “Imperial Citadel of Thang Long – the 1000-year history from the earth’s entrails” was held in Central Sector of Imperial Citadel of Thang Long – Hanoi. This is the first time the vestiges of Imperial Citadel of Thang Long – Hanoi has been displayed and introduced to Vietnamese people and international visitors.\nNha Trang to host international yacht race again\n(Oct 13, 2010) The central coastal city of Nha Trang will host the fourth VinaCapital Hong Kong-Vietnam International Yacht Race from October 20-24. The race is expected to draw more than 200 contestants from Hong Kong , Singapore , the Philippines , Australia , New Zealand and several European and American nations.\nHanoi to host Japanese language festival\n(Oct 12, 2010) The Japan Foundation for Cultural Exchanges in Vietnam and the Vietnam-Japan Human Resources Corporation Centre (VJCC) will hold a Japanese language festival in Hanoi on October 17.\nVisa fee exemption takes effect\n(Oct 12, 2010) The visa fee exemption policy took effect on October 10 after the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism (VNAT) had issued guidelines on the policy over weekend.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1445206"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6836574077606201,"wiki_prob":0.3163425922393799,"text":"Richard Long is a preeminent pioneer of walking as art, beginning with his seminal piece A Line Made by Walking, 1967. This work was considered – and is still considered, nearly 50 years later – a key moment in the development of a number of new art movements still flourishing today, including conceptual art, land and environmental art, performance art, the blurring of boundaries between different practices, and the idea that art does not need to be limited solely to the production of an art object.\nhttp://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Long_-_A_Line_Made_By_Walking_(1967).jpg\nIn, this simple line of flattened turf, made by his walking backwards and forwards in a field, Richard Long is saying that sculpture can be an act of walking, and that art can be ephemeral, performative – not necessarily able to be bought or sold or viewed in a gallery. All that remains is the now famous photograph that he took at the time, through which we can share the original experience of his walk in our own imaginations: the experience of being fully connected to the natural world around us through the natural and repetitive movement of the body.\nStill highly influential today, Richard Long has made epic walks in many of the world’s remotest regions, as well as close to home – often marking the landscapes of his journeys through archetypal geometric patterns (circles, spirals, lines…) either through his own movement or through making sculpture with the stone and natural materials to hand. These large outdoor sculptural works are short-lived – working always with deep respect for nature, Long will dismantle the pieces after he has documented them with photography.\nHe also makes work for gallery viewing – his photographs, text works, maps and other forms of presentation bring us vivid impressions of his human experience during the walks, and his floor-based stone pieces and mud works made directly on the gallery walls give an immediate physical sense of the land through which he has travelled.\nI wrote before on this blog about Richard Long – at the time of his wonderful Heaven and Earth exhibition at Tate Modern, London, 2009. Here is a glowing account of the exhibition, with which I completely agree, but could never say so well! Jonathan Jones – Heaven and Earth\nAnd I was surprised to find my views haven’t changed very much since 2009, so rather than repeat what I have already said – please read my earlier post if you would like to.\n‘One thing leads to another: everything is connected’. Made for\nArt on the Underground, in London. 60,000 copies were given away to customers on the Jubilee Line in June 2009.\nRichard Long seems to be ‘flavour of the month’ here in Devon, much to my pleasure – for I have seen three separate exhibitions here recently, where his work has been featured.\nDetached and Timeless, at the Royal Albert Memorial Museum (RAMM), Exeter, was a superb exhibition of significant British artists from across the last 60 years, whose work has been inspired by nature and spirit of place. Unfortunately here, I felt Long’s small stone floor piece suffered somewhat from being squeezed up against a dividing wall, making it difficult for me to get a sense of its geometry in relation to the space. But it was right it should be there, representing his contribution to contemporary land-related art, and there were many other fascinating and inspiring works on show to catch my attention! The exhibition closed on Nov 2nd, but there is a little info on the RAMM website, under ‘What’s On/ past exhibitions’.\nIn Plymouth, I visited Walk On (40 years of Art Walking – From Richard Long to Janet Cardiff), a wide-ranging and very interesting exhibition, which was promoted as ‘… the first exhibition to examine the astonishingly varied ways that artists, from the 1960’s onwards, have undertaken a seemingly universal act – that of taking a walk – as a means to create new types of art’.\nThe part of the exhibition held in Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery was my favourite. This was partly perhaps because of its emphasis on landscape and nature, with important works from Richard Long, Hamish Fulton, and a number of other distinguished figures such as Alec Finlay, Chris Drury, Julian Opie… But it was also because of the strength of the exhibition presentation itself, with two of Long’s stone circles rightly, I believe, taking a pivotal place in the centre of the floor, holding the exhibition together and setting it into context. The circles reflected his lifelong connection with Southwest England. Other smaller wall-based works of his represented significant moment during the course of his career. For me, there is often something timeless, almost Zen-like in the disciplined simplicity and repetitive nature of Long’s processes. The works are full of movement, and a sense of his own mental and bodily movements – and at the same time they carry a pervading sense of absolute stillness beneath the movement.\nThe ‘Walk-On’ exhibition is open until Dec.13th and well worth seeing if possible, for all the other artists too, that I haven’t been able to mention here.\nHere’s a recent short film from Lisson Gallery, London: Richard Long at Frieze Masters.\nThe third exhibition I have seen recently in Devon, is: Artist Rooms: Richard Long, at the Burton Art Gallery and Museum, Bideford. I approached it with some trepidation, for somehow I had got it into my head that the space was going to be too small, too dark and too cluttered… I could not have been more wrong, for as I pushed open the door to the first room, my eye, and indeed my footsteps, were drawn as if by a magnet to the central stone sculpture Cornish Slate Ellipse, 2009 (which Richard Long had personally reassembled in the gallery).\nAs I walked very slowly around the ellipse, one of my favourite quotations (from Isamu Noguchi) flitted through my head: ‘Stone is the visible history of time, feeding us through a calm and radiant presence’. I breathed in the strong physicality of the stone, and the clear, clean spaciousness of the surrounding gallery. The two were in perfect balance. (Though, on a second visit, I found the balance was somewhat disturbed by the intrusion of a large donations receptacle into a prominent position in the space. This put an interesting new reading on the entire exhibition!)\nHowever… continuing my earlier walk around the ellipse, a relaxed sense of being out in the open landscape slowly grew in me. I sat to look at the work more closely. Its simple geometric form allowed my mind to wander free.\nI admired the machine-cut precision of the stone pieces, set against the occasional glimpses of natural mineral veins and stains within the stone itself. And in the massed tightly-packed arrangement of the pieces within the ellipse, I began to see patterns, curves and alignments – drawing me to contemplate the never-ending movement of life – and a felt sense of geological time.\nThere was a second stone piece, of Delabole slate: Spring Circle 1992, in the second room of the gallery – both sculptures acting as reference points for exploring the surrounding display of photographs, text works, lithographic prints and a small book of mud-dipped pages.\nIt was very nice to view these small-scale wall-based works at close-hand and so clearly and logically presented in the comfortable rooms of the Burton Gallery. Quite a few of them were made in our region, the Southwest: River Avon Mud Drawings: ten mud-dipped papers, 1988, for instance, or the purely textual piece: Three Moors, Three Circles, 1982, representing walks made on Bodmin Moor, Dartmoor and Exmoor.\nAll of them, I believe, were made in the British Isles, covering a range of different types of work and key moments during Long’s career. All of them convey a strong sense of his moment by moment relationship with the land through which he passes. And in the images where he has worked directly with earth material on paper, we can see his relaxed mastery of his medium.\nIn this second room, the first work I viewed was the renowned A Line Made by Walking, 1967 … and the final one was In the Cloud 1991: a fairly large framed text piece of an eight day walk across Scotland… ‘Coast to Coast West to East 1991.’ Chronologically, this led me straight back to the Delabole circle, then back out through the first gallery and the Cornish slate ellipse.\nHere’s a video of another exhibition, that includes what I think is an earlier iteration of Cornish Slate Ellipse.\nI vaguely remember reading somewhere that Richard Long’s practice (long solitary walks, often in remote parts of the world, focusing on nature and getting away from human contact) is a sort of romantic escapist fiction, as opposed to the reality of social interaction. I would say it is the exact opposite – that our deepest reality lies in our being part of this planet. The fiction can be seen in the games and manoeuverings of our dominant culture. Richard Long is an explorer, and very much involves himself in bringing his work back to galleries around the world, for us to consider and enjoy.\nThe exhibition, at the Burton Art Gallery and Museum, Bideford, continues until 10th Jan 2015, so there is still lots of time to see it!\nFor finding out more about Richard Long – here are a few good links among the many:\nRICHARD LONG OFFICIAL WEBSITE – www.richardlong.org\nHe states: “Art about mobility, lightness and freedom.\nSimple creative acts of walking and marking\nabout place, locality, time, distance and measurement”.\nLisson Gallery – http://www.lissongallery.com/artists/richard-long\nTATE: A Line in the Himalayas\nRichard Long Exhibition (Heaven and Earth) – http://wp.me/p4mYE-ug\nWikipedia has a very good overview of Richard Long’s career, with quotations from the artist himself.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line196603"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6409679651260376,"wiki_prob":0.6409679651260376,"text":"Ivanhoe alternative bands\nAlternative Bands /\nIvanhoe, VA Alternative Bands\nWhether you’re a fan of Pearl Jam, Radiohead, Spacehog, or any of the other classic bands of the 90s, you’ll be glad to know GigMasters has a wide selection of Alternative Bands that you can book for your next event in the Ivanhoe, VA area. Start your search here!\nPlease note these Alternative Bands will also travel to Cripple Creek, Fries, Austinville, Wytheville, Max Meadows, Speedwell, Crockett, Galax, Barren Springs, Elk Creek, Woodlawn, Draper, Rural Retreat, Hillsville, Independence, Lambsburg, Ennice, Pulaski, Fancy Gap, Sugar Grove, Atkins, Dugspur, Bland, Sparta, Ceres, Piney Creek, Lowgap, Cana, Indian Valley, Bastian\nAre you a alternative band looking to book more events? Get more alternative band events today.\nTop Alternative Bands Near Ivanhoe, VA\nJukebox Revolver\nCover Band from Greensboro, NC (86 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nJukebox Revolver is a performance-oriented, five-piece band with one goal in mind…..to make sure that you have a great time. They are based out of Greensboro, North Carolina and each member, with their diverse musical and geographical background, has come together to form a truly entertaining and mesmerizing show. From the full, in your face light show, to their crowd engaging and energetic stage presence, to their vocally led and brilliant harmonies, Jukebox Revolver has put together a... (more)\nPatrick Rock and the Wreckage\nRock Band from Greensboro, NC (86 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nSinger/Songwriter Patrick Rock (Greensboro, NC) has been writing, recording and playing over 200+ shows a year for over 20+ years. 2017 began the involvement of his current touring line-up \"The Wreckage\" made up of stellar musicians George Westberry on Bass(The Deluge, None The Wiser), David McLaughlin on Guitar(House of Fools, Paris Ave.) and Rob Wojnar on Drums(Lube, Ultraviolet). (more)\nOriginal Band from Charlotte, NC (112 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nA High energy & charismatic duo, (featuring prolific & influential songwriter Paleface & darling drummer Monica \"Mo\" Samalot), that has been charming audiences from coast to coast with their dynamic & interactive performances that get crowds in great spirits, dancing and singing along. Their eclectic sound is influenced by Rock N Roll, Folk, Blues, Americana, Pop and Punk music and features dynamic compositions, vocal harmonies, and acoustic instruments (mainly guitar & drums) combined with a... (more)\nRadiojacks\nVariety Band from Charlotte, NC (118 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nClose your eyes and listen… Is that Taylor Swift or Bruno Mars playing your party? Who invited Justin Timberlake? This is what happens when RadioJacks takes the stage. You see, the songs that are just making the charts are already part of RadioJacks set. With uncanny accuracy, this band delivers today's top 40 so close to the original that you will think you have the original artist right there with you. Now open your eyes and see the dynamic, youthful energy of a band that is... (more)\nEmerald Empire Band\nCover Band from Asheville, NC (120 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nHigh Energy Live Music to Pack Your Dance Floor! We're live music experts, wedding enthusiasts, and party starters, infusing every event with energy and full dance floors. We're here to make your wedding the greatest party of your life! The Emerald Empire are a premium, customizable 3-14 piece band specializing in high-energy music for festivals, weddings, corporate events and private functions–at a sensible price. Our talented and professional musicians have performed regularly with... (more)\nCover Band from Raleigh, NC (150 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nThe Whiskey Rebellion\nCover Band from Moseley, VA (183 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nSkillful picking and expert three-part harmonies are just part of what you can expect from the Whiskey Rebellion, who have been plying their brand of high-energy acoustic music across the Southeast (and as far west as the Pacific Ocean) for the last eight years. The band has recorded two regionally-acclaimed original albums, shared the stage with the Sam Bush Band and Carolina Chocolate Drops, and had their 2011 tour of the Pacific Northwest captured by filmmaker Tony Morin for a forthcoming... (more)\nBergamot Rose - Nouveau Alternative & French Band\nFrench Band from Purcellville, VA (240 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nBergamot Rose | Nouveau Alternative, Chamber Pop, World Jazz and French Fusion A sound palette of world rhythms infused with a French twist. Inspired by early '90's new wave, Bergamot Rose is composed of tart lyrics balanced by vibrant rhythms and instrumentation. The group also performs world jazz and is well known for their performances at The French Ambassador's Residence in DC in addition to The French Embassy and Canada OAS. The music of Bergamot Rose reflects a musical... (more)\nSonic Spectrum Band\nVariety Band from Wilmington, NC (248 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nSonic Spectrum brings the party by building a one of a kind show of both live and DJ songs to create the customized experience you deserve. From Shag to Soul; from Motown to Metal, we cover the Spectrum to go beyond just the wedding and party basics. Sonic Spectrum hails from Wilmington, NC and powerfully delivers an eclectic mix of funk, rock, pop & soul. Mike Lewis (lead vocals) presents an impressive range, accurately recreating Al Green, Prince, Axel Rose and Rick James just to name a... (more)\nThe Lone Rangers\nVariety Band from Charlottesville, VA (161 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nThe Lone Rangers are on a mission to save the world from boring. Sporting a deep catalog of hits from the '70s, '80s, '90s, and today, the band can elevate any social gathering to a sing-along, dance-along, riotously good time. The Rangers draw on the talents of several established local acts, combining their powers towards a singular goal: to bring you the party. In a world of increasing tedium, the Lone Rangers are prepared to deploy epic amounts of fun. Will you join them? (more)\n3 Shades Of Blue\nAlternative Band from Glenmoore, PA (363 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\n3 Shades of Blue is an alternative rock band from Philadelphia PA. They have opened for bands such as Panic at the Disco, Switchfoot, Skillet, and many more. They are best known for their time on America's Got Talent season 10, where they placed top 20. 3 Shades of Blue plays original music along with top 40's and recent alternative covers. The band travels with a full sound system when needed. Please reach out for any booking inquiry's. (more)\n7 Sharp 9\nCover Band from Atlanta, GA (278 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nHire TheKnot.com's Hall Of Fame Inductee and Best Of Weddings Winner (2015, 2016, 2017, 2018), WeddingWire.com's 'Couple's Choice Award winner 2016 and 2017, and #1 rated Cover Band AND Wedding Band in Georgia on Gigmasters! 7 Sharp 9 pride themselves on their versatility, musicianship, professionalism, and high energy. If you're looking for variety, fun, and you want your dance floor to stay packed, 7 Sharp 9 is your band! You will see on their song list music from all time periods and... (more)\nMod Society\nJazz Band from Brooklyn, NY (465 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nMod Society combines modern-chic style with top quality music entertainment that will keep your guests on the dance floor all night! We specialize in blending indie rock, classic rock, and Top 40 in our arrangements to present a unique performance at every event. Mod Society has been performing throughout Boston and NYC for the past 10 years. Our music spans from straight-ahead traditional jazz to highly energized latin jazz and salsa. High-energy Top 40 dance songs and indie covers are... (more)\nVariety Band from Baltimore, MD (293 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nCover Band from Chicago, IL (496 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nPatrick & the LVB - Chicago Cover Band / Top 40 Band / Party Band (Las Vegas, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Chicago, Denver, Orlando) Patrick Sieben has quickly become one of Las Vegas' top performers. He currently holds a 4 night per week residency at Aria Resort and Casino located at the heart of the Las Vegas strip, performing a young and energetic mix of modern pop tunes, classic hits and originals. While maintaining his residency in Vegas, Patrick and his band travel across the country... (more)\nVinyl Underground\nCover Band from Detroit, MI (404 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nThe Vinyl Underground is Detroit's Premier Party Band. Composed of five of Detroit's most decorated musicians. The Vinyl Underground boasts a range of material unmatched by any other band in the Midwest. The Vinyl Underground has performed at the North American Auto Show for 5 consecutive years, Autorama, The Motor City Casino, The Gem Theater and private parties from Traverse City to West Virginia. Fronted by national and local award winning singer, Chris McCall, the Vinyl Underground... (more)\nOnLive\nVariety Band from Pelham, AL (407 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nCreating the best and most memorable event is important to you! OnLive understands this, and is dedicated to helping ensure that you receive the best in quality music and entertainment. If you are looking for a wide variety of musical genres and a band that is dedicated to meeting all of your expectations, then look no further! OnLive is a \"full-service\" entertainment group with a host of musical backgrounds and years of public performances. We have traveled thousands of miles to perform... (more)\nThe Jump Cut\nHey there! We are The Jump Cut, a 4-piece band from Atlanta, and we would love to help you make your next event one to remember! Our members have spent the better part of the last decade in a variety of positions throughout the Atlanta music scene, from studio musicians to sound engineers, even traveling the country performing with national touring acts. We believe that this breadth of experience has given us a unique ability to adapt and excel in any situation that calls for live music, and... (more)\nSmitty's Polka Band\nPolka Band from New York City, NY (463 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\n** SMITTY'S POLKA BAND -- ROLLIN' OUT THE BARREL w/ the hottest session players in the NY music scene today--classic rock takes on polka, plus pop, Top 40 and Dance Music. ** Smitty's combines classic Old World beer hall accordion with vocals, electric guitars, brass, bass guitars and drums, in a rock band setup. And no genre is safe from the SMITTY'S, who will do whatever it takes to get your groove on! ** SMITTY'S rapidly growing client list includes names like Tussey Mountain PA,... (more)\nTalking Machine\nAcoustic Band from Newburgh, NY (490 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nMarried couple Chris Holub, AKA Tin Monk, and Di Holub are Talking Machine, available as an acoustic duo or three piece band with the addition of long time drummer/percussionist, Sam Allen. Talking Machine's sound and approach are an amalgamation of their musical tastes in all genres, old and new. Although the group is acoustic, song arrangements and instrumentation are that of a fully formed rock group, delivering a full sounding, rhythmically driven musical experience. Chris (Monk) ... (more)\nJose Conde Bands, Ola Fresca\nCuban Band from New York City, NY (464 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nA consistent choice of celebrities and top party planners for over 20 years, Jose Conde is \"one of NY's most important Latin voices\" (TIMEOUT NY), and a dynamic and charismatic Cuban American singer, performer, producer and bandleader. Recent gig activity for Conde includes leading bands in top public and private venues in notable spaces such as MOMA, Museum of the City of New York, Lincoln Center, Sunset Beach-Shelter Island, Mexico City's Publico Prim Museum, Miami Beach Bath Club, Dumbo... (more)\n56DAZE\nVariety Band from Toledo, OH (363 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\n***The KNOT's Best of Weddings Pick for 2018 (9 Years Straight!) *** 2017 BRIDE's CHOICE AWARD from WEDDING WIRE *** Since 2005, 56DAZE has been the PERFECT entertainment for many \"MUST BE PERFECT\" events! 56DAZE is equally at home performing at wedding receptions, corporate events, street fairs, festivals, private parties, and many local and regional night spots. We'll work with you and adjust our song list to play the music you want to hear. We're not the typical stuffy \"wedding band\"... (more)\nCover Band from Washington, DC (259 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nThe 80’s vs. 90’s Show\n90s Band from New York City, NY (464 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nThe 80's vs. 90's Show is a unique and mind blowing experience featuring the best music from two very different decades. Whether it's big hair, neon, Doc Martens or flannel, this band will keep your guests partying on the dance floor all night long! MTV videos play during the set, which bring you back to your favorite decade or decades! The band performs in era specific costumes, raising the bar and raising hell! If you're looking for for something completely new and exciting for your party,... (more)\nJupiter Vinyl\nFolk Band from Pittsburgh, PA (251 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nWe take songs that are well-loved, time-honored classics and make them our own. We give them a new twist so that they can be enjoyed all over again with a fresh hip sound. We are a trio that has written original music as well as covered a wide variety of popular songs. We play everything from the Beatles to Radiohead in our unique style. We can provide our own high-quality sound system that can handle 50-500 people. We are also happy to travel lighter and plug into your house system. We have... (more)\nLost Love Horizon\nRock Band from Harrisburg, PA (329 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\n\"Lost Love Horizon,\" is a central Pennsylvania based, high-energy rock, pop, country, classic, current hit band that also performs LLH originals. The 4-MAN band tours throughout the Northeast, performing at various venues, reaching a wide audience while traveling with state-of-the-art sound & lighting production. The band delivers top-shelf vocals, & rock-solid musicianship combined with a variety of all styles of music. There is something for everyone. All four members of the band... (more)\nThe Cosmic Collective\nJazz Band from Nashville, TN (323 miles from Ivanhoe, VA)\nThe Cosmic Collective covers multiple styles of music; from Jazz and Bossa nova to Pop, R&B, Funk, and Motown. The group boasts a range of accomplishments, including house dance band at The Grand Hotel in Mackinac Island, MI and a feature on Greg Pogue's Jazz Station on ACME Radio. The band consists of formally trained musicians active in the Nashville area, vocalist Nikki Elias, bassist Tyler Enslow, Drummer Jed Smith, Keyboardist Jeff Goodkind, and saxophonist DeVante' Buford. Regulars in... (more)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1261601"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5459604263305664,"wiki_prob":0.4540395736694336,"text":"Peak Potential\nExplore Energy Efficiency\nTrane partners with building owners and operators to create exceptional energy efficiency buildings – and maximum return on investment.\nMore energy-efficient buildings benefit everyone, from those who own and operate them, to those who live and work in them. Worldwide, the process of monitoring, controlling and conserving a building’s energy consumption is evolving quickly and becoming more complex. Building owners and operators may be hesitant about the best ways to do it all.\nTrane cuts through the complexity to guide customers through the energy management process. We partner with them to achieve even the most ambitious energy efficiency goals for their buildings, at minimal operating costs.\nThis means exploring their building’s mission and defining its energy initiatives with them. Then we link those initiatives, in priority order, to the customers’ strategic and financial goals.\nTrane then combines a wide range of systems and services to give customers unified business and technical solutions. And finally, using our unparalleled expertise and offerings, we work with our customers to track results and ensure their mission is achieved — now, and throughout the lifecycle of their energy efficient buildings.\nBaxter Manufacturing Facility in Sabiñanigo Significantly Lowers Energy Use and Improves Comfort\nTrane and global, diversified healthcare company, Baxter, made energy-saving infrastructure upgrades within Baxter’s Spanish manufacturing facility that are expected to reduce energy use an average of 35 percent per year. The energy-efficient systems and solutions have also helped the plant to cut its annual carbon emissions by approximately 450,000 kilograms of carbon dioxide (CO2), or the equivalent of planting 2,260 trees each year. The upgraded cooling and air conditioning system features three new Trane RTAD chillers, variable frequency drives and static and dynamic hydronic balancing, a dry cooler, heat exchangers and other energy efficient solutions.\nTrane Presents Leading Safety Razor Manufacturer with Energy Efficiency Leader Award\nGillette and Trane completed energy saving infrastructure upgrades at the Gillette razor manufacturing, packaging and warehousing facility in Łódź, Poland, that significantly reduced energy use and increased uptime and reliability at the facility. The improvements also provide a safer, more comfortable and more productive environment for workers at the facility. In addition to the main systems upgrades, other efficiency improvements included implementation of variable flow drives and dry coolers for optimal performance. Upgrades also included extension of the free-cooling feature, which enables the ambient cold to be used for the cooling process, limiting the need to operate in compressor mode and reducing energy use.\nUpgrades at Old Colony Regional Vocational Technical High School Cut Energy Consumption by More Than 50 Percent\nTrane made energy-efficient infrastructure upgrades at Old Colony Regional Vocational Technical High School in Rochester, Mass.- USA, that have reduced energy consumption by more than 50 percent, while improving the learning and teaching environment. An ongoing service and maintenance program helps ensure that all systems continue to run at optimum levels. Old Colony implemented a building automation system which provides centralized building control and enables remote access while monitoring results to help ensure that systems continue to run at optimum levels. Other upgrades included installing 18 rooftop units to increase efficiency and 54 variable air volume air handling systems which provide precise temperature control within specific zones.\nOther About Us","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line653474"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9740694761276245,"wiki_prob":0.9740694761276245,"text":"Ring News 24Boxing News Breaking Boxing NewsJaime Munguia retains WBO junior middleweight title with points win over Liam Smith in Las Vegas\nJaime Munguia retains WBO junior middleweight title with points win over Liam Smith in Las Vegas\nAnthony Cocks\nAustralian-based boxing journalist Anthony Cocks has been covering the sport for over 15 years for various print and online publications. He refuses to believe that Roberto Duran ever lost to Tommy Hearns and says that Jeff Fenech would destroy Chuck Norris, Bruce Lee and Muhammad Ali on the same night.\nFollow Anthony Cocks on: Twitter |\tFacebook\nWBO junior middleweight champion Jaime Munguia 30-0 (25) overcame a spirited effort from mandatory challenger Liam “Beefy” Smith 26-2-1 (14) to retain his title over 12 rounds at the Hard Rock Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada on Saturday night.\nIn his first defence of the title he won from Sadam Ali 26-2 (14) in May this year, the 21-year-old Mexican had to withstand an early attack from England’s Smith before taking over in the fourth round and landing the harder shots for most of the fight.\nBy the time the dust settled, Munguia was awarded the victory by scores of 116-111, 119-110 and 119-108.\n“It was a tough fight and he’s a tough fighter,” said Munguia, who has only been past the sixth round once when Johnny Navarrete 31-13-2 (13) took him 10 rounds in April last year.\nIn the sixth round a sizzling left hook from Munguia dropped the 8-1 underdog, but the champion was unable to finish the job.\nThe fight ended Munguia’s six-bout knockout streak going back a year.\n“I feel good. I’m happy. I think that the people liked it,” said Munguia. “I didn’t win by knockout like I always. This is the fifth decision win of my career. But I fought a good opponent who was strong. I came in very well prepared.\n“There are no excuses and we will keep learning because this gave me a lot of experience. I’m only 21 years old and I will keep working in the gym. Liam Smith is a warrior. He is strong. There were times where I really landed punches, which really backed him up. He’s very strong and can take a punch, so I have no excuses.\n“I was always looking for the knockout. I always looked for the fight, and I went in there like a true Mexican. I think going these 12 rounds will serve me as experience.”\nSmith was originally set to face Miguel Cotto-conqueror Ali for the championship in May but was forced to withdraw after a skin condition caused by an allergy prevented him from training. This opened the door for the little-known Munguia to step in and win the WBO world title.\nDespite the wide scorecards, Smith put up a good fight and was far from disgraced.\n“I don’t think he’s a much better fighter than me,” said Smith. “It was the body shots that hurt me. I wanted the title I lost two years ago.\n“I want to stay more active than before. I’m usually known for my fitness, but was I winded in this fight. I felt my skill level made the difference in certain parts.”\nUndisputed cruiserweight champion Oleksandr Usyk calls out Tony Bellew after victory over Murat Gassiev in WBSS final\nTony Bellew accepts challenge from undisputed cruiserweight champ Oleksandr Usyk\nRead more articles about: Jaime Munguia, Liam Smith, Miguel Cotto, Sadam Ali","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1526538"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5452681183815002,"wiki_prob":0.45473188161849976,"text":"Wild Animals in Circuses Bill\nPolicy background\n3 The Bill takes forward the UK Government's policy in relation to the use of wild animals in travelling circuses as set out in the Written Ministerial Statements on 1 March 1 and 12 July 2012 2 . The Government stated that it intended to pursue a ban on ethical grounds on the use of wild animals in travelling circuses in England. In the absence of any compelling scientific evidence that a ban could be justified on welfare grounds, such a ban would require primary legislation. Because primary legislation would take time, as an interim measure, the Government would introduce a licensing scheme using powers available under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. The Welfare of Wild Animals in Travelling Circuses (England) Regulations 2012 came into force on 20 January 2013. Only two travelling circuses have been licensed under the 2012 Regulations to use wild animal acts.\n4 In April 2013, the Government published a draft Wild Animals in Circuses Bill for pre-legislative scrutiny. The draft Bill was considered by the House of Commons' Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Select Committee who published their report in July 2013. The Government responded in October 2013. The Government did not accept the main select committee recommendation that the ban should only apply to some wild animals, rather than all wild animals. Since the Government response, no parliamentary time has been found to introduce the Bill. Several attempts to introduce the Bill by backbench means have also been unsuccessful.\n1 Hansard 1 March 2012 Column 41 WS\n2 Hansard 12 July 2012 Column 43 WS\nWhat these notes do\nOverview of the Bill\nLegal background\nTerritorial extent and application\nCommentary on provisions of Bill\nFinancial implications of the Bill\nParliamentary approval for financial costs or for charges imposed\nCompatibility with the European Convention on Human Rights\nAnnex A - Territorial extent and application in the United Kingdom\nPrepared 8th March 2018","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1595969"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8277153968811035,"wiki_prob":0.8277153968811035,"text":"Using anthropology, data and design thinking to disrupt development consulting\nPublished Thu, May 11 2017 8:09 PM EDT Updated Fri, May 12 2017 9:43 PM EDT\nNyshka Chandran@nyshkac\nIn sunny Singapore, one start-up is disrupting the world of development consulting.\nThe field, in which companies advise public and private sector players on projects related to economic development, traditionally uses a top-down strategy. Zeroth Labs, however, takes that a step further with an adaptive approach to problem solving and constant experimentation.\nThe two-and-a-half year old consultancy applies behavioral insights to urbanization challenges in order to create new services and business models within emerging economies, and it's beginning to make waves.\n\"In the dominant business model of development consulting, you create great strategy based on great information and analysis, and expect that to work on the ground. But things aren't always as linear we'd like it to be,\" said Zeroth co-founder Bernise Ang, who was recently named a young global leader of the World Economic Forum.\nOne of Zeroth's projects: A prototype of a service center in Gazipur City, Bangladesh.\nUNDP - Zeroth Labs - Tandemic\nDevelopment professionals need to formulate hypotheses, create a small-scale prototype, test it, and pay attention to what the data says you need to do next, said Ang, who boasts a finance and psychology background. \"It's not as sexy because it now places the client as the expert instead of the consultant. Still, this is what I think will truly build the capability for developing countries to make life better for citizens. \"\nIn 2014, Zeroth worked on a United Nations project designed to improve Bangladesh's social services that saw municipal officials in the city of Gazipur generate concepts for how they believed services should operate from a user perspective.\nThe end product was a new range of services that supported the blind, was more sensitive to women with children and culturally relevant for female slum dwellers. \"An interesting prototype that emerged was an app for municipal payments and services — not because it's techy, but because of cash and corruption issues surfaced by the mayor's office staff,\" said Ang.\nIn international development, where the interaction of public, private and civil society players is key, understanding human behavioral patterns is crucial to creating sustainable solutions to real-life problems. Organisations such as the Brookings Institution have long advocated the importance of behavioral science in economic development.\nWomen in Gazipur City working on the Bangladesh social services project.\n\"Many mainstream management consulting firms don't have a significant anthropology practice where they conduct their own ethnographic research as it's more time and cost intensive, but it's a key way to uncover the kind of deep behavioral insights we find,\" stated Ang.\nZeroth, a spin-off from Ang's previous non-profit Syinc, deploys a careful blend of anthropology, data analysis, design thinking, and lean startup methodology across a range of social issues, including sanitation, waste management, youth, education, and healthcare. The key lies in the ability to pull these different ideas together, noted Ang, deploying her music training as a metaphor.\n\"I used to play jazz trumpet, and a lot of amazing jazz solos come about from playing metaphorical Lego with other pieces but in new, combinatorial ways. Everything is a remix.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line290307"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.802653968334198,"wiki_prob":0.802653968334198,"text":"By Akon Eddy, Kaduna\nSenator representing Kaduna Central, Senator Shehu Sani has said he will dedicate a quarter of his salary to over 100 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs), from Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states who flee their homes due to insurgency activities who are now taking refuge in Kaduna. He said he will also dedicate the period which he will serve in the Upper Chambers to see that the children have their dreams realized.\nSenator Shehu Sani made the declaration during a visit to the IDPs’ camp in Badarawa, Kaduna North Local Government area of the state on Sunday.\nThe senator why personally distributing honey and bottles of Yoghurts to the IDPs, hinted that he got the news that there was a substantial number of IDPs in Kaduna, and as a senator representing the State, it’s obligatory of him to intervene.\n“I got the news that we have substantial number of IDPs here in Kaduna. And as a Senator representing this very city, it is incumbent of me to intervene; and the intervention should be in such a way that I have decided to rent a house for them and also dedicate a quarter of my salary for the IDPs’ upkeep, education of their children, and for general support for all them in Badarawa.\n“These people are Nigerians, they’re part of us and we’re morally bound to support and help them. I will dedicate the period which I will serve in office to see these children have a future and their dreams realized.\n“I believe Nigeria has enough to support these people yo get their lives back. I’m here to offer moral and financial support not just for a day or two but to continue to support them so that the women among them can have their lives back. And the children can also have their future.\n“These women have lost their husbands and children. They’re widows and orphans and there’s nothing we can do that’s enough to get them out of where they find themselves. I’m pained by the continuous situation of the IDPs.\n“I’m very much disturbed that these persons are victims of insurgency that continue to threatened our peace, lives and freedom. The plight of these IDPs is a moral burden on all Nigerians. As long as they continue to remain in this position, we are morally at guilt to support them and also free them from the situation they find themselves,”he said.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1065668"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8866438865661621,"wiki_prob":0.8866438865661621,"text":"Themes from the Vernacular\nThis evening, I turned on the CD player and put in a CD full of \"American Music.\" I compiled the CD myself to celebrate the fourth of July last year, and interestingly, there are several pieces by non-american composers that appear on the CD. Among these are Dvorak's Symphony No. 9 \"From the New World.\"\nIt's a work we often group into the \"Americana\" genre, as the nation of cowboys and colonials inspired the great work. Infused throughout the work are many original themes that Dvorak wrote based on Native American and African American melodies he encountered in the US. The native Bohemian wrote the work in 1892 during his stint as head of the National Conservatory in New York.\nThe second movement of Dvorak's symphony is particularly well-known for its beautiful melody which was later popularized as a spiritual (Goin' Home). It's interesting to think that Dvorak was attempting to write themes in the vain of spirituals, and that his original theme was later turned into a spiritual and became widely popular. He obviously paid attention to what he was hearing around the country.\nMany composers have drawn on folk songs and themes from the vernacular in their music. However, not many have been able to create an original work which was later adopted as part of that vernacular. It seems backwards, but in fact it shows the care and respect that Dvorak had for this music. It is entirely possible to believe (if you don't know the history behind the work) that Dvorak's tune was in fact a spiritual that he borrowed - it fits all the criteria. Although there is some speculation about this possibility, it's highly unlikely that Dvorak's tune existed before his pencil hit the paper.\nHere's a video of Dvorak's wonderful second movement from Symphony No. 9 \"From the New World.\" Enjoy!\nhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aYl4Xb4cDQ8&hl=en_US&fs=1&\nTagged: American music, Dvorak, folk music, New World Symphony, symphony no- 9 dvorak","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line964941"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6298905611038208,"wiki_prob":0.6298905611038208,"text":"Home » Struggle: A Documentary Film About a Brilliant and Forgotten Artist\nDecember 13, 2018 by Rebecca Forstadt-Olkowski 8 Comments\nIn 2013, I wrote a blog post about a genius artist and sculptor I knew in the early 1980s. His name was Stanislav Szukalski. My post apparently popped up on Google and I was asked to do an interview for an upcoming documentary film about his life called “Struggle: The Life and Lost Art of Szukalski.” Two of the producers are George and Leonardo DiCaprio who also knew Mr. Szukalski during that time.\nThe Lobby card for Struggle at LACMA – c/o Netflix\nHappily, I didn’t end up on the cutting room floor and appear in a quick sequence. After four years in the making, I was invited to a screening of the completed documentary at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA)\nStanislav Szukalski – Genius artist and Sculptor\nMr. Szukalski, or Stash, as he liked to be called was born in 1893 in a small town in Poland. He began to draw and sculpt as a child and had his first art exhibition at age 14. His family immigrated to Chicago when he was in his teens and at age 13, he enrolled at the Art Institute of Chicago. A year later he had his first art exhibition. It drew the attention of Sculptor Antoni Popiel who encouraged his parents to send him to study at the Academy of Fine Arts in Krakow, Poland.\nThe students being considered for the Academy were asked to draw from a nude model. Szukalski drew only the knee of the model, but it was so compelling, it immediately earned him a place at the school without having to take an examination.\nBeing the mad genius that he was, he had his own opinions about art education and after attending for a short time, hurled an insult at the Academy. Szukalski left abruptly and went back to Chicago.\nHe became entrenched in the Chicago arts scene where he met and became friends with Ben Hecht. Hecht later became a well-known screenwriter, director, producer, playwright, journalist, and novelist.\nDuring the 1920s, Szukalski was becoming a rising young artist and had several important exhibitions. He worked in a grandiose and exaggerated style that incorporated meticulous detail and symbolism. It’s hard to explain what his art was like but Culture.PL describes it this way:\n“It merged the decorative flourishes of Romanticism, and multiple currents of early 20th century European Modernism, Cubism, Expressionism, Futurism, as well as Pre-Columbian art.”\nLet’s just say it’s like nothing you’ve ever seen in your lifetime.\nPolivarus by Stanislav Szukalski\nHis reputation continues to grow\nAs he grew more popular, he showed his work at exhibitions in Europe and enjoyed his notoriety. He and his wife Joan returned to Poland on a commission in 1936, and they brought all his work with them. While they were there, he completed several large sculptures and other projects. News of his work spread to Germany, and he was asked to provide a caricature of Hitler who hadn’t yet emerged as a tyrant. Szukalski depicted Hitler as a ballerina, which, of course, didn’t go over well.\nThey were living in Warsaw when it was attacked by the Luftwaffe. His studio was destroyed along with most of his work. A few pieces were looted and found decades later.\nStruggle – This sculpture was recovered years after the destruction of Warsaw in WWII and was restored. It was displayed in the lobby of the Bing Theater at LACMA during our screening.\nSzukalski and his wife escaped returning to America ending up in Los Angeles. With his work destroyed and as a virtual unknown in America he ended up doing background art on several films through his association with Ben Hecht and worked at Rocketdyne creating engineering designs.\nEcho – sculpture by Stanislav Szukalski – seen in his book “Behold!!! The Protong\nMy association with the artist\nWhen I met Mr. Szukalski, he was 90-years old and was a friend of my Polish acting teacher Leonidas Ossetynski. We visited him several times at his small apartment in Burbank. Coincidentally, I now live in the same apartment complex. I always enjoyed our visits because he was so interesting to talk to. He was also a horny little bastard and often tried to cop a feel even though he was 90 at the time. I didn’t mind, though, because he was funny and we always had a great time. My late husband was asked to take photos of his work. The slides are buried somewhere in a box that I need to find and dig out.\nStanislav Szukalski (2nd from right) next to me (far right) in the early 80s at Stages Theatre in Hollywood when he was 90 years old. I was starring in a play there at the time.\nWith brilliance comes some eccentricity\nLate in his life, he developed a theory that all human culture was derived on Easter Island after Noah landed there after the flood. I know it sounds nuts but he had the kind of imagination that produces amazing art. He had also developed his own alphabet as a child which he used in his letters and his writings. I have an autographed copy of one of his books signed with his unique scribble.\nThe unique handwriting of Stanislav Szukalski – He autographed his book for my husband and me in 1982\nHe died from a stroke in 1987 at the age of 93 and his ashes were taken to Easter Island by his friend Glenn Bray, his wife and some friends. Bray is a comic book aficionado who developed a close relationship with Szukalski. He became the executor of Szukalski’s will and inherited his collection. He has a prominent role in the Struggle documentary film as well as George DiCaprio. Several others, including myself, are featured in interviews.\nA forgotten artist gets his due recognition\nGeorge DiCaprio became friends with Mr. Szukalski during the 1970s. He often brought his son Leonardo along when he visited. Leonardo also became a fan of his work and hosted an exhibition in Laguna Beach during the early 2000s.\nAtlantea – sculpture by Stanislav Szukalski on display in the lobby of the Bing Theater at LACMA\nStruggle was screened at a film festival in Amsterdam and our viewing at LACMA was the first official presentation of it in the United States. It’s being distributed by Netflix and I’m hoping it will have a wide release.\nI recently saw the film At Eternity’s Gate about the life of Van Gogh. As we all know, he was an artist who didn’t receive the recognition he deserved until after his death. Mr. Szukalski’s skill set is on the level of Michelangelo or Da Vinci, and I’m not exaggerating. I’m hoping he enjoys the same respect someday.\nAn unpleasant surprise\nIn the course of filming, the production team discovered some alarming aspects of Szukalski’s life. It came to light that he had extreme anti-Semitic leanings during his earlier years. It was typical of the mindset of Poles at the time. I met several with similar views through my Polish acting teacher. After the destruction of Warsaw during WWII, and time spent as a citizen of the U.S., he changed his way of thinking dramatically. In his later years, he became more interested in humanity coming together as one.\nStruggle is available on Netflix\nThe documentary is timely in that Szukalski’s work fully and explicitly encompasses the violence and terror of nationalism and its potentially tragic results.\nGlenn Bray ingeniously filmed hours of Betamax tape of Szukalski near the end of his life that was used in the film. The vignettes are both comical and dramatic. It’s a treasure of a film and I’m so proud to have been a part of it. I hope you get a chance to see it.\nView the film’s official homepage and trailer here.\nFiled Under: Entertainment, Movies Tagged With: Art, celebrities, film\nWow. He sounds like quite the historical figure. A lot of us Poles can be a bit eccentric but creative. And making it from the 1800s to 1980s was pretty impressive. Its cool you got to meet him. My grandmother once met Mussolini when he came by her village in Slovenia. She wasn’t political so she was just like “Someone’s coming to the village? Better be a good host”. As for his anti-Semitic views of his past, people do change over their lives. On one Springer episode was this Klansman dad who in a later episode, returned after a black guy saved his life and wanted to help his family overcome their racial issues. None of us are the exact same person we were decades ago. If I get the chance I should check this movie out.\nRebecca Forstadt-Olkowski says\nThanks, Chris. It hasn’t officially been released yet but should be soon. It was a privilege to meet him and to work on the film. Interesting about your grandmother meeting Mussolini. You just never know about people. LOL\nHaralee says\nWow, fascinating. How very cool back in the day your paths crossed then and now again!\nYou never know when someone you meet will be a significant event. That’s for sure, Haralee.\nTom P. says\nHi, do you know if struggle is still at LACMA if so, how long will it he there?\nHi Tom, It was only there for the one night as a preview. It is being distributed by Netflix and I’m not sure when it will officially open. I’m hoping it will be soon.\nTom P says\nI was referring to the actual art piece 😁. That must have really been a very special project to have been a part of!\nI’m not sure about the actual piece. I believe it belongs to Glenn Bray and he would know.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line57799"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6062341332435608,"wiki_prob":0.3937658667564392,"text":"A little bit about us...\nGroup picture from a Denver Weekend, taken near our trees\nOur club was founded on January 10th, 1981, after we had gotten the approval to do so from John and his office in late December 1980 - today we are the only official John Denver club in Germany. At this point of time, it has about 500 members in Germany, but also in Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxemburg, France, Italy, Great Britain, Australia and the USA.\nMain reason for founding the club all those years ago was to create a possibility for interested fans to be able to always get the newest information about John Denver's concerts, CDs, television appearances etc. Now, after John's fatal accident on October 12, 1997, of course some things have to be changed. Nevertheless, we have decided to go on in any case, and so to help that his music as well as his commitment for a better world won't be forgotten, respectively kept going.Until 2010, we published a printed newsletter. The last one came out in early 2011, on the occasion of our 30th anniversary. We have now completely switched to email newsletters. You can register to receive this information here. Of course we also - as far as possible - are happy to answer each question about John, his music etc..\nOur club is a member of the \"World Family Of John Denver Fan Clubs\". That means we are regularly in touch with the other John Denver clubs all over the world - a wonderful opportunity to exchange infos, opinions and also to make new friends.\nWe will also keep alive a \"tradition\" of the club - once a year, we organize a \"Denver Weekend\", a club meeting. It is meant for everybody as a chance to get to know each other, chat, sing, watch videos... The proceeds go to a worthy cause, this year for example we have been supporting the Wild Bird Care Center Kirchwald. 1992, 1997 and 2002, we even made the joint effort, along with the other three clubs in Europe, to have an \"European John Denver Weekend\"...\nIn the years since the club was founded, we have, among others, supported the following organizations:\nMenschen für Menschen\nDeutsche Leukämie-Hilfe\nDolphin Aid\nWindstar Land Conservancy and the John Denver Meadowlands\nPlant-It 2000\nWildvogel-Pflegestation Kirchwald e.V.\nIn case you would like to join us, just register for the newsletter!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line902979"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6697143316268921,"wiki_prob":0.3302856683731079,"text":"Cooperative agreements authorized between council and federal officials and agencies\n• rules\n• powers of Governor\n• exception for inactive or abandoned site\n(1) Notwithstanding the authority of the Oregon Health Authority pursuant to ORS 453.605 (Definitions for ORS 453.605 to 453.800) to 453.800 (X-ray Machine Inspection Account) to regulate radiation sources or the requirements of ORS 469.525 (Radioactive waste disposal facilities prohibited), the Energy Facility Siting Council may enter into and carry out cooperative agreements with the Secretary of Energy pursuant to Title I and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission pursuant to Title II of the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978, Public Law 95-604, and perform or cause to be performed any and all acts necessary to be performed by the state, including the acquisition by condemnation or otherwise, retention and disposition of land or interests therein, in order to implement that Act and rules, standards and guidelines adopted pursuant thereto. The Energy Facility Siting Council may adopt, amend or repeal rules in accordance with ORS chapter 183 and may receive and disburse funds in connection with the implementation and administration of this section.\n(2) The Energy Facility Siting Council and the State Department of Energy may enter into and carry out cooperative agreements and arrangements with any agency of the federal government implementing the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, as amended, 42 U.S.C. section 9601 et seq., to clean up wastes and contaminated material, including overburden, created by uranium mining before June 29, 1989. Any such project need not obtain a site certificate from the council, but shall nevertheless comply with all applicable, relevant or appropriate state standards including but not limited to those set forth in ORS 469.375 (Required findings for radioactive waste disposal facility certificate) and rules adopted by the council and other state agencies to implement such standards.\n(3) The Governor may do any and all things necessary to implement the requirements of the federal Acts referred to in subsections (1) and (2) of this section.\n(4) Notwithstanding ORS 469.553 (Active uranium mill or mill tailings disposal facility site certification required), after June 25, 1979, no site certificate is required for the cleanup and disposal of an inactive or abandoned uranium mill tailings site as authorized under subsection (1) of this section and Title I of the Uranium Mill Tailings Radiation Control Act of 1978, Public Law 95-604. [1979 c.283 §9; 1987 c.633 §2; 1989 c.496 §1; 2009 c.595 §955]","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line267613"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.592149019241333,"wiki_prob":0.407850980758667,"text":"Awards and Funding\nGallery Representation & Public Collections\nSince 2009, I have been one of the directors and curators of Unravelled Arts which we formed in order to commission artists and makers to work in response to historic houses. In 2010, twelve artists make work for Preston Manor in Brighton, Following this, Unravelled worked in partnership with Trust New Art at the National Trust and curated three exhibitions for them at Nymans House and Gardens (2012), The Vyne (2013) and Uppark House (2014).\nThe rich and complex histories of each property proved fertile ground for the artists involved. Having between 10 and 12 artists responding to the same site allowed multiple histories to be brought to light. An unexpected aspect of the curatorial project was the democratisation of history: the space for histories that would usually be deemed as marginal to move centre stage. The interventions also allowed for a more playful and free interpretation of the past, sometimes relying more on instinct than documented records.\nIn 2008 I curated Precious: Reclaiming Art and Craft at Hove Museum with Polly Harknett. Twenty artists whose work involved the transformation of discarded materials into things of worth were displayed with objects from the collections of the Royal Pavilion and Museums, Brighton and Hove.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line567936"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.687633752822876,"wiki_prob":0.687633752822876,"text":"Libertarianism Hits the Big Time\nBy David Boaz\nMichael Crowley, late of the New Republic and now with Time magazine, writes thoughtfully about Ron Paul, Rand Paul, and libertarianism. Crowley notes that Rand Paul, “more politically flexible than his father,” has plenty of unlibertarian positions. But both of them are tapping into a real strain in contemporary politics:\nBut he, like his father, also knows well that a genuine libertarian impulse is astir in America…. polls show an uptick in both social permissiveness and skepticism of government intervention….[Ron Paul] has already waited a long time — and it appears the country is moving his way.\nThis is a current trend, but it’s also deeply rooted in the American political culture. As David Kirby and I wrote in “The Libertarian Vote”:\nIt’s no surprise that many Americans hold libertarian attitudes since America is, after all, a country fundamentally shaped by libertarian values and attitudes. In their book It Didn’t Happen Here: Why Socialism Failed in the United States, Seymour Martin Lipset and Gary Marx write, “The American ideology, stemming from the [American] Revolution, can be subsumed in five words: antistatism, laissez-faire, individualism, populism, and egalitarianism.”… Richard Hofstadter wrote: “The fierceness of the political struggles in American history has often been misleading; for the range of vision embraced by the primary contestants in the major parties has always been bounded by the horizons of property and enterprise. However much at odds on specific issues, the major political traditions have shared a belief in the rights of property, the philosophy of economic individualism, the values of competition; they have accepted the economic virtues of capitalist culture.”… McClosky and Zaller sum up a key theme of the American ethos in classic libertarian language: “The principle here is that every person is free to act as he pleases, so long as his exercise of freedom does not violate the equal rights of others.”…\nSome people recognize but bemoan our libertarian ethos. Professors Cass Sunstein and Stephen Holmes complain that libertarian ideas are “astonishingly widespread in American culture.”\nMuch political change in America occurs within those guiding principles. Even our radicals, Lipset and Marks note, have tended to be libertarian rather than collectivist. America is a “country of classical liberalism, antistatism, libertarianism, and loose class structure,” which helps to explain the failure of class-conscious politics in the United States. McClosky and Zaller argue that many of the changes of the 1960s involved “efforts to extend certain values of the traditionalethos to new groups and new contexts”—such as equal rights for women, blacks, and gays; anti-war and free speech protests; and the “do your own thing” ethosof the so-called counterculture, which may in fact have had more in common with the individualist American culture than was recognized at the time.\nIn a broadly libertarian country most voters and movements have agreed on the fundamentals of classical liberalism or libertarianism: free speech, religious freedom, equality before the law, private property, free markets, limited government, and individual rights. The broad acceptance of those values means that American liberals and conservatives are fighting within a libertarian consensus. We sometimes forget just how libertarian the American political culture is.\nAnd of course American politics and policy deviate a great deal from those fundamental principles, which leaves libertarians feeling frustrated, even angry, and seeming extreme or radical to journalists and others. But as Conor Friedersdorf just wrote in Time’s longtime rival, Newsweek, the media have a bias toward the status quo and establishment politicians, even when current policies and the proposals of elected officials are at least as extreme as libertarian ideas:\nIf returning to the gold standard is unthinkable, is it not just as extreme that President Obama claims an unchecked power to assassinate, without due process, any American living abroad whom he designates as an enemy combatant? Or that Joe Lieberman wants to strip Americans of their citizenship not when they are convicted of terrorist activities, but upon their being accused and designated as enemy combatants? In domestic politics, policy experts scoff at ethanol subsidies, the home-mortgage-interest tax deduction, and rent control, but the mainstream politicians who advocate those policies are treated as perfectly serious people.\nAnd Fareed Zakaria, the editor of Newsweek International, made the point a dozen years ago in a review of Charles Murray’s book What It Means to Be a Libertarian (in the Public Interest, not online)\nThe reason that libertarians seem extreme and odd is not that they are a furious minority, angry at a world that seems to have passed them by, but rather the opposite. They are heirs to a tradition that has changed the world. Consider what classical liberalism stood for in the beginning of the nineteenth century. It was against the power of the church and for the power of the market; it was against the privileges of kings and aristocracies and for dignity of the middle class; it was against a society dominated by status and land and in favor of one based on markets and merit; it was opposed to religion and custom and in favor of science and secularism; it was for national self-determination and against empires; it was for freedom of speech and against censorship; it was for free trade and against mercantilism. Above all, it was for the rights of the individual and against the power of the church and the state….\nThe reason that libertarianism seems narrow and naive is that having won 80 percent of the struggles it has fought over the last two centuries, it is now forced to define itself wholly in terms of the last 20 percent. Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice if you were in Prussia in the 1850s, but in America in the 1960s? Libertarianism has become extreme because the world has left it no recourse.\nNow, I don’t feel furious, angry, or extreme. I think that libertarianism is the philosophy of the American revolution, the basic ideology of America, and indeed the foundation of Western civilization. The concept of personal and economic freedom – giving people more power to pursue happiness in their own way by restricting the size, scope, and power of government – is not extreme. Nor is it reactionary. In fact, it is the direction in which civilization has been heading, with many digressions and blind alleys, since the liberal revolution of the 17th century. I am a progressive. I believe that the simple, timeless principles of the American Revolution – individual liberty, limited government, and free markets – are even more powerful and more important in the world of instant communication, global markets, and unprecedented access to information than Jefferson or Madison could have imagined. Libertarianism is not just a framework for utopia, it is the indispensable framework for the future.\nGeneral, Government and Politics, Political Philosophy\nAmerican Revolution, Cass Sunstein, charles murray, economic freedom, free markets, free speech, freedom, freedom of speech, gold standard, government, individual liberty, individual right, individual rights, libertarian, libertarian vote, libertarianism, limited government, markets, obama, politicians, private property, rand paul, socialism","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1680184"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.744401752948761,"wiki_prob":0.744401752948761,"text":"Luxury online reseller The RealReal closes up more than 40% in debut\n(Reuters) - Shares of U.S. online luxury reseller The RealReal Inc (REAL.O) closed up more 40% in their debut on Friday, giving it a market capitalization of around $2.4 billion and signaling investor appetite for listings of consumer companies.\nJulie Wainwright (C), CEO of The RealReal Inc. takes part in the company's IPO at the Nasdaq MarketSite inside of Times Square in New York, U.S., June 28, 2019. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson\nThe shares opened at $28, above their initial public offering price of $20, and closed at $28.90.\nThe offering of 15 million shares was priced at $20, above the expected range of $17 and $19 per share, helping the company raise $300 million in net proceeds.\nThe personal luxury goods market is expected to grow to between $364 billion and $415 billion in 2025, with millennials expected to represent 40% of the market, according to research firm Bain & Co.\nThe vast majority of The RealReal’s business is in the United States and Chief Executive Julie Wainwright said the company would eventually expand abroad.\n“We have a huge opportunity in front of us. Two-thirds of it’s outside the U.S. so at some point we’ll go overseas but not in the near term,” Wainwright said in a telephone interview.\nThe RealReal is a marketplace for second-hand luxury items including clothing and accessories. People can list their unwanted luxury goods, some that are either used or still have tags on them, and the company then takes a cut when a sale is made.\nThe RealReal, which started out as a business run from Wainwright’s kitchen table, now processes nearly 2 million orders per year. It has expanded its physical presence by opening two brick-and-mortar stores in Manhattan and one in Los Angeles that collect as well as sell goods.\nThe company has been thriving on the rising sales of second-hand, or vintage, luxury goods - from Chanel handbags and Gucci dresses to Rolex watches - banking on growing millennial interest in the price and environmental benefits of recycled clothing.\nRival resellers are looking to cash in on the booming market, including thredUP, which branched into luxury last year, and established players like Vestiaire Collective.\nThe top-selling luxury designers on The RealReal’s online marketplace include Cartier, Chanel, Christian Louboutin, Gucci, Hermès, Louis Vuitton, Prada, Rolex, Tiffany and Valentino.\nThe company posted a net loss of $75.8 million in 2018, compared with a loss of $52.3 million in 2017, on revenue of $207.4 million, up over 55%, its filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission showed.\nInvestors in the San Francisco-based company include Perella Weinberg Partners and Great Hill Partners.\nReporting by Aparajita Saxena and Aishwarya Venugopal in Bengaluru, and Joshua Franklin in New York; Editing by Susan Thomas and Alistair Bell","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line258779"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9895250797271729,"wiki_prob":0.9895250797271729,"text":"White Sox turn to Floyd in battle with Tigers\nIt could be the White Sox's inability to beat the Tigers this season that keeps them out of the postseason. If only Gavin Floyd could start every game against the division rival.\nFloyd takes aim at a fourth straight winning decision this afternoon when Chicago tries to make up ground on first-place Detroit in the second of three straight games between the clubs.\nThe right-handed Floyd has won six of his past seven decisions while going at least seven innings in five of his last eight outings. That includes a win at Seattle on Sunday as he gave up two runs on five hits over 7 1/3 innings with six strikeouts.\n\"It was an all-around good ballgame,\" said Floyd, who was backed by homers from Tyler Flowers and Dayan Viciedo. \"To get run support is nice.\"\nFloyd is 12-10 with a 4.36 earned run average in 26 starts this season and has been solid in 15 road outings, going 8-5 with a 3.08 ERA.\nThe 28-year-old has had much success against the Tigers in his career, going 6-1 with a 3.31 ERA in 15 starts. He picked up a victory at Detroit on July 15, allowing one earned run in 7 2/3 innings.\nThe White Sox, though, have lost eight of 13 so far to the Tigers this year, including five of seven in Detroit following last night's 8-1 defeat. Starter John Danks was knocked around for eight runs over 4 2/3 innings to suffer the loss as Chicago fell 6 1/2 games behind Detroit in the American League Central.\n\"We've put ourselves in a pretty bad position here but we're not out of it,\" said Danks.\nFlowers hit a home run for the White Sox, who have lost two straight following a win in five in a row.\nJustin Verlander got plenty of support en route to his 21st victory of the season. He allowed one run over 7 1/3 frames to earn his ninth straight win, getting supported by Austin Jackson's two-run homer and a three-run double by Jhonny Peralta.\n\"Another stellar performance,\" Tigers manager Jim Leyland said of Verlander. \"It was kind of a neat night because Justin picked the guys up and the guys picked Justin up.\"\nDelmon Young added an RBI triple for the Tigers, who have won three of four and also maintained a 5 1/2-game advantage over the Indians in the standings while picking up the game over the White Sox.\nChicago will try to solve Tigers starter Brad Penny, who has won all three of his career starts versus the club with a 2.89 ERA. One of those wins came on July 17, when the righty gave up three runs over 6 2/3 innings.\nPenny is coming off a horrid outing at Minnesota on Sunday as he was denied a third straight winning decision. The 33-year-old was drilled for seven runs on eight hits over five innings of an 11-4 defeat, dropping to 9-10 with a 5.07 ERA in 26 starts.\n\"I didn't really have a good breaking ball today,\" said Penny. \"Didn't have a lot of opportunities to throw it and get a feel for it, but I felt strong, my arm felt great.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line283222"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.809864342212677,"wiki_prob":0.809864342212677,"text":"louise weir\n@smallpublishersfair Holborn London this Friday/Saturday books,cards etc work at https://t.co/XlXQmwJg89 Be great… https://t.co/tNguStdbzg\t3 years ago\nLouise Weir is an artist, illustrator and lecturer on the Illustration course at Southampton Solent University.She grew up in a small hamlet in the North West of England called Hatton in the only local pub the “Hatton Arms”. The rural landscape and the large and rich variety of “locals” that inhabited her childhood have had a profound effect on Louise’s work and she has a fascination with narrative that explores these areas.\nAfter a Foundation year at Mid Cheshire College she travelled East to study a BA in Graphic Design and Illustration at Hull college of Art before heading south to London to study an M.A at St Martins College.\nShe currently lives in Walthamstow and works in her studio next to London Fields in the East End of London.\nShe has been working within the Illustration industry for over twenty years with a wide range of experience across Design, Advertising, Publishing and Editorial. Working in the U.K and worldwide for clients such as The Royal Mail, CDP Advertising, The Ministry of Sound, Wardour Publishing, Random House Publishing, Penguin, The Guardian, Independent, Mail and Times newspapers.\nShe exhibits regularly in group and solo shows in the UK and Europe. Her current exhibition ” Expectations of the Past” has been produced with the support of Arts Council funding and will tour the UK during 2017/18. This new and recent work is an investigative journey of memory, identity and loss informed by Dickens’ novel “Great Expectations” which examines very similar themes. Exploring the text helped Louise examine her own personal history and emotional landscape, creating a dialogue between the text, isolated memories and specific events at the time of making. The dialogue between past and present is reflected in Louise’s methodology, which brings together a breadth of traditional and digital processes.\nHer work has been discussed in anthologies of Illustration including, “The Fundamentals of Illustration” by Lawrence Zeegan, , Varoom, A.O.I Images, and journals published in connection with the Illustrative Berlin/Zurich 2007- 11 in which original artworks have been exhibited. She was also a founder member of a successful Illustration collective called Monster, and has also held a position as joint director at The Association of Illustrators.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1394848"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6347290277481079,"wiki_prob":0.3652709722518921,"text":"Biblical Evidence for Catholicism\nGet updates from Biblical Evidence for Catholicism delivered straight to your inbox\nCatholic Feedback ('97-'01)\nCatholic Feedback ('02-Present)\nNon-Catholic Feedback\nCatholic Apologetics\nApologetics, General\nBaptism & Sacramentalism\nBible & Tradition\nChurch, The (Ecclesiology)\nEucharist & Liturgy\nHell, Satan, & Last Things\nMary (Mariology)\nPapacy & Infallibility\nSaints, Purgatory, & Penance\nSalvation & Justification\nTraditionalism vs. Reactionaries\nTrinitarianism & Christology\nConversion & Converts\nDevelopment of Doctrine\nFathers of the Church\nHeresies & Comparative Religion\nInquisition, Crusades, & Scandals\nJews, Judaism, & Old Testament\nOrthodoxy, Eastern\nGreat Apologists\nFr. John A. Hardon, S. J.\nMalcolm Muggeridge\nEcumenism & Christian Unity\nLiberal & Modernist Theology\nPolitical, Ethical, & Moral Issues\nRomantic & Imaginative Theology\nSexuality & Gender Issues\nAll Books & Purchase Links\nDeep Discount E-Booksite\nespañol / português / FRANÇAIS\nDiscussion Policy\nCalvin, John\nCalvinism & General Protestantism\nLutheranism\nPersecution & Intolerance\nWhite, James: \"Mr. Anti-Catholic\"\nSacramentalism & “Ex Opere Operato” (vs. Calvin #37)\nJanuary 30, 2019 by Dave Armstrong\nSacramentalism & “Ex Opere Operato” (vs. Calvin #37) January 30, 2019 Dave Armstrong\nThis is an installment of a series of replies (see the Introduction and Master List) to much of Book IV (Of the Holy Catholic Church) of Institutes of the Christian Religion, by early Protestant leader John Calvin (1509-1564). I utilize the public domain translation of Henry Beveridge, dated 1845, from the 1559 edition in Latin; available online. Calvin’s words will be in blue. All biblical citations (in my portions) will be from RSV unless otherwise noted.\nRelated reading from yours truly:\nBiblical Catholic Answers for John Calvin (2010 book: 388 pages)\nA Biblical Critique of Calvinism (2012 book: 178 pages)\nBiblical Catholic Salvation: “Faith Working Through Love” (2010 book: 187 pages; includes biblical critiques of all five points of “TULIP”)\nIV, 14:15\nOF THE SACRAMENTS.\n15. Refutation confirmed by a passage from Augustine.\nHence the distinction, if properly understood, repeatedly made by Augustine between the sacrament and the matter of the sacrament. For he does not mean merely that the figure and truth are therein contained, but that they do not so cohere as not to be separable, and that in this connection it is always necessary to distinguish the thing from the sign, so as not to transfer to the one what belongs to the other. Augustine speaks of the separation when he says that in the elect alone the sacraments accomplish what they represent (Augustin. de Bapt. Parvul.). Again, when speaking of the Jews, he says, “Though the sacraments were common to all, the grace was not common: yet grace is the virtue of the sacraments. Thus, too, the laver of regeneration is now common to all, but the grace by which the members of Christ are regenerated with their head is not common to all” (August. in Ps. 78).\nObviously, people have different levels of grace. Catholics don’t quibble with that.\nAgain, in another place, speaking of the Lord’s Supper, he says, “We also this day receive visible food; but the sacrament is one thing, the virtue of the sacrament another. Why is it that many partake of the altar and die, and die by partaking? For even the cup of the Lord was poison to Judas, not because he received what was evil, but being wicked he wickedly received what was good” (August. in Joann. Hom. 26).\nA little after, he says, “The sacrament of this thing, that is, of the unity of the body and blood of Christ, is in some places prepared every day, in others at certain intervals at the Lord’s table, which is partaken by some unto life, by others unto destruction. But the thing itself, of which there is a sacrament, is life to all, and destruction to none who partake of it.”\nIn other words, it is connected to salvation (“life to all”), just as Jesus explained in John 6.\nSome time before he had said, “He who may have eaten shall not die, but he must be one who attains to the virtue of the sacrament, not to the visible sacrament; who eats inwardly, not outwardly; who eats with the heart, and not with the teeth.” Here you are uniformly told that a sacrament is so separated from the reality by the unworthiness of the partaker, that nothing remains but an empty and useless figure. Now, in order that you may have not a sign devoid of truth, but the thing with the sign, the Word which is included in it must be apprehended by faith. Thus, in so far as by means of the sacraments you will profit in the communion of Christ, will you derive advantage from them.\nCalvin, as is his wont, goes too far and denies an underlying Catholic principle: ex opere operato: the notion that the sacraments have inherent power and have effect precisely because God’s power is in them. Catholics agree that the benefits of the sacrament can vary, according to inner disposition, but they also assert ex opere operato, and it is Calvin’s aim to deny that. The Catholic view is Christ-centered, whereas Calvin’s view is too man-centered on the scale of things. He puts relatively more emphasis on the recipient rather than the Lord of the sacraments, Who uses them to accomplish His purposes. The Catechism of the Catholic Church asserts the proper, balanced view:\n1127 Celebrated worthily in faith, the sacraments confer the grace that they signify. They are efficacious because in them Christ himself is at work: it is he who baptizes, he who acts in his sacraments in order to communicate the grace that each sacrament signifies. The Father always hears the prayer of his Son’s Church which, in the epiclesis of each sacrament, expresses her faith in the power of the Spirit. As fire transforms into itself everything it touches, so the Holy Spirit transforms into the divine life whatever is subjected to his power.\n1128 This is the meaning of the Church’s affirmation that the sacraments act ex opere operato (literally: “by the very fact of the action’s being performed”), i.e., by virtue of the saving work of Christ, accomplished once for all. It follows that “the sacrament is not wrought by the righteousness of either the celebrant or the recipient, but by the power of God.” [footnote: St. Thomas Aquinas, S Th, III, 68, 8] From the moment that a sacrament is celebrated in accordance with the intention of the Church, the power of Christ and his Spirit acts in and through it, independently of the personal holiness of the minister. Nevertheless, the fruits of the sacraments also depend on the disposition of the one who receives them.\n1129 The Church affirms that for believers the sacraments of the New Covenant are necessary for salvation. “Sacramental grace” is the grace of the Holy Spirit, given by Christ and proper to each sacrament. The Spirit heals and transforms those who receive him by conforming them to the Son of God. The fruit of the sacramental life is that the Spirit of adoption makes the faithful partakers in the divine nature [footnote: cf. 2 Peter 1:4] by uniting them in a living union with the only Son, the Savior.\nSt. Augustine (virtually Calvin’s chosen “patron saint”) accepted ex opere operato. For example, he wrote:\nBaptism consists not in the merits of those by whom it is administered, nor of those to whom it is administered, but in its own sanctity and truth, on account of Him who instituted it. (Cont. Cres., IV)\nWhence this great power of water, that it touches the body and cleanses the soul? (Tractate 80 on the Gospel of John)\nTo my mind it is abundantly clear that in the matter of baptism we have to consider not who he is that gives it, but what it is that he gives; not who he is that receives, but what it is that he receives . . . Wherefore, any one who is on the side of the devil cannot defile the sacrament, which is of Christ . . . When baptism is administered by the words of the gospel, however great the evil of either minister or recipient may be, the sacrament itself is holy on account of the one whose sacrament it is. In the case of people who receive baptism from an evil person, if they do not receive the perverseness of the minister but the holiness of the mystery, being united to the church in good faith and hope and charity, they will receive the forgiveness of their sins. (On Baptism; cited by Protestant historian Alister McGrath, Historical Theology: An Introduction to the History of Christian Thought, Wiley-Blackwell, 1998, pp. 77-78)\nElsewhere, Calvin explicitly rejects ex opere operato, and in so doing, shows that he scarcely even understands what it is that he rejects:\nTo show more fully the agreement between the doctrine of the Papists and that which Paul opposes, it must be observed, that the sacraments, when we partake of them in a sincere manner, are not the works of men, but of God. In baptism or the Lord’s supper, we do nothing but present ourselves to God, in order to receive his grace. Baptism, viewed in regard to us, is a passive work: we bring nothing to it but faith; and all that belongs to it is laid up in Christ. But what are the views of the Papists? They contrive the opus operatum, by which men merit the grace of God; and what is this, but to extinguish utterly the truth of the sacrament? (Commentary on Galatians 5:1-6, section 3; translated by John King)\nCalvin scholar David Curtis Steinmetz makes it very clear that Calvin opposed ex opere operato:\nFrom the standpoint of medieval theology, Zwingli and Calvin placed the baptism of Jesus and John on the same level, partly by raising the baptism of John and partly by lowering the baptism of Christ. They elevated the baptism of John by insisting that John preached the gospel and offered the same baptism as the apostles. They lowered the baptism of Christ by arguing that it conferred no grace ex opere operato. (Calvin in Context, Oxford University Press, 1995, p. 168)\nReformed Protestant theologian G. C. Berkouwer explains very well, and fairly and objectively (as he usually does), the differences between Catholic and Calvinist thinking regarding the sacraments and ex opere operato:\nWhy, then, did the Reformers so unanimously reject ex opere operato? . . .\nIt is striking that so much agreement exists between Lutherans and Reformed precisely in the rejection of ex opere operato. . . . he [Calvin] objects to the ex opere operato not only because it is incorrect but because (as he remarks) it contradicts the very nature of the sacraments. . . .\n[Dave: Calvin writes in IV, 14, 26 (cross-reference cited by Berkouwer, but in Latin footnotes):\nIt is here proper to remind the reader, that all the trifling talk of the sophists concerning the opus operatum, is not only false, but repugnant to the very nature of sacraments, which God appointed in order that believers, who are void and in want of all good, might bring nothing of their own, but simply beg. Hence it follows, that in receiving them they do nothing which deserves praise, and that in this action (which in respect of them is merely passive) no work can be ascribed to them.]\n. . . we must now recognize that the Roman Catholic not only rejects this reproach of magic, but that he also faces a problem of subjectivity in the sacraments. This is already apparent in the pronouncement of Trent, which not only poses the ex opere operato, but also speaks of the problem of the obstacle. It is impossible, therefore, to speak simplistically of the Roman Catholic sacramental doctrine as “magical.” . . . a subjective disposition is necessary for the working of the sacrament. Rome never intended to rule out this disposition in an objectivistic manner, but only to deny that this necessary disposition is either causal or meritorious. . . . In spite of all the criticism from the Reformed side, Rome wants to defend the gratuity of grace. . . .\nThis mode does not simply pit objectivity against subjectivism, nor sacrament-magic against human activity. It does not place the absolute gratuity of grace in opposition to the meritoriousness and the preparation of man. It rather synthesizes and connects these contradictory elements, and precisely in so doing it places itself against the Reformed doctrine of the sacraments. . . .\nFor the Reformation, the objectivity of the sacraments could no longer depend on the efficacy of infused supernatural grace . . . The sacraments are no longer independent new fountains of grace . . .\nThe sacrament no longer has the function of infusing supernatural grace, but can only be understood in connection with the word of promise. . . . There is a receiving of the sacrament which is altogether different from the receiving of supernatural grace. (Studies in Dogmatics: The Sacraments, Grand Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans, 1969, pp. 64-65, 67, 69, 74, 76)\nThe excellent Catholic Encyclopedia article on Sacraments describes Calvin’s and Protestantism’s errors in this regard and presents the Catholic alternative (paragraphs are my own, for easier reading):\nLuther and his early followers rejected this conception of the sacraments. They do not cause grace, but are merely “signs and testimonies of God’s good will towards us” (Augsburg Confessions); they excite faith, and faith (fiduciary) causes justification. Calvinists and Presbyterians hold substantially the same doctrine. Zwinglius lowered still further the dignity of the sacraments, making them signs not of God’s fidelity but of our fidelity. By receiving the sacraments we manifest faith in Christ: they are merely the badges of our profession and the pledges of our fidelity.\nFundamentally all these errors arise from Luther’s newly-invented theory of righteousness, i.e. the doctrine of justification by faith alone (see GRACE). If man is to be sanctified not by an interior renovation through grace which will blot out his sins, but by an extrinsic imputation through the merits of Christ, which will cover his soul as a cloak, there is no place for signs that cause grace, and those used can have no other purpose than to excite faith in the Saviour. . . .\nAgainst all innovators the Council of Trent declared: “If anyone say that the sacraments of the New Law do not contain the grace which they signify, or that they do not confer grace on those who place no obstacle to the same, let him be anathema” (Sess. viii, can.vi). “If anyone say that grace is not conferred by the sacraments ex opere operato but that faith in God’s promises is alone sufficient for obtaining grace, let him be anathema” (ibid., can. viii; cf. can. iv, v, vii).\nThe phrase “ex opere operato”, for which there is no equivalent in English, probably was used for the first time by Peter of Poitiers (d. 1205), and afterwards by Innocent III (d. 1216; de myst. missae, III, v), and by St. Thomas (d. 1274; IV Sent., dist. 1, Q.i, a.5). It was happily invented to express a truth that had always been taught and had been introduced without objection. . . . “Ex opere operato”, i.e. by virtue of the action, means that the efficacy of the action of the sacraments does not depend on anything human, but solely on the will of God as expressed by Christ’s institution and promise.\n“Ex opere operantis”, i.e. by reason of the agent, would mean that the action of the sacraments depended on the worthiness either of the minister or of the recipient . . . It is well known that Catholics teach that the sacraments are only the instrumental, not the principal, causes of grace.\nNeither can it be claimed that the phrase adopted by the council does away with all dispositions necessary on the part of the recipient, the sacraments acting like infallible charms causing grace in those who are ill-disposed or in grievous sin. The fathers of the council were careful to note that there must be no obstacle to grace on the part of the recipients, who must receive them rite, i.e. rightly and worthily; and they declare it a calumny to assert that they require no previous dispositions (Sess. XIV, de poenit., cap.4).\nDispositions are required to prepare the subject, but they are a condition (conditio sine qua non), not the causes, of the grace conferred. In this case the sacraments differ from the sacramentals, which may cause grace ex opere operantis, i.e. by reason of the prayers of the Church or the good, pious sentiments of those who use them.\n(originally 10-21-09)\nPhoto credit: Historical mixed media figure of John Calvin produced by artist/historian George S. Stuart and photographed by Peter d’Aprix: from the George S. Stuart Gallery of Historical Figures archive [Wikimedia Commons / Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license]\nBaptism and Sacramentalism\nCalvin & sacraments\nCalvin & the Eucharist\nCalvin's eucharistic theology\nCalvin's sacramentalism\nex opere operato\nsacramentalism\nsacrifice of the mass\nsubstantial presence\nsymbolic Eucharist\ntransubstantiation\nSacraments & the Church Fathers (vs. Calvin #36)\nJanuary 30, 2019 Radically Anti-Traditional Sacramentalism (vs. Calvin #38)\n\"I would add, \"strictly provisionally\"That is, provisional on it remaining the superior explanation, as alternative ...\"\nabb3w\nDialogue w Atheist on Christianity & ...\"\n\"Thanks very much for that find. I have removed the reference.\"\nSt. Augustine Was CATHOLIC, Not Proto-Protestant!\n\"And the key word there is provisionally. I would add, \"strictly provisionally\" and probably \"highly ...\"\n\"Thanks for the amine reference.Sorry, the rest is too disjointed and minute in focus. We ...\"\nSelect a Category About Me Anti-Catholicism Atheism & Agnosticism Baptism and Sacramentalism Bible and Tradition Blessed Virgin Mary Books by Dave Armstrong C. S. Lewis Calvinism & General Protestantism Catholic Apologetics Catholic Apologists Catholic conversion Catholic converts Christmas Church (Ecclesiology) Church History Conversion and Converts Development of Doctrine Eastern Orthodoxy Ecumenism & Christian Unity Eucharist & Liturgy Fathers of the Church French Translations G. K. 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Pasqualucci Re Vatican II #2: Unitatis Redintegratio...\nPope Francis & Transubstantiation (vs. Sedevacantists)\nWhy do Catholics Believe that Sacraments are Necessary?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line77849"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7511888742446899,"wiki_prob":0.7511888742446899,"text":"Refugees & Fragile States\n68.5 million children and families have been forcibly displaced from their homes. These are the largest numbers of refugees and displaced people since World War II. The vast majority of them come from “fragile states”, where families and communities are affected by disasters, economic crises, conflict, and social upheaval. By 2030, an estimated 80% of the world’s extreme poor (living on less than $1.90 a day) will live in these fragile places with weak governance and disrupted public services, like education, health, and clean water. World Vision has worked in fragile states for over three decades to provide life-saving support and durable solutions for the world’s most vulnerable children.\nFollow our fragile states expert, Jonathan Papoulidis, on Twitter: @JPapoulidis\nRead our recent article, Fragile states and the search for ‘what works’\nRead the Global Washington profile on World Vision’s focus on fragility\nTell me the story\nVenezuela crisis: Facts, FAQs, and how to help\nThe Venezuela crisis has caused about 3.4 million people to flee the country, seeking food, work, and a better life. While the influx from Venezuela has caused tensions in host countries, it also has brought out their hospitable spirit.\n8 reasons why the Syrian refugee crisis still matters after 8 years\nMarch 15, 2019, marks eight years since the Syrian refugee crisis began. With reports of the war in Syria almost over and after eight years of hearing about and caring about this crisis, does it still matter? Compassionate voices come together with a resounding yes.\nFragile states: Helping children in the worst of all worlds\nOur executive advisor on fragile states breaks down this difficult context for humanitarian work and explains how we’re uniquely equipped to respond.\nPeople in 38 of the 58\nmost fragile areas receive support through our long- and short-term programming.\n5,000 World Vision advocates\ncontacted Congress to oppose proposed 30% cuts to the foreign affairs budget, which funds lifesaving programs in the most difficult places, with success.\n2 million refugees and displaced people\nhave been assisted by our staff in the midst of conflicts in Syria and Iraq.\nWhat is a refugee?\nmso-para-margin:0in;\nmso-bidi-font-family:”Times New Roman”;\nRefugees are people who had to flee their home country due to war, violence, or persecution, according to the UN Refugee Agency. Refugees are different from immigrants because refugees cannot go home, or are afraid that it is not safe to return. Displaced people have had to leave their homes for the same reason as a refugee, but they are still living within their home country. World Vision works with both refugees and Internally Displaced People (IDPs) in the most fragile places, including Syria, Iraq, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.\nWhy does World Vision work in fragile places?\nWe go where humanitarian and development needs are high. If estimates hold true, by 2030, around 80% of the world’s extreme poor will live in fragile states. What’s more alarming is that extreme poverty has a child’s face: the majority of people in fragile contexts are young. As a child-focused organization, we have a clear call to help the most vulnerable children — those who live in fragile states and who are increasingly forced to flee instability within and across borders as refugees.\nWhat programs are most effective in helping families in these situations?\nPrograms that provide basic necessities while boosting a community’s resilience and self-reliance in the face of disasters and destitution are most effective. Direct assistance for children, households, and communities make a big impact in fragile states, since their governments are often unable to provide basic services. To be most effective, programs need to empower communities and work through local organizations, including churches, mothers’ groups, and farmers’ associations, so that they build local capacity while providing assistance. Programs should also help governments assume responsibility, over time, for service delivery and social protection.\nHow does World Vision’s work help?\nWe have worked in the majority of the world’s fragile states for more than 30 years. We know what types of programs work in these contexts, and more importantly, we have longstanding relationships and trust with the communities we serve. Our big focus in fragile states is on developing new approaches to enable transition out of fragility, especially in program areas where we are strong: water, sanitation, and hygiene; health; livelihoods and food assistance; and child protection, and education. By integrating all these programs, we help to provide communities with what they need most. But no single group or organization can tackle fragility alone, so we partner with churches, donor governments, corporations, and individual supporters across the globe, in addition to local communities, faith bodies, civil society, and public institutions where we work.\nUltimately, our successful programs empower refugees and displaced people and cultivate ingenuity and resilience, so that communities have the know-how, the confidence, and the ability to help themselves and care for their children.\nHow quickly can a fragile nation move toward resilience?\nThe journey can take decades, but we don’t have to wait that long to help change children’s lives. We are seeing communities achieve better health, education, livelihoods, nutrition, and gender equality. And while the road is long, sustained donor support is making a difference in the most fragile places.\nRefugees and Fragile State Resources\nWorld Vision’s Presence in Fragile Areas (PDF)\nSomRep Positive Deviance Study (pdf)\nThis study of our emergency response in Somalia found belonging to a savings group and participating in preparedness and early warning activities were consistently related to both community identification of successful coping as well as food security status.\n3 ways you can help refugees and those living in fragile contexts\nPray for refugees:\nJoin us in prayer\nSpread awareness\nGive monthly to the Refugee Children’s Crisis Fund: $29+\nYour monthly gift will provide life-saving essentials like access to healthcare, clean water and nutritious food along with emergency supplies and safe places for children to play and learn.\nSponsor a child in a fragile\ncontext: $39\nFeed a refugee child for a month: $38\nWith the help of people like you, World Vision is at work in the most broken places—like Syria, South Sudan, and the Central African Republic. Your gift of a Refugee Food Kit can help provide families with desperately needed emergency food.\nTogether, we work to help communities develop the perfect recipe for sustainable success.\nChoose one and see how our work gets done.\nPoverty in America\nHunger & Food Security","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1580929"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5854318737983704,"wiki_prob":0.41456812620162964,"text":"Nigel Paine\nAbout Nigel Paine\nNigel Paine has been involved in corporate learning for over twenty years.\nHe has run organisations producing learning software, CD Roms/multimedia materials,and offered development and support as well as learning resources to companies large and small.\nAppointed in April 2002 to head up the BBC’s Learning and Development operation, he built a successful L&D operation which included a brand-new on-boarding program, a comprehensive leadership development program for over 6,000 staff and a state of the art informal learning and knowledge sharing network.\nHe left the BBC in September 2006 to start his own company focussing on building great workplaces by promoting creativity, innovation, values based-leadership and learning and the link between them. He speaks at conferences around the world, writes for a range of international publications, coaches senior executives in Europe, Australia and the USA and is writing a book on C21st learning leadership called The Learning Challenge, to be published in 2014.\nNigel is a Fellow of the Learning and Performance Institute, Chartered Institute of Personnel Development and the Royal Society of Arts and has been a visiting Professor at Napier University since 1998. In 2006 he was given the Masie Learning Thought Leader Award, and has been a Masie Fellow ever since. In 2012 he was giving the Colin Corder Award for outstanding achievement in corporate learning by the UK’s Learning and Performance Institute.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1640326"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7891349792480469,"wiki_prob":0.7891349792480469,"text":"Books, Their Dedications, and The Media\nCP Current Page: Opinion | Sunday, October 10, 2010\nBy Richard Land, Christian Post Executive Editor | Sunday, October 10, 2010\nWhile his inauspicious beginnings as the only child of orthodox Jewish Russian émigrés did not augur his future notoriety, Saul Alinsky remains a man of tremendous influence to many on the left, including Jesse Jackson, Ralph Nader, Marian Wright Edelman, Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.\nAlinsky died in June 1972, but his principles, particularly as the \"father\" of the community organizing movement, survive him.\nSome have called him Barack Obama's political \"spirit guide.\" The president's successful campaign for the White House was framed on a foundation Alinsky built.\nSoon after Obama graduated from Columbia University in 1983 he went to Chicago to work as a community organizer on the city's South Side, where Alinsky had been based. While Alinsky had already died, Obama was hired by those who had firsthand knowledge of Alinsky's modus operandi, and reportedly Obama was a devout student of Alinsky's book \"Rules for Radicals: A Practical Primer for Realistic Radicals.\"\nThere is no question that community organizing remains a critical cog in the president's worldview, but Obama is not alone among Washington, D.C., power brokers in his affinity for Alinsky.\nHillary Clinton did her senior thesis at Wellesley College on Alinsky and his model of social change, noting, \"There is no lack of issues; what is missing is the politically sophisticated organizers.\" She also wrote of him, \"If the ideals Alinsky espouses were actualized, the result would be social revolution.\" In fact, Alinsky offered Clinton a job, which she declined, choosing instead to enroll in law school at Yale.\nClinton's thesis was embargoed during the entire time her husband, Bill, was in the White House. No doubt that was because the paper is such a strong endorsement of Alinsky and his principles, including this maxim from Alinsky's Rules for Radicals: \"That perennial question, 'Does the end justify the means?' is meaningless as it stands; the real and only question regarding the ethics of means and ends is, and has always has been, 'Does this particular end justify this particular means?'\"\nAlinsky, a criminologist by training, details in the book's first chapter a clear distinction between his book and an earlier classic political treatise: \"'The Prince' was written by Machiavelli for the Haves on how to hold power. 'Rules for Radicals' is written for the Have-Nots on how to take it away.\" He later terms the book \"a manual for the Have-Nots of the world regardless of the color of their skins or their politics.\"\nHis stated aim was \"to create mass organizations to seize power and give it to the people….\" Alinsky hoped to convert the \"hot, emotional, impulsive passions [of radicals] that are impotent and frustrating\" into \"actions that will be calculated, purposeful, and effective.\"\nAlinsky's book remains a founding document of sorts for those involved in grassroots organizing.\nYet there is something extremely noteworthy about his Rules for Radicals that few have noted. While his dedication of the book to Irene, his third wife, is innocent enough, the radical wasn't through with his formal notes of appreciation.\nA notation in the book's front matter should give everyone pause:\n\"Lest we forget at least an over-the-shoulder acknowledgement to the very first radical: from all our legends, mythology, and history (and who is to know where mythology leaves and history begins - or which is which), the first radical known to man who rebelled against the establishment and did it so effectively that he at least won his own kingdom - Lucifer.\" - Saul Alinsky\nThis startling front-of-the-book salute to Lucifer is clear admission that Alinsky's intentions were not entirely secular.\nYet while Hillary Clinton has served as First Lady, presidential candidate, U.S. Senator, and now U.S. Secretary of State, no one in the mainstream press has ever publicized the fact that Lucifer was so admired by the subject of her senior thesis.\nAnd Barack Obama honed his skills as a community activist teaching Rules for Radicals in Chicago with the same people who were Alinsky's disciples. Yet not a word from the media.\nIt says much about Clinton and Obama's worldview that they have built so much of their life's work on Alinsky's teachings. It says even more about the national electronic and print media that most Americans don't know of Alinsky's admiration for Lucifer.\nOne can scarcely imagine the hue and cry that would have erupted if it had been discovered that George W. Bush had written his senior thesis at Yale on a person whose seminal work contained even a tacit dedication to Lucifer.\nAnd how shrill would the pundits' calls be if it were found that Sen. John McCain had taught the writings of a man whose best-known work gave a well-placed tip of the hat to the Prince of Darkness himself?\nLet's face it: The national secular media is in the tank for those on the left.\nBook dedications can have far-reaching implications for authors. They are not casually dropped in the front of a book just prior to it going on the press. As an author of multiple books, I can honestly tell you that the content on the dedication pages of each of my books was purposeful and well-considered.\nTrustees of the University of Illinois-Chicago recently took note of a dedication in a book by William Ayers, one of the founders of the violent group the Weather Underground and an associate of President Obama.\nAyers, who recently retired from the school, was being considered for emeritus faculty status. A professor's bid for such status is typically noncontroversial.\nYet a 1974 book \"Prairie Fire: The Politics of Revolutionary Anti-Imperialism,\" which Ayers co-authored, is dedicated to what the Associated Press termed \"a lengthy list of revolutionary figures,\" including Sirhan Sirhan, the man who assassinated Sen. Robert Kennedy in 1968.\nAyers has said he doesn't \"regret setting bombs,\" and in his memoirs, \"Fugitive Days,\" he confesses that he found a \"certain eloquence to bombs, a poetry and a pattern from a safe distance.\"\nThe affinity of Ayers for Sen. Kennedy's assassin was not at all appreciated by Christopher Kennedy, chairman of the school's trustee body and the son of the late senator. He urged his fellow trustees to reject the honor for Ayers.\nThe university's trustees heeded Kennedy's wishes and declined to give the emeritus faculty status to Ayers, who the Sept. 27, 2010 Investor's Business Daily explained \"became an academic when he realized he could do more damage to our society by controlling what our children are taught than by blowing up buildings one at a time.\"\nWhile it is said you can tell a lot about a book by its cover, it is even more true that you can tell a lot about an author by perusing the pages before a book's table of contents.\nA personal tribute to Dr. Norman Geisler\nWe're commanded to pray for presidents but not to give them photo-ops\n'The Handmaid's Tale' is more conservative than you think\n'Unplanned' movie will cause men to repent for mistreating, abandoning women and shift the culture\nReligious freedom is for Muslims too","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1517550"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5700954794883728,"wiki_prob":0.5700954794883728,"text":"A-Level results 2018 – By the numbers\nhttps://education-forum.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/08/A-Levels.jpg 960 640 Stuart O'Brien Stuart O'Brien https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9defd7b64b55280442ad2d7fb546a9db?s=96&d=mm&r=g 16th August 2018 27th September 2018\nStudents have picked up their A-Level results, with 26.4% gaining As and A*s – the largest proportion to do so since 2012.\nOverall, this year’s A Level results show:\nMaths continues to be the most popular subject at A Level, with the number of entries up 2.5% on last year – up 26.8% compared to 2010;\nEntries into STEM subjects continue to rise, up 3.4% on last year and up 24% since 2010;\nAn increase in entries to STEM A Levels by girls, up 5.5% from last year and 26.9% since 2010;\nOver half of the entries were in subjects that open doors to the widest range of courses at Russell Group universities, with the proportion continuing to rise year on year;\nThe proportion of entries to art and design, music and modern foreign languages remains broadly stable;\nYorkshire and the Humber has seen the biggest improvement in entries achieving top grades (A* and A); and\nIn the second year of reformed A Levels, the percentage of UK entries awarded the A* grade remains stable at 8.0% this year, compared with 8.1% in 2010 and the overall UK pass rate remains stable at 97.6%, compared to 97.9% last year.\n2018 marks the first results of 12 more reformed A Levels, following the introduction of the first reformed exams last year. Under these reformed A Levels students are examined after two years helping them build an in-depth understanding of the subject, better preparing students for future study or the workplace.\nThis follows universities saying many students lacked some of the skills and knowledge essential for undergraduate learning.\nIt comes alongside measures to create more, high-quality options for 18 year olds, including radical reforms to apprenticeships that are combining work with training in fields such as engineering and design; in some cases combined with a degree.\nSecretary of State for Education Damian Hinds said: “I want to congratulate everyone getting their results today. It is the culmination of a lot of hard work and dedication – from both those receiving their marks and the teachers who’ve been supporting them every step of the way. They should rightly feel proud of their achievements.\n“We’ve worked to improve education for every child – from their early years through to secondary school and beyond. I also want young people to have wider choice, whether that’s going to university, earning through an apprenticeship or in future taking technical qualifications that match the best in the world.\n“Today is a significant milestone in the lives of many young people. No matter what path they choose to take next, we are working to make sure it provides them with a world-class education and a passport to an exciting future.”\nIn addition, a record rate of 18 year olds are heading to university this September, including a record proportion attending from disadvantaged backgrounds. The Government says it’s introducing further measures to offer more choice to students and widen access, including accelerated degrees and access to data so students know where they will get the best outcomes.\nUniversities Minister Sam Gyimah said: Congratulations to everyone getting their results today, and to those hundreds of thousands who will begin their university experience in September.\n“Thanks to the support offered by this government, no student with the talent and potential is restricted from studying in our world-class university sector.\n“We have worked with employers to design new high quality apprenticeships – including degree apprenticeships – making them longer, with more off-the-job training and proper assessment at the end so that apprentices are learning the skills that industry really needs.”\nApprenticeships and Skills Minister Anne Milton said:\nUniversity has often been seen as the only route to a successful career, but apprenticeships can be a great way to give you the skills you need to get the job you want.\nWe are shaking up the education system and working with businesses to provide even more opportunities to get into amazing jobs, and there are now high-quality apprenticeships available in a range of exciting industries including aerospace, fashion, nuclear and teaching – and up to degree level too.\nFrom 2020 young people will be taking the first T Levels – new technical qualifications on a par with A Levels that the Government says will give young people more choice and more opportunities to succeed and fulfil their potential.\nNew scheme to boost teaching workforce for further education providers\nhttps://education-forum.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2018/10/Teaching-Workforce.jpg 960 640 Stuart O'Brien Stuart O'Brien https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/9defd7b64b55280442ad2d7fb546a9db?s=96&d=mm&r=g 15th October 2018 8th November 2018\nIndustry Spotlight – Post-FE: What students need to focus on to succeed in their careers…\nhttps://education-forum.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Flying-Start-XP-MICROSITE.jpg 800 450 Jack Wynn Jack Wynn https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e6e4c614a3e43ed5c1e30f3c96cd4d3d?s=96&d=mm&r=g 20th September 2016 3rd October 2016\nPrep for SATs exams damaging children’s mental health…\nhttps://education-forum.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/nut-logo-EDITED.jpg 800 450 Jack Wynn Jack Wynn https://secure.gravatar.com/avatar/e6e4c614a3e43ed5c1e30f3c96cd4d3d?s=96&d=mm&r=g 28th June 2016 12th September 2016","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line767705"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7189286947250366,"wiki_prob":0.7189286947250366,"text":"Angels set Guinness World Record for sixth straight year\nWritten By Kirstie Chiappelli\n(Getty Images) https://images.performgroup.com/di/library/omnisport/18/a/angels-050615-usnews-getty-ftr_ltkdv5taqek31p7q26yggvbsa.png?t=702639109&w=500&quality=80\nThe Angels may not have won a World Series since 2002, but they sure can throw a fiesta.\nIn honor of Cinco de Mayo, the Angels successfully set a Guinness World Record for the largest gathering of people wearing sombreros for the sixth consecutive year.\nWith over 20K participants, we hold the Guinness World Record for the Largest Gathering of People Wearing Sombreros! pic.twitter.com/auk5H445wu\n- Angels (@Angels) May 6, 2015\nThe announcement came in the middle of the fifth inning during Tuesday's 5-4 win over the Mariners. In order for the record to be official, fans were required to don the sombreros that were distributed upon entry into the stadium at the same time for at least five minutes. The unofficial total of people wearing sombreros inside Angel Stadium for the record was 25,111.\n\"Sixth straight year of going for a world record now and next year, hopefully, it'll be seven,\" Angels Marketing Director Kevin Shaw said, via FOX Sports. \"Now it's something that people actually point to on their calendar and look forward to see how they can be a part of a Guinness World Record.\"\nIn addition to the sombrero record, other Guinness World Records that have been set at Angel Stadium involve Snuggies, wrestling masks, cowboy hats, wigs and Santa hats.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1397734"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6600181460380554,"wiki_prob":0.3399818539619446,"text":"Under Her Wings by Anne Marie Citro Book Tour & Excerpt\nContemporary RomanceDate Published: June 21, 2016\nWishing for death while living through hell, Gabriella is rescued off the rocks of a Scottish loch at the lowest moment of her life by the hot, humorous Edward and the sexy, staid Liam. The two men nurse the despondent woman back to health while teaching her how to pick up the pieces of her life. Both are captivated by her and vie for her attention.\nFriendships are formed and secrets revealed. One man will become her lover, while the other becomes her best friend. Together, they have a past they cannot change, a present they must live through, and a future yet to be discovered. However, every time things appear to settle down for the trio, fate deals another blow, testing their trust and faith in each other and the love they have created.\nGabriella discovers the beauty of Scotland and life anew as she learns that trust is a two-way street that can either strengthen bonds or destroy relationships. Will she accept all that she learns or continue to believe she is betraying the memories she ran from?\nPlease Take Me\nGabriella stared out at the stormy water of Loch Snizort, five minutes away from the town of Portree on the Isle of Skye, Scotland. She sat on the edge of a cluster of boulders that were half-submerged in the loch. The spray of the water mingled with the tears streaming down her face. She was soaked, shivering, and not even aware the daylight was escaping from the night.\n“Goddammit! God, if I believed in you—which I don’t—I would ask you why! Why!” She sobbed. “Why leave me? Please take me. I have nothing.” Her stomach muscles ached from the constant, racking sobs she couldn’t control.\nShe had contemplated suicide, but the fear that God did exist had stopped her. If by any chance an afterlife did exist, by killing herself, she would be denied the privilege of entering Heaven, of holding her beloved boys in her arms again. She would be stuck in the hell that was her never-ending existence.\nIt had been years—three to be exact—since her world had been turned from light to dark. Everyone had said she needed to deal with her grief, and she had tried. Regardless, it hadn’t worked.\nBesides, who the fuck were they to say what stage of grief she was dealing with? What if the next stage never came, and she never recovered? Then what? Did people actually believe it was a conscious choice not to move on? Was it depression? Abso-fucking-lutely! Did seeing a shrink help? No. Did talking about it help? No. Did medication help? No, because no one seemed to understand Gabriella’s pain.\nShe had lost her world through no fault of her own. It was marred not just by loss, but also because of the rumours surrounding her family’s deaths …\nAnne Marie Citro grew born and raised in the greater Toronto area of Ontario, Canada. She grew up in a large, loving family. Anne Marie is married to a very patient man. He is the love of her life. They have four very cool sons, and the girls they brought into their family that have become daughters of her heart. She has been blessed enough to finally have a beautiful granddaughter after four sons. She has her own personal gaggle of girlfriends, who enrich her life on a daily basis and make her laugh. Caesar Friday is her favourite day of the week. Caesars with the girls and date night with her hubby. She works with special-needs teenagers, that have taught her how to appreciate life and see it through gentler eyes. Anne Marie was encouraged by her husband to follow her life long dream to write. She loves the characters that take over imagination and haunts her dreams. She loves the arts and she has tried her hand at painting, wood sculpting, chainsaw carving, wood burning, metal and wire sculptures. Yes, her husband is a very patient man! Anne Marie is an avid reader and enjoys about three books per week. But nothing makes her happier then riding on the back of her husband's Harley and throwing her arms out and feeling the wind race by. Anne Marie and her husband take a few weeks every year to travel to spectacular destination around the world. Anne Marie is excited and can't wait to see what the next chapter holds for her life.and enjoys about three books per week.\nWebsite: annemariecitro.com\nFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100012775572222\nTwitter: @AnneMarieCitro\nPinterest: https://www.pinterest.com/amcitro/\nGoodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/30369363-under-her-wings?from_search=true\nhttps://www.amazon.com/Under-Her-Wings-Sistas-Book-ebook/dp/B01GP453MY/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1481036988&sr=8-4\nBarnes and Noble:\nhttp://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/under-her-wings-anne-marie-citro/1123892404?ean=9781533628183\nKobo: https://www.kobo.com/ca/en/ebook/under-her-wings-1\nEmily Heisler","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1496839"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9749996662139893,"wiki_prob":0.9749996662139893,"text":"SocGen to pay $1.34 bn for Libya bribes, Libor manipulation\nMonday 4 June 2018 - 7:35pm\nFILE PHOTO: A logo of French bank Societe Generale is pictured on a building in Geneva, Switzerland, November 8, 2017.\nPARIS - France&39;s second-biggest bank Societe Generale will pay US authorities $1.34 billion(R16.86billion) to settle allegations that it bribed officials in Libya and also manipulated the Libor interest rate benchmark, the US Justice Department announced Monday.\nFrench prosecutors had said earlier that the bank had agreed to pay 500 million euros ($583 million) to end inquiries in the US and France into its dealings with the regime of slain Libyan dictator Moamer Kadhafi.\nThe French financial prosecutor&39;s office said the bank had agreed to pay 250 million euros each to France and the US to avoid corruption trials on either side of the Atlantic.\nSociete Generale itself announced earlier that it reached agreements to settle the Libya investigations as well as a separate US investigation into its alleged rigging of Libor interest rates.\nThe bank did not say how much it had paid in total but said it had already provided for the cost and that it would have \"no impact on Societe Generale&39;s results\".\nLast month, it said it had set aside one billion euros to settle the disputes.\nLibya&39;s sovereign wealth fund, the Libyan Investment Authority, had accused Societe Generale of channelling bribes to associates of Kadhafi&39;s son Seif al-Islam as part of a \"corrupt scheme\" to get the LIA to invest billions in Societe Generale and its subsidiaries between 2007 and 2009.\nThe fund claimed that at least $58 million in bribes was routed through a Panama-registered company called Leinada, which was headed by an associate of Seif al-Islam.\nSociete Generale paid nearly a billion euros to the LIA last year to settle the case before it opened in the High Court in London.\nBut it remained under investigation in the US and France.\nA French court on Monday approved the deal struck with French authorities to avoid a trial, with a US court expected to follow suit on Tuesday.\nRate rigging\nSociete Generale said it had also struck a deal with the US Department of Justice over its alleged attempt to manipulate the London Interbank Offered Rate (Libor), which governs credit costs around the world.\n\"For years, Societe Generale undermined the integrity of global markets and foreign institutions by issuing false financial data and by fraudulently securing contracts through bribery,\" Acting US Assistant Attorney General John Cronan said on Monday.\nThe bank is the latest in a string of lenders, including Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Royal Bank of Scotland and Goldman Sachs, to pay hefty sums to settle allegations of conspiring to rig the rate.\nDeutsche Bank paid $240 million, while HSBC forked out $100 million.\nThe announcement marks an end to a scandal which led to the surprise departure of Societe Generale&39;s deputy CEO Didier Valet in March.\nValet, who reportedly quit over the way the dispute with the US was handled, was one of two senior executives to step down, along with the bank&39;s head of retail banking.\nThe departures rattled investors, casting a pall over Societe Generale&39;s results in the first quarter.\nHigher-than-expected net profits of 850 million euros were offset by a decline in revenues of 2.8 percent to 6.3 billion euros.\nSociete Generale said that its French retail banking revenues were hit by low-interest rates but were expected to stabilise in 2018.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1680262"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8445916771888733,"wiki_prob":0.8445916771888733,"text":"Father of Sandy Hook shooting victim Avielle Richman found dead of apparent suicide inside Newtown town hall\nNEWTOWN, Connecticut -- The father of one of the 20 children killed in the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting was found dead of an apparent suicide inside a Newtown municipal building, authorities confirmed Monday.\nPolice say 49-year-old Jeremy Richman, the father of Avielle Richman, took his own life at Edmond Town Hall, located on Main Street in Newtown, where he reportedly had an office.\nHe is the founder of the Avielle Foundation, an organization with the mission of preventing violence and building compassion by seeking a better understanding of brain health.\nHis body was found by a town worker around 7 a.m. Monday, but it was unclear when the suicide took place.\n\"The death appears to be a suicide, but police will not disclose the method or any other details of the death only to state the death does not appear suspicious,\" Newtown police said in a press release.\nThe Medical Examiner will determine the cause of the death.\n\"This is a heartbreaking event for the Richman family and the Newtown community as a whole,\" police Lieuteant Aaron Bahamonde said. \"The police department's prayers are with the Richman family right now, and we ask that the family be given privacy in this most difficult time.\"\nSenator Chris Murphy said Richman \"was with me in my office two weeks ago, excited as could be about the Avielle Foundation's latest amazing work.\"\n\"My god. This is awful, horrible, devastating news,\" Murphy tweeted. \"Jeremy was a good friend and an unceasing advocate for better research into the brain's violence triggers.\"\nThe Avielle Foundation issued the following statement:\n\"Our hearts are shattered, and our heads are struggling to comprehend. Jeremy was a champion father, husband, neuroscientist and, for the past seven years, a crusader on a mission to help uncover the neurological underpinnings of violence through the Avielle Foundation, which he and his wife, Jennifer Hensel, founded after the death of their daughter, Avielle, at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Jeremy was deeply devoted to supporting research into brain abnormalities that are linked to abnormal behavior and to promoting brain health. Tragically, his death speaks to how insidious and formidable a challenge brain health can be and how critical it is for all of us to seek help for ourselves, our loved ones and anyone who we suspect may be in need.\nJeremy's mission will be carried on by the many who love him, including many who share the heartache and trauma that he has suffered since December 14, 2012. We are crushed to pieces, but this important work will continue, because, as Jeremy would say, we have to.\nAs we did six years ago and now must do again today, we ask both the media and the public to give the family the privacy anyone would deserve to begin to process this tragic development.\"\nRichman's death comes just days after the apparent suicides of two Parkland, Florida, area teenagers.\nIf you are in crisis, please call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255) or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741-741.\nnewtownsuicidenewtown shootingsandy hook elementary school shooting","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line886420"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6752262711524963,"wiki_prob":0.6752262711524963,"text":"The Luckiest Letter In Texas\nFrançois Simars de Bellisle outlived four other French officers after their ship’s captain abandoned them near Galveston Bay. Then, he was captured by Akokisa Native Americans.\nBy W.F. StrongFebruary 20, 2019 10:52 amArts & Culture, Stories From Texas\nThis is the story of what was luckiest letter ever mailed in Texas. It took about six months to reach its destination, which was Louisiana. But to say it was mailed is a bit of a stretch. It was handed to some people to be given to others and it bounced around a while, sat idle for months at a time and then miraculously moved on. Texas was, at the time, under Spanish rule, but the letter was written in French. It was a Hail Mary mailing. Truly an act of desperation. The fact that it arrived at all was a miracle within a miracle, and it saved the sender’s life.\nFrançois Simars de Bellisle was just 24 when he left France to come to America in 1719. He was headed for Louisiana on a small ship. As was often the case in those days, his captain overshot their destination. He missed Louisiana entirely and ended up near present-day Galveston where the ship ran aground off Bolivar Peninsula. But the captain thought they were relatively close to Ship Island near New Orleans, a little error of 300 miles. What Google Earth could have done for these early travelers!\nBellisle and four other French officers took meager supplies — biscuits, guns, minimal ammunition, swords — and went ashore to determine their location and seek help to guide their ship to port. They slept well that first night and when they got up the next morning their ship was gone. They had been abandoned.\nThey walked east and made it to what was likely the mouth of the Sabine River where they could go no further because of deep mud. They headed back the way they had come. Though they had some success finding oysters and killing small birds — they even killed a deer — they began, one by one, to succumb to starvation. Within two months, Bellisle had buried all of his friends. He was alone and hungry in this new land and, naturally, desperately depressed.\nBellisle believed he was living his last days. He was on the west side of Galveston Bay, out of bullets and reduced to eating boiled grass and worms out of driftwood. Then, one clear morning he saw the first Native Americans he had seen since being stranded. They were Akokisa and his only hope for survival. The Akokisas greeted him by taking all of his goods and stripping him of his clothes, leaving him naked – a state he would remain in for over a year. The only good thing that happened that day is that they fed him. But he was enslaved, ordered about mercilessly, beaten regularly and used as a beast of burden. How ironic that his name Bellisle meant “beautiful island,” but that is not what he found that day.\nThey took him west with them toward the Brazos River to hunt buffalo. He had to walk, naked and barefoot, carrying their supplies. But he did record later that, despite his wretched condition, he couldn’t help but marvel at the beautiful prairies they passed through for over 150 miles. He wrote, “This is the most beautiful country in the world. The earth is black. Grass grows there to a prodigal height, and in abundance, which is a certain sign that the earth is good.”\nUpon returning to the bay, he realized that his situation was dire. He would die if he stayed. So he retrieved one of the few pieces of paper he had in his belongings and wrote a letter. He asked his hosts give it to the white chief they told him was rumored to live to the east.\nHe had nothing to write with so he carved a crude pen out of wood and made ink out of charcoal and water. He wrote a letter begging for rescue from anyone who would might receive it. A couple of his tribe took the message east but never attempted to find the rumored white chief. They just passed along this strange artifact to other tribes as a curiosity. It went from tribe to tribe, perhaps traded for one thing or another, but all the while moved northeast. Then the miracle occurred. Members of the Hasinai Native Americans, which had close ties to the French, happened to see the letter and knew that it was something the French would like to see. So they took it to the commander of the French garrison at Natchitoches, Louisiana, a week’s journey away. The commander, Louis Juchereau de St. Denis, wrote a letter in return, and ordered the Hasinais to bring the castaway back, whether dead or alive.\nWhen Bellisle’s rescuers reached the Akokisa camp, they gave Bellisle the letter that informed him that the Hasinais would escort him to Natchitoches. His captors didn’t want to let him go, but they feared the Hasinais and so they relented. Bellisle said the final night in camp waiting to leave the next morning was the longest of his life. It still took him months to get to Natchitoches, but at least he was free. He had sent what was the land version of a message in a bottle, and it had caught the best currents and washed up on the perfect shore. His literacy, and luck, saved him.\nThe source of this story comes mostly from Bellisle’s memoirs, published in part by Henri Folmer in The Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Vol. 44, No. 2 (Oct. 1940), pp. 204-231.\nHere’s Why Voter Registration Groups Are Fighting Texas’ Attempted Voter Purge\nTexas Standard For February 20, 2019\nTexas Teachers Living Paycheck To Paycheck Welcome Senate Pay Raise Proposal\nPrivate Contractor, Conduent To Pay The State $236 Million For Alleged Medicaid Fraud\nHouston City Leaders Ready Requests For Airport Funds\nNews Roundup: Democratic Lawmakers Want Probe Into ICE’s Force-Feeding Of Hunger-Striking Detainees\n‘Little Egypt,’ A Nearly-Lost Freedmen’s Town In Dallas, Resurfaces Thanks To College’s Digging\nLegislature Looks To Ax Driver Responsibility Program – And Just Might, This Time Around\nAre US Officials Unaware When Visa Holders Cross The Border?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line740659"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5843126773834229,"wiki_prob":0.5843126773834229,"text":"Forecasting Facebook’s future trends\nBen Smith Director, Social and Emerging Media | June 18, 2019\nWhen it comes to Facebook, there’s no shortage of opinion, perspective, and news coverage of the social media titan. At times, it all can make it tough to see the forest for the trees.\nTo help us make sense of it all we sat down with Ben Smith, Callahan’s Director of Social and Emerging Media, who recently attended Facebook’s F8 conference for developers. In this episode, Ben shares his insight and perspective on the overall health of Facebook, its coverage in news, and what emerging trends could shape future marketing tactics on the platform.\nhttp://traffic.libsyn.com/uncoveringaha/Episode_23_-_Facebook_F8_Recap_and_Trends_-_Uncovering_Aha.mp3\nWelcome to Callahan’s Uncovering Aha! podcast. We talk about a range of topics for marketing decision-makers, with a special focus on how to uncover insights in data to drive brand strategy and inspire creativity. Featuring Ben Smith and Jan-Eric Anderson.\nHi, I’m Jan-Eric Anderson, Head of Strategy at Callahan.\nI’m Ben Smith, Director of Social and Emerging Media at Callahan.\nI’m pumped to have Ben on the podcast with me today. We’re going to be talking about his favorite topic, social media. Ben is fresh back from the F8 summit, a developer conference at Facebook. It’s a black tie event. No, it’s not a black tie event, but it is invitation only. Ben, what is F8? Help the listeners understand what F8 is and what it’s about.\nYeah, F8 is Facebook’s annual developer conference, as you mentioned. It’s an event they host each year, where Mark Zuckerberg, and the leadership of Facebook, really outline their vision for what’s next, both in the short term, and with their long-term roadmap, and at the same time, give attendees direct access to a lot of the product teams, the engineering teams, the people making what we’re using.\nGot you. Invitation only. How many people are there?\nYeah, so there’s about 5,000 people go worldwide, and you either have to be invited, or apply, and a small number of people have their applications accepted. So, it’s a mix of pretty diverse mix of people, but a small group, which then affords that type of direct access.\nWow, 5,000 people’s a lot of people, but when you think about that they’re pulling from the world, it is a pretty exclusive group. You’re fresh back from that. You attended. You were one of the 5,000 in attendance.\nSo, today on the podcast, Ben has agreed to share some of his insights, from what he learned while he was at the conference. We’re thrilled to have you, so thanks for being here.\nI guess I’d like to maybe have you comment on the elephant in the room. I see headlines all the time about Facebook. Is Facebook in trouble? Look, what’s going on? It seems like Facebook is in the middle, is the rope of the tug-of-war between in the U.S. political ecosystem right now. People hate or love Facebook for different reasons, depending on which side of the aisle. Is Facebook in trouble?\nThat’s a really interesting question. It’s one where there’s not a simple answer, but at the top level, to me, a lot of the headlines feel very overblown, being quite honest. There’s a lot of stories that make for good readership. There’s a lot of headlines that can get a little sensationalized. Yeah, there’s definitely things about Facebook which are under heavy scrutiny. It’s definitely the center of the political climate right now. A lot of it’s elevated in media topics, media conversations, and commentators, raising a lot of, sometimes valid, sometimes not as valid, questions or concerns.\nTo me, it’s something where, when I look at this, and really dig deep, a lot of the issues that are raised, are ones that really aren’t issues. At the same time, Facebook is going to be under scrutiny, but it’s also in a situation where it’s built itself, so whatever happens next, there’s really not a losing scenario. If Facebook was to be broken up, in many ways it becomes stronger as three individual companies. If Facebook continues as it is, it has a lot more opportunity, to keep growing and connecting its different services. So, I would say under scrutiny, absolutely, in trouble, not to the point I would be concerned.\nIs Facebook in trouble with these headlines, and sometimes sensationalist headlines? Is Facebook shedding users, are they shrinking?\nThis is the really interesting part, is you’ve got this tag-of-war going on, as you mentioned, both political parties, the media, even outside pressures, even outside influences. The Chinese tech companies really are watching, and seeing what’s happening, but in the middle of it all, you have the users. The user base keeps growing. In the last quarterly report, it showed 8% year-over-year growth despite everything you hear. What we tend to see is, outside of the bubble of media headlines, the political discussion, a majority of the people in the middle, the users, just want to keep using the platform, just want to keep doing what they’re doing, just want to keep sharing their content, talking to people, connecting with people. A lot of those people are really uninfluenced by the very bubble type conversations around them. So, it’s not losing users, it’s actually still gaining users.\nPerhaps an indication of the political system in the U.S. being disconnected from the population. This is not a political podcast, so we will leave that where it is. Let’s get back to F8, because that’s what we really wanted to, to pick your brain about.\nI’m always fascinated. You’ve been to F8 several years in a row. I really enjoy our conversations every time that you get back from F8, and hearing what you had heard from, and you usually come back with some overarching theme, maybe one or two themes that Mark Zuckerberg is focused on at the conference. What was the theme that came out of F8 in 2019?\nThis was a very clear-cut theme this year. Other years, you’ve gotten a number of different trends going on, different themes going on underneath that overarching one. This year was very definitive, and that was a move to privacy. So, move from being a very public-built social network, to being a very private, and privacy-focused social network.\nThat’s interesting, privacy. Public and privacy. Help me understand that, because it feels to me like, unless I’m sending a direct message to somebody, everything on Facebook’s private, or is public rather.\nYeah. It’s actually a headline which has scared a lot of people, in the marketing and ad tech marketing space, of, well what does a private Facebook look like? I’ve read headlines saying, “Well, this is the end of Facebook for marketers,” or “This is the end of social media.” Actually, to me, yeah, there’s a lot of things that haven’t been said, and people are joining too many dots that don’t even exist. When you really start looking at what has been said, digging deeper into both directly what’s been said, but also what’s been implied, start looking at where they’re investing engineering resources, people, money, what seems to be very clear, is that the public side of Facebook isn’t going away, but they’re adding this public layer to really compliment it.\nThe analogy they use is, in our daily lives, we have both public and private spaces. The town squares, and the living rooms, is the way they described it. So, in the same way we have those public and private spaces, in our daily offline lives, we need to have that more in our online life. That we need more spaces, we can choose to be private, choose to be secluded, choose who we’re with, while still having the space and resource to be public, but need to be able to move between the two seamlessly.\nThat analogy actually is really relatable. I think that makes, actually, a ton of sense, but historically, fair to say that Facebook has been much more about a town square than the living rooms. So, the big theme here, and the Aha, is that … or what’s revealed at F8 this year, is this this migration more toward creating these living room or private spaces.\nYeah, and really, Facebook’s mission to date, has been connecting the world, so that’s a very, very significant shift. What they talk about a lot, is how we learn, from a brand side, from marketer side, is learning how to engage in public, and then move people to in a private connection. So, it might be in, for instance, engaging or connecting with somebody in a Facebook feed, at a very high funnel level, then moving them Facebook Messenger for a private conversation.\nAh, I see. The ecosystem within Facebook is huge. Maybe run down a list of some of the big products that fall into this ecosystem, that we talk about with Facebook.\nYeah. When we say Facebook, we’re not just talking about the Facebook app, we’re talking about Facebook itself, but then also Instagram, Messenger, WhatsApp, Groups, Oculus, the VR division. So, it’s really a whole ecosystem. What’s interesting is, you see people using different parts of that ecosystem, so where Facebook talks around 2.3, 2.4 billion monthly users, when you start looking at the ecosystem, you’ve then got 2.1 billion people using at least one of those apps every single day.\nThat’s billion with a B.\nYeah, lots of users. So, in this shift from public spaces to more private spaces, are there certain apps, or certain products, is probably the better word, that become more of a priority now, in terms of development, and enhancements, and features within that ecosystem, as they make this migration? What does that mean from a product development standpoint?\nYeah, from outside looking in, from the brand side, marketer side, looking in, we’re going to have to pay really close attention to Facebook Messenger. I think we’re going to see a lot of shift there, with resources going into the Messenger product, but also how consumers are encouraged to change their behavior through new tools, new applications. We’re going to see users encouraged to use Messenger mail, where they can communicate with one-on-one, or one-to-many, or control groups. Brands are going to have to learn to follow them, and how to engage in that environment.\nAnd then, we’re going to see a big push, on both Facebook and Instagram, with Stories. They’ve already become an incredibly popular means of sharing content, but I really think we’re going to see a lot of shift of Stories functionality, to allow us to do more than share video, and photos, and stories, but to start replicating what would have been feed functionality in that private Stories environment.\nRight. Messaging huge, Stories, and evolution with Stories is a big one, groups. As there is a migration into more of Groups, perhaps, that probably has some impact as well.\nTotally. Yeah. With the relaunch of Facebook version five that just happened, Groups was put front and center. They’re placing as much importance on communities as on friends, and Groups is a fascinating one. A business, a brand can start a group, can participate in a group, but you have to have a good reason to do that. Is there something that’s meaningful to your brand, something your brand can own in terms of conversation?\nBut yeah, Groups is another thing. And another thing we’re going to have to watch for, beyond that, is Facebook currency. It wasn’t really addressed at F8, so a little bit of a segue, but it’s coming soon. Facebook are going to be launching their own micropayment currency, which could potentially disrupt eCommerce, as well as providing a means of allowing people to make instantaneous, very small payments.\nThat’s really interesting. How does that exactly work? With these micro payments, this is a new product, that’s in development right now, right? It has not launched.\nCorrect. This is something that Facebook is going to develop and deploy, and it appears from the information we’re seeing, that it will be managed and controlled by an independent party for Facebook, so it’s under regulatory control.\nWhat it would allow people to do, is make payments, potentially make payments of any value, instantaneously. So, if you think about it, you’re on a website, and you want to access a piece of content, right now, a paywall might mean you have to pay a monthly fee, and it discourages a lot of people. What if you could pay 10 cents to read that piece of content, and could do it with no friction, no credit card to be entered, no login? You could buy things at 10 cents at a time, but buy them at scale.\nInteresting. Now, so those are bite-size, that’s the micropayment idea that … Is there, then, other extensions for commerce on that? Is it beyond just spending a nickel on an article?\nAbsolutely. Here’s a great example. Think about Instagram. Instagram is a destination people go to, not just to browse content, but to buy goods. It’s a very visual platform. People shop there, sometimes way too easily.\nTell me about it.\nOne of the things we’re seeing right now, is the evolution of, very intentional evolution of Instagram as a shopping platform. There’s new products being rolled out, that allow you to browse products, for the brand to embed product tags, so you can literally see a product, tap on it, and then have the opportunity to purchase that product.\nWhat if you didn’t have to enter your credit card number? You could just, not only see the product, tap to view it, and to enter a checkout process, but then to buy it without doing anything more. Everything’s integrated inside your Facebook account, including the payment itself. So, no third party transaction to worry about, just a fully integrated payment, from the micropayment up to a full eCommerce platform\nOh, it’s going to light the idea of impulse purchases on fire, and it will be the death of my checking account, for the record. I already have a big enough problem spending money in Instagram. The worst thing for me is, they can make it easier, which they sound like they’re doing. Thanks a lot.\nAll right, so we’ve got this shift, of going into private, and you’ve been into more private type spaces. You’ve been alluding to this, and hinting as you’ve gone through, but I guess I’m kind of curious, and I’m sure CMOs will be thinking about this, what does this mean for brands?\nI get this, as a user, and connecting with friends, and smaller communities, and smaller groups, and smaller spaces. The living room example makes a ton of sense. What does it mean for a brand? Is this limiting for a brand? What opportunities does this create for brands, and how should CMOs be thinking about that?\nYeah. That’s such an important question. I’ve heard so many negative push backs, negative headlines around this, of, well we can’t advertise in that environment. One of my personal beliefs around social, has always been, the biggest opportunity is building one-on-one relationships at scale. I’d love the process of doing that. So, to me this aligns perfectly with that.\nThat actually presents a really exciting opportunity to rethink how we advertise. So, I don’t look at this as a negative or something scary. The deeper I dig into this, the more I actually find opportunity. I’m looking at this. Think of the public space as the very top of the funnel, that initial awareness level, and then moving to private being that consideration phase. How we move from consideration to conversion.\nMoving to private doesn’t mean to say you have to have, literally, a one-on-one conversation with somebody. There’s so many technologies you can deploy, and develop, to do that automatically, but in a meaningful way.\nA great example is with Facebook Messenger. You can talk to somebody individually as a community manager, or you can develop a messenger Bot, that can help people find what they need, either information, or a product, something to buy, an appointment to make. You can have them move through that process, seamlessly, all the way to completion and conversion.\nSo, you’re engaging in a high effort awareness level in the public, moving through the funnel in private. It’s got so much potential, it’s actually a very exciting thing to see happening.\nYeah. And having worked with you enough, I’ve come to really appreciate your commitment to that one-on-one relationships at scale, of personalized relationships at scale. It almost seems like this is setting up to create an even better environment for being able to do those things.\nBen, before we wrap up, is there anything else that you … any other final notes you’d want to add about F8, or Facebook in general?\nYeah. I think, to me, that the big thing right now is just, don’t take every headline at face value. Facebook makes a good media scapegoat right now. There’s a lot of stories out there. It’s a very political issue. There’s also a lot of agendas at play. So I would encourage, particularly anybody who’s making business decisions around this, to dig deeper, and to not take every headline, not be reactionary, but to understand the longer term mission, the longer term vision, and to understand, truly, what the implications are of the changes Facebook are making, and potential political outcomes, and what it really means, and look for the opportunity instead of fearing the worst.\nWell, yeah. Just to kind of build upon that, it seems like, if you read through the tea leaves, Facebook’s actually primed to take a huge leap forward. This particular trend, or theme, around the future being private, seems like it actually lends to the strength of the platform, and we actually may be on the doorstep of a whole new horizon, of great ways for brands to be even more relevant within that platform, and making more personal relationships.\nYeah. I think something that Facebook’s done a tremendous job of, over the years, is really understanding the importance of keeping users, and to keep users, you have to have a healthy platform, a healthy environment. If they’re willing to take a huge shift in how they do their business, ultimately they’re confident in how that impacts the user health, and users on the platform. So, for a brand, for marketers, the more users that are engaged in that platform, obviously the better. So, absolutely.\nWell, the coming months will be really interesting to see, how all these developments unfold. And as you’ve stated all the time, by the time we get done recording this, maybe there will be new updates, that we’re already out of date on this podcast. Regardless of that, Ben, your insights from F8 are always really appreciated. Thank you so much for joining us on the podcast.\nWell, thank you.\nA new approach to social media strategy for sales\nMeasure first, make last: A study in social media behaviors (Part 1)\nA glimpse into the future at the Gartner Digital Marketing Conference\nHow to make Facebook data work harder for your marketing","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1000934"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6731881499290466,"wiki_prob":0.6731881499290466,"text":"> Owner's Manuals>Mercedes Benz Vito 108 CDI Manual | Instrucciones de Servicio | W638\nManuals Classifieds by Model\nMercedes Benz 600 W100 Series (1963-1981)\nMercedes Benz S-Class W105 Series (1956-1959)\nMercedes Benz SL-Class R107 Series (1971-1989)\nMercedes Benz SLC-Class C107 Series (1972-1981)\nMercedes Benz E-Class W110 Series (1961-1968)\nMercedes Benz M-Class W163 Series (1997-2005)\nMercedes Benz A-Class W168 Series (1997-2005)\nMercedes Benz SLK-Class R170 Series (1996-2004)\nMercedes Benz SL-Class W198 Series (1954-1957)\nMercedes Benz C-Class W201 Series (1982-1993)\nMercedes Benz CLK-Class W208 Series (1996-2002)\nMercedes Benz E Class W210 Series (1995-2003)\nMercedes Benz CL-Class C215 Series (2000-2006)\nMercedes Benz R-Class W251 Series (2006-2015)\nMercedes Benz UNIMOG U411 Series (1956-1974)\nMercedes Benz G-Class W460 Series (1979-1991)\nMercedes Benz MB W631 Series (1981-1995)\nMercedes Benz Vito W638 Series (1996-2003)\nMercedes Benz Vito Series W 639 (2003-2014)\nMercedes Benz Sprinter W901-905 Series (1995-2006)\nEngine Manuals\nChassis & Body Manuals\nService Manual Library\nG-Class & UNIMOG Manuals\nMercedes Benz Service Manual Engines M 110\nContains instructions for repair and maintenance of the M110 engine...\nMercedes Benz Service Manual V-8 Engine M119\nMercedes Benz Service Manual V-8 Engines M 116 (3.5), M 117 (4.5)\nMercedes Benz Service Manual Engine 615, 616, 617.91\nContains instructions for repair and maintenance of the OM615 engine...\nMercedes Benz Service Manual Diesel Engines 602, 603\nMercedes Benz Service Manual Chassis & Body Model 107 | Volume 1\nThis manual is also useful for tasks in all models of the W107 Series....\nMercedes Benz Vito 108 CDI Manual | Instrucciones de Servicio | W638\nOwner's manual of Mercedes Benz cars of the W638 Series that including models Vito 108 CDI.\nMercedes Benz Vito 108 CDI Manual | Instrucciones de Servicio | W638.\nToday, in many cases, is difficult to find or purchase the paper version of the owner’s manual for Mercedes Benz Vito 108 CDI | W638 Series was originally issued to each vehicle user of the trademark. For this reason we offer a digital version of the same content and the possibility of immediate download.\nFor the owner of Mercedes Benz Vito 108 CDI | W638 Series will not find a better manual.\nIt has 331 pages in Spanish including descriptive images and driving directions, vehicle management, care team and technical data. Available in PDF format also allows reading from the screen of a personal computer, tablet or smartphone as printing the pages.\nBrief description of contents:\nManejo\nConsejos de autoayuda\nSustancias necesarias para el funcionamiento\nDigital format PDF (compressed with WinRAR)\nShipping method: Download link\nInstructions: Unzip and open with PDF reader\nCrazy About Mercedes, Available in worldwide!\nEmail: team@crazyaboutmercedes.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1592218"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6665344834327698,"wiki_prob":0.6665344834327698,"text":"Review of “US” A New Film By Jordan Peele\nUploaded on 21 March, 2019\n“US” Reviewed by Cleo Coulter\nFilm Director/Writer Jordan Peele’s (Get Out, 2017) took a stab at creating a family summer vacation movie for his second feature film release. “Us” amply titled, takes the viewer through a corridor of dual realities. “Us” is a modern version of an old concept of an underworld parallel to our own. Modern moviegoers, who are obsessed with what can be described as a hidden clue will be satisfied to watch this movie over and over to digest this soon-to-be cult-classic fully.\nThe film’s opening scene takes film fans into an 80’s time warp, planting seeds that will, later on, become the tares amongst the wheat in this human transplant thriller. Jordan Peele’s subversive style of writing comingles comedy with horror that takes jump scares to a whole new level. This is not a conventional type of horror film per se, yet it weaves between Hitchcock’s, King’s and Peele’s different styles. Peele’s writing and directing may remind viewers of Hitchcock’s usage of reality against itself and King’s defiance to the natural order of things. The Peele style of metaphoric twists taught fans a lesson in his first film about taking frame changes for granted, so viewers beware.\n“Us” follows a family on vacation to Santa Cruz when the unthinkable happens. Lupita Nyong’o (10 Years A Slave), leads this movie as the matriarch of her family. Her husband, played by Winston Duke (Black Panther), and their two children(Shahadi Wright Joseph and Evan Alex) are fighting to stay alive in what can be perceived as, “A Night of the Living Dead” scenario, but it is worse, much worse. It’s the Isaac Newton’s 3rd law, “For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction,” as each member faces off against their mirrored selves in what can only be described as carnage on an apocalyptic level. Lupita turns in a hair raising performance playing dual roles as her reflected self with terrifying precision. While Winston is allowed to play the vulnerable husband that has to step up as a hero in the family’s fight for survival. The children bring the right amount of terror and shock to their respective roles performing acts that can create nightmares for a lifetime.\nThis film swells with anticipation and anxiety. There are a few jokes here and there to lighten the suspenseful tension and remind the audience to breathe. Once the audience understands that there might not be any help coming for these poor souls, stress kicks in. Maybe the threat of family separation subconsciously affects us all and the maternal, and paternal instincts make us root for the family because you become invested in the outcome. You shouldn’t watch this film for that. You should watch this film because it shows that even in the scariest situations, you are stronger as a functioning family unit. This film is going to scare you and make you think.\n“US ” also stars Elizabeth Moss, Tim Heidecker, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II, Anna Diop, Madison Curry, Cali Sheldon, Noelle Sheldon.\nCategory: Movie Reviews.\nTags: horror, Jordan Peele, lupita nyong'o, and Winston Duke.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1197160"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6064293384552002,"wiki_prob":0.3935706615447998,"text":"Home What's On\nNewsNottingham NewsWhat's On\nPictures: First look inside Nottingham’s new seaside arcade bar – Penny Lane\nTuesday, April 23, 2019 11:31 am\nUPDATED: Tuesday, April 23, 2019 11:52 am\nPenny Lane opens officially this Friday – 26th April 2019.\nLocated at 9 Fletcher Gate, the new flagship venue, named Penny Lane after taking inspiration from seaside family holidays, summer trips to Matlock Bath and Blackpool and Brighton’s iconic pier.\nSpeciality cocktails designed by an award-winning mixologist and an extensive handpicked selection of food and drinks feature on the menu, designed to reflect the seaside look and feel.\nThe new bar and kitchen, which will serve as both a daytime and evening venue, will also have a nostalgic amusement arcade with a mid-century British inspired design throughout.\nMichael Johnson, the operations director at Penny Lane, said: “We are thrilled to be opening our newest venture in Nottingham’s Lace Market – it is the perfect location and we think people will be really excited to try it out. Penny Lane will be our flagship venue, and will feature some of our most exciting and adventurous ideas yet.\n“Nottingham is such a vibrant city, known for its artistic flare and independent scene, so it was really important that we created something different with a unique interactive element – Penny Lane is just that.”\nMichael added: “There will be unusual cocktails on the menu, designed to bring back British childhood memories. Our Twister cocktail at The Hockley Arts Club is extremely popular, so we will be using similar ideas to fit in with the fun quirky theme at Penny Lane, as well as colourful lights and stunning monochrome tiles to deliver an iconic venue that the city can be proud of.\n“We are really excited to open up the venue during the daytime too, which will be suitable for families and children looking to have a go on the games and relax with some casual food and drink.”\nGET DAILY NEWS UPDATES IN ONE EMAIL\nReceive all the day's stories and events from The Wire delivered in one email every day\nWestlife’s Twenty Tour’s last show to be broadcast live in Nottingham...\nWhat's On Thursday, July 4, 2019 1:26 pm\nNews Thursday, July 4, 2019 10:12 am\n‘Everything is Roarsome’ exhibition for LEGO fans this summer at Twycross...\nWhat's On Monday, July 1, 2019 2:04 pm\nWhat's On Saturday, June 29, 2019 10:33 am","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line906139"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9897282123565674,"wiki_prob":0.9897282123565674,"text":"LATV Makes History by Launching the First LGBTQ Latinx Talk Show on Nationwide Television\nLATV Network, the original national, bicultural television network — which recently kicked off its second decade of programming — is excited to announce the launch of its groundbreaking weekly talk show “Glitterbomb”, premiering on the network this fall.\n“Glitterbomb” is an explosive pop-culture talk show hosted by an entirely gay, Latino, Hollywood-insider panel featuring “Entertainment Weekly” senior editor Patrick Gomez, iHeartRadio personality Alexander Rodriguez, and actor Enrique Sapene.\nTheir queer Latino perspective — drizzled with wit, humor and first-hand insight into A-lister life — gives “Glitterbomb” a festive and unique flavor that everyone can enjoy. Combining their experience in acting, radio and journalism, there’s no subject too hot to handle and no scandal too spicy to dig into.\n“The LGBTQ Latino community has, for too long, been underserved,” says Luca Bentivoglio, LATV’s COO and Head of Programming. “LATV is proud to foster an environment of inclusivity and we are thrilled to be a pioneer in LGBTQ Latino programming by airing the first-ever talk show with an entirely gay Latino cast. As part of our network’s mission to be as inclusive as possible, ‘Glitterbomb’ is a shining example of our network’s commitment to serving diverse and alternative audiences.”\nProduced at LATV’s state-of-the-art HD studios in Los Angeles, “Glitterbomb” is an English-language show that features heated discussions about the latest in pop culture news and trends; provides an inside look at the latest celebrity hot spots and events; and welcomes some of the biggest names in entertainment.\n“We could not be happier that LATV has given three gay Latinos a platform as big as ‘Glitterbomb,’” co-hosts Gomez, Rodriguez, and Sapene say in a joint statement. “But we hope that people of all races, genders, and orientations will see a bit of themselves in our show — or, at the very least, have a good time watching it!”\nAbout LATV:\nLATV is the only remaining Latino-owned TV network in the Hispanic television space. Its programming primarily targets U.S.-born Latinos and the coveted bicultural 18-49 Latino demographic, with content that features originally-produced shows in Los Angeles, as well as licensed content that has never before been seen in the U.S. For more go to www.LATV.com.\nAbout the hosts:\nPATRICK GOMEZ is currently a Senior Editor at “Entertainment Weekly”. As a veteran “People” magazine writer and member of the Television Critics Association, the Texas native has appeared on “Today”, “Extra!”, “Access Hollywood”, “E! News”, HLN’s “Michaela”, and “Nightline” and can be seen frequently on “Good Morning America”.\nALEXANDER RODRIGUEZ is an on-air personality and entertainer. His sense of humor shines on his nationally syndicated radio show, “On The Rocks”, “where celebrities and cocktails” on iHeartRadio and Universal Broadcasting Network. The show is broadcast live weekly from Sunset Gower Studios in the heart of Hollywood. The Southern California native also serves as Entertainment Editor for “Bear World Magazine”, a national LGBT online media source.\nENRIQUE SAPENE is an actor, host and producer. The Venezuela native has entertained audiences internationally as a reporter on Univision, NBC, ABC and Telemundo. As an actor, he has recurred on the Amazon Prime series “Borderline” and his telenovelas “ Pecadora”, “El Alma Herida”, “Eva la Trailera” and “Tomame o Dejame” have sold worldwide. In 2017, Enrique joined the cast of the docu-series “My Life is a Telenovela”, which aired on WEtv and E! Latin America and is currently available on Hulu.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line234825"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5499342679977417,"wiki_prob":0.5499342679977417,"text":"December 18, 2012 - News Leader\nRCMP WARN OF SCAM\nPrinceton RCMP would like to advise the public of a telephone scam that has come to the attention of the police. This involves an unknown individual posing as a family member or a representative of the family member. The caller requests that you send money to assist the family member and details are provided on how to transfer the money. Once the money is transferred, the person does not hear from the caller again and when they finally speak to the family member, it is realized that the call was not legitimate. RCMP would like to caution the public of such phone scams and if you do receive a suspicious phone call of this nature to contact Phone Busters at 1-888-495-8501.\nWHY CHRISTMAS TREES?\nThe Christmas tradition of bringing an evergreen tree into the house goes back to northern Europe perhaps 300 years ago, but may have originated with a pagan custom dating even further back. The first Christmas trees were decorated with edibles - apples, nuts and dates. Some families hung sugar cookies on the tree. In America, popcorn and/or cranberry garlands were strung on the tree. Around 200 years ago, some families put candles on the tree. Often, the tree was set in the middle of the best room in the house, and the family danced around it singing Christmas songs such as ‘O Christmas Tree’. When Christmas trees became popular among Europe’s nobility, the decorations became much more elaborate. Confections were hung from the tree, and often small decorated boxes were hung and used as gifts for important visitors.\nPAPER OFFICE CLOSES FOR HOLIDAY\nPrinceton’s only locally-owned weekly community newspaper, the Similkameen News Leader, will be closing this week. This will be the last issue published of the paper for 2012. The office of the Similkameen News Leader will close at 5:00 PM on Wednesday, December 19th for the Christmas holiday. There will not be a paper next week. “This is the only break we get all year so we’re going to do our best to enjoy as much of it as we can between now and the end of 2012,” explains Similkameen News Leader Owner/Publisher George Elliott. “Our office will re-open for regular business at 8:30 AM on Wednesday, December 26th and we look forward to serving you throughout 2013.” The first issue of the News Leader for 2013 will be available Monday, December 31st but will be dated Tuesday, January 1, 2013.\nDancers Celebrate The Season!\nPhoto: Dawn Johnson\nPrinceton Highland Dancers held their annual 'Christmas Fling' December 13th at Riverside Theatre. The event is free to attend, provided you bring a non-perishable food item. All 'admission fees' are collected and handed over to Princeton Crisis Assistance Society for their annual Christmas Hamper Drive.\nWinner Walks Away With Paint!\nThe joint Princeton Home Hardware/Similkameen News Leader 'Splash/Win Some Paint' Contest in November saw a lot of interest thanks to Beauti-Tone. The new paint mixing machine at Princeton Home Hardware was the reason for the contest which was won by Princeton's Noreen Pringle, right. Her prize package included $215.00 worth of paint and accessories presented by Princeton Home Hardware Co-Owner/Manager Peter Rubingh, left.\nCOUNCIL AWARDS ANALYSIS CONTRACT\nThe contract for structural analysis of the Princeton Courthouse building was awarded at the December 3rd regular meeting of Town Council. In a motion made by Councillor Jason Earle, and seconded by Councillor Doug Pateman, David Nairne and Associates of North Vancouver will conduct a Structural Assessment of the building at 151 Vermilion Avenue valued at $7,728.00. A total of seven responses were received following a Request for Proposals with David Nairne & Associates being the lowest one received. The second lowest amounted was $9,366.00 and the highest came in at $49,600.00. An assessment of the mechanical, electrical and environmental systems was completed earlier this year. The second step is the structural assessment. “If the results are favourable, the next step will be an architectural engagement to determine the suitability of the building for the purpose of a Town Hall,” Interim CAO Helen Koning stated in her report to Council. The structural analysis will start “as quickly as we can sign a contract with them,” Koning added. Expect to hear more about this project well into 2013 as Princeton Town Council continues with a step-by-step plan for the future of the building.\nMUSIC MAN RETURNS!\nPrinceton welcomed the return of Harold Crane, former band teacher at Princeton Secondary School. He was guest of honour at the band concert held at Riverside Centre on December 3. The reason for honoring Crane begins with current band teacher, Myrna Coates, seeking a vibraphone for her band. She went to a music supply store in Kelowna to ask if the shop owner knew of anyone who might want to sell a vibraphone. He did. He immediately contacted Joyce Crane, Harold’s daughter, who had a vibraphone stored in her basement. Her father had bought it for her many years ago when she was in a band with him. Joyce hesitated about selling it, but when she found out it was for Princeton, and told her father about it, he told her to make up her mind. The result was the vibraphone was donated to Princeton’s band. At the concert, 96 year old Harold Crane led the band in O Canada to begin the concert. Calling Crane Princeton’s ’Music Man’, Bob Cormack, who had been Principal of Princeton Secondary during the years when Crane taught music, gave a speech outlining Crane’s success as a band teacher. Crane began teaching in 1961 and by 1965 led the Princeton band to a championship at a music festival in the Lower Mainland. The mixed school and community bands completed the evening with a wide variety of music, some simple for the beginners and some complex involving the entire band, such as the rollicking finish with ‘Rock Around the Clock’.\nLocal Design Gets Our Attention!\nDrawing: Steve Brodie\nPrinceton's Steve Brodie has ideas. The last one he shared with us at the Similkameen News Leader was for the zigzag project. Although Brodie's design was not used, it had some creative and practical applications and design features we really liked. This week Brodie shares with us his conceptual vision of what can take place at the old court house building on Vermilion Avenue. We like it because it's designed by a local. What do you think?\nWe Visit Internet Radio Station!\nVANDALS COST PRINCETON POSSE $$$\nby W. George Elliott Owner/Publisher\nPrinceton’s Junior B Hockey Club, the Posse, suffered a lost over the weekend. No, they didn’t lose a game and they didn’t lose a member of their team. The Princeton Posse lost an opportunity. The past five seasons the Princeton Posse has been part of a network of teams in the KIJHL and other sports teams in Western Canada that ‘webcast’ their games over the internet. The games are part of a pay-per-view program that makes money for both the league and the team. Viewers spend an average of $7.00 to view the game. A portion of that fee\ngoes to the league, which is then distributed to teams at the end of the season. The Princeton Posse webcasts have been the second most viewed in the league for the past two seasons. On average there can be anywhere from 25 to 100 people watching the live webcasts at home anywhere in North America. You do the math. That’s a few dollars. Multiply that by 25 home games in the regular season and tack onto that playoff games and additional revenue from viewing archived games and you get the picture that this is not a few bucks we’re talking about. Some time after the November 16th game and November 30th the Princeton Posse webcast equipment was damaged. The damage was serious enough to prevent the team from putting last Friday night’s game online, which lost the team (and KIJHL) some revenue. The Posse pay a per game fee to webcast each game and the league fines teams a hefty amount for not providing a webcast. The Posse could be fined for all future games not provided online. Fortunately a fundraising campaign started before last Friday night’s game ended and generous donations have been received. But why did this happen? I have my suspicions of what went on in the broadcast booth at Princeton Arena between Posse home games, but I have no proof, and it is not my style to point fingers without something to back me up. What I do know is that there are issues related to safety and security at Princeton Arena, which affect all the users of the facility. But what it really comes down to is sharing. We all need to share the space and we need to respect what other users are doing with their portion of that space. Wrecking webcast equipment is one thing. Those things can be replaced, but what happens if it gets more serious than that? If you have any information regarding the circumstances revolving around the vandalism of the Princeton Posse webcast gear, I’d like to hear it.\nTOURIST STRATEGY WORTH BILLIONS\nA 10 year tourism strategy has been developed by the Thompson Okanagan Tourist Association for the entire region, which will include a strategy for marketing the Similkameen Valley. Tourism in the region is valued at an estimated $1.7 billion. During the past two years, the regional Tourist Association has worked to make business aware of the potential. Meetings with stakeholders have been involved in developing the strategy through a coordinated approach to strengthening the tourist industry. One of the key messages to every part of the region was to stop viewing competition as the business down the street, and start seeing it as the business in California or New Zealand. The goal of the Association is to put Thompson Okanagan region on the world stage as a ‘must visit’ destination. Similkameen Valley Planning Society has worked on marketing the entire valley. One of the key findings at the tourism meetings was a lack of identity for the Similkameen Valley. A Similkmeen Valley website is being developed which will contain numerous images of the valley. One of the common goals of every part of the region is to create jobs and development that respects and sustains our environment and our culture. For those who may doubt our culture, an overview of what goes on in the region is much like what goes on in the Similkameen Valley. Ours is a region of forests, mountains, rivers, lakes, ranches, vineyards and wineries, sawmills, mines, orchards, ski hills and ski trails, and First Nations Reserves and businesses. The sheer diversity of the region lends itself to a real marketing opportunity. The focus on summer tourism is still in place, but there seems to be a lack of tourists in the colder months, a problem the Association will address. Snowmobile tours and ice fishing are winter time activities which may benefit from more and better marketing.\nSightings Prompt Action!\nResidents on the Second Bench in Princeton have reported seeing a bear in their neighbourhood off and on over the past couple of weeks. There have also been bear sightings in various other residential locations in the area for several months. This bear trap spent a few days parked on the Second Bench as Conservation Officers took action resulting from the volume of sightings.\nZigzag Project Update!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line165029"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8985805511474609,"wiki_prob":0.8985805511474609,"text":"Matt's Old Man Rants\nThe rants and ramblings of a man called Matt who isn't actually old\nRant History\nMatt’s Music Spot Miniblog\n1996: The Year In Pop… 20 Years On\nARIA 1991 Top 100 Singles\nMatt’s Music Spot: 2014.05.22\nMatt’s Music Spot: whatever happened to 2005?\nThe top ten singles of 2005… 10 years on\nMatt’s Old Man ‘That’s Not News’ Rant\nTHAT’S NOT NEWS! 18 September 2016\nTHAT’S NOT NEWS! 9 July 2016\nMatt’s Old Man Travelblog\nTag Archives: Ed Sheeran\nInternet Killed The Radio Star\nPosted on March 18, 2017 by mattsoldmanrants\nLast week was record-breaking on pop music charts all over the world. It was also quite a telling week regarding the state of music in the digital age.\nHere in Australia, Ed Sheeran’s third album ÷ (aka, Divide) debuted at number one, already certified 2xPlatinum for first week sales of more than 140,000 units. During the 90s and early-2000s plenty of albums racked up multi-platinum first-week sales and debuted at number one, but these days it’s a double-whammy that almost never happens; in fact, it’s a feat only achieved so far this decade by two other albums.\nSheeran also set a chart precedent ten weeks ago when Divide’s first two singles were released at the same time and debuted at numbers one and two; no other artist had ever sent two singles to the Top 2 of the Australian chart, on début, in the same week.\nSix weeks later, while Shape Of You and Castle On The Hill were still on the two top rungs, the third track from Divide, How Would You Feel, also crashed into the chart at number two, pushing Castle On The Hill back to number three; the same artist occupying the entire chart podium had only ever been seen twice before—when Beatlemania took off in 1964, and, inexplicably, when Karise Eden won The Voice in 2012.\nLast week, the remaining thirteen tracks from Divide all debuted within the Top 40. Yep, every single track.\nAnd if you think that sounds weird—it certainly is, at the very least, highly unusual—then spare a thought for Irish music lovers: the entire Top 16 of last week’s Irish singles chart was the tracks from Divide!\nShape Of You and Castle On The Hill were, officially, Divide’s first two singles, while How Would You Feel was designated as a ‘promotional single’. And the other thirteen? Well, at least for now, they’re just tracks on the album. And this is where the modern way of things starts getting a tad confusing, if you actually try to understand how it all works. So let’s forget the complexities of the present for a bit, and take a step back in time for some context.\nIn the olden days (but, really, not that long ago at all) a single was a single, and in 99% of cases its prime objective was to promote album sales. A single had a physical release in at least one format, it was played on radio (sometimes) and on music TV shows (sometimes) and it only hit the chart if enough people went to a retail outlet and paid for it; subsequent singles from the same album would follow more-or-less the same pattern. Total sales volumes and resultant chart positions were determined by a physical exchange of cash for product—a CD, a cassette, or a black vinyl platter that, as if by magic, had somehow been infused with music. It was a pretty straightforward process: 1 payment = 1 exchange = 1 sale. 100 payments = 100 sales, 35,000 payments = 35,000 sales and, in the latter case, a gold record accreditation.\nIt was also extremely rare in the olden days for any non-single album track to ever see the light of day on TV or radio.\nIn the olden days, albums were always the big-hitters. Other than any singles already released, we were largely unaware of an album’s content until we actually bought it—and so, there was a vested interest in buying it; invariably, we enjoyed some tracks more than others, and there were sometimes even tracks that we didn’t like much at all. But we still viewed an album as a body of work and we listened to each track in the order in which it appeared on the album; even in the age of random play and ‘shuffle’, some music lovers stood firm in the belief that this was the order in which the artist wanted us to hear the album.\nThese days, the content of any album is readily accessible online, at least to ‘preview’, without necessitating any kind of purchase whatsoever. Individual album tracks can mostly be paid for and downloaded, whether they’re a single or not; in fact, as far as digital downloads go, these days there’s virtually no discernible difference between an album track and an actual single, other than the fact that some singles are available before an album’s release and some have their own bespoke cover art; some also contain additional tracks or remixes, both of which usually leads to an ‘EP’ designation and a price hike.\nThese days, album tracks, as with singles, can also be streamed. While downloads count towards a track’s total sales just as physical purchases did in the olden days, the part played by streaming involves a more complex equation. According to ARIA CEO Dan Rosen, it goes something like this: “Say for example it was 175 streams equating to one sale, once you work out that conversion you tally up all your streams, divide it by that number, tally up all your iTunes downloads and add the two and that’s the number for the ARIA chart”… clear as mud, right?\nThese days, there are virtually no physical sales of singles—although, the vinyl revival of the past few years has seen that changing, if only in small numbers. Specifically in the case of the thirteen Ed Sheeran tracks, though, it was the enormous number of times they were streamed that saw all thirteen of them hit the chart at once; purchased downloads only accounted for the tiniest proportion of this seemingly bizarre outcome. Such is the way the charts are calculated these days that three of the tracks made it all the way to the Top 10, joining the first two singles that were still sitting pretty at the top of the chart—and streaming volumes just keep getting higher and higher, to the point where digital services accounted for more than 60% of total market value in 2015.\nMeanwhile, Divide, saw an almost 50/50 split between physical CD sales and digital downloads, which in itself is also quite unusual for any album these days.\nMeasures of success have also shifted. In the olden days, whether a single was successful or not was largely inconsequential as long as the album it was promoting sold like hot cakes; and if it did, then even the least successful of singles could go on to be fondly recalled as a massive hit.\nIn 1970s and 80s Australia, full-length LPs were still relatively expensive. Nevertheless, Australians snapped up albums like Cold Chisel’s East, ABBA’s Arrival and Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours in massive numbers; it was as if everyone everywhere knew every word of every song on every big-selling album. Some of those albums also featured singles that were hugely successful in their own right, although that certainly wasn’t always the case, but at any rate albums were the artists’—and the record companies’—bread and butter; singles were merely promotional tools.\nFast forward a decade or two and the radio producers and presenters who were air-guitaring and lip-syncing to all those songs in the 70s and 80s were now adding them to their playlists; even if they were never big hits to start with, their status as pop and rock classics was now assured, thanks almost entirely to radio and music video airplay decades after their release.\nBut there was trouble brewing. Long before the Internet started to skew how we watch TV and movies, it also had a significant hand in the slow demise—or, at very least, the destructive realignment—of the music industry.\nIn the olden days, the only way to hear those non-single album tracks was to preview the album at a retail outlet—some larger retailers, like Virgin and HMV, offered ‘listening posts’, others had a stereo at the counter to serve the same purpose, while smaller stores would simply play whatever you wanted to hear through their speakers, in turn allowing everyone else in the shop to hear and thusly pour scorn all over your questionable taste in music… or was that just mine? In most cases, though, the only way some people ever heard those tracks was to actually buy the album.\nSince 1998 the Internet has given rise to a constant evolution of how we consume music. Today, anyone can go online, preview album tracks, largely ignore them, buy individual songs, or use streaming services to listen to some or all of any given album, the latter of which avoids a purchase and results in artist royalties that are, at best, variable and, at worst, contemptuously minimal—for example, a track apparently needs at least 1,000 streams on Spotify to earn the artist a paltry $1.\nIndustry bodies have acknowledged artists’ record sales for decades. In Australia, the first sales accreditations were established by record companies in the 1970s. The numbers weren’t always consistent between the companies and levels were sometimes different between singles and albums but, generally, a Gold accreditation was awarded for 50,000 sales and Platinum for 100,000 sales. The physical award that was presented to the artist was generally a gold or platinum-coloured copy of the vinyl disc, in a great big frame with a plaque—thus the terms “gold record” and “platinum record”.\nHaving taken end-to-end management of the national charts in-house during 1988, in 1989 ARIA revised accreditation levels down to 35,000 for Gold and 70,000 for Platinum—possibly something to do with the organisation having been created by a conglomerate of the four major local record companies in 1983.\nEven though the reduced numbers meant greater recognition of singles sales, albums were still far and away the biggest hitters. Throughout the 90s, high-selling albums regularly achieved certifications of between 5 and 10xPlatinum, while the really big ones—Alanis Morissette’s Jagged Little Pill, Savage Garden’s 1997 début, and Shania Twain’s Come On Over—were certified up to 15xPlatinum. Earlier mega-sellers, like The Best Of ABBA, the Grease soundtrack, Michael Jackson’s Thriller, John Farnham’s Whispering Jack, Meat Loaf’s Bat Out Of Hell and Dire Straits’ Brothers In Arms, have all, over time, been accredited for sales in excess of 20xPlatinum.\nIn 1993, Whitney Houston’s mega-hit I Will Always Love You became the first single ever accredited 4xPlatinum by ARIA, recognising local sales of more than 280,000 units. Five years later Elton John smashed that record when his tribute to Princess Diana, Candle In The Wind, achieved an unprecedented 14xPlatinum certification, a record that went unbroken for seventeen years. But, under ‘normal’ sales conditions, Houston’s achievement technically stood for two decades, although it looked like it was about to be bettered multiple times before then—Lou Bega’s Mambo No. 5 and The Offspring’s Pretty Fly (For A White Guy) had also joined the 4xPlatinum club in 1999, but it wasn’t until 2003 when, after twelve weeks at number one, Eminem’s Lose Yourself was well on its way to becoming ARIA’s first 5xPlatinum single. Then… nothing. But finally, after the best part of a decade of a consistently small volume of digital sales, Lose Yourself was, all at once, awarded seventh Platinum certification (and therefore, by inference, its fifth and sixth) in mid-2013.\nBut by then, a 7xPlatinum accreditation for a single had become so commonplace that, in July 2014, LMFAO’s Party Rock Anthem was certified a whopping 15xPlatinum—not only making it the only single to ever sell more than a million units in this country, but also placing it just behind the only eight full-length albums that have ever sold more. And since 2013, ten other singles have also been certified between 10 and 13xPlatinum.\nThat’s how much things have changed, certainly since 1993, but most significantly in just the past five years.\nIn the olden days albums were, by far, the bigger sellers—singles just propped them up—but these days it’s the reverse. As a general rule, singles now sell by the (digital) truckload, sometimes bouncing around the chart for up to two years. But long-player sales have been so depleted that it’s not uncommon for an album by a niche artist to début at number one off the back of a couple of thousand sales, before disappearing from the chart altogether within three or four weeks.\nThe divergence between olden days volumes and today’s—and the very reason why Divide’s opening week tally of 140,000 units is so significant—is crystal clear with a few historical comparisons. In December 2003, for example, Guy Sebastian’s Just As I Am had opening week sales of 164,000 units; in 2006, Anthony Callea’s A New Chapter couldn’t edge any higher than number 45 with sales of nearly 5,500 units. By January 2014, the entire Top 500 albums combined sold just under 182,000 units; in March 2015, one-time superstar Madonna’s Rebel Heart debuted at number one on less than 7,000 sales, before nosediving to a measly 1,300 sales in its second week; three months later, just 3,777 sales pushed Ed Sheeran’s previous album X back to number one; and even in the UK last week, Sheeran’s new album sold more units than the rest of the Top 500 albums combined.\nAs well, the hugely reduced volume of overall album sales results in a whole lot of super weird in/out up/down activity on the albums chart that simply wasn’t seen before about five years ago; ultimately, it calls into question the relevance, or even the validity, of the chart, particularly given outcomes like the one seen last week with Ed Sheeran—for example, why should non-single tracks appear on a singles chart, rather than their streaming and download volumes being combined to reflect sales of the album they feature on? Surely that makes more sense and it couldn’t be that hard, could it? I mean, I’m no mathematician or statistician, but it seems logical to me that each download of a single track from a 16 track album should amount to 1/16th of a sale of that album… shouldn’t it?\nAt any rate, it’s unlikely any of the thirteen Sheeran tracks will see the light of day on the radio again, once post-release hysteria has been quelled, unless they’re released as a single.\nCue the question of ‘what does the future hold?’, because, at the current rate of change, music seems to be evolving in ever-decreasing circles.\nRadio’s been around for a century, and for much of the last sixty years it was the go-to source for music that people wanted to hear; today you’re more likely to see people gathered around a smartphone’s Spotify playlist, while radios merely generate background noise in kitchens, on desks and in mechanics’ workshops across the country.\nMusic television took off in the early-80s and, for music lovers, was an essential resource for at least twenty years; today, a music video isn’t even guaranteed for any release and, more often than not, if there is one they’re usually not much more than an ultra-fancy YouTube lyric video. Music Television, as we knew it in the olden days, is virtually dead; the ABC’s Rage, which celebrates its 30th anniversary next month, is now pretty much the sole survivor.\nThe ability to quickly and easily convert CDs into individual audio files in the late 90s lead directly to the P2P file sharing revolution, which, come 1999, had music lovers all over the world partying like it was, indeed, 1999 as they uploaded and downloaded free song after free song after free song—as quickly as their glacially slow dial-up connection would allow them to; but even Napster, the one that arguably started it all, was dead within seven years.\nSo-called “legitimate” online services have very much become the accepted norm since the local launch of the iTunes Store in late-2005, and they more-or-less had a monopoly until about 2012; but since 2015 the increasing uptake of streaming services has seen digital download revenues decrease by more than 10%, year-on-year—in other words, as streaming uptake increases, the number of paid downloads decreases.\nWhat’s next, then? How soon can we expect streaming to also become obsolete? From what we’ve seen in the last ten years alone, its demise is probably just around the corner. Should we expect a replacement with an even shorter life-cycle?\nWhatever it turns out to be, it will inevitably be some form of online platform. And, it’ll mean yet another nail in the coffin of the video and the radio star.\n| Tagged Album, Australian charts, Cassette, CD, Digital Download, Ed Sheeran, Highest-selling albums, Highest-selling singles, Music, Single, Streaming, Vinyl\t| Leave a comment\nSearch-a-Rant\nRecent Rants\nThe News In Brief (or The Irony Of Twitter Trending Determining What We Forget) December 4, 2017\nDeath Of The Long Play Album August 27, 2017\nWhy “Marriage Equality” Has Become Embarrassing August 11, 2017\nRESOLVED! How Car Insurance Naming And Shaming Paid Off July 4, 2017\nReview: SBS’s “EUROVISION TOP 40 SONGS”. Wednesday 10 May 2017, 8:30pm. May 11, 2017\nFollow Rants via Email\nCalendar-o-Rants\nMeta-Rant","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line365382"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5397332906723022,"wiki_prob":0.46026670932769775,"text":"You're using an outdated browser. Please upgrade your browser or activate Google Chrome Frame to improve your experience.\nEvening Meal\nABOUT PAUL NEWMAN\nPaul Newman’s craft was acting. His passion was racing. His love was his family and friends. And his heart and soul were dedicated to helping make the world a better place.\nPaul was quick to acknowledge the good fortune he had in his own life, beginning with being born in America, and was acutely aware of how unlucky so many others were. True to his character, he quietly devoted himself to helping offset this imbalance and used his influence to advance many social causes. He accomplished this with an uncanny ability to break new ground.\nPaul applied his greatest commitment and derived his deepest satisfaction from his quiet work in philanthropy. He used his influence, gave of his financial resources, and personally volunteered to advance humanitarian and social causes around the world. He accomplished this with an uncanny ability to break new ground.\nIn 1982, he founded Newman’s Own, Inc., which was one of the first food companies to use all natural products. Today, Newman’s Own, Inc. is a successful international food business, of which all after-tax profits and royalties are donated to thousands of charities worldwide through Newman’s Own Foundation. Thus far, over $500 million has been awarded to grantee recipients in all 50 USA states and in 31 countries around the world.\nPaul founded the Hole in the Wall Gang Camp in Ashford, Connecticut, for children with life-threatening conditions. It was the first of many camps established where children could escape the fear, pain, and isolation of their conditions to kick back and “raise a little hell.” Later, he founded the SeriousFun Children’s Network (formerly known as the Association of Hole in the Wall Camps), which now includes a global network of camps and initiatives.\nUpon turning 70 years old, Paul decided not to accept any more awards for his charitable work. He was personally reluctant to acknowledge that his charity was anything special, and true to his character, he burned his tuxedo in a front-yard ceremonial bonfire attended by family and friends.\nWhile Paul Newman was a Hollywood star of extraordinary celebrity and a person recognized for exceptional commitment and leadership for philanthropy, he lived his life as an ordinary person, which he always considered himself. He was a man of abundant good humor, generosity, and humility. Paul departed this world on September 26, 2008.\nPaul Newman and Hotch filled empty wine bottles in the basement with homemade salad\ndressing to give as holiday gifts to friends and neighbours. Before long they all came back asking for more.\nNewman’s Own Salad Dressing officially launched, generating over $300,000 in first-year profits. Paul declared, “Let’s give it all away to those who need it!”\nPaul Newman’s Own entered the Australia market and the product line started expanding with the introduction of pasta sauce.\nThe Hole in the Wall Gang Camp opened in Connecticut, serving 288 kids in its first year. A place where children with life-threatening conditions could “raise a little hell’.\nFollowing the success of salad dressing, pasta sauce, lemonade, and microwave popcorn, Newman’s Own introduced salsa — all from Paul’s recipes.\nA significant milestone was reached of over $50 million donated to charity in the company’s first decade.\nBy this time, Newman’s Own products had expanded globally, with distribution to countries including the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.\nNewman’s Own Foundation was established to carry on Paul Newman’s philanthropic legacy.\nOn September 26, Paul Newman’s life and legacy were recognised upon his passing, honouring the actor and philanthropist who helped make the world a better place.\nThe new SeriousFun Children’s Network brand was launched, uniting Paul Newman’s global family of camps, which have served over 384,700 kids since 1988.\nNewman’s Own celebrated 35 years of giving it all away in the US with worldwide donations exceeding $500 (USD) million\nCOPYRIGHT 2019 PAUL NEWMAN'S OWN / WEBSITE BY SMACK BANG DESIGNS","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1395372"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5195625424385071,"wiki_prob":0.4804374575614929,"text":"Powder Diffraction\nReference materials for the stu...\nKaduk, James A. and Blanton, Thomas N. 2013. An improved structural model for cellulose II. Powder Diffraction, Vol. 28, Issue. 03, p. 194.\nFawcett, T.G. Crowder, C.E. Kabekkodu, S.N. Needham, F. Kaduk, J.A. Blanton, T.N. Petkov, V. Bucher, E. and Shpanchenko, R. 2013. Reference Materials for the Study of Polymorphism and Crystallinity in Cellulosics – ERRATUM. Powder Diffraction, Vol. 28, Issue. 02, p. 169.\nBao, Cong Yu Long, Didier R. and Vergelati, Caroll 2015. Miscibility and dynamical properties of cellulose acetate/plasticizer systems. Carbohydrate Polymers, Vol. 116, Issue. , p. 95.\nYang, Changlin Wen, Guanghua Tang, Ping Xi, Chaochao and Sun, Qihao 2016. Quantification of crystalline fraction of solid slag film using X-ray powder diffraction. Powder Diffraction, Vol. 31, Issue. 01, p. 40.\nMastalygina, E. E. Shatalova, O. V. Kolesnikova, N. N. Popov, A. A. and Krivandin, A. V. 2016. Modification of isotactic polypropylene by additives of low-density polyethylene and powdered cellulose. Inorganic Materials: Applied Research, Vol. 7, Issue. 1, p. 58.\nFawcett, T. G. Kabekkodu, S. N. Blanton, J. R. and Blanton, T. N. 2017. Chemical analysis by diffraction: the Powder Diffraction File™. Powder Diffraction, Vol. 32, Issue. 02, p. 63.\nVasquez-Zacarias, Leticia Ponce-Peña, Patricia Pérez-López, Tezozomoc Franco-Urquiza, Edgar A. Ramirez-Galicia, Guillermo and Poisot, Martha 2018. Hybrid Cellulose-Silica Materials from Renewable Secondary Raw Resources: An Eco-friendly Method. Global Challenges, Vol. 2, Issue. 7, p. 1700119.\nCardoso, Gabriel Valim Di Salvo Mello, Lucas Roberto Zanatta, Paula Cava, Sergio Raubach, Cristiane Wienke and Moreira, Mario Lucio 2018. Physico-chemical description of titanium dioxide–cellulose nanocomposite formation by microwave radiation with high thermal stability. Cellulose, Vol. 25, Issue. 4, p. 2331.\nDairi, Nassima Ferfera-Harrar, Hafida Ramos, Marina and Garrigós, María Carmen 2019. Cellulose acetate/AgNPs-organoclay and/or thymol nano-biocomposite films with combined antimicrobial/antioxidant properties for active food packaging use. International Journal of Biological Macromolecules, Vol. 121, Issue. , p. 508.\nMarch 2013 , pp. 18-31\nReference materials for the study of polymorphism and crystallinity in cellulosics\nT. G. Fawcett (a1), C. E. Crowder (a1), S. N. Kabekkodu (a1), F. Needham (a1), J. A. Kaduk (a2), T. N. Blanton (a3), V. Petkov (a4), E. Bucher (a5) and R. Shpanchenko (a6)...\n1International Centre for Diffraction Data, Newtown Square, Pennsylvania\n2Illinois Institute of Technology, Naperville, Illinois\n3Eastman Kodak Company, Rochester, New York\n4Central Michigan University, Mt. Pleasant, Michigan\n5International Paper Company, Loveland, Ohio\n6Moscow State University, Moscow, Russia\nPublished online by Cambridge University Press: 13 March 2013\nEighty specimens of cellulosic materials were analyzed over a period of several years to study the diffraction characteristics resulting from polymorphism, crystallinity, and chemical substitution. The aim of the study was to produce and verify the quality of reference data useful for the diffraction analyses of cellulosic materials. These reference data can be used for material identification, polymorphism, and crystallinity measurements. Overall 13 new references have been characterized for publication in the Powder Diffraction File (PDF) and several others are in the process of publication.\nCOPYRIGHT: © International Centre for Diffraction Data 2013\na)Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail: Fawcett@icdd.com\nBaker, A. A., Helbert, W., Sugiyama, J., and Miles, M. J. (2000). “New insight into cellulose structure by atomic force microscopy shows the Iα crystal phase in near-atomic resolution,” Biophys. J. 79, 1139–1145.\nBarr, G., Dong, W., and Gilmore, C. J. (2004a). “High-throughput powder diffraction. II. Application of clustering methods and multivariant data analysis,” J. Appl. Cryst 37, 243–252.\nBarr, G., Dong, W., Gilmore, C. J., and Faber, J. (2004b). “High-throughput powder diffraction III: the application of full profile pattern matching and multivariate statistical analysis to round-robin and related powder diffraction data,” J. Appl. Cryst. 37, 635–642.\nBates, S. (2010). The Amorphous State: A Structural Perspective, presented at PPXRD09, abstract available online at http://www.icdd.com/resources/ppxrd/index.asp\nBates, S., Zografi, G., Engers, D., Morris, K., Crowley, K., and Newman, A. (2006). “Analysis of amorphous and nanocrystalline solids from their X-ray diffraction patterns,” Pharm. Res. 23, 2333–2349.\nDriemeier, C. and Galligari, G. A. (2011) “Theoretical and experimental developments for accurate determinations of crystallinity of cellulose I materials,” J. Appl. Cryst. 44, 184–192.\nElazzouzi-Hafraoui, S., Nishiyama, Y., Putaux, J-L., Heux, L., Dubreuil, F., and Rochas, C. (2008). “The shape and size distribution of crystalline nanoparticles prepared by acid hydrolysis of native cellulose,” Biomacromolecules 9, 57–65.\nFaber, J. and Blanton, J. (2008). “Full pattern comparison of experimental and calculated powder patterns using the integral index method in PDF-4 +,” Powder Diffr. 23, 141–145.\nFaber, J., Weth, C. A., and Bridge, J. (2004). “A plug-in program to perform Hanawalt or Fink search, indexing using organic entries in the ICDD PDF-4/organic 2003 database,” Adv. X-ray Anal. 47, 166–173.\nFawcett, T. G., Faber, J., Kabekkodu, S., McClune, F., Rafaja, D. (2005). “PDF-4 + , the materials identification database,” Microstruct. Anal. Mater. Sci. Freiburg 1–3, Germany, June 15–17.\nGilmore, C. J., Barr, G., and Paisley, J. (2004). “High-throughput powder diffraction. I. A new approach to qualitative and quantitative powder diffraction pattern analysis using full pattern profiles,” J. Appl. Cryst. 37, 231–242.\nGriffith, J. D., Wilcox, S., Powers, D. W., Nelson, R., and Baxter, B. K. (2008). “Discovery of abundant cellulose microfibers encased in 250 Ma Permian halite; macromolecular target in the search for life on other planets,” Astrobiology 8, 215–228.\nHofmann, D. W. M. and Kuleshova, L. (2005). “New similarity index for crystal structure determination from X-ray powder diagrams,” J. Appl. Cryst. 38, 861–866.\nHubbe, M. A., Venditti, R. A., and Rojas, O. J. (2007). “What happens to cellulosic fibers during papermaking and recyclingA review,” BioResources 2, 739–788.\nKaduk, J. A. and Langan, P. (2002). “Crystal structures and powder patterns of celluloses 1α, 1β, and II,” presented at the PPXRD2 Symposium, Concordville, PA., December 2002. The structures and atomic parameters from this presentation were published in the Powder Diffraction File in 2006, by private communication and with permission of the authors.\nMadsen, I. C., Scarlett, N. V. Y., and Kern, A. (2011). “Description and survey of methodologies for the determination of amorphous content via X-ray powder diffraction,” Z. Krist. 226, 944–955.\nNishiyama, Y. (2009). “Structure and properties of the cellulose microfibril,” J. Wood Sci. 55, 241–249.\nNishiyama, Y., Chanzy, H., Wada, M., Sugiyama, J., Mazeau, K., Forsyth, T., Riekel, C., Mueller, M., Rasmussen, B., and Langan, P. (2002). “Synchrotron X-ray and neutron fiber diffraction studies of cellulose polymorphs,” Adv. X-ray Anal. 45, 385–390.\nNishiyama, Y., Sugiyama, J., Chanzy, H., and Langan, P. (2003). “Crystal structure and hydrogen bonding system in cellulose 1α, from synchrotron X-ray and neutron fiber diffraction,” JACS 125, 14300–14306.\nPetkov, V., Ren, Y., Kabekkodu, S., and Murphy, D. (2012). “Atomic pair distribution functions analysis on low-Z materials of limited degree of structural coherence,” Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. (submitted).\nRoche, E., Chanzy, H., Boudeulle, M., Marchessault, R. H., Sundarajan, P. (1978). “Three dimensional crystalline structure of cellulose triacetate II,” Macromolecules 11, 86–94.\nScardi, P., Leoni, M., and Faber, J. (2006). “Diffraction line profile from a disperse system: a simple alternative to Voigtian profiles,” Powder Diffr. 21, 270–277.\nSonneveld, E. J. and Visser, J. W. (1975). “Automatic collection of powder data from photographs,” J. Appl. Crystallogr. 8, 1–7.\nTurley, J. W. (1965). X-ray Diffraction Patterns of Polymers (International Centre for Diffraction Data publishers, Newton Square, PA).\nWada, M., Yoshiharu, N., Chanzy, H., Forsyth, T., and Langan, P. (2008). “The structure of celluloses,” Adv. X-ray Anal. 51, 138–144.\nWolkov, S. (2012). Appendices for the submission of grant data, Appendix 4: Instrumentation Summary, Appendix 5: Guidelines for the preparation of digitized X-ray powder patterns, available at www.icdd.com also see Calvert, L. D., Flippen-Anderson, J. L., Hubbard, C. R., Johnson, Q. C., Lenhert, P. G., Nichols, M. C., Parrish, W., Smith, D. K., Smith, C. S., Snyder, R. L., and Young, R. A. (1979). “The standard data form for powder diffraction data,” report of the subcommittee of the American Crystallographic Association, presented at the 1979 Symposium on Accuracy in Powder Diffraction, Washington, D.C., International Centre for Diffraction Data publishers.\nURL: /core/journals/powder-diffraction\ncrystallinity","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1530204"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5863168835639954,"wiki_prob":0.41368311643600464,"text":"Save Page · Saved Pages\nPick Topic\nReview Topic\nList Experts\nExamine Expert\nSave Expert\nSite Guide ··\nGout: HELP\nArticles by Michele Meltzer\nBased on 3 articles published since 2008\nHideThe current database of articles was compiled on:\nSat Jul 6 05:14:51 2019\nMore database statistics are available.\n||||\nBetween 2008 and 2019, Michele Meltzer wrote the following 3 articles about Gout.\n+ Citations - Citations + Abstracts - Abstracts\n1 Article Burden of musculoskeletal disorders in the Eastern Mediterranean Region, 1990-2013: findings from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013. 2017\nMoradi-Lakeh, Maziar / Forouzanfar, Mohammad H / Vollset, Stein Emil / El Bcheraoui, Charbel / Daoud, Farah / Afshin, Ashkan / Charara, Raghid / Khalil, Ibrahim / Higashi, Hideki / Abd El Razek, Mohamed Magdy / Kiadaliri, Aliasghar Ahmad / Alam, Khurshid / Akseer, Nadia / Al-Hamad, Nawal / Ali, Raghib / AlMazroa, Mohammad AbdulAziz / Alomari, Mahmoud A / Al-Rabeeah, Abdullah A / Alsharif, Ubai / Altirkawi, Khalid A / Atique, Suleman / Badawi, Alaa / Barrero, Lope H / Basulaiman, Mohammed / Bazargan-Hejazi, Shahrzad / Bedi, Neeraj / Bensenor, Isabela M / Buchbinder, Rachelle / Danawi, Hadi / Dharmaratne, Samath D / Zannad, Faiez / Farvid, Maryam S / Fereshtehnejad, Seyed-Mohammad / Farzadfar, Farshad / Fischer, Florian / Gupta, Rahul / Hamadeh, Randah Ribhi / Hamidi, Samer / Horino, Masako / Hoy, Damian G / Hsairi, Mohamed / Husseini, Abdullatif / Javanbakht, Mehdi / Jonas, Jost B / Kasaeian, Amir / Khan, Ejaz Ahmad / Khubchandani, Jagdish / Knudsen, Ann Kristin / Kopec, Jacek A / Lunevicius, Raimundas / Abd El Razek, Hassan Magdy / Majeed, Azeem / Malekzadeh, Reza / Mate, Kedar / Mehari, Alem / Meltzer, Michele / Memish, Ziad A / Mirarefin, Mojde / Mohammed, Shafiu / Naheed, Aliya / Obermeyer, Carla Makhlouf / Oh, In-Hwan / Park, Eun-Kee / Peprah, Emmanuel Kwame / Pourmalek, Farshad / Qorbani, Mostafa / Rafay, Anwar / Rahimi-Movaghar, Vafa / Shiri, Rahman / Rahman, Sajjad Ur / Rai, Rajesh Kumar / Rana, Saleem M / Sepanlou, Sadaf G / Shaikh, Masood Ali / Shiue, Ivy / Sibai, Abla Mehio / Silva, Diego Augusto Santos / Singh, Jasvinder A / Skogen, Jens Christoffer / Terkawi, Abdullah Sulieman / Ukwaja, Kingsley N / Westerman, Ronny / Yonemoto, Naohiro / Yoon, Seok-Jun / Younis, Mustafa Z / Zaidi, Zoubida / Zaki, Maysaa El Sayed / Lim, Stephen S / Wang, Haidong / Vos, Theo / Naghavi, Mohsen / Lopez, Alan D / Murray, Christopher J L / Mokdad, Ali H. ·Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA. · Department of Community Medicine, Preventive Medicine and Public Health Research Center, Iran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. · Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Bergen, Norway. · Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway. · Japan International Cooperation Agency, Lusaka, Zambia. · Ophthalmology resident in Aswan University Hospital, Aswan, Egypt. · Clinical Epidemiology Unit, Department of Clinical Sciences Lund, Orthopedics, Lund University, Lund, Sweden. · Murdoch Childrens Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. · The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. · The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. · Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. · University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. · Food and Nutrition Administration, Ministry of Health, Safat, Kuwait. · University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. · Saudi Ministry of Health, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. · Division of Physical Therapy, Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Applied Medical Sciences, Jordan University of Science and Technology, Irbid, Jordan. · Charité Universitätsmedizin, Berlin, Germany. · King Saud University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. · Graduate Institute of Biomedical Informatics, Taipei Medical University, Taipei, Taiwan. · Public Health Agency of Canada, Toronto, Ontario, Canada. · Department of Industrial Engineering, School of Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Javeriana, Bogota, Colombia. · Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, California, USA. · David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), California, USA. · College of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Jazan, Saudi Arabia. · University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil. · Monash Department of Clinical Epidemiology, Cabrini Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. · Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. · Walden University, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. · Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Peradeniya, Peradeniya, Sri Lanka. · Clinical Investigation Centre INSERM (the National Institute for Health and Medical Research), Université de Lorraine, Vandoeuvre les Nancy, France. · Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. · Harvard/MGH Center on Genomics, Vulnerable Populations, and Health Disparities, Mongan Institute for Health Policy, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA. · Department of Neurobiology, Care Sciences and Society (NVS), Karolinska Institute, Stockholm, Sweden. · Non-Communicable Diseases Research Center, Endocrine and Metabolic Research Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. · Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany. · West Virginia Bureau for Public Health, Charleston, West Virginia, USA. · Arabian Gulf University, Manama, Bahrain. · Hamdan Bin Mohammed Smart University, Dubai, United Arab Emirates. · Nevada Division of Behavior and Public Health, Carson City, Nevada, USA. · Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA. · Public Health Division, Secretariat of the Pacific Community, Noumea, New Caledonia. · Salah Azaiz Institute, Tunis, Tunisia. · Institute of Community and Public Health, Birzeit University, Birzeit, Palestine. · Health Economics Research Unit, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK. · Department of Ophthalmology, Medical Faculty Mannheim, Ruprecht-Karls-University Heidelberg, Mannheim, Germany. · Hematology-Oncology and Stem Cell Transplantation Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. · Non-Communicable Diseases Research Center, Endocrinology and Metabolism Population Sciences Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. · Health Services Academy, Islamabad, Pakistan. · Ball State University, Muncie, Indiana, USA. · Department of Health Registries, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Bergen, Norway. · University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. · Aintree University Hospital National Health Service Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK. · School of Medicine, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK. · Mansoura Faculty of Medicine, Mansoura, Egypt. · Imperial College London, London, UK. · Digestive Disease Research Institute, Tehran Universities of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. · McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. · College of Medicine, Howard University, Washington DC, USA. · Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. · College of Medicine, Alfaisal University, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. · Hunger Action Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA. · Health Systems and Policy Research Unit, Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria. · Institute of Public Health, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany. · International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh. · Faculty of Health Sciences, Center for Research on Population and Health, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon. · Department of Preventive Medicine, School of Medicine, Kyung Hee University, Seoul, South Korea. · Department of Medical Humanities and Social Medicine, College of Medicine, Kosin University, Busan, South Korea. · National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, Bethesda, Maryland, USA. · Noncommunicable Diseases Research Center, Alborz University of Medical Sciences, Karaj, Iran. · Contech International Health Consultants, Lahore, Pakistan. · Contech School of Public Health, Lahore, Pakistan. · Sina Trauma and Surgery Research Center, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. · Finnish Institute of Occupational Health, Helsinki, Finland. · Sweidi Hospital, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. · Society for Health and Demographic Surveillance, Suri, India. · Digestive Diseases Research Institute, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran. · Independent Consultant, Karachi, Pakistan. · Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. · Alzheimer Scotland Dementia Research Centre, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK. · Department of Epidemiology & Population Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon. · Federal University of Santa Catarina, Florianópolis, Brazil. · University of Alabama at Birmingham, and Birmingham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Birmingham, Alabama, USA. · Alcohol and Drug Research Western Norway, Stavanger University Hospital, Stavanger, Norway. · Department of Anesthesiology, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia, USA. · Outcomes Research Consortium, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA. · Department of Anesthesiology, King Fahad Medical City, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. · Department of Internal Medicine, Federal Teaching Hospital, Abakaliki, Nigeria. · Federal Institute for Population Research, Wiesbaden, Germany. · German National Cohort Consortium, Heidelberg, Germany. · Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan. · Department of Preventive Medicine, College of Medicine, Korea University, Seoul, South Korea. · Jackson State University, Jackson, Mississippi, USA. · University Hospital, Setif, Algeria. · Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. ·Ann Rheum Dis · Pubmed #28209629.\nABSTRACT: OBJECTIVES: We used findings from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013 to report the burden of musculoskeletal disorders in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR). METHODS: The burden of musculoskeletal disorders was calculated for the EMR's 22 countries between 1990 and 2013. A systematic analysis was performed on mortality and morbidity data to estimate prevalence, death, years of live lost, years lived with disability and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs). RESULTS: For musculoskeletal disorders, the crude DALYs rate per 100 000 increased from 1297.1 (95% uncertainty interval (UI) 924.3-1703.4) in 1990 to 1606.0 (95% UI 1141.2-2130.4) in 2013. During 1990-2013, the total DALYs of musculoskeletal disorders increased by 105.2% in the EMR compared with a 58.0% increase in the rest of the world. The burden of musculoskeletal disorders as a proportion of total DALYs increased from 2.4% (95% UI 1.7-3.0) in 1990 to 4.7% (95% UI 3.6-5.8) in 2013. The range of point prevalence (per 1000) among the EMR countries was 28.2-136.0 for low back pain, 27.3-49.7 for neck pain, 9.7-37.3 for osteoarthritis (OA), 0.6-2.2 for rheumatoid arthritis and 0.1-0.8 for gout. Low back pain and neck pain had the highest burden in EMR countries. CONCLUSIONS: This study shows a high burden of musculoskeletal disorders, with a faster increase in EMR compared with the rest of the world. The reasons for this faster increase need to be explored. Our findings call for incorporating prevention and control programmes that should include improving health data, addressing risk factors, providing evidence-based care and community programmes to increase awareness.\n2 Article Payer decision-making with limited comparative and cost effectiveness data: the case of new pharmacological treatments for gout. 2012\nMeltzer, Michele / Pizzi, Laura T / Jutkowitz, Eric. ·Department of Rheumatology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, PA 19107, USA. ·Evid Based Med · Pubmed #22345034.\nABSTRACT: CONTEXT: The need for comparative effectiveness (CE) data continues to grow, fuelled by market demand as well as health reform. There may be an assumption that new drugs result in improved efficacy compared with the standard of care, therefore warranting premium prices. Gout treatment has recently become controversial, as expensive new drugs enter the market with limited CE data. METHODS: The authors reviewed published clinical trials and conducted a cost effectiveness analysis on a new drug (febuxostat) versus the standard (allopurinol) to illustrate the limitations in using these data to inform evidence-based decision-making. FINDINGS: Although febuxostat trials included allopurinol as a comparator, methodological limitations make comparative effectiveness evaluations difficult. However, when available trial data were input to a decision analytic model, the authors found that a significant reduction in febuxostat cost would be required in order for it to dominate allopurinol in cost effectiveness analysis. This case exemplifies the challenges of using clinical trial data in comparative and cost effectiveness analyses.\n3 Minor Allopurinol versus rilonacept for the prevention of gout flares: comment on the article by Schumacher et al. 2013\nMeltzer, Michele. · ·Arthritis Care Res (Hoboken) · Pubmed #23281274.\nABSTRACT: -- No abstract --\nCopyright (C) 2000-2019 by Expertscape Inc.. Manifesto · Terms of Use · Recognition Program · Contact Us\nExpertscape does not provide medical advice or diagnosis.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1225587"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5325514078140259,"wiki_prob":0.5325514078140259,"text":"Audrey White\nFighting back against sexual harassment\nIn 1983 Audrey White was the manager of the Lady at Lord John clothes store in Liverpool. When her area manager sexually harassed four women in her team, she complained – and was sacked.\nBut Audrey was a TGWU (now Unite) member and she was going to fight. Her campaign put sexual harassment at work in the spotlight and ultimately led a long campaign and a change in employment law in 2005. Audrey tells us more below.\nIt was shocking to be sacked over the phone.\nI said, “I’m sorry, I don’t understand.” My manager replied, “Isn’t plain English bloody good enough for you? I’m sacking you.” The company thought they could treat me like garbage but they hadn’t reckoned on me being a union member. The advice from my union was to keep going to work until they sacked me in writing.\nBack at work, my manager brought in the police to arrest me if I didn’t leave the store.\nThe staff didn’t stand up for me – they were too scared of losing their jobs. The company refused to meet with my union so we started picketing outside the store the next day. We were there with banners and petitions from opening time to closing for five weeks. And no one crosses a picket line in Liverpool!\nInspired by this story?\nYou can’t tell people who haven’t experienced solidarity what solidarity is like – it’s priceless.\nOn the picket we had dockers, car workers, staff from unemployed centres, union members, local activists. I feel such warmth when I think of those ordinary people who invested so much time and energy in supporting the cause. It was wonderful, but it was also bitter and harrowing and my nerves were on edge because all these people were fighting for my job and I didn’t want to let them down.\nWe didn’t even know the phrase ‘sexual harassment’ back then.\nWe learned how bad things were: women came up to us on the picket and said, “I had a wonderful job but my boss would do this, so I had to leave.” And, “I didn’t go along with what the boss wanted, so I got demoted”. When the company finally agreed to meet with us, they wouldn’t discuss the sexual harassment complaints, even though I’d got statements from the girls. They claimed I’d been sacked because I wasn’t ‘bubbly’ enough.\nMy most vivid memory from that time was the victory.\nOnce we lined up pickets at the Manchester and London stores, the company relented. I remember phoning the pickets from London and saying, “You can take the pickets off because we’ve won!” That night I got back to Liverpool and had the most fantastic night of my life, singing, dancing and celebrating. I got paid for lost earnings and walked back into my job.\nMy story shows that a woman can win – even a woman in a shop in 1980’s Britain.\nWhen I’m in the supermarket I’ll always chat with the women on the tills. If they have a little moan about their work I’ll say, “Are you in a union?”. They’ll shake their heads and say, “I’d be the only one…” But even one woman in a workplace can change conditions if they’ve got their union behind them. And they’ll inspire other women to do the same. We can fight – and we can win.\nWhat happened next?\nIn 1988, Audrey’s story was made into a film – Business As Usual. Here she is with Glenda Jackson, who played her character.\nAngela Rayner MP\nA remarkable journey to Westminster\nRevolutionary Rosie\nMass Strike in Dublin 1913\nTGWU","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line456862"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6644361019134521,"wiki_prob":0.33556389808654785,"text":"papagalaamg\nп»їIn 2017, Hurricane Maria caused devastation to the island of Puerto Rico and viagra without doctor prescription its residents but until now, the health impacts of this storm on vulnerable populations, including people living with HIV were unknown. The study, conducted in San Juan, also found that HIV care outcomes were related to the participants' pre-hurricane viral suppression status.Through a computer-assisted personal interview, the researchers studied a cohort of people living with HIV and a history of substance use from the San Juan Metropolitan Area using a generic viagra without subscription social and behavioral assessment. They also collected blood samples to measure CD4 and viral load at the study launch and at 6-month follow-up visits, including time points before and after the Hurricane.Indicators such as homelessness, drug and alcohol use in the past 6 months, depression, physical abuse/interpersonal violence, access to care, and social support, among others, were also assessed.Viral suppression decreased from 71 percent to 65 percent across the sample as a result of the impacts of Hurricane Maria, and access to care was reduced by over 22 percent. Study participants who generic viagra sildenafil citrate were not virally suppressed pre-Hurricane Maria had significantly less access to care and lower medication adherence, but made a greater number of hospital/clinic/outpatient visits post-Hurricane Maria compared to pre-Hurricane Maria.The impact of Hurricane Maria on people living with HIV with a history of substance use in San Juan was mixed, observed Diana Hernandez, PhD, first author and Assistant Professor of generic viagra Sociomedical Sciences at Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health. But from our results it is clear to see the benefits of conducting further research that will help us understand divergent paths following natural disasters for vulnerable populations.Co-authors include Lisa R. Metsch, Pedro C. Castellon, Sandra Miranda de Leon, Glenda O. Davila-Torres, Yue Pan, Allan E. Rodriguez, Iveth G. Yanez, Mariela Maisonet Alejandro, Wilmarie L. Calderon Alicea, Gabriel Cardenas, Hector Melendez, Lauren Gooden, Daniel J. Feaster and Jorge Santana-Bagur. Weill Cornell Medical College (led by Bruce Schackman, canadian pharmacy) is also collaborating on this study.The study was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse R59DA085880. The study principal investigators are Lisa R. Metsch, PhD (Columbia University), Jorge Santana-Bagur, MD (University of Puerto Rico) and Sandra Miranda de Leon, MPH Puerto Rico Department of Health. Papa","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line184488"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9516223073005676,"wiki_prob":0.9516223073005676,"text":"Koch Adds Three Labels\nBy David Greenwald | June 23, 2006 12:00 AM EDT\nHBD, Worldwide and Taxi link with distro.\nPort Washington, N.Y.-based Koch Entertainment Distribution has announced exclusive, North American agreements with three independent record labels. Koch will handle releases from HBD Label Group, Worldwide Music, Inc. and Taxi Records.\nThe reggae-focused Taxi Records is owned by Grammy-winners Sly & Robbie. The 30 year-old company has previously issued albums through Island /Universal, and upcoming Koch-distributed releases include Sly & Robbie’s “Rhythm Doubles” featuring Wyclef Jean, Bounty Killer and Beres Hammond, as well as the tribute album “Greetings to Led Zeppelin + Queen.”\nThe HBD Label Group, which boasts its own overseas distribution network, encompasses urban and electronic labels. Koch is the company’s first distributor.\nWorldwide Music, Inc. is a gospel label founded alongside Gospel Truth Magazine by Kerry Douglas. The company’s releases were previously handled by Navarre.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line450111"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9838321805000305,"wiki_prob":0.9838321805000305,"text":"Tippi Blevins: C | 166 USERS: A-\nHardy Boy, Your Angels Came Home to Roost\nBy Tippi Blevins | Season 9\t| Episode 9\t| Aired on 12.03.2013\nThe next day, Metatron and Gadreel meet somewhere by the freeway. \"Frankly, I never got used to them,\" Metatron says. He's talking about humans. They're emotional basket cases. Gadreel agrees: \"Sam Winchester? It is a mess in here. And the brother? I do not know where to start.\" Metatron says he can free him from all this messy humanity. \"You would be the ruler of this new Heaven, correct?\" asks Gadreel. \"It is a burden I feel I must accept,\" Metatron says, after making a show of great reluctance. \"Then, does that not make you God?\" Gadreel asks. Metatron giggles, unable for a moment to contain his glee at the very idea. \"I don't know that I'd take on that name necessarily. When the time comes, we'll call me... X.\" He says it like it's something he's just spit balling on the spot when you know he's already daydreamed several scenarios wherein he introduces himself in just this way.\nSomewhere, still on the job, Castiel has managed to procure himself a tidy little motel room. He kneels beside the bed and folds his hands neatly together. \"Okay, I am unfamiliar with this end of the process,\" he says by way of apology. \"Of course, no one may be listening, but, um, I do need assistance.\" He closes his eyes, very earnest in his appeal. He tries many prayer poses from different religious faiths while the daylight wanes from the windows behind him. \"I don't know how humans do it,\" he says, exhausted.\nHe goes over to the TV and fiddles with the knobs, to no effect. \"Try plugging it in,\" says a woman's voice from outside. Castiel opens the door to find a lady park ranger. \"Surely that wasn't the answer you were seeking,\" she says. \"You're an angel,\" Castiel says. \"Muriel,\" she introduces herself. She looks at him -- really looks at him -- for the first time and realizes who he is. She turns to go. \"It can't be known that I even spoke to you,\" she says. \"I just need a moment,\" he says. There's no resisting those big, pleading eyes.\nAt the LOL, Kevin pores over the angel tablet without luck. \"Crowley said the spell to cast out the angels was irreversible,\" he reminds Dean. He stares harder at the tablet. \"This part is nearly indecipherable.\" Isn't it all indecipherable, and that's why you can't read any of it? He thinks maybe Metatron was trying to keep the words hidden, even from the prophets. Sam returns from Gadreel's outing, or maybe it's still Gadreel, since he isn't wondering aloud why he was missing for the past 10 hours. Dean fills him in on the campground massacre. Long, boring story short: Dean linked Kristin Cherubweth to the deaths in the Wyoming biker bar. For a mid-season finale, this episode sure does have a lot of drawn-out scenes of people just standing (or sitting) around and talking…and talking and talking.\nPrevious 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12Next","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line422658"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5971133708953857,"wiki_prob":0.5971133708953857,"text":"NYPD Muslim Spying Program in NYC Was a Waste of Time and Money\nBy Elle Kay\nIn what was heard around the world as the loudest “DUH” in history, the NYPD produced zero cases of suspected terrorist activity after years of eavesdropping on Muslims, according to the Associated Press. The most the NYPD could have learned from this “investigation” is where to find the best hookah, falafel, and kebab places in New York. What they were hoping to find in college organizations and local hangouts besides nerdy students and coffee lovers is beyond me.\nOn Monday, unsealed court testimonies revealed that the NYPD acknowledged that the six-year spying program “never generated a lead or triggered a terrorism investigation.” Set up with the help of the CIA, Demographic Unit, the division responsible for the surveillance program, was intended to serve as a first-line defense against terrorist activity in New York City.\nLike many of my Muslim friends who attend college in New York City, I was shocked to learn that the New York Police Department was spying on Muslim communities across the Tri-State area for six years. We felt violated, demeaned, and falsely associated with crimes we didn’t commit. It’s humiliating.\nAlthough controversial, the police are technically allowed to keep track of civilian life in New York. But lawyers believe that the NYPD stepped outside of their jurisdiction when police officers spied on Muslims outside of the Five Boroughs. Students at Yale University humorously protested against the program with a clever “Call the NYPD” photo campaign.\nNot only is the NYPD’s secret Demographic Unit unfairly targeting Muslims, it is practicing discriminatory policing against ethnic and religious groups. Muslims face enough discrimination, the most recent examples being the multiple attacks on mosques and schools during the holy month of Ramadan.\nEarlier this year the AP broke a series of stories documenting how the police spied on Muslim-owned businesses, accompanied college students on rafting trips, and infiltrated mosques. The Muslim population in New York, Connecticut, and New Jersey was outraged.\nThe NYPD reports read like prejudiced tourist guides that give you the inside scoop on Albanian, Egyptian, Syrian, and Moroccan neighborhoods. Each includes a list of “locations of concern,” mostly consisting of cafes and mosques. Officers made specials notes if the Arabic news channel Aljazeera was allowed on the premises, if there is a prayer area, and the nationality and gender of the owner.\nThe civil liberties and advocacy group, Center for American-Islamic Relations, released a statement in which it calls the investigation “unconstitutional … counterproductive and discriminatory.” Executive Director Muneer Awad of CAIR’s New York chapter said the police surveillance was “based on only race, ethnicity, and religion, rather than suspicion of criminal activity.”\nIn addition to wasting taxpayer dollars, the NYPD surveillance program “did not make our nation more secure and only served to harm relations between law enforcement and the communities they serve,” Awad said.\nPolice surveillance programs aren’t new. In the 1950s and 1960s, the NYPD kept tabs on students, civil rights groups, and Communist sympathizers. New federal guidelines were established in the 1970s following a lawsuit against the police department to allow data collection related to potential terrorism, but not about political speech.\nSince September 11, 2001, officials cooperated with Muslim leaders to rebuild a broken relationship, but news of the surveillance program’s failure to produce any leads diminished all efforts, according to Michael Ward of the Newark FBI.\nPolice chief Raymond Kelly defended spying on innocent civilians, citing that the “primary goal is to keep this city safe and save lives.”\nThe reaction in Muslim and minority communities is a mixture of relief, anger, and confusion. We’re relieved that no dangerous activity was found, but at the same time we’re are angry and confused that our religion and national origins are reasons enough to start extensive surveillance programs.\nUntil Islamophobic sentiment dies down, there’s not much Muslims can do but fight back against discrimination in the most sensible way possible, and if it's through humor, then why not.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1701136"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8693348169326782,"wiki_prob":0.8693348169326782,"text":"Faraday Future’s wheels are coming off\nby Wynand Goosen | Mar 23, 2017 | Blog, Brands, China, Faraday Future, Fundraising, LeEco | 0 comments\nFaraday Future‘s wheels are coming off due to what its founder, Jia Yeutling, is calling a “big company disease,” being a cash crunch. LeEco, the Chinese equivalent of Netflix and parent company of two EV start-ups, Faraday Future in the USA and LeSee in China, is forced to sell its Silicon Valley property, earmarked for its US headquarters. The sale, reported by Reuters, to Chinese property developer, Genzon Group, will provide the company with $260 million much-needed cash.\nLeEco, now known for overpromising and massively under delivering, claimed that its premium car, the Faraday Future FF91, is a “Tesla Killer.” LeEco unveiled the FF91 “Tesla Killer” at the 2017 CES in Las Vegas along with the LeSee concept electric vehicle. While the LeSee received acclaim the launch of the FF91, on the other hand, was a real doozie. Faraday Future quickly published a highly edited version of the launch on its website, but it was too late as real events quickly went viral. See the video at this link. LeEco has also partnered with Aston Martin on the RapidE, where it will help with the development of the zero emission technology.\nFaraday Future, a contradiction in terms, is scaling back all its operations in the USA, with the headcount rumored to have halved over the last couple of months. The production facility in North Las Vegas has been scaled back significantly, and although ground-breaking started late 2016, it has just remained that, as no production facilities have been erected. The company could not even pay the $21 million deposit to Aecon despite being offered $300 million by the local authorities for building the assembly plant there. The new phased construction is in line with the company’s reduced model lineup down from 7 models to 2.\nThe 13-year-old LeEco is financially pressed on all fronts. Rumors have also been flying that it was exciting its India operations and shares in its flagship unit, Leshi Internet Information and Technology Corp Beijing lost 25% of its value in five months. LeEco, which products include consumer electronics and cellphones, such as the LePro phone were able to raise $2.2 billion from Sunac China Holdings, a property developer. The funds are however not earmarked for LeEco‘s electric car division.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line577853"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8960886597633362,"wiki_prob":0.8960886597633362,"text":"Home » Guides » Florida » State Road 575 / County Road 575\nState Road 575 travels just 2.24 miles through the Pasco County community of Lacoochee. The highway transitions to Hernando County Road 575 (Burwell Road) north to SR 50 near Ridge Manor and west from U.S. 301 to Trilby and Blanton as Pasco County Road 575.\nHernando County Road 575 extends 2.05 miles north from the SR 575 end along a portion of Withlacoochee State Forest. Pasco County Road 575 forms an L-shaped route 6.73 miles west along rural Trilby Road to County Road 41 (Blanton Road).\nCounty Road 575 east\nReassurance marker for County Road 575 east posted along Trilby Road after U.S. 98. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nU.S. 301 south merges with U.S. 98 on the five-mile drive to Dade City. Saint Catherine lies ten miles to the north along U.S. 301 in Sumter County. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nPasco County Road 575 (Trilby Road) sees a stop sign with U.S. 301. U.S. 301 north passes through Trilacoochee before entering Ridge Manor in Hernando County. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nSR 575 north\nState Road 575 takes over for Pasco County Road 575 east of U.S. 301. A reassurance shield is posted in each direction of the route. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nEntering the community of Lacoochee along SR 575 north. The state road crosses a CSX Railroad line ahead. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nCurving northward from Lacoochee, SR 575 spans the Withlacoochee River. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nSR 575 north reaches the Hernando County line and transition back into County Road 575. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nBurwell Road leads Hernando County Road 575 northward from the county line. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nApproaching the north end of County Road 575 by Mills Smokehouse Pond. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nState Road 50 travels across Hernando County from Weeki Wachee to the Little Withlacoochee River into Sumter County. Ridge Manor lies just to the west while Groveland is 21 miles to the east. Photo taken 02/09/14.\nCounty Road 575 ends at the rural intersection with SR 50 (Cortez Boulevard). SR 50 carries just two lanes through this stretch, as it passes through Withlacoochee State Forest to the east. The road expands to four lanes along side U.S. 98, between Ridge Manor and Brooksville. Photo taken 02/09/14.\n02/09/14 by AARoads\nU.S. 301\nCounty Road 41 & 541","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line219250"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6930232644081116,"wiki_prob":0.6930232644081116,"text":"\"Say what you want\", Texas plays Knuedler!\nIt's been 21 years since the very first Rock um Knuedler. Back in 1991 it was a very modest affair with 5 acts on 1 stage. This year it features 19 acts on 3 stages with Texas headlining.\n(ADW) It's been 21 years since the very first Rock um Knuedler. Back in 1991 it was a very modest affair with five acts on one stage.\nFast forward to 2011 and now the line-up boasts 19 acts on three stages with Texas headlining! Quite a journey for Luxembourg City's best known free rock concert that takes place on Place Guillaume II (or Knuedler in Luxembourgish) and Place Clairefontaine this Sunday.\nThe festival's recipe is quite simple. The chefs, Luxembourg City Tourist Office together with the Rockhal Centre de Resources, select the finest local rock music “ingredients”, mixing differing styles to produce sounds to everyone's taste. The icing on the cake of course being a headline international act and this year Texas comes to Luxembourg.\nSix years after their last album “Red Book”, Texas sets off on a greatest hits tour. The band from Scotland will once again play hits like “I don't want a lover”, “Inner smile” and \"Say what you want\".\nThe lead singer of Texas, Sharleen Spiteri, who launched a solo career, admitted, \"it made me realise how great it was when all the members of Texas are in the same room\". During their European tour, however, this is more likely to be the same tour bus.\nTexas plays on Place Guillaume II main stage at 10:15pm. However, we should not forget the long list of local acts that precede the Scots.\nWith two stages on Place Guillaume II and one on Place Clairefontaine, here is the full list of acts:\nLion Stage, Place Guillaume II\n15h00 Vintage Gigolos\n16h00 Medley Juke Box\n17h00 Heartbeat Parade\n18h00 Versus You\n19h00 Porn Queen\n20h00 Project 54\n21h00 The Side\n22h15 Texas\nHorse Stage, Place Guillaume II\n15h30 Elephant Ghost\n16h30 Anx 74\n17h30 Lumi\n18h30 Birdbones\n19h30 Lost in Pain\nPlace Clairefontaine\n15h00 Zero Point 5\n16h00 Moonlight in the desert\n17h00 Lego Trip\n18h00 Super heroes in ties\n19h00 Kate\n20h00 Music lounge, screening live from the Place Guillaume II main stage.\nFor more information check out the official Rock um Knuedler website","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1683212"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7338530421257019,"wiki_prob":0.2661469578742981,"text":"The tigers (Panthera tigris), which are essentially an Asian animal not found outside the Euro-Asian landmass, are defined by three distinct mitochondrial nucleotide sites and 12 unique micro satellite alleles. The pattern of genetic variation in these cats corresponds to the thesis that they came to India approximately 12,000 years ago after being forced to spread southwards in search of suitable habitat as successive phases of Ice Ages made northern Asia inhospitable. This recent history of tigers in the Indian subcontinent is consistent with the absence of fossil records from India prior to the late Pleistocene (approximately 11,000 years ago) and the absence of tigers in Sri Lanka, which separated from the Indian landmass due to rise in sea levels in the early Holocene (Holocene started approximately 11,500 years BP or before present). However, a recent study of two independent fossil finds from Sri Lanka, one dated to approximately 16,500 years ago, tentatively classifies them as being a tiger.\nThe Bengal tiger has been India’s national symbol since about 2500 BCE (Before the Common/Current/Christian Era; an alternative to Before Christ, abbreviated BC) when it was displayed on the Pashupati seal of the Indus Valley Civilisation (2900BC-1900BC). On the seal, the tiger, being the largest, represents the Yogi Shiva‘s people. Some of the seals of that time contain figures of which the front half is a woman and the hind half a tiger. One seal shows the naked figure of a woman, upside down with her legs apart and two tigers standing to one side. Later the animal became the royal symbol of the Chola Empire from 300 CE to 1279 CE and is now designated as the official animal of India. Tipu Sultan, who ruled the Mysore state in late 18th century (India), was also a great admirer of tiger. He was obsessed with the animal to the extent that he adorned almost everything with the tiger symbols. Even his banner carried the legend, ‘The tiger is God’. In India tiger has also found a place of prestige even in Vedic literatures. It has been celebrated in Hindu consciousness from time immemorial as the divine vehicle of the goddess of power, Durga or Shakti. In modern India too it has been given place of pride by Reserve Bank of India, which has chosen it as its emblem. Even the currency notes are carrying its portrait.\nAs the time passed, its image as symbol of power seems to have transcended the earlier boundaries and the cat appeared over and over again in mosaics, murals, carvings and other artistic works, cultures, religious and administrative records of various nations and societies from North Africa and Mediterranean Europe in the west to China in the east. In India tiger has not only become subject of myths and legends, but has also been given special place by various kingdoms, big or small.\n9 opinions on “Tiger History in Indian Subcontinent”\njhon smith says:\nI went over this web site and I believe you have a lot of superb information, saved to bookmarks (:.\nAndrea Milling says:\nEllsworth Castorena says:\nDo you realize your website is advised by many other sites? Great products. Thank you a lot!\nChrista Veld says:\nI’m impressed, I need to say. Actually rarely do I encounter a blog that’s each educative and entertaining, and let me tell you, you may have hit the nail on the head. Your idea is excellent; the difficulty is something that not sufficient individuals are speaking intelligently about. I’m very glad that I stumbled throughout this in my search for one thing regarding this.\nVon Drabant says:\nHi there, just became aware of your blog through Google, and found that it’s really informative. I’m gonna watch out for brussels. I will be grateful if you continue this in future. Numerous people will be benefited from your writing. Cheers!\nralph lauren says:\nCongratulations for posting such a useful blog. Your blog isn’t only informative but also extremely artistic too. There usually are extremely couple of individuals who can write not so easy articles that creatively. Keep up the good writing !!\nStephine Dibona says:\nDo you people have a facebook or twitter fan web page? I looked for one on twitter but couldn’t locate one, I’d really like to become a fan!\nValuable information. Lucky me I found your website accidentally, and I’m shocked why this coincidence didn’t took place earlier! I bookmarked it.\nLonnie Ha says:\nWe are a group of volunteers and starting a new scheme in our community. Your site offered us with valuable information to work on. You’ve done a formidable job and our entire community will be thankful to you.\n− 4 = one","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line193992"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7091299295425415,"wiki_prob":0.2908700704574585,"text":"APPEARS IN News\nFederal Ammunition Sales Regulation: A Proven Failure\nRecent calls for federal regulations and restrictions on ammunition sales ignore the failure of such laws in the past. They also ignore the impracticality of imposing and enforcing similar controls in today's huge ammunition market. The National Shooting Sports Foundation estimates that 10-12 billion rounds of ammunition are produced domestically each year, while billions more are imported.\nThe Gun Control Act of 1968 required federal licensing for all ammunition dealers, and required that a record be kept on all handgun ammunition sales by retailers—including the popular .22 rimfire cartridges. The requirements proved to be such a heavy burden on retailers that in 1982, Congress removed .22 caliber rimfire ammunition from the record-keeping requirement.\nEven with that change, the value of ammunition sales licensing and record keeping was doubted by many, including the nation's top firearms law enforcement officials. In 1984, the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee concluded that ammunition dealer licensing \"was not necessary to facilitate legitimate Federal law enforcement interests.\"1 In 1986, the director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms supported eliminating the record keeping requirement: \"The Bureau and the [Treasury] Department have recognized that current recordkeeping requirements for ammunition have no substantial law enforcement value.\"2 As a result, the Firearms Owners Protection Act of 1986 repealed the ammunition restrictions, with little opposition despite heated debate over other provisions of the bill.\nMore recently, anti-gun politicians have called for bans or restrictions on online or mail order ammunition sales. But limiting the ability of law-abiding gun owners to purchase ammunition online or through catalogs will not prevent any criminal from purchasing ammunition from a local retailer. A box or case of ammunition is the same if it is bought from a local gun store, a big box retailer, or an online seller. And as with sales of other regulated products, online retailers take practical measures to verify the age of shoppers—usually by requiring a copy of the buyer's driver's license and requiring an adult signature for delivery of the package.\nFinally, limiting the quantity of ammunition a gun owner may purchase online or by mail will only affect the law-abiding. Criminals typically fire only small quantities of ammunition during attacks. Leading criminologist Gary Kleck describes numerous studies showing that armed assaults usually involve either no shots or only a few shots fired, noting that \"Even in a sample of gun attacks on armed police officers, where the incidents are more likely to be mutual combat gunfights with many shots fired, the suspects fired an average of only 3.7 times.\"3\nIn contrast, it is not at all unusual for top pistol, rifle and shotgun competitors to fire tens of thousands of rounds per year. Law-abiding competitive and recreational shooters regularly buy ammunition in bulk, saving money on the large quantities of ammunition they need to improve and maintain their skills.\nEven in the international arena, the United States recognizes the fundamental problems inherent in regulating ammunition. As the top U.S. negotiator at U.N. Conference on the Arms Trade Treaty put it: \"Ammunition is a fundamentally different commodity than everything else we have discussed … It is fungible, consumable, reloadable, and cannot be marked in any practical way that would permit it to be tracked or traced. Any practical proposal for ammunition would need to consider the significant burdens associated with licensing, authorizations, and recordkeeping for ammunition that is produced and transferred in the billions of rounds per year.\"4 That statement holds just as true for recently proposed domestic controls.\n1. Federal Firearms Owners Protection Act, S. Rept. 98-583, Aug. 6, 1984.\n2. Legislation To Modify the 1968 Gun Control Act, Hearing Report, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. House of Representatives, October 38, 30, Nov. 8, 1985, and February 19 and 27, 1986. The BATF was an agency of the Treasury Department until 2003.\n3. Gary Kleck, Targeting Guns 123 (1997).\n3. UN arms trade treaty shouldn't regulate ammunition, The Hill, July 10, 2012 (http://thehill.com/blogs/global-affairs/un-treaties/236969-us-says-un-arms-trade-treaty-shouldnt-cover-ammunition)\nAmmunition ammunition sales\nUP NEXT x\nObama calls for gun control\nCalifornia: Lead Free Ammunition Required for All Hunting as of July 1\nCalifornia Call to Action: Help NRA and CRPA Fight the New Ammo Laws!\n60 Minutes “Research” Discovers Bullets Can Cause Damage\nCalifornia: Ammunition Background Check Takes Effect July 1","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line546632"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8925589919090271,"wiki_prob":0.8925589919090271,"text":"Trial starts in Las Vegas over Harry Reid’s exercise band injuries\nLawyers for former U.S. Sen. Harry Reid and the makers of a resistance exercise band started jury selection Monday in a case that stems from an incident that blinded Reid in his right eye.\nBy\tDavid Ferrara\t/ Las Vegas Review-Journal\nUpdated March 25, 2019 - 6:05 pm\nFormer U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, who sued the makers of an exercise band after injuring his eye, leaves the courtroom after attending the first day of jury selection in his civil trial at the Regional Justice Center on Monday, March. 25, 2019, in Las Vegas. Bizuayehu Tesfaye Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfaye\nThen-Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada, joined by Sen. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., takes questions from reporters during a news conference on Capitol Hill in Washington on Feb. 10, 2015, for the first time after suffering an eye injury and broken ribs while exercising on New Year's Day. (J. Scott Applewhite/AP)\nFormer U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, who sued the makers of an exercise band after injuring his eye, leaves the courtroom after attending the first day of jury selection in his civil trial at the Regional Justice Center on Monday, March. 25, 2019, in las Vegas. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfaye)\nFormer U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, who sued the makers of an exercise band after injuring his eye, leaves the courtroom with his wife, Landra Gould, after attending the first day of jury selection in Reid's civil trial at the Regional Justice Center on Monday, March. 25, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfaye)\nFormer U.S. Sen. Harry Reid, who sued the makers of an exercise band after injuring his eye, leaves the courtroom in a wheelchair after attending the first day of jury selection in his civil trial at the Regional Justice Center on Monday, March. 25, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfaye)\nThen-Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid of Nevada talks to reporters on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 22, 2015, for the first time after suffering an eye injury and broken ribs while exercising on New Year's Day. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)\nU.S. Senator Harry Reid, D-Nev., celebrates with his wife, Landra Gould, during an election night party at Aria hotel-casino in Las Vegas in November 2010. Reid overcame a four-point deficit in pre-election poles to beat his Republican challenger, Sharron Angle. (File Photo)\nDistrict Judge Joe Hardy Jr. speaks during a case update involving former Sen. Harry Reid at the Regional Justice Center in Las Vegas on Feb. 20, 2019. Reid and his wife are suing the makers of a resistance exercise band the former politician blames for an accident that left him blind in his right eye. (Erik Verduzco/Las Vegas Review-Journal) @Erik_Verduzco\nAttorneys Colin Esgro, left, and James Morgan, representing former Sen. Harry Reid, during a case update at the Regional Justice Center in Las Vegas on Feb. 20, 2019. Reid and his wife are suing the makers of a resistance exercise band the former politician blames for an accident that left him blind in his right eye. (Erik Verduzco/Las Vegas Review-Journal) @Erik_Verduzco\nFormer U.S. Sen. Harry Reid was seated in a wheelchair Monday when his lawyer paused to address the political views emanating from a group of potential jurors in a Las Vegas courtroom.\n“Our country is about as split as it could be,” said the attorney, Jim Wilkes. “We can’t fix policy today. We’re here about a civil lawsuit. This is about one person’s litigation.”\nReid, now 79, sued the makers of a resistance exercise band after an incident that blinded him in his right eye more than four years ago. But as the trial in the case opened, several jurors seemed more focused on Reid’s political views.\n“Do you question the senator’s veracity?” Wilkes asked one man.\n“Absolutely. He’s stated under oath that he lied,” the man said, adding that he had researched Reid online. “There’s a whole lot of stuff I know. If I say it here, everybody might have a jaundiced view without any substantiation of what I’m saying.”\nWithin a few moments, the man was excused from the panel.\nFinding an impartial jury\nRoughly 20 people in an opening panel of about 100 indicated a possible bias because they recognized Reid or knew of his injury.\n“I’ve lived in Nevada a long time,” one man said, “and I’m familiar with Sen. Harry Reid and his politicking.”\nAnother potential juror could be heard saying: “That’s a nice way to put it.”\nWilkes asked one man directly about his views on Reid.\n“I have issues personally with him,” said the man, who was ultimately dismissed.\n“You have a negative opinion of Sen. Reid?” Wilkes asked.\n“It isn’t positive,” the man replied.\nAt one point, Wilkes joked: “Does everybody understand you don’t have to become a Democrat if you serve on this case?”\nAnother man, who remained among the potential jurors as the trial recessed for the day, stated: “I have a very positive bias toward Senator Reid.”\nSeveral prospective jurors said they could set aside their political views and remain fair in their decision.\nIn late 2015, Reid and his wife of 60 years, Landra Gould, filed a product liability lawsuit against three defendants: Hygenic Intangible Property Holding Co., The Hygenic Corp. and Performance Health LLC.\nThe trial before District Judge Joe Hardy Jr. is scheduled to last into next week.\nReid told the Las Vegas Review-Journal in an interview last month that he was still blind in his right eye. When asked whether he was prepared to testify during the trial, Reid responded, “Whatever.”\nAbout two months after his injury, Reid, Senate minority leader at the time, announced that he would not seek re-election. He had served in the Senate since 1987.\nReid said his injury played a role in his decision not to seek re-election in 2016.\n“It sure didn’t help it,” he said, then adding, “It was one of the things that entered into it.”\nHe said that following the injury he had a problem with depth perception, particularly when he was speaking on a small stage. He said then-House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio, would help him.\n“John Boehner, to his credit, would point me in the right direction,” Reid said.\nJury selection is slated to continue into Tuesday afternoon.\nLawyers involved in the suit seemed to know the process might be a struggle. A proposed list of questions includes:\n—What is your opinion about Harry Reid?\n—What are your thoughts on politicians telling the truth?\n—Do you think that politicians tell the truth all the time?\n—Do you think that it is acceptable for politicians to not tell the truth at times?”\nReid, who was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer last year, arrived Monday wearing a dark blue suit and was accompanied by his wife, who was wearing a dark blue dress.\nNegligence allegation\nThe suit alleges that the three defendants “combined to create, manufacture and market a defective product called TheraBand or Thera-Band exercise band.”\nReid has said he was injured while exercising with the band, which was latched to a “sturdy object” in January 2015 in the bathroom of his Henderson home.\n“While in use, the TheraBand broke or slipped out of Mr. Reid’s hand,” the lawsuit states, “causing him to spin around and strike his face on a cabinet.”\nAs Wilkes asked jurors about Reid’s litigation, some in the panel said they had concerns about whether Reid should have filed suit because of the health care benefits he received as a member of Congress.\n“I feel that it is a user error,” said one woman, who remained on the panel, referring to the exercise band. “I don’t know the circumstances, but that’s just my opinion.”\nAlong with losing vision in his right eye, Reid suffered a concussion, broken orbital bones, severe disfigurement to his face, bruising and lacerations on his face, hand injuries, scarring and broken ribs.\nThe lawsuit accuses the defendants of negligence and failure to warn.\nIt alleges that the exercise band makers should have known of the “danger of injury to consumers, especially to the elderly, as a result of TheraBands breaking or slipping out of their hands while mounted to various sturdy objects.”\nContact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-1039. Follow @randompoker on Twitter. Washington, D.C., correspondent Gary Martin contributed to this story.\nPosted on: News, Politics and Government\nAssemblywoman Daniele Monroe-Moreno hosts BBQ - Video\nAssembly Woman Daniele Monroe-Moreno hosts BBQ to bring the community together to hear about the candidates up for election and for people to gather and have fun.\nDemocrat Virtual Caucus - Video\nThe Right Take: Biden's Racially Questionable Comments\nJoe Biden has uttered racially charged statements for years. Now that he’s the frontrunner for the Democrat presidential nomination, he may finally face prolonged scrutiny for them.\nChristopher Rufo Discusses Homelessness In The USA - VIDEO\nChristopher Rufo discusses homelessness in the United States and how politicians can work to improve conditions for those with drug addictions.\nClark County 2019 Election Results - Video\nThe 2019 Elections wrap up in Clark County including an upset in the Boulder City Mayor race.\nGreene discusses Read by 3 and Opportunity Scholarships - VIDEO\nThe Nevada Legislative Session is over and the results are mixed for Nevada students, according to Tom Greene, Senior regional legislative director, Excel in Ed in Action.\nThe Right Take New Education Funding Plan - VIDEO\nOn Monday, Senate Education Committee chair Mo Denis, D-Las Vegas, released a new education funding formula. For years, many Democrat politicians have criticized the current education funding formula, called the Nevada Plan. They claim it’s old and outdated. Their biggest beef is that it doesn’t allocate more money for students who are English Language Learners or live in poverty. The theory is that it’s harder to educate those students and so they need additional services, which costs additional money.\nAl Gore Speaks At UNLV About Climate Change - Video\nFormer Vice President of the United States Al Gore talks to an audience at UNLV about the effects of Climate change and how to switch to renewable sources of energy.\nForum on Wages and Working People Highlights - VIDEO\nPresidential candidates Elizabeth Warren, Beto O'Rourke, Kamala Harris, Amy Klobuchar, Julian Castro, and John Hickenlooper speak in Las Vegas, Nevada.\nNevada Politics Today Valerie Weber - VIDEO\nValerie Weber sits down with Victor Joecks to discuss her policies and why she is running for Ward 2 of the Las Vegas City Council.\nMay-Brown describes why some with disabilities need the subminimum wage - VIDEO\nEliminating the subminimum wage will end training and work opportunities for some members of the disabled community. Instead of doing something productive, they would be relegated to adult day care. That’s according to Tracy May-Brown, Opportunity Village’s director of advocacy, board and government relations.\nLas Vegas at forefront of new effort to head off veteran suicides\nBy Briana Erickson and Mia Sims / RJ\nMilitary veterans die of suicide at a far higher rate than their civilian counterparts, but Las Vegas is one of eight cities at the forefront of an effort to change that.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1049396"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8636518716812134,"wiki_prob":0.8636518716812134,"text":"Home News Boyers sell Buglin’ Bull\nBoyers sell Buglin’ Bull\nThe Buglin’ Bull Restaurant and Sports Bar changed hands last week, as WR Hospitality purchased the property from owners, from left, Johnathan Stahl and Janet and Brian Boyer. The trio decided to sell the business after deciding to scale down their business interests and hectic schedules as Brian fights cancer. [Submitted Photo/Deb Wallenberg]\nAlmost a decade after they purchased it, Brian and Janet Boyer have sold the Buglin’ Bull Sports Bar and Restaurant.\nIt was October 2009 when the Boyers and Johnathan Stahl added the restaurant to their growing list of business interests, but at that time the restaurant was known as Elk Canyon Steakhouse. The group spent around eight months renovating the restaurant and opened for business as the Buglin’ Bull June 17, 2010.\nYesterday morning, the Buglin’ Bull became the property of WR Hospitality in connection with Ramkota Companies.\nThe sale was all about quality of life for the Boyers and Stahl, or, more importantly, the quality of life for Brian Boyer. Brian continues to battle pancreatic cancer, an especially devastating form of cancer that can have very low survival rates depending on the stage of the cancer.\nThe Boyers made the decision to sell the Buglin’ Bull in September of last year and met with a realtor that fall. By January, Janet Boyer said, the talks to sell the Buglin’ Bull had gotten serious.\n“We did not want to sell the Bull, but we just absolutely cherish quality of life and this will give us a better quality of life, simply because we will have more time as a family,” Janet said.\nBrian has undergone 15 rounds of chemotherapy and understands the grimness of the disease he carries. However, on the positive side, the cancer has not progressed since he began chemotherapy.\nBrian said selling the Buglin’ Bull is bittersweet due to the friends made through the business and the employees who became like family.\n“It’s hard to walk away,” he said.\nStahl, who spent five to six nights a week there to make sure things were operating smoothly, said the time was right to sell, calling the 10 years they owned the business a great run.\n“We had a great community behind us,” he said. “We were very supportive of the community and it supported us. We just need to take a little bit of a load off.”\nAnother silver lining, Janet says, is the sale of the business to WR Hospitality. It was the only company they wanted to sell the business to because of the company’s extensive history in the restaurant business and quality reputation.\n“They truly do understand the hospitality industry,” she said. “We feel with them coming in, the food scene will be elevated. From the beginning, this is the only company we worked with.”\nWR Hospitality owns and operates the Minerva’s restaurants in South Dakota, along with RedRossa restaurants in the state and Augie’s Sports Bar and the Deadwood Grille at The Lodge in Deadwood. It also helps with food and beverage in Custer State Park, where Regency Hotel Management, the management arm of Ramkota Companies, manages the park’s resorts. Regency also manages two other Custer businesses under the Ramkota umbrella: the Kleemann House and Rock Crest Lodge, another former Boyer property.\nJosh Schmaltz, chief operating officer for Ramkota Companies, called the purchase of the Buglin’ Bull another great opportunity to be in “the thriving Custer community.”\n“We love what the community has done as a whole, capitalizing on all the tourists coming to the area,” he said. “It’s a thriving community and we wanted to be involved in it, not just in the capacity of Custer State Park. There are great opportunities in Custer. The success Custer has had to this point is just the beginning, so why not be a part of it in a larger capacity?”\nSchmaltz said, while there will be some changes to the Buglin’ Bull, plans for now are to operate it as it is. Any changes will come after the summer tourist season.\nThe Buglin’ Bull will remain open during the winter, Schmaltz said, as WR Hospitality investigates ways to perhaps even expand during the winter. Perhaps the best news of all for the town is that all of the restaurant’s employees who want to be retained will be retained and will receive the benefits package WR Hospitality offers, such as health insurance, a 401k plan, etc.\nSchmaltz said there is no general manager in place for the restaurant yet and, because of that, Don Anderson, president of WR Hospitality, along with some other WR employees, will be onsite for at least the next 30 days to ensure the transition runs smoothly.\nAs for the Boyers and Stahl, as Stahl says, they are not going anywhere; the family still has its other business interests — Mount Rushmore Brewing Co., The Begging Burro and Custer Car Wash — to keep them busy.\n“We appreciate all the support the past 10 years. The community has been great,” Brian said. “It’s been fun to have been a part of downtown Custer.”\n“Our staff is a wonderful staff. We couldn’t have done it without them for 10 years,” Janet added. “I really appreciate the fact we have had the opportunity to support different organizations and different parts of the community and to be a part of the community. It’s just been a blessing.”\nPrevious articleTeslas coming here May 17\nNext articleEight days in Custer County","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line139551"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6918322443962097,"wiki_prob":0.6918322443962097,"text":"John?s Cafe closes after three years in downtown Palo Alto\nUploaded: Jan 5, 2015\nThe usually bright and airy John's Cafe at Lytton Avenue and Waverley Street in downtown Palo Alto looked decidedly different Monday afternoon, with glass bakery cases and the refrigerator empty, furniture stacked on itself and half-used packs of soda and water bottle sitting on tables. Owner John Adams, a longtime Palo Alto resident and former high-tech employee, decided to close the cafe Dec. 30 after a three-year run.\n\"I was working a lot of long hours and (the cafe) probably wasn't as busy as I was hoping it would be,\" Adams said Monday. \"But we had good business; we had great employees and all the customers. I think I was just spending too much time here.\n\"It appears to be time to move on,\" he said.\nA sign outside John's Cafe reads, \"John's Cafe is closed (Dec. 30 for good). Thanks for your support and have a great new year!\"\nAdams opened the cafe at 401 Lytton Ave. in 2011 after a career in high-tech. Adams ran his own market-research company for more than 20 years, worked for Yahoo and Nielsen and was consulting when he decided to open a café.\n\"I was walking across the street from Mollie Stone's and there was a 'for lease' sign on a restaurant that was there and a little light bulb turned on,\" Adams remembered. He said to himself, \"'Hey, maybe I'll do that.'\"\nHe said he wanted it to be an \"all-around cafe,\" though they specialized in freshly made paninis. All meats were made in house ? the ham baked, the turkey slow-roasted for hours and the chicken and tri-tip made on a grill that sat outside the front of the cafe. The café also served coffee, soups, salads, breakfast items and baked goods. Adams also added \"John's Cafe At Night\" with wine tastings, games and specialty dinner items.\nAdams said one of the most surprising yet gratifying things about opening the café was that it became a place that customers were attached to.\n\"You think you're opening up your cafe and what you realize quickly is that the people who come in take it over and it's their cafe. If you change something on the menu, it's like, 'You changed my menu!'\" he laughed. \"That's probably one of the gratifying or just really interesting things that happens. You think you own it and it turns out that it becomes, without you knowing it, community property.\"\nAdams said he's \"pretty sure\" the person who took over his lease will be opening a restaurant, though he doesn't know what kind.\nShort term, he said he'll probably get back into market research or consulting, though he's not ruling out another cafe.\n\"If I have another cafe I will probably try to have it on a beach somewhere,\" he laughed.\nPosted by AJ, a resident of Another Palo Alto neighborhood,\non Jan 5, 2015 at 6:59 pm\nSounds like I could have gotten attached, too -- if I had known it was there! All the best to you, John!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1116187"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8890385031700134,"wiki_prob":0.8890385031700134,"text":"'The Simpsons Intro': Russian arthouse version of the famous cartoon hits YouTube\nYekaterina Sinelschikova\nLazy Square\nAs well as rethinking The Simpsons, Alexei Semenov has made trash animations about Barack Obama, The Terminator, Pennywise the clown, and even an existential video about his own thirtieth birthday – each lasting less than 30 seconds.\nMoscow designer Alexei Semenov makes super-short trash animations inspired by American pop culture. He publishes them on YouTube under the name Lazy Square, where he uploads real and joke advertising videos. It is the latter that have brought him more fame.\nHis latest work – which gives the legendary Simpsons a dose of Russia reality – became an online hit. The short clip (entitled “The Simpsons. Russian Art Film Version”) features a Russian “Lisa” who plays the saxophone in a dingy underpass, a “Bart” reimagined as a Russian “gopnik,” a “Homer” who works as a security guard, and a “Marge” who cusses like there’s no tomorrow. As for how it ends, see for yourself. Semenov’s longest work to date, it lasts… just over a minute. As the name might suggest, Lazy Square prefers the super-short format.\nSemenov creates the videos all by himself. Meanwhile, his main business is Serious About, which he runs with his wife. Under this brand, they sell designer badges and other eye-catching trinkets. It was for this project that Semenov first started making animations. For example, here’s an ad for a sex doll sold by Serious About.\nAnimation soon turned into a hobby. Before the arrival of The Simpsons, his most popular video was Terminator 2½ – about a liquid robot in the form of a killer spoon.\nThe average video takes about six weeks to make. He currently has no plans to up the tempo due to his “universal laziness.” On the occasion of his 30th birthday, Semenov shot a 30-second video about his life thus far, tellingly named “30 wasted years.”\n“Ever since childhood, I had no goals, didn’t do anything, didn’t aim for anything, blew a couple of talents, f***ed up a few opportunities. I was a drifter, like lots of others judging by the comments,” he once said in an interview.\nHe says he has no interest in promotion or attracting clients, and just draws what he wants. His main sources of inspiration are usually old Hollywood films like It or A Nightmare on Elm Street, and U.S. pop culture, especially animation: The Simpsons, Family Guy, Futurama, South Park. “But it was Rick and Morty that totally shook up my mind. The darker and edgier the humor, the better,” recalls Semenov.\nSemenov also made an ironic ad for NASA and imagined what Barack Obama did on his first day after leaving the Oval Office:\nSuperheroes, too, have been given the Semenov treatment. Meet Tomatoman, who extracts ketchup from near empty bottles, and Mr Tea Bag, who solves humanity’s second most urgent problem – pulling tea bags out of mugs when the string and label have gone overboard.\nOn the Russian theme, besides The Simpsons, there is a short “comedy” about out-of-town residential developments. In it, a “happy” mortgagee regurgitates standard marketing slogans about the “benefits” of such housing before opening a window and... It’s pretty clear even if you don’t know Russian.\nIf using any of Russia Beyond's content, partly or in full, always provide an active hyperlink to the original material.\nanimation social media youtube cartoon\nHow one railway line through Siberia crushed lives in the name of communism (PHOTOS)\nHow did the Soviet economy work and why did it fail?\nBlack hole of the 1990s: The lawless market where people could buy guns and go into hiding (PHOTOS)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1476396"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5384211540222168,"wiki_prob":0.4615788459777832,"text":"Allan Rayman is Letting the Music Speak for Itself\nBy Latecia Joiner\nBeatrice Hazlehurst\nBelieve you us, songwriter and powerhouse vocalist Allan Rayman is on the verge of shaking the music industry to its core. Since his debut in 2016 with Hotel Allan, the Toronto-based Wyoming-native has been steadily making his mark, recently wrapping a 30-date world tour and hitting every live session in town.\nNow, Rayman is back again with a double visual release for \"Word of Mouth\" and \"Go My Way,\" the objective bangers from his recent EP,Courtney. The former reads like a hyperrealistic documentation of his time on tour, while \"Go My Way\" sees the singer search out a lost love. PAPER sat down with the soft-spoke rocker to talk inspiration, adventures abroad and why the center of attention is overrated.\nI heard that this is the first real conversation you've chosen to have with a publication. Why is that?\nI think it's important to let my music do the talking, give people that creative room to come up with their own stories, if that makes sense. For me most of the people I endear in the industry were musicians. You don't get to meet them so you kind of develop your own theories and opinions. I think by having very little out there allows people to shape their own opinions around me. In their minds I'm whoever they want Allan to be but at the same time I can't live up to what their expectations are.\nYou aren't concerned you might be holding too much back?\nI think naturally that worry does come into play. I think from outside sources, when they ask you what you really want from all of this, playing the game, and giving out more and more about yourself is an important thing. To me it doesn't really matter. I just want to make music and have fun doing it. I think all that other stuff is just extra but does get you to where you want to go faster. I'm in no rush. If I don't have to do it I choose not to. I think its about allowing people to give that creative space. Allan Rayman can be so many different people to so many different people. Why take that away from somebody by starting to completely define characteristics of this person in the public. Why ruin that?\nYou just wrapped your tour, how was that experience for you?\nIt was great. One of the main things as an artist is to get out there and expose yourself. For me that's always been the most important aspect of my music. If you can't do this on a stage then don't try to do it in a studio. So if you don't hit that note then just leave it because you can't hit it onstage. That's where I have the most fun doing what I'm doing. For me it's the best part.\nHow was Europe?\nWe were in Paris for a longer amount of time so we got to walk around there. We went to this cemetery where a bunch of different creatives have been buried. Jim Morrison, who is obviously is a huge inspiration for me, he was buried there. It was great. We walked around this old gothic cemetery.\nThat's so fucking cool.\nYeah there were a lot of different artists there but I think the most sought after one is his [Morrison's.] People leave bottles of liquor, and roses, and stuff. It's pretty crazy.\nI know for Courtney you went in a totally different direction in comparison to past work you've done, expand on that for me.\nI think it goes back to keeping people on their toes and being knowledgeable to jump in and out of different genres. It's an experiment. At the end of the day I think that as an artist you should always try to push limits and explore. Things like that keep you evolving and keeps it fresh.\nWas that also your approach to these new videos?\nExactly. I just wanted this whole project to have that feel. \"Go My Way\" was high contrast and a green screen and looked almost cocky and played out. I think it's good to poke fun and not be taken too seriously. At the end of the day you get to do what you love to do so you should have fun with it.\nWhat's can we expect next from Allan Rayman?\nContinuing to build, continuing to put out good projects, content, marketing campaigns, touring, just continuing to build off of what we have already built. I just have to keep it fresh. I'm working on a couple of projects right now and I'm really excited about those. For me it's just about finding my place in all of this, taking my time with it, and making sure the people that I keep close to me also enjoy it. Thee story that started with Courtney isn't finished.\nCheck out \"Go My Way\" and \"Word of Mouth\" below.\nAll images supplied\nHarry Styles Won't Be Playing Elvis\nKelly Clarkson Wants Taylor Swift to Re-Record Her Songs\nScarlett Johansson: My Quote Was Edited for 'Clickbait'","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line624653"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9828736186027527,"wiki_prob":0.9828736186027527,"text":"Phillips told Nola being a utility infielder likely wouldn’t create the path to a major-league job. He then gave Nola a possible alternative — “Have you ever thought about catching?”\nNola had never caught a game in his life — in little league, high school, college, anywhere in the minors. He wasn’t thrilled about the idea even when his younger brother Aaron, now a pitcher with the Philadelphia Phillies, would ask him to put on the gear to catch him.\nPhillips told Nola to consider it.\n“I went home, I thought about it, and thought maybe I should try it,” Nola said. “I went back the next day and said, ‘I’d like to try it.’\n“He would take me in the cage before games. We’d get there a little earlier, and just take some balls off the machine, receive a little bit, just to teach me the fundamentals of it. I kind of started to like it.”\nA few years removed from learning the position, Nola, now 29, is a regular catcher for Triple-A Tacoma. He was acquired as a free agent by Seattle’s organization during the offseason.\nEntering Wednesday night’s Rainiers game, Nola has caught 15 games, also appearing in eight games at first base, and two at third, and had yet to commit an error.\n“He can play all over the field,” Seattle Mariners director of player development Andy McKay said recently about the former LSU shortstop who was a fifth-round draft pick in 2012. “A high-end college middle infielder, he’s just another guy who is creating a lot of versatility for himself, and is giving himself more opportunities to find a way to the big leagues.”\nPlaying catcher helps Nola’s resume. But, learning arguably baseball’s toughest defensive position provided plenty of challenges.\n“It was humbling. It really was,” Nola said. “There were times my first year when I really questioned whether this was the right move.”\nNola played in the Fall League in 2016, joining Phillips who was coaching there/ He said the first game he appeared behind the plate was the hardest nine innings of his career.\nMidway through the game, Nola asked Phillips if he could be subbed out. Nola remembers missing several balls in the dirt, and being hit with catcher’s interference during the first at-bat of the game.\n“I was torn up,” he said. “I didn’t know if I wanted to catch anymore. I didn’t want to show up the next day.”\nBut, he did, and his performances continually improved.\n“I feel in a better position because of the growth and the tough times,” he said.\nBlocking was the toughest to learn, Nola said, because of his background as an infielder. Learning to call the games wasn’t easy either, he said, but he adapted quickly by learning from his own mistakes.\n“They wanted me to fail on pitch calling early to learn,” Nola said. “If I just kept looking in the dugout for assurance, I would never learn.\n“That was one thing (Phillips) helped me with a lot was, ‘No, you need to learn this. You need to put the preparation in, and then you need to fail in the game in order to learn, to get better at that part of the game.’ ”\nNola said his brother has also been helpful in his development, teaching him about how different pitchers approach the game.\n“He teaches me a lot about the tendencies, pitchers and what they like to do,” Nola said. “And, what he sees with hitters from a pitcher’s vision — what he sees compared to what I’m seeing — and shows me that.\n“Sometimes there are some unorthodox things he does that I’m like, ‘That could work on some of the guys I catch.’ That’s been a big help.”\nNola split the 2017 season between Double-A Jacksonville and New Orleans, starting in 75 games behind the plate, and catching 629-plus innings. He committed just three errors in his first season at the position, and caught 27 runners stealing.\n“I was thankful the Marlins gave me the opportunity to learn that, and take that route, because it’s a long route, it’s a tough route to learn how to catch,” Nola said.\nRainiers manager Daren Brown said Nola is a valuable player for Tacoma, and thinks he could be a valuable player in the big leagues, because of his versatility and ability to play catcher — which many utility players don’t have significant experience with.\n“He’s a really knowledgeable guy and wants to be the best at it,” Brown said. “Those are some things you really can’t measure.\n“He’s done a really nice job behind the plate, but again, he’s done a nice job wherever we’ve put him.”\nNola is also having his most productive season at the plate. He leads the Rainiers in most offensive categories among players who have appeared in more than six games.\nHe has a .364/.441/.614 slash line with a 1.055 OPS, and has hit 10 doubles and four homers while driving in a team-leading 21 runs.\n“I’m just trying to have better pitch selection, and refine my approach more, and be more disciplined at the plate,” Nola said. “I think that’s the biggest thing.”\nBrown praised Nola’s consistency — as a batter, as a catcher, and anywhere else Tacoma has played him. While there is plenty of value in Nola’s bat, and his defensive versatility, he said he favors playing catcher now.\n“I see myself as a catcher,” Nola said. “I want to become a catcher. I love the position a lot. I’ve really enjoyed learning the pitchers.\n“I like being in the game, and I like being in that part of the game. I like calling pitches, I like framing, I like doing all of the stuff. You’re in every pitch.”\nAustin Nola (14) during the game. The Tacoma Rainiers played the Albuquerque Isotopes in a Triple-A baseball game at Cheney Stadium in Tacoma, Wash., on Saturday, May 4, 2019. Joshua Bessex joshua.bessex@gateline.com\nMariners’ Austin Nola swings at a pitch in the eighth inning. The Seattle Mariners played the San Diego Padres in a exhibition baseball game at T-Mobile Park in Seattle, Wash., on Tuesday, March 26, 2019. Joshua Bessex joshua.bessex@gateline.com\nSeattle Mariners starting pitcher Nabil Crismatt, right, and catcher Austin Nola meet on the mound for a moment after Crismatt hit Chicago Cubs’ Kris Bryant with a pitch in the third inning of a spring training baseball game Tuesday, March 19, 2019, in Mesa, Ariz. Elaine Thompson AP\nLauren Smith\nLauren Smith covers the Seattle Mariners for The News Tribune. She previously covered high school sports at TNT and The Olympian, beginning in 2015. She is a graduate of the University of Washington and Emerald Ridge High School.\nMariners manager Servais on Narvaez’s career day, disappointing 7-4 loss to A’s\nServais on Mariners’ 8-2 win over Royals: ‘Marco pitching well and we’re hitting homers. That’s a good formula for us’\nMariners allow late homer, get swept by Angels to open second half\nMatt Thaiss hit a tiebreaking three-run homer in the eighth inning, and Los Angeles completed a three-game sweep of the Seattle Mariners with a 6-3 victory on Sunday.\nMORE SEATTLE MARINERS\nMariners’ Kikuchi attempts to build momentum after an up-and-down first half of the season\nTrout, Pujols power Angels to victory over Mariners\nAngels’ Cole, Pena combine for no-hitter against Mariners on night honoring Tyler Skaggs\nYou probably remember the 3-error game. The Mariners remember how Dylan Moore moved on from it\nMariners road preview: Angels, A’s on deck to open second half\nMariners would like more wins in second half but it’s all about trades and young talent","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line376788"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.72768235206604,"wiki_prob":0.72768235206604,"text":"Why We're Focusing on Mental Health\nBy Andrew Meyer • May 21, 2018\nMore than a third of Ohio residents reported poor mental health in the Kaiser Family Foundation's 2017 report.\nKAISER FAMILY FOUNDATION\n“For 29 years, I thought about mental health as someone else’s problem.”\nOn March 6th, The Players’ Tribune published an article written by Cleveland Cavs center and forward Kevin Love. The team was off to a poor start for the season. He talked about the stress from that and from personal issues. It came to a head during a game against the Atlanta Hawks. He wrote about his heart racing, not being able to catch his breath, and feeling like his mouth was chalk. He ended up at Cleveland Clinic where they ran a “bunch of tests” but found nothing.\nThe truth: Kevin Love had suffered a panic attack.\nBut he wrote he knew he couldn’t bury what happened.\nThe team connected him with a therapist.\nMonths later, Love shared his own story, and took a big step towards getting past the stigma and sharing his own struggle.\nWhether we want to admit it or not, many of us have stories about a mental-health crisis. It happens to our colleagues, our loved ones and ourselves. It is not someone else’s problem.\nThis is a story that is common to more people than you would think.\nIn a 2017 report, Mental Health America found that nearly a fifth of the people in the U.S. have a mental health condition. That’s over 43 million Americans, and more than half lack access to care.\nGraphic from Mental Health America's 2017 report.\nCredit MENTAL HEALTH AMERICA\nOhio is no different than the rest of the country; in some ways things are worse here. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, in 2017, more than a third of Ohio residents reported that they had poor mental health.\nThe federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration issues a yearly Behavioral Health Barometer.\nIn its most recent report based on data from a 2015 survey, the stats show mental health issues have been increasing over the last several years.\nThe state is either in line with or worse than the national average. More than half of Ohio residents say they have needs in dealing with mental health issues that aren’t being met.\nA colleague. A friend. A loved one. Ourselves.\nMany of us know somebody who is either struggling with a mental health concern or has been challenged in the past.\nGraphic from SAMHSA's Behavioral Health Barometer 2015 report.\nCredit SAMHSA\nWe have stories to share. We have experiences that are both distinct and yet universal. But all too often, there are a range of challenges to overcome.\nGetting past the stigma, the perception by society that mental health issues are a deficiency instead of an illness no different than any other physical ailment\nFinding the appropriate professional help\nDetermining the best course of treatment\nHaving the means to afford that help\nImproving awareness among public safety officials about mental health\nAnd knowing what the options really are when a mental health crisis is beyond your one’s own ability to deal\nWe are striving for much in our reporting. We hope to provide information and connections to resources anyone can use to get there. And most of all, we want to be a convener of a conversation, both on an intimate, one-to-one basis and amongst the larger community of Northeast Ohio. Addressing mental health issues should be no different than seeking treatment for a physical health ailment. We need to get past the stigma. We want to help light the path to better mental health in Ohio.\nMental Health America\nThe View From Pluto: Cavs' Kevin Love Starts A Much-Needed Conversation About Mental Health\nBy Amanda Rabinowitz • Mar 7, 2018\nCavs star Kevin Love revealed Tuesday that he’s been struggling with mental health issues. Love wrote in an essay published in the Players’ Tribune that he left a game in November after suffering a panic attack. He detailed how it left him confused and ashamed, and said that he’s started seeing a therapist.\nAkron Agency Will Use A Grant to Address Mental Health Among Elderly Asian Americans\nBy Mitch Felan • Jun 5, 2017\nASIA SERVICES IN ACTION\nAsian Services in Action is getting a grant from the McGregor Foundation to provide mental health resources for elderly people in Cuyahoga County.\nThe group will use the money for its Asian Senior Empowerment Program, which connects low-income Asian Americans with limited English to community and mental health services.\nHealth Insurers Are Still Skimping On Mental Health Coverage\nBy Jenny Gold • Nov 30, 2017\nIt has been nearly a decade since Congress passed the Mental Health Parity And Addiction Equity Act, with its promise to make mental health and substance abuse treatment just as easy to get as care for any other condition. Yet today, amid an opioid epidemic and a spike in the suicide rate, patients are still struggling to get access to treatment.\nHow Gaps In Mental Health Care Play Out In Emergency Rooms\nBy Shefali Luthra • Oct 17, 2016\nNearly 1 in 5 children each year suffers a psychiatric illness, according to research estimates. But a national shortage of medical specialists and inpatient facilities means that many still go untreated — despite national efforts to improve mental health care.\nCleveland Police Release Draft Guidelines for Dealing with Individuals with Mental Health Issues\nBy Annie Wu • Nov 29, 2016\nThe Cleveland Police Department has proposed new guidelines for officers called to handle health crisis situations. It’s part of the city’s police reform efforts with the U.S. Justice Department.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line173969"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.522548258304596,"wiki_prob":0.522548258304596,"text":"Pop Tart: Porn mogul Michael Lucas on the porn industry, sex and the men of Montreal\nRichard Burnett\nFamed gay-porn director and adult-film actor Michael Lucas —born Andrei Lvovich Treivas in Communist Russia in 1972— emigrated to Germany after graduating from the Moscow Law Academy in 1994. He began working as an adult performer before founding his own porn production company, Lucas Entertainment, in New York in 1998. Today Lucas has become one of the most successful producers of porn, and has used his success and notoriety to —as a media columnist and university speaker— speak out against drugs, unsafe sex and the oppression of gays, as well as support the state of Israel. Lucas was in Montreal earlier this summer and Pop Tart caught up with the opinionated entrepreneur for a fun and frank Q&A about all things porn, PrEP, LGBT civil rights, and the raid by U.S. federal investigators on the New York headquarters of popular gay-male escort site Rentboy.com. Plus, Lucas talks about his love affair with Montreal.\nPop Tart: When you started out in the porn business, did you anticipate that you’d have this incredible career and longevity?\nMichael Lucas: I was definitely hoping for a long career, because I was young and ambitious. I don’t think I anticipated such a big success. But I usually do achieve my goals, because I am very focused and hard-working.\nWhy you, and why not so many others in the adult-film industry?\nAnyone can produce a movie, but you have to have business skills to make it work. Education is a plus. I know at least 20 porn stars that opened a company, produced a few films and unfortunately lost all their savings. Vision is important, but that’s only a small part of the recipe for success. The rest is business skills.\nPorn director and adult-film actor Michael Lucas\nYou got a law degree. What made you decide to get into porn?\nAfter graduating, I moved to the West but was unable to work because I didn’t have the proper papers. I needed to start making money. I was young and had a high sex drive and someone told me that I had a big dick, so I decided to try my hand at porn.\nDo you still enjoy acting / performing in your films?\nVery much so. I love sex.\nDo you see a time when you will “retire” from your on-screen roles, and continue working strictly off-screen? Have you given yourself any kind of timeline?\nI didn’t give myself any sort of timeline. Age is just a number and I like the idea of defying age restrictions. I know incredibly hot men that are well past their 50s. It’s about leading a healthy lifestyle. Numbers don’t matter.\nFor many years you were vocally opposed to bareback sex in porn videos. Why did you change your mind?\nI wrote an article on that subject for Queerty. The short version is, times have changed. When I was doing condom scenes, there were no other ways to prevent HIV transmission. Today we have more than just condoms: We have PrEP, which has been proven to work if taken as prescribed. A person with an undetectable viral load cannot give the virus to an HIV-negative person. I myself have been on PrEP for more than two years.\nYou produced the doc Campaign of Hate: Russia and Gay Propaganda. Why did you make this film? Do you see things getting any better for LGBT Russians in the foreseeable future?\nI am very proud of that documentary and very excited that Netflix decided to show it. I grew up the Soviet Union and was a victim of homophobia myself. I have many gay friends there so I thought it was important to produce this film and help raise awareness of the mistreatment of LGBT people.\nIn fact, Russians bully, demonize and discriminate against not only gay people but anyone who is different. Russian people have been intolerant for centuries I see no reason to believe that will change. The West has no influence there. Russia resents everything progressive and that comes from the West as much as they did during the Cold War. While the Western world moves forward, Russia is going backward.\nI’ve been to Israel twice, including for Gay Pride in Tel Aviv. What do you think about charges that promoting LGBT tourism in Israel is “pinkwashing”?\nIsrael is a very accepting and tolerant Jewish state of seven million people that is unfortunately surrounded by 350 million intolerant people. Their neighbors are threatened by the only democratic country in the Middle East. “Pinkwashing” is an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that is created in order to smear and disregard the good that Israel is doing. I recently produced a documentary about the gay community in Israel. It is called Undressing Israel: Gay Men in The Promised Land.\nMichael Lucas enjoys vacationing in Montreal\nWhat is at the core of your world view —your Jewish identity or your gay identity?\nIt depends on the circumstances. If I feel discriminated against for being Jewish, then Jewish becomes my first identity; if I encounter homophobia, then my gay identity comes first. But I do not identify myself as just Jewish or gay. I have many identities, one of which is being an American patriot, and that becomes my first identity when I encounter any form of anti-Americanism during my travels.\nHow did you feel when The New Republic dubbed you “Gay Porn’s Neocon Kingpin”?\nI still do not know exactly what that means, but I enjoyed reading a profile about me in one of the oldest political magazines in America.\nAny thoughts on porn director Chi Chi LaRue checking into rehab?\nChi Chi has been fighting addiction for many years and I hope she will beat it this time. I know it is not easy; my ex-boyfriend has been in recovery for four years and there are days that are really hard. It is a daily struggle.\nSome people think young porn stars are more susceptible to the ravages of the fast life in the porn business. What do you think?\nYes, but same goes for show business in general. Just look at mainstream celebrities. Many are in and out of rehab all the time.\nWhat do you think of the police raid on Rentboy.com? Was it a homophobic action?\nMaybe, but straight escort companies are raided as well. It’s infuriating that Homeland Security decided go after harmless sex workers instead of putting that time and money toward keeping us safe from terror attacks. I pay lots of money in taxes, and I hate seeing it funding pointless efforts to prevent people from choosing what to do with their bodies.\nYou were in Montreal this summer. Why did you visit the city, and what do like about the city?\nMy best friend decided to celebrate his birthday in Montreal and a bunch of us spent a weekend in your beautiful city. It was not my first time visiting and I am sure it will not be my last. I love your old streets, the open-mindedness of your people and how gay and straight couples enjoy summer concerts together at Place des Festivals. You have lots of great art and culture and amazing food.\nHow sexy are the men in Montreal?\nVery sexy! And they speak French, which makes them even sexier!\nWhat new projects have you got in development, and is a memoir in your future plans?\nMy forties have been the best time of my life. I am trying to spend as much time as possible with friends and family, and travel to places I never been before. Life is short and I don’t want to miss out on anything important to me.\nI am not planning on writing my memoirs but I’m always happy to do interviews like this one. I also write about politics, social issues and culture for the Advocate and Out. You can read my articles and learn more about my documentaries at the newly-redesigned MichaelLucas.com.\nTwitter.com/bugsburnett\nThe Watchers Sept. 14-20: A new executioner, Neil Patrick Harris as... Madonna and Diplo join Arcade Fire members onstage at Naïve Melodie...\nBianca Del Rio brings It's Jester Joke Tour to Vancouver\nRobert Downey Jr. ready to leave Iron Man behind\nLashana Lynch to become new 007 in Bond 25: Report","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line153848"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7910860180854797,"wiki_prob":0.7910860180854797,"text":"Tag Archives: Kevin Bacon\n(Fourth viewing, On DVD, August 2017) I don’t quite understand why there isn’t already a review of Tremors on this site given that I’ve seen it so often and enjoyed it every time. But my search engine tells me there’s a big Tremors-shaped hole in my reviews database, so that gives me a perfect excuse to rave about one of my favourite B-grade movies. Tremors is not perfect, but it comes really close in its chosen monster-movie subgenre. After an introduction in which we’re promised thrills, then introduced to a few sympathetic characters, Tremors ends its first act by cleanly explaining the nature of its monsters and why they’re so dangerous. Thus having set up the rules, it then spends the next hour inventively showing its characters outwitting the creatures, while the creatures themselves show signs of intelligence. It’s vastly wittier than most other monster movies, with strong characters and a convincing sense of place. A good sense of humour balances out the horror, turning the film into an unusually accessible thriller by dint of a light-hearted tone. Kevin Bacon is terrific in the lead role, but capable supporting characters include Fred Ward, Finn Carter, Michael Gross, Reba McIntyre and practical special effects that still hold up more than twenty years later. Writer/director Ron Underwood achieved something special here. Never mind the much-inferior sequels—the original Tremors is a near-classic, well worth watching or revisiting.\nKevin BaconRon UnderwoodTremors series\n(Netflix Streaming, April 2017) While I can recognize that Footloose isn’t a great movie, it’s easy to be swept along by its charm, clearly-defined stakes and infectious energy. I happen to like the song itself a lot, and the clever opening sequence is a lot of fun to watch. Then it’s off to rural America, when a stranger, our protagonist, comes to town to bring some wholesome urban values in the Midwestern wasteland. As a treatise on blue-versus-red America, Footloose has a lot to say and did so decades before the US electoral map ossified to the point that brought you Donald J. Trump, president. But there I go tainting Footloose’s innocent fun with not-so-fun stuff. It’s far better to focus on Kevin Bacon’s career-making performance, the ludicrous chicken-tractor sequence, or John Lithgow’s turn as a persuadable preacher. Footloose, alas, does run out of steam a bit too quickly: the ending seems to peter out after resolving itself ten minutes earlier, not quite managing to deliver a decent finale. Still, it’s a fun movie with a bit of depth to offer regarding the rural-vs-urban divide. The music is also quite a bit better than that other early-eighties musical Flashdance.\nJohn-LithgowKevin Bacon\n(On Cable TV, November 2016) It seems unfair to overly criticize a film like Cop Car. At its core, it’s nothing more than a simple low-budget film that tries for something specific and achieves it successfully. As two boys somewhere in rural Midwestern USA discover a seemingly abandoned cop car and start goofing with it (driving it on the back roads, playing with the equipment it contains), they barely realize what they’ve stumbled into. It gets much worse. As they discover a man tied up in the trunk and as the film intercuts with a crooked sheriff getting rid of a body, it’s clear to us (but not to them) how much trouble they’re into. Kevin Bacon isn’t bad, but doesn’t shine as the corrupt policeman. As a small-scale rural thriller, Cop Car sets up its elements and plays with them, steadily increasing the suspense until the end. There’s an intriguing mismatch between the crooked-cop thriller and the playful nature of the two boys having a grand day out (you don’t have to be a gun enthusiast to wince at the dangerous weapons handling shown here), up until the bullets start flying and they realize the danger they’re in. But for all of the low-budget charm that Cop Car can show, it’s not quite the film it could be. The plot is noticeably thin and the pacing even worse, leading to a film that feels too long even as it merely squeaks by 90 minutes. It also back-loads its story so that by the time everything happens in the last few minutes, it seems to end far too quickly to provide proper closure. While Cop Car ends up being a calling card for director Jon Watts (who’s moving on to no less than a new Spider-Man movie), it’s not quite good enough to reach viewers outside its chosen genre.\nJon WattsKevin Bacon\n(On Cable TV, June 2012) Romantic comedies tend to live or die on the strength of their cast, so it’s a relief to see that nearly everyone headlining Crazy, Stupid, Love is at the top of their game. Steve Carell anchors the cast as a recently-separated middle-aged man seeking lifestyle counsel from a capable womanizer, but he’s surrounded by more great performances by a variety of known names in a variety of large-and-small roles, from Julianne Moore, Emma Stone, Marisa Tomei, Kevin Bacon and Ryan Gosling, alongside newer names such as Jonah Bobo and Analeigh Tipton. Veterans Tomei and Bacon are hilarious to watch in small but effective roles, but Gosling is particularly noteworthy, charming his way through a character that could have been immensely repellent in less-capable hands. After focusing on the protagonist’s attempt to recapture some of his male seductive powers, Crazy, Stupid, Love soon expands into a mosaic of romantic subplots, occasionally palming a few cards in order to deliver a few almost-cheap twists along the way. No matter, though: it leads to a relatively pleasant conclusion despite the overused (but subverted) graduation-speech plot device. Such genre-awareness is a crucial component of Crazy, Stupid, Love’s moment-to-moment interest: Beyond the well-used soundtrack (including a striking usage of Goldfrapp’s “Ooh La La”), the sharp dialogue and the snappy direction, Crazy, Stupid, Love is just a joy to watch: so much so that even the tangled subplots and tortured twists seem cute rather than annoying. And that, one could argue, is a measure of the film’s success.\nAnaleigh TiptonEmma StoneJonah BoboJulianne MooreKevin BaconMarisa TomeiRyan GoslingSteve Carell\n(On Cable TV, April 2012) For years, I wondered missing out on Flatliners had led to an embarrassing omission in my movie-going culture. Hadn’t this film earned some interest as a science-fiction film? Didn’t it star a bunch of actors who went on to bigger things? Wasn’t this one of Joel Shumacher’s best-known movies from his earlier, better period? The answer to these questions is yes… but the film itself seems a bit of a letdown after viewing. Oh, some things still work well, and may even work better than expected. Of the five main actors, Kiefer Sutherland, Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon and Oliver Platt have all gone on to big careers –with poor William Baldwin being left behind. Schumacher’s direction is backed-up with Jan de Bont’s impressive cinematography: the visuals of the film may not make much sense, but they evoke a modern-gothic atmosphere that remains distinctive even today. The high-concept of the film remains potent, with genius-level medical students voluntarily defying death to investigate the mysteries of the afterlife. Unfortunately, all of these elements don’t quite add up satisfyingly. The jump from the high concept to the characters’ personification of those concepts is weak, and the contrivances become almost too big to ignore. The idea of atonement being closely linked to death is powerful, but the way this variously follows the character is more difficult to accept. (As Platt’s character knowingly remarks, those without deep-seated traumas will end up with some fairly silly phantoms.) There is quite a bit of repetitive one-upmanship in the way the plotting unfolds, and Flatliners sadly goes too quickly from provocative idea to ordinary morality. Still, it’s easy to argue that the film is worth a look: Roberts, Sutherland and Bacon look really good in early roles, and the visual style of the film is still an achievement twenty years later. There are some good ideas in the mix (witness the visual motif of “construction” -reconstruction, deconstruction- underlying nearly each scene), the portrait of intelligent characters interacting is charming and some of the suspense still works surprisingly well when it doesn’t descend in silliness. There are a few films that qualify as “minor classics” of their era in time. While Flatliners certainly won’t climb year’s-best lists retroactively, it’s a film that remains more remarkable than many of its contemporaries. I don’t regret seeing it… and I may even have liked to see it a bit earlier.\nJan de BontJoel SchumacherJulia RobertsKevin BaconKiefer SutherlandOliver PlattWilliam Baldwin","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line115064"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9033008217811584,"wiki_prob":0.9033008217811584,"text":"Location: Dedham Massachusetts\nAncestry of Nathaniel Reynolds Packard, 2d of Brockton Massachusetts\nNathaniel Reynolds Packard, 2d, who belonged to the older school of shoe manufacturers in Brockton, and whose industry and integrity, coupled with his executive ability and iron determination, won him success in his undertakings, died at Cory Hill hospital, Boston, Nov. 6, 1908, aged seventy-five years. He was a descendant of Samuel Packard, the first of the name in America, who with his wife and child came from Windham, near Hingham, England, in the ship “Diligence,” of Ipswich, and settled first at Hingham, Mass., in 1638, thence removing to West Bridgewater, where he became one of the early settlers, and where he was a tavern-keeper\nAncestry of Elmer C. Packard of Brockton Massachusetts\nFor nearly two hundred and seventy-five years the Packard family has been one prominent and influential in New England, and it has become a most numerous family, too, many of whose members both at home and abroad have given a good account of themselves. Samuel Packard, the immigrant ancestor of this family, became one of the early settlers of the ancient town of Bridgewater, and all of the name who have gone from the Bridgewaters were probably descendants of his; in fact, nearly all of the name in this country can be traced to that place. The genealogical records following\nAncestry of Jared Shaw of East Abington, Massachusetts\nThe Shaw family with which the Beal and Reed families are allied by marriage, was founded in this country by Abraham Shaw, who came to America before 1636.\nThe Massachusetts Tax Valuation List of 1771\nThe Massachusetts Tax Valuation List of 1771 contains the names and descriptions of taxable property of nearly 38,000 individuals who resided in 152 Massachusetts towns in 1771\nGenealogy of the Rhodes Family of Taunton Massachusetts\nThrough much of the century but recently closed and on into this has dwelt in Taunton and New Bedford, Mass., a family bearing the name of Rhodes. Reference is made to some of the descendants of the late Stephen and Anna Daniels (Carpenter) Rhodes, whose birthplaces were Dedham and Foxboro, Mass., respectively. Their son, Stephen Rhodes (4), became the head of the Taunton family, several members of which in succeeding generations have given a good account of themselves in the business and social life of their community, rising to useful and substantial citizenship, and as well to responsible public trust. The names of Hon. Stephen H. Rhodes, of Boston, late president of the John Hancock Insurance Company, who for years was prominent in the activities of Taunton, a member of the board of aldermen some forty years ago, and mayor of the city for one or two years; his brother, the present John Corey Rhodes, one of the best known manufacturers of southeastern Massachusetts; another brother, the present Marcus Morton Rhodes, Esq., who for perhaps a half century or more has been actively engaged in business in Taunton, and the greater part of the period as a senior member of the firm or corporation of M. M. Rhodes & Sons Company, and at one time one of the board of water commissioners of the city; the latter’s son, George Holbrook Rhodes, long a partner and stockholder of the firm and corporation just alluded to, and for years its treasurer, many years in succession a member of the common council of Taunton and for a number of years president of that body; John Bird Rhodes, son of John Corey Rhodes, chief executive of John C. Rhodes & Co., Inc., of New Bedford; and perhaps others as well, ever stand out prominently in the annals of Taunton.\nAncestors of John Richardson Bronson of Attleboro, MA\nJOHN RICHARDSON BRONSON, M. D., who for over half a century was one of the best known practitioners of medicine in southern Massachusetts and part of Rhode Island, and who for upward of fifty years was a resident of Attleboro, was a native of Connecticut, born in the town of Middlebury, New Haven county, June 5, 1829, son of Garry and Maria (Richardson) Bronson.\nThe Bronson family was early planted in the New World. John Bronson (early of record as Brownson and Brunson) was early at Hartford. He is believed, though not certainly known, to have been one of the company who came in 1636 with Mr. Hooker, of whose church he was a member. He was a soldier in the Pequot battle of 1637. He is not named among the proprietors of Hartford in the land division of 1639; but is mentioned in the same year in the list of settlers, who by the “towne’s courtesie” had liberty “to fetch woods and keepe swine or cowes on the common.” His house lot was in the “soldiers’ field,” so called, in the north part of the old village of Hartford, on the “Neck Road” (supposed to have been given for service in the Pequot war), where he lived in 1640. He moved, about 1641 to Tunxis (Farmington) He was deputy from Farmington in May, 1651, and at several subsequent sessions, and the “constable of Farmington” in 1652. He was one of the seven pillars at the organization of the Farmington Church in 1652. His name is on the list of freemen of Farmington in 1669. He died Nov. 28, 1680.\nAncestors of Frederick Macy of New Bedford Massachusetts\nThe Macy family of New Bedford is among the oldest and most prominent families of Nantucket, the name having been identified with the business interests of New Bedford for the past seventy years. The first American ancestor of the family was Thomas Macy, clothier merchant, who came, it is said, from the county of Wilts, England, and was in Newbury, Mass., a proprietor; he was a freeman of Sept. 6, 1639. He removed to Salisbury and was town officer and deputy. He removed about 1659 from there to Chilmark; his was the first family on Nantucket island. He was a\nDescendants of William Sumner of Dorchester, MA\nThe Sumner family, to which the late Mrs. George Barstow Stetson belonged, is an old and prominent family of New England, descended from one William Sumner, who was born at Bicester, England, in 1605, son of Roger Sumner, of Bicester, Oxfordshire, and his wife Joane (Franklin).\nWilliam Sumner, the only child of Roger and Joane, married Oct. 22, 1625, Mary West, and they came to America with their four children in 1636, locating at Dorchester, Mass. He was made a freeman of the Colony May 17, 1637, and held many offices of importance, being selectman for nearly a quarter of a century. He was deputy from Dorchester to the General Court for eight years. He died Dec. 9. 1688, surviving his wife, who died June 7, 1676. Both are buried at Dorchester.\nIvers Family of Dedham, MA\nIVERS (New Bedford family). The name Ivers seems one uncommon in New England annals and the family by no means numerous. At Dedham are fragmentary records of the Ivers family name, but nothing of an early date.\nWilliam and Gregory Ivers, brothers, appear in Boston in the early part of the eighteenth century. They are said to have come about 1720 with the pioneer Scotch settlers from the North of Ireland. William Ivers married in Boston April 28, 1724, Jane Barber, the ceremony being performed by a Presbyterian minister. Jane Ivers died at Boston in 1789; her will, made April 29, 1776, proved April 13, 1789, Capt. Job Prince, executor, mentions sons James and Thomas, probably the only ones living at the date of making the will.\nHawes Family of Wrentham, MA\nFor generations, since the early Colonial period, the Hawes family has been resident in Wrentham, Mass. The line is traced back to Edward Hawes, of Dedham, Mass., born probably about 1620, who died in 1686. He married April 15, 1648, Eliony Lombard. This genealogy discusses the line from Edward through Oliver Snow Hawes who removed to Fall River Mass. It then discusses the family and descendants of Olvier Snow Hawes who resided in the vicinity of Fall River.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1009691"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9472866058349609,"wiki_prob":0.9472866058349609,"text":"African-American Firsts, Commemorations, Competitions, Events, History, International, News, Records/Prizes, Sports, U.S.\t January 28, 2017\nSerena Williams Triumphs over Sister Venus to Win Record 23rd Major Title at Australian Open\nSerena Williams lifts her trophy after defeating her sister Venus Williams in their women’s singles final match at the Australian Open in Melbourne on Jan. 28, 2017. (Mark R. Cristino / EPA)\narticle via chicagotribune.com\nSerena Williams held up a Grand Slam winner’s trophy for the 23rd time, celebrating her unrivalled place in history, and received a congratulatory letter and a pair of custom-made shoes from Michael Jordan, the name most synonymous with No. 23.\nVenus Williams got to watch from close range again, and shed tears more of joy than regret after being beaten in a major final for the seventh time by her record-breaking younger sister.\nSerena won the all-Williams final, the ninth in Grand Slam history and the second in Australia, 6-4, 6-4 on Saturday. With her record seventh Australian Open title, Serena moved ahead of Steffi Graf for the most major titles in the Open era.\nSerena Williams, left, is congratulated by her sister Venus after winning their women’s final match at the Australian Open in Melbourne on Jan. 28, 2017. (Tracey Nearmey / EPA)\nWhen Serena sat on the court, holding both arms up to celebrate on Saturday, Venus walked over to her sister’s side of the net for a hug. “This was a tough one,” Serena said. “I really would like to take this moment to congratulate Venus, she’s an amazing person — she’s my inspiration. There’s no way I would be at 23 without her — there’s no way I would be at one without her. Thank you Venus for inspiring me to be the best player I can be and inspiring me to work hard.”\nAsked if it felt awkward to be on the receiving end of so many losses to her sister, the 36-year-old Venus didn’t flinch. “No, because I guess I’ve been here before,” she said. “I really enjoy seeing the name Williams on the trophy. This is a beautiful thing.”\nVenus won the last of her seven majors in 2008 at Wimbledon. She didn’t make the second week of a major for a few years as she came to terms with an energy-sapping illness after being diagnosed with Sjogren’s syndrome in 2011. And she only made it back to the semifinals last year at Wimbledon.\nAnother shot at a first Australian Open title was a sign of progress, she said. “That’s exactly where I want to be standing during these Grand Slams, is on finals day, having an opportunity,” she said. “That’s the highlight of all this, is to be in that moment.”\nSerena Williams, meanwhile, enjoyed the fact she made history in Melbourne. Only Margaret Court, with 24, is in front of her in terms of overall Grand Slam singles titles, although the Australian great won 13 of her Grand Slams before the Open era began in 1968.\nSerena Williams holds the winner’s trophy as she poses with her sister Venus, the runner-up, on day 13 of the Australian Open in Melbourne on Jan. 28, 2017. (Greg Wood / AFP/Getty Images)\n“My first Grand Slam started here, and getting to 23 here, but playing Venus, it’s stuff that legends are made of,” Serena said. “I couldn’t have written a better story.”\nThe match didn’t live up to its classic billing, with nerves and tension causing uncharacteristic mistakes and unforced errors, with four consecutive service breaks before Venus finally held for a 3-2 lead in the first set. That included a game when Serena had game point but served back-to-back double-faults and three in all to give up the break.\nThere were six service breaks in total. Both players were relatively subdued, except when Serena smashed her racket in the third game. After the fourth game, however, Serena Williams didn’t face another break point in the 1-hour, 22-minute match.\nSpeaking of records, Serena got a little bit superstitious Down Under, and hadn’t wanted to talk about the No. 23 until she got it.\nNow there’s a limited-edition racket — 23 of them to be released — and some custom-made shoes sent by former NBA great Michael Jordan. It had Jordan’s usual jersey number No. 23 stamped on the heel, helping to provide some synchronicity for the numbers involved.\nTo read full article, go to: http://www.chicagotribune.com/sports/breaking/ct-serena-williams-venus-venus-williams-australian-open–20170128-story.html\nFiled under: Australia, Australian Open, grand slam record, Grand Slam titles, Margaret Court, Melbourne, Serena Williams, Steffi Graf, Venus Williams, women's pro tennis, women's tennis\nEssence to Honor Issa Rae, Janelle Monae, Aja Naomi King and Yara Shahidi at Black Women in Hollywood Awards\nBrooklyn Federal Judge Ann Donnelly in Brooklyn Temporarily Blocks Trump’s Muslim Ban\nOne thought on “Serena Williams Triumphs over Sister Venus to Win Record 23rd Major Title at Australian Open”\nvitaminlover says:\nI wonder if Venus let her win?\nLeave a Reply to vitaminlover\tCancel reply","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line359920"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9866072535514832,"wiki_prob":0.9866072535514832,"text":"Asia Pacific|Reversal by tiny St. Lucia angers China\nReversal by tiny St. Lucia angers China\nCASTRIES, St. Lucia — This tiny Caribbean island may have thought it was no big deal when it severed its 10-year relations with China and restored ties Tuesday with rival Taiwan. Wrong.\nChina, which built a stadium and was finishing a psychiatric hospital here and considers Taiwan a renegade province, called the move \"brutal interference in China's internal affairs.\" In short order, one of the smallest countries in the world has made an enemy out of one of the largest.\nBoth Taiwan and China, which for more than 20 years have battled for diplomatic allies, brought out their big guns to curry favor with St. Lucia, a verdant, mountainous 610-square-kilometer, or 240-square-mile, island home to 168,000 people.\nChina sent its foreign minister for a two-day visit in September. Taiwan sent Foreign Minister James Huang in late April. On Tuesday, he and his St. Lucian counterpart, Rufus Bousquet, signed an agreement establishing diplomatic relations between the two countries.\n\"We have been very careful about making this decision, and now that we have taken it, we do not expect the Chinese will love us any more for it,\" Bousquet said. \"But we expect that they will conduct themselves in a manner that is acceptable to our government.\"\nBousquet had indicated that any decision would be based on which country could offer a better deal to St. Lucia, where some 20 percent of the population lives in poverty.\nAs he put it in April: \"Support those who give you the most.\"\nNationalistic pride in St. Lucia, which won independence from Britain in 1979, also played into the equation.\n\"St. Lucia did not win its sovereignty from one power to be now dictated to by another as to who its friends should be,\" the weekly St. Lucia Mirror said in a recent editorial. It added that Beijing's One China policy cannot \"be legally or diplomatically thrust on St. Lucia, as though we, too, were a colony of China.\"\nSt. Lucia indicated last week that if it resumed relations with Taipei, it would still want to be friends with Beijing. The Chinese Embassy sent a rebuff on Friday, saying that China does not accept \"double recognition.\"\nChina, which had established relations with St. Lucia 10 years ago, was apoplectic at the reversal.\n\"We express indignation and opposition,\" Liu Jianchao, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, said in a statement carried by the official Xinhua press agency.\nShelley Rigger, a professor of East Asian politics at Davidson College in Davidson, North Carolina, said the stakes of the back-and-forth game were higher for Taiwan, but both countries play it fiercely.\n\"Every diplomatic setback and step forward for Taiwan is important,\" Rigger said.\nRigger said China's foreign policy is still based on the idea that \"there's no space for Taiwan in the world.\"\n\"This is what happens when you have a foreign policy based on an absolute,\" he said.\nTo retaliate, China cannot very well cart off the stadium, named last year for the late George Odlum, who courted Beijing as foreign minister in 1997. The Chinese also built several buildings for an industrial free-trade zone.\nIt is a given that Beijing will not build a planned cultural center. And work has suddenly slowed on the almost-completed 104-bed psychiatric hospital.\nTies with China did not improve the lot of many St. Lucians. The last 10 years have seen a handful of Chinese businesses open on the island, mainly restaurants and shops. But St. Lucia has not seen the predicted influx of Chinese tourists.\nFor its part, Taiwan propagated new strains of fruits and vegetables and introduced agricultural techniques during its time here.\nBousquet said Taiwan had agreed to help St. Lucia diversify agriculture, help tourism, develop livestock and create information technology learning centers, all of which fit into government plans to fight poverty.\nSt. Lucia's recognition of Taiwan is Taipei's first victory in some time in its diplomatic rivalry with Beijing. In 1969, Taiwan had full relations with 67 countries, including the United States and much of Western Europe. Until Tuesday, that number had dwindled to 24.\nA version of this article appears in print on May 2, 2007, in The International Herald Tribune. Order Reprints| Today's Paper|Subscribe","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1183072"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.924994945526123,"wiki_prob":0.924994945526123,"text":"1619-1621 Main Street\nRobinson Building\nPossibly built as early as the summer of 1866 on land owned by John Rawls, 1619-1621 Main Street is one of several structures on this commercial corridor built during the Reconstruction era. William and Selina Robinson owned the property as early as 1879, and it passed down to their daughters following Selina's death in 1922. The Robinsons were active members of the Jewish community in Columbia; William served as a founding officer of the Hebrew Cemetery Society, a “free cemetery or burial ground for Hebrews,” today known as the Beth Shalom Cemetery at 1300 Whaley Street. By 1898, The State newspaper referred to the building as the \"Robinson building.\"\nThe original footprint of the Robinson Building, seen here in the 1904 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map. The Chinese laundry was owned by Yee Ching and the \"fruit\" was a fruit and confectionery store run by G.K. Xepapas. Image courtesy of South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia\nThe expanded footprint of the Robinson Building, seen here in the 1910 Sanborn Fire Insurance Map. Image courtesy of South Caroliniana Library, University of South Carolina, Columbia\nMontgomery, the Moving Picture Man was one of the many owners of the Grand Theatre. Reprinted from the 1912 Garnet and Black yearbook\nThe new facade of Allan's. Reprinted from The State newspaper, October 26, 1952.\nThe Robinson Building briefly housed a wax museum in 1979 and 1980, as seen in this photograph by Russell Maxey. Image courtesy Russell Maxey Collection, Richland Library\nHistoric Columbia staff with the recovered sign in 2017. Historic Columbia collection\nBetween 1904-1909, the Robinson building expanded to include a large theater at the rear. On April 26, 1909, the Grand Theatre opened as a vaudeville house that offered both live performances and moving, motion, pictures. In operation from 1909 until 1914, the Grand changed ownership frequently. The building also underwent extensive renovations around 1910, which included adding the name “Robinson” to the façade. Among the more celebrated acts that The Grand brought to Columbia were the Zam Zacks, “who [did] a sensational knife-throwing act in which [a] lady [was] surrounded with knives, any one of which, if there happened a misthrow, [would have] imperiled her life,” according to The State newspaper.\nIn 1936, the Allan Shop, owned by the Picow family, opened in the building's 1619 address. It later became Allan’s Clothiers, which expanded to include the entire building in 1948. In 1951, Allan’s made modifications to the façade, adding pink marble, metal jalousie windows screens and a new paint scheme done with “harmonizing paint.” This is also when the oversized, neon Allan’s sign was placed on the front of the building. Allan’s would remain at 1619-1621 Main Street until the store closed its doors in 1971.\nIn 1983, Andy Zalkin’s Army-Navy Store relocated to a portion of the Robinson building, where it operated until 2016. In 2016, the building was bought by LTC Health Solutions, which oversaw a major rehabilitation of the property began. The original core of the 1866 building remains intact, as does one of the building’s original windows that was obscured during the 1910 renovation. Intricate tile work and a steel beam that extended the façade from the 1910 renovation were found. Informed by the building's history and the rediscovery of the original sign from The Grand Theatre, the new restaurant and bowling alley was named The Grand on Main, which opened in late 2017.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line665423"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7724540829658508,"wiki_prob":0.7724540829658508,"text":"Similar to the 1982 Paul McCartney/Michael Jackson duet \"The Girl Is Mine,\" Monica and Brandy try to convince each other that they're the object of a guy's affection on \"The Boy Is Mine.\" Such lightweight pining also characterizes \"Inside,\" \"Angel of Mine,\" \"Keep It to Myself,\" \"Misty Blue\" and a remake of the Richard Marx ballad \"Right Here Waiting.\" Monica longs to rescue a former boyfriend from a \"life of doing the wrong things\" on the streets (\"Street Symphony\"). She's willing to meet someone's needs at any cost on \"For You I Will.\"\nWhen the singer learns that her lover got another woman pregnant, her biggest gripe is that he didn't wear a condom (\"Ring Da Bell\"). Disturbing rappers (Outkast) lend their voices to the love-hate anthem \"Gone Be Fine.\" At first glance, \"First Night\" seems to set sexual boundaries by saying, \"If I [make a move] it won't be right/ I don't get down on the first night,\" but suggests that teens having sex on the second or third date would be okay.\nA talented vocalist, this teenage diva stumbles when it comes to choosing her material. Some songs are harmless fun. However, several cuts communicate flawed sexual morals to her legion of young fans. That inconsistency undermines the smooth sweetness of The Boy Is Mine.\nThis million-selling album peaked at 2 on the R&B chart. \"\"Angel of Mine\"\" and \"\"The Boy Is Mine\"\" both spent multiple weeks at number 1.\nBob Waliszewski","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line499845"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5206453800201416,"wiki_prob":0.4793546199798584,"text":"Cheer Up Love\nThe Pieces of My Spirit Strewn\nLovely in Her Bones\nPrivate View (Blog)\nDamaris Athene\n© Damaris Athene 2019 All rights reserved\nSuzi Morris\nSeptember 11, 2018 in interview\nDamaris Athene: Suzi can you tell me a bit about yourself?\nSuzi Morris: I was born in Ayr in my grandparent’s house and educated in Glasgow. My mother who was also an artist, died when I was fifteen after a long illness, so I spent a lot of time with my grandparents. I come from a medico - scientific, art background. My father was a scientist so I grew up surrounded by National Geographic magazines and science journals, which inspired me to see more of the world. I left home when I was just 17.\nDA: And where is Ayr?\nSM: Ayr is a seaside town on the west coast of Scotland, 25 miles south of Glasgow. When I left Scotland, I spent a year in Carlisle on a foundation course before moving down to London to what was then Kingston Polytechnic, where I studied Illustration and Design for my BA; but I always knew deep down that I wanted to be a painter. I don’t know whether it was just at that time or in those days, but back then being a painter wasn’t seen as a proper job.\nDA: It still isn’t to be honest. You still have people that will think, ‘Oh I need to do Graphic Design, because it’s applied’ rather than pursuing Fine Art, which is their true passion. It’s sad.\nSM: It is sad. I’ve always had that love of paint since I was a child. When I was a student I took some really basic jobs and lived in sometimes-awful accommodation so that I could afford to buy quality art materials. At school I was forever in the art room painting and my reports always said ‘Susan has such a vivid imagination’. I think that was down having this sensitivity to unseen energies, often common among artists. When you just absorb too much at times.\nDA: I’m the same.\nSM: Really? And we both share an interest in exploring the corporeal and the abstraction of the human landscape! I think artists have a tendency to be sensitive. It’s one of the reasons why I have to be solitary when I’m painting.\nDA: How did your life lead up to becoming a full-time painter?\nSM: I worked in a design consultancy for a while but I didn’t have a passion for the corporate world and I was always more driven to paint. During the eighties, trompe l'oeil made a come back so I spent some time undertaking painting commissions in peoples’ homes. I was married for a long time and ended up going overseas seeking out opportunities to teach art. I really wanted to see the world.\nDA: Whereabouts did you travel to?\nSM: I’ve spent time in India, the Philippines, and Africa when it was still dealing with the AIDS epidemic in the nineties. As a consequence of the disease being so misunderstood initially, there were orphanages full of small children with HIV who had been abandoned by their families. I wasn’t painting for myself at that time but I loved sharing materials for mark making and watching children’s innate creativity. I think that some of the ordeals that I experienced through travel have made me who I am. Perhaps why I have no desire to paint the ‘visible’ world? In later years I worked in art direction for film, which allowed me to keep travelling. It was while I was working in film that I was encouraged to pursue my painting on a full-time basis. There comes a time when you’ve got to follow what’s in here *points to heart*. I feel that finally I’m doing what I want to be doing. In 2012, I met Eileen Cooper, Keeper of the Royal Academy and she suggested I apply to The City and Guilds of London Art School, and from there I went on to undertake the doctorate.\nDA: How did you find your MA at City and Guilds?\nSM: It was rather like joining the special forces of art schools! I had been out of education for some time so it was pretty challenging. I would be working on PowerPoint presentations every week and used to be in the studio from 8am until 8.30pm. I loved it though and it really helped to develop my practice.\nDA: God, every week. That’s intense! And your doctorate at the University of East London. Can you tell me a bit about that?\nSM: While I was on my MA, I had been fortunate enough to meet two leading German companies, Schmincke and Da Vinci. I was doing some filming for them and they kindly supported my doctorate. I love learning and felt at the time that I had only just scratched the surface in understanding my practice so undertaking the doctorate seemed like a natural progression. I was also interested in delving deeper into the concept of the Sublime - my own life experiences seemed to fit with this notion in so many ways. My director of studies and my supervisors at UEL were very insightful at helping me to realise just how much the language of medicine, genomics and clinical virology inform the decisions that I’m making in painting. Then began my relationship with Imperial College who continue to be really supportive. UEL was three of the toughest years of my life, yet three of the best.\nDA: How wonderful and such an achievement.\nSM: I feel that I began to find a truth in my painting that’s been incredibly hard to reach.\nDA: Can you tell me more about your practice itself?\nSM: Scientific research is a stimulus for me, which often provides triggers to inform new work. Plus I’ve always loved the qualities of oil paint. How pigment changes depending on its environment and how it can be manipulated to behave so differently. It’s so unpredictable, rather like the body. I work in multiple layers of translucent glazes, building the image up over long periods of time. Parts of the image get obscured through editing the work while other parts are destroyed and then resurrected from earlier layers. It’s not until the work is finished that I appreciate the art historical references, theory, personal experience and research that’s fed into it. The connection between the body and the performance of painting is fundamental. The imagination is massive and there’s so much I still want to do. I need another hundred years! *laughs*\nDA: *laughs*\nSM: It’s a bodily experience painting. The title of my thesis is ‘The Viral Sublime and the Bodily Experience of Painting’. It was through delving deeper into my practice that I realised how the body and painting contribute to a physical artwork. Merleau-Ponty writes of how our bodies are integrated into the fabric of the world and how painters are able to live purely in this enmeshment with the world and express it visually in their works (Merleau-Ponty, Eye and Mind, 2c, see 161d). I’m not a great one for theory but I enjoy Merleau-Ponty. I also draw connections from American artist Ross Bleckner, and Santiago Ramón y Cajal. I so admire his drawings related to neuroscience. I made a painting recently; ‘The Burden of the Dendrite’.\nDA: Good title! *laughs*\nSM: Dendritic ulcers! *laughs* Another painting - ‘The Naked Virus’. There’s so much emotion in that painting. I realised once it was finished that it was deeply connected with the anxiety over my eye problems at that time. It marked a turning point in my research regarding the part that the subconscious plays in painting. It’s like when you go to the studio, you start off with five or six people with you in your mind, and one by one they leave until you’re left with your body and your subconscious. If I’m lucky I leave the studio too! *laughs* Then you never know what’s going to happen, but on reflection the painting always seems to relate to what I’ve been researching. It’s fascinating. I love being an abstract artist because you never know what you’re going to get. I like how James Elkins describes painting as ‘liquid thought’.\nDA: Oh wow, that’s beautiful. It’s like you’re channeling your thought through your body.\nSM: Yeah. I’ve started in the last year to use parts of the body to manipulate the paint. Exploring paints inherent qualities and working more intuitively to see what comes.\nDA: You’ve touched on this a bit but how do you usually work?\nSM: Alone in the studio with either Ennio Morricone or Chopin’s nocturnes… something classical to take me away someplace else. The light and the line are the two fundamentals that always seem to remain.\nDA: The one over there hasn’t got a line yet.\nSM: Not yet, no.\nDA: Is the line the final thing?\nSM: Often, yes. They are like the minimalist figure in the landscape. Nodding to Modernism and the colour field painters, namely Barnet Newman. I call them biomarkers because biomarkers in science are used for many things, one being to measure our individual susceptibility to things, which I find fascinating. I’m interested in the body and the corporeal. Our bodies have such wisdom if we can just access it. I love reading about epigenetics, and how through editing the human genome science is changing the face of medicine as we know it. It makes me think of Huxley’s ‘Brave New World’ where the natural processes of birth, ageing and death are no longer recognisable. What might it be like to be human in the future?\nDA: Completely. Do you not fear that at all? Is it only excitement you feel?\nSM: There’s a bit of fear since germ-line engineering in the wrong hands could be annihilating. But fear of dystopian change shouldn’t blind us to the benefits to society, as this type of science could signal the end of so many inherited devastating genetic diseases. With gene editing technology scientists can sever the DNA of certain viruses, so perhaps many conditions, which are incurable today, will become curable. I’m hopeful that in my lifetime CRISPR technology might release me from the virus that causes Keratitis. It’s a virus that I fight with on a daily basis and have done for decades. Science is achieving incredible things just now in curing certain cancers and other deadly diseases. It’s an exciting time to respond to the science of my time in terms of my practice.\nDA: It makes me think, what would happen if no one died of diseases? The population would grow exponentially, and we wouldn’t be able to support ourselves. It’s difficult!\nSM: It is a daunting prospect. When I read about science extending the human life span through deciphering the genetic codes responsible for controlling limb regeneration it’s like the stuff of science fiction. Whatever would happen to the pensions crisis!\nDA: Yeah, exactly! It’s a pretty big problem! But then I guess if you were coming to later life in a healthier state… it’s just prolonging the inevitable surely.\nSM: Yeah, people would live a lot longer but as you say a healthier old age would be better.\nDA: But would you be immortal if you could be?\nSM: Oh no, no. I wouldn’t want to live forever, would you?\nDA: No! Not at all.\nSM: No, I’m exhausted *laughs* But I’d like at least another 20/30 years of painting if that’s possible?\nDA: Hopefully you will! I guess with your eyes as well, how much does it affect your painting?\nSM: It does affect my painting in that I paint how I see. My long-term fascination with blur against sharpness maybe due to my left eye having scarring in the line of vision causing permanent blurring, but I also have areas of sharpness. So as long as medicine can keep the virus in its latent state my eye will be fine. It’s just my left eye that’s the real problem. So, I like to believe that I’ll always be able to paint.\nDA: Fingers crossed.\nSM: I won’t deny that’s it’s a huge anxiety.\nDA: Yeah, for anyone, let alone an artist where there are more levels of anxiety to it. Sight is integral…Can you tell me about your gallery representation? How did you start your relationship with NoonPowell Fine Art?\nSM: Rachel the gallery director was looking for new artists at the time. She had seen my work online and was so enthusiastic about it.\nDA: Do you have any upcoming shows or anything you’re specifically working towards?\nSM: I’ve had a really busy year with shows. I’ve just finished a painting that has sold to a film producer in Los Angles so that’s great. I’m also going to be exhibiting in a group show coming up at Mall Galleries through NoonPowell, and I’m preparing to present a talk about how medical research inspires my practice, at Imperial College this September. The Department of Medicine have been really supportive throughout my doctorate so I’m looking forward to engaging the public through becoming more involved at Imperial as artist in residence.\nDA: That’s wonderful, congratulations! What’s your favourite piece that you’ve made? I know it’s a tricky question.\nSM: It is, because they all have a part of me. Perhaps ‘Truth Lies and Hidden Realms’ and the other is ‘The In-between’ which is now in a private collection. I was trying to think about why they’re favourites. Possibly some of it is the time that I spend with a piece and whether it becomes a turning point in my practice. All the work is very labour intensive and these particular pieces were painted over two years. ‘The Inbetween’ was painted at such a difficult time in my life. I had lost two studio spaces because they were sublets and I was trying to sell my property in the country and find somewhere to rent in London at the height of the property boom in 2014. At one point I was actually living in my studio in Peckham. There was a huge sense of solace in being in my studio painting. I think studio time is really precious anyway because we all have to do admin and all the other stuff that comes with being a professional artist. The relationship with both these paintings during that period was very intimate. This can make it hard to let a painting go, but at the end of the day, it’s that sense of solace that I feel in making a painting that I want to transmit out into the world. I always remember Eileen Cooper’s advice to ‘not become collectors of your own work’. Her words always ring in my ears whenever I find it hard to let go of a piece. We live in such a chaotic horrid world that’s why I’m doing it at the end of the day.\nCome and see Suzi’s work in ‘Sensibilities of Belonging’ at the Mall galleries, The Mall, London SW1 from 11th to 16th September 2018. Click here for more information.\nFind out more about Suzi’s work:\nTags: artist, female artist, artist interview, painting, fine art, interview\nNatalia González Martín in her studio\nNatalia González Martín\nFebruary 15, 2018 in interview\nDamaris Athene Can you tell me a bit about yourself?\nNatalia González Martín I grew up in Spain in a very small village. I went to school there and that’s quite a boring part of my life, until I was 18 when I came to London for my foundation diploma at City and Guilds, where I also did my BA. Now I’m trying to be a practicing artist, trying to live off that and see what happens. Complicated! With part-time jobs, little things, whatever comes. Recently I opened this space in my own home to promote the work of other artists and curators.\nDA What’s that called?\nNGM Subsidiary Projects. Some friends and I wanted to do an exhibition and we set up a space in my house. It’s too perfect not to continue doing it so I’ve gone further with it. More than just putting my own work and my friends’ work. I find other people and it’s a great way of getting in touch with different artist that I didn’t know about before. I’m not asking economically for anything, it’s art for the sake of art. I think everyone after Uni goes through a period of disenchantment with the art world. I wanted to make something genuine and for the process of experimentation. You can take a risk and make something that doesn’t work at all and you don’t have the pressure of having to answer to a big gallery. I think it’s relieving to have a space like that that isn’t just your studio.\nDA Can you tell me about your practice?\nNGM The very basics of it is archaeology. Around 2/3 years ago I realised that was what linked everything together. I had always been extremely interested in materiality in a very visceral way. My dad is a vet so I’ve seen a lot of horrid, horrid carcases through his work. I always saw it as something quite appealing and, colour palette wise, quite beautiful. I incorporated that with artefacts and history through objects. Now it’s turning into this experimentation of the things man have made with their hands. Forms we’ve been drawn to and ways of representation of materials, but giving it that organic quality that I cannot seem to get away from. Which makes sense with my idea of archaeology itself, because I see it as nothing stable, something quite alive. Not in a beautiful sense, in a precarious way. It has so much potential to decay and be forgotten and die.\nView of Natalia González Martín's Studio\nDA How do you usually work? You graduated in the Summer of 2017, and you’ve been working as an artist since….\nNGM It’s hard to keep up the momentum after Uni and I think everyone finds themselves in this place of ‘What were all of those ideas?’ ‘Where have they gone?’ ‘I had so many ideas for the Degree Show’ and now they go back to basics. That’s what I’ve done - going back to the first sources that inspired me and continuing to analyse them. Maybe it’s because there’s no pressure of having a mark on what you’re doing and it’s finally more for yourself. It doesn’t last but you’ve got this period just for yourself. It’s enjoyable to go to the most naïve, basic aspect of that. ‘I’m just going to do this’ - there is a reason but at the beginning it’s ‘because’ and then it all comes together. It’s challenging after Uni.\nDA What were the things you were drawn back to?\nNGM I had completely left out figuration and now I see myself representing certain images that I had in the back of my head, trying to do them accurately or just replicating an image, which at the end of Uni I was almost against. Like, ‘Oh no, you cannot just make an image and that’s it’. I find it so vital for going back to progress somehow. I don’t know, maybe I had left out so many materials because I had also thought that they’re not professional enough or…I don’t know, you have that pressure when you’re at Uni, especially towards the Degree Show, and you have to deliver this very stable product. It doesn’t have to be that stable after which is nice.\nDA Some freedom.\nNGM Yes, in many ways. In materials, in presentation. It cannot go on forever otherwise it’ll all crumble, but for a bit I think it’s healthy.\nDA You said you’d been working Part-time trying to support things. Is it a patchwork of work to try and pay your rent?\nNGM Yes, I'm a part-time Art Teacher, doing freelance private classes. I’ve also been working at Block 336, at the private views. It’s nice because it doesn’t take too much time from the studio. However, I am looking into getting something more constant. I had a bad experience just after Uni. I was freaking out looking for jobs and I found this one Photographer job. Everything seemed ideal, apart from the fact that it was a recent graduate job and the pay was nothing. Legally there are some things you cannot do for free and I feel people really abuse recent graduates. It was taking all my time, some days were 10 hours long. I chose the studio and not being able to pay rent!\nDA It’s tricky, a lot of the friends who I studied with have stopped making work - they had to earn money and when you lose momentum it’s so hard to start up again.\nNGM Almost impossible. I think we invested too much money in University to let it go. I’d rather starve for a few months than loose the dynamic of coming to the studio.\nDA What difference have you found between studying in Spain and studying here?\nNGM The thing is in Spain I’ve never studied Fine Art in my A levels (Bachillerato). You can find one that is artistic but because it’s Spain, it’s a very old minded country, and it doesn’t have a good reputation. I chose what we call ‘pure letters’ - Latin, Greek, History of Art. Fine Art in Spain is very academicist and not conceptual at all. No self-development of practice. You don’t have your own studio. The exam, for example, will be copying a torso very accurately, which is more of a skill than a profession. Then at the same time I’ve seen some things lacking in the English system - there's not much emphasis in the history of Art itself, which I missed. I think it would be great to do a course in Spain and learn everything until the 18th century and then come to England to learn all the rest. So, just a bit of a balance. I’ve seen what is missing in the two of them.\nDA How have you found living over here? You’ve been here for 4 years now.\nNGM It sounds a bit like the typical story – a small village girl coming to a big city, but it didn’t feel like that. It felt like the right place. Some people say, ‘Oh in London you can feel lonely in such a big city’, but I don’t feel that as much. There’s too much going on. I think it’s too easy to get by. I really like this city. Never going to leave until they kick me out. They’re trying but no way. I’m waiting for Theresa’s call!\nDA *laughs*… What have you been doing since your graduating?\nNGM I had a solo show at St Catherine’s Church, in Neasden. The building is so beautiful I almost didn’t want to put anything in it! I could put up some of my pieces but I had to keep it palatable for the church goers. You don’t want to disturb too much and it’s tricky because you do want to put across a message that’s risky.\nDA Are you religious yourself?\nNGM I am not religious. In my work there is a lot of religion, because of my Catholic background. We love the icons! I think that comes across in my work. I’m drawn to the aesthetic of processions and celebrations.\nDA What have you been working on recently?\nNGM I’ve been really interested in marbling and limbs. I have a need to completely cover something in marbling and maybe put it in weird spaces. I’m into the idea of art in non-art spaces. There is this Instagram profile called Great Art in Ugly Rooms where they post pictures of famous artworks in motels or toilets or McDonald's, etc... It’s such a great concept! It goes as well with the idea that I put into my work of the value of art. Is it the piece? Is it where the piece is? Is it what has been said about the piece? I’m sceptical that it’s not the object itself at all. Maybe changing the context will enhance that?\nDA Have you got any spaces in mind?\nNGM Well the other day I put some clay sculptures in Sainsbury’s. I took some milk off the shelves and just displayed them.\nDA Ah, brilliant!\nNGM More than the display itself it was the peoples’ reactions. No one, literally no one, was weirded out that I was taking these big sculptures out of my bag, placing them there and looking at them. Everyone went through them to get their milk and went back to the queue. None of the Sainsbury’s people said anything. So that was surprising – no impact at all.\nDA Wow, do you think they just were too busy to bother? They thought – Oh that’s weird – but didn’t think much of it. That’s so interesting.\nNGM I don’t know if it’s something to do with England. If you see a horse riding a bicycle no one will look. They’re not surprised…It’s not like not surprised it’s very polite. I think it would really change if I did it in Spain. I want to try it and see the peoples' reactions.\nDA I think you should do it again and you should film it.\nNGM Yeah, I mean I have a Sainsbury’s next to my house, I can always use it. It’s my new gallery space.\nDA They might start knowing you, 'Come along at 12 o’clock on a Sunday to see the sculpture in the milk fridge!'\nNGM Maybe I should advertise it! Who knows! Free marketing.\nDA What have you got planned for the future?\nNGM Applying to more contests and getting more of those dreadful rejection emails. I’ve learnt that we have to live with that. It’s part of it. I was considering a Masters degree but I think that England is far too expensive and I think the masters is like a business. You cannot pay that much money to receive so little space and tuition. I just feels wrong. I’m against it but at the same time I feel like it’s the only way to do it. Maybe I’ll go back on my word and do a Masters. Maybe that’s the plan.\nFind out more about Natalia González Martín's work:\nSubsidiary Projects Website\nSubsidiary Projects Facebook\nSubsidiary Projects Instagram\nTags: artist, female artist, painting, sculpture, interview\nA blog where I, Damaris Athene, interview different female artists. A step towards challenging the gender imbalance of the art world.\nAll photos taken by me unless otherwise stated.\nMellissa Fisher\nThanks to @LondonSculpture for a great wax sculpture course last week. Can’t wait to do more experiments in the stu… https://t.co/LKoMApV5nD\nFINAL DAY - You’ve got just over an hour to catch ‘Cheer Up Love’ before it closes today. Peterhouse’s Old Brewhous… https://t.co/BtonKztkIx\nDue to unforeseen circumstances ‘Cheer Up Love’ will have to close early and will shut this Sunday (12th May). If y… https://t.co/RiNk41lvSL\nPrivate View RSS","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line513444"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9687639474868774,"wiki_prob":0.9687639474868774,"text":"news, local-news\nBUSINESSES will be eligible for land tax rebates and most Tasmanian shacks will be exempt from the tax under changes announced by Premier David Bartlett yesterday. The changes, worth $19 million this financial year and $31 million next financial year, include: •Businesses with land values of more than $350,000 will be eligible for rebates this financial year reflecting the new land tax rates. •Land tax benefits to businesses and private investors across the board will be on the component of their land tax value over $350,000. •The rate of land tax on land values of more than $350,000 will be immediately cut from 2 per cent to 1.5 per cent, and those valued at more than $750,000 will be cut from 2.5 per cent to 1.5 per cent. •The new rates will apply from July 1, 2010, but to assist industry in the transition to the new rates, a cap will ensure no eligible business pays an increase greater than 100 per cent this financial year and in 2010-11. •Landlords will be required to pass on land tax savings to their business tenants, with the Government considering legislative measures to ensure this happens. •Shacks with a land value of up to $500,000 from 2010-11 will be exempt from land tax. •From 2010-11, intending first home builders will be given up to two years to complete construction in order to be eligible for a full rebate on the land tax they have paid on their block. •The Government will provide up to $4 million additional funding to the Valuer-General to enable revaluations to occur every two to three years, rather than every six. •From 2010-11, those running a small business from their home will no longer pay land tax on the part of their home used for businesses purposes. Announcing the package yesterday, Mr Bartlett said his Government had taken its \"eye off the ball\" in relation to land tax but that it was now acting in response to community anger and to protect jobs. He said he could guarantee the Government would meet its financial targets despite the cost of the reforms. \"The Government is using the state's stronger-than-expected revenues to provide tax relief to businesses that will employ more Tasmanians and keep our economy strong,\" he said. \"But we are also using our financial position to look after those Tasmanians saving to build their first home, to family shack owners and to people who run a business from their home.\" Last month Mr Bartlett said no changes would be made to land tax until the outcome of the federal taxation review being undertaken by Treasury head Ken Henry was known. Yesterday he said Mr Henry had been kept informed of the changes. Changes to the land tax rate and the exemption of shacks and home businesses will require legislation. THRESHOLDS 2009 LAND TAX THRESHOLD BY STATE NSW: $368,000 Victoria: $249,999 Western Australia: $300,000 Queensland (residential): $599,000 Queensland (commercial): $349,000 South Australia: $110,000 Tasmania: $25,000\nhttps://nnimgt-a.akamaihd.net/transform/v1/resize/frm/silverstone-feed-data/84989bf6-ea06-4434-8946-ead431fc6989.jpg/w1200_h678_fcrop.jpg\nDecember 10 2009 - 12:45PM\nMost shacks now exempt from land tax\nLORETTA JOHNSTON\nBUSINESSES will be eligible for land tax rebates and most Tasmanian shacks will be exempt from the tax under changes announced by Premier David Bartlett yesterday.\nThe changes, worth $19 million this financial year and $31 million next financial year, include:\nBusinesses with land values of more than $350,000 will be eligible for rebates this financial year reflecting the new land tax rates.\nLand tax benefits to businesses and private investors across the board will be on the component of their land tax value over $350,000.\nThe rate of land tax on land values of more than $350,000 will be immediately cut from 2 per cent to 1.5 per cent, and those valued at more than $750,000 will be cut from 2.5 per cent to 1.5 per cent.\nThe new rates will apply from July 1, 2010, but to assist industry in the transition to the new rates, a cap will ensure no eligible business pays an increase greater than 100 per cent this financial year and in 2010-11.\nLandlords will be required to pass on land tax savings to their business tenants, with the Government considering legislative measures to ensure this happens.\nShacks with a land value of up to $500,000 from 2010-11 will be exempt from land tax.\nFrom 2010-11, intending first home builders will be given up to two years to complete construction in order to be eligible for a full rebate on the land tax they have paid on their block.\nThe Government will provide up to $4 million additional funding to the Valuer-General to enable revaluations to occur every two to three years, rather than every six.\nFrom 2010-11, those running a small business from their home will no longer pay land tax on the part of their home used for businesses purposes.\nAnnouncing the package yesterday, Mr Bartlett said his Government had taken its \"eye off the ball\" in relation to land tax but that it was now acting in response to community anger and to protect jobs.\nHe said he could guarantee the Government would meet its financial targets despite the cost of the reforms.\n\"The Government is using the state's stronger-than-expected revenues to provide tax relief to businesses that will employ more Tasmanians and keep our economy strong,\" he said.\n\"But we are also using our financial position to look after those Tasmanians saving to build their first home, to family shack owners and to people who run a business from their home.\"\nLast month Mr Bartlett said no changes would be made to land tax until the outcome of the federal taxation review being undertaken by Treasury head Ken Henry was known.\nYesterday he said Mr Henry had been kept informed of the changes.\nChanges to the land tax rate and the exemption of shacks and home businesses will require legislation.\n2009 LAND TAX THRESHOLD BY STATE\nNSW: $368,000\nVictoria: $249,999\nWestern Australia: $300,000\nQueensland (residential): $599,000\nQueensland (commercial): $349,000\nSouth Australia: $110,000\nTasmania: $25,000","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line968224"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6816369295120239,"wiki_prob":0.3183630704879761,"text":"Books Kids Nonfiction 1,000 Facts about the White House\n1,000 Facts about the White House\nSarah Wassner Flynn\nNational Geographic Children's Books\nWelcome to the White House! Go behind the scenes to get a 360-degree view of America's most famous president’s residence, from how it was built in 1792 and the fire of 1812, to today's state dinners, celebrations, celebrity pets, and more. Discover through 1,000 fun-to-read facts what it's like to live and work at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, the quirky rules of the house and how the Secret Service keeps it safe. Find out how the kids who have lived there play, watch movies, and entertain friends. With a treasure trove of material from the White House Historical Association, this book presents a fascinating story of the building and the many people who have shaped its 225-year history.\nIllustrations/Photos (if applicable)\nLearning Value\nTop 50 Reviewer\nView all my reviews (130)\nTons of Awesome Facts!\n'1,000 Facts about the White House' by Sarah Wassner Flynn is definitely worth reading. From facts about why the rooms are named as they are in the White House to interesting facts about first ladies, pets, and food as related to the presidency, there is something for everyone.\nThere are plenty of interesting facts that even the most well-versed presidential fanatics can find at least one that they may not have known before. It is also nice how the facts are arranged so that the connections are pretty sequential. Learning the layout of the White House and when certain wings were added adds a lot to the points being made, showing that the home has evolved as time has passed.\nNo matter whether your favorite president is George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Bill Clinton, or anyone who has come before or after, you are sure to find something that will engage your interest and round out your understanding of not only the White House, but also the importance of the highest office one can hold in the United States.\nKids Nonfiction\nLincoln's Grave Robbers\nCategory: Kids Nonfiction","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1110030"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7446050643920898,"wiki_prob":0.7446050643920898,"text":"The Autopsy of Jane Doe Movie – First look!\nTwo new official pictures of The Autopsy of Jane Doe, the upcoming psychological horror movie starring Emile Hirsch and Brian Cox, have shown up online, take a look below:\n(Click on a picture to enlarge.)\n“In small-town Virginia, police are called to a gruesome crime scene where a family has been massacred in their own house. In the basement, an even more disturbing discovery is made: the partially buried corpse of a nude woman. The cops take this unidentified victim to a small, family-run morgue, where they ask proprietor Tommy Tilden (Brian Cox) to perform an urgent forensic analysis in order to help determine what happened at the blood-stained house. Tommy’s son Austen (Emile Hirsch) cancels a date with his girlfriend (Ophelia Lovibond) in order to help his father perform an autopsy, and the two Tildens set about their grisly examination in the morgue basement.\nWorking late into the night as they methodically peel back layers of skin, muscle, and bone, Tommy and Austen are baffled by the lack of external signs of trauma on the victim and the alarming extent of her internal injuries. Increasingly perplexed and frustrated by these forensic anomalies, the pair begins to succumb to late-night jitters, getting spooked at apparitions that seem to be lurking in the shadows. As the dread mounts and the atmosphere gets thick with evil, it becomes apparent that the Tildens’ fate is intertwined with a darkness that neither of them can comprehend.”\nSo an evil demon was hiding in that corpse’s stinky innards?\nThe film is directed by Andre Ovredal based on a script by Ian B. Goldberg and Richard Naing.\n11 September 2016 tags: The Autopsy of Jane Doe\nThe Autopsy of Jane Doe Movie starring Emile Hirsch and Brian Cox - Here’s the official plot synopsis of The Autopsy of Jane...\nThe Autopsy of Jane Doe - The Autopsy of Jane Doe Genre: Horror/Thriller Directed by: Andre...\nThe Autopsy of Jane Doe Movie Trailer - We’ve got our hands on the first official trailer of The...\nThe Autopsy of Jane Doe Trailer - There’s a brand new morbid trailer for The Autopsy of Jane...\nTrailer of The Autopsy of Jane Doe starring Emile Hirsch and Brian Cox - There’s a new scary trailer for The Autopsy of Jane Doe,...\n2 Clips of The Autopsy of Jane Doe - You may watch below two new preview clips of The Autopsy of Jane...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1658983"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5942896008491516,"wiki_prob":0.5942896008491516,"text":"Swarbreck Surname Ancestry Results\nOur indexes 1000-1999 include entries for the spelling 'swarbreck'. In the period you have requested, we have the following 7 records (displaying 1 to 7):\nGet all 7 records to view, to save and print for £32.00\nswanwich swanwick swanwicke swanwyk swanwyke swany swanynglee swanyngton swanzey swanzy swap swapeltrot swapes swaphel swapp swapson swarama swarb swarbeck swarbreake swarbreek swarbricj swarbrick swarbricke swarbridge swarbrook swarbrooke swarbruck swarby sward swarder swardiere swardill swardiston swardo swardridge swards swardt swardy swardz\nOfficial Papers (1694-1695)\nThe State Papers Domestic cover all manner of business relating to Britain, Ireland and the colonies, conducted in the office of the Secretary of State as well as other miscellaneous records. Here we have the period from January 1694 to June 1695.\nSWARBRECK. Cost: £4.00.\nInhabitants of Poulton le Fylde in Lancashire (1790-1797)\nThe provincial sections of the Universal British Directory include lists of gentry and traders from each town and the surrounding countryside, with names of local surgeons, lawyers, postmasters, carriers, &c. (the sample scan here is from the section for Bridgnorth). The directory started publication in 1791, but was not completed for some years, and the provincial lists, sent in by local agents, can date back as early as 1790 and as late as 1797. This particular list was included in the appendix of late returns.\nDeaths, Marriages, News and Promotions (1851)\nDeath notices and obituaries, marriage and birth notices, civil and military promotions, clerical preferments and domestic occurrences, as reported in the Gentleman's Magazine. Mostly from England and Wales, but items from Ireland, Scotland and abroad. July to December 1851\nThe Law Times: Birth Notices (1869)\nVolume 47 of The Law Times, 'The Journal of The Law and The Lawyers', a weekly publication, runs from 1 May to 30 October 1869, issues number 1361 to 1387. Regular features include Birth, Marriage and Death announcements.\nMissing Next-of-Kin and Heirs-at-Law (1880)\nThe Unclaimed Money Registry and Next-of-Kin Advertisement Office of F. H. Dougal & Co., on the Strand in London, published a comprehensive 'Index to Advertisements for Next of Kin, Heirs at Law, Legatees, &c., &c., who have been Advertised for to Claim Money and Property in Great Britain and all Parts of the World; also Annuitants, Shareholders, Intestates, Testators, Missing Friends, Creditors or their Representatives, Claimants, Unclaimed and Reclaimed Dividends and Stock, Citations, Administrations, Rewards for Certificates, Wills, Advertisements, &c., Claims, Unclaimed Balances, Packages, Addresses, Parish Clerks' Notices, Foreign Intestates, &c., &c.' The original list was compiled about 1860, but from materials dating back even into the 18th century: most of the references belong to 1850 to 1880. For each entry only a name is given, sometimes with a placename added in brackets: there may be a reference number, but there is no key by which the original advertisement may be traced. The enquirer of the time had to remit £1 for a 'Full and Authentic Copy of the Original Advertisement, together with name and date of newspaper in which the same appeared'.\nSurgeons (1928)\nThe Royal College of Surgeons, established by royal charters, issued this calendar 1 August 1928, including official lists of all its fellows, members, licentiates and diplomates. The register of fellows gives full name (surname first) and address (in italics), with dates of admission as fellow and member. The list of members gives year of admission, full name (surname first) and town or country of residence. The lists of licentiates give year of admission and full name, but no indication of current address: entries of fellows of the college are prefixed with a double dagger, those of members with an asterisk. The lists of diplomates give year of admission and full name (surname first), with those diplomates who were neither members nor fellows of the college indicated with a dagger. This is the index to the members.\nDoctors trained in Britain or Ireland but living abroad (1948)\nThe Medical Directory was split into several sections. The Practitioners Resident Abroad section covered all medical practitioners who, having qualified in Britain or Ireland, were living abroad. Each year a schedule was sent to each doctor to be returned to the publishers, so as to keep the directory up to date. In the directory the doctor's name is given first, in bold, surname first, in capitals; then current address. Next are the qualifications; the italic abbreviations in parentheses following the qualifications indicate the medical school at which they were gained. Then there is a list of posts and honours within the profession, starting with those then current; previous posts are preceded by the word 'late'. Finally, brief details are given of any publications. Inclusion of names in the list did not imply a right to practise in the country of residence.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1607753"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8670274615287781,"wiki_prob":0.8670274615287781,"text":"Americans should reclaim the Betsy Ross flag instead of abandoning it | Opinion\nNike dropped plans for shoes featuring the Betsy Ross flag, which some white nationalist groups have co-opted as a symbol.\nAmericans should reclaim the Betsy Ross flag instead of abandoning it | Opinion Nike dropped plans for shoes featuring the Betsy Ross flag, which some white nationalist groups have co-opted as a symbol. Check out this story on commercialappeal.com: https://www.tennessean.com/story/opinion/2019/07/08/betsy-ross-flag-nike-controversy/1675249001/\nJohn R. Vile, Guest columnist Published 3:00 p.m. CT July 8, 2019 | Updated 5:39 p.m. CT July 8, 2019\nSportsPulse: The latest Nike-Kaepernick shoe debacle isn't an opportunity to pick sides but a chance to take time to learn lessons about our own country's history, says USA TODAY Sports' Christine Brennan. USA TODAY\nJohn R. Vile is dean of the University Honors College at Middle Tennessee State University and the author of \"The American Flag: An Encyclopedia of the Stars and Stripes in U.S. History, Culture and Law.\"\nIn recent days, Nike has scrapped plans for a line of shoes featuring the so-called Betsy Ross flag because of concerns that some racist white nationalist groups have used it as their symbol. This is a case where it would be better to seek to recapture the flag than to abandon it.\nAs a people we live by symbols. Some symbols, like the Confederate flag, come with such historical freight that they may better be relegated to museums and private graveyards than to wearing apparel or public marches. This doesn’t give racists, or any other hate groups, the right to appropriate the Betsy Ross flag any more than they have the right to monopolize any other cherished American symbol.\nThe Tennessee Smokies Double-A baseball team came under fire Thursday, July 3, 2019, after it posted a tweet showing the Betsy Ross flag etched into the infield. Nike reportedly designed a shoe featuring the early flag but pulled it after former NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick complained. (Photo: USA TODAY Network - Tennessee)\nThe Betsy Ross flag consist of 13 white stars in a blue canton with 13 alternating red and white stripes in the field. The likelihood that Ross, a Philadelphia seamstress, designed this flag is fairly remote and originated from a speech about 100 years later. In addition to being popular during the Revolutionary War era — numerous African Americans who served in George Washington’s armies would have rallied to this flag — it was quite popular during the both the centennial and bicentennial celebrations of the Declaration of Independence. Like the Star-Spangled Banner that flew over Fort McHenry and that was sewn by Mary Young Pickersgill, one attraction of the Betsy Ross flag is that we associate it with a woman, who like African-Americans of her day, did not have full citizenship rights.\nDr. John R. Vile is a professor of political science and dean of the University Honors College at Middle Tennessee State University. (Photo: MTSU photo by J. Intintoli)\nThe colors of the flag are largely derived from the flag of Britain. The idea of setting stars in a circle or in rows where none was larger or stood in distinction from others was meant to represent a new small-r republican constellation in which a single monarch or sun king would no longer dominate.\nWhatever the flaws of the new nation that the Betsy Ross flag represented, the Declaration of Independence, which served as its birth certificate, proclaimed that “all men are created equal” and that all were equally entitled to “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”\nMore: Tennessee Smokies delete tweet showing Betsy Ross flag drawn on infield\nIn the early 19th century, abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison described the U.S. Constitution as “a covenant with death” and “an agreement with hell” because of its failure to condemn slavery. By contrast, Frederick Douglass observed that the American framers had envisioned a nation where they thought slavery was on a path to ultimate extinction and that it was better to work within the Constitution than to abandon its nobler principles. During the fight for women’s suffrage and later marches for civil rights, demonstrators proudly waived American flags even though they knew that they still represented unrealized ideals.\nMembers of the Ku Klux Klan have burned crosses, yet we still humbly display them in our churches. We further ennoble our symbols as we refine our nation’s principles.\nThis undated product image obtained by The Associated Press shows Nike Air Max 1 Quick Strike Fourth of July shoes that have a U.S. flag with 13 white stars in a circle on it, known as the Betsy Ross flag. (Photo: Nike via AP)\nThe Betsy Ross flag and our current stars and stripes are collective symbols, and we would be foolish to concede them and the patriotic emotions they evoke to the most extreme elements and un-American elements among us.\nIf these flags are endangered, let’s show some of the courage that has kept our nation free and recapture them rather than let them remain in enemy hands.\nRead or Share this story: https://www.tennessean.com/story/opinion/2019/07/08/betsy-ross-flag-nike-controversy/1675249001/\nThe 21st century has been a huge disappointment\nHong Kong protest lesson: freedom is fundamental\nMore fathers must step up, take responsibility","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line61372"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.807883083820343,"wiki_prob":0.807883083820343,"text":"Sexless marriage? The sex therapist’s advice for jaded couples\nIt’s official: long-term couples are having less sex than ever before. The psychologist Dr Stephen Snyder says any couple, even after decades, can rediscover their mojo\nJennifer Aniston and Paul Rudd portray modern marriage in the film WanderlustALAMY\nSex is in trouble — especially married sex. The latest National Surveys of Sexual Attitudes and Lifestyles (Natsal-3) showed that British adults are having less sex. More are reporting no sex at all in the past month, compared with data from a decade ago. A recent report in the BMJ (British Medical Journal) said this was particularly true for people in relationships.\nAccording to the data, the steepest drop in sexual frequency was seen in those who were married or cohabiting. What’s this all about? No one knows for sure, but it’s clear we’re living through a period of rapid cultural and technological change, with many more opportunities for distraction. Which is probably not great news when it comes to married sex. As Jean Twenge,…","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1563411"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6281192302703857,"wiki_prob":0.6281192302703857,"text":"Famous for its charcoal grilled stakes, seafood dinners, live entertainment and illegal backroom gambling, Babette's was a staple of Atlantic City nightlife throughout the 1920s. Located at 2211 Pacific Avenue – property now occupied by the Trump Plaza Casino – Babette's was owned by Dan Stebbins and was originally called the Golden Inn.\nIn 1920, a young singer and entertainer named Blanche Babette came to Atlantic City, where she met and married Dan Stebbins who owned a small club on Pacific Avenue known as the Golden Inn. The pair expanded the facility and renamed it Babette's in the 1930s. While Dan Stebbins managed the business side of the nightclub, Blanche handled the revues: designing costumes, arranging the music, rehearsing the chorus line, and introducing the acts.\nStars like Eleanor Powell, Jack White, Joe Penner, the Carlisle Sisters, comic Little Jerry Bergen, and Velma and Buddy Ebsen performed there. Visitors included Jimmy Walker, Mayor of New York; Rudy Vallee; the Three Stooges and Milton Berle.\nThe décor of Babette's was famously unique. It was fashioned in a nautical theme which included a bar in the shape of a ship. It is rumored that a trapdoor that led from the horse room – an illegal backroom gambling center where individuals placed bets on horse races – to the roof of the building, from which one could then access the Stebbins' home.\nDuring a federal investigation in the 1930s, Babette's was targeted for its gambling and horse-race betting operations. In 1943, Sheriff James Carmack led a raid on Babette's. Racing sheets, craps tables, roulette wheels and telephones were seized. Stebbins ultimately paid $5,000.00 in fines.\nIn 1950, the Stebbins retired from the business and sold the nightclub. Dan Stebbins passed away in 1960 and Blanche in 1963.\nAn ad for Babette's in the 1946 Atlantic City City Directory. (H009.BabettesAd1946CityDirectory. Atlantic City Heritage Collections, Atlantic City Free Public Library.\nVicki Gold Levi. Atlantic City: 125 Years of Ocean Madness. New York: C.N. Potter, distributed by Crown Publishers, 1979.\nJonathan Van Meter. The Last Good Time: Skinny D'Amato , The Glorious 500 Club & the Rise and Fall of Atlantic City. New York: Crown, 2003.\nJim Waltzer and Tom Wilk. Tales of South Jersey: Profiles and Personalities. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2001.\nUS Department of Justice and US Department of Treasury. The Case of Enoch L. Johnson: a complete report of the Atlantic City investigation conducted jointly by the Treasury Department and the Department of Justice. [United States: n.p.], [1942].\nLocal History Biography File – \"Stebbins, Blanche Babette\"\nLocal History Subject File – \"Nightclubs\"\nAtlantic City City Directories","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1584534"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8702067732810974,"wiki_prob":0.8702067732810974,"text":"Australia Dumps Another Prime Minister for Pushing Climate Policies\nMyron Ebell • August 31, 2018\nMap of Australia overlaid with Australian flag\nClimate policy has once again toppled a prime minister in Australia. After Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton threatened to challenge Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s leadership over climate policy, Turnbull on May 18th agreed to drop the National Energy Guarantee, legislation to implement Australia’s pledge under the Paris climate treaty to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 26% below 2005 levels by 2030. But that was not enough to save Turnbull.\nDutton then challenged Turnbull, but Turnbull survived a vote on August 21st by Liberal Party members of Parliament, 48 to 35. Dutton resigned from the Liberal-National Coalition government, but on Wednesday the 22nd Turnbull appeared to win back support from other government ministers who had voted against him.\nThe next day, Thursday the 23rd, Dutton presented a petition signed by 43 Liberal members of the House and Senate—a bare majority—asking for a new leader. After Turnbull resigned as party leader and prime minister on Friday the 24th, an election was immediately held. Three members—Dutton, Foreign Minister Julie Bishop, and Treasurer Scott Morrison—contested the election. Bishop was eliminated in the first round, and Morrison then defeated Dutton 45-40 to become leader of the Liberal Party and thus prime minister. Morrison is a member of the establishment wing of the party and was a strong Turnbull supporter.\nMalcolm Turnbull resigned his parliamentary seat on August 31st, thereby triggering a by-election in the wealthy Sydney suburban constituency of Wentworth. A date for the election has not yet been set and the parties have not selected candidates, but early polls show a dead-even race between the Liberal and Labor parties. A Labor victory would end the Coalition government’s one seat majority in the House of Representatives.\nMorrison is Australia’s seventh prime minister in eleven years and fifth in the last five years. Most of them were ousted because they insisted on pursuing unpopular climate and green energy policies. Turnbull now has the distinction of being toppled twice, the first time in a party revolt led by Tony Abbott.\nPresident Trump Promotes Administration's Environmental Accomplishments\nClimate Risk Disclosure Proposal Would Destroy, Not Protect, Shareholder Value\nMore by Myron Ebell\nTrump Administration Environmental Agenda Focuses on Stewardship, not Alarmist Policies\nClimate Change Narrative is Driven by Agenda of Political Control: Myron Ebell","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1722852"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9353398084640503,"wiki_prob":0.9353398084640503,"text":"Latin American states urged to ease entry for fleeing Venezuelans\nEditor | August 24, 2018 | Middle East | No Comments\nThe United Nations has urged Latin American countries to ease entry for thousands of people fleeing Venezuela’s deepening economic and political crisis.\nThe call on Thursday came after Ecuador and Peru announced tighter entry requirements for Venezuelans.\n“We recognise the growing challenges associated with the large scale arrival of Venezuelans,” UN refugee agency chief Filippo Grandi said in a statement issued jointly with the International Organization for Migration.\n“It remains critical that any new measures continue to allow those in need of international protection to access safety and seek asylum,” Grandi added.\nLed by President Nicolas Maduro, Venezuela has been struggling with hyperinflation, economic recession and shortages of essential goods, including food and medicine, as well as a political crisis that has left much of the country polarised.\nAccording to the UN, 1.6 million Venezuelans have fled the country since 2015, 90 percent of whom went to countries within South America.\nThis week, Ecuador and Peru said that those without valid passports would be denied entry, in a move affecting hundreds of thousands of Venezuelans who were previously allowed to cross the border with paper ID cards instead.\nThe UN agencies warned that the new passport requirement will expose people to “further risk of exploitation, trafficking and violence”.\nEcuador recently declared a state of emergency in three northern states and has called for a regional summit to discuss the mass exodus, which sees up to 4,200 Venezuelans arriving in the country daily.\n“It is the moment to exchange opinions, to see what different countries are doing in different aspects,” Santiago Chavez, Ecuador’s vice minister for human mobility, said in a statement on Wednesday.\n“The worst that can happen to the country [Ecuador] is migratory chaos,” he added.\nAl Jazeera’s Mariana Sanchez, reporting from the Ecuador-Peru border, said that “there is a lot of anxiety among all these Venezuelans who are trying to get into Peru” before a Saturday deadline where they will be required to have a passport to cross the border.\n“There is a lot of expectation that there will be a lot of people coming here in the next few days,” she added.\n‘We are stranded’\nFor its part, Colombia on Wednesday said it wanted a special UN envoy and a “multilateral emergency fund” to help manage the mass exodus. More than a million people have entered Colombia in the past 16 months alone.\nColombia has granted 800,000 of them temporary residence, but many want to travel onwards to Peru, Chile or even Argentina, which has taken in more than 30,000 Venezuelans under a law that allows foreign nationals to remain in the country “when there are exceptional reasons of a humanitarian nature”.\n“What is happening in Venezuela is of such gravity that it looks as though we were going through a terrible war like Syria – except there is no war,” Trino Marquez, a sociologist in Venezuela’s capital, Caracas, told Al Jazeera.\n“And there is the expectation that things will get even worse,” Marquez added.\nMany Latin American governments initially welcomed the migrants with open arms, remembering Venezuela’s role in welcoming those fleeing dictatorships and conflicts in the past.\nBut the exodus has ballooned this year, stretching social services, creating more competition for low-skilled jobs and stoking fears of unrest.\nEarlier this week, residents in a northern Brazilian town drove hundreds of Venezuelans back over the border.\n“There have been days of tension at the border between Brazil and Venezuela, especially at the town of Pacaraima where a shelter where Venezuelans were living was attacked and set on fire, with a group of Brazilians pushing about 1,000 Venezuelans to the Venezuelan side of the border,” said Al Jazeera’s Teresa Bo, reporting from Boa Vista, the capital of the northern state of Roraima.\nShe added that those who had managed to come back were living in shelters.\n“I cannot go back to my country, we cannot survive there,” Ricardo Rondon, a Venezuelan in Pacaraima, told Al Jazeera.\n“It’s a disaster and I won’t go back as long as Nicolas Maduro is in power. We are stranded.”\nVenezuelan migrants at a temporary shelter in the San Juan de Lurigancho district of Lima [Guadalupe Pardo/Reuters]\nOn August 20, Maduro’s government rolled out a new currency, slashing five zeroes from the bolivar in a bid to tame the country’s rampant hyperinflation.\nThe new bolivar, which will be in circulation alongside the old currency during a transitional period, will be pegged to the country’s state-backed cryptocurrency, the petro.\nMaduro, who says that he is the victim of a US-led “economic war” designed to sabotage his administration through sanctions, said that using the petro will abolish the “tyranny” of the dollar and lead to an economic rebirth in Venezuela, an OPEC member state and home to the world’s biggest crude oil reserves.\nBut many fear the measures could worsen the situation.\n“There has been complete confusion and paralysis since these new reforms came into place,” said Al Jazeera’s Lucia Newman from Caracas.\n“There is little confidence that these new measures are going to make things better … and people believe that the only way out of this crisis is leaving this country,” Newman added.\nBut for many, this is not a realistic option. The country has all but stopped issuing passports due to ink and paper shortages, as well as bureaucratic problems. Those who can afford it have paid fees and bribes upwards of $2,000 to get a new passport.\n“I need to leave but how? There is no way to get a passport unless you pay $2,000 under the table, which I don’t have,” a Venezuelan citizen told Al Jazeera.\nVenezuela’s gross domestic product (GDP) has dropped by about 45 percent since Maduro took office in April 2013, according to the International Monetary Fund.\n“There is no work, I can’t support my family or buy milk or diapers for my baby, so I have no choice but to leave,” Alejandro Blanco, another Caracas resident, told Al Jazeera.\nDRC election: Voting under way in long-delayed polls\nIran’s Mossadegh ‘would have negotiated with Donald Trump’\nWickremesinghe: Sri Lanka democracy under threat\nAlgeria PM starts talks on new cabinet as gas field workers protest","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line273561"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9553399682044983,"wiki_prob":0.9553399682044983,"text":"Medal Of Honor Developer: \"Afghanistan Sort Of Chose Us\"\nThis spring, one of the biggest war video game franchises will be set in a current war, the conflict in Afghanistan. Why? Not politics, a developer told Kotaku. Not current events.\n\"We never chose Afghanistan,\" Medal of Honor executive producer Greg Goodrich said in a recent interview in New York City. \"Afghanistan sort of chose us. We had a story we wanted to tell and it was about a certain group of individuals. And that's where they happened to be. And so we ended up there.\"\nThis new Medal of Honor puts players in the boots of various soldiers during an undated but clearly early part of the US-led NATO war in Afghanistan that began in the fall of 2001. Players spend much of their time in the game controlling elite Tier 1 operative soldiers, the type of bearded super-soldiers who have performed some of the most elite and dangerous missions in the way.\nGoodrich denied that setting the game during this modern conflict was an attempt to grab the attention of potential players who might be gripped by current events as opposed to the fictional future combat of competing series Modern Warfare or the older wars depicted in other major war games. \"I don't think about that at all,\" he said. \"We have a story to tell: Our story, our characters and the quality level at which we're telling our story will engage people whether it's there or anywhere else. The backdrop is just that. It's a historical backdrop that has rich history. It all adds to that recipe that goes into making a great storytelling experience, beyond the locale, beyond the time of day, beyond the audio or music.\"\nThe enemy in the new Medal of Honor will be Al Qaeda and foreign fighters from areas like Chechnya. They will exhibit fighting tactics seen in the real conflict.\nBeyond providing a new enemy, Goodrich said Afghanistan unexpectedly provided the game developers, the diverse terrain they wanted. \"What Afghanistan gives us is that the average consumer is going to expect a certain thing: a very dry, arid rustic terrain,\" he said. \"That's a part of Afghanistan. Helmand Province is a very dry rugged terrain. But when [the soldiers who consulted on the game]started bringing in photographs and we started looking at video, the different terrain of that country I was surprised... I've seen photographs that I would swear was Vietnam. I've seen snowy mountain peaks... What this does is it gives us a visual cascade of terrain that is going to be appealing to the consumer.\"\nSo the game won't be using its Afghanistan setting to press any political buttons. Usually the big war games don't, even, when setting themselves in a current war, it seems they could.\nMedal of Honor ships this spring for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and PC.\nPIC via Flickr, taken by U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Jim Downen\nmrwaffle @Mr Waffle\nlol, so it's set in the \"we're heroes come to save the day!\" part of the War on Terror, and not the quagmire that is still going on today. Gotcha.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1163589"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6581118702888489,"wiki_prob":0.6581118702888489,"text":"High street shopsGames, gadgets and toysGifts, books and stationary\nSmiggle, the world’s hottest stationery brand, was born in 2003. The ultimate creators of colourful, fun, fashion-forward stationery. The first Smiggle store opened in Melbourne, Australia and word spread fast about the bright pens, notebooks and gadgets that filled a tiny, but very special place.\nThe concept took off and the company soon hit 20 stores, where it caught the eye of the Just Group - Australasia's most exciting fashion & apparel retailer. Smiggle joined the Just Group in August 2007 and has not looked back since!\nIn 2008 Smiggle jumped the seas and opened its first international store in New Zealand. In 2011 Smiggle expanded into Singapore, and in 2014 Smiggle opened its doors in the UK, and in 2016 Smiggle says hello to malaysia and hong kong! It's all part of the grand plan to be the world's most exciting and famous stationery brand. Check out our store locations.\nThe product range is now bigger and better than ever, with the team at the Smiggle Design Lab drawing inspiration from all over the globe. Our ultimate goal is to inspire and develop the creative spirits of our customers, by delivering original, fun and affordable stationery.\nSmiggle products are all about great design and innovation, bold colour, quirky graphics, great value and most of all - giving our fans the tools they need to have fun!\nWe think we've created a place that's well worth a peek. It's small, it's not spacious, and it's incredibly bright, with friendly and passionate Smigglers who will happily take you through the range.\nSo come on in, experiment, explore, poke, prod and play, because a visit to our stores is just like a hug from your best friend. Where a smile meets a giggle, it's the world's greatest place.\nVisit our website and browse our latest offers and visit us in store\nUnit L3 Overgate Centre, Dundee, DD1 1UF Dundee, Dundee City\n9:00am - 5:30pm Monday:\n9:00am - 5:30pm Wednesday:\n9:00am - 5:30pm Friday:\n9:00am - 5:30pm Sunday:","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line781856"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5120739936828613,"wiki_prob":0.48792600631713867,"text":"Disorientated Feelings (Part 48)\nThe only school that is best suited for my son is Mizuho Academy: the school that seem to have some special magic to it. Saeko and my husband, who have both respectively studied and worked there for a number of years, claim that they have no role in it. It's more of based on the situation, my son's character and age, and so forth.\nSadly, there's no other school that could accept both my son's feminine behavior, and prevention of being picked on because of his young age and quite a number of people whom I don't even know being able to recognize me on the streets because I hold a high-level position of Hatsuya, which many people are familiar with. Sending him to a normal school would mean that he could be an easy target to be bullied, or, worse, be kidnaped to force me as a highly ranked Hatsuya staff to do something undesirable. This would be a different story if my son could even defend himself.\nI have 3 daughters and a son, but with this, it's making my only s…\n609th post: When not to round off numbers\nYou come across a number that looks something like\n27634279.3478295 and wonder how to round that off. Most people would just simply say 30 million or 25 million. Sometimes, however, knowing what the exact number can be important. Makes a difference when over/under estimation is involved, but when it comes to just talking to people about how big the number is, saying this can be quite a mouthful.\nAnyway, I'm here to talk about rounding off numbers that you would come across for money. Before I go on, note that some countries uses \".\" or a space to separate 3 digits of whole numbers, and \",\" for decimals. For countries like India, the first group contains 3 digits, but subsequent groups contain only 2 digits.\nSituations where you are more likely to come across more than 2 decimal places for money (or, depending on currency, trailing digits that are more than the lowest denomination) when calculating taxes or dealing with foreign currency. Here's an example of …\n608th post: Small Change in foreign Currency\nHaving been to many different countries, I have accumulated quite a number of coins. As you probably know, the money changer do not carry coins besides that of the local currency. Sure I could create a collection out of these, but there are extras left over for it. How to deal with these?\nI don't know what is the smallest denomination the money changer would accept, but it's certainly banknotes instead of coins. I have received RM1 notes, which are worth only US$0.31, and sometimes, the highest denominated notes of that currency aren't worth much, so exchanging a few pieces, and getting the equivalent in foreign currency back as thick stacks of notes.\nWell, if going to the country again, make sure to bring those coins along, and try to use as much of the smallest denomination as possible, or pay in a way that you don't get small denominations. Example: Paying the exact change (or as close as possible) with as many of the low-denominated coins as possible instead of…\n606th post: Behind the scenes\nI've talked from time to time about my posts (blog stories and anime posts especially) being late/early and such.\nHowever, with a lot of things to do, including doing household chores, it's hard to keep a schedule. Blog stories are supposed to be out once a week. But as time went past, they get unknowingly longer and longer (in terms of the number of words per part/post). On top of that I have a busier schedule and things that have higher priority that it's hard to maintain that.\nEventually, that weekly thing became every fortnight Mondays, and now... well whenever I say it's ready. Sometimes, it just sits in my drafts for days and then publish it at a later date without any editing. Before you ask, it's not scheduled either.\nAlso, I am writing only because I want to write what I want, but, unfortunately, I don't earn enough from those to make a living. (Not even enough to afford one subway train ride) Wasting my effort on something that doesn't reward me …\nAlternate Dimension (Part 85)\nAt work, Hitoko (the one whom I rescued a while back) showed something that required my attention: there is something detected in the mountain ranges at the northern part of the country that is related to the phenomenon of people being turned young girls. Ironically, Hatsuya had also given me the same assignment at the same area with very vague detail and an almost immediate timing that implies that they knew that Powell had already told me.\nHatsuya said that I could go there with what I'm wearing at that moment without the need for any additional clothing as my body can withstand extreme conditions that normal people can't, but added that the same doesn't apply to how I would feel about it. Obviously, I don't want to go a mountainous region wearing nothing but summer clothes. Plus, they could track my location and see what I'm seeing, which I can't disable it myself as it's part of my body. For the latter, it's deeply implemented into my eyes that the …\nTeary Promise (Part 15)\nHisakawa seemed to have problems with the people with a certain group of people in an area near where we are now. Quite a number of people have seen her at Powell Research's official events in that Mizuho uniform, enough times for people to see it as her \"trademark\" outfit. This means that she would be recognized instantly.\nFor her to get into a disguise is nearly impossible as her Mizuho uniform can't be removed, including the name tag that has a completely different name written on it. The shape of that name tag, and her (larger-than-average) breasts, could still be seen even with multiple layers of clothes worn over it. She added that she hates wearing skirts, which is ironic as she's wearing one now and is never seen wearing anything else. Hisakawa is such a beautiful and elegant woman that I can't ever imagine her as a man.\nHisakawa's phone started ringing. She answered it, but not long after, she started crying.\nHisakawa: \"What do you mean? Didn…\nDisorientated Feelings special: College Graduation Trip\nMy friends and I have planned a trip to head to New York via car as part of the graduation trip. My university is located about 40 km south east from San Fransisco, but New York city, which is on the other side of America, is 5000 km away from here. I'm leaving behind things that I don't need with a friend, so I had to fly back to California to pick them up before heading back to Japan. It's hard to book flights due to the unpredictability of the trip that could exceed the original plan by as much as a week or more. I could get a standby ticket if I want to get to the earliest available flight at that time, but only if there are still seats available at the time the regular check-in closes, which, considering that the international airports of California and Japan are major stopover airports, that's not guaranteed.\nFor this trip, we would be traveling in two cars. Whose car? Well, from someone who is joining the trip who lives closer to New York than California: one of…\nDisorientated Feelings special: College Graduation...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line701368"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5967644453048706,"wiki_prob":0.4032355546951294,"text":"TRUMP-KIM SUMMIT: Will De-Nuclearization Instill World Peace?\nThe first ever live face-to-face encounter of a sitting U.S. President and a reigning North Korean leader was witnessed by the world in the hotels near Singapore's Sentosa Island on June 12, 2018 to sign the agreement of denuclearization of Korean Peninsula.\nThe long going war between the two nations and the exchange of insults a month before the summit has got everyone biting their nails off. This was the biggest historical event with quite a background on it. If implemented in right spirit, this peace agreement between North Korea and The United States of America can bring the ever-going violence and rivalry between the two countries that poses threat to world peace may give a sigh of relief.\nThe Korean Peninsula war in 1950 came to an end after the intervention of the US led-coalition army.\nHeart burn with the loss during the war, the North Korea was left with a big scar and a grudge against the USA.\nEver since, the North Korea has been on its mission of US invasion.\nOn succeeding his father and earlier ruler of North Korea, Kim Jong-Un unleashed the incessant attacks on USA.\nLast year after Kim Jong-Un, the dictator of North Korea conducted multiple nuclear tests and continued with his programme of attacking the United States which raised questions about world peace that led to foundation of this summit.\nSouth Korea, which shuttled between The USA and North Korea set up the Trump-Kim meeting and is of the view that Kim Jong-Un has genuine interest in dealing away his nuclear weapons in return for economic benefits.\nDuring their summit at a border truce village, Moon, South Korean President and Kim vaguely promised to work toward the \"complete denuclearization'' of the Korean Peninsula.\nNorth Korea's Foreign Ministry said that all the tunnels at the country's north-eastern testing ground will be destroyed by explosion, and that observation and research facilities and ground-based guard units will also be removed.\nThe North Korean leader seeks a deal in which he gives away his intercontinental ballistic missiles but retains some of his short-range arsenal in return for a reduced US military presence in the South.\nTHE DEAL: Key Points\nThe United States and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) commit to establish new US - DPRK relations in accordance with the desire of the peoples of the two countries for peace and prosperity.\nThe US and The DPRK will join their efforts to build a lasting and stable peace regime on the Korean Peninsula.\nReaffirming the April 27, 2018 Panmunjom Declaration, the DPRK commits to work towards complete denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.\nThe US and The DPRK commit to recovering POW/MIA remains, including the immediate repatriation of those already identified.\nThe deal seems to bring peace in the world with the denuclearization of the ballistic missiles by North Korea. After signing the Agreement, Donald Trump said \"better than anyone could have expected... It is a tremendous honor, and I have no doubt we will have a terrific relationship.\"\nNorth Korea's party line has been amended to focus primarily on economic development on the rationale that North Korea has achieved its nuclear goals.\nBy giving Kim the respect that comes with interaction on an \"equal footing,\" Trump has front-loaded symbolic expressions of his intent to improve relations, further instilling faith in the agreement.\nNorth Korea has suspended its Anti-US rally to show the zeal towards denuclearization.\nThere is a risk that leaning too heavily into an attempt to end the Korean war and replace it with a permanent peace might change the relationship without addressing the underlying risk that accompanies a nuclear North Korea.\nBringing the Korean War to an end could result in exposure of South Korea to North Korea with their short range arsenal still in place. This could undermine the alliance between The USA and South Korea.\nNorth Korea has been making vague promises for over three decades.\nThe Korean side of the agreement falls short of details and is very vaguely worded, presenting no timeline for the initiation of the denuclearization.\nTwo weeks after The Singapore Summit, 38NORTH(North Korea's analysis outlet) witnessed nuclear infrastructural developments of a new cooling water pump house, a number of new buildings, a completed construction on a cooling water reservoir and a possible radiochemical laboratory. This could nullify the Global peace efforts taken by the United States.\nTips to improve participation in GD Round\nThe above discussed topic is one of the most talked about issue and has been carefully chosen and solved with the sole aim to help you succeed in GD round. If you follow a few key tips, you can improve your participation and scores on this GD topic and others:\nInitiate the group discussion only if you are well versed with the facts and information on the GD Topic.\nIf you are not well versed with the topic and feel a bit low on content, try to gather information from first 1-2 speakers and then participate.\nQuote facts and figures, if you are sure of the authenticity. You may encounter volley of counter questions on the facts and statistics from your fellow participants. Unless very sure, don’t use it.\nMake multiple entries using the opportunity to speak. Note down important information from other participants and turn it to your benefit.\nSince GD is a sort of debate, you should have a clear view point on the topic – either for or against. Do not switch viewpoints. However, if you have points for both for and against the topic, substantiate your viewpoint with well qualified data, examples or exceptions.\nEven if you agree or disagree to the view point of other participant, add value by giving reasons for it when you speak but don’t simply say I agree or disagree.\nYou can conclude above topic by summarizing key facts on both point of views and conclude with the majority opinion, while respecting the minority viewpoint.\n..Read More GD Topics","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1301475"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7470711469650269,"wiki_prob":0.25292885303497314,"text":"Porter Blinn\nFebruary 13, 2015 by BJ MacDonald\nHeirs of Alexander Barclay: Sarah Agnes Barclay Blinn\nSarah Agnes Barclay has also given me trouble. I thought I had her in Connecticut married to a Porter Blinn but discovered, when I was in Connecticut in 2011, that it was a Sarah Grissom who married Porter Blinn. This is an example of checking other records like marriages and not just relying on census. The Sarah Agnes Barclay Blinn I wanted married a James Blinn. As you read the information below you will see that Sarah is still giving me trouble.\nIn Salt Lake City, in October 2014, I found a birth record for an unnamed baby. The parents were Jas. B. Blinn and Sarah A. Barclay Blinn. The baby was born 29, June 1868 in Hartford, Hartford Co., Connecticut. FHL#1313829.\nBirth Record child of Sarah and James.\nJune 29, ____ Blinn, Male, Jas, B. & Sarah A. Barclay Blinn, father 41, mother 22, 121 Park Street, Occupation of the father [M/Woulder] W. H. Tremaine, physician. Mother’s occupation Bonnet Maker.\nUpdate 6/10/2016 – I just recently found them in the 1870 Census. They are living in Bridgeport, Connecticut:\nline 27, They are under house 1708 of a Dolph, Edwin L. 2531, Blinn, James B, 40, M, W, Iron Moulder, $150, born Connecticut, his parents are of foreign birth\nBlinn, Sarah, A, 28, F, W, domestic _____, born Conn. parents of foreign birth.\nBlinn, Anna E, 8/12 F, W.\nSource: 1870 U.S. Federal Census, James Blinn Family, page 312, Bridgeport, County of Fairfield, Connecticut, enumerated the 26th day of July, 1870 by a Philo L. Bainerd.\nThe 1880 Connecticut Census has a James with a Sarah A. which might be them but the ages do not match the birth record above?\nLine 28, 1751/2, 19, 30 Blinn, James B. W, M, 52, Iron Maulder, born Connecticut, parents born Ireland.\nBlinn, Sarah A. W, F, 33, Wife, Hair worker, born Connecticut, father born England, mother born Scotland.\nBlinn, Rex E., W, M, 8, son, at school, born Connecticut, parents born Connecticut.\nBlinn, Olive May, W, F, 3, daughter, at school, born Connecticut, parents born Connecticut.\nSource: James Blinn Family, Hartford, Hartford Co., Connecticut, page 3, SD#2, ED#4, enumerated 1 of June 1880, by J. McConville.\nSarah Agnes Blinn witnesses a deed between Grace and Amarilla in 1899 in August. I have featured this deed in a previous post on this blog regarding George A. Barclay’s estate, in Pine River. See the post dated March 24, 2014 titled: “Final Decree Aug. 15, 1899 – George’s Legacy.” I am glad Grace got to meet more of her father’s siblings. I think of all the lost stories of this family, sigh!\nUpdate 6/10/2016 – I no longer feel that this is Sarah it just doesn’t work. In the 1900 Census we find Sarah with a daughter in California.\nLine 84, 426, 55, 103, Blinn/Blum, Sarah, Head, W, F, June 1834, 65 Wd, 2 children born, 2 died. Born in Scotland, Immigrated 1851, 49 years in U.S., no occupation.\nBlum, Louisa, daughter, W, F, Nov. 1853, age 46, S, born California, father born Sweden, mother Scotland, no occupation\nSource: 1900 U.S. Federal Census for Sarah Blum, San Francisco, San Francisco Co., California, SD# 1, ED 306, Sht 4, Assembly Dist. No. 45, enumerated on the 4th day of June 1900, by Joseph A. Gendoth.\nIf this is Sarah Agnes Barclay Blinn then I find her birth date very interesting and the fact she immigrated in 1851 also very interesting. Her daughter Louise is very confusing with the age 46 and the birth 1853?\n1910 U.S. Census Seattle, King County, Washington we find them under the name Blain. Update 6/10/2016 – The only thing that bothers me is that she is said to be born in PA and I think that is not correct. So this is where things get tricky.\nLine 96, 24th Avenue, 46, 56, Blain, Sarah A., head, F, W, 60 Wd, 5 children born 2 living, born Pennsylvania, Scot – Engl, Eng. English, Income, yes, yes.\nLeola M. daughter, F, W, 33, D, 0 0, Born Pennsylvania, Father born New Jersey, mother born PA, English, Clerk, Abstract Office, W, No. O, yes, yes.\nSource: Sarah Blain Family, 1910 Seattle, King County, Washington 11th Precinct part of, SD#1, ED#93, Ward 3 Part of), Sht#2, enumerated 16 April 1910, by T/F. W. Van Allen. Blain,\nIn 1920 Sarah is living in an insane asylum and probably has suffered the same fate as Alexander who was found wandering Farmington before his death and ended up in the Rochester Hospital in Olmsted Co., Minnesota. It is very interesting that her parents are born in New York?\nLine 65, Blinn, Sarah A, F, W, 69, WD, yes, yes, born Connecticut, father born New York, mother born New York, yes,, no occupation.\nSource: 1920 U.S. Federal Census, Napa State Hospital, Napa, California, Juarez Precinct, SD#3, ED# 56, Sht.#16, enumerated 14 January 1920, by John K. Harries.\nThe information provided below may or may not be the correct family, there is a tombstone at Find A Grave in the Sunset View Cemetery in Contra Costa, California, for a Sarah A. Blinn with the appropriate dates. She is listed as the Mother of Leola M. Kellogg but I don’t know or can’t find a Leola Kellogg marriage record:\nhttp://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GSln=Blinn&GSfn=Sarah&GSbyrel=all&GSdyrel=all&GSob=n&GRid=137683492&df=all&\nDaughter Leola Mae may have married first an Alexander Buck and lived in Contra Costa but based on the above, I am not sure.\nLine 71, 423, 433, Buck, Alexander, Head, M,W, 35 M, yes, yes, born PA, parents born PA. yes, truck_____Contractor.\nBuck, Leola Mae, F, W, 34, M, yes, yes, born Connecticut, parents born Connecticut, none.\nSource: Alexander Buck Family, 1920 U.S. Federal Census, Contra Costa, California, 7th Township, SD#3, ED#17, Sht.#18, enumerated 31, January 1920, by Claire W. Schmidt.\nBy 1930 they have moved to Placer, California.\nLine 92, 178, 198, Buck, Alexander, yes, M, W, 45, M, 21, no, yes, born Connecticut, parents born Connecticut, 55, yes, rancher, fruit ranch\nBuck, Leola, F, W, 44, M, 21, no, yes, born Connecticut, parents born Connecticut\nBuck, Sarah, daughter, F, W, 8, S, yes, yes, born Connecticut, parents born, Connecticut, rancher, fruit ranch.\nSource: Alexander Buck, 1930 U.S. Federal Census, Placer, California, township 14, ED# 31-27, SD4, Sht#7, enumerated on 22, April, 1930 by Matthew W. Coates.\nSarah J. Buck was born 4 January 1922 in Placer and her mother’s maiden name was Blinn.\n1940 we find Alexander with a May in Placer.\nLine 41, 141, O, 200, No, Buck, Alexander E. Head, M, W, 55, M, No, 8, born PA, Same house, Farmer. Buck, May, Wife, F, W, 56, M, No, 8, born PA, County Clinton, State PA, no occupation.\nSource: Alexander Buck Family, Placer County, California, Judicial 10, SD#2, ED#31-21, Sht 7, enumerated on 22 April, 1940, by Eldon R. Martinson.\nIt looks like Alexander Buck died on 20 November 1970 in Placer, California and was born 21 December 1884 per the California Death Index.\nUpdate 6/10/2016: About two weeks ago a lady from MOHAI contacted me with an article about a Leola Mae Blinn who was an attorney in the Seattle, Washington area. MOHAI is the Museum of History and Industry here in Seattle. So I started to doublecheck everything and found the 1870 census for James and Sarah A. Blinn. I am still having trouble verifying the death of James and finding out more about Sarah.\nThis article from the MOHAI individual had a photo from a city directory for a Leola May Blinn as an attorney.\nLeola May Blinn\nThe article was from the Urbana Daily Courier Tuesday December 12, 1916 – Woman Motorists Drive off Wolves, Their Only Weapons Were Firebrands and Hatchet — An All-night Battle. Seattle, Wash. Forced to use firebrands, their only weapon aside from a hatchet, to drive away the timber wolves and coyotes that surrounded their machine at night, three Seattle women fund excitement aplenty on the last leg of an 8000 automobile journey across the continent. The women, Miss Leola May Blinn, her mother, Mrs. Sarah Blinn, aged 70, and Mrs. Charles S. Davis, traveled alone, without even a gun to protect themselves. They slept ou in the open. Miss Blinn’s automobile being converted at night into a sleeping car. “It was when we got stuck in eastern Washington that we suffered out most harrowing experience,” said Miss Blinn, describing the events of the journey. “We had just been ferried across the river at Walla Walla to Wallula when we ran into poor roads. From there to North Yakima we had a terrible time. We managed the difficult sand piles that served for roads until we were making a forced detour around the ‘Old Horn,’ a bend in the Columbia River. Then we got stuck in the sand. “We were miles from nowhere. Night came on. We had trouble with our battery and could not switch on the electric lights We could not go ahead nor could we go back. While we sat their the coyotes and timber wolves came. We had no gun. There was nothing but a hatchet. “We had built a fire, however, with the safe brush that was near, and with the firebrands were able to keep them off. The Coyotes were afflicted with rabies, the weather having been very hot, and the wolves came right up to the machine and almost put their noses inside. We stayed up all night. Early the next morning I started out for assistance. While I was away Mrs. Davis had to use firebrands again to keep off the coyotes who had reappeared. Then she became anxious for my safety, not knowing whether I would be able to find assistance or not. I was able, however, to arouse two white men in a tent a mile away and with their help we got out of the North Yakima flats.”\nI know that Sarah Agnes Blinn was in Seattle in 1906 helping her niece and nephew with affidavits about their father’s disappearance in Alexander’s estate papers. So this is very interesting.\nI did manage to find an obituary about a Leola M. Kellogg but I don’t know what paper it is from only that it was done sometime in 1959:\nMrs. Leola B. Kellogg, Criminal Lawyer, Dies – Mrs. Leola Buck Kellogg, 82, a criminal lawyer for 40 years, died, Monday at Harbor General Hospital, where she was taken after being stricken at her Redondo Beach home. She lived at 1927 Gates Ave. North Redondo Beach. Mrs. Kellogg was born in Hartford, Conn. She was graduated from law school at George Washington University, Washington D.C., and later attended the New York School of Dramatic Art. After a brief career as an actress in the Boston stock company and at the Knickerbocker Theater, New York, she went to Seattle where she was admitted to the bar in 1912. Mrs. Kellogg was admitted to the California bar in 1919 and had specialized in criminal law in Los Angeles since then, acting as defense counsel in 18 murder trials in this area. She maintained offices at 122 S. Pacific Ave. Redondo Beach, and appeared in Redondo Beach Municipal Court as recently as March 3. Funeral services will be conducted at 10 a.m. Saturday at the Niland Mortuary Chapel, 535 N. Pacific Coast Highway, Redondo Beach and interment will be at Pacific Crest Cemetery. Mrs. Kellogg leaves a daughter, Mrs. Sarah Jane von Dyl of Encino, and five grandchildren.\nThis obituary about Leola May Kellogg explains the notate on the tombstone that I found for Sarah A. Blinn, see above link to Find A Grave. It also explains why I was finding articles about Leola in the Seattle newspapers which stopped about 1920. I am going to summarize these articles here:\nThe Seattle Sunday Times, Oct. 27, 1912 – Miss Blinn Active in Republican Campaign – Feminine Lawyer Who Made Great Race for State Office, Heads Women’s auxiliary. With Photo. Miss Leola May Blinn, who ran third in the race for commissioner of public lands and who was the only woman admitted to the practice of law at the last state bar examination has been made chairman of the King County Republican committee’s women’s auxiliary. Miss Blinn is in charge of the women’s headquarters in the Seattle Hotel. Miss Blinn made a remarkable race for land commissioner, spending most of her time at her desk in the county clerk’s office while the campaign was in progress and devoting odd moments to her own canvas. As she is a good automobile driver she was able, in spare time, to make quick runs to nearby points and covered a great deal of the state in short trip expeditions. She introduced into politics an innovation — the woman campaign manager — who accompanied her on all her trips. Immediately after the close of the campaign, Miss Blinn appeared before the bar examining board and passed one of the most rigid bar examinations ever submitted to students. It is her ambition to devote herself to law practice in probate and realty matters, having had seven years’ experience in abstract work and having become familiar with probate business through her experience in the county clerk’s office. Miss Blinn is a member of the Women’s Relief Corps and several other organizations. She was born in Hartford, Conn. and now resides with her mother, at 1833 Twenty-fourth Avenue.\nThe Seattle Republican Friday Jan. 17, 1913 – Leola May Blinn ….first woman to be admitted to practice in the U.S. court in this district.\nThe Seattle Star, Wed, May 21, 1912 First Edition – Women Attorneys are Opposed in Man’s Trial. About a burglary case in which Miss Blinn and Miss Reah Whitehead argued the case.\nThe Labor Journal (Everett, WA) Fri, Feb 7, 1913 – First Edition – Women Form State Body. She held several positions in the creation of the organization.\nThe Labor Journal (Everett, WA) Fri Aug 14, 1914 – First Edition page 3 with photo – Woman Lawyer to Aid Paroled Prisoner.\nThe Newport Miner (Newport, WA) Thu, Aug 8, 1912 – First Edition page 6, Woman Candidate Files – Her move to run for land commissioner is filed.\nThe Oregon Daily Journal (Portland, OR) Tue, Aug 24, 1915 – page 13 – Woman Lawyer at Joint Meeting. Miss Leola May Blinn of Seattle is the only woman lawyer from Washington attending the joint meeting of the Washington Oregon and Bar Association….sort of a quick bio of her.\nThe Seattle Sunday Times, Nov. 11, 1917 She appears with a photo, About her Relief Corp work.\nThere is a Find A Grave memorial, with no gravestone at this time, to Leola. They use the name Leola Buck Kellogg, born Aug. 29, 1876 and died May 11, 1956. She is buried in the Pacific Crest Cemetery in Redondo Beach, Los Angeles Co., California. Plot 4 563 5. Billion Graves has a tombstone photo for her that reads: Beloved Mother, Leola B. Kellogg 1876 to 1959. There are other Kelloggs buried in the Pacific Crest: Daisy Evans, Emmer Edward and Michael. I did not find her husband.\nThe SSDI Applications and Claims Index has a Sarah Jane Vondyl (Sarah Jane Von Dyl) who was born 4 Jan 1922 in Auburn Place, CA and she died 16 Dec. 2006. Her father is listed as Alexander E. Buck and her mother is Leola M. Blinn. So this means that Leola M. Blinn did marry to Alexander Buck.\nI found a marriage in Skagit County, Washington on 5th September, 1917 in Mt. Vernon by a Baptist Minister. Alexander E. buck of King and Leola May Blinn of King. Witnesses were Edna M. Behrens and Mrs. J.E. Noflsinger. Rev. Noflsinger was the officiating minister. Pastor of the Davis Memorial Baptist Church in Mt. Vernon. So by 1920 they were in California.\nAccording to the SSDI He, Alexander Buck, was born 21 December, 1884 and died Nov. 1970 in California in Contra Costa. This means they must have divorced because he died 11 years after Leola died and she was Kellogg by that time.\nI found two references to court cases one took place 6 December 1940. Where a Leola M. Kellogg applied for Habeas Corpus. The petitioner, who is the wife of William V. Kellogg, was charged with grand theft accomplished by means of drawing and cashing six checks upon the alleged joint tenancy account of herself and her husband at the Bank of America in Sacramento and by appropriating the money to her own use contrary to her trust. etc. This case goes on for 10 pages. Justia – US Law, Case Law, California Case Law Cal App 2d Volume 41 in reg Kellogg.\nCollison v. Thomas, Docket No. L.A. 25793, 55 Cal 2d 490 (1961) – This litigation involves the estates of William P. O’Brien his wife Masie O’Brien..Edna M. Collison, as administratrix of Masie’s estate…Leola Buck Kellogg was administratrix of William’s estate to quiet title on land in Torrance, CA. Unfortunately Leola died during the trial etc. The entire trail of this action took less than one day. It commenced at 11:05 a.m. on May 11, 1959, Mrs. Kellogg, the administratrix of William’s estate died at 11:20 a.m. on the day of the trial. This brief was 4 pages long.\nAn article appeared titled “Woman Charges Husband Ruined Law Business, Los Angeles, Sep. 17, UP Mrs. Leola M. Kellogg, former Sacramento attorney, today filed suit asking $15,250 damages from her husband, William V. Kellogg of Sacramento, charging that he ruined her law business by causing her prosecution on grand theft charges. Mrs. Kellogg said her husband swore to a complaint Sept 12, 1940, which caused her arrest and trial in Sacramento. She said she was acquitted in a jury trial but that her practice was destroyed. Her husband, she said, was “malicious” in his action, which was described as the outgrowth of a dispute over funds in a joint bank account.\nI have not found a marriage record for Leola to William V. Kellogg at this time. I cannot get a fix on him although he may have died in Denver, CO.\nEnd of update 6/10/2016 – Well if this is Sarah’s daughter Leola must have been someone to know. Maybe some day I will figure this out. It looks very much like it could be Sarah’s family.\nI find that the Barclay’s were very inconsistent with their census information. I am using census again without other documents like vital records to verify, so the information above is all very uncertain till I get time to dig more.\nThere is certainly more to do with Sarah Agnes and her family like finding her marriage record and when did James pass. How many children did she actually have? Did I find the correct Sarah in the census or am mistaken. I need to look at vital records and more to see if I cannot get a clearer picture of Sarah Agnes Barclay Blinn.\nPosted in Blinn Surname, California, City and County of San Francisco, Connecticut, Hartford, Hartford County, James Blinn, King County, Leola Blinn, Porter Blinn, Sarah Agnes Barclay, Seattle\t| Tagged Blinn Family connections, Buck surname, Contra Costa California, Kellogg surname, Placer California | Leave a comment\nApril 3, 2010 by BJ MacDonald\nJohn Barclay’s Two Families\nJohn Barclay, my great great grandfather, was introduced to me by my Aunt Miriam in her family history notes, so I knew about him. I also had a copy of the book by the city of Pine River, celebrating their first 100 years, and he is mentioned in that book:\n“…not far from Shakopee where George’s father chose to live “because it reminded him of his native Scotland.” Apparently the father, John, remarried and had other children…”\nJohn Barclay had two families. He was first married to Margaret. When he married Margaret is not known and where she is buried is also unknown. She probably died in Connecticut but so far a search of records reveal only one possibility of a Margaret Barclay dying in Enfield in 1848 of about the right age.\ncontinuing the quote above…” because at the time of Alexander’s death in 1906, there was quite a bit of difficulty in locating all the Barclay heirs from “both families.”” pg. 105\nIn my Aunt Miriam’s notes she mentions Alexander’s probate:\nAlex's Probate\nMy great-uncle Alexander Barclay has been very good to me. I secured his probate file at some expense from the Dakota County Courthouse in Minnesota and it opened up a very big genealogical door!\nFrom this first marriage came seven (7) siblings that were listed in Alexander’s estate file. There wasn’t a will so some of the information is carefully taken from the probate file. Other information such as census searches and indexes were also used. I am slowly gathering the facts together on the siblings and will present more at a later time.\n1. John Avery Barclay born abt 1836, died – unknown. According to Alex’s estate file he disappeared and was presumed dead as stated in an affidavit of his sister Sarah Agnes. He appears in deeds, land records, and court documents in Silbey Co., Minnesota till about 1880. He may have gone to California. John Avery Barclay was probably born in Scotland per census information and other sources but that is not yet proven. John married Minerva Parks on 3 July 1865 in Henderson, Sibley Co., Minnesota. Since John Avery Barclay was considered dead his two children where his heirs and they are mentioned in the estate file. The couple actually had four children:\n1. John Avery Barclay II born 23 July 1867 in Sibley Co., Minnesota and died 8 March 1951 in Seattle, King Co., Washington.\n2. Sarah Ellen born 29 March 1869 in Sibley Co., Minnesota.\n3 and 4. There were two other children twins: Albert and Alice born 1870 Silbey Co., Minnesota but it is looking like they didn’t survive. Some of this information was supplied by another cousin.\n2. James A. Barclay born about 1838 in Connecticut, he died about 1906 in Bridgeport, Fairfield Co., Connecticut during the probate process of Alexander’s estate. He married a Maryanne Stewart and had children.\n3. Sarah Agnes Barclay born about 1840 in Connecticut. She married Porter Blinn about 1860 in Connecticut. He was born about 1842 in Connecticut. They had 6 children and it looks like they stayed in Newington, Hartford Co. , Connecticut.\nUpdate: May 26, 2010 – I was at the Family History Library researching when I discovered that the Sarah that I thought was Sarah Agnes Barclay in the census married to Porter Blinn was the Sarah I should be studying for the Barclay’s. Turns out she is a Griswold and her father is Henry Griswold. So back to the drawing board on #3. This is why it is so important to check other sources like marriages and birth records and not totally trust the census.\n4. Mary J. Barclay born about 1841 in Connecticut and died 28 March 1917 in Bristol, Hartford Co., Connecticut. I have her estate file. She married a Jerome B. Ford and had 3 daughters. Jerome was born about 1846 in Connecticut.\n5. Alexander A. Barclay was born September 1842 in Hartford, Connecticut and died on 9 December 1905 at the Rochester Hospital for the Insane in Olmsted Co., Minnesota. He apparently suffered in the end with dementia. He was only in the hospital about 6 days before he died. He was buried 17 December 1905 in the Corinithian Cemetery in Farmington, Dakota Co., Minnesota.\n6. Martha M. Barclay born about 1843 in Connecticut and died around 1920 or later in California. She married a Jeremiah Ford in about 1859 in Connecticut. I do not know if Jeremiah and Jerome were brothers. Martha and Jeremiah had two daughters.\n7. George Angus Barclay was born 18 August 1844 probably in Connecticut and died on the 28th of October 1898 in Pine River, Cass Co., Minnesota. George is the subject of our blog and more information will be forthcoming on his life. He married Amarilla Spracklin in 1878 and they had 2 children.\nThe second marriage of John Barclay was to Helen in Scott Co., Minnesota. I have not been able to find their marriage in Minnesota records but it happened prior to 1860 per the census and from this marriage their were four (4) children born.\n8. Charles Barclay was born about January 1860 in Eagle Creek (Shakopee), Scott Co., Minnesota. After the death of his mother in 1907 he seems to have moved from Shakopee and might have gone to Minneapolis and died about 1938. Charles didn’t marry as far as I can determine from census and other documents.\n9. William Barclay was born about 1863 in Eagle Creek (Shakopee), Scott Co., Minnesota and died 7 Dec 1937 in Gallatin Co., Montana. He married a Clara E, probably in Minnesota. She was born about 1859 in Wisconsin and died about 21 March 1919 in Madison Co., Montana. They had one child name Foster born 1891 and probably died by 1907.\n10. Mary E. Barclay was born about 1864 in Eagle Creek (Shakopee), Scott Co., Minnesota and died 19 February 1930 in Cascade Co., Montana. She married Charles B. Clark probably in Minnesota for he was born there about 1856. He died 28 February 1932 in Deer Lodge Co., Montana. They had at least one child named Ruth Clark who was born about 1895. It is interesting that there are two Mary’s named in John’s family a good 20+ years apart.\n11. Anna Elizabeth Barclay was born 15 April 1870 in Shakopee, Scott Co., Minnesota and died 4 August 1955 in Menominee, Menominee Co., Michigan. She married David Maurice Carter on 9 July 1885 in Eagle Creek (Shakopee), Scott Co., Minnesota. David was born 9 January 1860, Marinette, Marinette Co., Wisconsin. The information for this family was supplied by a cousin and has not been verified. Anna had 4 children.\nThe person that initiated the probate process for Alexander was his niece, my grandmother Grace A. Barclay McDonald. She was pregnant at the time and lived in International Falls. She was unable to attend the court sessions because she had the baby and was “indisposed.” The baby was my Aunt Miriam.\nBook: Logsleds to Snowmobile’s, Pine River Centennial Celebration, 1873-1973, Written by the Citizens of Pine River and edited by Norman F. Clarke, Pine River Centennial Committee, 1979. A copy is available at the Family History Library.\nPosted in Alexander Barclay, Amarilla Spracklin Barclay, Anna Elizabeth Barclay, BARCLAY SURNAME, Charles B. Clark, Charles Barclay, Clara E., Connecticut, Corinthian Cemetery, Dakota County, David Maurice Carter, Deer Lodge County, Gallatin County, George Angus Barclay, Grace Barclay McDonald, Hartford, Helen/Ellen Stevenson or Iverson, James Barclay, Jeremiah Ford, Jerome B. Ford, John Avery Barclay Jr., John Barclay, John Barclay, the son, Madison County, Margaret Barclay, Marinette County, Martha M. Barclay, Mary E. Barclay, Mary J. Barclay, Maryanne Stewart, Menominee County, Michigan, Minerva Parks, Minnesota, Miriam's Notes, Montana, Pine River, Porter Blinn, Sarah Agnes Barclay, Sarah Ellen Barclay (Helen), Shakopee, Sibley County, SPRACKLIN/LEN SURNAME, William Barclay, Wisconsin\t| Tagged Barclay, John Barclay, Logsleds to Snowmobiles | Leave a comment","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1066126"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5386393666267395,"wiki_prob":0.5386393666267395,"text":"By Jeffrey Gottfried and Elisa Shearer\nThe American Trends Panel (ATP), created by Pew Research Center, is a nationally representative panel of randomly selected U.S. adults recruited from landline and cellphone random-digit-dial (RDD) surveys. Panelists participate via monthly self-administered web surveys. Panelists who do not have internet access are provided with a tablet and wireless internet connection. The panel is being managed by Abt Associates.\nData in this report are drawn from the panel wave conducted Aug. 8-21, 2017, among 4,971 respondents. The margin of sampling error for the full sample of 4,971 respondents is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points.\nMembers of the American Trends Panel were recruited from several large, national landline and cellphone random-digit-dial surveys conducted in English and Spanish. At the end of each survey, respondents were invited to join the panel. The first group of panelists was recruited from the 2014 Political Polarization and Typology Survey, conducted from Jan. 23 to March 16, 2014. Of the 10,013 adults interviewed, 9,809 were invited to take part in the panel, and a total of 5,338 agreed to participate.1 The second group of panelists was recruited from the 2015 Pew Research Center Survey on Government, conducted from Aug. 27 to Oct. 4, 2015. Of the 6,004 adults interviewed, all were invited to join the panel, and 2,976 agreed to participate.2\nThe third group of panelists was recruited from a survey conducted from April 25 to June 4, 2017. Of the 5,012 adults interviewed in the survey or pretest, 3,905 were invited to take part in the panel and a total of 1,628 agreed to participate.3\nThe ATP data were weighted in a multi-step process that begins with a base weight incorporating the respondents’ original survey selection probability and the fact that in 2014 some panelists were subsampled for invitation to the panel. Next, an adjustment was made for the fact that the propensity to join the panel and remain an active panelist varied across different groups in the sample. The final step in the weighting uses an iterative technique that aligns the sample to population benchmarks on a number of dimensions. Gender, age, education, race, Hispanic origin and region parameters come from the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2015 American Community Survey. The county-level population density parameter (deciles) comes from the 2010 U.S. Decennial Census. The telephone service benchmark comes from the January-June 2016 National Health Interview Survey and is projected to 2017. The volunteerism benchmark comes from the 2015 Current Population Survey Volunteer Supplement. The party affiliation benchmark is the average of the three most recent Pew Research Center general public telephone surveys. The Internet access benchmark comes from the 2017 ATP Panel Refresh Survey. Respondents who did not previously have internet access are treated as not having internet access for weighting purposes. Respondents were also weighted according to their previously reported usage of eight different social networks for news consumption. The variables used for this weighting were measured on the January-February 2016 wave of the ATP and were weighted to match a Pew Research Center journalism survey from March-April 2016. For panelists who did not participate in the 2016 survey, these variables were imputed using chained equations. Sampling errors and statistical tests of significance take into account the effect of weighting. Interviews are conducted in both English and Spanish, but the Hispanic sample in the American Trends Panel is predominantly native born and English speaking.\nThe following table shows the unweighted sample sizes and the error attributable to sampling that would be expected at the 95% level of confidence for different groups in the survey:\nSample sizes and sampling errors for other subgroups are available upon request.\nIn addition to sampling error, one should bear in mind that question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of opinion polls.\nThe August 2017 wave had a response rate of 74% (4,971 responses among 6,722 individuals in the panel). Taking account of the combined, weighted response rate for the recruitment surveys (10.0%) and attrition from panel members who were removed at their request or for inactivity, the cumulative response rate for the wave is 2.6 %.4\n“numoffset=”2” When data collection for the 2014 Political Polarization and Typology Survey began, non-internet users were subsampled at a rate of 25%, but a decision was made shortly thereafter to invite all non-internet users to join. In total, 83% of non-internet users were invited to join the panel. ↩\nRespondents to the 2014 Political Polarization and Typology Survey who indicated that they are internet users but refused to provide an email address were initially permitted to participate in the American Trends Panel by mail but were no longer permitted to join the panel after Feb. 6, 2014. Internet users from the 2015 Pew Research Center Survey on Government who refused to provide an email address were not permitted to join the panel. ↩\nWhite, non-Hispanic college graduates were subsampled at a rate of 50%. ↩\nApproximately once per year, panelists who have not participated in multiple consecutive waves are removed from the panel. These cases are counted in the denominator of cumulative response rates. ↩\nBack to Overview Next Page → ← Prev Page\nFact TankSep 7, 2017\nAmericans’ online news use is closing in on TV news use\nDigital News Fact Sheet\nAnalysisMay 26, 2016\nPublicationsFeb 9, 2017\nHow Americans Encounter, Recall and Act Upon Digital News\nNews Interest\nAmerican Trends Panel Data","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line320383"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5150114893913269,"wiki_prob":0.5150114893913269,"text":"Eagles Alshon Jeffery Looking Like a Significant Risk\nInside Injuries\tAugust 3, 2018 8:13PM EDT\ninsideinjuries.com has the latest on top WRs who continue to recover from season-ending injuries and offseason surgeries.\nOdell Beckham Jr. NYG: ankle surgery\nThe Giants’ crumbled when OBJ went down with a season-ending ankle injury in Week 5 last year. Now 10 months removed from surgery to address a fracture with ligament damage, he is fully cleared for training camp. Beckham originally injured his ankle during the preseason, causing his ligaments to stretch and leaving him more susceptible to a more serious ankle injury. Unfortunately it took just a few weeks for the injury to occur.\nHis ankle should be in much better shape now, but his Injury Risk remains Elevated. The good news is with a Peak HPF, he should be ready to perform as an elite WR. He could miss some practice time early in the year as he works his way back, but he should be ready to go Week 1.\nAlshon Jeffery PHI: torn rotator cuff\nAlshon Jeffery has by far the worst outlook on this list. He underwent shoulder surgery after the Eagles’ Super Bowl win. Recovery time from a rotator cuff tear is a minimum of 6 months, but it can take 9-12 months to get back to 100%. That means Jeffery is pushing it to be ready for Week 1, and even then he won’t be anywhere near full strength. His Injury Risk, of course, remains very High.\nRight now Jeffery is hovering around a Top 20 WR, making him a WR2, but he can’t be trusted that early in drafts. There’s no guarantee he will be ready Week 1, and playing in all 16 games seems like a long-shot. The Eagles need to look out for his long-term health and not rush his recovery just to have him out there in September. He is starting training camp on the PUP list, and there is no timeline for him to be fully cleared. He appears to be a ways away.\nAllen Robinson CHI: torn ACL\nAfter missing all of 2017 due to a preseason ACL tear, Robinson is fully cleared and ready to go at the start of training camp. Robinson is already back at a Low Injury Risk, and we are even showing a Peak HPF. His ADP is right around Jeffery, hovering around the Top 20, and that seems realistic. Robinson could be a steal in the WR2 spot, and he could even be a Top 10 guy by the end of the season if the Bears’ offense can improve.\nRecovery from ACL tears has improved drastically in recent years, and 12 months is more than enough time to get back into football shape. Because Robinson is a young wide receiver and his knee injury was an isolated tear (no additional ligament or cartilage damage), he should be right back where he was before the injury.\nJulian Edelman NE: torn ACL\nEdelman tore his ACL during the 2017 preseason but didn’t cause any additional damage to his knee. Like Robinson, Edelman should be close to 100% already, but he is sliding down draft boards due to his four-game suspension. When he returns, he can be locked in as a WR2. His Injury Risk just moved from Elevated to Low, currently sitting at 13%. His HPF is also Peak, so his knee won’t limit his ability to perform on the field. Sometimes returning from an ACL tear is more mental than physical at this point, but with training camp and preseason games to work his way back, he should be prepared by week 5.\nThere are two important things to keep in mind: Edelman’s age and his injury history. At 32, he is much older than guys like Robinson and Meredith. Younger players tend to have much more success on the field following an ACL tear. Edelman has also missed a lot of time due to a 2015 foot fracture and lingering problems that carried over into the 2016 season. He shouldn’t be removed from draft boards, but make sure you don’t get too excited about his potential and reach to get him in the earlier rounds.\nQuincy Enunwa NYJ: neck surgery\nEnunwa missed all of last season after undergoing surgery on his neck to repair a bulging disc. He was limited during OTAs and said he felt like he was close to 100%. He has now passed his Optimal Recovery Time and returned to a 13% (Low/Elevated) Injury Risk. It’s always concerning when a player suffered such a serious neck or back injury, so he needs to be watched closely throughout training camp, especially when participating in contact drills. This week he fully participated in the no-pads practice on Day 2 and only wore the no-contact jersey during team drills on Day 3. It’s slow and steady progress- exactly what we want to see at this point in his recovery.\nEnunwa can’t be relied on as a starting option each and every week, but he is a high-upside guy to have on your bench. If his neck is fully healed, he could become the Jets’ #1 option in the passing game, giving him WR3/flex value many weeks. He hasn’t cracked the Top 200 in ADP yet, but it could start to climb as he increases his participation at training camp and proves he is healthy enough to contribute.\nRandall Cobb GB: right ankle surgery\nCobb finally admitted that he underwent surgery on his foot over the summer to remove a small piece of cartilage that was causing discomfort. It isn’t a serious long-term concern, but this will affect him early in the season. We are showing an August 18 Healthy to Return Date. Until then, he shouldn’t be involved in 11v11 and full contact drills. His Injury Risk is currently very High. Cobb also has a concerning injury history that include ankle and hamstring issues, so there may be better WR options out there unless he slips outside the top 100 picks.\nBrandon Marshall SEA: ankle surgery\nAs Brandon Marshall continues to recover from season-ending ankle surgery, his injury numbers are very interesting. We don’t see this often- his Injury Risk is High, but his HPF is Peak. So that means his risk of a future injury or aggravation of a previous injury is very high (28%), but he should be able to play fairly well when he is cleared. It’s unlikely Marshall sees time in all 16 games this year, so he’s nothing more than a late-round flier. Marshall also underwent toe surgery to address a lingering injury from 2015, so he is recovering from multiple serious injuries. He may not even make the Seahawks final roster – watch him closely throughout camp.\nCameron Meredith NO: torn ACL & MCL\nMeredith’s devastating knee injury last season looked like it could be career-threatening. Now almost a year removed from surgery, Meredith is practicing without limitations. Because this was a multi-ligament injury, recovery is typically longer and more complicated. He may not get back to 100%, but at the 12-month mark he should be close. At 9% Injury Risk (Low), he should be viewed as a late-round option that could have huge upside after joining Drew Brees in New Orleans.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1238601"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7304310202598572,"wiki_prob":0.2695689797401428,"text":"Colombia Becomes 100th U.S. Open-Skies Partner\nColombia became the United States’ 100th Open-Skies partner yesterday as representatives of the two countries reached agreement to liberalize U.S.-Colombia air services for airlines of both countries.\n“Reaching 100 Open-Skies agreements is a major milestone in U.S. aviation history,” said U.S. Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood. “Since the first Open-Skies agreement was reached with the Netherlands in 1992, nations all over the world have come to recognize the benefits of a free market in international aviation services. Travelers, shippers, airlines and economies all over the world have benefited from the competitive pricing and more convenient service that Open Skies have made possible.”\nOnce full Open Skies takes effect at the end of 2012, airlines from the United States and Colombia will be allowed to select routes, destinations and prices for both passenger and cargo service based on consumer demand and market conditions.\nSignificant liberalizations will take effect in advance of full Open Skies. When the terms of the agreement are applied, restrictions on all-cargo flights will be lifted immediately, and carriers will be able to begin operating additional passenger flights with additional passenger services phased in over the next two years. Negotiations were concluded Nov. 11 in Bogota, Colombia.\nUpdated: Wednesday, April 18, 2012\nCaitlin Harvey\nOffice of Public Affairs\ncaitlin.harvey@dot.gov","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1165582"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9408480525016785,"wiki_prob":0.9408480525016785,"text":"British MPs tour Jaffna, Vanni\nProgress in peace talks will largely determine if Britain will lift the ban on the LTTE or not, said Mr.Gareth Thomas, British Member of Parliament, Tuesday after visiting Jaffna and Vanni areas accompanied by Mr.Robert Evans, Member of European Parliament.\nMr.Robert Evans and Mr.Gareth Thomas met Mr.S.P.Thamilchelvan Tuesday afternoon and had discussions for about one and a half hours, according to the LTTE sources.\nThe British MPs arrived in Jaffna yesterday and visited Vadamarachchy, Kaithadi and Chavakachcheri. They met the Principal of Harley College, Mr. SriPathy in Point Pedro and had discussions with the representatives of the Students Union of Jaffna University. They also had discussions with Major General Anton Wijendra at the Palaly army base.\nMeeting local press in Vavuniya enroute to Colombo, Mr. Evans said, \"I was in Jaffna two years ago. The town has made significant process toward normality. But we are very conscious of the need to move forward. There seems to be a lot of evidence of re-building and it is heartening to see the people not only are going about with their own lives but looking forward with optimism towards the future.\n\"We are very enthusiastic about the peace process and the prospects for the country settling down and moving forward. No one thinks it is going to be easy. Negotiations towards reaching a settlement will be difficult and will take time. But the mere fact that within a matter of months talks are taking place and more talks are planned is very encouraging to all people of Sri Lanka.\"\nWhen asked about the meetings with the officials of the security forces and with the political head of the LTTE Mr. Evans said, \"We discussed with both sides on issues related to landmines, recruitment policies of child soldiers, resettlement, and their commitment to the peace process. Although there are differences between the sides in some aspects, over all we are satisfied with the positive nature of responses.\"\nMr.Robert Evans said that they were impressed on the changes which has taken place in Colombo and Jaffna after the peace process started to move forward.\n\"I have noticed a markded decrease of the military presence and road blocks in Colombo. Situation is similar in Jaffna. We didn't feel in any way insecure or on the edge in Jaffna. We went out in the evening and it was fine. Equally in the Vanni, there was no show of military strength by the LTTE.\"\nWhen asked about the fate of the Tamil asylum seekers in the European countries he said: \"There are number of people, mainly Tamils from North and East seeking asylum. The UK government and the other European governments are trying to work out a common European Asylum Policy that will provide an opportunity and assistance for those wishing to return to Sri Lanka to resettle. But there will not be any forced repatriation. At present we are not accepting new asylum seekers from Sri Lanka because the situation is calm and we don't believe the current position warrants it.\"\nMr.Gareth Thomas said he joined this visit to see for himself the ground situation in the country in general and particularly in Vanni, the area controlled by the LTTE.\n\"I wanted to see how the peace process is working and I am very much encouraged by the way things are going on here now. We hope the peace process will continue and the sense of peace and the sense of goodwill will deepen.\n\"One of the issues they have raised with me is the ban on the LTTE. The truth is the ban on the LTTE is not likely to be lifted until we see how the peace process unfolds. The reason I have come to Sri Lanka is because I have a large number of Tamil contituents, in some areas 10% of residents are Sri Lankans,\" he said.\nTELO sources in Vavuniya said that the MPs visit was initiated by Mr.Selvam Adaikalanathan TNA MP for the Vanni electoral district, who is now in India.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1697900"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6382876038551331,"wiki_prob":0.6382876038551331,"text":"Cheltenham HS\nCareer Honors\n2018 First Team All-American (indoor 800m)\n2018 Second Team All-American (outdoor 800m)\n2x ACC champion in the indoor 4x400m (2016, 2018)\n3x First Team All-ACC honoree (indoor & outdoor)\nClemson Highlights\nHolds program record, 1:47.14, in the indoor 800m, which he achieved at 2018 ACC Indoor Championships on Clemson’s home track\nRanks fourth in program history in the outdoor 800m (1:47.62)\nMember of 2018 ACC indoor champion 4x400m relay team, which set No. 4 time (3:07.36) in program history\nMember of both 2017 and 2018 DMR unit, which ranks firsts and second in program history, respectively.\nEarned First Team All-America honors after placing seventh in 800m at NCAA Indoor Championships\nEarned Second Team All-America honors after placing 15th in 800m at NCAA Outdoor Championships\nRan program record 1:47.14 to earn ACC Indoor Championship runner-up status and First Team All-ACC accolades\nMember of ACC indoor champion 4x400m, third-place DMR and third-place outdoor 4x400m teams\nOutdoor ACC runner up in 800m\nRepresented the Tigers at NCAA Outdoor Championships in the 800m and 4x400m relays\nEarned Second Team All-ACC honors in both indoor and outdoor 800m\nAchieved outdoor personal best, 1:47.62, at 2017 ACC Outdoor Championships, which is also good for No. 4 in Clemson history\nHelped 4x400m relay to ACC Indoor crown in February, Clemson’s second straight in the event\nQualified for open 800 final at the indoor conference meet\nCompeted at the NCAA East Preliminary Round in the 800m\nTop time overall was 1:48.19 in a runner-up effort at Auburn’s Tiger Track Classic\nCheltenham High School Highlights\n2014 400m Indoor State Champion\n2014 4×4 Indoor State Champions\n2014 4×4 3rd at New Balance Indoor Nationals (Split 47.43)\n2014 4×4 Outdoor State Champions\n2014 AAU National Junior Olympics 800m Champion\n2015 800m Indoor State Champion (1:50.57, Finished ranked US #1)\nWon 2015 4×4 New Balance Indoor Nationals\n2015 800m Outdoor State Champion (1:48.72)\n2015 4×4 Outdoor State Champion (Split 46.00)\n2015 800m New Balance Outdoor National Champion (1:48.33)\nWon Back to Back Team State Championship Titles 2014-2015 for Indoor and Outdoor\nEarned Pennsylvania Gatorade Track Athlete of the Year, broke the outdoor 800 state record, earned Cheltenham High School Athlete of the Year and earned an Iron Man Award for 2014\nBorn Jan. 18, 1997\nMajoring in parks, recreation & tourism management","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1011480"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5124748945236206,"wiki_prob":0.5124748945236206,"text":"Home » Blog » Plaintiffs in the Pain Pump Litigation Earn Big 6th Circuit Reversal\nPlaintiffs in the Pain Pump Litigation Earn Big 6th Circuit Reversal\nby: Edward B. Mulligan V , Attorney\nOn Friday August 10, 2012, the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit overturned a district court’s decision to dismiss the claims filed by Rachel Krumpelbeck in a product liability suit against Breg, Inc., a manufacturer of pain pumps and other medical devices.\nLike hundreds of others in the pain pump litigation, Ms. Krumpelbeck’s claims arose out of her use of Breg pain pump following arthroscopic surgery. Ms. Krumpelbeck’s surgery occurred in March 2005, when she was just seventeen. Pain pumps were designed–as an alternative to conventional narcotics–to manage post-operative pain by continuously injecting local anesthetic directly into a patient’s shoulder joint. However, in the months following her successful surgery, Krumpelbeck began to experience extreme pain, worsening stiffness, clicking and popping in her shoulder joint. In December 2007, she was diagnosed with glenohumeral chondrolysis, a painful condition involving the permanent destruction of cartilage in the shoulder joint. As a result of her extensive cartilage loss, Ms. Krumpelbeck, now only 24 years old, will require multiple shoulder replacements during her lifetime.\nBreg has faced hundreds of lawsuits premised upon both its failure to warn of the risks that its pain pumps pose to human cartilage as well as misrepresentations made to physicians regarding the safety of its pumps. Under the laws of most states, Breg was under a legal duty to warn physicians and their patients of all risks associated with its pumps about which it knew or should have known. In this case, as it has in many others, Breg argued that it was under no such duty because, at the time of the Plaintiff’s surgery in 2005, the association between chondrolysis and pain pumps was unknown to not only Breg, but the entire scientific community.\nTo counter Breg’s argument, the plaintiff merely needed to point to evidence suggesting that the facts–whether Breg knew or should have known of the risks of chondrolysis–were in dispute such that a jury trial would be required. Although Plaintiff presented a variety of evidence demonstrating that Breg did or should have had knowledge of the risks its pumps posed to cartilage, the district court agreed with Breg and dismissed all of Ms. Krumpelbeck’s claims.\nOn appeal, the Sixth Circuit panel reversed and remanded part of the district court’s dismissal of Ms. Krumpelbeck’s claims for “defective design and inadequate warning or instruction” for further proceedings and affirmed the remainder of the district court’s decision.\nIn overturning the lower court’s ruling as to Krumpelbeck’s defective design claim, the panel held the district court overlooked a key factor, the so-called “consumer expectation” test, which considers “[t]he extent to which [the product’s] design or formulation is more dangerous than a reasonably prudent consumer would expect when used in an intended or reasonably foreseeable manner.”\nAs to Krumpelbeck’s failure to warn claim, the panel determined that the evidence in the record was sufficient to create disputed issue of fact for trial. Specifically, the panel held that numerous articles and studies submitted by Krumpelbeck and published prior to her surgery had “found a link between infusion of chemicals into the joint space and harm of the same general nature as that Krumpelbeck suffered–damage and destruction of the cartilage.” “A reasonable jury could conclude,” the panel wrote, that this information “was sufficient to put Breg on notice of the risk of harm to the cartilage generally when its device was used to inject anesthetics directly in the joint space,” and “could be sufficient to put a reasonable manufacturer on notice of the need for testing to explore the potential risks inherent in such use.”\nThe panel also acknowledged the significance of evidence demonstrating\n(1) that the FDA had repeatedly refused to clear Breg’s pain pumps for orthopedic and/or intra-articular use,\n(2) that Breg had not tested the safety of these uses, and\n(3) that Breg had promoted its pumps for those uses anyway. “Like the sufficiency of the medical literature,” the panel wrote, “it is for a jury to decide whether a reasonable manufacturer in Breg’s position would have conducted such testing prior to promoting an off-label use of its product.”\nWhile this decision is consistent with dozens of decisions issued by federal district courts around the country in the pain pump litigation, it is significant because it is the first federal appellate court decision to reverse one of only a few district court decisions that Breg and other pain pump manufacturers rely upon heavily in defending these cases. In this regard, it is an important victory for those who have been permanently injured by the wrongful conduct of pain pump manufacturers, including Breg. However, the significance of this ruling does not end there as the Sixth Circuit’s decision makes clear that a manufacturer can be found liable for failing to conduct adequate safety testing. Hopefully this aspect of the Sixth Circuit decision will encourage manufacturers, such as Breg, to more seriously engage in pre-market testing before selling its products for use on humans.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line541241"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6616483330726624,"wiki_prob":0.33835166692733765,"text":"Alicia Silverstone is the the bestselling author of The Kind Diet and founder of TheKindLife.com. Best known for her generation-defining turn in Clueless, she continues to work steadily in film, television, and theater. A dynamic and well-connected fixture in the acting, political, and scientific communities, she is a dedicated activist on behalf of humans, our planet and animals. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband and their son, Bear Blu.\nSee Articles By Alicia Silverstone\nConnect with Alicia Silverstone\nFacebook Twitter Artboard 1","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line88725"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7968562841415405,"wiki_prob":0.7968562841415405,"text":"Outcasts United: The Story of a Refugee Soccer Team That Changed a Town\nby Warren St. JohnWarren St. John\nPaperback(Youth Edition)\nA moving account of how a soccer team made up of diverse refugees inspired an entire community here in the United States.\nBased on the adult bestseller, Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team, and One Woman's Quest to Make a Difference, this young people's edition is a complex and inspirational story about the Fugees, a youth soccer team made up of diverse refugees from around the world, and their formidable female coach, Luma Mufleh.\nLuma Mufleh, a young Jordanian woman educated in the United States and working as a coach for private youth soccer teams in Atlanta, was out for a drive one day and ended up in Clarkston, Georgia, where she was amazed and delighted to see young boys, black and brown and white, some barefoot, playing soccer on every flat surface they could find. Luma decided to quit her job, move to Clarkston, and start a soccer team that would soon defy the odds. Despite challenges to locate a practice field, minimal funding for uniforms and equipment, and zero fans on the sidelines, the Fugees practiced hard and demonstrated a team spirit that drew admiration from referees and competitors alike.\nOutcasts United explores how the community changed with the influx of refugees and how the dedication of Lumah Mufleh and the entire Fugees soccer team inspired an entire community.\nPraise for Outcasts United\n“An uplifting underdog story.”—Kirkus Reviews\n“Motivating messages that will resonate with teen readers.”—School Library Journal, Starred Review\nPraise for Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team, and One Woman's Quest to Make a Difference\n“Wonderful, poignant book is highly recommended...\"–Library Journal, Starred Review\n“Engagingly written.”—School Library Journal\n“Richly detailed, uplifting … educational and enriching.”—Kirkus Reviews\n“Dee\"Inspiring...richly detailed...Deeply satisfying...a bighearted book.\"—Shelf Awareness\nYouth Edition\nWARREN ST. JOHN is the author of the national bestsellers \"Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer: A Journey into the Heart of Fan Mania\" and \"Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team and One Woman's Quest to Make a Difference.\" A former reporter for the New York Times, he has also written extensively for The New Yorker, the New York Observer, and Wired. He was born in Birmingham, Alabama, attended Columbia University and now lives in New York City.\nThe name Luma means “dark lips,” though Hassan and Sawsan al-Mufleh chose it for their first child less because of the shade of her lips than because they liked the sound of the name–short, endearing, and cheerful–in the context of both Arabic and English. The al-Mufl ehs were a wealthy, Westernized family in Amman, Jordan, a teeming city of two million, set among nineteen hills and cooled by a swirl of dry desert breezes. The family made its fortune primarily from making rebar–the metal rods used to strengthen concrete–which it sold across Jordan. Hassan had attended a Quaker school in Lebanon, and then college in the United States at the State University of New York in Oswego–“the same college as Jerry Seinfeld,” he liked to tell people.\nLuma’s mother, Sawsan, was emotional and direct, and there was never any doubt about her mood or feelings. Luma, though, took after her father, Hassan, a man who mixed unassailable toughness with a capacity to detach, a combination that seemed designed to keep his emotions hidden for fear of revealing weakness.\n“My sister and my dad don’t like people going into them and knowing who they are,” said Inam al-Mufl eh, Luma’s younger sister byeleven years and now a researcher for the Jordanian army in Amman.\n“Luma’s very sensitive but she never shows it. She doesn’t want anyone to know where her soft spot is.”\nAs a child, Luma was doted on by her family, sometimes to an extraordinary degree. At the age of three, Luma idly mentioned to her grandmother that she thought her grandparents’ new Mercedes 450 SL was “beautiful.” The next day, the grandparents’ driver showed up at Hassan and Sawsan al-Mufl eh’s home with a gift: a set of keys to the Mercedes, which, they were told, now belonged to their threeyear-old daughter.\nHassan too doted on his eldest child. He had high expectations for her, and imagined her growing up to fulfi ll the prescribed role of a woman in a prominent Jordanian family. He expected her to marry, to stay close to home, and to honor her family.\nFrom the time Luma was just a young girl, adults around her began to note her quiet confi dence, which was so pronounced that her parents occasionally found themselves at a loss.\n“When we would go to the PTA meetings,” Hassan recalled, “they’d ask me, ‘Why are you asking about Luma? She doesn’t need your help.’ ”\nSometimes, Luma’s parents found themselves striving to please their confi dent daughter, rather than the other way around. Hassan recalled that on a family vacation to Spain when Luma was ten or eleven years old, he had ordered a glass of sangria over dinner, in violation of the Muslim prohibition against drinking alcohol. When the drink arrived, Luma began to sob uncontrollably.\n“She said, ‘I love my father too much–I don’t want him to go to hell,’ ” Hassan recalled. He asked the waitress to take the sangria away.\n“I didn’t drink after that,” he said.\nLuma encouraged–or perhaps demanded–that her younger sister, Inam, cultivate self-suffi ciency, often against Inam’s own instincts or wishes.\n“She was a tough older sister–very tough love,” Inam said. “She would make me do things that I didn’t want to do. She never wanted me to take the easy way out. And she wouldn’t accept me crying.”\nInam said that she has a particularly vivid memory of her older sister’s tough love in action. The al-Mufl ehs had gathered with their cousins, as they often did on weekends, at the family farm in a rural area called Mahes, half an hour from Amman. Inam, who was just seven or eight at the time, said that Luma took her and a group of young cousins out to a dirt road to get some exercise. The kids set off jogging, with Luma trailing them in the family Range Rover. It was hot and dry and hilly, and one by one, the kids began to complain. But Luma wouldn’t have any of it. She insisted that they keep running.\n“She was in the car, and we were running like crazy,” Inam recalled. “Everyone was crying. And if I would cry, she would just look at me.”\nThat withering look, which Luma would perfect over the years, had the stinging effect of a riding crop. Despite the pain, little Inam kept running.\nLuma’s drill-sergeant routine at Mahes became a kind of family legend, recalled to rib Hassan and Sawsan’s firstborn for her tough exterior. The family knew another side of Luma–one that others rarely encountered–that of a sensitive, even sentimental young woman with a deep concern for those she perceived to be weak or defenseless. Luma laughed along with everyone else. She enjoyed a good joke and a well-earned teasing, even at her own expense. But jokes aside, Luma’s tough love had it’s intended effect.\n“I wanted to prove to my sister that I could do anything,” she said. “I always remember that my sister pushed me and I found out I was able to do it.”\nTHE AL-MUFLEHS WERE intent on raising their children with their same cosmopolitan values. They sent Luma to the American Community School in Amman, a school for the children of American expatriates, mostly diplomats and businessmen, and elite Jordanians, including the children of King Hussein and Queen Noor. Luma learned to speak English without an accent–she now speaks like a midwesterner–and met kids from the United States and Europe, as well as the children of diplomats from all over the world.\nLuma’s childhood was idyllic by most measures, and certainly by comparison to those of most in Jordan. She went to the best school in Amman and lived at a comfortable distance from the problems of that city, including poverty and the tensions brought on by the infl ux of Palestinian and later Iraqi refugees. But her maternal grandmother, Munawar, made a point of acknowledging and aiding the poor whenever she could. Beggars regularly knocked on her door because they knew that on principle she would always give them alms. And when relatives would tell her she was being taken advantage of because of her generosity, Munawar would brush them off.\n“She would say we had an obligation because we were so privileged,” Luma recalled. “And she would say, ‘God judges them, not us.’ ”\nMunawar’s home abutted a lot in Amman where young men played soccer in the afternoons. As a kid, Luma would climb a grapevine on the concrete wall behind the house and watch the men play. She eventuallygot the nerve to join in, and she would play until her grandmother saw her and ordered her inside on the grounds that it was improper for a young woman to be around strange men.\n“She would have a fi t if she saw me playing soccer with men,” Luma said. “And then she’d say, ‘We are not going to tell your father about this.’ ”\nAt the American Community School, Luma was free from the strictures of a conservative Muslim society and at liberty to play sports as boys did. She played basketball, volleyball, soccer, and baseball with the same intensity, and stood out to her coaches, particularly an African American woman named Rhonda Brown.\n“She was keen to learn,” Brown said. “And no matter what you asked her to do, she did it without questioning why.” Brown, the wife of an American diplomat at the U.S. embassy in Amman, coached volleyball. She had played volleyball in college at Miami University in Ohio and, when she found herself bored in the role of a diplomat’s wife, had volunteered to coach the women’s varsity volleyball team at the ACS. When she showed up to coach, Brown said, she was disappointed at what she found.\n“These girls were lazy–incredibly lazy,” she said.\nLuma was the notable exception. Though Brown didn’t know much about the Jordanian girl, she noticed her dedication right away and felt she was the kind of player a team could be built around. Coach Brown asked a lot of her players, and especially of Luma. She expected them to be on time to practice, to work hard, to focus, and to improve. She believed in running–lots of running–and drilling to the point of exhaustion. Brown challenged her players by setting an example herself. She was always on time. She was organized. When she asked her players to run fi ve kilometers, she joined them, but with a challenge: “Because you’re younger I expect you to do it better than me,” she told them. “If I beat you, you can expect the worst practices ever.”\n“They ran,” Brown said.\nBrown’s coaching philosophy was built on the belief that young people craved leadership and structure and at the same time were capable of taking on a tremendous amount of responsibility. She didn’t believe in coddling.\n“My feeling is that kids have to have rules,” Brown explained. “They have to know what the boundaries are. And kids want to know what their limits are. It’s important for them to know that people have expectations of them.”\nBrown was resigned to the fact that her players might not like her at fi rst. But she took a long view toward their development and their trust in her. She was willing to wait out the hostility until her players broke through.\n“I’m stubborn,” Brown said. “I don’t give in a lot. You can come across as mean, and until they see what kind of person you are they might not like you.”\nIn fact, Luma didn’t like Brown at all. She felt singled out for extra work and didn’t appreciate all the extra running. But she kept her mouth shut and didn’t complain, partly, she said, out of a suspicion that she and her teammates would benefi t from the harsh treatment.\n“I knew my teammates were lazy–talented but lazy,” Luma said.\n“And part of me was like, Maybe I want the challenge. Maybe these very harsh, very tough practices will work.”\nOver time, the practices began to have an effect. The team improved. They were motivated, and even the slackers on the team began working hard. Along the way, Luma started to pick up on a seeming contradiction. Though she told herself she disliked Coach Brown, she wanted desperately to play well for her. “For the majority of the time she coached me, I hated her,” Luma said. “But she had our respect. She didn’t ask us to do anything she wouldn’t do. Until then I’d always played for me. I’d never played for a coach.”\nWhen Luma was in high school and still playing for Coach Brown the junior varsity girls’ soccer team at the American Community School found itself in need of a coach. Luma volunteered. She emulated Brown–putting the team through fi ve days a week of running drills and pushing the young women to work harder and to get better.\nLuma loved it. She liked the way the daily problems of the world seemed to recede once she took the field, the subtle psychological strategies one had to employ to get the best out of each player, and most of all the sense of satisfaction that came from forging something new out of disparate elements: an entity with its distinct identity, not a collection of individuals, but a new being, a team. And she wasn’t afraid to admit she also liked being in charge.\nBut as she got older and accustomed to the liberty she had as a woman at ACS–where she could coach and play sports as she pleased–she began to feel at odds with the Jordanian society in which she had grown up. She wanted to be able to play pickup games of soccer with whoever was around, without regard to gender. She wanted the liberty to be as assertive in her daily life as Coach Brown had taught her to be on the court. Her family’s social status created additional pressure for her to follow a more traditional path. There were obligations, as well as the looming threat that she might be pressured into marrying someone she didn’t love.\n“When you come from a family that’s prominent, there are expectations of you,” she said. “And I hated that. It’s a very patriarchal society, and as modern as it is, women are still second-class citizens. I didn’t want to be treated that way.”\nCoach Brown picked up on Luma’s yearning. At a team sleepover, the players and coach went around the room predicting where everyone would be in ten years. Coach Brown joked that Luma would be “living illegally in the United States.” Everyone laughed, including Luma. But she disagreed.\n“In ten years, I’ll be there legally,” she said.\n“I knew from even our brief time together that she wanted something else for her life,” Brown recalled.\nToward the end of Luma’s junior year, she and her parents decided she would attend college in the United States. Hassan and Sawsan wanted their daughter to continue her Western education, a rite of sorts for well-to-do Jordanians. But Luma was more interested in life in the United States than she was in what an education there might do for her in Jordan. “America was the land of opportunity,” she said. “It was a very appealing dream of what you want your life to be like.” Within the family, Luma’s grandmother alone seemed to understand the implications of her going to college in the United States.\n“If she moves to America,” Munawar told the family, “there’s a chance she won’t come back.”\nLuma’s fi rst trip to the United States came when she enrolled at Hobart and William Smith College, a coed school in the Finger Lakes region of New York, not too far from where her father had gone to college. She played soccer her first fall there, but midway through the season injured a knee, sidelining her for the rest of the year. Luma liked the school well enough, but winter there was colder than anything she had experienced in Amman, and the campus was remote. She wondered if she had made the right choice in going so far from home. Luma decided to look at other schools, and soon visited Smith College, the women’s school in Northampton, Massachusetts.\nThe campus seemed to perfectly embody the setting Luma had envisioned for herself when she left Jordan for America. It was set in a picturesque New England town with a strong sense of community and security. And as a women’s college, Smith was focused on imbuing its students with the very sort of self-reliance and self-confidence Luma felt she had been deprived of at home. Luma fell in love with the place and transferred for her sophomore year.\nAt Smith, Luma had what she described as a kind of awakening. She was taken by the presence of so many self-confident, achieving women, and also by the social mobility she saw evident in the student body. Her housemate, for example, was the first in her family to go to college, and there she was at one of the preeminent private colleges in the United States. That would never happen in Jordan, Luma remembered thinking to herself at the time.\nLuma’s friends at Smith remember her as outgoing and involved–in intramural soccer and in social events sponsored by the college’s house system. Few understood her background; she spoke English so well that other students she met assumed she was American.\n“One day we were hanging out talking about our childhoods and she said, ‘I’m from Jordan,’ ” recalled Misty Wyman, a student from Maine who would become Luma’s best friend. “I thought she’d been born to American parents overseas. It had never occurred to me that she was Jordanian.”\nOn a trip home to Jordan after her junior year at Smith, Luma realized that she could never feel comfortable living there. Jordan, while a modern Middle Eastern state, was not an easy place for a woman used to Western freedoms. Professional opportunities for women were limited. Under Sharia law, which applied to domestic and inheritance matters, the testimony of two women carried the weight of that from a single man. A wife had to obtain permission from her husband simply to apply for a passport. And so-called honor killings were still viewed leniently in Sharia courts. As a member of a well-known family, Luma felt monitored and pressured to follow a prescribed path. A future in Jordan felt limited, lacking suspense, whereas the United States seemed alluringly full of both uncertainty and possibility.\nBefore she left to return to Smith for her senior year, Luma sought out friends one by one, and paid a visit to her grandmother. She didn’t tell them that she was saying goodbye exactly, but privately, Luma knew that to be the case.\n“When I said goodbye I knew I was saying goodbye to some people I’d never see again,” she said. “I wanted to do it on my own. I wanted to prove to my parents that I didn’t need their help.”\nLuma did let on to some of her friends. Rhonda Brown recalled a softball game she and Luma played with a group of American diplomats and expatriates. When the game had finished, Brown went to pick up the leather softball glove she’d brought with her from the United States, but it was gone–stolen, apparently. Brown was furious. She’d had the glove for years, and it was all but impossible to get a softball glove in Jordan at the time. Luma had a glove that she too had had for years. She took it off her hand and gave it to her coach.\n“She said, ‘You take this glove,’ ” Brown recalled. “ ‘I won’t need it. I don’t think I’m coming back.’ ”\nBrown–who soon moved to Damascus, and later to Israel with her husband and family–lost touch over the years with her star player, but she kept Luma’s glove from one move to the next, as a memento of the mysteriously self-possessed young woman she had once coached. Fifteen years later, she still has it. “The webbing has rotted and come out,” Brown told me from Israel, where I tracked her down by phone. “That glove was very special to me.”\nIN JUNE 1997, a few weeks after graduating from Smith, Luma gave her parents the news by telephone: She was staying in the United States–not for a little while, but forever. She had no intention of returning home to Jordan.\nHassan al-Mufleh was devastated.\n“I felt as if the earth swallowed me,” he said.\nHassan’s devastation soon gave way to outrage. He believed he had given every opportunity to his daughter. He had sent her to the best schools and had encouraged her to go to college in the United States. He took her decision to make a home in the States as a slap in the face. Luma tried to explain that she felt it was important for her to see if she could support herself without the social and fi nancial safety net her parents provided at home. Hassan would have none of it. If Luma wanted to see how independent she could be, he told her, he was content to help her find out. He let her know that she would be disinherited absolutely if she didn’t return home. Luma didn’t budge. She didn’t feel that she could be herself there, and she was willing to endure a split with her family to live in a place where she could live the life she pleased. Hassan followed through on his word, by cutting Luma off completely–no more money, no more phone calls. He was finished with his daughter.\nFor Luma, the change in lifestyle was abrupt. In an instant, she was on her own. “I went from being able to walk into any restaurant and store in the United States and buy whatever I wanted to having nothing,” she said.\nLuma’s friends remember that period well. They had watched her painful deliberations over when and how to give her parents the news that she wasn’t coming home. And now that she was cut off, they saw their once outgoing friend grow sullen and seem suddenly lost.\n“It was very traumatic,” said Misty Wyman, Luma’s friend from Smith. “She was very stressed and sick a lot because of the stress.\n“There was a mourning process,” Wyman added. “She was very close to her grandmother, and her grandmother was getting older. She was close to her sister and wasn’t sure that her parents would ever let her sister come to visit her here. And I kind of had the impression from Luma that she had been her father’s pet. Even though he was hard on her, he expected a lot from her. She was giving up a lot by not going home.”\nSo Luma made do. After graduation, she went to stay with her friend Misty in Highlands, North Carolina, a small resort town in the mountains where Misty had found work. Luma didn’t yet have a permit to work legally in the United States, so she found herself looking for the sorts of jobs available to illegal immigrants, eventually settling on a position washing dishes and cleaning toilets at a local restaurant called the Mountaineer. Luma enjoyed the relative calm and quiet of the mountains, but there were moments during her stint in Appalachia that only served to reinforce her sense of isolation. Concerned that her foreign-sounding name might draw unwelcome attention from locals, Luma’s colleagues at the Mountaineer gave her an innocuous nickname: Liz. The locals remained oblivious of “Liz’s” real background as a Jordanian Muslim, even as they got to know her. A handyman who was a regular at the Mountaineer even sent Liz flowers, and later, sought to impress her by showing off a prized family heirloom: a robe and hood once worn by his grandfather, a former grand dragon of the Ku Klux Klan.\n“I was so shaken up,” Luma said.\nAfter a summer in Highlands, Luma kicked around aimlessly, moving to Boston then back to North Carolina, with little sense of direction. Her news from home came mostly through her grandmother, who would pass along family gossip, and who encouraged Luma to be strong and patient with her parents. Someday, Munawar said, they would come to forgive her.\nBut for now, Luma was on her own. In 1999, she decided to move to Atlanta for no other reason than that she liked the weather– eternal-seeming springs and easy autumns, with mercifully short and mild winters–not unlike the weather in Amman. When Luma told her friends of her plan, they were uniformly against it, worried that a Muslim woman from Jordan wouldn’t fi t in down in Dixie.\n“I said, ‘Are you crazy?’ ” Misty recalled.\nLuma didn’t have much of a retort. She knew next to no one in Atlanta. She had little appreciation for how unusual a Muslim woman with the name Luma Hassan Mufl eh would seem to most southerners, and certainly no inkling of how much more complicated attitudes toward Muslims would become a couple of years into the future, after the attacks on September 11. Luma arrived in Atlanta with little mission or calling. She found a tiny apartment near Decatur, a picturesque and progressive suburb east of Atlanta anchored by an old granite courthouse with grand Corinthian columns. She knew nothing yet about Clarkston, the town just down the road that had been transformed by refugees, people not unlike herself, who had fled certain discontent in one world for uncertain lives in another. But like them, Luma was determined to survive and to make it on her own. Going home wasn’t an option.\nPart 1 Changes\n1 Luma 11\n2 Beatrice and Her Boys 18\n3 \"Small Town… Big Heart\" 25\n4 Alone Down South 35\n5 The Fugees Are Born 41\n6 \"Coach Says It's Not Good\" 51\n7 Get Lost 60\nPart 2 A New Season\n8 \"I Want to Be Part of the Fugees!\" 69\n9 Figure It Out So You Can Fix It 78\n10 Meltdown 92\n11 \"How Am I Going to Start All Over?\" 99\n12 Alex, Bien, and Ive 110\n13 Trying Again 115\n14 The Fifteens Fight 120\n15 Go Fugees! 128\n16 Gunshots 135\n17 The \"Soccer People\" 138\n18 Playing on Grass 141\nPart 3 Full Circle\n19 Who Are the Kings? 149\n20 Showdown at Blue Springs 156\n21 Coming Apart 161\n22 Hanging On at Home 166\n23 The Dikoris 171\n24 \"What Are You Doing Here?\" 179\n25 Halloween 189\n26 The Fifteens' Final Game 194\n27 My Rules, My Way 199\n28 Tornado Cup 203\nEpilogue 220\nFor More Information 227\nWhat People are Saying About This\n\"Respecting cultural differences, building a global community, and the importance of getting involved are powerful, motivating messages that will resonate with teen readers, not just soccer fans.\"Starred Review, School Library Journal\n\"An uplifting underdog story that will appeal to readers interested in the immigrant experience and the surprising role sports can play in people's lives.\"Kirkus Reviews\n\"Exciting youth soccer action blends with politics . . . filled with fast kicks, scrimmages, dribbles, crossses, corners, shots, and misses on the field that will grab kids, as will the harrowing stories of what the families fled from their continuing struggle.\"Booklist\nGr 7 Up—In this young adult adaptation of Outcasts United: An American Town, a Refugee Team, and One Woman's Quest to Make a Difference (Spiegel & Grau, 2009), St. John presents the remarkable, inspiring story of a persevering female coach, a soccer team of refugee boys, and the Georgia town that is their home. With conviction and skill, Jordanian Luma Mufleh established and coached three soccer teams known as the Fugees. Her players were haunted by memories of war-torn homelands and personal tragedies and were struggling to adjust to life in the United States. However, her high expectations and willingness to help families impacted her young players. Despite challenges to locate a practice field, minimal funding for uniforms and equipment, and zero fans on the sidelines, the Fugees practiced hard and demonstrated a team spirit that drew admiration from referees and even their competitors. Featuring pivotal soccer games and anecdotes about interactions between a coach and her players, tension among the boys, family responsibilities, and a town wrestling with its changing identity, St. John delivers a vivid, cohesive story about hope and determination. Profiles are enriched with background information on the conflicts that drove the players from their homes in Africa, the Middle East, and Eastern Europe. Respecting cultural differences, building a global community, and the importance of getting involved are powerful, motivating messages that will resonate with teen readers, not just soccer fans.—Gerry Larson, formerly at Durham School of the Arts, NC\nAn inspiring account of a young Jordanian immigrant who created Fugees, a soccer program for refugees from war-torn nations. Adapted from an adult book of the same title, St. John tells the story of how Luma Mufleh formed a soccer team composed of young refugees from all over the world, rescued by the U.N. High Commission for Refugees and living together in a crime-ridden settlement in suburban Atlanta. After seeing refugee children playing soccer in vacant lots around town, Mufleh persuaded the local YMCA to fund a free soccer program and signed on as its unpaid coach. The children she recruited came from such war-ravaged countries as Liberia, Sudan, Zaire, Kosovo and Afghanistan. The team offered youngsters traumatized by civil war and genocide the chance to enjoy a familiar recreation and an alternative to gangs. In addition to coaching, Mufleh often acted as counselor and surrogate parent to children whose own parents worked long hours. Though insightful about immigration and the challenges of assimilation, the fast-paced account lacks sufficient detail about the experiences that forced the players to leave their home countries. An uplifting underdog story that will appeal to readers interested in the immigrant experience and the surprising role sports can play in people's lives. (Nonfiction. 12-16)\nOutcasts United: The Story of a Refugee Soccer Team That Changed a Town 4.8 out of 5 based on 0 ratings. 10 reviews.\nOutstanding story recommend for all ages.\nThe book was so amazing\nmzavori More than 1 year ago\nOne Team, One Coach – Dreams United Luma Mufleh did not know what to expect when she arrived in the small town of Clarkston, Georgia, just on the outskirts of Atlanta. She certainly did not anticipate the sight of women walking down the street covered head to toe and carrying laundry baskets over their heads, nor did she expect the smell of traditional Middle Eastern cuisines, or even the small refugee boys playing soccer with nothing but their bare feet and a ball made from plastic bags. Outcasts United, written by Warren St. John, follows the inspirational story of a small refugee soccer team, known as the Fugees, and their coach through their many adventures as they struggle to find their place in a small southern American town. Not only does St. John document some pivotal soccer seasons of the Fugees, but readers catch a glimpse of the refugee families living in Clarkston as they describe their past experiences and share their journeys to the United States. St. John paints a vivid picture of the controversial subject regarding immigration, especially when placed in context with the topic of illegal immigration during the Bush administration, as long-time Clarkston residents struggle to accommodate the new arrivals. Left to deal with the refugees and, consequently, the widely spreading demographic change, members of the Clarkston community resort to resentment and anger towards the refugees, thus illustrating how fear of the unknown and cultural differences can disband (and eventually reunite) an entire community. At the heart of this novel, however, is the story of Luma Mufleh, a Jordanian immigrant herself, and a myriad of teenage boys from numerous nationalities who overcome their differences and band together to form the Fugees. St. John transports the readers through the highs and lows experienced in each soccer season and highlights the importance of hard work, strength, self-preservation, and team camaraderie. The team dynamics of the Fugees shows a juxtaposition on other youth sports teams across America; where they succeed, others fail, which causes readers and athletes (like myself) to wonder where youth sports programs today have gone astray in building team cohesiveness. Everyone could benefit from a coach like Luma Mufleh. While the detailed descriptions of the Fugees’ countless soccer matches overtake much of the novel, sometimes to the point of boredom, St. John weaves together a beautiful story filled with war stories, government politics, and a coach who is set upon making a difference in the lives of the Fugee family. Watching a team of misfits form a tight-knit bond is everything one looks for in a narrative such as this, and it is amazing to see them carry that love for each other on and off the field. This book is highly recommended for those who have a passion for soccer and those who are looking for an uplifting and easy tale to read. Outcasts United is St. John’s second novel; his first, Rammer Jammer Yellow Hammer, is as deeply satisfying and intriguing for those who cannot get enough of sports.\nI got this book and loved it. Luma is a very inspirational woman who acts as teacher, coach, mentor, supplier, lover, and tougher-upper. I totally wish I had her as my soccer coach. She is just as good as Mia Hamm, in some ways as good or better, in others less. Anyway I give it five stars and encourage it to you for a great and inspirational read.\nHeidi_G More than 1 year ago\nLuma Mufleh, a Jordanian woman living just east of Atlanta, saw a need in the community and stepped up to ensure that need was filled. She sometimes joined in a group of boys playing soccer, boys whose families came from many parts of the world. With no sponsorship and resentment from some town residents toward the swelling immigrant population, Luma managed to put together three groups of boys who were excited to be playing on a soccer team. She worked the boys hard, made them play fair, and expected them to stay current in their school work. Acting as coach, mentor, and counselor, Luma made a difference in the lives of her players. This book will appeal to teen readers who are soccer players or fans; other readers might be put off by the detailed accounts of so many soccer games. I would've like to read more about the obstacles faced by several of the boys and what caused their families to leave their homelands. The book's epilogue does describe what became of several of the teams' players and what Luma has done since the 2006 soccer season.\nHow do i unlock myself?\nTrainees den.\nIm sorry im just really happy for my character in that rp!\nbook by sarah j maas\nbook by kimberly brubaker bradley\nbook by john feinstein\nhoops by walter dean myers paperback\nbook by tracy kidder\nthe cheerleaders by kara thomas hardcover\nAndy Warhol, Prince of Pop\n“IN THE FUTURE EVERYBODY will be world famous for 15 minutes.”The Campbell’s Soup Cans. The ...\n“IN THE FUTURE EVERYBODY will be world famous for 15 minutes.”The Campbell’s Soup Cans. The Marilyns. The Electric Chairs. The Flowers. The work created by Andy Warhol elevated everyday images to art, ensuring Warhol a fame that has far outlasted ...\nCatwoman: Soulstealer (DC Icons Series #3)\nSizzling with action and suspense, #1 New York Times bestselling author SARAH J. MAAS delivers with this ...\nSizzling with action and suspense, #1 New York Times bestselling author SARAH J. MAAS delivers with this DC Icons coming-of-age Selina Kyle who will steal readers' hearts in the YA blockbuster: CATWOMAN!DC ICONS IS NOW A NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING SERIES!A Catwoman story with ...\nCaught by the Sea: My Life on Boats\nAnother such wave could easily be the end of us. I had to do something, ...\nAnother such wave could easily be the end of us. I had to do something, fix something, save the boat, save myself.But what?Gary Paulsen takes readers along on his maiden voyage, proving that ignorance can be bliss. Also really stupid ...\nFather Water, Mother Woods: Essays on Fishing and\nSurvival in the wilderness--Gary Paulsen writes about it so powerfully in his novels Hatchet and ...\nSurvival in the wilderness--Gary Paulsen writes about it so powerfully in his novels Hatchet and The River because he's lived it. These essays recount his adventures alone and with friends, along the rivers and in the woods of northern Minnesota. There, ...\nFor Freedom: The Story of a French Spy\nFrom the Newbery Honor and Schneider Award-winning author of The War that Saved My Life ...\nFrom the Newbery Honor and Schneider Award-winning author of The War that Saved My Life comes For Freedom, the thrilling true story of one of France's youngest spies during World War II and perfect for fans of Code Name Verity ...\nFoul Trouble\nBestselling sportswriter John Feinstein exposes the big money and back-room deals that pervade college-basketball recruiting ...\nBestselling sportswriter John Feinstein exposes the big money and back-room deals that pervade college-basketball recruiting in this fast-break young adult novel. Terrell Jamerson is the #1 high school basketball player in the country. His team is poised to win ...\n“Gorgeous, heartbreaking, and ultimately ... Yoon, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Everything, Everything.Perfect for fans of ...\n“Gorgeous, heartbreaking, and ultimately ... Yoon, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Everything, Everything.Perfect for fans of Turtles All the Way Down,Thirteen Reasons Why, and Zentner's own The Serpent King, one of the most highly acclaimed YA novels of ...\nFor fans of Pretty Little Liars, Little Monsters is a new psychological thriller, from the author of ...\nFor fans of Pretty Little Liars, Little Monsters is a new psychological thriller, from the author of The Darkest Corners, about appearances versus reality and the power of manipulation amongst teenage girls. Kacey is the new girl in Broken Falls. When she ...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line746065"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8044654726982117,"wiki_prob":0.8044654726982117,"text":"Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Pride Month (LGBT Pride Month) is celebrated annually in June to honor the 1969 Stonewall riots, and works to achieve equal justice and equal opportunity for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and questioning (LGBTQ) Americans. In June of 1969, patrons and supporters of the Stonewall Inn in New York City staged an uprising to resist the police harassment and persecution to which LGBT Americans were commonly subjected. This uprising marks the beginning of a movement to outlaw discriminatory laws and practices against LGBT Americans.\nPride parades (also known as pride marches, pride events, and pride festivals) are outdoor events celebrating lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ) social and self acceptance, achievements, legal rights and pride. The events also at times serve as demonstrations for legal rights such as same-sex marriage. Most pride events occur annually, and many take place around June to commemorate the 1969 Stonewall riots in New York City, a pivotal moment in modern LGBTQ social movements.[4]\nThere are two cities in the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico that celebrate pride parades/festivals. The first one began in June, 1990 in San Juan; later in June, 2003 the city of Cabo Rojo started celebrating its own pride parade. The pride parade in Cabo Rojo has become very popular and has received thousands of attendees in the last few years. San Juan Pride runs along Ashford Avenue in the Condado area (a popular tourist district), while Cabo Rojo Pride takes place in Boquerón.\nIn 1994, a coalition of education-based organizations in the United States designated October as LGBT History Month. In 1995, a resolution passed by the General Assembly of the National Education Association included LGBT History Month within a list of commemorative months. National Coming Out Day (October 11), as well as the first “March on Washington” in 1979, are commemorated in the LGBTQ community during LGBT History Month.\nThe following year the festival expanded to six hubs around England and the conference had its own slot. The Alan Horsfall lecture was given by Professor Susan Stryker of the University of Arizona in 2016. The national heritage premieres were \"Mister Stokes: The Man-Woman of Manchester\" written by Abi Hynes and \"Devils in Human Shape\" by Tom Marshman.\nEach year there are a series of parties and celebrations which take place throughout the city, and continue right up until the concluding Pride Parade, which happens towards the end of June. While the main parade usually takes place in the heart of Manhatten, pride events often transpire in other areas of the city too, including Brooklyn and Staten Island.\nSocial conservatives are sometimes opposed to such events because they view them to be contrary to public morality. This belief is partly based on certain things often found in the parades, such as public nudity, BDSM paraphernalia, and other sexualized features. Within the academic community, there has been criticism that the parades actually set to strengthen homosexual-heterosexual divides and increase essentialist views.\nThough the reality was that the Stonewall riots themselves, as well as the immediate and the ongoing political organizing that occurred following them, were events fully participated in by lesbian women, bisexual people, and transgender people, as well as by gay men of all races and backgrounds, historically these events were first named Gay, the word at that time being used in a more generic sense to cover the entire spectrum of what is now variously called the 'queer' or LGBT community.[37][38]\nOn June 26, 1994, to celebrate the 25th Anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, Progressive Organization of Gays in the Philippines (ProGay Philippines) and Metropolitan Community Church (MCC) Manila organized the first LGBT Pride March in Asia, marching from EDSA corner Quezon Avenue to Quezon City Memorial Circle (Quezon City, Metro Manila, Philippines) and highlighting broad social issues. At Quezon City Memorial Circle, a program was held with a Queer Pride Mass and solidarity remarks from various organizations and individuals.\nBoth Berlin Pride and Cologne Pride claim to be one of the biggest in Europe. The first so-called Gay Freedom Day took place on June 30, 1979 in both cities. Berlin Pride parade is now held every year the last Saturday in July. Cologne Pride celebrates two weeks of supporting cultural programme prior to the parade taking place on Sunday of the first July weekend. An alternative march used to be on the Saturday prior to the Cologne Pride parade, but now takes place a week earlier. Pride parades in Germany are usually named Christopher Street Day.\nMeetings to organize the march began in early January at Rodwell's apartment in 350 Bleecker Street.[16] At first there was difficulty getting some of the major New York City organizations like Gay Activists Alliance (GAA) to send representatives. Craig Rodwell and his partner Fred Sargeant, Ellen Broidy, Michael Brown, Marty Nixon, and Foster Gunnison of Mattachine made up the core group of the CSLD Umbrella Committee (CSLDUC). For initial funding, Gunnison served as treasurer and sought donations from the national homophile organizations and sponsors, while Sargeant solicited donations via the Oscar Wilde Memorial Bookshop customer mailing list and Nixon worked to gain financial support from GLF in his position as treasurer for that organization.[17][18] Other mainstays of the organizing committee were Judy Miller, Jack Waluska, Steve Gerrie and Brenda Howard of GLF.[19] Believing that more people would turn out for the march on a Sunday, and so as to mark the date of the start of the Stonewall uprising, the CSLDUC scheduled the date for the first march for Sunday, June 28, 1970.[20] With Dick Leitsch's replacement as president of Mattachine NY by Michael Kotis in April 1970, opposition to the march by Mattachine ended.[21]\nThe origins of Gay and Lesbian Pride month can be traced back to a turbulent weekend in New York City in June of 1969. On the evening of June 27th, the usual crowd gathered at the Stonewall Inn, a popular gay bar in New York City's Greenwich Village. New York Beverage Control Board agents and NYC police officers raided the bar to enforce an alcohol control law that was seldom enforced anywhere else in the city. Patrons were physically forced out of their gathering places, sometimes beaten, and often arrested with no just cause. On that night, lesbians and gay men spontaneously fought back against police harassment for the first time. Word spread quickly about the confrontation and large, outraged crowds gathered on ensuing nights to protest the mistreatment historically inflicted on the gay community. These protests came to be known as the Stonewall Rebellion. This uprising was the catalyst for the modern political movement for gay and lesbian liberation, calling for gay pride and action to secure their basic civil rights.\n2019 will be extra special because New York will be hosting the iconic World Pride for the entire month of June. This will be the first time in World Pride's 20-year history that the event will take place in the USA. Pride means different things to everyone, which is why World Pride NYC offers a whole heap of LGBTQ activities during the celebrations.\nThe initiative received government backing from the deputy DfES and Equalities Minister Jacqui Smith, although some sections of the press argued against its political correctness, and pointed out that the sexuality of some historical figures is more a matter of speculation than fact.[16] Supporters of the event countered that it is important to challenge heterosexist attitudes in society.\nIn Greenland, LGBT history is celebrated with a Pride Parade instead of a month-long celebration. It started in 2010 when 19-year-old Nuka Bisgard and her friend Lu Berthelse, 24, another woman, teamed up with other Greenlanders to create a pride celebration.[22] This was made to help Greenland's visible and invisible gay community feel more inclusive and united. On May 15, 2010, their hard work paid off when Pride drew over a thousand participants. Gay Pride has successfully been repeated since 2010.[23]\nCzech Republic's largest LGBT event. This year, the week-long Prague Gay Pride runs from August 5th-11th. Expect lots of fun activities - concerts, workshops, theatre, exhibitions, film, lectures, discussions, dance parties. The parade takes place in the city centre on Saturday, August 10th. Check the website for full details and program. ...read more\nOn July 22, 2005, the first Latvian gay pride march took place in Riga, surrounded by protesters. It had previously been banned by the Riga City Council, and the then-Prime Minister of Latvia, Aigars Kalvītis, opposed the event, stating Riga should \"not promote things like that\", however a court decision allowed the march to go ahead.[85] In 2006, LGBT people in Latvia attempted a Parade but were assaulted by \"No Pride\" protesters, an incident sparking a storm of international media pressure and protests from the European Parliament at the failure of the Latvian authorities to adequately protect the Parade so that it could proceed.\nThe annual gay Pride weekend in Cologne takes place from July 5th-7th in 2019. with the street parade on Sunday. Hundreds of thousands of participants are expected. The street festival will feature numerous LGBT activities and events - colourful stage performances, parties, political events, film screenings, cultural activities, etc. Planning to be ...read more\nA Brazilian photographer was arrested after refusing to delete photos of police attacking two young people participating in a gay pride parade on October 16, 2011 in the city of Itabuna, Bahia, reported the newspaper Correio 24 horas. According to the website Notícias de Ipiau, Ederivaldo Benedito, known as Bené, said four police officers tried to convince him to delete the photos soon after they realized they were being photographed. When he refused, they ordered him to turn over the camera. When the photographer refused again, the police charged him with contempt and held him in jail for over 21 hours until he gave a statement. According to Chief Marlon Macedo, the police alleged that the photographer was interfering with their work, did not have identification, and became aggressive when he was asked to move. Bené denied the allegations, saying the police were belligerent and that the scene was witnessed by \"over 300 people\", reported Agência Estado.[55]\nTurkey was the first Muslim-majority country in which a gay pride march was being held.[118] However, the parades have been banned nationwide since 2015. Authorities cite security concerns and threats from far-right and Islamist groups, but severe police retrubution against marchers had led to accusations of discrimination tied to the country's increasing Islamization under Erdogan.[119]\nThe first NYC Pride Rally occurred one month after the Stonewall Riots in June 1969, that launched the modern Gay Rights Movement. 500 people gathered for a “Gay Power” demonstration in Washington Square Park, followed by a candlelight vigil in Sheridan Square. NYC Pride has continued this proud tradition by hosting the event in various locations throughout the city. The March passes by the site of the Stonewall Inn on Christopher Street, location of the June 1969 Stonewall riots.\nIn 2007, following international pressure, a Pride Parade was held once again in Riga with 4,500 people parading around Vērmane Garden, protected physically from \"No Pride\" protesters by 1,500 Latvian police, with ringing the inside and the outside of the iron railings of the park. Two fire crackers were detonated with one being thrown from outside at the end of the festival as participants were moving off to the buses. A man and his son were afterwards arrested by the police.[86] This caused some alarm but no injury, although participants did have to run the gauntlet of \"No Pride\" abuse as they ran to the buses. They were driven to a railway station on the outskirts of Riga, from where they went to a post Pride \"relax\" at the seaside resort of Jūrmala. Participants included MEPs, Amnesty International observers and random individuals who travelled from abroad to support LGBT Latvians and their friends and families.\nToday, celebrations include pride parades, picnics, parties, workshops, symposia and concerts, and LGBT Pride Month events attract millions of participants around the world. Memorials are held during this month for those members of the community who have been lost to hate crimes or HIV/AIDS. The purpose of the commemorative month is to recognize the impact that LGBTQ individuals have had on history locally, nationally, and internationally.\n^ \"Making colleges and universities safe for gay and lesbian students: Report and recommendations of the Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth\" (PDF). Massachusetts. Governor's Commission on Gay and Lesbian Youth., p. 20. \"A relatively recent tactic used in the backlash opposing les/bi/gay/trans campus visibility is the so-called \"heterosexual pride\" strategy\".\nOn Saturday, June 27, 1970, Chicago Gay Liberation organized a march[12] from Washington Square Park (\"Bughouse Square\") to the Water Tower at the intersection of Michigan and Chicago avenues, which was the route originally planned, and then many of the participants spontaneously marched on to the Civic Center (now Richard J. Daley) Plaza.[13] The date was chosen because the Stonewall events began on the last Saturday of June and because organizers wanted to reach the maximum number of Michigan Avenue shoppers. Subsequent Chicago parades have been held on the last Sunday of June, coinciding with the date of many similar parades elsewhere.\nIn 2008, the Riga Pride was held in the historically potent 11. novembra krastmala (November 11 Embankment) beneath the Riga Castle. The participants heard speeches from MEPs and a message of support from the Latvian President. The embankment was not open and was isolated from the public with some participants having trouble getting past police cordons. About 300 No Pride protesters gathered on the bridges behind barricades erected by the police who kept Pride participants and the \"No Pride\" protesters separated. Participants were once more \"bused\" out but this time a 5-minute journey to central Riga.\nIn Greece, endeavours were made during the 1980s and 1990s to organise such an event, but it was not until 2005 that Athens Pride established itself. The Athens Pride is held every June in the centre of Athens city.[80] As of 2012, there is a second pride parade taking place in the city of Thessaloniki. The Thessaloniki Pride is also held annually every June. 2015 and 2016 brought two more pride parades, the Creta Pride taking place annually in Crete[81] and the Patras Pride, that is going to be held in Patras for the first time in June 2016.[82]\nLGBT History Month was celebrated in Hungary for the first time in February 2013, and since then every year. The program series is coordinated by Háttér Society and Labrisz Lesbian Association, events are organized in partnership with other LGBT organization, cultural and academic institutions, professional organizations etc. The majority of the events take place in Budapest, but a few events are also organized in larger cities all over the country, e.g. in Debrecen, Pécs, Miskolc and Szeged.[29]\nThe Pride Parade is heavily supported by the federal government as well as by the Governor of São Paulo, the event counts with a solid security plan, many politicians show up to open the main event and the government not rarely parades with a float with politicians on top of it. In the Pride the city usually receives about 400,000 tourists and moves between R$180 million and R$190 million.\nThe West Coast of the United States saw a march in Los Angeles on June 28, 1970 and a march and 'Gay-in' in San Francisco.[14][15] In Los Angeles, Morris Kight (Gay Liberation Front LA founder), Reverend Troy Perry (Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches founder) and Reverend Bob Humphries (United States Mission founder) gathered to plan a commemoration. They settled on a parade down Hollywood Boulevard. But securing a permit from the city was no easy task. They named their organization Christopher Street West, \"as ambiguous as we could be.\"[16] But Rev. Perry recalled the Los Angeles Police Chief Edward M. Davis telling him, “As far as I’m concerned, granting a permit to a group of homosexuals to parade down Hollywood Boulevard would be the same as giving a permit to a group of thieves and robbers.”[17] Grudgingly, the Police Commission granted the permit, though there were fees exceeding $1.5 million. After the American Civil Liberties Union stepped in, the commission dropped all its requirements but a $1,500 fee for police service. That, too, was dismissed when the California Superior Court ordered the police to provide protection as they would for any other group. The eleventh hour California Supreme Court decision ordered the police commissioner to issue a parade permit citing the “constitutional guarantee of freedom of expression.” From the beginning, L.A. parade organizers and participants knew there were risks of violence. Kight received death threats right up to the morning of the parade. Unlike later editions, the first gay parade was very quiet. The marchers convened on McCadden Place in Hollywood, marched north and turned east onto Hollywood Boulevard.[18] The Advocate reported \"Over 1,000 homosexuals and their friends staged, not just a protest march, but a full blown parade down world-famous Hollywood Boulevard.\"[19]\nFrom 2016, Schools OUT UK has partnered with a several contract publishers to produce magazines as an Official Guide to LGBT History Month, putting 35,000 copies of their publication into every secondary school in the UK, plus community spaces, charities and businesses. The magazine had introductions from the leaders of all the main political parties and the Mayor of London. The magazine's Diversity Dashboard runs job adverts and events listings from LGBT-friendly employers and the community.\nOther Southeastern Brazilian parades are held in Cabo Frio (Rio de Janeiro), Campinas (São Paulo), Vitória (capital of Espírito Santo), and Belo Horizonte and Uberaba (Minas Gerais). Southern Brazilian parades take place in Curitiba, Florianópolis, Porto Alegre and Pelotas, and Center-Western ones happen in Campo Grande, Cuiabá, Goiânia and Brasília. Across Northeastern Brazil, they are present in all capitals, namely, in Salvador, Aracaju, Maceió, Recife, João Pessoa, Natal, Fortaleza, Teresina and São Luís, and also in Ceará's hinterland major urban center, Juazeiro do Norte. Northern Brazilian parades are those from Belém, Macapá, Boa Vista and Manaus.\nMardi Gras was Sydney's contribution to the international gay solidarity celebrations, an event that had grown up as a result of the Stonewall riots in New York. Mardi Gras was one of a series of events by the Gay Solidarity Group to promote the forthcoming National Homosexual Conference, and offer support to San Francisco's Gay Freedom Day and its campaign against California State Senator John Brigg's attempts to stop gay rights supporters' teaching in schools. It was also intended to protest the Australian visit of homophobic[according to whom?] Festival of Light campaigner Mary Whitehouse.[26]","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line193933"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6126489043235779,"wiki_prob":0.6126489043235779,"text":"Home » Sports » Roland Garros 2015 edition richer than ever\nRoland Garros 2015 edition richer than ever\nOctober 7, 2015 Sports\nFor the those who don’t know, 2015 edition of Roland Garros was in fact the richer editon of the famous tennis tournaments taking place in Paris: € 28,028,600 was the amount of the total prize, increased by + 12% compared to the previous edition. Of this amount, 1,800,000 have been entitled to women’s singles and men’s singles winners; while the pair winning the mixed doubles has been awarded € 114,000. And so, in the prestigious field, named after Suzanne Lenglen, the approximately 10,000 spectators (10,076 is the maximum capacity of the stadium – almost always sold out!) have witnessed the triumph of the USA champion Serena Williams and the one of Stan Wawrinka, the swiss one, who triumphed on French Open, overcoming respectively Lucie Safarova and Novak Djokovic.\nThere were Many VIPs at the court of Roland Garros 2015; many of them coming from the world of sport and entertainment, others from the world of politics, or finance that matters. To the latter category belongs the Italian Giampaolo Lo Conte, a man who dedicated his life to international trading and large companies’ investments. “I’m here – told us in an interview in his studio in London – because I love tennis. It ‘a very tough sport, both physically and mentally, concentration always wins before physical strength. I will also be at Wimbledon! In a few weeks “.\nDo we talk about business even in Paris? “Sure, but not on on Roland Garros’s stands – says Giampaolo Lo Conte, smiling. “People here loves to sunbathe and relax while enjoying the show. Including VIPs. ” Do you feel like a celebrity too? “Not an entertainment one … nor even a sports’ one! (Laughs again). “Let’s say I meet celebrities every week, but they do not recognize me very often, because I do not feature on TV. But do I focus on the ones that matter in the world of high finance: I left Italy, from Rome where I am born, and now I work a lot between New York and London. I do not think that will change any time soon”. But maybe it’s too early to tell!\n“I’m here – told us in an interview in his studio in London – because I love tennis. It ‘a very tough sport, both physically and mentally, concentration always wins before physical strength. I will also be at Wimbledon! In a few weeks “. these are the words coming out of Giampaolo Lo Conte, baron, business consultant and a leading figure in international finance.\nWe met him in his studio in London, a few days after his return from Paris, where he had attended Roland Garros 2015, where French Open winners were Serena Williams and Stan Wawrinka; the first one, for the females, has “paved” the Czech Lucie Safarova during the final match, while the Swiss had nothing less than the pleasure of defeating the strong Novak Djokovic. Giampaolo Lo Conte is very passionate about sports (tennis and basketball above all); he was in the stands of Roland Garros and had the opportunity to chat with acquaintances and colleagues from the world of finance.\n“It felt good – reported Giampaolo Lo Conte – people there love to sunbathe and relax while enjoying the show. Including VIPs! And including me, even if I focus more on people that count in the world of high finance: I left Italy and now I work a lot between New York and London. I do not think that I will change lifestyle any time soon”. Lo Conte is not one of those guys posing in photos with Ronaldo (who was also in Paris), but it is not rare to find him in social events with celebrities. It ‘also fond of fashion: in Rome, between its interventions, he has recently participated in the four-day Alta Roma 2015 event: the event have surely had less resonance of Roland Garros but, from the point of view of business development, it sure rises lots of interest. In fact fashion is one of the areas which Italy tries to rise again in terms of global business from.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1579222"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7786916494369507,"wiki_prob":0.7786916494369507,"text":"by Noise Pop Presents\nFri, June 14, 2019, 8:00 PM – 11:30 PM PDT\nTicket sales have ended\nTickets at the door. Cash and card accepted.\nFri, June 14, 2019\n8:00 PM – 11:30 PM PDT\nThis show is 21+\n“Seductive and soulful, this one may have you dialing your ex. Don't say we didn't warn you.” - Vibe Magazine\nJanine is a fiercely talented songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist. She is also a self-sufficient artist who has created her own artwork and directed music videos. But, her greatest weapon: an ethereal and devastatingly beautiful voice that commands every single verse, hook and refrain. She’s magnetic - bringing you into her world.\nBorn in New Zealand, Janine dedicated herself to music almost as soon as she could walk, recording herself singing her favorite tunes on a double cassette player at the age of five. At the age of fourteen, she began performing her original songs with a guitar at open mics, mostly held at bars she wasn’t technically allowed into. As a result, her art remains as honest as it is hypnotic.\nUnder original moniker Janine and The Mixtape, the artist made quite a mark since first arriving stateside in 2011. She moved to New York quietly building a buzz, the songstress penned, produced, and recorded 2013’s independent Dark Mind EP. Following placements on VH1’s Black Ink Crew and Love & Hip-Hop: Atlanta, it vaulted to #2 on the Billboard Heatseekers Chart and #2 on iTunes Top R&B/Soul Albums Chart, while the single “Hold Me” went Top 10 on Spotify’s Global Viral Charts and #1 on iTunes New Zealand.\nTastemakers including Complex, VIBE, Billboard, MTV, and more lauded her sound. Signing to Atlantic Records, she co-produced 2015’s XX EP (pronounced ex’s) with 4e. The project went on to win “Best R&B Album” at the New Zealand Music Awards in between touring the states with Floetry.\nIn 2017, Janine went on her first headline tour, the Before It’s Too Late Tour, which included packed shows in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Houston, San Francisco, Atlanta, D.C and more.\nFollowing the tour she released her debut album, 99, on May 25th, which was described as “Aaliyah crooning over nocturnal Bryson Tiller production or a femme fatale Weeknd.” The album hit #8 on the US iTunes R&B chart, #54 on the US overall iTunes Charts, #1 on the NZ Heatseekers Charts, #1 on the R&B Charts and #13 on the overall iTunes Chart and was featured on multiple Spotify and Apple Music playlists. Janine's song \"Unstable\" was featured on Starz \"Power\" and reached top 30 in the US itunes R&B charts.\n“99 is a triumphant, and decidedly breakthrough-the-clouds debut from Janine, one that will surely wear your repeat button out, too.” - Paper Mag\nUnited States Events California Events Things to do in San Francisco, CA San Francisco Performances San Francisco Music Performances\nJanine at Cafe du Nord\n2174 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94114\nNoise Pop Presents\nTue, Nov 19 7:00 PM\nTyrone Wells with special guest Dan Rodriguez\nSwedish American Hall, San Francisco\nSat, Oct 19 8:00 PM\nChris Pureka & Laura Gibson\nCafé du Nord, San Francisco\nAlice Phoebe Lou, strongboi\nPixx, Rosie Tucker\nSaintseneca\nCafe Du Nord, San Francisco\nMezzanine, San Francisco\nAli Barter\nMon, Nov 11 7:30 PM\nThe Building, Heather Woods Broderick\nIan Sweet & The Courtneys, Half Stack\nAn Evening With: A.A. Bondy\nBrowse San Francisco Events","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line93937"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.961603045463562,"wiki_prob":0.961603045463562,"text":"Burger King manager told to ‘go back to Mexico’ for speaking\nReport: USAA may sell wealth-management business for about $2B\nhttp://www.washingtonpost.com/world/iran-warns-us-it-could-down-more-drones-as-pompeo-arrives-in-persian-gulf/2019/06/24/c7d59330-967c-11e9-a027-c571fd3d394d_story.html\nTrump imposes new sanctions on Iran, warns US 'restraint' is limited\nJohn Hudson, Anne Gearan and Erin Cunningham, The Washington Post\nPublished 7:40 pm CDT, Monday, June 24, 2019\nUS President Donald Trump shows an executive order on sanctions on Iran's supreme leader in the Oval Office of the White House on June 24, 2019. (Photo by MANDEL NGAN / AFP)MANDEL NGAN/AFP/Getty Images\nPhoto: MANDEL NGAN;Mandel Ngan / AFP / Getty Images\nWASHINGTON - The Trump administration targeted Iran's supreme leader with new sanctions on Monday, using one of the few tools available to punish Iran for downing a U.S. drone after President Donald Trump took military strikes off the table last week.\nTrump warned that his \"restraint\" might not last, but he appeared to muddy his own tough message with a vague threat to end U.S. protection for international shipping in the vital Strait of Hormuz, off Iran.\nThe U.S. economic penalties are part of Trump's strategy to drive a weakened Iran to the bargaining table for new talks over its nuclear ambitions. The sanctions were announced as Secretary of State Mike Pompeo began recruiting allies, including Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, to help monitor threats from Iran in the Persian Gulf.\nIt is far from clear that Iran will buckle. Iran's U.N. ambassador said Monday that any thought of negotiation is \"not ready yet.\" He also disputed claims that Iran was behind a recent string of attacks on oil tankers and other provocations against nations operating in the region, including the United States.\nTrump said the new \"hard-hitting\" sanctions will deny Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and several other top officials access to financial resources. The administration also plans to target Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif with economic sanctions later this week.\nPresident Trump imposed additional economic sanction on Iran on June 24, a few days after Iran shot down a U.S. surveillance drone near the Strait of Hormuz.(The Washington Post)\nMedia: Washington Post\nThe measures mean that any foreign financial institutions that provide significant \"financial services\" to any of the Iranian officials would be subject to U.S. penalties.\n\"The assets of Ayatollah Khamenei and his office will not be spared from the sanctions,\" Trump said. The president mispronounced the Iranian clerical leader's name as \"Khomeini,\" which was the name of the former leader who died in 1989.\nThe decision to target Khamenei directly suggests that Trump is attempting to turn up pressure on the leader who would decide whether to accept an invitation to new negotiations over Iran's nuclear program. Trump's titular counterpart is President Hassan Rouhani, who presided over the 2015 international nuclear deal that Trump rejects as flawed and weak.\nTrump withdrew the United States from the pact last year and began increasing sanctions in a campaign his critics say is aimed at further undermining the nuclear deal and forcing the regime's collapse.\n\"The supreme leader of Iran is the one who ultimately is responsible for the hostile conduct of the regime,\" Trump said as he signed an order imposing the sanctions, which come atop dozens of previous economic penalties applied over Iran's alleged support for terrorism and other actions.\n\"He's respected within his country. His office oversees the regime's most brutal instruments, including the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps,\" the president said, which the United States blames for an attack on two tankers near the Strait of Hormuz on June 13.\nTrump appears to be gambling that the pressure campaign will compel Iran's leadership to agree to a new nuclear agreement and not prompt it to lash out militarily for what it views as an illegal effort to strangle Iran's economy.\nBut analysts said the United States is reaching a point of diminishing returns when it comes to sanctions pressure.\n\"The entities that Khamenei's office controls have already been subject to U.S. sanctions,\" said Suzanne Maloney, an Iran scholar at the Brookings Institution. \"Any new measures are only incremental and possibly redundant. The Iranian economy has already been forced to become more insular and less interconnected - which leaves the residual economic activity paradoxically more resilient to U.S. restrictions.\"\nBeginning last year, when Trump withdrew from the nuclear deal, his administration has effectively banned Iranian oil exports, the country's main revenue source, and moved onto smaller targets such as the iron, steel, aluminum and copper industries.\n\"Further economic sanctions are almost entirely symbolic, rather than being economically significant,\" said Elizabeth Rosenberg, a sanctions expert at the Center for a New American Security. \"Sanctions at this point are a sideshow to the real threat of military escalation and all-out war.\"\nDespite his aversion to a military strike, Trump said he has legal authority to order such an action without congressional approval, something some lawmakers has insisted he obtain. \"I do like keeping them abreast, but I don't have to do it legally,\" he said in an interview with the Hill on Monday.\nOn Monday, the Trump administration presented a case against Iran at the U.N. Security Council, arguing that Iran or its proxies were behind numerous assaults in the Middle East. The United States was not directly targeted in those actions, until the drone attack.\nIranian Ambassador Majid Takht Ravanchi told reporters at the United Nations that the unmanned \"spy\" plane violated Iranian airspace and ignored repeated radio warnings before it was shot down. The United States maintains that the aircraft was flying over international waters.\n\"We cannot accept any intimidation or any threat from anybody,\" said Ravanchi, who helped negotiate the 2015 nuclear deal. He called for a regional dialogue under U.N. auspices and appeared to dismiss direct negotiations with Washington.\n\"How can we start a dialogue with somebody whose primary preoccupation is to put more sanctions on Iran?\" he said. \"So the atmosphere for such a dialogue is not ready yet.\"\nTrump continued to sound optimistic about the prospects for a new deal that he says would do more to prevent an Iranian nuclear bomb than the existing agreement.\n\"We would love to be able to negotiate a deal if they want to. If they don't want to, that's fine, too. But we would love to be able to,\" Trump said in the Oval Office. \"And, frankly, they might as well do it soon.\"\nTreasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said the sanctions against senior military commanders \"will lock up literally billions of dollars more of assets.\"\nThese sanctions block access to the United States financial system and any assets the officials might hold in the United States. The order Trump signed gives Mnuchin authority to target other officials appointed by Khamenei.\nMnuchin stressed that the sanctions were not intended to hurt the people of Iran but were aimed at the country's leaders. \"I want to be very clear. We are not looking at creating issues for the people of Iran,\" he said.\nHowever, U.S. sanctions have devastated Iran's currency, making everyday goods such as fruits, vegetables, car parts and mobile phones exceedingly expensive for average Iranians.\nThe sanctions, which have strained U.S. relations with Europe, have elated Washington's allies in Israel and Arab Gulf states. But the president has shown frustration in doing most of the heavy lifting.\nTrump complained on Twitter that the United States is \"protecting the shipping lanes for other countries\" and suggested he could stop U.S. naval patrols at the entrance to the Persian Gulf, one of the world's most volatile flash points.\n\"All of these countries should be protecting their own ships on what has always been a dangerous journey,\" Trump wrote.\nPompeo reiterated that message Monday during his meeting with Mohammed bin Zayed, the crown prince of Abu Dhabi. Asking for military help with maritime security, Pompeo said \"we'll need you all to participate, your military folks.\"\n\"The president is keen on sharing that the United States doesn't bear the cost of this,\" he added.\nZarif, the Iranian foreign minister, retorted in a tweet that Trump \"is 100% right that the US military has no business in the Persian Gulf. Removal of its forces is fully in line with interests of US and the world. But it's now clear that the #B_Team is not concerned with US interests - they despise diplomacy, and thirst for war.\"\nMilitary officials have said a new program for international cooperation on maritime security in the Persian Gulf is still in the early stages. It will require foreign nations from Asia and the Gulf region to provide payment or naval assets to help monitor and protect maritime commerce in the Middle East, said one official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss a program that as not been finalized.\nCountries that buy and sell oil in the region would be asked in certain cases to escort ships, place vessels at fixed positions in the region or provide maritime patrol aircraft.\nPompeo also met with King Salman and his son, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, on Monday in Saudi Arabia, which has signed onto the plan.\nCunningham reported from Dubai. The Washington Post's Carol Morello, Karen DeYoung, William Branigin, Missy Ryan and Damian Paletta contributed to this report.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line380022"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5661885142326355,"wiki_prob":0.5661885142326355,"text":"Jim Lewis\nSenior Asst. AD for Athletic Communications\nE-mail: jdlewis@catawba.edu\n@CatawbaSID\nJim Lewis was named Senior Assistant Athletic Director for Athletic Communications in 2015. He became the Sports Information Director at Catawba in June of 1996 and prior to the 2009-10 athletic season, he was promoted to Assistant Athletic Director.\nLewis has been associated with the sports information department since enrolling as a student in 1984. His duties are to oversee the publicity for all 18 sports and the athletic department. He currently serves as the primary contact for all of Catawba's 18 sports.\nLewis is a member of both the College Sports Information Directors of America (CoSIDA) and the North Carolina Collegiate Sports Information Association (NCCSIA). He currently serves as treasurer for NCCSIA and coordinates the women’s basketball college all-state team. Lewis is also a member of the NCAA II Men’s Lacrosse South Region Advisory Committee and the National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA) Southeast Region ranking committee.\nDuring his tenure, Lewis has created or expanded the record books for all of Catawba sports teams. He also helped coordinate the creation of the Catawba athletic video streaming operations. Lewis has served as announcer for many web streamed broadcasts and also has announced Catawba athletic events for WSAT Radio. During the summer, he works as an official scorer for the Kannapolis Intimidators minor league baseball team.\nLewis has helped staff numerous conference and regional tournaments. He served as host SID for five South Atlantic Conference Spring Sports Festivals that brought all SAC spring tournaments to Salisbury. Lewis also worked the 2001 NCAA II National Women’s Golf Championships in Rock Hill, S.C., and the 2008 and 2015 NCAA I Men’s Basketball tournaments in Charlotte.\nA 1989 Catawba graduate, Lewis earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration. He is a native of Mooresville and currently resides in Salisbury.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line922287"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5525487065315247,"wiki_prob":0.5525487065315247,"text":"Figure Skaters Online October 21, 2013\nArticles/Interviews\nRippon Seeks Thrills with Quad Lutz\nFigure Skaters Online would like to welcome Chloe Katz to the staff. She is a former U.S. senior national and international pair skater (with Joseph Lynch from 2000-2011) and singles skater who retired from competitive skating in 2011. Chloe graduated from New York University in 2012 where she studied International Business and she currently holds a position in New York City working in financial services consulting. FSO hosted her and Lynch’s official site from 2006 until 2011. Chloe is thrilled to be working with FSO and as a former skater and fellow athlete her perspective adds a unique outlook to her athlete interviews. Adam Rippon was the first skater with whom she conversed in September 2013, about a month and a half before the start of his international season at Skate America (October 18-20, 2013, in Detroit, Michigan).\nPhotos by Leah Adams.\nIn 2010, a fifth place finish at U.S. Nationals left Adam Rippon just short of a spot on the U.S Olympic team; he was second alternate. That same year he rebounded to win the ISU Four Continents Championships and then took advantage of a last-minute opportunity to compete in his first World Championships where he placed sixth. Now, four years later, he is once again focused on his Olympic quest. This time, he has an improved weapon in his arsenal – a quad Lutz jump.\nA quad Lutz turns four rotations in the air in a fraction of a second; this is half a rotation more than the more commonly performed quads, the Salchow and toe loop. Adam may be the only skater on the 2013-2014 ISU Grand Prix circuit planning to execute a quad Lutz in his programs. Currently, he is one of only a handful of skaters to have ever attempted the element in competition. Although he previously had tried the quad Lutz in his free skates during the Grand Prix series in the fall of 2011, this season he plans to perform two quad Lutzes – one in the short program and one in the long. Landing it in competition truly would be an accomplishment and could make Adam a strong contender for the 2014 U.S Olympic Team.\nFew people contemplate attempting something others on earth rarely can do, and even fewer accomplish such a feat. I’d like to know how Adam has done it, and why he’s trying. Surely a quad Lutz is dangerous. Just break down the basic components of a figure skating jump: acceleration plus gravity over ice, multiplied by a lot of determination. In a perfect jump these forces are mastered; otherwise, there are painful consequences. Ice is not a forgiving surface. I decided to talk to Adam to get some answers.\nIt is a Saturday morning when Adam calls me; 9am his time. I wonder why he is up so early; I am still drinking my morning latte. “Adam, thanks for calling me, you are up early,” I say. He laughs and tells me he started his gym workout at 7am. A typical Saturday, when the rest of the world is lounging in bed, Adam is busy doing a workout that would sweep most people off their feet. Like other elite athletes, he gets confidence knowing he is fit and strong and will do whatever it takes to get that way. I take notes on Adam’s workout: core strengthening, plyometric jumps, hydrate repeat, hydrate repeat; I want to be strong like Adam. I take a sip of my latte. I am a bit tired just listening.\n“Adam, what is difficult about skating that people do not realize?”\nHe tells me: “People do not realize how taxing skating is on the body. They see a quick three minutes for one routine and five for the other and they don’t understand the work and hours that are put into these routines.”\nHe explains that a movement of only ten seconds can be worked on for countless hours in front of the mirror until it conveys the perfect message, or the years it takes to learn a triple jump.\n“Skaters look so effortless on the ice; our goal is to look effortless. But if you talk to just one skater you will find that each one always has an injury and they are almost always putting off necessary rest time or they are postponing surgery.”\nSmart athletes understand how to manage their training in a strategic way and do their best to mitigate the effects of injuries so they can sustain training in the long-term. However, regardless of how well a skater manages training, the reality is that the human body is not created to skate, and spectators often overlook the difficulty behind performances because skaters make the end result look so easy.\nIn reality, skating is dangerous. “We are doing things on a regular basis that our body isn’t meant to do, like quads where the impact is so high,” Adam says. I ask him if he’s ever been injured in a quad. He tells me he suffered a series of reoccurring ankle injuries during the 2010 Olympic season and that one of them was from a quad [Editor’s note: An ankle injury sustained while practicing a quad jump also forced his withdrawal from the 2013 Four Continents Championships]; fortunately his ankles are fine now.\nSkating is a mental challenge, he tells me. Apart from rebuilding your physical strength post-injury, you have to resist the urge to not subconsciously protect weak muscles. For example, you cannot favor a stronger part of your body or compensate in your motions to avoid putting pressure on a newly healed joint. A move like this will throw off your timing and most likely lead to another injury. Adam talks a lot about the mental aspects of skating; it is a big mind game he tells me.\nSkating is more than a mind game; it is a competition. One with an intricate set of rules that determines how skaters pick which elements they will include in their routines. I ask Adam: “If you could change one rule in skating what would it be?”\nHe replied: “I think they should broaden the GOE (grade of execution) spectrum to minus five plus five because this allows for a larger scale when grading an element.”\nI think he has a point there. A larger grade scale has the capability to more accurately reflect the quality of an element than a smaller one. As it stands, Adam says, “when an element is executed the scores do not always capture its value”; therefore, as he pointed out, a larger GOE range would also create more fairness in the judging. “It would allow more credit to be earned for harder elements as well as ones that are more innovative.” He could be referring to the triple Lutz he does with his arms over his head – certainly that is worth more merit. I like where he is going with this.\nAs a skater moves up the ranks, creativity is brought to the forefront. The pressure to be innovative within the constraints of the rules grows exponentially, and adding unique facets to a performance becomes a strategic challenge. Coupled with the mental and physical brutality of the sport, practice is exhausting.\nI have one final question for Adam: “What keeps you coming back for more?”\nHe said, simply: “It’s the thrill; I love the thrill of jumping, to push myself beyond my limits. I know I am doing something I was made to do.”\nIn a way we are all like Adam; we all want to experience the surge of intense pleasure and excitement that comes from being thrilled. As we go about our days, we secretly envision ways to escape the constraints of the mundane. Some of us will fly to white sand beaches, others indulge daydreams of a secret crush; there are the daring that will sky dive or gamble with their money and then there are those, like Adam, who will become masters of the ice. Ultimately we all want to evoke those undeniably good sensations that come from breaking the norm. In the end, we all want to be thrilled.\n[Postscript: Adam Rippon went for the quad Lutz is both his short program (light hand down) and free skate (fall) at Skate America. Both attempts were called under-rotated by the technical panel and given 70% of the jump’s base value, an improvement on his previous attempts in competition in the fall of 2011.]\nPatrick Chan on his legacy: ‘I just want to be a skater who is able to take people’s breath away’\nAshley Wagner contemplates ‘Delicious Ambiguity’ and transition to post-competition life in new podcast\nWith new coaches and a new perspective, Camden Pulkinen wants to ‘show improvement in all areas’\nEvgenia Medvedeva on Stars on Ice debut: “It’s such an incredible experience for me”\nThe Shibutanis’ whirlwind post-Olympics year: “Our approach has just been to appreciate every moment and take it all in.”\nPREVIOUS Previous post: Christina Gao ready for Olympic season\nNEXT Next post: Joshua Farris launches redesigned website","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1197439"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9138795733451843,"wiki_prob":0.9138795733451843,"text":"Lowry mum on Raptors, speaks only about USA Basketball\nW.G. Ramirez\nPMN Sports\nLAS VEGAS — Kyle Lowry knew people wanted to ask him about DeMar DeRozan.\nThat didn’t mean he was going to give them answers.\nIt was a USA Basketball minicamp in Las Vegas, and that’s all that Lowry — the Toronto Raptors point guard who watched his longtime backcourt partner get traded to the San Antonio Spurs last week — wanted to talk about. So, when he was asked about DeRozan on Friday, no matter how reporters tried to pose questions, Lowry tailored his answers the exact same way.\n“It’s been a great week for USA Basketball for me,” he said. “Being out here with these guys and hanging out and getting to talk and hang out with these guys and hanging out with DeMar and all those guys, it’s been fun.\n“Summer has been great in general for everyone. Just to have the opportunity to relax and work on your game and prepare for the upcoming season.”\nDeRozan and Lowry are very close friends on the court and off, and neither was happy to see the trade. DeRozan was shipped to the San Antonio Spurs on July 18, along with centre Jakob Poeltl and a protected 2019 first round pick, in exchange for Kawhi Leonard and wing Danny Green.\nKyle, your thoughts?\n“I’m here for USA Basketball,” Lowry repeated. “It’s been a great week for USA Basketball.”\nLowry is coming off his lowest scoring output in five seasons, after averaging 16.2 points and 6.9 assists per game last year, considerably lower than the career-high 22.4 he averaged the previous season.\nBut, as the oldest player attending the two-day mini-camp, the 32-year-old said he wasn’t as concernced about working on his game or anything particular as much as he was providing leadership at USA Basketball’s first minicamp of this Olympic cycle.\n“Just build chemistry and be a leader, be a voice,” Lowry said. “We all know each other, we all have massive respect for each other so just coming to hang out and kick it is fun.”\nLowry, who won a gold medal with the national team at the 2016 Rio Olympics, said one of the biggest benefits for him has been absorbing as much information from former USA Basketball coach Mike Krzyzewski, and new coach Gregg Popovich, also DeRozan’s new head coach.\n“They’re two of the greatest coaches to ever coach the game of basketball,” Lowry said. “Coach K has been amazing, having the opportunity to spend a lot of time with him three summers ago was awesome, and even these last three days with Pop has been fun.”\nAnd while Lowry refused to discuss his close friend’s departure or anything pertaining to the Raptors, DeRozan said he was confident his former teammate would be just fine without him thanks to a basketball IQ he respects.\n“His knowledge of the game, just his IQ of the game, it stands out, bar none,” DeRozan said. “Just talking about basketball, understanding basketball, reading basketball. It’s great to see that.”\nDeRozan said both players understand the league is about business.\n“Kyle is Kyle, at the end of the day this is our profession,” DeRozan said. “We understand what comes with the job. It’s gonna be simple, we all gotta job and got responsibilities to take care of with our home team. What happened, happened. He gotta do what he gotta do for his team and I go to do what I got to do for mine.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line263418"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9276418685913086,"wiki_prob":0.9276418685913086,"text":"Kapamilya Biggest Performers to Invade the Biggest Filipino Experience in Dubai \"One Music X\" on November 3\nThe “Rakrakan” concert series from 2006 to 2009. The groundbreaking “FilExpo” in 2008. The first “It’s Showtime” outside the Philippines in 2011. The thrilling “JadIne In Love” in Dubai in 2016. The milestone “ASAP in Dubai” in 2014. The record-breaking “Birit Queens in Abu Dhabi this year.\nFrom concert series, trade fairs to franchised events, ABS-CBN The Filipino Channel (TFC) has been delivering the most epic Filipino events to the Middle East that bring together Filipinos to celebrate as one community and which have come to be the most anticipated in the region.\nThis year, as ABS-CBN Middle East celebrates its 10th anniversary, the network that delivers content beyond information and entertainment, brings it a notch higher as it paves the way for the biggest Filipino music experience to date — “One Music X” on November 3 at the Dubai Media City Amphitheater.\nOn November 3, TFC will come together with ABS-CBN’s hit-making recording company Star Music; the leading FM radio station My Only Radio (MOR) For Life; the first all-Filipino music channel Myx; and the Philippines’ foremost music portal One Music PH; to deliver the highpoints of Philippine culture and celebrate everything Filipino for a full day of “One Music X”.\nONE MUSIC\nKnown for the Filipino’s penchant for music, “One Music X” is gathering the biggest Original Pilipino Music (OPM) acts from the Philippines, representing a wide range of music genres that appeal across audiences and artists who have become icons in their own right.\nFrom winning ABS-CBN’s reality singing competition “Pinoy Dream Academy” in 2006, Pop Rock Royalty Yeng Constantino has certainly come a long way. From her successful initial foray “Hawak Kamay” to a musical about her life story — “Josephine” — Constantino has truly become one of the young superstars to reckon with in the music industry.\nAlso a product of a reality singing competition and band performances, Soul Supreme KZ Tandingan has gone beyond the winning to prove that she deserves both a place to win and a niche in the music industry with her show-stopping performances.\nOnce behind the shadow of his very famous father, Teen Singing Sensation Iñigo Pascual is setting out to become a pop superstar in his own right. Today’s biggest hit “Para Sa Iyo” is his and he can very well claim it as his own success.\nMeantime four-piece Pinoy Pop Rock band Silent Sanctuary, arguably best known for their hit “Pasensiya Ka Na” became known for their own brand of baroque pop. For their first show with TFC the band is expected to bring in the sighs as well as the cheers.\nFrom being a significant part of a popular band in the 90s, OPM Rock Icon Rico Blanco went on to become a world of his own, earning critics and fans approval for his soulful songs such as “Your Universe”.\nTogether, Constantino, Tandingan, Pascual, Silent Sanctuary and Blanco will elevate the musical experience of “One Music X” where OPM truly belongs –– the world stage.\nJoining the Philippines’ biggest acts is multi-awarded young host Robi Domingo and award-winning MOR DJ Chacha and surprise acts from the local Dubai music scene for a day that also promises cultural fusion and musical collaboration.\nONE EXPERIENCE\nPromising to be the biggest Filipino experience, “One Music” X will deliver beyond music - uniquely Filipino booths and day-long activities to the Dubai Media City Amphitheater, a highly popular event place that have been host to the biggest local and international acts.\nFrom the Global Tawag ng Tanghalan sa “It’s Showtime” region finals to outdoor family activities; food trucks; acoustic lounges featuring local talents and premium lounges for VIP ticket holders; food trucks; and more, “One Music X” promises to be the complete experience for every member of the family.\nBe part of history as “One Music X” happens on November 3 at the Dubai Media City Amphitheater. Gates open at 1 p.m. The festivities start at 2 p.m. For the full “One Music X” experience, download the TFC Live app available on Google playstore and Apple store.\nFor tickets, visit Virgin Megastore and selected zoom outlets, Wall street Exchange branches or visit ktx.abs-cbn.com. Save as much as 40 AED on your general admission tickets through the Early Bird discount until September 30. Tickets are at AED 135 for General Patronage and AED 245 for VIP tickets. For more information visit emea.kapamilya.com or facebook.com/TFCMiddle East.\nWatch out for the next “One Music X” and always visit facebook.com/KapamilyaTFC and follow KapamilyaGlobalPR and KapamilyaTFC on Twitter and IG.\nTFC Brings Xian Lim and KZ Tandingan in the Biggest Filipino Event in Japan “Philippine Festival 2017” on October 1\nHeadlines of entertainment news in recent years attest to the breadth of the Filipino talent, especially in the field of music - from singing competitions in search of the best amateur performers to reality shows such as “America’s Got Talent”.\nThis wealth of talent continues to catch the attention of international icons including music producer David Foster who said in an interview with ABS-CBN: “I don’t know what’s in the water over there in the Philippines but there are a lot of great singers out there”.\nThis October, The Filipino Channel (TFC) will continue to prove the wealth of Filipino talent as the network brings multi-talented ABS-CBN stars Xian Lim and KZ Tandingan to join the Filipino community at the Philippine Festival 2017 - touted as the biggest Filipino event in Japan - on October 1, 2017 at the Hibiya Park Chuo Ku Event Square in Tokyo.\nFirst organized by the Philippine Festival Organizing Committee (FPOC) in 2012 with support from the Philippine Embassy in Japan, the Philippine Festival is organized annually for Filipinos and foreign nationals specifically “to bring expatriate Filipinos together, and at the same time introduce Philippine cuisine, music, dance, and products to Japanese and international friends”, according to the official website of the festival.\nDuring the TFC Hour of the Philippine Festival 2017 tagged also as the “most awaited Filipino event in Japan”, Lim and Tandingan will showcase the great Filipino talent as they share their singing as well as their other talents when they perform for their fellowmen (kababayans).\nWhile Kapamilya Heartthrob Lim is more known as a young sensation from ABS-CBN has proven his charm in top-rating dramas such as the recently concluded “The Story Of Us” and has equally proven his acting skills in award-winning films such as “Everything About Her”.\nUnknown to many, Lim is musically inclined and has a talent both in singing and in playing instruments like the piano and the trumpet. In fact, he has three recording albums already under his belt: “So It’s You”, “XL2” and “Key of X”. He is also known internationally as the voice behind the Philippine release of the movie “Paddington Bear”.\nMeantime, Tandingan has become a sought-after performer since becoming the first “X Factor” Philippines winner because of her soulful song performances of her own hits such as “Wag Ka Nang Umiyak” at “Mahal Ko o Mahal Ako” and with her latest hit - her own rendition of the classic song “Two Less Lonely People” by the international duo Air Supply.\nTFC first shared the breadth of the Filipino talent to the Philippine festival in 2013 when the network brought Kapamilya artists: TFC’s first Goodwill Ambassador Martin Nievera, together with the iconic series “Be Careful with My Heart’s” cast members Doris Carlos and Sabel Fortuna to personally meet, and bring entertainment to the Filipino community in Japan.\nThe next year, 2014, TFC brought the Big Band Crooner Richard Poon who serenaded the ladies during the event.\nThis year, its Lim and Tandingan’s turn to continue the commitment from TFC through a showcase of unique Filipino performances.\nIn addition to the songs and acoustics, TFC will also open its booth to give the festival-goers chances to win photo opportunities with Lim and Tandingan, and take home limited edition TFC merchandise.\nAside from the performances from the Kapamilya artists, the organizers have geared up for the annual parade representing the different popular festivals in the Philippines. The performers’ colorful costumes and lively dances are two of the highlights which the Filipino community in Japan look forward to as they help bring back memories of celebrations from home.\nDuring the event, festival-goers also get to enjoy their favorite Filipino delicacies being sold at the different booths around the venue.\nTFC and the Philippine Festival invite the Filipino community to reminisce the Filipino festivals and the locals to join the celebration at the Philippine Festival 2017 on September 30 and October 1, with the TFC Hour happening on October 1 at the Hibiya Park Chuo Ku Event Square in Tokyo.\nFor more updates about the event, visit and like facebook.com/TFCJapan or visit www.kapamilya.com/tfcjapan.\nConnect with fellow global Kapamilyas and follow @KapamilyaTFC and KapamilyaGlobalPR on Twitter and Instagram. (with additional report from Camille Naredo of ABS-CBN News)\nGrae Fernandez and Andrea Brillantes Teach Value of Contentment in “Wansapanataym” Starting October 1\nViewers are set to witness another whimsical story that will share valuable lessons this Sunday (October 1) as teen idols Grae Fernandez and Andrea Brillantes star in their very own series “Wansapanataym Presents: Louie’s Biton.”\nDon’t miss Grae and Andrea in their first-ever starring role in “Wansapanataym” as they teach the value of contentment that will surely captivate Pinoy kids nationwide.\nGet to know Louie (Grae Fernandez), the teenager who once lived a fancy life but now experiences hardships after the unexpected death of his father. He lives with his mother Mary Jane (Dimples Romana), who works hard for their everyday living. Bringing him constant joy is his friend Tori (Andrea), the girl he has feelings for.\nOne day, his school announces that it will hold a basketball clinic, with Louie’s idol PBA player Ralph Lorenzo (Aljur Abrenica) serving as coach. However, having no money and a pair of shoes to play in, he fails to join the event and gets bullied by his classmates.\nFrustrated by the rejection, he then comes to the shoe repairman Mang Dolino (Jojit Lorenzo) to get his shoes fixed. The repairman hears Louie’s desire to live another person’s life and then reveals himself as a fairy god leather. To help the boy with his wish, he gives Louie a magical shoe shiner, which will only work once he wipes it on the shoes of the person he wants to exchange life with.\nDreaming to live the life of his idol, Louie wipes the shoe shiner on Ralph’s shoes and successfully gains control of his life. However, he abuses the power of the shoe shiner and uses Ralph’s body to get even with his classmates, which leads to a grave punishment that will change his own life.\nWhat consequences will Louie face? Who will set him free from the spell?\nAlso part of “Wansapanataym Presents: Louie’s Biton” are Louise Delos Reyes, Mico Palanca, Irma Adlawan, Brace Arquiza, Marina Benipayo, Dionne Monsanto, Paeng Sudayan, Simon Ibarra, and Marnie Lapuz. It is under the direction of Benedict Mique.\nCatch the magical stories filled with valuable lessons in “Wansapanataym Presents: Louie’s Biton” this Sunday (October 1) on ABS-CBN and ABS-CBN HD (SkyCable ch 167). For more information, go to fb.com/dreamscapeph and follow @dreamscapeph on Twitter and Instagram.\n5 Things that Make Coco Martin a Modern-Day Hero\nCardo (Coco Martin) is definitely the country’s most loved “probinsyano.” For over two years now, we have welcomed him into our homes every night and joined him in his heart-pounding adventures as he battles crimes and saves lives as a tough police officer.\nDedicated to his job, Cardo surely has done it all — from going on life-threatening assignments and disguising as the alluring lady Paloma.\nHe may not have magic spells nor superpowers, but he is what you may call a modern-day hero. Here’s why:\nHe fights to preserve peace and order\nWilling to risk his life to protect others, Cardo has saved thousands of people who fell victim to notorious gangs and has raided the country’s biggest crime syndicates. But his quest does not only involve life-threatening battles; he also leads in maintaining peace and order in their community and is always just a call away when their neighborhood needs help.\nNow, his dedication to preserve peace still lives on as he went undercover to join Pulang Araw to reveal the truth behind all the terrorist attacks and chaos happening in the city, which are all orchestrated by director Renato Hipolito (John Arcilla), who aspires to be a senator.\nHe fights for the oppressed\nHaving grown up without his family, Cardo sure knows how hard life can be, which explains his desire to serve the people, especially those who do not have the capacity to fight for their rights. He has helped victims of crimes such as prostitution, child trafficking, and corruption to stand up and expose syndicate masterminds, putting an end to their evil ploys.\nEven now that he is with Pulang Araw, Cardo continues to be the warrior for the oppressed after he recently fought for the rights of the Mt. Karagao farmers, whose lands were being claimed by the illegal quarry owners Javier (Jestoni Alarcon) and Miguel Enriquez (Aljur Abrenica). Along with the rebel group, Cardo responded to the farmers’ plea and ended the Enriquez’s tormenting schemes.\nHe champions Filipino family values\nAs Filipinos, it is ingrained in our culture to give importance to filial relationships, which is evident in Cardo’s family.\nA family man, Cardo always puts the welfare of his family first and makes sure they are intact, especially during trying times. They are also a great reflection of a warm Pinoy household that welcomes and cares for people who are not related to them by blood but treats them as their own, such as Onyok and Makmak. Their family also got bigger after Cardo married Alyana (Yassi Pressman) and welcomed his partner in crime Paco (Long Mejia) and kids Ligaya, Dang, and Paquito.\nHe is a model citizen\nJust like everybody else, Cardo wants change to happen in our society. As a police officer, he is able to influence the people around him by setting as an example of what a good citizen should be. He also uses his authority to stop abusive people, like Renato Hipolito and even his then arch nemesis Joaquin Tuazon (Arjo Atayde), from taking advantage of their positions to manipulate innocent people. This makes his character not only admirable to viewers, but also to real life cops, earning the nods of the Department of the Interior and Local Government secretary Mike Sueno and Philippine National Police chief Ronald Dela Rosa.\nHe is a reflection of an everyday Filipino\nHe may now be living in the city, but Cardo remains a certified “probinsyano,” living a simple life and working hard to give his family a good life. Hardships may come his way, but his faith and resilience helps him fight against life’s biggest struggles. Despite having achieved milestones in his career, he remains humble and thankful for the blessings he receives.\nWith the traits he exemplifies, Cardo sums up what an every ordinary Filipino is and what we should continue to aspire to be.\nDon’t miss the number one primetime series in the country “FPJ’s Ang Probinsyano,” weekdays on ABS-CBN and ABS-CBN HD (SkyCable ch 167).\nTo watch the show’s past episodes, login to iWanTV or skyondemand.com.ph for Sky subscribers.\nZanjoe Marudo Nominated For Best Actor at 45th International Emmy Awards\nKapamilya actor and Star Magic artist Zanjoe Marudo is the only Asian artist nominated in the Best Performance by an Actor category in the 45th International Emmy Awards.\nThe model turned actor is competing against actors Julio Andrade (Brazil), Kenneth Branagh (United Kingdom), and Kad Merad (France) in the category.\n“This recognition from the iEmmys is a personal milestone for me as an actor and as a Filipino. This is a dream come true. I thank the jurors, the show “MMK,” ABS-CBN and Star Magic,” said Zanjoe.\nZanjoe is nominated for his exceptional portrayal of a father with paranoid schizophrenia in the “Anino” episode of ABS-CBN’s weekend drama anthology “MMK” (“Remembering”). This real life story, brought to life by Zanjoe, is among the many unique stories that have given Filipino viewers inspiration, hope, and life lessons in the 25 years that “MMK” has been on air.\nDubbed as the longest drama anthology in Asia, “MMK” is hosted by actress and ABS-CBN’s chief content officer Charo Santos-Concio, who was also a former gala chair for the International Emmy Awards back in 2015.\nZanjoe is among the 44 nominees across 11 categories and 18 countries in this year’s awards.\nLast year, fellow Star Magic artist Jodi Sta. Maria also got an international Emmy nomination in the Best Performance by an Actress category for her portrayal as Amor Powers in the hit drama “Pangako Sa’Yo.” Primetime series “Bridges of Love,” meanwhile, was nominated in the Best Telenovela category.\nABS-CBN previously scored International Emmy® Awards nominations for “Precious Hearts Romances Presents: Impostor” (Best Telenovela) in 2011, “Dahil May Isang Ikaw” (Best Telenovela) and Sid Lucero in “Dahil May Isang Ikaw” (Best Actor) in 2010, and “Kahit Isang Saglit” (Best Telenovela) and Angel Locsin in “Lobo” (Best Actress) in 2009.\nThis year’s winners will be announced at a black-tie ceremony to be held November 20 at the Hilton New York Hotel. The International Emmy® Awards are given by the International Academy of Television Arts & Sciences.\nThe Filharmonic and Geneva Cruz Headline Kick-off of Filipino American History Month Celebration in Carson California on October 7\nAs October approaches, the City of Carson, California prepares to kick off the month-long celebration of Filipino-American History Month with an impressive showcase of Filipino talent.\nThe kick-off festivities on Saturday, October 7th, will be held at the Congresswoman Juanita Millender-McDonald Community Center starting at 9:00 a.m. located at 801 E. Carson Street. This event is open to the public and admission is free.\nHeadlining this year’s event are The Filharmonic and Geneva Cruz. ABS-CBN TFC is bringing The Filharmonic, an Los Angeles-based a capella group featured in NBC’s hit musical competition, “The Sing-Off”, and featured in the Universal Pictures hit movie, “Pitch Perfect 2”, which became a viral sensation. In 2016, The Filharmonic was named the #1 college-booked entertainment group of the year, bringing their unique blend of hip hop, pop and 90s nostalgia to more than 150 stages nationwide. Geneva Cruz is an award-winning singer and actress who began her career in 1989 as one of the lead singers of the double platinum-selling teen group Smokey Mountain with massively popular classics that include “Anak ng Pasig” (named Best Pop Song in 1992 by the Catholic Mass Media Awards in the Philippines), “Ang Gaan ng Feeling”, “In the Name of Love”, and “Kailan”. Cruz also became the first and youngest Grand Prize winner of the “The Voice of Asia” in Russia in 1992.\nPerformances at the event include songs from the City of Carson 2016 FilAms Got Talent Winner Therese Masangcay, vocalists Joni Villamil and Michael Keith, comedian Joseph Gelito, and a dance number from 2016 World Championship of Performing Arts winner Junior New System. The Annual FilAms Got Talent 2017 singing contest will also be held.\nA program featuring awards for community leadership, youth achievement, and heroism will take place at the event. The awardees are Melissa Ramoso, Joanna Concepcion, Jesus-Alex Cainglet, and Marcelino Ines Jr. for Community Leadership. Other awardees include Wilfredo Credo (Heroism), Kamille Magante and Angelica Tan for Youth Achievement.\n“Carson is proud to recognize the contributions of Filipino-Americans nationwide, but especially to the Carson community. Special thanks to Councilmember Elito M. Santarina for his leadership in helping make this celebration a reality,” said Carson Mayor Albert Robles.\nFilipino American History Month Celebration is an annual event during the month of October in the City of Carson. The event is done in collaboration with ABS-CBN TFC (The Filipino Channel) and Mutch Cariño of Maxx Promos.\nFor more information about Filipino-American History Month Celebration in Carson, California, please call (310) 952-1743.\nBy: JED On 11:22:00 AM\nSKY Movies Pay-Per-View Brings “Kita Kita,” “Luck At First Sight,” and “One Step” to PH TV from September 23 to October 13\nThe highest grossing Filipino indie film of all time “Kita Kita” makes its Philippine TV premiere on SKY Movies Pay-Per-View from September 23 to October 13.\nThe surprise blockbuster hit of the year is about an unlikely romance between two Pinoys living in Japan. It has made a household name of its unconventional leading man, Empoy (Empoy Marquez) and his “AlEmpoy” love team with the talented Alessandra de Rossi.\nIt will be shown with “Luck At First Sight,” starring Jericho Rosales and Bela Padilla, and “One Step,” featuring Korean popstar Sandara Park.\nJericho Rosales and Bela Padilla play unlucky people whose fortunes are reversed when they are together in “Luck At First Sight.” To keep their luck going they make a promise not to fall in love with each other. However, keeping the promise might be harder than they thought.\n“One Step” is about a woman, played by Sandara Park, healing from the physical injuries and emotional trauma from an accident through music.\nGet unlimited access to SKY Movies PPV for seven days for only P99.\n“Kita Kita” on SKY Movies PPV is available to all ONE SKY, SKYcable, Destiny Cable, SKYdirect subscribers.\nIt is also available to SKYbroadband subscribers through SKY on Demand.\nText MOVIESPPV to 23662 or call 418-0000 or your local SKY office, or visit www.mysky.com.ph/moviesppv to subscribe.\nSKYdirect prepaid subscribers can register by texting PPV KITA to 23667, while postpaid subscribers can text SKY to 23668.\nBoy Abunda's 100+ Abundable Thoughts to Ponder Compiled in Latest Book \"It’s Like This\"\nMulti-awarded host Boy Abunda pens a new book to inspire readers with his nuggets of wisdom, quotes and life-affirming essays in “It’s Like This: 100+ Abundable Thoughts that will make you think and rethink what you’ve always thought about your life” by ABS-CBN Publishing.\nThe new manual highlights important lessons from Asia’s King of Talk as he shares his life filled with love and abundance, while recalling friends, experiences and changes that brought him to where he is now.\n“It’s Like This” covers some of the author’s unforgettable encounters as a young boy raised in Borongan, Eastern Samar, as a student inside the seminary, as a probinsyano who went to study at Ateneo, and as a fledging actor in theater.\nThe “Tonight With Boy Abunda” host also shared bits of insights on how he faced heartbreaking moments in his life, such as the death of his father. He wrote, “when Tatay died, I was forced to live.”\nBoy’s latest offering will not be complete without disclosing inspiration he got from his mother who he calls “the center of my universe.”\nThe book likewise includes his story on how he finally got an offer to be on television and the learnings he discovered as a talent manager. He penned, “when a star becomes the boss, what does the talent manager do? The dynamics between talent and celebrity changes. New rules are invented.”\nSome of the lessons readers will pick up from the book are:\n· Laugh and live with your successes and failures, knowing that all are fleeting.\n· Everything and everyone has a dark side, embrace it.\n· Gay love is equal to all forms of human love.\n· Love your mother, return phone calls, fight only when you need to, read books and the best spa is at the feet of God.\n· Always play for the crowd, and remember that they won’t always be there.\n“It’s Like This: 100+ Abundable Thoughts that will make you think and rethink what you’ve always thought about your life” is now available in National Book Store and Powerbooks for only P275.\n\"Tawag ng Tanghalan\" Grand Champ Noven Belleza Releases Debut Album “Ako’y Sayo”\n“Tawag ng Tanghalan” grand champion Noven Belleza marks his official debut as a recording artist and is all set to conquer the OPM scene as he launches his first album under Star Music, “Ako’y Sayo.”\nNoven shared his elation on the latest break that came his way. He said, “I’m overwhelmed that from the many people who dreamed, I was given this opportunity to have my own album. I am very thankful for all the blessings.”\nWith the passions of Pinoys in mind, Noven offers a debut album that features a timeless and distinct Pinoy sound and brings together the compositions of some of the industry’s best songwriters such as Vehnee Saturno, Jungee Marcelo, Jonathan Manalo, and Rey Valera.\n“There are inspirational songs, there is a prayer, there are songs for the brokenhearted, for those who are in love, and for those who had to leave their family to give them a better future. All the songs are dedicated to them,” he shared.\nHis carrier single, “Tumahan Ka Na” composed by Vehnee, has dominated the MOR 101.9 charts for ten weeks now, peaking at number one.\nFresh from the success of “Tumahan Ka Na,” the former farmer from Negros Occidental also released on September 28 his second single entitled “Nais Kong Ibalik” composed by Jonathan on September 28.\nOther tracks to expect in the album are “Problemang Puso” composed by Vehnee Saturno, “Lupa” by Charo Unite and Ernie Dela Peña, “Sino Ako” by Fr. Joe Casteneda, “Kung Kailangan Mo Ako” (jukebox version) from Rey Valera, and “Ako’s Sayo” by Jungee Marcelo.\nA cinematic version of the OPM classic “Kung Kailangan Mo Ako” is also included as a bonus track.\nAside from his recording project, the talented soloist was also recently inducted as a member of the Organisasyon ng Pilipinong Mang-aawit (OPM) together with other “Tawag ng Tanghalan” singers in a joint effort of TNT Versions (TNTV) and OPM.\nNoven’s “Ako’y Sayo” is now available in all music stores nationwide and all digital stores worldwide.\nFor more information, visit Starmusic.ph or follow Star Music’s official social media accounts at Facebook.com/starrecordsphil, Twitter.com/starrecordsph and Instagram.com/Starmusicph.\nKim Chiu Celebrates 11th Year in Showbiz with the Launch of Third Album “Chinita Princess: Touch of Your Love”\nKapamilya recording artist and actress Kim Chiu celebrates her eleven successful years in the industry with the launch of her new album under Star Music, “Chinita Princess: Touch of Your Love.”\nThe “Ikaw Lang Ang Iibigin” star has exceeded expectations when she ventured into making her own kind of music, and now, she is ready to prove her distinctive flair once again in her third album produced by Rox Santos.\nKim’s latest offering has five original tracks, with a bonus minus one track (song title). It is fittingly called “Touch of Your Love” as she explained in a recent “Magandang Buhay” interview. “All my songs here are about different types of love. There’s something on having a crush, on hoping to be adored in return, different touches of love,” she said.\nHer carrier single “Okay Na Ako,” composed by Nica del Rosario, has already dominated the top spot in MOR 101.9 charts for several weeks now.\nOther tracks in her album are “’Wag Kang Makulit” composed by Nica Del Rosario and Hazel Faith, “Ipadarama” by Kiko Salazar, “Katok” by Jack Rufo and Yani Rufo, and “Yun Na, You Na” by Jungee Marcelo.\nThe female singer already has several chart-topping songs in her portfolio - “Peng Yu,” “Crazy Love,” “Falling For You,” and “Mr. Right.” “Gwa Ai Di,” her debut album that includes “Crazy Love,” achieved a gold record in 2008, and her hit song “Mr. Right” was cited as the \"LSS Song of the Year\" in MOR Pinoy Music Award 2016.\n“Chinita Princess: Touch of your Love’s” album launch will be held on Thursday (September 28), 7pm at SM City North EDSA – Skydome. She will be joined by Kaye Cal, Kisses Delavin, and other special guests.\nThe physical album, priced at P199, will be available first and exclusive at the launch and will be out on digital market after the show.\nThe single “Okay Na Ako” is now available in digital stores worldwide. For more information, visit Starmusic.ph or follow Star Music’s official social media accounts at Facebook.com/starrecordsphil, Twitter.com/starrecordsph and Instagram.com/Starmusicph.\nKapamilya Biggest Performers to Invade the Biggest...\nTFC Brings Xian Lim and KZ Tandingan in the Bigges...\nGrae Fernandez and Andrea Brillantes Teach Value o...\nZanjoe Marudo Nominated For Best Actor at 45th Int...\nThe Filharmonic and Geneva Cruz Headline Kick-off ...\nSKY Movies Pay-Per-View Brings “Kita Kita,” “Luck ...\nBoy Abunda's 100+ Abundable Thoughts to Ponder Com...\n\"Tawag ng Tanghalan\" Grand Champ Noven Belleza Rel...\nKim Chiu Celebrates 11th Year in Showbiz with the ...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1325372"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5088028907775879,"wiki_prob":0.4911971092224121,"text":"danny@dannymorrison.com\nDec 12, 2015 | Latest\nHave just started John McMillan’s latest novel Upstream. It’s the story of a married couple living in the West Country (south west England) told from the perspective of the husband Jim Mitchell, a struggling author. Thoroughly enjoyed his other books The Soul of the...\nReflections on WWI\nNov 13, 2015 | Features\nIn Cork on Wednesday night – 11th November – I was proud to be invited to speak at the launch in the City Library of Conal Creedon’s biography of Michael O’Leary, a Victoria Cross recipient from County Cork. Conal had also asked me would I...\nHillsborough Agreement, 1985\nNov 13, 2015 | Latest\nInterviewed this afternoon by BBC television journalist Mark Simpson about my reflections on the Anglo-Irish Agreement which was signed this day thirty years ago. My opinion hasn’t changed: Thatcher’s aim was to secure increased cross-border security...\nThe Last Jews in Berlin\nOct 25, 2015 | Features\nI read this book, The Last Jews In Berlin, whilst staying at a writers’ residential at Wannsee lake within view of Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz, the villa where in 1942 the Nazis planned the extermination of European Jewry. In fact, when I finished the book I cycled...\n‘I Am A German’\nSep 22, 2015 | Features\nA Stranger in My Own Country: The 1944 Prison Diary by Hans Fallada has been described as, ‘An outspoken memoir of life under the Nazis written from a prison cell’ (Independent), but which has also been viewed as an apologia because Fallada decided to live in Nazi...\nOn Bonfires, The PSNI, Unionism, Sinn Féin & Stormont\nMallon Tears Up The GFA\nThe Woman Behind The Poster\nBeyond The Working Class\nThe War Over Our Heads","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1713138"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5669724345207214,"wiki_prob":0.43302756547927856,"text":"He measured the length of the building along the front of the separate area behind it, with a gallery on each side, a hundred cubits; he also measured the inner nave and the porches of the court. The thresholds, the latticed windows and the galleries round about their three stories, opposite the threshold, were paneled with wood all around, and from the ground to the windows (but the windows were covered), over the entrance, and to the inner house, and on the outside, and on all the wall all around inside and outside, by measurement.read more. Christian Canvas Art\nMasters, treat your slaves justly and fairly, knowing that you also have a Master in heaven. Continue steadfastly in prayer, being watchful in it with thanksgiving. At the same time, pray also for us, that God may open to us a door for the word, to declare the mystery of Christ, on account of which I am in prison— that I may make it clear, which is how I ought to speak. Walk in wisdom toward outsiders, making the best use of the time. ... Christian Art and Gifts\nSolomon made all the furniture which was in the house of the LORD: the golden altar and the golden table on which was the bread of the Presence; and the lampstands, five on the right side and five on the left, in front of the inner sanctuary, of pure gold; and the flowers and the lamps and the tongs, of gold; and the cups and the snuffers and the bowls and the spoons and the firepans, of pure gold; and the hinges both for the doors of the inner house, the most holy place, and for the doors of the house, that is, of the nave, of gold. Christian Canvas Art\n19 designers and 31 writers invested their energy and creativity to this collection, each riffing on the timeless, inspired words of Scripture. Each designer worked hard to capture the essence of each verse in its historical and cultural context, and to design in a way that makes clear the way in which the original readers would have understood it. Then, after each design was complete, a writer reflected on each piece of art and the verse that inspired it. The result is 100 pairs of art and devotional that illuminate the words of Scripture. Bible Scripture Verse Art","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1099756"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6295151710510254,"wiki_prob":0.3704848289489746,"text":"2015 Democracy 360\nSamara's Democracy 360, a report card on the state of Canada's democracy, focuses on the complex relationship between citizens and political leadership. With the understanding that democracy is about more than just casting a ballot every four years, any conversation about how decisions are taken on the future of our country needs to consider a more robust definition of \"everyday democracy.\"\nSamara's Democracy 360 expands the measurement of democracy and kick-starts a conversation using measurable indicators focused on three areas essential to a healthy democracy: communication, participation and political leadership. That is: talking, acting and leading.\nThe Democracy 360 brings together a number of data sources, such as Samara's public opinion research and website content analyses, as well as publicly available data from other sources, including the House of Commons and Elections Canada. As such, it is designed to be a thorough, yet manageable, look at the health of citizens' relationship with politics, and one that was repeated in 2017 in time for Canada’s 150th birthday.\nIn an effort to set a benchmark that prompts reflection and discussion, Samara has awarded an overall letter grade as well as a letter grade for each of the three areas, as outlined in this report.\nWhat does C mean? Quite simply our democracy is not doing as well as a country as rich as Canada deserves. Canadians are not participating in politics as much as they could, they don’t believe it affects them, and they don't see their leaders as influential or efficacious. To turn this situation around, Canada requires more than just higher voter turnout. Canada requires a culture shift towards \"everyday democracy,\" in which citizens feel politics is a way to make change in the country and their voices are heard.\nWhat's Inside Samara's Democracy 360?\nCanadians don’t trust Members of Parliament or political parties and believe they largely fail to perform their core jobs:\nOnly 40% of Canadians report that they trust MPs to do what is right and only 42% of Canadians place some trust in political parties.\nCanadians give MPs and political parties failing grades on nearly all their responsibilities, ranging from reaching out to citizens to their work in Parliament. Overall, Canadians feel MPs do a better job representing the views of the party than they do representing their constituents.\nPolitics is seen as irrelevant and, as a result, Canadians are withdrawing from the democratic system:\nOnly 31% of Canadians believe politics affects them every day.\nOnly 37% give any time or resources to formal political activities between elections.\nA surprising number (39%) say they haven’t had a single political conversation—online or offline—in a year-long period.\nWith a federal voter turnout of 61% puts Canada in the bottom fifth among democracies, according to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.\nTo make politics relevant, Canadians will need to see the value in politics and democracy. This will require the following changes:\nMPs who serve as reliable, vibrant, two-way links between citizens and government.\nCitizens who become more politically active at and beyond the ballot box.\nPolitical leadership that acts in ways that encourages Canadians’ involvement and demonstrates how politics is a worthwhile way to invest time in order to make a difference.\nDespite an overall unhealthy picture, the Democracy 360 also reveals several positive signs on which to build:\nMPs make considerable efforts—through social media, householder mailings and their websites—to reach out to Canadians. With small changes, they can communicate much more effectively.\nOver half of Canadians petition, donate to charity and volunteer, revealing a desire to connect to causes rooted in and affected by politics.\nAn election in 2015 presents a real opportunity to build momentum towards a more engaging political culture:\nIndividual volunteers, candidates and parties, as well as community groups, can all take simple steps to change how citizens get involved and demand a more responsive democracy.\nUnder #TalkActLead, anyone can contribute ideas and solutions to improve how politics works. To spur engagement, Samara Canada will be releasing tip sheets and resources as the election approaches.\nDownload the PDF of the Report Card here\nSamara’s Democracy 360 uses quantifiable indicators to focus on three areas that are essential to a healthy democracy: communication, participation and political leadership.\nThe indicators measured in this report track Canadian democracy across a wide range of areas, from diversity in the House of Commons to the many ways Canadians can participate in politics to how Members of Parliament and parties function. While not exhaustive, together the indicators paint a rich picture of the way that Canadians talk, act and lead in politics, adding multiple dimensions to voter turnout, the metric most commonly used to measure democracy.\nLook through the Numbers below\nDownload the PDF of the Numbers here\nRead the methodology here\nDemocracy 360: The Provinces\nGet the provincial story here","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1390735"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9193103313446045,"wiki_prob":0.9193103313446045,"text":"Shoreworld: Ricky Persaud Jr. – Optimistic Bliss\nJohn Pfeiffer\nRicky is a singer/songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, record producer and arranger from Irvington, NJ whose music style is formed around reggae rock.\nRicky is part of the Berklee College of Music, Class of 2021. He received his first instrument for Christmas at the age of 1. At the tender age of 4 years old, Ricky started taking music classes at Music Together and dance lessons at Stories in Motion, both in South Orange, NJ.\nRicky was accepted by the Newark School of the Arts to study drums at the age of 4. When Ricky was 8 years old, he would go with his brother Nicholas, who was 5, to his weekly guitar lessons at Mark Murphy Music School in South Orange, NJ. Ricky studied Nicholas’ homework and taught himself how to play the guitar. By the age of 10, Ricky could perform Bob Marley’s songs on the guitar proficiently.\nAlong with drums, Ricky started taking bass lessons at the Newark School of the Arts at the age of 11. Still drawn to the guitar, Ricky decided to take guitar lessons at the age of 12, and at the age of 14, Ricky discovered Billy Joel. He taught himself how to play the harmonica and keyboards. Shortly after, Ricky started taking piano lessons in school and at the Newark School of the Arts. Upon the passing of his guitar and bass teacher, jazz guitarist, Hayes Johnson, Ricky put the guitar aside.\nRicky’s mom encouraged him to give guitar lessons another try. So, Ricky enrolled in the school that introduced him to the guitar, the Mark Murphy School of Music. Ricky studied voice, band and guitar there. Ricky studied drums at the Newark School of The Arts, and currently studies music production there. Ricky is a member of the New Jersey Performing Art (NJPAC)/Wells Fargo Jazz for Teens Ensemble and NJPAC’s George Wein Scholars Ensemble.\nRicky, along with his brother Nicholas, performs weekly on Inside with Valerie Persaud, the TV Show which airs on Comcast, Cablevision and Verizon Fios throughout the state of New Jersey. Ricky has recorded three albums. His first album was recorded when he was 14 years old. Ricky Jr. arranged the music and played all the instruments on the album. His second album was recorded when he was 15 years old, and again he played all the instruments on the album and performed the lead and background vocals. Ricky released his third album, Welcome To My World, in 2015. When it comes to this new album, Ricky wrote all the songs and again played all the instruments on the album and performed all the vocals. The album is sold on iTunes, Amazon, CD Baby just to name a few.\nRicky won a Silver Medal in Music Composition and a Gold Medal in Vocal Performance in the North at the Act-So Competition in 2016. Moreover, Ricky is the recipient of the 2016 Governor’s Award for Excellence in Music. His latest record, Optimistic Bliss, has been submitted for consideration for the 60th Grammy Awards as “Best Reggae Album.” The award ceremony will be held in New York City on Jan. 28, 2018.\nHis fourth album, was produced and mixed along with Ricky Persaud Sr. and Ricky Persaud Jr. for Persaud Entertainment, LLC. It was mastered by Gar Francis for Bongo Boy Records and recorded at Crossroads Studios.\nWhile I’m not a huge reggae fan, I must admit that Persaud’s record hits the mark with mojo to spare. As far as production, performence and playing are concerned, this is a record that anyone I know would be proud to call their own.\nThe first song on the disc is called “Let Me See,” and it runs a veritable gamut of musical delights. Written along with Valerie Persaud, “Let Me See” blends traditional reggae sounds with a funky R&B vibe that commands attention from the very beginning. Percussion, bass, and guitars chime perfectly as Persaud lays toned vocals over the top. Reverbed accents, strong backing vocals, and rhythms come together to present an extremely fluid piece of music. It reminds me of Michael Jackson in the ‘80s as it contains many pop sensibilities and melodic grooves. Tight and jam-packed with musical nuances of the genre and beyond, “Let Me See” is a perfect song to kick off with. I love the middle-eight lead break and rhythmic accompaniments, and the way the song climbs back into its central theme is utterly enthralling.\n“Sound of a Hit” is up next. Another co-write with Valerie, Persaud demonstrates superior vocal technique and production moxy on this one. While this song follows a more traditional path of reggae, it also offers energetic charges of songwriting superiority. Persaud and company know how to write and “Sound of a Hit” is a perfect example of that. Keyboards whirl and twirl over the top of funk-inspired bass, drums and guitars as Persaud delivers pristine vocals and harmonies. Even his down-home ending is great as he closes out with a sigh and a statement, “That is good!”\nSkipping around the disc, I came to a song called, “Girl Has the Essence.” Valerie and Ricky Jr. continue their winning streak with another poppy reggae-tinged tune that should do well for him. Persaud’s vocal attack is infectious and well planned, bringing the value of the song to a national level. Guitars upstroke as bass, drums, and horn arrangements tear through the middle of the tune like nobody’s business. Electric guitars scream and feedback where needed and then disappear back under the curtain of percussion and accent as Persaud sings his emotional journey.\nRicky penned “People of the World” on his own. Carrying a pocket-tight backbeat, Persaud lays down fat bass, drums, guitars, and keys underneath some otherworldly vocals. This song smacks from the get-go. Everything seems to fall into place the way it should with any good song. Persaud’s vocals are clean, bright and powerful as hell. The verses work perfectly into the bridge before hitting an addictive chorus. Ricky writes exceptionally catchy songs which will count towards getting greater recognition. Once again, the production sings. The Persaud’s know their craft, and the result is a bunch of fascinating songs that should draw in more than just reggae enthusiasts.\nOne more song I wanted to mention is the disc’s namesake. “Optimistic Bliss” is a fresh cross between The Red Hot Chili Peppers, Blink 182 and some of Peter Tosh’s later work. Once again, Persaud is joined by Valerie Persaud to come up with a terrific tune. Verses, bridges, and choruses pop as Persaud croons to beat the band. Waves wash over the beginning of the song, adding another level to an already powerful piece. Backing vocals sing over the top of rhythmic wah-wahs and percussive hits as Persaud brings the song to a remarkably higher level. I love the guitar work here as well. Measured and supportive, they break free in the choruses and the middle-eight. Persaud’s lyrical content is personal in nature but readily understandable and concise in its delivery. This song features a mighty chorus, and I believe that Persaud will find great success with this song.\nThere are a total of 12 songs on Optimistic Bliss, and each song is as good or better than the next. I find it hard to believe that this outstanding songwriter hasn’t been snapped up by a significant tour yet, but give him time, he’s well on his way.\nFor more information on Ricky Persaud Jr., head over to bongoboyrecords.com to get the latest scoop on this outstanding Shoreworld artist.\nricky persaud jr.shoreworld\nInside The “Cult Of Chucky”\nIan Anderson: Jethro Tull’s Early Beginnings And New Starts\nShoreworld: Jersey Shore Festival Gives It All Away\nShoreworld: The Vansaders – Jumping At Shadows Record Release Party – The Stone Pony – Aug. 22 – Opening For Social Distortion","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1690898"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5925959944725037,"wiki_prob":0.5925959944725037,"text":"The National Shrine\nof Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage\nNational Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage in Antipolo City\nONE of the most well-known pilgrimage churches in the Philippines is Antipolo Church, whose full name is the National Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage. A lot of Filipino devotees head for this church for the Visita Iglesia tradition during Holy Thursday, so expect to catch a crowd there and wait patiently for your turn.\nThe National Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage is a centuries-old church that traces back to the late 1500s. The first missionaries of Antipolo were Franciscans, but it was the Jesuits who administered the church from 1591 to 1768. It was greatly damaged during the Chinese uprising of 1632, followed by the earthquakes of 1645, 1824 and 1863. For three centuries, the National Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage has been the object of religious pilgrimages all over the Philippines.\nAfter finishing your Christian obligations inside the church, treats await you outside the church, as stalls selling suman, kalamay and kasuy enthrall you with their products, and simply find it difficult to resist taking some back home as pasalubong.\nThe National Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage also commands a huge crowd come May 1, when devotees get on their feet, walk up to Antipolo and attend Mass at the church. This church is also where people who buy new vehicles have their vehicles blessed by the priest.\nCategory(s): Travel\nTags: Antipolo Church, Antipolo City, churches to visit for Lent 2017, Holy Thursday Catholic tradition, Lent 2017, Lenten season, National Shrine of Our Lady of Peace and Good Voyage, pilgrimage church, Visita Iglesia\nCathedral of Vigan in Ilocos Sur\nTwittername (without @)\nFacebook (complete URL)\nGoogle+ (complete URL)\neight × eight =","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1192076"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.99103182554245,"wiki_prob":0.99103182554245,"text":"SportsCollege Sports\nNo. 4 Michigan tops Indiana, aims for No. 8 Ohio State\nBy: Larry Lage, AP Sports Writer\nGregory Shamus\nANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN - NOVEMBER 17: Nick Eubanks #82 of the Michigan Wolverines celebrates a first half touchdown with Tarik Black #7 while playing the Indiana Hoosiers at Michigan Stadium on November 17, 2018 in Ann Arbor, Michigan. (Photo by Gregory Shamus/Getty Images)
\nANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) -- The Michigan Wolverines looked like they were peeking ahead to playing Ohio State, turning an expected rout into a closely contested game.\nKaran Higdon ran for a go-ahead touchdown early in the third quarter and Jake Moody set a school record with six field goals, helping No. 4 Michigan beat Indiana 31-20 Saturday.\n\"When you're in playoff mode -- that's our mindset right -- playoff wins are big,\" coach Jim Harbaugh said. \"Wins against Big Ten teams in late November are huge.\"\nThe next one would be bigger if Michigan can pull it off.\nThe Wolverines (10-1, 8-0 Big Ten, No. 4 CFP) close the regular season against the ninth-ranked Buckeyes, needing a win to reach the Big Ten championship game for the first time. If Michigan can win a road game in the series for the first time since 2000, it will be another victory away from likely earning a spot in the College Football Playoff.\n\"We understand the tradition and the meaning behind it,\" said quarterback Shea Patterson, who will make his debut in the rivalry on Saturday in the Horseshoe.\nThe Hoosiers (5-6, 2-6) were competitive against Michigan as they have been lately, losing in overtime twice in the previous three meetings, but came up short again.\n\"Went toe to toe with them and it was a one-possession game in fourth quarter,\" coach Tom Allen said. \"That's really all you can ask for. You just got to find a way to finish these out.\"\nIndiana led 17-15 at halftime and finished with more yards (385) than anyone has had against Michigan's top-ranked defense this season. The Hoosiers also forced Michigan's offense to stall in the red zone and settle for field goals.\nPatterson was 16 of 28 for 250 yards with one touchdown, a 41-yard throw to Nick Eubanks in the second quarter. He threw his first interception in more than a month and had nine carries for 68 yards.\n\"Their quarterback is a difference-maker,\" Allen said.\nIndiana's Peyton Ramsey was 16 of 35 for 195 yards with a touchdown and an interception. Ramsey also ran for 51 yards. Stevie Scott had 30 carries for 139 yards scored a touchdown -- extending his single-season, school-record total to nine -- and lost a fumble for the Hoosiers. Scott has 1,033 yards rushing, the most by a true freshman at Indiana.\n\"This performance definitely showed to the nation that we can compete with anybody,\" Scott said. \"We've got the talent here. We just have to finish strong.\"\nIndiana: After a strong performance against a team that has been winning big, the Hoosiers should feel better about their chances of beating Purdue to become bowl eligible.\n\"I'm proud of our team's fight,\" Allen said.\nMichigan: An injury may be a factor against the rival Buckeyes. Michigan defensive end Chase Winovich left the game midway through the third quarter after appearing to hurt his left shoulder. Harbaugh said Winovich's X-rays and CAT scans were negative.\nHarbaugh said Berkley Edwards, who primarily plays on special teams, had a concussion. Edwards was put on a backboard and taken off the field on a cart after being hit by Cam Jones, who was ejected for targeting. Harbaugh said Edwards was taken to a hospital as a precaution, adding he was able to talk, respond and move.\nREADY, KID?\nMoody had only handled kickoffs before finding out just before the game he would be replacing Quinn Nordin, who wasn't feeling well. The freshman made all six of his attempts, converting on field goals from 29 to 33 yards.\n\"It was an incredible experience,\" Moody said. \"The guys out there made it really easy for me with the snaps and the hold.\"\nRED ZONE WOES\nMoody had an opportunity to set a school record because Michigan's offense often stalled in the red zone. The Wolverines scored only one touchdown in seven drives that went inside the Indiana 20, settling for six field goals and having the first half end before being able to stop the clock for another snap.\nIndiana: Hosts the rival Boilermakers, needing a win to earn a spot in the postseason.\n\"We're back to where we were a year ago,\" said Allen, whose team lost 31-24 at Purdue last year to end the season with five wins.\nMichigan: Plays at Ohio State, hoping to win for the second time in 15 meetings.\nHow quickly did Harbaugh plan to shift his focus to the Buckeyes?\n\"Pretty quick,\" he said.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line637988"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5696119666099548,"wiki_prob":0.43038803339004517,"text":"\"5 X Worse than Irene\"\n3 Cheshvan 5772\n(H/T Global Disaster Watch)\nThe deadly snowstorm on US East Coast killed at least six people and left more than three million homes without electricity.\nSnowstorm damage 'five times worse' than Tropical storm Irene - The idea of snow in October - no matter the amount - was far-fetched enough that when forecasts late last week began calling for several inches of snow, many throughout Connecticut were skeptical. Even the most panicked meteorologists, though, weren't aware of just how stunningly powerful this weekend's freak winter storm would be.\nOn Sunday night, the president and chief operating officer of Connecticut Light and Power, laid things out in perhaps the most eye-opening way for a state only beginning to move on from Tropical Storm Irene.\nThe damage from the storm was \"five times worse\" than that delivered by Irene. More than half of customers throughout the state remained in the dark. Early this morning, the number of outages had begun to slowly recede. CL&P, which had more than 800,000 outages earlier in the day, reported 772,155 at 12:15 a.m. -- still an astonishing 62 percent of customers. Even as the number of outages began to drop, the total early today was still higher than it was at any point following Tropical Storm Irene. At 12:15 a.m. there were 45 cities and towns throughout the state completely in the dark, including Monroe, Oxford, Seymour, Redding, New Fairfield and Washington. There were also outages for 97 percent of customers in Newtown, 92 percent in Bethel, 87 percent in Ridgefield, 75 percent in Brookfield and 55 percent in Danbury. Emergency shelters and warming centers are open throughout the state Sunday night so residents without power won't have to brave potentially record low temperatures in their homes. 45 transmission lines and 15 substations are damaged. Officials said it could take days -- or more than a week -- before all power is finally restored.\n\"This is THE LARGEST NUMBER OF POWER OUTAGES WE HAVE EVER EXPERIENCED,\" more than Tropical Storm Irene. \"We are expecting extensive and long term power outage. This is a historic storm, NEVER BEFORE in anyone's recollection or anyone's review of history has such a storm hit the state so early.\" School closures are likely because many bus routes remained blocked and school buildings without power. Strong winds with gusts as high as 29 mph have lead to more power outages. As snow falls from tree limbs, the branches snap back, breaking power lines. Damage to 164 ATT cell phone towers will result \"degraded service\" beginning this afternoon. Two-thirds of the flights at Bradley International Airport were back on normal schedules. In Danbury, 64 percent of the city is without power. \"I would term it a catastrophic situation.\" More than 200 roads are closed in the area. There were hundreds of accidents reported across the state caused by a combination of slippery snow, downed trees and poor visibility. Saturday's storm, which didn't garner significant attention from meteorologists until Thursday night, SHATTERED OCTOBER SNOWFALL RECORDS THROUGHOUT NEW ENGLAND and left more than a dozen towns either mostly or entirely without power throughout the state.\nIntroducing Rabbi Sholom Gold\n30 Tishrei 5772\nRosh Chodesh 'א Cheshvan\nCheck out his website - rabbisholomgold.com .\nMessage from Binyamin at end of year 5771\nThere are a few new messages that need to be translated. I started with a short one. (Q & A to follow)\nMessage from Binyamin\nThere will yet be very big things. And what more is there to say!? At long last, what we have been talking about for seventeen years is beginning to take place. It’s not ‘beginning,’ because the process already started some time ago. And still, with all the troubles and with all the falls, with the money as well as the bizarre and difficult things from nature, also wars in every place and riots everywhere, and seeing the sheker, that it ascends and rises more and more, being exposed more and more, in every corner, in every place. With all this, at the moment that there is a drop of calm – a majority of the people return to what was. They don’t think about teshuvah. They don’t think about drawing closer to Hashem. They’re returning to the same nonsense, to the same concepts which are just the sheker of olam hazeh, and therefore, much greater troubles are coming now and almost without a break between them. [Sanhedrin: “If you see troubles pulling like a river, etc.”] Until Hashem will repair all the true Jews. In Egypt, it took a whole year, all the plagues, with breaks between them, but for us, there won’t be a lot of time in between one and the next – like now.\nLike we said once, you’ll look above and it will come from below; you’ll look right – it will come from the left. Now, it’s from the right as well as from the left, from above and also from below, and from one side and also from the other side - from every place. It’s impossible to know where to look and what to think.\nFor the not-intelligent people who are still planning for the future six months ahead when there will be some social gathering or in hopeful expectation of some trip that they will make abroad. So, I ask very much from them: To see the truth, that it’s impossible to know what will happen from moment to moment, and now, especially, it will be what it will be, very difficult for those who do not trust in Hashem. For those who do trust in Hashem and are truly waiting for Mashiach….and truly weep over the Shekhina’s suffering, it will be the greatest joy.\nSo, those who understand what I’m saying, I bless you that all of us together will receive our righteous Mashiach in mercy and happiness. And to those who don’t understand what I said, I pity you and pray to HKB”H that nevertheless, he will save you in power.\n(Re-posting due to problem with Blogger)\nNew Messages in English\nYou can read new messages from the autistic children here.\nIs this IT?\nCould this be the spark that starts WW3? Tuesday is Erev Hoshanah Rabbah.\nThe Yalkut Shimoni (Yeshayah 59) relates the following:\n“Rabbi Yitzchak said, at the time of the revelation of\nMashiach, the kings of all the nations challenge one another. The king of Persia challenges the king of Arabia, and the king of Arabia goes to Aram to seek their counsel. The king of Persia arises again and lays waste the whole world, and all the nations of the world are distressed and frightened and fall on their faces and they are seized by pains like birth pangs. Yisrael too is distressed and frightened and asks, ‘Where shall we turn?’ And Hashem answers them, ‘My children! Do not be afraid. All that I have done, I have done only for your sake. What are you afraid of? The time of your redemption has come.”\nUS on global alert for Iranian reprisal that may jeopardize Shalit releaseA worldwide advisory published in Washington Wednesday, Oct. 12, warned UScitizens to beware of Iranian-instigated terrorist attacks following the uncovering of an Iran-directed plot to assassinate Saudi Arabian ambassador Adel Al-Jubeir and bomb the Saudi and Israeli embassies.\nIranian radicals look for a limited clash with the US\nThe motivation for the foiled Iranian-instigated plot to murder the Saudi ambassador to Washington at his favorite eatery, Café Milano in Georgetown, is revealed by debkafile's Iranian sources as a bid by a super-radical faction at the top of the Iranian regime to draw the United States into a limited military clash. Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei approved the plot when his son and heir Mojtaba, 42, and the Al Qods Brigades commander Gen. Qassem Soleimani presented him with their \"grand plan.\nBig US airlift drill starts Monday. Fresh Hamas demands for Gilad ShalitThe United States launches a large-scale strategic airlift exercise over the Middle East Monday, Oct. 21. Tuesday, the day of the Israel-Hamas prisoner exchange for Gilad Shalit, the giant transports carrying command and combat units will practice swift emergency landings in Israel and Saudi Arabia. The US, Israeli, Egyptian and Saudi armies are on high military preparedness amid warnings of terrorist attacks to disrupt the prisoner exchange and avenge US charges of an Iran-instigated plot to murder the Saudi ambassador.\n(More on all the above at Debka.)\nMoadim l'Simcha!!\nSomething to Think About Before Yom Kippur\n8 Tishrei 5772\nFrom The Book of Our Heritage by Eliyahu Kitov\n“…one who habitually sins and overcomes his habit through repentance, and uproots that sin from his being and totally abandons it, is said to be as desired by G-d as one who offered a rich sacrifice on the altar---and his reward is exceedingly great. The more that a sin has become a part of a person, the greater the reward for repenting.\nThe same is true concerning a place, a time, or an age. For example, if one sees a place where people are prone to commit a certain sin, know that this particular sin is the greatest source of accusation against them. Hence, repentance from this sin is more important that any source of merit that might exist and is more highly regarded by G-d than any good deed. If they will repent this sin, their repentance will assist them in overcoming all other trangressions. But, if they do not repent, even if all their other acts are good, then they will be considered to be like one who immerses himself in a mikveh for purification while holding an impure object in his hand!\nIf there is an entire generation which is known for a particular trangression, then the sensitive among them should rectify that particular failing more than other failings, for their repentance will tip the scales on behalf of all the others who will emulate their behavior and also repent.\"\nG'mar chatima tova. Shabbat shalom and Chag Sameach!\nMessage - \"5772\" End\nLipi's Message - \"I am very sad\"\n14 Elul 5771\nI am very sad. Very sad that in days so difficult and dangerous, the Jews are busy with disputes. The Jews are busy with falsehood. The Jews are busy with severe sins. The Jews are busy with the Golden Calf, with the lusts and materialism of the Egel. I am sad, very, very much, that Am Yisrael doesn't understand that this is the end, that we are standing before a very huge and difficult war, not only in Israel, but also the world.\nThe changes in This World in all of this world, from two years ago, are really astonishing. Changes that are hard for us to digest. And there is, for the majority of the people in the world, a will not to believe that the world, in fact, is not the same world it was ten or twelve years ago.\nWe, the Jews, are standing before a huge birur - a clarification. Also, the whole wide world stands before a huge birur. But, especially important to me - the Jews.\nAnd the Jews, in general, the majority, don't want to believe that the end has arrived. Like two thousand years, approximately, we have been wandering around the world, in exile, sometimes living in a very good way, materialistically, and sometimes a life in a situation of very high spirituality, but usually, the two don't go together. And therefore, the situation today is one of materiality. And there are very many Jews who are of the opinion that the materialism and spirituality can co-exist. But, that can't be. Materialism and spirituality, which is closeness to Hashem, cannot co-exist. Under absolutely no circumstances. And now, at this moment, without waiting, every Jew must choose. Whether he wants the materialism or the spirituality. But both of them, impossible. They must choose only one from the possibilities. And materialism is not only silver and gold, it's also faith in other powers, foreign powers. And this is to believe in low powers. But, there are Jews who believe that low powers have like saved them. (i.e. IDF, American political support, etc.)\nAnd spirituality is closeness to the Holy One, blessed be He. And to live a life of spirituality - that is to say, to live all the time the will of Hashem, every day and every night and all your life. If he is a spiritual person - that's what there is in his head.\nAnd now will be the big choice, this Rosh Hashanah. Every Jew is choosing where he wants to be. Whether he wants to be with the Golden Calf, which means the death of spirituality and materialism forever, G-d forbid, or whether he wants spirituality, which is proximity to Hashem forever. [I Kings 18: 21 - \"And Elijah drew near to all the people and said, 'Until when are you hopping between two ideas? If the Lord is God, go after Him, and if the Baal, go after him.'\"]\nIt's the end, it's the end. We are drawing near the end at the speed of lightning. Many Jews have awakened from their slumber. And every one who chooses materialism and distance from HKB\"H, suddenly at the end, he will understand that maybe, actually, not maybe - of course, that he made the biggest mistake of his life, And this he will understand at the end before death, and then he will die, G-d have mercy.\nI very much warn all the believing Jews about lashon hara. Because slander is possible, G-d forbid, to bring down the holiness from Am Yisrael. Woe to you, woe to you. The punishment is too great even to explain to you.\nI bless all the Jews for a good year, a year of redemption and salvation, that every Jew and Jewess, boy and girl, will receive our righteous Mashiach in mercy and joy.\n[Quoting tractate Chovot Halevavot... \"Love of this world and love of the world to come, they are two problems, one to the other. Fire and water, that can't co-exist.\"]\nMessage - \"5772\"\nDaniel's Message, 28 Elul 5771\nAm Yisrael, I want to wish you shanah tovah, but how can I wish you shanah tovah; this is my problem. What can I say that I haven't already said? But, let's begin and I will tell you what is in my heart and what I know from various sources.\nAm Yisrael, truly, truly, the world as we have known it is finished. It's finished. Everybody can see it. He only has to want to accept the truth and to see that it's impossible to continue with the drunkenness that's been until now. It's finished! Do you hear? It's finished! There are here and there traces of what once was, but it's finished.\nIn the world, the Shechina is disappearing from all the lands and is gathering in Eretz Yisrael. What are you still doing there? What else are you benefitting from there? The exile is finished, the world of unnecessary materialism is finished. What else do you have there?\nThis World is being revealed as one big lie; everything is a lie. You see it already; everyone sees it already, but don't want to accept it.\nIt's finished because it's impossible to continue with a world of falsehood, that a person is not able to believe in anyone or anything, impossible.\nEven a person who doesn't believe, G-d forbid, in HKB\"H, has to believe in something. At least, to believe that his friend is honest with him, that his Prime Minister is honest with him, wants the good of the citizenry, but this, too, is no longer. They've revealed themselves, all over the world, as liars who only want to suck from the little guy all the money that he has and after they've sucked it all from him, they throw him in the trashcan.\nBut, Am Yisrael, Am Yisrael, you feel it, that in the near future, now, now, now, 5772, there will be huge things, unbelievable things. Indeed, for those who know the prophecies, it won't come as a surprise. Those who put their trust fully in Hashem, it won't be a surprise for them. They will come through it much more easily, but those who don't have a clue, who don't have real faith and trust in HKB\"H, and it doesn't matter if they are Shabbat observant or not Shabbat observant, they won't be able to get through it.\nThe situation is bad. All the institutions that we put faith in, have been revealed as empty and full of falsehood, who don't have the good of the citizen at heart or at will or at service, only falsehood.\nLeave the lie, return to HKB\"H, trust in Him, know in truth that only He is omnipotent, the \"Hakol Yachol.\" That He directs us in this world to the world to come, to the world of Mashiach, a complete world, calm, that only goes up and up in spirituality, ascending, ascending, ascending in the direction of HKB\"H.\nAnd after this, the seven thousandth, that will be something so wonderful that we don't know how to describe at all, hard for our imaginations to understand it.\nAm Yisrael, I suggest to you, in truth, I can't tell you more, but now, I will say this in preparation for Rosh Hashanah: Am Yisrael, those who are in exile and those who are in Eretz Yisrael, return to HKB\"H, those who are abroad, return, return to Eretz Yisrael, with all that is happening, it is the most secure place.\nThe Zionists? There are no more Zionists. There are various Jews that are sitting in the Knesset who are stam evildoers, decidedly not Zionists. Erev Rav, Amalek, evil ones. No longer Zionists. They're dead, all of them, and if there are here and there some old ones who still remain from then, he's also no longer Zionistic. He's either Amalek or Erev Rav. There are no Zionists, only evildoers, like all the gentiles in the world.\nThe Chareidi community is full of Amaleks and Erev Rav, so return to Eretz Yisrael, to the Holy Land. At least to demonstrate to HKB\"H that we are ready to return home, that we want the redemption already, that we want to sit on the ground, not in the State of Israel, but in the Land of Israel, upon the ground that is holy.\nIt's worthwhile, really worthwhile to return. And those who are not able, return to HKB\"H. He will bring you on eagle's wings. Only those who truly put their trust in Him, only those who truly believe in Him and trust in Him and know that He is \"Hakol Yachol.\" (He can do anything.)\nWe are entering now, with G-d's help, to 5772. All the signs are that this is the year of redemption, all the signs in every place. All the prophecies show that we have a huge chance that this is the year of redemption.\nAnd if, G-d forbid, not, then of course, this is the year that the world turns upside down, because the world can't continue like it is. The world has deteriorated very quickly. It cannot last.\nSo, Am Yisrael, I wish you shanah tovah, k'tivah v'chatimah tovah, and I request from you, to return home, to actively return to HKB\"H with all your heart, with all the essence of the person. Also to return to Eretz Yisrael, not the State of Israel, the Land of Israel.\nShanah Tovah.\nWe're All a Work in Progress\nI don't remember where I originally got this story, but it really struck home with me when I first read it and it has stayed with me ever since. I found it again in my email archives from 2005. It seems especially poignant at this time of year and at this time in history. Enjoy!\nThere was a couple who used to go to England to shop in the beautiful stores. They both liked antiques and pottery and especially teacups. One day in this beautiful shop they saw a beautiful teacup. They said, \"May we see that? We've never seen one quite so beautiful.\"\nAs the shop owner handed it to them, suddenly the teacup spoke. \"You don't understand,\" it said. \"I haven't always been a teacup. There was a time when I was red and I was clay. My master took me and rolled me and patted me over and over, and I yelled out, 'Let me alone!,' but he only smiled, 'Not yet.' Then I was placed on a spinning wheel and I was spun around and around and around. 'Stop it! I'm getting dizzy!' I screamed. But the master only nodded and said, 'Not yet.' Then he put me in the oven. I never felt such heat. I wondered why he wanted to burn me, and I yelled and knocked on the door. I could see him through the opening and I could read his lips as he shook his head, 'Not yet.'\n\"Finally the door opened, he put me on the shelf, and I began to cool. 'There, that's better,' I said. And he brushed and painted me all over. The fumes were horrible. I thought I would gag. 'Stop it, stop it!' I cried. He only nodded, 'Not yet.' Then suddenly he put me back into the oven, not like the first one. This was twice as hot and I knew I would suffocate. I begged. I pleaded. I screamed. I cried. All the time I could see him through the opening nodding his head and saying, 'Not yet.'\n\"Then I knew there wasn't any hope. I would never make it. I was ready to give up. But the door opened and he took me out and placed me on the shelf. One hour later he handed me a mirror and said, 'Look at yourself.' And I did. I said, 'That's not me. That couldn't be me. It's beautiful. I'm beautiful!'\n\"'I want you to remember then,' the master said, 'I know it hurts to be rolled and patted, but if I had left you alone, you'd have dried up. I know it made you dizzy to spin around on the wheel, but if I had stopped, you would have crumbled. I knew it hurt and was hot and disagreeable in the oven, but if I hadn't put you there, you would have cracked. I know the fumes were bad when I brushed and painted you all over, but if I hadn't done that, you never would have hardened; you wouldn't have had any color in your life. And if I hadn't put you back in that second oven, you wouldn't survive for very long because the hardness would not have held. Now you are a finished product. You are what I had in mind when I first began with you.'\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line129032"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8325011730194092,"wiki_prob":0.8325011730194092,"text":"New York - Garment District\nGarment District Office Space For Rent\nDisplaying 1 – 12 of 122 listings\n130 West 37th Street - 4th Floor\n110 West 40th Street - Office Space\n110 West 40th Street - 3rd Floor - Suite 302\n256-258 West 36th Street - 10th Floor\n224 West 35th Street - Suite 301\n336 West 37th Street - 7th Floor - Suite 740\n499 7th Avenue - 12th Floor\n525 7th Avenue - Office Space\n1410 Broadway - 11th Floor - Suite 1101\nThe Garment District is also called the Fashion District because of its impressive fashion industry that generates about $14 billion in sales annually. Naturally, it’s widely considered to be the fashion capital of the world. If you’re seeking affordable Midtown office space with plenty of public transportation options, the Garment District might be the right place for you and your business.\nGarment District Office Space | Lease Data & Trends\nThe Garment District has nearly 48 million square feet of office space for rent, with another 7 million under construction. Its central location to several transit hubs makes it a convenient location to accommodate employees commuting from throughout the New York Metro.\nWith an average asking rent of $65 per square foot, Garment District office space is some of the most affordable in Manhattan. More than 40 percent of available office space is in Class A buildings, with an average asking rent of $97 per square foot. However, Class B office space features asking rents of around $60 per square foot.\nThe Garment District is less than one square mile in size and rests between Fifth Avenue and the Hudson River. Nearby neighborhoods and business districts include Hudson Yards, Times Square, Chelsea, Korea Town, and notable businesses in the area include Microsoft, The New York Times, R/GA, and the Boston Consulting Group.\nOffice Space for Rent Price per square foot\nClass A $97\nClass B $61\nWhat Our Brokers Say about Garment District Office Space for Lease\nDespite its small size, the Garment District is home to more than 27,000 people. Travel quickly to and from Times Square and other popular destinations using one of the many transportation options for city and suburban residents. Convenient nearby transportation includes Penn Station, Grand Central Station, and Port Authority. Between these three transit hubs, commuters can access New Jersey Transit, Amtrak, Long Island Railroad, PATH, and Greyhound. In addition to these transit options, city residents can access the Garment District via the 1, 2, 3, 7, A, C, E, N, Q, R, and W trains.\nBecause of its proximity to Times Square and Port Authority, Garment District has among the worst traffic in NYC and isn’t a particularly bike-friendly area.\nGet to Know the Garment District\nThe Garment District includes plenty of apartment, hotel and restaurant choices. Looking for a delicious and convenient place for a business lunch event? Check out Casa Nonna, Ai Fiori, Savory and Parker & Quinn.\nThe Garment District is widely known as the ultimate destination for designers, stylists, wholesale buyers, students and, of course, shoppers from all over the world. Calvin Klein, Donna Karan, Carolina Herrera, Liz Claiborne and Andrew Marc represent some of the top-notch fashion labels that have office space and production facilities in the district.\nNot only does the neighborhood attract those who work in the fashion industry—it’s also a popular destination for shoppers and tourists. As the Garment District’s name suggests, the neighborhood is an excellent place to shop for clothes and the materials to make them. Here are just a few of the most renowned places to shop in the Garment District: M&J Trimming, Louis Vuitton, Urban Outfitters, Mood Designer Fabrics and Lord & Taylor.\nGarment District: A Global Hub for Fashion\nThe Garment District began influencing what people wear and how they obtain their clothing back in the 1800s. Middle-class Americans used to make their own clothing, and only rich people hired tailors to sew for them. During the Civil War, these tailors began collaborating to sew clothing in bulk for the soldiers. At the same time, skilled immigrants began moving to New York City, creating a labor force that could work in clothing factories.\nBy 1910, approximately 70 percent of women’s clothing came from the Garment District. By 1931, the area boasted the most garment manufacturers of anywhere in the world. Today, the Garment District is known as the fashion capital of the world and offers a huge variety of niche resources such as dress dying services, full production cutting and wholesale fabric manufacturers—all within one square mile. The Garment District is a unique place to do business because it offers opportunities for fashion moguls, young entrepreneurs and recent immigrants alike.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1191842"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8580518960952759,"wiki_prob":0.8580518960952759,"text":"Chuck Jones, animator of Looney Tunes\nBY David W Brown\nFew animated series have aged as gracefully as Looney Tunes, and that’s in large measure because of director Chuck Jones. He drew relentlessly as a child, a result of a nearly unlimited access to pencils and stationery because of his father’s business ventures. (Each time one of his dad’s companies closed, Chuck and his siblings were given the remainder office supplies.) He never stopped drawing, and would go on to elevate animated shorts as an art form. Here are a few things you might not have known about the man behind Bugs Bunny.\nHe worked for Walt.\nAfter Warner Brothers closed its animation studio, Chuck Jones worked for Walt Disney. “In animation,” he said in an interview, “asking ‘Walt who?’ would be a very strange thing. It would be like saying ‘Jesus,’ and saying ‘Jesus who?’—he was that important.” (Jones added that poor Walt Lantz, director and producer of Woody Woodpecker, was always overshadowed as the other Walt. “There were no Chucks, which is just as well.”)\nHe didn’t last long at Disney, though.\n“The reason I stopped working [at Disney] was because I saw that nothing happened unless Walt okayed it, and you might have to wait three weeks to get an appointment with Walt to come in and see this sequence you were working on. And it was old stuff to these guys, but not to me. I was used to working at a pace.”\nDr. Seuss was an old war buddy.\nDuring World War II, Jones served with Theodor Geisel in a unit that produced training films for soldiers. They worked on such series as Situation Snafu and Fubar. Army training shorts could be pretty boring, he noted. “The pictures were made by some Army colonel who thought he was a director.” Jones and Geisel made it a point to keep their films interesting and entertaining. As if it’s not weird enough that the guy behind Bugs Bunny and the guy behind the Cat in the Hat were war buddies, they later collaborated with the Navy on other films. The Navy liaison? Hank Ketcham, the cartoonist behind Dennis the Menace.\nHe didn’t make Saturday morning cartoons...\nThis might sound weird to anyone under 30, but for a very long time, if you wanted to watch cartoons, you had to wake up early on Saturday mornings. Looney Tunes, of course, was a mainstay. But none of Chuck Jones’s work was made for children on Saturday mornings. “They were always made for theatrical release right up to ’63. None of them were made for television. There’s a perfectly logical reason for it, and it was that there wasn’t any television.” In the 1930s and 40s, he and his team figured the work that they were doing had a total lifespan of three years—first run through fifth run—until finally the films would be worn and retired. Accordingly, they were unafraid to take risks with what they were doing. This often drove their producers crazy. “We got a double pleasure, and that was to make pictures that we enjoyed making, plus making someone else uncomfortable by doing it.\n“Because we were so young and had recently left our parents, or teachers, we had very little respect for adults. So we ended up where every creative person is, and that is where you paint or draw for yourself. And we figured if we made each other laugh, hopefully the audience would as well. And it turns out they did.”\n...and yet he helped invent Saturday morning cartoons.\nIn the mid-1950s, KTLA in Los Angeles and WNEW in New York starting running old Warner Brothers cartoons from the archives on Saturday mornings, thus beginning the tradition of programming for children. Animated features at the cinema didn’t last long after that. “We used to kid about it when television was being done... We figured TV might put us out of work, which eventually it did.”\nHe said of his work at Warners, which was never meant to survive, let alone endure, “We kind of lived in a paradise and we didn’t know it.”\nHe reportedly considered \"What’s Opera, Doc?\" to be his greatest work.\nIf the words “Kill the wabbit!” mean anything to you, then you’re familiar with arguably the greatest cartoon of all time. The 1957 animated short features Bugs Bunny and Elmer Fudd, and parodies Wagner’s operas. (The cartoon’s most famous line is sung to \"Ride of the Valkyries.\") This wasn’t his only take on opera. He took on Rossini in 1949’s Rabbit of Seville.\nHe had to persuade his old friend that How the Grinch Stole Christmas would make a great show.\n“I had known Ted during the war, but it had been 15 years... I had really wanted to do something of his, and Charlie Brown was one of the only works I knew doing a Christmas special.” Jones thought that Dr. Seuss was the natural person for such an annual tradition. “So I called up Ted, so I ask him would he be willing to think about doing it? He was anti-Hollywood, very much, because when he left after the war they pirated a lot of his stuff and took his credits off of his features... He did some documentaries—one of which won the Academy Award and someone else took it. So he was pretty sour about that.” How did he persuade Geisel? “I told him this was another field—this was television!—and he didn't know much about televisions either.”\nIronically, a banking consortium agreed to sponsor the show, which helped Jones sell the Christmas special to the networks. Jones later noted that Dr. Seuss’s publisher should have sponsored the show, because the cartoon doubled sales of the book that year, and they haven’t slowed since.\nHe was once, under protest, the vice president in charge of children’s programming at ABC.\nIn 1972, he was hired by ABC TV to be its vice president of children’s programming. “I’m guilty of a lot of sins,” he said, “but that is one I’d just as soon forget.” How did he get the job? “I complained so much about children’s programming that these guys called my bluff. They said come over and do something... well that was a very good idea except nobody listened to me.” He didn’t last long. “I didn’t want to be vice president. I wanted to go back to doing drawings.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1724127"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5756070017814636,"wiki_prob":0.5756070017814636,"text":"How this 300-year-old city is leading on U.S. sola...\nHow this 300-year-old city is leading on U.S. solar, energy-water, and climate action\n« Fighting for the planet, one methane comment at a time\nInvesting in a strong foundation for energy resilience in Texas »\nBy EDF Staff / Published: April 24, 2018\nBy Kate Zerrenner, Jaclyn Rambarran\nOn May 5, 2018, the city of San Antonio will officially be 300 years old! On that day in 1718, the Presidio San Antonio de Béxar (a Spanish fort) was founded. The city’s tricentennial celebration will culminate in a weeklong celebration of history, art, and culture the first week of May.\nSan Antonio is a unique place that should be honored in Texas and beyond. In addition to its strong Hispanic heritage, the city boasts a large military population, straddles the border between eastern, western, and southern U.S., and claims to be the birthplace of breakfast tacos.\nThis growing city also has a powerful role to play in the future of Texas and the United States in terms of climate change and air quality, as evidenced by its initiatives around renewable energy, the energy-water nexus, and climate action. With all this in mind, let’s take a moment to celebrate not just San Antonio’s momentous birthday, but also its impressive efforts to ensure the sustainability of the city going forward.\nLeading in Texas solar\nThe Alamo City has taken great strides to incorporate more renewable energy sources into its electricity generation mix, hitting 20 percent of its overall capacity in 2016, four years before the city’s target year. Texas advocates have commended San Antonio’s municipally owned electric and gas utility, CPS Energy, for the way it values the long-term benefits of solar to the community.\n[Tweet “How this 300-year-old city is leading on U.S. solar, energy-water, and climate action”]\nIn fact, San Antonio recently jumped to number six on a list of U.S. cities with the most solar, due to a growth in solar capacity of 37 percent in 2017. The city was also one of 18 with a “Solar Star” designation for averaging more than 50 watts of solar per person. In total, there are 1,400 installments throughout the city, including community solar, utility-scale farms, and rooftop panels.\nThrough its utility, San Antonio is choosing to invest in clean energy over expensive retrofits for dirtier energy sources, which in turn helps reduce power sector pollution and better protects the vibrant community that resides there.\nEnergy-water nexus\nA major part of San Antonio’s culture is the river that runs through downtown. The San Antonio River first brought settlers to the area, and the city was built around it, creating one of the city’s most popular destinations: the River Walk. San Antonians don’t get their water from that river (it comes mainly from the Edwards Aquifer), but in this dry South Texas town, water is central.\nSan Antonio has long been a leader in water conservation, and in recent years, it’s been leading the pack on the energy-water nexus, where the two sectors intersect. Because the city has local control over both its electricity and water, as well as a water-smart population, it has embodied best practices that can be adopted and applied to other cities’ energy-water challenges. Environmental Defense Fund’s (EDF) new case study, Capitalizing on energy-water nexus opportunities at the utility level, can help other cities learn from San Antonio’s example.\nSpecifically, other cities can follow San Antonio Water System’s (SAWS) and CPS Energy’s collaborative efforts, which have included:\nengaging in joint rebates,\nconducting joint audits of customer’s facilities, and\nconducting audits on one another’s systems in order to identify opportunities for enhanced efficiency.\nAdditionally, designating at least one staff member at each utility as the lead for fostering collaboration opens up more opportunities for energy-water programs. Beyond rebates and communication, SAWS and CPS also acknowledge there are non-monetary costs when customers do not conserve energy and water, including negative effects on the environment and human health. The recognition of these costs has manifested in demand management programs in San Antonio, which reward the partner utility for reducing or shifting its energy demand during peak times, or conserving water during a drought.\nSan Antonio climate action plan\nFollowing its sustainability plan of 2016 and the City Council’s resolution in support of the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement, the city last year announced development of its first climate action and adaptation plan, called San Antonio Climate Ready. CPS Energy and the University of Texas at San Antonio will lead an 18-month multi-stakeholder process to create a comprehensive climate action and adaptation plan for the city. EDF staff will participate in the process officially as technical advisors.\nAn important aspect of this climate plan is that it seeks the input of stakeholders throughout the city, a majority of which are in generations-deep Hispanic communities. These communities’ input is essential for preserving the city’s unique culture, while ensuring that it remains strong into the future. To that end, the city has created a technical working group on equity to ensure that the input of people most vulnerable to climate change is considered as the plan goes forward.\nWhen the plan is completed, San Antonio could join Austin as the only two Texas cities with designated climate action plans.\nSan Antonio can serve as an example to how to strive for integrated, inclusive, and innovative approaches to how we mitigate and adapt to the effects of climate change, while protecting our resources and preserving our local cultures. We wish San Antonio a very happy 300th birthday and look forward to helping achieve the city’s clean energy and climate ambitions. ¡Feliz cumpleaños San Antonio!\nThis post originally ran on our Energy Exchange blog.\nPhoto source: Flickr/Tim Pearce\n3 energy-water nexus lessons from the state of Texas\nClean Energy and Job Creation Go Hand-in-Hand in San Antonio\nWhy Do Latinos Support Action on Climate Change?\nThis entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink. Both comments and trackbacks are currently closed.\nThis post has a guest author.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1033674"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6194442510604858,"wiki_prob":0.38055574893951416,"text":"I bet no boy can write a paragraph on internet\nSwot analysis walt disney essay example\nOnly essay writers\nPantheon in paris\nBlue all shadeswhite, with silver trimmings Beads: The students had heavily vandalized the recently refurbished center, the cost of the damages might be near 1 million euros.\nThe outermost dome is built of stone bound together with iron cramps and covered with lead sheathing, rather than of carpentry construction, as was the common French practice of the period. InMarigny commissioned Jacques-Germain Soufflot to design the church, with construction beginning two years later.\nGreen and yellow Ritual implement: Brown, with Opal and coral. In his speech, President Jacques Chirac stated that an injustice was being corrected with the proper honouring of one of France's greatest authors. Brass bell; a fan ornamented with peacock feathers Sacrifices: The Pantheon has its own drainage system to deal with the rain that falls through the Oculus.\nFounded init houses the main part of Law School. It is believed that this is the orisha that watches over the cadaver when it is laid to rest. Castrated goats, hens, pigeons, and guinea hens Taboos: Kirchliche Baukunst des Abendlandes. However, initiation into his cult is becoming a rare phenomenon.\nPast scholars and Olorishas have argued that it originated in Egypt or the desert areas.\nOba has no roads. When she cries, she does so out of joy: For more information and to book a tour during your stay in the Eternal city: Paul's Cathedral in London. No less vast was its crypt. Inthe broad frieze below the dome with its false windows was \"restored,\" but bore little resemblance to the original.\nThe Government tried unsuccessfully to sue the group for the intervention. Genevieve was finally completed incoinciding with the early stages of the French Revolution. White with silver trimmings Beads: The administration stopped the clock from working by removing one of its parts.\nAs far back asthis site was chosen by King Clovis - the first Frankish Merovingian King - for a basilica to serve as a tomb for him and his wife Clothilde. Concealed flying buttresses pass the massive weight of the triple construction outwards to the portico columns.\nThe foundations were laid inbut due to economic problems work proceeded slowly. Mary of the Martyrs but to most people it is simply known as the Pantheon. The cross of the dome, which was retained in compromise, is again visible during the current major restoration project.\nIt houses the Economics Graduate School.Panthéon: Panthéon, building in Paris that was begun about by the architect Jacques-Germain Soufflot as the Church of Sainte-Geneviève to replace a much older church of that name on the same site. It was secularized during the French Revolution and dedicated to.\nThe Pantheon boasts 16 massive columns for the inner area of the Portico. There are many famous monuments all over the world modelled on the Pantheon in Rome such as; such as the US Capitol Building, the Pantheon in Paris, Santa Maria del fiore in Florence and the Jefferson Memorial in Washington D.C.\nREDUCED PRICE. Under 26 YO for not a national of a Member State of the European Union. With eight hundred years of excellence to build on, the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, a descendant of the Sorbonne and the Faculty of Law and Economics of Paris, is one of the largest universities in France today.\nA neo-Classical church situated in the Latin Quarter and 5th arrondissement of Paris, from here, on the top of Montagne Sainte Geneviève, you'll get a pigeon's eye view over the whole city! In early life, the Panthéon was an abbey, built in commemoration of Saint Genevieve (the patron saint of Paris).5/5().\nThe Panthéon (Latin: pantheon, from Greek πάνθειον (ἱερόν) '(temple) to all the gods') is a building in the Latin Quarter in Paris, jimmyhogg.com was originally built as a church dedicated to St. Genevieve and to house the reliquary châsse containing her relics but, after many changes, now functions as a secular mausoleum containing the remains of distinguished French citizens.\nGlobalization germany and the european union essay\nGood research paper topics for middle school\nAsiana airlines seat assignment\nWhy mental preparedness in sports is as important as physical training\nCollege essay editing service\nWal martmarketing plan phase i essay\nRoadside dhaba case study essay\nSolvency ii unit-linked business plan\nMaster of arts creative writing uts\nThe use of assistive technologies information technology essay\nSynchronous generator","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line923088"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8709326386451721,"wiki_prob":0.8709326386451721,"text":"Political parties the same\nTHE EDITOR: Do politicians really have the interests of the country at heart? Are politicians…\nCorey Connelly\nOsaze’s Easter miracle\nBoy, 13, gets life-saving heart surgery\nOsaze Badal is an altar server at St Francis of Assisi RC Church, Sangre Grande. He underwent life-saving heart surgery on March 28 during Holy Week. PHOTOS COURTESY THE BADALS\nIn his parents’ eyes, Osaze Badal is an Easter miracle.\nOn March 28, in the middle of Holy Week, the Sangre Grande teen underwent life-saving heart surgery at the Eric Williams Medical Sciences Complex (EWMSC), Mt Hope some five years after being diagnosed with a serious defect.\nAnd while he is recovering splendidly from the near three-hour-long operation, it would be months before Osaze can participate fully in football, swimming, athletics and dancing– activities he has enjoyed for much of his 13 years.\n“I’m good,” he says of his convalescence.\n“I’m not in pain anymore. But I have to hold off on sports because the doctor said I would need six weeks to heal and six months before I could become totally active again.”\nOsaze told Sunday Newsday he was extremely grateful for the love and support of his parents, Clifton and Camille Jack-Badal, as well as the team of doctors who performed the procedure.\nJack-Badal, a secondary school teacher, said they were relieved and overwhelmed their son has made it through the operation successfully.\n“I am still a little bit in shock but I am overwhelmed. I am praising God profusely,” said Jack-Badal, a devout Roman Catholic.\n“I am experiencing mixed emotions but I am thankful that this has happened at the time in which it did - Holy Week.”\nPraising the work of the team of doctors, Jack-Badal said she and her husband could not have desired better for their son.\nShe said the horror stories she has sometimes heard about the EWMSC was a far cry from what they experienced.\nDespite the high level of competence and professionalism shown in the handling of Osaze’s case, though, Jack-Badal is convinced there is an inherent spiritual dimension to their son being afforded a new life.\nShe said the manner in which the events leading up to her son’s surgery unfolded has renewed her faith in divine intervention.\nJack-Badal revealed that Osaze, which means “favoured by God” in Hebrew, turned 13 on March 21 and received the phone call for his surgical procedure– an anomalous right coronary artery reimplantation– four days later, on Palm Sunday.\nOsaze Badal at his Sangre Grande home. He says he feels good after heart surgery last month.\nCoincidentally, Osaze was born on Palm Sunday, March 21, 2005.\nJack-Badal explained the surgery was to rectify Osaze’s right coronary artery which had become intertwined with his aortic valve.\nNow, optimistic that the worst is over, Jack-Badal said she and her husband are humbled by the blessings they have received.\nThey also have vowed to never take for granted the experiences they share with their two young children.\nAn energetic, fun-loving teen, the Holy Cross College student was diagnosed as having a bicuspid valve when he was just nine years-old.\nAccording to wikipedia, a bicuspid valve is an inherited form of heart disease in which two of the leaflets of the aortic valve fuse during development in the womb resulting in a two-leaflet valve (bicuspid valve) instead of the normal three leaflet (tricuspid).\nJack-Badal said she learnt, then, the condition was not life-threatening.\n“People with bicuspid valve live to a ripe old age and it only bothers them when they are in their 70s.”\nShe said the condition would have simply required that he visit a paediatric cardiologist, annually, for a check-up.\nHowever, Jack-Badal said nine months after discovering the bicuspid valve, her son started experiencing seizure-like attacks.\n“He would stiffen up, gasp for breath and hold his chest in pain. Then we would rush him to the hospital.”\nJack-Badal said she and her husband quickly consulted the paediatric cardiologist (the only one in the country), whom she said, suggested the bicuspid valve would not have accounted for the seizures and discomfort he was experiencing.\nNevertheless, the cardiologist opted to run further examinations, which included an echo stress test and neurological test.\n“They were all good so she (cardiologist) put it down to mean panic anxiety attacks.”\nBut Osaze’s medical issues did not end there.\nIn his second week at Holy Cross College, last September, he passed out and was unconscious for about 45 minutes.\nOsaze was taken to the Arima Health Facility before being transferred to the EWMSC.\nJack-Badal said the doctors did not think the bicuspid valve would have accounted for his blackout but chalked it up to him entering puberty “so the hormone imbalance would sometimes cause pre-teens or teenagers to pass out.”\nThe doctors also advised that they again visit the paediatric cardiologist, whom Osaze had been seeing for the past five years.\nJack-Badal said when she took Osaze to visit the cardiologist, the doctor did not like what she saw and carried out further tests.\nJack-Badal said when the results came back in November, they learnt that their son’s right coronary artery was being compressed.\nShe said: “When the cardiologist broke it down for me, it was coming off on the wrong side of where it was supposed to come off and was going between the two valves and being restricted somewhat.\n“That is what caused the black-out and that is what has been causing all of his problems all along, which she mistakenly took for panic/anxiety attacks.”\nSaying the condition was rare, Jack-Badal learnt that puberty also played a role in masking the condition.\nShe said the cardiologist also told them that surgery was the only option to rectify Osaze’s problem, since it came with no symptoms and could result in death.\nJack-Badal said she and her husband did not waste any time.\nThey sought advice from a variety of sources, one of whom advised them to seek a second opinion from a visiting cardiologist.\nAnd as fate would have it, the cardiologist, she said, requested copies of Osaze’s medical report to take to the US for further consultation.\nDuring that time, the Badals had accumulated some funding through barbecues and other events to assist with their son’s surgery.\nThe also consulted with officials at the Children’s Life Fund, whom they said were extremely helpful both in consultancy and in fast-tracking the procedure.\nJack-Badal said her son was scheduled to have done the surgery at Jackson Memorial Hospital, Miami, in June.\n“We got through with the funding and we were going there to do it and bam, out of the blue, unexpectedly, coming out of nowhere, Caribbean Heart Care (Medcorp Ltd) called on (Palm) Sunday and they asked us to bring him in.”\nThe surgery was performed last Wednesday.\nAsked what is her advice to parents who are experiencing a similar dilemma with their children, Jack-Badal told Sunday Newsday: “The best advice I can give to them is to pray and trust that God will work it out and he (God) showed me no less than in Holy Week.”\nShe said Osaze, an altar boy at St Francis of Assisi RC Church, Sangre Grande, was preparing for the Easter Triduum at the time he got the call to prep for surgery.\n“He had the surgery done to save his life and glorify God. He (God) had prepared him to enter into this time of pain and suffering with him. That is the significance of what God did at this time.”\nJack-Badal thanked the priests at the church as well as Frs Trevor Nathasingh and Jason Boatswain for their prayers and support.\nShe said she also was grateful for the support of staff at Franciscan House and members of the Holy Cross College and Arima North Secondary communities.\nJack-Badal said the family has planned a thanksgiving service for Osaze at St Francis of Assisi RC Church on Sunday.\nReply to \"Osaze’s Easter miracle\"\nPraise Festival rocks square\nSaga Boy culture","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line104227"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.780178427696228,"wiki_prob":0.780178427696228,"text":"A Message from the Dean on Inclusive Excellence\nGillings Equal Opportunity Statement\nDiversity and Inclusion Planning\nOur Journey to Inclusive Excellence\nDiversity Outreach, Recruitment and Programs\nA Legacy of Diversity and Inclusion\nMinority Health Project\nMinority Student Caucus\nMinority Health Conference\nNational Health Equity Research Webcast\nStudent Affairs / 263 Rosenau Hall / (919) 966-2499\nDean's Office / 170 Rosenau Hall / (919) 966-3215\nBusiness and Administration / 170 Rosenau Hall / (919) 966-3215\nAcademic Affairs / 170 Rosenau Hall / (919) 966-3215\nBarbara K. Rimer, DrPH\nWelcome! Since the beginning of the UNC School of Public Health (named the Gillings School of Global Public Health in 2008), nearly 80 years ago, our faculty, students and staff have sought to create and enhance a diverse and inclusive environment, even as we contributed to the social and physical conditions to support health for all. Diversity and inclusion are central to our mission to improve public health promote individual well-being and eliminate health inequities across North Carolina and around the world. In 2011, our school’s leaders created a statement about our commitment to diversity and inclusion. Read it here. In this section, I provide a detailed description about some of our history and activities that show our commitment to increasing diversity, inclusive excellence and reducing inequities. Here’s a very short version.\nShort take. Our faculty, staff and students have been committed to increasing diversity and reducing health inequities from the earliest days of the School. There should be no question about it: we are committed to reducing health and other inequities and increasing diversity and inclusive excellence. We do not tolerate discrimination, bullying, harassment or sexual misconduct. In my blog, Monday Morning, I write frequently about these issues, including a post on the toppling of Silent Sam, the confederate monument on UNC’s campus, in August 2018.\nThe first cohort of health education students at North Carolina Negroes College. Faculty from UNC’s School of Public Health worked with leaders of the historically black college to create the program.\nWe’ve been working to advance health equity and reduce disparities for nearly as long as the School has existed. In 1945, a joint public health training program was established with North Carolina Central University (then the North Carolina Negroes College). Close partnerships with NCCU continue to this day. At a time when the South was segregated, people in this school were not intimidated by prevailing customs. That spirit is part of our school’s DNA. In the 1960s and 1970s, our faculty were among the most ardent supporters of desegregating what was still a segregated North Carolina.\nIn 1965, John Hatch, DrPH, who became a Kenan Professor of Health Behavior, was one of the courageous leaders who started the first rural community health center in the U.S. – in Mound Bayou, Mississippi, with Jack Geiger, MD, while Hatch was an assistant professor at the Tufts University Medical Center. It became a model for others across the country. Hear the story in their words. Watch a video about the Delta Health Center.\nSPH2020, a renewed commitment to diversity and inclusion. In 2010, our School’s leadership engaged in a strategic planning process, SPH2020, in which we asked faculty, staff, students and alumni to weigh in about their vision for the Gillings School in 2020. Hundreds shared their thoughts, and a Diversity and Inclusion Task Force was formed, creating a report that would serve as our roadmap going forward.\nWe’re still leaders. For example:\nO.J. McGhee, MA, Instructional Media Services manager, has served as chair of UNC-Chapel Hill’s Carolina Black Caucus from 2015 to 2018.\nOur National Health Equity Research Webcast each fall highlights some of the nation’s most pressing issues in diversity, inclusion and health equity and emphasizes justice- and community-led approaches to fostering health equity research.\nDirk Davis, MPH, PhD candidate, Health Behavior, and May Chen, MPH, PhD candidate, Health Behavior, created the LGBTQ Health Disparities Research Collaborative in 2017 as a place where students and faculty can discuss critical issues surrounding LGBTQ health.\nPeggye Dilworth Anderson, PhD, professor of Health Policy and Management, was honored in May 2018 with the University Diversity Award.\nIn spring 2018, I was appointed to the North Carolina Governor’s newly formed Commission on Inclusion, which advises and identifies policies and measures for the state to promote inclusion and address discrimination, harassment and retaliation based on prohibited grounds.\nIn February 2019, we celebrate the 40th year of the Minority Health Conference, the largest and longest running student-led health conference in U.S.\nWhere we are today. Over the past couple years, we have come together as a community to reflect at various times on current events that have shaken members of our community. We’ve supported students leading Black Lives Matter, taken new steps to increase the diversity of our faculty, staff and students, revised our leadership statement about diversity and inclusion, and hosted major events as part of the yearly Minority Health Conference and National Health Equity Research Webcast. We are proud that the Minority Health Conference is the largest and longest-running student-led health conference in the U.S. In 2019, we celebrate 40 years!\nKauline Cipriani, PhD\nBecoming more diverse and inclusive. Like most universities and schools, we are not where we’d like to be, and we continue to work even harder to get there. We are not standing still. In the past year, I have written blog posts and spoken out on issues such as zero tolerance for discrimination, sexual harassment and bullying. To repeat, we do not tolerate these behaviors, and they violate UNC policies.\nOur campus was roiled by the presence of confederate statue, Silent Sam, and saw its toppling in August 2018. I also have written about that. Just to be clear: I do not believe that confederate statues belong on public university campuses.\nI’m delighted that, in February 2018, Kauline Cipriani, PhD, joined the Gillings School as assistant dean for inclusive excellence. Dr. Cipriani is collaborating with people across the School and University to help us become more diverse and inclusive. She is working with our faculty, staff and students and with others across campus, including Associate Vice Chancellor and Chief Diversity Officer, G. Rumay Alexander, EdD, RN, FAAN.\nOur Office of Student Affairs team is committed to inclusive excellence. Stop by their office Monday through Friday. Trinnette Cooper, MPH, coordinator for Diversity Programs and Recruitment, who works in our Office of Student Affairs, is another excellent resource and holds weekly hours for students.\nTrinnette Cooper, MPH\nWe take seriously our accountability for increasing inclusive excellence and track metrics for faculty, staff and students. We’re also being systematic about ensuring that all MPH students meet critical competencies in this domain.\nIn Fall 2018, we launched a new MPH concentration on Health Equity, Social Justice and Human Rights, and our Global Health concentration will have a strong emphasis on global health equity.\nThis is an amazing, welcoming, inclusive and civil community. We welcome people of all backgrounds, skills, preferences and interests to be part of the Gillings School community.\n–Barbara K. Rimer, DrPH, Dean and Alumni Distinguished Professor","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line191315"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.813326895236969,"wiki_prob":0.813326895236969,"text":"CBS C.E.O. Les Moonves to Be Investigated Over Sexual Misconduct Allegations\nShari Redstone\n“The Nuclear Option”: With CBS Going to Court, Shari Redstone’s “Kabuki Theater” Falls Apart\nWilliam D. Cohan\nAfter Les Moonves’s Downfall, CBS Investors Fear the Reign of Shari\nIf Moonves goes, as seems likely, it will be just a matter of time before Shari tries to merge CBS and Viacom for a third time. And that’s what CBS investors fear most.\nLes Moonves in New York City.By Krista Schlueter/The New York Times/Redux.\nHours before Ronan Farrow published his bombshell about Leslie Moonves in the The New Yorker, the stock market had already reached a verdict about the fate of the longtime CBS chairman and C.E.O. After The Hollywood Reporter released a story on Friday afternoon foreshadowing the piece, CBS’s stock fell as much as 7 percent, costing shareholders around $1.4 billion in value. The stock recovered a bit on Friday before falling another 4 percent or so on Monday morning. As one longtime CBS loyalist told me, the market was rapidly calculating Moonves’s value to the company in real time, presupposing the conclusion of his titanic 12-year run.\nI respectfully disagree with this proposition. As Charles de Gaulle observed correctly, “The cemeteries of the world are full of indispensable men.” Yes, the absence of Moonves may be a factor in some investors’ minds for the rout. But the bigger concern, as it has been for two years, is that Moonves was the final defense against Shari Redstone’s irrepressible plan to recombine CBS and Viacom, against the stated wishes of her nonagenarian father. Only six years after Viacom bought CBS for around $35 billion, in 2000, Sumner Redstone realized that the long hoped-for synergies between the two companies—broadcast television and a once powerful cable network—had failed to materialize and that both companies would be better off on their own. But Shari has been trying to engineer a merger ever since she assumed Sumner’s position as the controlling shareholder in both companies in 2015. Without Moonves as her counterweight, Shari will much more easily be able to swat away the CBS directors who have been steadfastly loyal to Moonves and, as a result, have long opposed the re-unification with Viacom. In other words, investors aren’t calculating Moonves’s value; they are figuring out the burdens of life under Shari and a recombined CBS and Viacom.\nCBS shareholders have had a great ride under Moonves. The company’s stock has as much as tripled since he took the helm of the independent public company in 2006. The fate of Viacom, meanwhile, has been much different: its stock has tread water since it returned to independence, down around 30 percent. Viewership at its cable channels, such as Nickelodeon and Comedy Central, has been falling steadily for years. There has also been considerable management turmoil at Viacom, with the exits of longtime executives Philippe Dauman, Tom Dooley, and Carl Folta, among others. The company is in the hands of Shari’s handpicked C.E.O. Bob Bakish. Now, things may get a little hairy. Shari has tried twice in the past few years to force a re-merger between CBS and Viacom and both times her efforts have failed, in large part because the CBS shareholders voted with their feet, so to speak, by selling their stock in the face of the proposed merger. A year ago, after Shari’s second effort to merge the companies began in earnest, CBS stock was trading at around $70 per share. As Shari kept pushing for the merger, the CBS stock fell into the high $40s. It had returned to nearly $60 a share by mid-July after it was clear to the market—thanks to dueling lawsuits in the Delaware Chancery between CBS and the Redstone’s holding company—that there would be no merger this time either.\nOn Monday, the CBS board of directors decided to keep Moonves in place, for now, as it selects an outside law firm to conduct an independent investigation into his alleged behavior. But if Moonves ultimately goes, as seems likely, it will presumably be just a matter of time before Shari tries to merge CBS and Viacom once more. And that’s what CBS investors fear most. True, Shari would have some purging to do at CBS before she gets her way. She would have to make it clear to Joe Ianniello, Moonves’s likely successor, that there is a new sheriff in town. That shouldn’t be hard to do, especially if Shari makes clear that, if he doesn’t play ball with her, Bakish will be his successor once the two companies are merged. (That may happen anyway.) She will also likely want to continue her ongoing efforts to stack the 14-member CBS board with her loyalists. In addition to her own vote, she has others locked up: Rob Klieger, one of her family’s attorneys, and David Andelman, a Boston attorney who has long been loyal to Sumner. She is in the process of trying to remove Chad Gifford, a respected Wall Street banker, whom she has accused of bullying “intimidating and bullying” behavior. He has long opposed her initiatives to merge Viacom and CBS. If her court filings are any indication, she doesn’t like him. And she is determined to get him off the CBS board, and will probably succeed in doing so. Shari will soon have another ally on the CBS board—Dick Parsons, the former C.E.O. of AOL Time Warner—when the CBS annual meeting is reconvened, after a litigation-related postponement, in August, and another opponent, Arnold Kopelson, presumably leaves the board.\nShari also must resolve the pending litigation between CBS and her holding company. A trial is scheduled for October before Judge Andre Bouchard, where CBS will try to win his approval to issue enough new stock dividends to dilute Shari’s near-80 percent voting stake in CBS down to a still formidable 17 percent. The Redstones, understandably, are trying to block that maneuver. While both sides have the best Wall Street attorneys money can buy, and are certain of the correctness of their legal arguments, the market has long decided that the fight is really one between Moonves and Shari, who, although once allies in their dislike of Dauman, now detest each other. With Moonves gone, there will be less impetus for the blood feud to continue. Look for Ianniello and the CBS board to find a way to settle with Shari, with her getting the better part of that outcome.\nWith a CBS-Viacom merger back on track, Shari will be in a position to achieve her ultimate goal: to find a tax-efficient way to sell the merged companies to another large corporate entity in the vein of the recently completed AT&T-Time Warner merger. Perhaps the likes of Verizon, or Amazon, or Apple, or maybe even a deflated Facebook might be interested. But perhaps not. It’s quite possible that Viacom will drag CBS down to its level and the combined business will flounder, and find no corporate takers in the market. Rather than wait around and see whether that happens or not, the smart money at CBS is heading for the exits.\nThat Shari now has the best chance to not only be her father’s successor but to openly defy his wishes—while he is still alive, no less—is the ultimate irony, as she herself must realize. You can take your pick of the e-mails she has sent her children over the years. In a September 2014 e-mail to her son Tyler, Shari wrote about why she rejected her father’s $1 billion offer to buy her out of the family’s holding company: “Why would I ever give [Sumner] his dying wish of peace when he never gave me any peace during my whole life.” In October 2014, she wrote her daughter, after she had called her grandfather, “I can’t believe you keep calling him when he could not make it any clearer that all of us could drop dead and it would be the happiest day of his life.” That same day, to all of her children, Shari wrote, “It could be [sic] not be more clear that the only people in the entire world who your grandfather doesn’t care about, and [in] fact is willing to hurt, damage, and destroy are the four of us.” Sumner himself appears to have perceived the morbid endgame. In July 2015, after Shari saw her father in Los Angeles, she again wrote Tyler, “your grandfather says I will be chair over his dead body.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line599503"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5735532641410828,"wiki_prob":0.42644673585891724,"text":"Adventure into the Past — How to Use GhostTowns.com & Credit Card Rewards to Explore Forgotten Towns\nIn a Nutshell: What good is a vacation if it doesn’t stoke your sense of adventure, inspire your creativity, and leave you with more memories than debt? Most popular destinations are fun once or twice, but the drag of standing in line, sitting in traffic, or laying down excessive amounts of money gets old. For more than two decades, Todd Underwood has guided visitors to memorable trips to some of America’s most remote areas through his website, GhostTowns.com. These towns can include remote locations or flourishing tourist towns. Nearly every state has a ghost town or two to visit, but most ghost towns reside in the southwest region of the US, where settlers moved more than a century ago to seek their riches while mining for precious metals.\nEveryone loves a good vacation. If you’re taking the time to read this, chances are you’re sitting at your desk right now, dreaming about your next getaway from the real world.\nI’ve been there. But don’t worry, I won’t tell your boss.\nVeteran travelers realize the point of a vacation is to escape from the everyday grind of life. So what is the use of visiting the same big-city destinations that have you fighting traffic, waiting in line, and needing a vacation just to decompress after your vacation?\nInstead of going to the same places everyone else in your office is going to, why not use those credit card travel rewards you’ve built up to visit a place where the number of stories its buildings tell is greater than its population?\nTodd Underwood of GhostTowns.com has spent the better part of the last 30 years mastering these types of trips so he could make them a reality for adventure seekers around the world. The site is an information resource on ghost towns in the American West, complete with interactive maps and photos. And Underwood and his team offer guided tours to many of the historic ghost towns and mining camps of Arizona.\nUnderwood classifies a ghost town as any place that is a shadow of its past glory and where people once lived, or are still living. This can include remote locations with very little physical structure remaining (referred to by enthusiasts as True Ghosts), or they can be flourishing tourist towns such as Jerome, Arizona, or Calico, California.\nThese sites can sometimes be relatively intact from their heyday a century ago. From silver mining towns to rural villages, Underwood has visited and explored areas most people think only exist on movie sets. In each area, he maintains the biggest rule among ghost towners — take nothing with you and leaving nothing behind but footprints.\nUnderwood, a chemistry professor turned pilot, moved to Arizona as a youngster in the 1970s and quickly adopted his father’s love for the Old West.\n“We used to get our hair cut at a barbershop called Don’s that also sold metal detectors and made regular excursions to ghost towns,” Underwood said. “It wasn’t long before we bought a pair of detectors and a four-wheel drive vehicle and started trying to find ghost towns.”\nThose early trips became a passion for Underwood, who has since visited over 1,000 ghost towns. Today, he hosts tours in Arizona for adventure seekers who want to experience a piece of history without waiting in line or fighting for space to take a picture.\nBut ghost towns aren’t unique to Arizona and other areas synonymous with the Wild West. Thousands of ghost towns are scattered throughout the country. Some are accessible at any time of year via paved road, and others require more planning, equipment, and expertise to explore.\nA Four-Wheel Drive into Areas Otherwise Inaccessible\nA trip to a True Ghost is nothing like your average vacation at a theme park. The rocky four-wheel drive off the beaten path of civilization sends dust flying and wind whistling through caves and cliffs uninhabited for decades or longer.\nWhile many experienced explorers need multiple trips through abandoned mines or across rugged terrain to find certain sites, a thriving community of enthusiasts share their experiences and findings to make it easier for newcomers to find what they’re looking for.\nTodd Underwood guides adventure-seeking travelers into ghost towns in Arizona.\nSome more advanced thrill-seekers use modern technology such as drones to cover more ground and explore areas previously thought to be inaccessible.\n“Our website provides two-wheel drive (2WD) or four-wheel drive (4WD) vehicles for each town,” Underwood said. “Generally for 2WD locations, you can take a car or light truck, but 4WD can get you almost anywhere. You may need an outfitted jeep, an ATV, a good pair of hiking shoes, a mountain bike, or more.”\nUnderwood’s website hosts a gallery of dozens of photos submitted by travelers who visited various ghost towns in the past. Each photograph is a glimpse into a life once lived by settlers who sought new territories to find their fortune.\nDespite the fascinating remains from these civilizations, Underwood said the most thrilling part of the adventure takes place before you step foot in any ghost town.\n“The best part of visiting a ghost town is the adventure getting there,” he said. “Some sites are inaccessible most of the year whereas some are accessible all year. Some are located on paved highways so there’s not much in the way of a challenge to find them and get to them. Others are very remote and require not only a great off-road vehicle or good hiking skills, but also require the ability to use GPS and other sources to locate the sites.”\n“Feel the Spirit of Those Who Were There”\nTraveling to a ghost town can require something as quick as a drive down the highway or as long as an all-day hike. As with most things in life, not all ghost towns are created equal.\nSome ghost towns contain still intact remnants of their history.\n“Visiting Jerome, Arizona, is a simple trip up a paved road that takes an hour or two,” Underwood said. “But getting to most true ghost towns requires a full day of travel. Some ghost towns are remote, but easily accessible, especially in the summer. These would require about a half-day of travel from the nearest town.”\nUnderwood said some of his favorite ghost towns to visit are Old Hundred, Animas Forks, and Holy Cross in Colorado, and Jerome, Ruby, and Gillette in Arizona.\nOld Hundred, he pointed out, requires a treacherous hike on a cliff to get to, but the payoff is the pleasure of taking in the amazing views from the side of a mountain.\n“Each town is unique and offers different challenges and rewards,” he said.\nGhost Towns are a Reflection of Our Past\nGhost Towns offer something different for every adventurous traveler and provide an experience no typical tourist attraction can create.\n“Ghost towns are a reflection of our past,” Underwood said. “It’s like looking at ourselves through a time machine and seeing the ingenuity and resourcefulness of the human spirit. When you are standing at a ghost town site, you can feel the spirit of those who were there.”\nThose sights and sounds are a far cry from the bright lights and big cities most people think about when they consider vacation destinations. Instead, ghost towns give travelers an opportunity to unplug from the busy everyday world and reconnect with a simpler time.\n“You can hear the horses trotting and the stagecoach wheels coming through,” Underwood said. “You can hear the pounding of the mills and the piano player coming from the saloon. You can get a glimpse of what life was like for our ancestors and pioneers. Of course, some visit just for the challenge of getting there — to test their skills of finding these lost locations.”\nBen Schlappig Shares how he Maximizes Credit Rewards to Travel the World\nAmber Brooks • July 8, 2016\nUse Travel Rewards to Stay at San Francisco’s Historic Palace Hotel\nSuzanne Wentley • May 11, 2018\nCash in Credit Card Rewards to Visit Lake Tahoe’s Camp Richardson\nJon McDonald • May 14, 2018\nJazz Up Credit Card Rewards Usage at New Orleans’ Windsor Court Hotel\nRay FitzGerald • June 4, 2018","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1479635"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.617763876914978,"wiki_prob":0.617763876914978,"text":"End Child Hunger in Alabama's five-year review reveals progress toward total food security\nBy Charlotte Bedsole | 5/11/19 2:17pm\nAUBURN, Ala. - As the first outreach initiative of the Hunger Solutions Institute at Auburn University, End Child Hunger in Alabama has reduced the number of children in Alabama suffering from food insecurity in only five years.\nOne in four children and youth in Alabama suffer from food insecurity. Because Auburn University is a land-grant institution, it was important to focus on the statewide issue of child hunger.\nThe rate of child hunger in Alabama decreased almost four percent in the last five years, according to Alabama Possible, a statewide nonprofit organization.\nEnd Child Hunger in Alabama’s mission has been to identify, address and implement solutions related to child hunger issues in the state. Since Gov. Kay Ivey launched it in 2013, the initiative has compiled a report, which gives details about their impact through collaboration and intense efforts over the last five years.\n“I have had the privilege of being involved with the End Child Hunger in Alabama campaign since its kickoff. The work being done is making huge strides in putting an end to child hunger,” Ivey said. “These are not hungry children in foreign countries, these are hungry children right here in Alabama, in our communities, urban and rural. I applaud everyone involved but especially the Hunger Solutions Institute at Auburn University for working to end child hunger in Alabama and for being a shining example to others across the country.\"\nEnd Child Hunger in Alabama, or ECHA, is a task force made up of leaders from state government and nonprofit organizations, as well as the education and corporate sectors. Their goals include improving Alabama's food assistance safety net for youth, creating a strong regional food system, generating public will to fight childhood hunger, increasing economic stability, supporting community action to benefit children's health, and preventing obesity.\nECHA's efforts to achieve each of their goals resulted in positive impacts and an increased number of outreach initiatives fighting childhood hunger. The ECHA Five-Year Review gives detailed descriptions of the program's successes, such as efforts to end the summer nutrition gap.\nAlabama's summer food service program, Break for a Plate, served a record 3 million meals in 2018. The program has nearly doubled in the last five years as a result of ECHA's actions. Because of this success, the United States Department of Agriculture now uses Break for a Plate as a national example of the best ways to expand food service programs in summer.\n“In this five-year review, we are pleased to report that our collective action has shown positive impact in all of our five goal areas,” said Auburn University Hunger Solutions Institute Managing Director Harriet Giles. “Most importantly, we are so heartened to see significantly greater numbers of children having access to and participating in summer feeding, after school and alternative school breakfast programs. However, we readily acknowledge our work will never be complete as long as one child in Alabama goes hungry.”\nECHA will continue to expand their outreach efforts across the state over the next five years, using their goals prioritize action.\nTo learn more about ECHA and view the full five-year review, visit www.endchildhungeral.org.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1560366"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5240819454193115,"wiki_prob":0.4759180545806885,"text":"Home › Industry Updates › Mortgage Industry › Detroit leads nation in reverse mortgage foreclosures\nDetroit leads nation in reverse mortgage foreclosures\nPosted on June 17, 2019 by Posted in Mortgage Industry\nMichele McCoy always thought she and her siblings would inherit the house she grew up in on Decatur Street on Detroit’s west side.\nHer father, a Detroit Police officer, and her mother, a schoolteacher, bought the three-bedroom bungalow in the late 1960s after moving here from Wheeling, West Virginia.\n“It would be part of our family legacy because that was the first property my family bought when they moved to Michigan,” McCoy, 55, said.\nMichele McCoy of Champaign, Illinois speaks about how her parents, now in their 90s, lost their Detroit home after taking out a reverse mortgage. (Photo: Ryan Garza, Detroit Free Press)\nBut that changed after a visit nearly 20 years ago from a door-to-door representative of a reverse mortgage lender.\nThe house on Decatur now is one of 1,884 reverse mortgage foreclosures in Detroit between 2013 and 2017. No other city in the country has seen more in that span, according to a USA Today analysis of 1.3 million loan records and hundreds of foreclosure cases. The Free Press and USA Today reporters reviewed data and conducted interviews in recent weeks to try and understand why Detroit and other urban communities have borne the brunt of the reverse mortgage foreclosure trend.\nReverse mortgages work like this: Lenders appraise the value of a house and allow homeowners to borrow back money against that market value.\nBorrowers can stop making monthly mortgage payments, and they can stay put for life, so long as they maintain the home and pay property taxes and insurance. For years, reverse mortgages required no credit check and government-mandated financial counseling can be as easy as a 20-minute phone call.\nMichele McCoy grew up in this house on Decatur St. on the west side of Detroit. (Photo: Joe Guillen, Detroit Free Press)\nAt the end — a move-out, death or default — the bank calls the loan due, to be paid back either by the sale of the home or an heir or homeowner repaying the loan money. Lenders and their investors make their money through origination fees that can top $15,000 with fees and mortgage insurance, and by charging interest on the loan balance.\nReverse mortgage lenders targeted Detroit and other large urban areas over the last couple decades, sometimes with misleading sales tactics.\nNearly 100,000 of the loans designed for seniors to generate some cash have now failed nationwide, leaving those elderly borrowers to navigate the often-unforgiving foreclosure process\nMcCoy’s parents, William and Virginia Creighton, took out an $84,000 reverse mortgage in 2000 on the home for repairs. The house needed a roof, pipe work in the basement and a furnace, McCoy said.\nThe Creightons fell behind on their property taxes and lost the house to foreclosure in 2016. Fannie Mae sold the property the next year to Paramount Consortium, a Warren-based company, for $4,500 — an amount so paltry that McCoy said she wouldn’t share with her parents.\nThey are now both in their 90s and live in an apartment in Westland. Looking back, McCoy said she doesn’t think her father fully understood the reverse mortgage.\n“He was just confused,” she said.\nDetroit edged out Chicago — with a population quadruple Detroit’s — to lead the nation in reverse mortgage foreclosures from 2013 to 2017.\nWhat’s more, Detroit has three of the top 10 ZIP codes in the United States for reverse mortgage foreclosure in the last five years. Those ZIP codes are 48221, which includes the University District, and two others nearby, 48235 and 48227.\nDetroit was ripe for reverse mortgage lenders in the past couple decades because of its high senior population and the high number of homeowners with equity built into their homes. Even if the city’s homes were declining in value, Detroit was attractive for lenders who could rake in closing costs and other fees.\nFor low-income seniors who needed help with living expenses or home repairs, a reverse mortgage seemed like an attractive option to secure a new cash flow. Borrowers must be at least 62 years old to qualify for a reverse mortgage.\n“You have a large population of homeowners with equity built into their homes,” said Joshua Akers, an assistant professor of geography and urban regional studies at the University of Michigan-Dearborn. “You have a large senior population that is also looking for additional income.”\nSeniors who take out a reverse mortgage are still responsible for their property taxes and home insurance, and a missed payment can trigger a foreclosure. Loans also come due for surviving family members after the death of the borrower. If the family does not cover the loan balance, the lender can foreclose on the property.\nThe effects of reverse mortgage foreclosures are particularly devastating for seniors. Many are out of the job market, making it more difficult to rebound from losing their home.\n“For many Americans, the home is their greatest asset. They’re putting it on the line,” Akers said. “For a lot of these seniors, losing their home is the last thing they had.”\nDetroit’s place at the top is emblematic of a national pattern.\nReverse mortgages end in foreclosure six times more often in predominantly black neighborhoods than in neighborhoods that are 80% white.\nEven comparing only poorer areas, black neighborhoods fare worse. In ZIP codes where most residents make less than $40,000, the analysis found reverse mortgage foreclosure rates were six times higher in black neighborhoods than in white ones.\nChicago was second in USA Today’s analysis of reverse mortgage foreclosures with 1,846 from 2013 to 2017. Baltimore had 1,516; Miami 1,329; and Philadelphia had 1,027 to round out the nation’s top five.\nOne Reverse Mortgage, part of the Detroit-based Quicken Loans family of companies, is an industry leader. It made $788 million worth of government-backed reverse mortgages in 2018, the second-highest behind American Advisors Group, which issued $2.7 billion in loans, according to Inside Mortgage Finance, a company that tracks mortgage statistics.\nGregg Smith, CEO of One Reverse Mortgage, said home equity should be factored into seniors’ financial plans. “It empowers the senior to utilize the equity in their home in a way they deem to fit their needs,” he said.\nMost of One Reverse Mortgage’s loans, by volume, are in California, Florida and Texas — places with high populations and home values, Smith said. The company was not very active in Detroit from 2001 to 2009. It only originated 17 loans in that time, according to USA Today’s data.\nBefore finalizing a loan with One Reverse Mortgage, seniors undergo a financial assessment and counseling session where obligations like property taxes and home insurance are explained, Smith said, adding that his company has been up front and clear with borrowers throughout its existence, which dates to 2001.\n“From our perspective, I think we do an amazing job with every client and putting them in a position to succeed,” he said.\nMary Jo Homrich, 80, said the reverse mortgage she took out from AAG four years ago on her home in Portage has worked out well.\n“I have money I can draw from it if I needed,” Homrich said. “I’m glad that money’s available because I’ve had to have a couple things done to the house.”\nHer home was worth about $120,000 and she used the reverse mortgage to pay off a $40,000 debt and obtain a $20,000 line of credit that can be used when she needs it. Homrich, a retired bookkeeper, said she has talked with her children about the loan and makes sure to stay up to date on her property taxes and insurance.\n“I’m hoping I can stay here for another 10, 15 years. I plan on staying around,” she said. “It was a good deal for me.”\nBut in Detroit, housing advocates and legal aid lawyers have seen families suffer as a result of reverse mortgages.\nIn the mid-2000s, risks of foreclosure often were not clear. Some advertisements for reverse mortgages even claimed that borrowers would not have to make any payments, said Joe McGuire, a staff attorney in Detroit for Michigan Legal Services.\n“There was an era, especially during the mortgage boom, where there was pretty unscrupulous pushing of these,” McGuire said.\nMcGuire said he mainly sees two types of eviction cases stemming from reverse mortgages.\nThe first type of case involves a borrower who is alive but fell behind on property tax or insurance payments. Those payments previously may have been escrowed into the original mortgage bill. “It’s a big change for a lot of people to go from that to having to pay the property taxes and the insurance themselves,” he said.\nThe second common instance involves children who lived in the home of a deceased borrower. The house is foreclosed on to satisfy the loan, leaving the senior’s child to go from thinking they were going to inherit the house to getting evicted.\n“It’s very disruptive to people,” McGuire said. “With working-class people of color, most of the generational wealth is in the home and that home being passed on.”\nTypically, there is an opportunity for families to redeem homes lost to reverse mortgage foreclosure at a sheriff’s sale. The price is based on an appraisal by the federal government and may be less than the loan balance, said Kim Stroud, director of mortgage foreclosure prevention and land contract support for the United Community Housing Coalition in Detroit.\nStroud said UCHC has small loan program that can help with those redemption costs.\nSeniors considering a reverse mortgage should make sure to get counseling from an agency certified by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, said Dannielle Laura, interim director of economic opportunity services for the Wayne Metro Community Action Agency.\n“It’s easy to think (a reverse mortgage) can be the answer to your prayers,” Laura said. “My advice would be that a little healthy skepticism never hurt anyone.”\nSource: Detroit leads nation in reverse mortgage foreclosures\n‹ Cuba’s generosity after Chernobyl\nQuicken Loans to pay $32.5 million to settle FHA lending case ›","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line51683"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8076239228248596,"wiki_prob":0.8076239228248596,"text":"Recruiting Target Brent Kennedy Makes Foot Locker Nationals\nWestern Pennsylvania's Brent Kennedy (New Kensington's Kiski Area high school) is squarely in Villanova's recruiting cross hairs. Villanova is competing against Syracuse, Notre Dame, Virginia, and Virginia Tech, all of whom are keen to land a commitment from Kennedy. We at Villanova Running showcased Kennedy recently HERE, at which point in time Kennedy had made campus recruiting visits to both Villanova and Syracuse. Since that post, which highlighted his runner-up performance at the Pennsylvania state cross country meet, Kennedy -- only a junior with another prep year remaining -- has gone on to qualify for Foot Locker Nationals in San Diego (see the top results of last weekend's Footlocker Northeast Regional below) by finishing 9th of 169 competitors at Van Cortlandt Park on November 24th. Commenting on the race, Kennedy admitted that \"I thought if I went out too fast, things definitely wouldn't work out for me. I went out through the mile pretty far back and really wasn't feeling great, but people started to come back (to me) through the Back Hills. I pulled up into about 15th place at the two-mile (mark) and was able to get those last six spots.\"\nFoot Locker Northeast Regional -- Top 10: Nationals Qualifiers\n1. Cheserek, Edward 12 Newark NJ 15:21.8\n2. Green, Jonathan 12 Berlin MA 15:36.8\n3. Wilson, Shawn 12 Marlton NJ 15:42.5\n4. Shearn, Brendan 12 Frackville PA 15:45.5\n5. Kroon, Kyle 11 Toms River NJ 15:46.0\n6. Crawley, Trevor 12 Cumberland RI 15:47.3\n7. Norris, Max 12 Narberth PA 15:48.3\n8. Alvarado, Chris 11 Fairfield CT 15:49.1\n9. Kennedy, Brent 11 New Kensington PA 15:50.9\n10. Pondel, Austin 12 Columbus PA 15:51.0\nToday, Kennedy posted his first journal entry as he leads up to the national championship race on Saturday, December 8th.\nWhat a season. I am truly honored to be part of such a historic year in PA cross country. I know the purpose of this journal is to share my training and race experiences and things like that, but I could not begin without thanking my family and coaches, Mr. Berzonsky and Mr. Arabia, for their complete dedication to maximizing my success as a person and a runner. Of course, a big thank you goes to my teammates for making running such a fun and enjoyable part of my life.\nOur team set our sights on making it back to the state meet for the second year in a row. Though we came up short, it would be impossible to view the year as a failure. Our personal successes reflect the hard work from everyone top to bottom on the squad. I was lucky enough to have a legitimate shot at winning every race I was in, losing to Vinny Todaro and Dan Jaskowak in some exciting races. My friends Tyler Snider and Patrick Miller did come up big (like always) at WPIALs and joined me for states. I carried my WPIAL win into Hershey with some confidence before having my hopes squandered by a CR from Tony Russell, a great guy by the way. The finish was a bit of a letdown and I am for sure being hard on myself, but I do feel like there are a hundred other kids that deserve to be second in the state and I am not going to look past that accomplishment.\nI headed into Foot Locker with some feelings of uncertainty. A new course, new competition, even new socks (lost the racing socks). Physically, after a long championship season, I felt sort of run-down. But you don’t want to hear me complain and it wasn’t all negative, believe it or not. I felt like I had a pretty good chance of making top ten with a smart race; my plan was to hang back through the flat first mile, then stay consistent through the woods.\nA few minutes before the race, Conner Quinn welcomed me to a spot on the line next to a swarm of fellow Pennsylvania runners, and I heard Brendan Shearn screaming his head off at the other end of the line, “PA don’t play!” That really got me going and I was finally ready to run. The race played out for me like I had hoped. I went through the mile at 5 flat, moved my way into the top 20 by the two mile point, and then hammered the down hills to finish with Austin Pondell. I made that sound pretty easy I guess, but I am looking forward to the yearlong break before hitting the hills at Van Cortlandt again.\nRunning for a team, in my opinion, is the most inspirational part of any cross country race. Representing Pennsylvania at Regionals was an aspect of the race I hadn’t really thought about before. It is so cool that I get to run for my state and the Northeast Region in San Diego next week. I can’t wait to get these couple weeks of training going and see how I match up against 39 of the top runners in the country.\nPosted by BC at 9:49 PM No comments:\nWilmington Tatnall's Julie Williams Commits to Villanova\nOn November 10th of this year Julie Williams of Wilmington, Delaware's Tatnall High School committed to run for Gina Procaccio's Villanova women's team. Williams committed after finishing second at the Delaware state cross country meet, where she ran 19:12.54 over the 5000 meter course. To date, Williams has found most success over 800, 1600, and 5000 meters.\nLast weekend Williams finished 18th (for the second straight year) at the Nike Cross Nationals Southeast Regional in Cary, NC. At the race, she improved her time from 2011 (18:31.40) to 18:15.50, a new PR. In 2011 Williams qualified for Nike Cross Nationals, where she finished 120th. In late September of this year, she came 23rd at the Great American Cross Country Festival, also in Cary, NC, running 18:22.40.\nOn the track, Williams finished third at the 2012 Delaware State meets (both indoor and outdoor) in both the 800 meters and 1600 meters.\nJulie's Mile Split page can be seen HERE. She presently boasts PRs of:\n2:16.00 (800 meters)\n4:55.07 (1600 meters)\n10:27.47 (3000 meters\n11:12.00 (3200 meters)\nNovember 28th a Good Day for Villanova Track:\nHappy Birthday to Sonia O'Sullivan & Bobby Curtis\nTwo of Villanova's all-time track heroes share November 28th as a birthday.\nOn this day in 1969 three-time world champion Sonia O'Sullivan was born in Cobh, Country Cork, Ireland. After winning two NCAA cross country individual titles (1991, 1992) as well as two NCAA 3000 meter titles (both indoors and outdoors in 1990) on the track for Villanova, O'Sullivan represented her native Ireland at four consecutive Olympic Games (1992, 1996, 2000, 2004). She won a silver medal over 5000 meters at the 2000 Games in Sydney, where she ran a blistering PR of 14:41.02. She won two world cross country titles (executing a rare short- and long-course double in 1998) as well as the 1995 world title in the 5000 meters on the track. She won a silver medal over 1500 meters as well at the 1993 World Championships. O'Sullivan was a three-time European Champion (over 3000, 5000, and 10,000 meters) and set World Records over 2000 meters (5:25.36 in July 1994), 2 miles (9:19.56 in June 1998), and 5000i meters (15:17.28 in January 1991). She is by virtually all accounts the greatest runner ever produced by the country of Ireland.\nNovember 28th is also the birthday of Villanova's most recent male individual NCAA champion. The new 28 year old won the NCAA 5000 meter title in 2008 and his time of 13:33.93 was the 10th fastest time ever run by a US collegiate athlete over that distance. He was Villanova's first NCAA outdoor male champion since 1981. Curtis had been the 5000 meter runner-up at the 2007 NCAA championships. Curtis was a 2-time Big East cross country champion (2004, 2007), won the 2007 NCAA Mid-Atlantic cross country regional, and finished as high as 4th (2007) at cross country nationals. He was a 2-time All-American in cross country. After graduating from Villanova, Bobby Curtis has developed into an international-class 10,000 meter runner and his 27:24.67 PR is the 7th fastest time ever run by a native-born American.\nPosted by BC at 8:42 AM No comments:\nKoons & Beamish Post Top-5 Finishes at Rothman 8K\nHugo Beamish\nOver 1800 competitors contested the Rothman 8K on the streets of Philadelphia on Saturday, and two former Villanova stars finished in the top five of their respective races. Former Rothman 8K race champion (2009 in 26:34) Frances Koons finished third, covering the 8K distance in 26:29, 47 seconds behind race winner Misiker Demassie of Ethiopia. On the men's side, Hugo Beamish, the former Big East 5000 meter champion, was one of 4 men to break Marcus O'Sullivan's 15 year old course record (23:03). Beamish came 4th in 23:02, 33 seconds behind Kenya's Isaac Korir. Former Villanova trackman Brandon Eck was 63rd in 28:41.\nRothman 8K -- Men\n1. Isaac Korir KEN 22:29 CR\n2. Samuel Ndereba KEN 22:47\n3. Scott Smith USA 22:47\n4. Hugo Beamish NZL 23:02\n5. Mengistu Nebsi ETH 23:03\nFrances Koons\nRothman 8K -- Women\n1. Misiker Demessie ETH 25:46\n2. Amy Van Alstine USA 25:59\n3. Frances Koons USA 26:29\n4. Helen Jemutai KEN 26:51\n5. Erin Koch USA 27:18\nFull searchable results from the race are HERE.\nPosted by BC at 12:08 AM No comments:\nVillanova Back in the Pack at NCAA Cross Nationals\nWomen Come 20th, Men 27th\nLipari earns All-American status with her 25th place finish\nThe Villanova men and women finished close to their national rankings at the NCAA cross country nationals yesterday: the #25 men finished in 27th place, while the #22 women came 20th. Neither team ran its best race of the year. For the men, the team's usual top two finishers (Sam McEntee and Jordy Williamsz) were the team's 3rd and 4th finishers. Topping the men's finishers were seniors Mathew Mildenhall (108th individually) and Matt Kane (145th individually). McEntee (150th) and Williamsz (161st) were next, and Rob Denault (166th) rounded out the top five. Alex Tully, on whose effort the Villanova men finished 2nd at Mid-Atlantic regionals, was unable to catch lightning in a bottle a second time. He came 198th, followed by Brian Basili in 234th place. As has been the case throughout the season, the men ran is a tight cluster, with a mere 26.7 seconds from 1-5. The good news for the men is that several key runners will return next year.\nThe full men's results are HERE.\nVillanova Men 587 places\n108/84 Mathew Mildenhall 30:50.0\n145/116 Matthew Kane 31:04.6\n150/120 Sam McEntee 31:06.6\n161/131 Jordy Williamsz 31:12.8\n166/137 Rob Denault 31:16.7\n198/(153) Alex Tully 31:39.6\n234/(197) Brian Basili 32:36.8\n2000 3215 4950 6910 5 mi 10K\nMildenhall 5:49 9:24 14:47 20:56 24:35 30:50.0\nKane 5:57 9:38 15:08 21:12 24:57 31:04.6\nMcEntee 5:51 9:29 14:54 20:58 24:52 31:06.6\nWilliamsz 5:46 9:23 14:51 21:00 24:55 31:12.8\nDenault 5:56 9:41 15:11 21:15 25:03 31:16.7\nTully 5:56 9:38 15:12 21:26 25:21 31:39.6\nBasili 6:00 9:48 15:28 21:47 25:50 32:36.8\nOn the women's side, Emily Lipari put in the best performance of the day for either team, as she finished 25th overall, good for All American status. Lipari finished in 20:05.6, about 38 seconds off race winner Betsy Saina of Iowa State. Nicky Akande, who won the NCAA Mid-Atlantic regional a week ago, struggled on the day, finishing well back in 95th place overall, some 41 seconds behind Lipari. As she has done all year, Summer Cook was Villanova's no. 3 finisher, just 5 seconds in arrears of Akande. The women's 1-5 split was 1:13.6.\nThe full women's results are HERE.\nVillanova Women 475 places\n25/18 Emily Lipari 20:05.6\n95/68 Nicky Akande 20:46.5\n110/82 Summer Cook 20:51.7\n173/136 Stephanie Schappert 21:19.2\n209/171 Sydney Harris 21:34.1\n219/(181) Megan Venables 21:40.9\n240/(202) Courtney Chapman 22:04.5\n2000 3022 6K\nLipari 6:27 9:53 20:05.6\nAkande 6:34 10:06 20:46.5\nCook 6:39 10:12 20:51.7\nSchappert 6:45 10:22 21:19.2\nHarris 6:58 10:41 21:34.1\nVenables 6:57 10:40 21:40.9\nChapman 6:49 10:37 22:04.5\nBack in Philly, Koons Looks to Make a Mark\nVillanova graduate Frances Koons looks forward to Rothman 8K\nJen A. Miller, For The Inquirer\nWhen Frances Koons lists her reasons for running the 2012 Rothman 8K race on Saturday, she points out the same attributes that draw almost every other runner in the Philadelphia area.\n\"It's close, so we don't need to wake up early and drive somewhere,\" said Koons, 26, who lives in Ardmore, which is just shy of five miles away from Center City. \"It's a nice, flat course.\"\nWhat Koons leaves out is that she won the women's race in 2009 in 26 minutes, 34 seconds and that this will be her first return to the distance in three years.\nKoons, an Allentown native, ran track at Allentown Central Catholic High School and then for Villanova. While at 'Nova, she was named an all-American eight times and racked up a first-place Big East finish in the 1,500 meters in 2006 and the 1,000 and mile indoor titles in 2007, along with first-place finishes in the distance-medley relay and the 4x800 relay.\n\"She's a very determined individual,\" said her coach, Marcus O'Sullivan, the director of Villanova's track and field program who still holds the course record for the Rothman 8K. He set the mark in 1997 at 23 minutes, 3 seconds.\nKoons winning Ryan Shay Mile\n\"She's incredibly tough and very ambitious,\" he said.\nO'Sullivan added that Koons is also \"remarkably positive.\"\nCase in point: When talking about injuries that have hampered her running career, Koons references plantar fasciitis, which is the thickening of tissue on the bottom of the foot followed by a stress fracture, not a 2007 bout with clear-cell renal carcinoma.\nA golf-ball-size tumor was removed from her kidney in the summer of 2007. She took six weeks off and was back in running shape in time for the 2008 U.S. Olympic track and field trials.\nAfter graduating in 2009, Koons went right into a master's degree program at Villanova for applied statistics. And she kept running, winning the Rothman 8K in 2009 and the Penn Relays 5K in 2010. She set two personal bests in 2011: a 4:31 mile and a 15:29 5K.\nShe took time off from her degree to train with the New Jersey-New York Track Club, an elite group of runners based at Rutgers in New Brunswick, N.J. It's the first track club of its kind on the East Coast and it sent one runner to the Olympics this summer.\nBut, earlier this year, Koons decided to come back to Pennsylvania to finish her master's while also working as an assistant coach to the men's cross-country team. She also wanted to be coached by O'Sullivan.\nThis year has been a struggle because of the foot injury, but O'Sullivan said the Rothman 8K has been an excellent training goal for Koons, who considers it a \"season opener\" for the forthcoming indoor and outdoor track seasons.\n\"I'd like to someday get into longer races,\" she said when asked about moving up to the half-marathon or marathon distance. \"But for now, the aim next spring will be the 5K again.\"\nThat's after Koons crosses another Rothman 8K off her race list.\nBox Draws for NCAA Cross Country Nationals\nHere are the box draws for teams and at-large individuals for this Saturday's cross country nationals. The Villanova men are in box 22, about the exact center of the race start. The Villanova women are in box 9, about one-quarter of the way off the edge. The boxes are assigned randomly, by computer allocation.\nXc 12 National Box Draw\nNicky Akande is Mid-Atlantic Region Athlete of the Year\nAkande Rolling to Regional Win\nVillanova junior Nicky Akande has been named NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional Cross Country Athlete of the Year. A Villanova women has now won this award for the 5th straight year (after Frances Koons in 2008, and Sheila Reid in 2009, 2010, 2011). Akande has enjoyed a great fall campaign. She finished 2nd at the Main Line Invitational at Haverford, 8th at the Paul Short Run at Lehigh, 26th at Pre-Nationals in Louisville, and 3rd at the Big East championships at Van Cortlandt Park in New York. She capped those performances by winning the NCAA Mid-Atlantic regional at Penn State.\nThe release from the USTFCCCA is HERE.\nHere is the official news release from Villanova:\nNicky Akande Named Mid-Atlantic Region Athlete of the Year\nVillanova junior won individual title at NCAA regional meet last week\nNEW ORLEANS--For the fifth consecutive season a Villanova runner has been chosen as the Mid-Atlantic Region Athlete of the Year by the United States Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA). Junior Nicky Akande (Lawrenceville, Ga.) was announced as this year's winner on Tuesday night after winning the individual title at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional last week.\nAkande made great strides as a sophomore last season to emerge as one of the Wildcats most dependable runners and this year she has become a fixture at the top of the team's lineup. At the NCAA regional last Friday she cruised to a nine-second margin of victory and registered a career-best time of 20:14 on a 6,000 meter course.\nThis is the second straight year that Akande has earned All-Mid Atlantic Region honors for a top 25 finish at the regional meet. She also earned All-BIG EAST accolades for the second straight year after coming in third at the conference meet last month.\nLed by Akande, fellow junior Emily Lipari (Greenvale, N.Y.) - the BIG EAST individual champion - and senior Summer Cook (Thornton, Colo.) the Wildcats have earned a team berth to the NCAA Championships for the fifth straight year. Villanova was selected as one of 13 at-large bids to the field of 31 teams that will compete in the national championship meet this coming Saturday afternoon.\nIn four scored meets this season Akande has been the top Villanova finisher two times and has been the team's second runner in the other two races. Prior to the first two postseason meets she led the Wildcats with an eighth place finish at the Paul Short Run and also came in 26th at the Pre-NCAA Meet.\nThe NCAA Championships are being held at E.P. Tom Sawyer State Park in Louisville and the women's race begins on Saturday at Noon.\nNOTES: Villanova has produced the Mid-Atlantic Region Athlete of the Year in cross country every year since 2008 ... That year Frances Koons was the winner, while most recently Sheila Reid was a three-time recipient of the award from 2009-11.\nPosted by BC at 12:55 PM No comments:\nOverview of Villanova Cross Country in the NCAA Championships\nVillanova Women's Cross Country\nNCAA Team Championships: 9\nNCAA Individual Champions: 9\nVicki Huber (1989)\nSonia O'Sullivan (1990, 1991)\nCarole Zajac (1992, 1993)\nJen Rhines (1994)\nCarrie Tollefson (1997)\nSheila Reid (2010, 2011)\nTeam Finishes\nYear Place Score\n2011 3 181\nVillanova Men's Cross Country\nVic Zwolak (1963)\n2011 13 352\nVic Zwolak: Villanova's Only Individual Male XC Champion\nDespite NCAA team titles in 1966, 1967, 1968, and 1970, to say nothing of numerous team top-ten finishes and dozens of All-Americans since then, only one Villanova male harrier has ever won the NCAA cross country individual title. Vic Zwolak won that title in 1963, a year when the Villanova men finished 9th in the team competition (going 1-23-57-59-87-(112)-(117)). Zwolak led the 4-mile race from start to finish: he was in first place at 1 mile (4:34), 2 miles (9:39), and 3 miles (14:46), before ultimately winning the race in 19:35. Zwolak also won two NCAA titles (1963 and 1964) in the 3000 meter steeplechase.\nVillanova Running highlighted Zwolak previously HERE.\nHere are the top finishers in that 1963 cross country national championship race:\nTwenty-fifth Annual National Collegiate Athletic Association University Division\nCross Country Championships held at Michigan State University, East Lansing, on\nTuesday, November 26, 1963, at 11:30 a.m.\nl. Victor Zwolak Villanova 19:35\n2. John Camien Kansas State 19:38\n3. Jeffrey M. Fishback San Jose State 19:48\n4. Geoff Walker Houston 19:53\n5. Danny L . Murphy San Jose State 19:56\n6. G. Douglas Brown Montana State 19:59\n7. Richard A. Schramm Miami 20:04\n8. Ben F. Tucker San Jose State 20:06\n9. Arthur Scott Idaho State 20:07\n10. Richard Sharkey Michigan State 20:08\n11. Clayton Steinke Oregon 20:09\n12. Walter Hewlett Harvard 20:10\n13. Bill Clark Notre Dame 20:11\nl4. Ken Moore Oregon 20:14\n15. David Highton Colorado 20:16\n16. Frank Carver Notre Dame 20:19\nl7. Jack Bacheler Miami 20:20\n18. Herman E. Gurule San Jose State 20:21\n19. Ralph A. Lingle Missouri 20:23\n20. William J. Straub Army 20:25\nVillanova Women Receive At-Large Invite to XC Nationals\nInvite is 5th Straight & 25th Overall for the 9-Time Champs\nHere is the press release from Villanova's official athletic website, announcing that the Villanova women have received an at-large bid to cross country nationals. The Villanova women were the next-to-last at-large team invited to the national meet. They will join the Villanova men who received at automatic bid to nationals based on their second-place finish at the Mid-Atlantic Regional. The women finished third at the regional and thus were forced to rely on a non-automatic selection.\nThe Villanova women won the NCAA team title in 2009 and 2010, and finished 3rd last year (see photo above). They have won 9 NCAA titles overall.\nWomen's Cross Country Receives At-Large Bid to NCAA Championships\nWildcats earn fifth straight team berth in national meet after strong regional showing\nVILLANOVA, Pa. - One day after a strong performance at the regional championships the Villanova women's cross country team learned on Saturday that it had received a team berth to the NCAA Championships, which take place at E.P. Tom Sawyer State Park in Louisville next weekend. This is the fifth consecutive year that the Wildcats have earned a team bid to the 31-team NCAA field. Villanova was one of 13 teams chosen for as an at-large selection.\nThe berth in the NCAA Championships comes on the heels of strong performances by the Wildcats in their last two meets. Villanova came in fourth at the BIG EAST Championships on October 26 and more recently finished third in a close race at the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Regional on Friday afternoon. Leading into the regional meet the Wildcats had been ranked second or third in the region in every poll this season, including holding down the No. 2 spot in the USTFCCCA Mid-Atlantic Region poll for the first month of the season.\nVillanova has fire power at the top of its lineup with the junior duo of Nicky Akande (Lawrenceville, Ga.) and Emily Lipari (Greenvale, N.Y.), who have combined for top-three finishes in each of their last two races. Akande captured the NCAA Mid-Atlantic Region individual title by a nine-second margin on Friday and Lipari placed third in a reversal of their finishes at the BIG EAST meet two weeks earlier. Lipari was the BIG EAST individual champion and Akande finished third in that race.\nSenior Summer Cook (Thornton, Colo.) has solidified herself in the Wildcats lineup this season and joined Akande and Lipari in earning both All-Mid Atlantic Region and All-BIG EAST accolades. All three runners were among the Villanova top-seven at the NCAA Championships last season.\nThe women's national championship race begins at Noon on Saturday and the Wildcats will be returning to E.P. Tom Sawyer Park, where they registered a seventh place finish at the Pre-NCAA Meet last month. The site was also host to the BIG EAST Championships last season.\nEach of the top five teams in the BIG EAST received a berth to the NCAA Championships, including three automatic bids and two at-large selections. Connecticut, Georgetown and Providence all finished first or second at their respective regional championships to earn an automatic bid, while Villanova and Notre Dame were at-large picks.\nThis will be the 25th appearance at the NCAA Championships for the Wildcats, whose nine titles all-time are four more than any other women's program has. Over the years Villanova has crowned nine individual champions and also has the distinction of having won the most consecutive team titles with six in a row from 1989-1994.\nNova Men Qualify for Cross Nationals with 2nd at XC Regional\nMcEntee & Williamsz come 2nd and 4th\nVillanova's men ran a strong race today at Penn State's Blue & White course at the Mid-Atlantic Regional. The team (57 places) finished second, a mere 1 place behind Georgetown (56). Princeton was beaten into third, with 61 places. The hero of the day award goes to Alex Tully who ran the race of his life, finishing 14th overall, in 30:49. In a race where the top three teams were separated by a mere 5 places, Tully's dynamic run was critical in getting Villanova to nationals.\nThe Villanova men were in a strong position at the half-way mark, when they led the team competition with 33 places, ahead of Penn State (77), Georgetown (93), and regional #1 Princeton (95). Princeton moved up after 3 miles and with a mile to go crept within 45 to 60, with Georgetown at 65 and Penn State at 123. Ultimately, Georgetown was able to inch ahead, but Villanova held off Princeton to guarantee its place in Louisville. The Villanova men finished with an impressive 20 second 1-5 spread.\nFull results are HERE.\n2. Sam McEntee 30:34\n4. Jordy Williamsz 30:36\n14. Alex Tully 30:49\n18. Mathew Mildenhall 30:53\n19. Rob Denault 30:54\n43. Brian Basili 31:30\n50. Matt Kane 31:42\n1. Georgetown 8-9-11-13-15-(17)-(65) 56\n2. Villanova 2-4-14-18-19-(43)-(50) 57\n3. Princeton 3-5-6-21-26-(29)-(32) 61\n4. American 7-16-22-49-51 145\n5. Penn State 12-25-28-40-42-(46)-(94) 147\nVillanova's Nicky Akande Takes NCAA Regional Crown\nThird Place Women on Bubble for Nationals\nVillanova's top 5 marking LaSalle's Meghan McGlinchey\nToday at Penn State's Blue & White course, Villanova's Nicky Akande won the individual NCAA Mid-Atlantic regional title, with Emily Lipari in third, but the women faded a bit over the finals kilometers and came third in the team standing. They are now clearly in jeopardy of not gaining an invite to the national meet. The women dropped from the team lead at one mile, and the second spot at three miles, to finish third behind winner Penn State (61) and Georgetown (63). Villanova finished with 95 places, and Princeton was fourth with 101. Since only the top two teams at regionals are awarded an automatic berth at cross country nationals in Louisville, the Villanova women will have to hope for an at-large bid. Should that bid not be forthcoming, Nicky Akande (as regional winner) and Emily Lipari (who won the Big East individual title two weeks ago and who was 7th at Pre-Nationals) would likely be invited as at-large individual competitors.\nHere's how the Villanova women finished:\n1. Nicky Akande 20:14\n3. Emily Lipari 20:27\n14. Summer Cook 20:52\n33. Courtney Chapman 21:42\n45. Megan Venables 21:58\n51. Sydney Harris 22:06\n52. Stephanie Schappert 22:06\nHere's how the top five teams fared (places are individual, not team, places):\n1. Penn State 4-6-10-20-21 61\n2. Georgetown 5-11-13-16-18 63\n3. Villanova 1-3-14-33-45 95\n4. Princeton 8-12-17-28-36 101\n5. W. Virginia 7-22-24-27-33 111\nPA State XC Runner-Up Brent Kennedy Eyeing Villanova\nHere's an article on Brent Kennedy of Kiski Area high school from today's Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Kennedy, a junior, was class AAA runner-up at last week's Pennsylvania state cross country championships. He has already visited Villanova and Syracuse on recruiting trips, and is also interested in Notre Dame, Virginia, and Virginia Tech.\nKennedy's Mile Split page is HERE.\nPIAA Cross Country: Kiski's Kennedy a silver streak in Hershey\nBy Cara De Carlo / Tri-State Sports & News Service\nKiski Area junior Brent Kennedy bolted to a 15:52 finish at last Saturday's PIAA Class AAA cross country championship meet in Hershey.\nHe placed second to West Chester Henderson's Tony Russell, earning a silver medal.\nThe race actually began as though the runners were in a can of sardines.\n\"We were all packed together through at least the first half of the race,\" Kennedy said. \"It's a downhill start for the first mile so everyone goes out really hard.\"\nKennedy kept his pace as the course went into the \"Aloha Hills\" -- a series of dips and U-turns in which the spectators wave hello and goodbye to their favorite runners. The disruptive terrain was stirring Kennedy's pack but he kept his sights on Russell. At 2 miles in, Russell's pace intensified to take a seven-second lead on Kennedy.\n\"[Russell] was about that far ahead of me for the last mile of the race,\" Kennedy recalled.\nHe said that didn't intimidate him, though.\nThe path continued up the course's last hill -- a 100-meter quad-drainer known as \"Poop Out Hill.\" It was on that hill that Kennedy stayed strong and separated himself from the 217 remaining finishers.\nKennedy's second place finish was definitive -- four seconds ahead of Corry Area's Austin Pondel. But Kennedy had had his eye on a victory.\n\"I just didn't have enough for the win at states,\" Kennedy said. \"Tony Russell is a great runner and he deserves it. I can't be too unhappy.\"\nSaturday's state meet wasn't Kennedy's first race against Russell.\n\"I raced him this year at the Carlisle Invitational,\" Kennedy said. \"I knew he'd be up there [in front at states].\"\nKennedy had actually beaten Russell in the 1,600-meter event at the PIAA track and field championships at Shippensburg last May. The two made it to the finals, where Kennedy finished eighth and Russell finished less than one second behind him.\nAs Russell and Kennedy finished their runs on Saturday, the two were happy for each other.\n\"We're all pretty good friends,\" said Kennedy, referring to himself and many of his cross country opponents. \"We're all doing the same type of thing.\"\nTwo days after Hershey, Kennedy was at Villanova University on a college visit that included a meeting with the cross country coach. The next day, Kennedy was scheduled to visit Syracuse.\n\"I'm just trying to check out all my options,\" Kennedy said. \"The list is getting bigger, I guess.\"\nKennedy is a junior and does not intend to make a final college decision until his senior year. Nonetheless, he attended track/cross country camps at Notre Dame and at the University of Virginia last summer. Since that time, Virginia Tech has also joined Kennedy's list of potential schools.\nBefore Kennedy can don spikes for the right college or university, he's got a lot of running still to do for Kiski Area. Kennedy said he's looking forward to running track this spring, especially if the competition includes Russell.\n\"I'm looking forward to getting the chance to race [Russell] again\" said Kennedy. \"There'll be some fast times and good competition there.\"\nReid, Koons in Elite Field for Rothman Institute 8K\nSheila Reid will make her Nike pro debut a week from Saturday at the Rothman Institute 8K. Her scheduled debut as a Nike-sponsored runner (The Dash to the Finish Line 5K in New York City, as part of the NYC marathon weekend) was cancelled duo to the recent storm. Reid will be joined by a former Villanova teammate and All-American Frances Koons. Koons won this race in 2009. Here is the press release for the event. As noted below, Villanova's own Marcus O'Sullivan still holds the Rothman Institute 8K course record -- an uber-quick 23:03 that has stood for 15 years.\nAthletics: Rothman Institute 8K Elite Field Announced\nPHILADELPHIA - The 2012 Rothman Institute 8K announces an impressive field of elite runners this year led by Philadelphia-area standouts Samuel Ndereba, Sheila Reid, Frances Koons, Samantha McNally, Cecily Tynan, Chris Heisey, John Itati and Matt Sadercock.\nThe Rothman Institute 8K (4.97 miles) -- held on Saturday, November 17 on Philadelphia Marathon Race Weekend -- is a great way to take part in Race Weekend. Runners will start on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway, near the Philadelphia Museum of Art -- looking out upon City Hall -- before taking a turn on the scenic banks of the Schuylkill River and Kelly Drive.\nFemale Runners to Watch\nReid repeats in 2011\nThe fastest entrant in the field is Sheila Reid, a 2012 Olympian (5,000 Meters, Canada) and an NCAA All-American from Villanova. Frances Koons, the 2009 Rothman Institute 8K champion and an NCAA All-American from Villanova, is trying to reclaim the title.\nA few women will be doubling, running both the 8K and the Philadelphia Half Marathon on Sunday including Hirsute Madero (Flagstaff, AZ) -- the 2010 8K runner-up and the 2010 Philadelphia Half Marathon winner -- and Kenya's Helen Jemutai, who won the Tufts 10K in Chicago in October.\nOther notables are: Samantha McNally (Doylestown, PA), who qualified for the 2012 Olympic Trials while running in the 2011 Philadelphia Marathon; Amy Van Alstine (Midland Park, NJ) who boasts a 15:43 5K PR; American University standout Erin Koch (Chevy Chase, MD); and Marissa Ryan who enters with a 33:36 10K PR.\nKoons takes Ryan Shay Mile\nThe 2011 Masters Champion and local favorite, Cecily Tynan (Media, PA), will be back to defend her title in the Masters Division.\nMale Runners to Watch\nKenya's Samuel Ndereba (Philadelphia, PA), the 2011 Rothman 8K winner, is back to defend his title. Ndereba also will be competing in the Philadelphia Half Marathon, and should be a contender in that race as well; he is just coming off of a victory at the Des Moines Half Marathon on Sunday, October 21.\nLooking to stand in the way of a repeat victory for Ndereba are some speedy international runners including 2011's second-place finisher Ethiopian John Itati (Royersford, PA); Kenya's Emmanuel Bor, a University of Alabama graduate with a 23:18 8K PR (Bor will also be running the Half Marathon on Sunday), and Harbert Okuti (New Paltz, NY) is Uganda's 5K record-holder.\nScott Smith (Flagstaff, AZ), with a 28:33 10K PR, is the top American prospect in the men's field. Other Americans to keep an eye on include Chris Pannone (Gardiner, NY) with a 2:18 Boston Marathon time this year; University of Pennsylvania alumni Phillip Kawkwell; Jonny Wilson (Flagstaff, AZ) and Temple Podiatry student Chris Heisey (Philadelphia, PA).\nGoing for a three-peat in the Masters Division is two-time winner Matt Sandercock (Exton, PA), the 2010 and 2011 masters Rothman 8K winner.\nRegistration for the Rothman Institute 8K is available at PhiladelphiaMarathon.com, costs $45 and closes on November 11, 2012.\nRothman Institute 8K Records\nMen: Marcus O'Sullivan, Time: 23:03 (1997)\nWomen: Svetlana Zakharova, Time: 25:37 (2001)\nJohn Kellogg Handicaps the Mid-Atlantic XC Regional\nHere's the perspective of John Kellogg of the running website LetsRun.com. He sees the Villanova teams on the bubble in their quest to qualify for the NCAA cross country national meet. Each team is sitting at #3 in the region, with only the top two team finishers getting an automatic slot at Nationals.\n2012 NCAA Regional Formchart – Mid-Atlantic Region\nby John Kellogg\nLetsRun.com Editor's note: LetsRun's coaching/stat guru John Kellogg has done what basically no one else in the world would have the expertise/patience to do – predict what his going to happen at Friday’s NCAA D1 cross country regionals. The top two teams in each region and top four individuals not on a team that qualifies will make it to NCAAs. Then 13 at large teams will be added in and two at large individuals. If someone wants to take the time to tell us who the at-large teams teams and individuals will be based on these previews, then please email us as we’d love to put that up later in the week. We imagine even the great John Kellogg is bound to have missed someone in these predictions, so if you have corrections, please email them to us.\nMr. Kellogg seemingly comes out of hibernation every few months to make predictions in the running world. He did Regional previews in 2011 and 2008 and in the spring of 2010, he said it wouldn’t surprise him if someone ran faster than 2:03:59 in Boston and then Geoffrey Mutai ran 2:03:02 and after the race everyone (except us) was saying the unthinkable had happened.\nMr. Kelllogg has scoured the season’s results – with the most weight given to recent (conference meet) performances – to take a guess at who should be the top 25 individuals and few teams in each of the nine regions. A lot of runners were considered for the top 25 and he’ll undoubtedly get quite a few wrong – someone just outside his top 25 has just as good a chance as someone who just made it – and there are always a couple of huge surprises. Team scores are generally based on the strengths of the top teams relative to each other (discounting many of the runners outside the top 25 or so from non-contending teams) and will probably end up being higher than he’s listed them due to displacement from those individuals. In short, this is a pretty good general idea of who should be in the hunt, but it’s still bound to get a bunch of it completely wrong. So basically this is all for S&Gs. We hop you enjoy them. For more on the logic behind the picks, please see last year’s instructions.\nBlue And White Golf Course, University Park, Pennsylvania\nGeorgetown’s Mark Dennin finished 6th in this region a year ago and would be the top returner, but he hasn’t raced since winning at Paul Short over a month ago. Directly behind him in 7th at last year’s Regional was teammate Andrew Springer, who has run well of late and came in 6th at Big East to lead the Hoyas. He should be challenged by Princeton’s recently-crowned HEPS champion Chris Bendtsen. Bendtsen has been running second for Princeton throughout most of the season, but his last effort made him a conference champion, so he gets the top spot in the formchart. Tiger teammate Alejandro Arroyo-Yamin has actually had the best overall season of anyone in the field, including a 31st place at Wisconsin, best of the region’s runners in that massive race. Duquesne’s Jim Spisak was on fire until recently, with 3rd at Paul Short and 13th at Pre-Nationals, but then slipped back to 22nd at Atlantic 10. That conference meet was won by 8:36.10 steepler and 1st team All-American Travis Mahoney (Temple) ahead of LaSalle’s Alfredo Santana, who has put up some pretty impressive results of his own this fall. Santana was 14th in the region last year and is the 3rd returner (minus Dennin).\nChris Bendtsen (Princeton)\nAndrew Springer (Georgetown)\nAlejandro Arroyo-Yamin (Princeton)\nTravis Mahoney (Temple)\nBen Furcht (Georgetown)\nTyler Udland (Princeton)\nAlfredo Santana (LaSalle)\nDarren Fahy (Georgetown)\nSam McEntee (Villanova)\nJim Spisak (Duquesne)\nJonathan Vitez (Princeton)\nMathew Mildenhall (Villanova)\nEddie Owens (Princeton)\nMark Allen (American)\nMiles Schoedler (Georgetown)\nRobert Denault (Villanova)\nLogan Mohn (St. Joseph’s)\nTyler Mueller (Lehigh)\nMatt McDonald (Princeton)\nJordy Williamsz (Villanova)\nJohn Dugan (Bucknell)\nRyan Mahalsky (Lehigh)\nJonathan Mazzio (St. Joseph’s)\nRobby Creese (Penn State)\nJohn Murray (Georgetown)\nPrinceton, surprised big-time by a monster race from conference rivals Columbia at Wisconsin, went into the Ivy League meet as underdogs for the first time in a long time, but galloped to the top two individual spots and placed 4 in the top 7 on their home course to emerge with a convincing 26-58 victory over the Lions. Princeton also beat Georgetown head-to-head very early in the season. Though early September meets don’t matter in November, the 13th-ranked Tigers should still be the favorites here if they run on a par with their HEPS race. Villanova got the best of Georgetown at Pre-Nationals by a scant 13 points and one team spot, but the Wildcats were relegated to 5th at Big East, where the Hoyas came up for second. Ergo, the pre-meet edge goes to Georgetown for the 2nd auto spot.\nBig East champ Emily Lipari (Villanova) gets the nod as the favorite in the region, also having the most impressive regular season result of any of the field’s runners – a 7th place at Pre-Nationals. Meghan McGlinchey of LaSalle raced to 33rd at Wisconsin and a runner-up finish at Atlantic 10. Assuming she runs up to expectations here, there’s a small chance she could be the only individual NCAA qualifier to finish in the top 10 in the meet. Most of the other top spots stand to be occupied by runners from the four currently ranked or formerly ranked teams in the region. One spot behind McGlinchey at Wisco was Penn State’s Rebekka Simko, who continued her strong running with 5th place at Big Ten. West Virginia has been without injured XC All-American Kaitlyn Gillespie all season, but the Mountaineers regained 2011 10k All-American Sarah-Anne Brault just in time for the Big 12 meet. Brault is actually the top returner in the region (not counting Gillespie) and raced to 10th at Big 12 – perhaps not strong enough to win the Regional but an impressive rust buster nonetheless, with the likes of Iowa State, Oklahoma State and Texas in the conference.\nEmily Lipari (Villanova)\nMeghan McGlinchey (LaSalle)\nRebekka Simko (Penn State)\nNicky Akande (Villanova)\nMadeline Chambers (Georgetown)\nKatrina Coogan (Georgetown)\nSarah-Anne Brault (West Virginia)\nTori Perri (Penn State)\nAnnamarie Maag (Georgetown)\nBrooklyne Ridder (Penn State)\nSummer Cook (Villanova)\nGreta Feldman (Princeton)\nKelly Williams (West Virginia)\nSamantha Nadel (Georgetown)\nKirsten Kasper (Georgetown)\nAnnie-Norah Beveridge (Navy)\nEmily Jones (Georgetown)\nSarah Martinelli (West Virginia)\nRachael Schneider (Georgetown)\nAbby Levene (Princeton)\nJordan Hamric (West Virginia)\nJackie Nicholas (Princeton)\nBrigid Byrne (Navy)\nMegan Venables (Villanova)\nNatalie Bower (Penn State)\nLast fall, Georgetown pulled off a minor upset over a few teams to win the national championship, with Villanova in 3rd, West Virginia 8th and Penn State 13th. This made the Mid-Atlantic, geographically the smallest region, the strongest one in the country on race day. It’s a competitive region for sure. G’Town is currently ranked 9th in the coaches poll and, having won their conference, the Hoyas do look to be the top team in the region, but winning it won’t be a gimme. Villanova is extremely good at 1 & 2 and still quite formidable through 3, but lack of depth prevented the Wildcats from rising higher than 4th at Big East, and they may face the same scenario here. Penn State and West Virginia may be behind ‘Nova after four runners are scored but have a chance to make up the gap by the time all five come in. The qualifying scenario is too complicated to figure until results from all the regions are in, but Villanova and West Virginia had better be aiming for top two. PSU almost certainly makes Nationals with a 3rd place team result, but there’s a chance they don’t if they’re any lower in the standings.\nRunning Times: Who Gets in at NCAA Cross Nationals?\nFor the first times in several years, Villanova's cross country teams have a lot to worry about as we approach the NCAA cross country regional weekend. Both the women's (#25) and men's (#35) teams are ranked well off the top end of the national polls and sit outside the top two teams in the Mid-Atlantic region. There is real doubt on the question of whether or not each will make it to the NCAA national meet in Louisville. Here is an excellent article from the folks at Running Times that describes the process of filling the list of teams (and at-large individuals) that will be invited to the national meet. Villanova's squads have some real work in front of them on Friday as Penn State hosts the regional.\nNCAA Nationals: Who Gets In?\nUnderstanding the selection process for cross country’s premier event\nBy John A. Kissane\nAs featured in the Web Only issue of Running Times Magazine\nOn Nov. 17, a total of 255 men and 255 women will compete in the NCAA Division I Cross Country Championships at E. P. “Tom” Sawyer State Park in Louisville, Ky. The breakdown goes like this: 31 seven-person teams (217 athletes) plus 38 individuals who are not members of any of those 31 teams.\nSo which teams make up that field? The easiest to understand is the automatic qualifying. The week before nationals, on Nov. 9, nine regional meets — the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, Midwest, Mountain, Northeast, South, South Central, Southeast and West — are held around the country. Each region automatically advances the top two teams (seven runners apiece), as well as the top four individual finishers not on qualifying teams. If you’re doing the math, you’ll see that 162 runners automatically make it to nationals based on the results of the regionals.\nThat’s the easy part, because there’s no analysis or decision-making involved. But filling out the fields with 13 more teams and two additional individuals is where things get dicey. This task falls to members of the NCAA Division I Track and Field Subcommittee, who will announce their selections the Sunday following regionals (i.e., Nov. 11) after they've analyzed regular season, conference and regional results and applied selection criteria to determine the at-large qualifiers.\n“It’s a really fair system, without any backroom politicking,” says Dartmouth men’s coach Barry Harwick, who also serves as President of the NCAA Division I Cross Country Executive Committee. “We’ll run our meet on Friday and the guys will be getting results from the other regions on the trip home, and by the time we get back we’ll pretty much know who the 13 at-large qualifiers are, before they’re announced. That shows the transparency of the system.”\nThe selection process is somewhat complicated, but here is a brief overview of how it works:\n• The subcommittee begins its work by placing the third- and fourth-place teams from each of the nine regions onto a board. Then they review the season performances of those 18 teams, to determine “wins” they might have against the 18 automatic qualifiers during a maximum of seven competition opportunities. The first at-large berth is awarded to the team with the highest win total. The subcommittee is required to review no fewer than 18 teams at all times during the selection process, so with the selection of each at-large team, the subcommittee immediately moves the next team from that same region (based on regional finish place) onto the board of 18 teams and again evaluates all 18 together. Each time an at-large selection is made, remaining teams having beaten the newly selected team are awarded a “win” to add to their point totals.\n• Teams must be considered for at-large berths in the order of their regional finish, and a fourth-place team may not be selected for an at-large berth ahead of a third-place team from the same region. Lower-finishing teams may be selected ahead of higher-finishing teams from different regions. (For instance, a team finishing fourth in the West region can get in ahead of a team finishing third in the Great Lakes region.)\nBut what happens if the fourth-place team from one region (say, team X) has more wins than the third-place team from the same region (team Y)? That’s where the so-called “push process” comes in. The subcommittee is obligated to extend at-large bids to both teams X and Y, so in effect team Y “pushes” team X into the national championship meet. Also, points (wins) will not be awarded to teams having defeated any team advancing into the championships by virtue of the push process.\nIf any two teams under consideration tied for total wins, the committee will look at head-to-head results. If head-to-head wins and losses are equal (e.g., each of the two teams has a record of 2-2 against the other), the committee may give greater consideration to the most recent competition. Furthermore, wins can only be accumulated against an opponent’s “A” team, which is considered to consist of four or more individuals who competed at the regional meet.\nRegular-season scheduling — and a team’s travel budget — can help a team that’s on the qualifying bubble. “Teams with the ability to travel outside their regions have some advantage, in that they’re able to compete against more of the highly ranked teams to get wins,” Harwick says. “So teams without the financial wherewithal to travel are stuck if they finish outside the top two at regionals.”\nIn addition to selecting 13 at-large teams, the subcommittee will also select two at-large individuals. These will be the two highest-finishing nonautomatic qualifiers from the nine regional meets. For instance, in 2011, Lauren Sara of Connecticut, who finished sixth at the Northeast regional, and Duke’s Madeline Morgan, sixth at the Southeast regional, received the women’s at-large individual bids.\nHere are the top four ranked teams in each regional, as of Nov. 5:\nMen Women\nGreat Lakes Great Lakes\n1. Wisconsin (6) 1. Michigan (6)\n2. Michigan (12) 2. Michigan State (11)\n3. Indiana (20) 3. Toledo (18)\n4. Notre Dame (28) 4. Notre Dame (23)\nMid-Atlantic Mid-Atlantic\n1. Princeton (13) 1. Georgetown (9)\n2. Georgetown (24) 2. Penn State (15)\n3. Villanova (NR) 3. Villanova (25)\n4. Penn State (NR) 4. West Virginia (NR)\nMidwest Midwest\n1. Oklahoma State (1) 1. Iowa State (2)\n2. Oklahoma (8) 2. Oklahhoma State (21)\n3. Tulsa (19) 3. Minnesota (28)\n4. Illinois (NR) 4. Tulsa (NR)\nMountain Mountain\n1. Colorado (2) 1. Weber State (13)\n2. BYU (7) 2. New Mexico (17)\n3. New Mexico (16) 3. Colorado (24)\n4. Northern Arizona (18) 4. Colorado State (NR)\nNortheast Northeast\n1. Iona (4) 1. Cornell (8)\n2. Syracuse (14) 2. Connecticut (16)\n3. Columbia (22) 3. Providence (20)\n4. Providence (NR) 4. Boston College (27)\nSouth South\n1. Florida State (23) 1. Florida State (1)\n2. Georgia (26) 2. Florida (14)\n3. Florida (NR) 3. Vanderbilt (NR)\n4. E. Tennessee State (NR) 4. Mississippi (NR)\nSouth Central South Central\n1. Texas (5) 1. Arkansas (12)\n2. Arkansas (10) 2. Texas (22)\n3. Texas A&M (29) 3. SMU (NR)\n4. McNeese State (NR) 4. LSU (NR)\nSoutheast Southeast\n1. Eastern Kentucky (15) 1. Duke (10)\n2. Virginia Tech (17) 2. William & Mary (19)\n3. Virginia (21) 3. NC State (30)\n4. NC State (NR) 4. Kentucky (NR)\nWest West\n1. Stanford (3) 1. Oregon (3)\n2. Portland (9) 2. Ariziona (4)\n3. Oregon (11) 3. Stanford (5)\n4. Arizona State (25) 4. Washington (7)\nNCAA Cross Country Mid-Atlantic Regional: Villanova Entries\nHere are the Villanova harriers who will compete at this weekend's cross country Mid-Atlantic regional. The top two team finishers in the Regionals are ensured a spot at the national meet, with several at-large teams selected after the automatic slots are filled. Twelve men and eleven women will compete at Penn State's University Park course. Only three of the twenty-three Wildcats are seniors.\nThe complete list of competitors for all teams is HERE.\nVillanova Men\nBasili, Brian 549 SO\nDenault, Robert 550 FR\nKane, Matthew 551 SR\nMcEntee, Sam 552 SO\nMildenhall, Mathew 553 SR\nMorrin, Greg 554 JR\nO'Sullivan, Chris 555 SO\nPickhaver, John 556 JR\nSolis, Dusty 557 SO\nTrainer, Thomas 558 FR\nTully, Alex 559 JR\nWilliamsz, Jordy 560 FR\nVillanova Women\nAkande, Nicky 277 JR\nBungo, Caitlin 278 FR\nChapman, Courtney 279 SO\nCook, Summer 280 JR\nHarris, Sydney 281 FR\nLipari, Emily 282 JR\nMargey, Kelsey 283 FR\nSchappert, Stephanie 284 SO\nSmith, Meghan 285 SR\nTucker, Leanne 286 FR\nVenables, Megan 287 SO\nAdrian Blincoe Leaving Villanova for Kiwi Coaching Position\nFond Farewell & Best Wishes in New Zealand\nAll the best to Adrian Blincoe as he returns to his homeland in New Zealand. He is to assume a new position in Auckland with Sport New Zealand as a high performance ambassador and mentor. We're sure that he will provide athletes there with the level of excellence he displayed at Villanova since his arrival over a decade ago. His 13 year stay at Villanova witnessed glory as both an athlete (he won 3 NCAA championships, set a school record, and was a 7-time All American) and as a coach (he recruited doggedly in Australia and New Zealand, helping bring several top-notch runners to Villanova -- think Gibney, Mildenhall, Mackenzie, Beamish, McEntee, Williamsz, Guest, Jenkin, and so on). We at Villanova Running selected him the Villanova male runner of the decade for the 2000s (click HERE to re-visit that selection). In doing so, we highlighted his tremendous accomplishments as a student-athlete at Villanova:\nAdrian Blincoe was a three-time NCAA champion and seven-time All American. He was the 2002 NCAA indoor champion at 3000 meters, and was NCAA runner-up at that distance in 2003. He also anchored two NCAA champion DMR teams (in 2002 and 2003). Blincoe also holds two school records: his 7:47.50 3000 meter time, achieved in Boston on January 27, 2002, erased Sydney Maree's previous mark. Moreover, Blincoe anchored the Villanova school record DMR team. While at Villanova he broke the 4:00 mile with his 3:58.19 indoors at the Armory on February 9, 2002. His other honors include anchoring the 2001 Penn Relays DMR Championship of America winner, 8 Big East titles, and a top-10 finish at the NCAA cross country nationals in 2000. In 2002 Blincoe was an NCAA finalist at 1500 meters outdoors (finishing 5th). In cross, Blincoe was the 2001 NCAA regional champion, finished 2nd in 2002, and was 3rd in 2000. He was runner-up at the 2001 Paul Short Invitational.\nHis accomplishments as a coach are obvious. During his 10-year tenure as assistant coach under Marcus O'Sullivan, Villanova produced a half dozen sub-4:00 milers, an NCAA individual champion over 5000 meters, a top-10 all-time NCAA 1500 meter man, a score of all-american certificates, numerous Penn Relay DMR wheels -- the list goes on. He brought glory to the Villanova program when he set a new New Zealand national record in the 5000 meters (13:10.19), when he represented his country on two Olympic teams, and multiple World Championship and Commonwealth Games squads.\nVillanova gave back to Blincoe, as well. In addition to the first class education he received and the degree that he earned, Adrian met his future bride, Kelly Coyle, at Villanova. Together with their daughter Ella they make the trek to New Zealand, where Adrian will continue his professional running career and help develop the next generation of New Zealand athletes. Best wishes for continued professional success.\nHere is the article detailing Blincoe's new responsibilities:\nAthletics: Blincoe lured home to work with youth\nFriday Nov 2, 2012\nOlympian and New Zealand 5000m record holder Adrian Blincoe is helping identify and develop New Zealand's future talent in a new job at High Performance Sport New Zealand.\nIn his role as high performance athlete development advisor, Blincoe will work with targeted national sport organisations to put systems in place to identify and develop athletes so they can succeed at international level.\nHPSNZ chief executive Alex Baumann said the overarching goal is to get more talented athletes into our high performance system so New Zealand can continue to succeed internationally.\n\"New Zealand has to compete on the world stage with much larger countries, whose sheer size means they will always have access to a number of top athletes,\" Baumann said. \"As a smaller country, we need to take a more systematic approach to finding and developing our athletes, and Adrian's role will be crucial to that.\"\nBlincoe has spent the past 12 years living in Philadelphia where he spent nine years running professionally for Team New Balance and seven years coaching at Villanova University.\nHe was assistant coach of track and field and cross country at Villanova University and focused on identifying and developing young talent.\nBlincoe competed for New Zealand at Olympic Games, Commonwealth Games and world championships and holds the national record in the 5000m (13:10.19). He was a finalist at the 2006 and 2010 Commonwealth Games, and competed in the 5000m at the Beijing Olympics. An ankle injury prevented him from competing at the London Olympics.\n\"I'm very passionate about helping athletes develop their potential, and I am excited about the opportunity to do this here in New Zealand,\" said Blincoe, who started work in the job on October 15. \"I'll be working with targeted sports on both specific initiatives and their overall athlete development systems so we can find individuals who may one day stand on the podium for New Zealand.\"\nSearch Villanova Running\nNorth Wales Running Company\nMike McIntosh's New Book\nwith 4X Gold Medalist\nRunningWorks XC Camp\nRunMoreMiles.com\nFollow @RunNova\nRecruiting Target Brent Kennedy Makes Foot Locker ...\nWilmington Tatnall's Julie Williams Commits to Vil...\nNovember 28th a Good Day for Villanova Track:Happy...\nVillanova Back in the Pack at NCAA Cross Nationals...\nNicky Akande is Mid-Atlantic Region Athlete of the...\nOverview of Villanova Cross Country in the NCAA Ch...\nVic Zwolak: Villanova's Only Individual Male XC Ch...\nVillanova Women Receive At-Large Invite to XC Nati...\nNova Men Qualify for Cross Nationals with 2nd at X...\nVillanova's Nicky Akande Takes NCAA Regional Crown...\nPA State XC Runner-Up Brent Kennedy Eyeing Villano...\nReid, Koons in Elite Field for Rothman Institute 8...\nJohn Kellogg Handicaps the Mid-Atlantic XC Regiona...\nRunning Times: Who Gets in at NCAA Cross Nationals...\nNCAA Cross Country Mid-Atlantic Regional: Villanov...\nAdrian Blincoe Leaving Villanova for Kiwi Coaching...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1121960"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7423097491264343,"wiki_prob":0.7423097491264343,"text":"Ron Brown was born in Gary, Indiana, the first of eight children, to Marzette and Myra Brown on May 15, 1956. When he was a senior in high school, he became blind after he was shot on his way home from a basketball game. At the time he knew nothing about blindness and was overwhelmed by the feeling that his entire life had been radically changed in an instant. One of the first painful lessons he learned was that many of his friends could not deal with his blindness and stayed away from him. Luckily he began to make new friends, members of the National Federation of the Blind. They became inspiring role models for Ron, teaching him that it was respectable to be blind and that he could continue to strive for the goals he had set himself.\nI have been an advocate for blind people for more than twenty-five years, and with every passing year my commitment to serving the blind of this nation increases. My life indeed changed the night I became blind, but with the perspective I now have, I must say that it was for the better.\nArmed with this newfound freedom, Ron graduated from Ball State University with a bachelor of science degree in health science. He then went to work at Tradewinds Rehabilitation Center in Indiana, where he met his wife Jean, who was on the staff. Eventually he was offered a job in the Business Enterprise Program. He had always wanted to own his own business, and this gave him the opportunity to do so. He has now been in business for himself for twenty years.\nRecently Ron returned to school and earned a master's degree in educational psychology with a certification in orientation and mobility from Louisiana Tech University. He now owns a second business, teaching cane travel to blind people in the state of Indiana.\nAs Ron Brown has developed and matured in his personal life, his commitment to and service in the National Federation of the Blind have deepened as well. In the early years he was a chapter president and was then elected to the NFB of Indiana's board of directors. He was first elected president of the affiliate in 1996 and has been reelected every two years since. In 2001 he was elected to serve on the NFB board of directors.\nLooking back, Ron Brown says, \"Becoming a member of the national board is the fulfillment of a life dream. I have been an advocate for blind people for more than twenty-five years, and with every passing year my commitment to serving the blind of this nation increases. My life indeed changed the night I became blind, but with the perspective I now have, I must say that it was for the better.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1119124"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6906052827835083,"wiki_prob":0.6906052827835083,"text":"Kawasaki set for a KO\nKawasaki are on the verge of pulling out of the World MotoGP Championship.\nBy Dave Fern / Published 2nd January 2009\nKawasaki pit girls\nI heard that it is all up in the air whether they run or not, but nothing has been confirmed\nThe Japanese concern are understood to have told their two contracted riders John Hopkins and Marco Melandri of their intentions.\nThe team was tight-lipped last night, but a statement regarding their future in the sport’s elite series is expected next week.\nHopkins – currently recovering from surgery to remove plates from an injured leg – says that he has had phone calls from team management highlighting the problem.\n“I heard that it is all up in the air whether they run or not, but nothing has been confirmed,” said the 25-year-old American who finished 16th in last season’s rankings.\nKawasaki had begun their preparations for the 2009 campaign with an intensive test session in Australia in November as part of a determined effort to restore fortunes after a tough time.\nThe team had finished fifth, and last, in last season’s constructors’ standings, with Hopkins having a best result of fifth in Portugal.\nThese poor results, coupled with the global economic downfall that has already seen Honda withdraw from F1 Grand Prix and both Suzuki and Subaru announce their decisions to quit the World Rally Championship, now look to have cost the MotoGP series one of its key teams.\nIf Kawasaki pull the plug, the MotoGP championship looks likely to go ahead with only 17 riders – though the saving grace for the series is the continued participation of six-times champion Valentino Rossi, riding Yamaha.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line371052"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6484512686729431,"wiki_prob":0.3515487313270569,"text":"CSBA.org > Services > Governance Technology >\nSearch the United States Code, Title 20 for:\nenter words or policy/code numbers\nSearch which fields?\ntext code\nMultiple-word search\nUse 'and' between words – returned documents will contain all included words\nUse 'or' between words – returned documents will contain one but not necessarily all of the included words\nLegal Resources | United States Code, Title 20 | 6383\nPart B - Student Reading Skills Improvement Grants. Subpart 4 - Improving Literacy Through School Libraries. Improving literacy through school libraries.\n(a) Purposes\nThe purpose of this subpart is to improve literacy skills and academic achievement of students by providing students with increased access to up-to-date school library materials, a well-equipped, technologically advanced school library media center, and well-trained, professionally certified school library media specialists.\n(b) Reservation From the funds appropriated under section 6302(b)(4) of this title for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve -\n(1) one-half of 1 percent to award assistance under this section to the Bureau of Indian Affairs to carry out activities consistent with the purpose of this subpart; and\n(2) one-half of 1 percent to award assistance under this section to the outlying areas according to their respective needs for assistance under this subpart.\n(c) Grants\n(1) Competitive grants to eligible local educational agencies\nIf the amount of funds appropriated under section 6302(b)(4) of this title for a fiscal year is less than $100,000,000, then the Secretary shall award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible local educational agencies under subsection (e) of this section.\n(2) Formula grants to States\nIf the amount of funds appropriated under section 6302(b)(4) of this title for a fiscal year equals or exceeds $100,000,000, then the Secretary shall award grants to State educational agencies from allotments under subsection (d) of this section.\n(3) Definition of eligible local educational agency\nIn this section the term \"eligible local educational agency\" means -\n(A) in the case of a local educational agency receiving assistance made available under paragraph (1), a local educational agency in which 20 percent of the students served by the local educational agency are from families with incomes below the poverty line; and\n(B) in the case of a local educational agency receiving assistance from State allocations made available under paragraph (2), a local educational agency in which -\n(i) 15 percent of the students who are served by the local educational agency are from such families; or\n(ii) the percentage of students from such families who are served by the local educational agency is greater than the statewide percentage of children from such families.\n(d) State grants\n(1) Allotments From funds made available under subsection (c)(2) of this section and not reserved under subsections (b) and (j) of this section for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall allot to each State educational agency having an application approved under subsection (f)(1) of this section an amount that bears the same relation to the funds as the amount the State educational agency received under part A of this subchapter for the preceding fiscal year bears to the amount all such State educational agencies received under part A of this subchapter for the preceding fiscal year, to increase literacy and reading skills by improving school libraries.\nEach State educational agency receiving an allotment under paragraph (1) for a fiscal year -\n(A) may reserve not more than 3 percent of the allotted funds to provide technical assistance, disseminate information about school library media programs that are effective and based on scientifically based research, and pay administrative costs related to activities under this section; and\n(B) shall use the allotted funds that remain after making the reservation under subparagraph (A) to award grants, for a period of 1 year, on a competitive basis, to eligible local educational agencies in the State that have an application approved under subsection (f)(2) of this section for activities described in subsection (g) of this section.\n(3) Reallotment\nIf a State educational agency does not apply for an allotment under this section for any fiscal year, or if the State educational agency's application is not approved, the Secretary shall reallot the amount of the State educational agency's allotment to the remaining State educational agencies in accordance with paragraph (1).\n(e) Direct competitive grants to eligible local educational agencies\n(1) In general From amounts made available under subsection (c)(1) of this section and not reserved under subsections (b) and (j) of this section for a fiscal year, the Secretary shall award grants, on a competitive basis, to eligible local educational agencies that have applications approved under subsection (f)(2) of this section for activities described in subsection (g) of this section.\n(2) Duration\nThe Secretary shall award grants under this subsection for a period of 1 year.\n(3) Distribution\nThe Secretary shall ensure that grants under this subsection are equitably distributed among the different geographic regions of the United States, and among local educational agencies serving urban and rural areas.\n(f) Applications\n(1) State educational agency\nEach State educational agency desiring assistance under this section shall submit to the Secretary an application at such time, in such manner, and containing such information as the Secretary shall require. The application shall contain a description of -\n(A) how the State educational agency will assist eligible local educational agencies in meeting the requirements of this section and in using scientifically based research to implement effective school library media programs; and\n(B) the standards and techniques the State educational agency will use to evaluate the quality and impact of activities carried out under this section by eligible local educational agencies to determine the need for technical assistance and whether to continue to provide additional funding to the agencies under this section.\n(2) Eligible local educational agency\nEach eligible local educational agency desiring assistance under this section shall submit to the Secretary or State educational agency, as appropriate, an application at such time, in such manner, and containing such information as the Secretary or State educational agency, respectively, shall require. The application shall contain a description of -\n(A) a needs assessment relating to the need for school library media improvement, based on the age and condition of school library media resources, including book collections, access of school library media centers to advanced technology, and the availability of well-trained, professionally certified school library media specialists, in schools served by the eligible local educational agency;\n(B) the manner in which the eligible local educational agency will use the funds made available through the grant to carry out the activities described in subsection (g) of this section;\n(C) how the eligible local educational agency will extensively involve school library media specialists, teachers, administrators, and parents in the activities assisted under this section, and the manner in which the eligible local educational agency will carry out the activities described in subsection (g) of this section using programs and materials that are grounded in scientifically based research;\n(D) the manner in which the eligible local educational agency will effectively coordinate the funds and activities provided under this section with Federal, State, and local funds and activities under this subpart and other literacy, library, technology, and professional development funds and activities; and\n(E) the manner in which the eligible local educational agency will collect and analyze data on the quality and impact of activities carried out under this section by schools served by the eligible local educational agency.\n(g) Local activities Funds under this section may be used to -\n(1) acquire up-to-date school library media resources, including books;\n(2) acquire and use advanced technology, incorporated into the curricula of the school, to develop and enhance the information literacy, information retrieval, and critical thinking skills of students;\n(3) facilitate Internet links and other resource-sharing networks among schools and school library media centers, and public and academic libraries, where possible;\n(4) provide professional development described in section 6372(d)(2) of this title for school library media specialists, and activities that foster increased collaboration between school library media specialists, teachers, and administrators; and\n(5) provide students with access to school libraries during nonschool hours, including the hours before and after school, during weekends, and during summer vacation periods.\n(h) Accountability and reporting\n(1) Local reports\nEach eligible local educational agency that receives funds under this section for a fiscal year shall report to the Secretary or State educational agency, as appropriate, on how the funding was used and the extent to which the availability of, the access to, and the use of, up-to-date school library media resources in the elementary schools and secondary schools served by the eligible local educational agency was increased.\n(2) State report\nEach State educational agency that receives funds under this section shall compile the reports received under paragraph (1) and submit the compiled reports to the Secretary.\n(i) Supplement, not supplant Funds made available under this section shall be used to supplement, and not supplant, other Federal, State, and local funds expended to carry out activities relating to library, technology, or professional development activities.\n(j) National activities\n(1) Evaluations From the funds appropriated under section 6302(b)(4) of this title for each fiscal year, the Secretary shall reserve not more than 1 percent for annual, independent, national evaluations of the activities assisted under this section and their impact on improving the reading skills of students. The evaluations shall be conducted not later than 3 years after January 8, 2002, and biennially thereafter.\n(2) Report to Congress\nThe Secretary shall transmit the State reports received under subsection (h)(2) of this section and the evaluations conducted under paragraph (1) to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions of the Senate and the Committee on Education and the Workforce of the House of Representatives.\n(Pub. L. 89-10, title I, Sec. 1251, as added Pub. L. 107-110, title I, Sec. 101, Jan. 8, 2002, 115 Stat. 1567.)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line355999"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9529229402542114,"wiki_prob":0.9529229402542114,"text":"Radical Islamism and Jihad (08 Nov 2018 NewAgeIslam.Com)\n200 Mass Graves in Iraq: A ‘Legacy of Terror’\nBy Falih Hassan and Rod Nordland\nOver 200 mass graves holding as many as 12,000 bodies have been found in areas of Iraq once controlled by the Islamic State, the United Nations said on Tuesday. The findings were highlighted in a joint report released by the United Nations mission to Iraq and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, which called the sites a “legacy of terror.”\nWhere Are The Graves, And What Are They Like?\nMost are in the four provinces of northern and western Iraq where the Islamic State’s so-called caliphate acted as the government: Anbar, Kirkuk, Salahuddin and Nineveh, which includes Mosul, the largest city once controlled by the extremists. They range from small burial sites with eight bodies, to massive pits believed to hold thousands. The biggest is believed to be the Khasfa Sinkhole near Mosul.\n“I can only say that the number of the victims of the mass graves is much bigger than the numbers in the report,” said Dhia Kareem, head of the Mass Graves Directorate in Iraq. He said eyewitnesses estimated there were 6,000 bodies in the Khasfa Sinkhole.\n“ISIL’s horrific crimes in Iraq have left the headlines, but the trauma of the victims’ families endures, with thousands of women, men and children still unaccounted for,” Michelle Bachelet, the United Nations human rights commissioner, said, referring to the Islamic State. “These graves contain the remains of those mercilessly killed for not conforming to ISIL’s twisted ideology and rule.”\nWhy Is This Discovery Important?\nWhile the extremists made no secret of their systematic violence, there has been little accountability for what they did. During its three-year rule, the Islamic State terrorized local residents, often releasing videos of executions of people targeted for government ties, sexual orientation and more. The militants also went after members of ethnic and religious minorities, including Christians and Yazidis.\nIn the Yazidi homeland of Sinjar, 69 mass graves have been identified, Iraqi officials said.\nBut so far, few criminal investigations have been conducted. The grave sites could provide valuable forensic evidence, but the scale of the job has made collections daunting. The deaths occurred in what the United Nations has labelled systematic and widespread violence, a campaign that “may amount to war crimes, crimes against humanity, and possible genocide.”\nWhat about the Families of the Victims?\nThe United Nations said it was likely that more mass graves would be discovered, which will only worsen the situation, especially for families of victims. The Iraqi authorities have so far exhumed only 1,258 bodies from 28 sites, the United Nations said, because of a lack of government resources at the Mass Graves Directorate. The United Nations urged officials to identify the victims quickly and to return the bodies to relatives. But it also recognized that the Iraqi authorities need more resources to make that happen, while preserving evidence of crimes, and it urged the international community to help.\nFatin Al-Hilfi, a member of Iraq’s human rights commission, praised the United Nations report for recognizing “the negligence of the government toward the mass graves team and the lack of logistical support.”\nThe report also noted that Iraqi bureaucracy made it difficult for people to find missing relatives because information was not held in a centralized way. “Their families have the right to know what happened to their loved ones,” Ms. Bachelet said.\nInvestigators recommended setting up a nationwide databank, similar to those set up in Bosnia and Rwanda.\nDo The Graves Add To What Is Known About The Scope Of ISIS Killings In Iraq?\nIt’s too early to say. The United Nations has estimated that 30,000 civilians were killed by the Islamic State from 2014 to 2017 — “a number that should be considered an absolute minimum.” But many of those victims were found and buried by their families. That so many thousands are in the 202 mass graves identified so far is shocking — and only 28 of those graves have been thoroughly exhumed.\nFalih Hassan reported from Baghdad, and Rod Nordland from Kabul, Afghanistan.\nSource: nytimes.com/2018/11/06/world/middleeast/iraq-isis-mass-graves.html?\nURL: http://www.newageislam.com/radical-islamism-and-jihad/falih-hassan-and-rod-nordland/200-mass-graves-in-iraq--a-‘legacy-of-terror’/d/116822","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1737951"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.63656085729599,"wiki_prob":0.36343914270401,"text":"Hornet City Guides\nThe Hornet Guide to Gay Beijing\nWritten by Charles Thompson-Wang on November 14, 2018\nThis post is also available in: Español Français Português ไทย Українська 繁體中文\nChina opened its doors to tourists in 1978 and finally decriminalized homosexuality in 1997. While China still needs to work on improving their human rights record, it’s quickly adopting modern ideas. The country’s been revitalized in the past two decades.\nThe capital city, Beijing, has over a thousand years of culture and history. But it’s not mired in its past — it’s a beautifully modern city. From famous sites to authentic Chinese cuisine and fantastic nightlife, there’s plenty to explore and do in gay Beijing!\nBefore your trip to gay Beijing\nChinese Embassy In Washington D.C.\nBefore you leave, you’ll need to get a travel visa. If your city has a Chinese Consulate, it’s really easy — you can get a visa in one day! If you don’t have a consulate near you, there are services online to help with the process, but they generally charge extra fees. The Chinese Embassy‘s website has additional details on how to get your travel visa hassle free — and remember, tourists need an “L” visa.\nBe warned — China keeps a firm grip on its media outlets. A number of social media sites like Facebook are also blocked. So, if you use Facebook or another similar site to communicate with friends, you’ll need to get a Virtual Private Network (VPN). Basically, it’s a little bit of software that convinces websites you’re browsing from a different country. There are a number of options, so do a bit of research to see which VPN service is right for you.\nMandarin is the official language in China, and it’s the dialect regularly spoken in Beijing. The Hornet Mandarin Phrasebook is a handy guide to some commonly used Mandarin phrases, along with pronunciation guides.\nThe Ring Roads of Beijing\nBeijing’s infrastructure is set up in a “Ring Road” system. Currently, there are six ring roads in the city; Ring Road One is the innermost district. There are a number of famous sites in this area, like Tiananmen Square, so you’ll definitely want to check this neighborhood out.\nRing Road Two consists of western hotels, fine dining and a thriving nightlife. The majority of gay Beijing bars in this neighborhood, so it’s easy to barhop. If you want the authentic Beijing experience, visit Ring Road Three and check out local shops and restaurants. And if you want to relive the 2008 Summer Olympics, head to Ring Road Five. That’s where the Olympic stadiums are, like the Aquatics Stadium (better known as the Water Cube).\nHow to get around in Beijing\nTaxi cabs are everywhere in Beijing — and they’re surprisingly inexpensive. However, the drivers don’t speak English and typically only accept cash for fares, unless you have the WeChat Wallet app.\nUber’s also available in China — but not with you normal Uber app. You’ll need to download the Uber China app to get around. It’s only available in Mandarin, though, and you’ll need to sign up with WeChat Wallet or Alipay to pay for your rides.\nGiven the difficulty of Uber China for foreign visitors, we highly recommend you download the Didi Chuxing app instead. Didi Chuxing (or simply “Didi” if you’re local) works just like Uber. But thankfully, Didi also offers an English-language interface. It’s easy to communicate with your driver, thanks to built-in translation services. And, best of all, Didi accepts major international credit cards!\nIf you don’t want to travel by cab, Bejing’s public transportation system is very easy to use. There are a total of 19 Beijing subway lines, and it’s the most convenient way to get around during rush hour.\nThe public bus is also an easy way to travel. However, there’s also an alternate bus line run by the Beijing Public Transport Holdings, Ltd. (“BPT”). BPT is the main bus and trolley operator in the city, with almost 28,000 buses. And there’s a third option from the Beijing Yuntong Bus Company. Yuntong buses have the prefix “运通” before the route number. Yuntong bus routes are different from BPT bus routes; Beijing Bus 110 and 运通110 won’t take you to the same place. However, the fares are the same for both Yuntong and BPT buses.\nPlaces to shop in Beijing\nWangfujing Shopping District\nIf you like to haggle, Beijing has several great shopping areas. The HongQiao Pearl Market is a wholesale market in the Dongcheng District. While it’s famous for pearls and jewlery, this market has a vast selection of electronics, apparel and accessories. You can find designer knock-offs here — just make sure you haggle to get a reasonable price!\nThe Wangfujing Shopping Street is Beijing’s oldest shopping district. It’s got huge upscale shopping malls at each end of the street. The street itself is a shopper’s paradise with shops selling paintings and traditional Chinese art and crafts. There are also trendy boutiques and upscale chain stores. And if you get hungry, it’s a perfect place — you can find everything from western food to authentic Chinese cuisine.\nQianmen Street is another place to soak up the local experience. While there aren’t any significant shopping malls on Qianmen Street, there’s scores of little shops where you can find clothes, shoes, traditional food and more.\nThe Place, an over-the-top shopping mall in the Chaoyang District, is a fun place to window shop and people watch. And when you get sick of that, just look up — there’s a magnificent screen in the ceiling! This mall has high-end boutiques, local stores, fine dining and great entertainment. No wonder it attracts thousands of visitors daily.\nUnique Beijing sites\nWorld Park Beijing\nThere are tons of famous sites in and around Beijing, like the Forbidden City, Tiananmen Square and the Great Wall. But since you already know about those, here are a few unique sites you’ll want to make sure to visit. And since they’re relatively unknown, they won’t be packed with tourists — bonus!\nThe World Park, 10 miles from downtown Beijing and Tiananmen Square, gives visitors a chance to see more than 100 of the planet’s famous landmarks — including the Great Pyramids, the Eiffel Tower, and the Statue of Liberty — all in miniature. You can explore the whole world in one place. The park’s monorail connects you to all five continents. Indeed, it’s a small world after all.\nWatermelon Museum\nWho doesn’t like watermelon? But if you really like watermelon, you’ll want to check out the China Watermelon Museum. The museum has plenty of fun facts and information about the mouthwatering fruit. Inside they have a variety of different wax melons on display, but outside, you can see actual melons growing!\nThe Dongyue Temple is unlike anything you’ve ever seen. Visitors walk through seventy-six different departments of the afterlife — sort of a Chinese version of Dante’s Inferno. Each of the departments tells the story of ancient Chinese underworld folklore. From the “Unjust Death Department” to the “Department of Paying Back Evil with Evil,” each room depicts a torture scene with statues in different grotesque poses.\nCentral Perk Cafe\nAre you a huge fan of the ’90s sitcom Friends? Du Xin, a Chinese entrepreneur, loves the show so much he opened his own version of Central Perk. Xin duplicated the whole interior decor from the show — the cozy orange coach, the red brick wall, the iconic logo. Come here to sip cheap coffee and watch Friends re-runs with your real friends.\nGay Beijing nightlife\nDestination Club\nGay bars act as a safe place for guys to meet in China. While homosexuality is decriminalized, it’s still stigmatized and the LGBTQ community ends up being very discreet.\nGay Beijing does have a thriving nightlife, however. Destination Club, in a massive two-storey building, is one of the most popular gay spots. If you smoke, you can mingle on the front patio. Once you enter the building, there are several rooms to explore. And if you just want a quiet night chatting with friends, there are open bars for socializing. Destination Club also hosts massive dance parties with world-famous DJs spinning.\nKai Club in the Chaoyang District is a cozy spot. While it’s tiny and intimate, the drinks are cheap, making Kai Club a great place to start your night. On the other hand, if you prefer elegance, Alfa is a fun place to dance and chat. At Alfa, you can always expect an international and mixed crowd. It’s an excellent place to jumpstart your weekend fun.\nPop Up Beijing\nPop-Up Beijing is the new, hip spot. It recently opened, and it’s the perfect place for an evening of vintage cinema, wine tasting and other fun special events. Pop-Up Beijing is located in the heart of Sanlitun, a gay-owned store selling homeware and antiques. The onsite bar has an excellent wine menu; happy hour is from 5-7 p.m. On Thursday nights, Pop-Up Beijing hosts an LGBTQ family night.\nFeature image by swissmediavision via iStockphoto.com\nAsia China traveling tips","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1059170"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7106415033340454,"wiki_prob":0.7106415033340454,"text":"International Young Ambassador of the 21st Century:\nShane continues to pick up the Young Ambassador titles\nBy Mairead O'Shea\nYoung Oran man Shane O'Brien has won the prestigious title of Lions International Young Ambassador of the 21st Century.\nThe eighteen-year-old was representing Roscommon Leo Club in the final of the British Isles and Ireland category of the competition. Shane won the nationwide event in Ireland at the end of January and he went on to compete in England last week. He beat off stiff competition from eleven other finalists from England, Scotland and Wales to be crowned the overall winner. He will now go forward to the European stage of the Young Ambassador competition, which takes place in Bologna, Italy this November.\nShane received the honour for his work on the 4U youth magazine, the 4U radio show on Ros F.M. and a plethora of other community and civic projects. Interviews took place on Saturday and a gala ball took place on Saturday night in Birmingham with the presentations to winners on Sunday morning.\nA Leaving Cert student at Roscommon CBS, Shane is a son of Michéal and Rita O'Brien from Oran. He has worked on the 4U magazine since 2007. The quarterly publication sees 3,000 copies distributed to secondary schools throughout the county.\nSpeaking to the Roscommon Herald, a clearly delighted Shane said: \"I was fairly confident going into the competition because our magazine has been a great success, it's all about promoting positive mental health and suicide awareness amongst teenagers. I think our project probably had more room for expansion than some of the others as the 4U magazine circulates to thousands of young people and schools all over the county. We are also hoping to circulate it in Athlone IT; it was a pilot project for Roscommon but I think the judges saw the nationwide potential of the magazine and it was so unique and innovative.\"\nShane also picked up a cheque for £1,500 as part of his overall prize. He plans to use the bursary award to help finance further publications of the 4U youth magazine will donate part of his winnings to flood victims in the area.\nA large crowd of family, friends and members of the Lions and Leo Club travelled to England at the weekend to support Shane. Scramogue natives, Lena O' Malley and Mick Lyons of the Roscommon Association in Birmingham also turned out in support. Shane was accompanied by his parents Michéal and Rita, friends, fellow Leo Club members, Leo Club leaders Eileen Hester, Kathleen Shanagher and Ciaran Mullooly and Lions Club President Gerry Finn.\nShane arrived into Dublin airport late on Sunday night but he was back in school in the CBS on Monday morning as he prepares for his Leaving Cert mocks later this week. A special gathering also took place in Gleeson's Townhouse in Roscommon town on Monday night for the homecoming celebrations.\nFRONT PAGE ARTICLE WITH THANKS TO ROSCOMMON HERALD.\nColáiste Éamann Rís Callain\nGive to the poor in handfuls.\nEdmund Rice","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1261539"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8812741637229919,"wiki_prob":0.8812741637229919,"text":"Submit to download\nBrisbane Airport (BNE), located just 12km from Brisbane’s CBD, has direct connections to 28 international destinations and operates 24 hours a day. Airtrain connects the airport’s modern domestic and international terminals to the Brisbane CBD via a high-frequency rail service, while the new Airport Link tunnel connects BNE to the CBD by road, reducing travel time by up to 88 per cent in peak hour (Source: AirportlinkM7, 2014).\nInternational and domestic passenger numbers through BNE increased by more than 480,000 in 2013-14 to exceed 21.8 million, representing a 2.2 per cent increase on the previous year. The fastest rate of growth in international numbers for several years was seen with an additional 267,700 international travellers translating to a 6 per cent increase on the previous year. Domestic passenger growth, while slower than in previous years, was still positive at 1.3 per cent, or more than 211,000 additional travellers (Source: Asia-Pacific Airports, 2014).\nBNE is owned and operated by Brisbane Airport Corporation Limited (BAC), a consortium of major Australian and international organisations (including Amsterdam Airport Schiphol and Port of Brisbane Corporation), and significant institutional investors. BAC’s close ties with Amsterdam Airport Schiphol, one of the world’s most modern and efficient airports, helps ensure world-class standards in owning, developing and operating a global airport city of the future. In 2014, BNE was ranked 23rd out of the world’s top 100 airports (Source: Skytrax World Airport Awards, 2014).\nIt also retained its ranking of third for global airports servicing from 20-30 million passengers, airports in Australia/Pacific and airport staff Australia/Pacific. BNE has also been ranked first in Australia for quality of service 10 years in a row (Source: Australian Competition and Consumer Commission Survey, 2014).\nBNE is a major commercial and industrial district, consisting of nine integrated precincts that together provide a 970ha, 24-hour global trade and commerce centre. BNE also serves an important role as a freight transport hub and in 2013/14, total international air cargo exports through BNE increased by 12 per cent.\nCovering 2700ha, BNE has the largest land area of any Australian capital city airport. With 1000ha of developable land, BNE offers significant future growth capacity. Under successive master plans, a vision is being realised to transform a city airport into an airport city, and to ensure that the significant growth this entails is achieved in a sustainable way.\nThe 2014 Master Plan has a 20-year planning horizon and will build on previous master plans to realise BAC’s vision of creating an employment and industry hub by structuring the airport’s significant land assets for a range of compatible uses.\nOver the next 10 years, BAC is investing more than $2.5 billion in airport infrastructure, including a new runway, redevelopment of the international terminal, multiple airfield upgrades, access road upgrades, and a number of new commercial buildings and facilities (Source: BAC, 2014).\nBAC recently opened the final piece of the domestic terminal upgrade, expanded the airport’s apron and taxiway network and started early works on the new parallel runway. All of this activity, along with numerous other developments, demonstrates that BNE is planning for the future, investing in Queensland, and contributing to one of Australia’s fastest-growing economies.\nTo discover more information, please visit the Brisbane Airport Corporation website, or contact the Investment Attraction Team.\nContact the Investment Attraction Team","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line775990"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.764900803565979,"wiki_prob":0.764900803565979,"text":"People v. T.R. (In re T.R.)\nNO. 4-19-0051 (Ill. App. Ct. 2019)\nPeoplev.T.R. (In re T.R.)\nAPPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FOURTH DISTRICTMay 28, 2019\nNO. 4-19-0051•2019 Ill. App. 4th 190051•\nDocket No. 4-19-0051\nIn re T.R., a Minor (The People of the State of Illinois, Petitioner-Appellee, v. T.R., Respondent-Appellant).\nCounsel on Appeal James E. Chadd, John M. McCarthy, and Salome Kiwara-Wilson, of State Appellate Defender's Office, of Springfield, for appellant. Don Knapp, State's Attorney, of Bloomington (Patrick Delfino, David J. Robinson, and Thomas R. Dodegge, of State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Office, of counsel), for the People.\nJUSTICE STEIGMANN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.\nIllinois Official Reports\nDecision Under Review\nAppeal from the Circuit Court of McLean County, No. 17-JD-78; the Hon. J. Brian Goldrick, Judge, presiding.\nRemanded with directions.\nCounsel on Appeal\nJames E. Chadd, John M. McCarthy, and Salome Kiwara-Wilson, of State Appellate Defender's Office, of Springfield, for appellant.\nDon Knapp, State's Attorney, of Bloomington (Patrick Delfino, David J. Robinson, and Thomas R. Dodegge, of State's Attorneys Appellate Prosecutor's Office, of counsel), for the People.\nJustices Knecht and Turner concurred in the judgment and opinion.\n¶ 1 In April 2017, the State filed a petition for adjudication of wardship, alleging respondent, T.R. (born April 3, 2001), committed criminal sexual assault (penis to vagina) (720 ILCS 5/11-1.20(a)(1) (West 2016)), criminal sexual abuse (in that he used force to touch the vagina of I.P.-V. (born March 31, 2002)) (id. § 11-1.50(a)(1)), and criminal sexual abuse (in that he committed an act of sexual penetration with I.P.-V. when she was between the ages of 13 and 17 years old and respondent was less than 5 years older than I.P.-V.) (id. § 11-1.50(b)). In July 2018, after a bench trial, the trial court adjudicated T.R. to be a delinquent minor. In December 2018, the court made T.R. a ward of the court, sentenced him to 36 months' probation, and imposed 30 days of detention to be stayed pending completion of probation.\n¶ 2 Respondent appeals, arguing (1) the trial court erred by considering evidence not presented at trial, (2) respondent's counsel gave ineffective assistance by stipulating to the introduction of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) evidence that supported the State's case, (3) the trial court should have conducted a hearing pursuant to People v. Krankel, 102 Ill. 2d 181, 464 N.E.2d 1045 (1984), (4) the trial court erred by admitting testimony regarding statements respondent made during a polygraph examination for the purpose of impeachment, and (5) respondent's convictions for criminal sexual abuse should merge with his criminal sexual assault conviction pursuant to the one-act, one-crime doctrine. We agree with respondent's third argument and remand for a Krankel hearing.\n¶ 3 I. BACKGROUND\n¶ 4 A. The Petition for Adjudication of Wardship\n¶ 5 In April 2017, the State filed a petition for adjudication of wardship, alleging respondent was a delinquent minor and should be made a ward of the court. The State alleged that in March 2017, T.R. committed three sex crimes against I.P.-V. Specifically, the State contended T.R. (1) committed criminal sexual assault by placing his penis in I.P.-V.'s vagina by the use of force, (2) committed criminal sexual abuse by knowingly and through the use of force touching I.P.-V.'s vagina for the purpose of sexual gratification, and (3) committed criminal sexual abuse by placing his penis in I.P.-V.'s vagina when she was between the ages of 13 and 17 years old and respondent was less than 5 years older than I.P.-V.\n¶ 6 B. The Bench Trial\n¶ 7 In June 2018, the trial court conducted a bench trial. The State presented testimony from I.P.-V. and her cousin, X.P., that in March 2017, the two went to meet X.P.'s boyfriend, Devan, and ended up going to respondent's apartment. I.P.-V. testified that while X.P. and Devan were in a separate room, respondent, with whom she had been \"laughing\" and \"playing around,\" picked her up and took her to another bedroom, where he held her down and put his penis in her vagina for \"maybe a minute.\" I.P.-V. left shortly thereafter and went to the hospital, where a rape kit was administered. The State then stipulated that the court could consider a report that indicated \"[t]he DNA profile obtained from the sperm fraction (SF) of [the vaginal swab sample] is consistent with a mixture of two individuals including the victim and one male contributor.\" The report concluded that the \"deduced male component DNA profile matches the DNA profile obtained from [respondent's] sample.\"\n¶ 8 Respondent testified that when X.P. and Devan left the room, he and I.P.-V. continued to flirt. Respondent stated that, eventually, I.P.-V. put her hand down his pants and touched his penis. Respondent said he placed his hand down her pants and touched her vagina but did not touch \"inside the hole.\"\n¶ 9 On cross-examination, the trial court permitted the State to use statements respondent gave during a polygraph examination to impeach his testimony. Respondent objected to the use of these statements as impeachment evidence, but the trial court overruled the objection and permitted respondent to file a memorandum in support of his objection after the conclusion of the hearing. Respondent denied making a particular statement to the polygraph examiner, and the State called the polygraph examiner in rebuttal to complete its impeachment of respondent regarding that statement.\n¶ 10 In closing argument, respondent's counsel's contended that (1) the DNA testing did not demonstrate that respondent's sperm was present and (2) the match could have been from skin cells left by respondent's hand. The State argued that the \"DNA profile is sperm fraction,\" which could only be determined from testing \"because you cannot tell it is sperm without doing a test.\" The trial court took the matter under advisement and set the case over for a hearing on respondent's objection to the polygraph impeachment and for the court to issue a ruling.\n¶ 11 C. The Trial Court's Ruling\n¶ 12 In July 2018, the trial court resumed the proceedings. Before addressing the testimony and the evidence, the court stated that it received an envelope from respondent's mother but had not opened it. The following discussion then took place:\n\"THE COURT: Before the Court gives its ruling, Court would note first that on late Thursday afternoon, I received an envelope from [respondent's mother] addressed to me that I did not open.\nMr. Feldman [(respondent's counsel)], I'm going to provide that to you.\nMs. [respondent's mother], I cannot receive correspondence from parents with respect to a case. I had received correspondence in times past from parents, for example, who are incarcerated and want to be brought to court. But I did not want to open that and review any of that information, so I'm giving that to Mr. Feldman who is [T.R.'s] attorney and let him review it and for you to discuss that with him.\nMr. Feldman, do you need some time to review it and talk with [respondent's mother]?\nMR. FELDMAN: I'm reading it right now, Your Honor. Your Honor, if we could have a sidebar a moment.\n(The following conversation was held at the bench.)\nMR. FELDMAN: This is sort of a mixed bag. Some of it I don't think the Court would probably consider at this point. I think it is argument by the mother on the minor's behalf. Some of it is an issue [in] that she has complaints about my performance. I think the Court ought to be aware of it. Obviously, I would have to let you know and provide copies to the State as well. I think the Court can review it. Probably parts the Court may consider, may not consider. I think it should be at least made to supplement the record. But I don't think we need anything additional as far\nas argument at this point in time. Because of the issue she's raised, I think the Court has to take a look at it.\nMS. LAWSON [(ASSISTANT STATE'S ATTORNEY)]: I haven't seen it yet, Your Honor. I think that what Mr. Feldman is representing is for appeal, not what's important to the Court to review before giving a ruling for today's purposes. So, I think that if the Court wanted to review it, it probably should not be done until after a ruling has been made. And if ineffective assistance of counsel is a reason for appeal, it's not a reason not to give a ruling on a case.\nTHE COURT: Any response, Mr. Feldman?\nMR. FELDMAN: I don't have much of a response at this point, Your Honor. Again, I think the Court needs to be made aware of that. She also inquired if the Court received correspondence from another individual, Mr. Dunson, D-U-N-S-O-N. I don't believe the Court has or the Court would have made us aware of that.\nTHE COURT: I have not.\nMR. FELDMAN: All right. Then what I'm going to do is hang on to this. Have a ruling pending, and I can supplement the record if necessary.\nTHE COURT: All right.\n(Sidebar concluded.)\nTHE COURT: Before the Court begins, Court would note that it was also provided with a memorandum regarding the State's use of the polygraph information as impeachment that was filed by Mr. Feldman.\"\n¶ 13 The trial court did not again refer to the envelope or its contents. Instead, the trial court addressed respondent's argument regarding the polygraph evidence. The trial court concluded the testimony was admissible for the purpose of impeachment as a prior inconsistent statement.\n¶ 14 The trial court then recounted the testimony of the witnesses at trial in some detail. The court believed that, based on the conflicting testimony of respondent and I.P.-V., the question was \"was it consensual or nonconsensual?\" The court believed the answer was in the DNA evidence stipulation. The court explained the meaning of the term \"sperm fraction\" and that male DNA can only be profiled if sperm is present. However, neither the stipulation nor the report contained this information. The court concluded that respondent committed an act of sexual penetration because his DNA profile was found in the sperm fraction from the vaginal swab. Accordingly, the trial court (1) found respondent guilty of all three offenses alleged in the petition, (2) adjudicated respondent to be a delinquent minor, and (3) continued the matter for sentencing.\n¶ 15 D. The Sentencing Hearing\n¶ 16 In December 2018, the trial court conducted a sentencing hearing. Before sentencing respondent, the court noted that it based its finding of guilt on \"the scientific evidence, which in my mind leaves no dispute as to what occurred based upon the rest of the evidence that was presented.\" The court found it was in respondent's best interest and the best interest of the public that he be made a ward of the court. The court imposed the statutory minimum sentence of 36 months' probation and imposed 30 days of detention, which the court stayed pending completion of probation.\n¶ 17 This appeal followed.\n¶ 18 II. ANALYSIS\n¶ 19 Respondent appeals, arguing (1) the trial court erred by considering evidence not presented at trial, (2) respondent's counsel gave ineffective assistance by stipulating to the introduction of DNA evidence that supported the State's case, (3) the trial court should have conducted a hearing pursuant to People v. Krankel, 102 Ill. 2d 181, 464 N.E.2d 1045 (1984), (4) the trial court erred by admitting testimony regarding statements respondent made during a polygraph examination for the purpose of impeachment, and (5) respondent's convictions for criminal sexual abuse should merge with his criminal sexual assault conviction pursuant to the one-act, one-crime doctrine. We agree with respondent's third argument and remand for a Krankel hearing.\n¶ 20 A. The Applicable Krankel Law and Standard of Review\n¶ 21 \"When a pro se defendant makes a posttrial claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, the trial court's responsibility to follow the common law procedure in Krankel is triggered.\" People v. Rhodes, 2019 IL App (4th) 160917, ¶ 12. The only question to be resolved by a Krankel hearing is whether the trial court should appoint new counsel to represent the defendant on his claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. People v. Roddis, 2018 IL App (4th) 170605, ¶ 47, 119 N.E.3d 52. The court need not appoint new counsel if the defendant's claims are without merit or pertain solely to matters of trial strategy. Id. ¶ 63. To determine whether new counsel should be appointed, a trial court should ordinarily inquire into the factual basis of the defendant's claims by (1) asking the defendant about the claims, (2) asking defense counsel about the claims, and (3) relying upon its knowledge of counsel's performance. Id. ¶¶ 58-59.\n¶ 22 \"[A] pro se defendant is not required to do any more than bring his or her claim to the trial court's attention ***.\" (Internal quotation marks omitted.) People v. Ayres, 2017 IL 120071, ¶ 11, 88 N.E.3d 732. \"Accordingly, a defendant may raise the claim orally or in writing, either by filing a formal posttrial motion with the court or by informally providing a letter.\" Rhodes, 2019 IL App (4th) 160917, ¶ 13. Even if the defendant makes the bare allegation of \"ineffective assistance of counsel,\" a trial court is required to conduct a Krankel inquiry. Id.\n¶ 23 The purpose of a Krankel inquiry is to allow defendants to flesh out their claims and limit the issues on appeal. Ayres, 2017 IL 120071, ¶ 13. A trial court's failure to conduct an adequate Krankel inquiry requires that the case be remanded. See id. ¶¶ 24-26. The appellate court reviews de novo whether a trial court should have conducted a Krankel inquiry and whether that inquiry was sufficient. People v. Jolly, 2014 IL 117142, ¶ 28, 25 N.E.3d 1127; People v. Taylor, 237 Ill. 2d 68, 75, 927 N.E.2d 1172, 1176 (2010).\n¶ 24 B. A Krankel Hearing Was Required in This Case\n¶ 25 Respondent argues that the trial court should have conducted a Krankel hearing when his counsel brought his mother's letter complaining of counsel's performance to the court's attention at the July 2018 hearing. Respondent recognizes that the allegation was raised prior to the trial court's ruling but asserts that the evidence and argument had been completed and all that remained was for the court to issue its decision on the record. Respondent claims that\nthe trial court was required to conduct the Krankel hearing after finding respondent guilty. Respondent also acknowledges that his mother, not he, raised the ineffective assistance claim. Respondent contends that, because (1) his mother was a necessary party and (2) parents have a special role under the Juvenile Court Act of 1987 (705 ILCS 405/1-1 et seq. (West 2016)) in delinquency proceedings, his mother had standing to raise the ineffective assistance claim.\n¶ 26 In response, the State argues that (1) Krankel does not apply to juvenile delinquency proceedings, (2) Krankel applies only to posttrial motions, and (3) a Krankel inquiry is required only when the claim is raised pro se by respondent. We disagree with the State and agree with all of respondent's contentions.\n¶ 27 1. Krankel Applies to Juvenile Delinquency Proceedings\n¶ 28 The State first argues that Krankel does not apply to juvenile delinquency proceedings. The State notes that (1) juvenile delinquency proceedings are civil in nature and (2) courts have declined to apply Krankel in cases under the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act (725 ILCS 207/1 et seq. (West 2016)). The State also suggests that (1) applying Krankel is not required merely because juveniles have a right to counsel and (2) trial courts can intervene in the event of a substantial injustice. We conclude that the common-law requirements set forth in Krankel and subsequent cases apply to juvenile delinquency proceedings.\n¶ 29 As an initial matter, we note that we are aware of only one published case, In re Eric B., 351 Ill. App. 3d 1000, 1007, 815 N.E.2d 917, 923 (2004), in which a court has applied Krankel in the context of a juvenile delinquency proceeding. That case simply addressed the merits of whether the trial court conducted an adequate Krankel inquiry and concluded that the trial court did. In that case, the First District did not address the issue the State raises here—namely, whether Krankel applies at all in juvenile proceedings. Id. We conclude that (1) the purpose of Krankel applies equally to juvenile delinquency cases and (2) Krankel hearings should be conducted because juveniles who have been adjudicated delinquent have a very limited opportunity to raise ineffective assistance claims.\n¶ 30 \"Minors in delinquency proceedings *** have a constitutional right to counsel.\" People v. Austin M., 2012 IL 111194, ¶ 74, 975 N.E.2d 22. In particular, minors are entitled to \"effective assistance of counsel.\" (Emphasis in original.) Id. \"[W]ith the exception of the right to a jury trial, the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution extends to delinquent minors all of the basic rights enjoyed by criminal defendants.\" Id. ¶ 76. Because the legislature has amended the Juvenile Court Act to make \"delinquency proceedings more akin to criminal prosecutions,\" \"the need for zealous advocacy to vindicate the constitutional rights of minors in delinquency proceedings has become even greater.\" Id.\n¶ 31 Although juvenile delinquency proceedings are not the equivalent to criminal proceedings (see In re Jonathon C.B., 2011 IL 107750, ¶ 96, 958 N.E.2d 227), it would be anomalous if Krankel did not apply in delinquency proceedings.\n¶ 32 The State correctly notes that juvenile delinquency proceedings are in fact civil in nature even though juveniles are entitled to rights similar to that of criminal defendants. The State argues that the appellate court has declined to extend Krankel to other quasi-criminal proceedings, such as those under the Sexually Violent Persons Commitment Act (see In re Commitment of Walker, 2014 IL App (2d) 130372, ¶ 56, 19 N.E.3d 205), and suggests we do\nthe same here. However, we conclude Walker is inapposite because of the unique circumstances of delinquency proceedings.\n¶ 33 In Walker, the Second District noted that (1) Krankel was not required by due process and (2) most jurisdictions did not employ similar procedures. Id. The court concluded that \"[a]ny remedy for counsel's alleged incompetence would lie in a collateral attack.\" Id. But juvenile delinquents cannot collaterally attack their judgments because the Post-Conviction Hearing Act (725 ILCS 5/122-1 et seq. (West 2016)) applies only to convictions and persons imprisoned in the penitentiary. Id. § 122-1(a). Juveniles are neither convicted nor imprisoned when they are adjudicated delinquent. People v. Taylor, 221 Ill. 2d 157, 168-69, 850 N.E.2d 134, 140 (2006); In re Vincent K., 2013 IL App (1st) 112915, ¶ 50, 2 N.E.3d 506.\n¶ 34 Moreover, the Illinois Supreme Court has held that petitions pursuant to section 2-1401 of the Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-1401 (West 2016))—the remedy suggested by the court in Walker instead of Krankel—do not provide an adequate remedy to preserve juveniles' claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. See In re William M., 206 Ill. 2d 595, 604-05, 795 N.E.2d 269, 274 (2003) (holding section 2-1401 petitions only apply to newly discovered facts or changes in the law and therefore cannot be used to assert claims of general trial errors or a claim that counsel was ineffective for failing to file a motion to withdraw guilty plea). We note that, in this case, a section 2-1401 petition would have been inappropriate because the record demonstrates that the claim of ineffective assistance was discussed by the trial court and counsel in July 2018 and therefore could not be considered newly discovered.\n¶ 35 This court has recognized that in some circumstances juveniles are unable to adequately present claims of ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal because they have not developed a factual record in the trial court and cannot do so in a collateral attack. See In re Ch. W., 399 Ill. App. 3d 825, 830, 927 N.E.2d 872, 876 (2010). In those instances, we have remanded the case to the trial court for an evidentiary hearing while retaining jurisdiction. Id.; see also In re Alonzo O., 2015 IL App (4th) 150308, ¶ 30, 40 N.E.3d 1228.\n¶ 36 The Illinois Supreme Court has repeatedly explained that \"the goal of any Krankel proceeding is to facilitate the trial court's full consideration of a defendant's pro se claim and thereby potentially limit issues on appeal.\" Ayres, 2017 IL 120071, ¶ 13. \"[T]he primary purpose of the preliminary inquiry is to give the defendant an opportunity to flesh out his claim of ineffective assistance so the court can determine whether appointment of new counsel is necessary.\" Id. ¶ 20. \"By initially evaluating the defendant's claims in a preliminary Krankel inquiry, the circuit court will create the necessary record for any claims raised on appeal.\" Jolly, 2014 IL 117142, ¶ 38. \"Absent such a record, *** appellate review is precluded. Moreover, the inquiry is not burdensome upon the circuit court, and the facts and circumstances surrounding the claim will be much clearer in the minds of all involved when the inquiry is made just subsequent to trial or plea, as opposed to years later on appeal.\" Ayres, 2017 IL 120071, ¶ 21.\n¶ 37 Here, we do not know the basis of the mother's ineffective assistance claim because the trial court did not want to hear it and would not look at the letter despite trial counsel's invitation to do so. Most important, respondent does not have a remedy to develop his claims in collateral proceedings. Had the court conducted a brief inquiry when the court was informed of the mother's letter, the court could have determined (1) what respondent thought about the allegations in his mother's letter, (2) what the factual basis of the claim was,\n(3) whether respondent's counsel alleged ineffective assistance was actually a trial strategy, and (4) whether respondent needed new counsel to assert any potentially meritorious claims. Krankel inquiries like these would have gone a long way to developing a record on ineffective assistance claims generally, potentially avoiding the need to remand for a Krankel hearing after an appeal has been filed. See Alonzo O., 2015 IL App (4th) 150308, ¶¶ 23-30 (explaining remand was necessary to develop a record of whether respondent's counsel investigated a key witness and why counsel chose not to impeach that witness with a prior conviction).\n¶ 38 Finally, the State suggests that juveniles have a remedy because the trial court is in a \"parens patriae\" relationship with juveniles and \"when it perceives a substantial injustice, [it] will intervene on the juvenile's behalf, even where the juvenile is represented by counsel [citation].\" In re Vincent K., 2013 IL App (1st) 112915, ¶ 61. However, as respondent points out, the trial court in this case was presented with a claim that his counsel was ineffective but chose not to even read the letter detailing concerns about respondent's counsel despite counsel's requesting the court do so. Moreover, a trial court cannot intervene to ensure a juvenile receives effective assistance if the factual basis giving rise to the claim occurs outside of the courtroom.\n¶ 39 2. The Ineffective Assistance Claim Was Raised Posttrial\n¶ 40 Respondent argues that a Krankel inquiry was required after defense counsel told the trial court that his mother's letter alleged ineffective assistance. Although this claim could be viewed as not being raised posttrial, respondent argues that the adjudication hearing had concluded and all that remained was for the trial court to issue its ruling. Accordingly, respondent contends that the court should have conducted a Krankel hearing after announcing its findings and ultimate decision. We agree.\n¶ 41 We acknowledge that the supreme court in Ayres wrote that \"Krankel is limited to posttrial motions\" (Ayres, 2017 IL 120071, ¶ 22), but that holding does not mean that Krankel does not apply in this case. That is because, as respondent notes, the trial had concluded weeks before and all that remained was for the trial court to issue its ruling. When respondent's counsel called the mother's letter to the court's attention, the court knew it was about to rule against respondent, and it did just minutes later.\n¶ 42 Moreover, defense counsel told the trial court he believed it needed to consider the allegations and added that counsel would hold on to the letter pending the court's ruling. But after the court ruled, neither counsel nor the court raised the issue of the letter again.\n¶ 43 3. Respondent's Mother Could Raise Ineffective Assistance\n¶ 44 Respondent recognizes that Krankel is limited to pro se claims of ineffective assistance and that he did not make any such claim in this case. Instead, his mother made it on his behalf. Respondent contends that his mother's claim in this case is more akin to a pro se claim because parents are necessary parties with special interests in juvenile delinquency proceedings. The State disagrees and notes that this court has held that Krankel applies only to pro se claims.\n¶ 45 \"Krankel is not triggered when counsel raises his own ineffectiveness.\" Rhodes, 2019 IL App (4th) 160917, ¶ 17 (citing People v. Bates, 2018 IL App (4th) 160255, ¶ 102, 112 N.E.3d\n657, appeal allowed, No. 124143 (Ill. Jan. 31, 2019), and People v. McGath, 2017 IL App (4th) 150608, ¶¶ 49-52, 83 N.E.3d 671). Nonetheless, if defense counsel conveys a defendant's pro se claim of ineffectiveness to the court, a Krankel inquiry may be required. See id. We believe that the circumstances in this case are more similar to those in Rhodes because counsel was not arguing his own ineffectiveness. Instead, he was merely bringing respondent's mother's claim to the trial court's attention. Accordingly, the question before us is whether a parent may raise an ineffective assistance claim on behalf of her child, who is a respondent minor in a juvenile delinquency proceeding. Given the unique circumstances present in such a proceeding, we conclude that a parent may do so.\n¶ 46 In cases under the Juvenile Court Act, custodial parents and legal guardians \"have the right to be present, to be heard, to present evidence material to the proceedings, to cross-examine witnesses, to examine pertinent court files and records and also *** the right to be represented by counsel.\" 705 ILCS 405/1-5(1) (West 2016). In delinquency proceedings, parents generally have the right to adequate notice (In re Gault, 387 U.S. 1, 33 (1967)) and are considered parties to the proceedings. In re Marcus W., 389 Ill. App. 3d 1113, 1122, 907 N.E.2d 949, 955 (2009). In juvenile delinquency proceedings, \"[t]he purpose of a parent's presence is to ensure the juvenile his right to counsel and his right to have his parents present at any hearing.\" In re J.E., 285 Ill. App. 3d 965, 980-81, 675 N.E.2d 156, 167 (1996). Illinois courts have long recognized the importance of a parent's presence to provide aid and counsel to their child. See Marcus W., 389 Ill. App. 3d at 1127 (noting \"the importance our supreme court has placed on a minor having at least one person, besides an attorney or court-appointed guardian, present during juvenile proceedings whose loyalty and concern would be toward the minor.\"); see also In re M.W., 232 Ill. 2d 408, 439, 905 N.E.2d 757, 777 (2009) (noting lack of notice to noncustodial father did not affect fundamental fairness of proceedings because minor's counsel and mother were present to advise minor on significant decisions); In re J.W., 87 Ill. 2d 56, 61, 429 N.E.2d 501, 504 (1981) (concluding lack of notice to noncustodial father was not an error because the minor had \"the assistance of his custodian, the person on whom he relies for other important decisions in his life\"). This court has stated that \"the primary purpose of affording the parents an opportunity to be present at significant juvenile delinquency proceedings is the aid the parent can give to the minor.\" In re S.L.S., 181 Ill. App. 3d 453, 456-57, 536 N.E.2d 1355, 1358 (1989).\n¶ 47 Although this court has consistently held that trial counsel cannot assert his own ineffectiveness (Rhodes, 2019 IL App (4th) 160917, ¶ 17), we believe that a parent's raising counsel's alleged ineffectiveness in a juvenile delinquency proceeding in which that parent's child is a respondent is a far different matter. Given a parent's unique role in juvenile delinquency proceedings, we conclude that (1) a parent may raise ineffective assistance of counsel claims to the trial court in the same manner as a pro se respondent and (2) when a parent has done so, the trial court is required to conduct a Krankel hearing.\n¶ 48 Because we conclude the trial court erred when it did not conduct a Krankel inquiry, we remand this case so that it may do so. (We encourage the trial court to review this court's recent decision in Roddis, 2018 IL App (4th) 170605, for a detailed discussion of how to proceed on remand.)\n¶ 49 C. Remand\n¶ 50 \"Because we conclude a Krankel inquiry is necessary, we need not consider [respondent's] other arguments.\" Rhodes, 2019 IL App (4th) 160917, ¶ 21; see also People v. Bell, 2018 IL App (4th) 151016, ¶ 37, 100 N.E.3d 177 (\"Depending on the result of the *** Krankel inquiry, defendant's other claims may become moot.\"). We express no view on the merits of respondent's ineffective assistance claim or on any of the other arguments he has made on appeal.\n¶ 51 To avoid confusion in the event of a subsequent appeal, we retain jurisdiction over this matter pursuant to Illinois Supreme Court Rule 366(a)(5) (eff. Feb. 1, 1994). Alonzo O., 2015 IL App (4th) 150308, ¶ 31. In the event that the trial court appoints new counsel after the Krankel inquiry and ultimately determines that a new trial is warranted, the court should proceed accordingly. Only if (1) the trial court determines that appointment of new counsel is not warranted or (2) after a subsequent hearing on the ineffective assistance claim, the trial court rejects that claim, then respondent may again appeal, at which point we will address respondent's remaining arguments from this appeal and any argument on appeal respondent may raise about the trial court's determination that his trial counsel was not ineffective.\n¶ 52 III. CONCLUSION\n¶ 53 For the reasons stated, we remand for the trial court to conduct an inquiry into respondent's claim of ineffective assistance of counsel.\n¶ 54 Remanded with directions.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1264493"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8979294896125793,"wiki_prob":0.8979294896125793,"text":"ALEC Disbands Task Force On ‘Stand Your Ground’ After Liberal, Rights Groups Protest\nBy David Zielenziger @DavidZie\nQuimani Cobb, 11, holds a sign while taking part in the Seattle Unite 1000 Hoodies rally for Trayvon Martin at Westlake Park in Seattle, Washington, March 28, 2012. Photo: Reuters\nThe conservative American Legislative Exchange Council has disbanded a task force that had advocated for state Stand Your Ground laws as well as voter identification laws.\nThe move to axe the Public Safety and Elections task force came as ALEC was besieged by liberal and civil rights groups angered by the case of Trayvon Martin, the Sanford, Fla., teenager shot to death on Feb. 26 by a local security watchdog.\nLast week, a Florida special prosecutor charged George Zimmerman, 28, with second-degree murder in the Martin case. Zimmerman has claimed self-defense under the Florida Stand Your Ground Law.\nGroups including Credo, Color of Change, the NAACP, the Urban League, Common Cause and the Progressive Change Campaign Committee claim to have obtained more than 400,000 signatures protesting Washington, D.C.-based ALEC.\nThey also urged corporate sponsors including AT&T (NYSE: T) to quit the conservative group that lobbies state legislatures. Others getting complaints include Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) and State Farm.\nCoca-Cola (NYSE: KO), PepsiCo (NYSE: PEP). McDonald's (NYSE: MCD), Wendy's Co. (Nasdaq: WEN), Kraft Foods (NYSE: KFT) Mars, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Arizona Public Service Co. and Intuit (Nasdaq: INTU), have already quit. In response, ALEC last week denounced coordinated intimidation against its members.\nThe pro-business trade group, which says it aims to connect state legislators with other state legislators, said companies join because they're more interested in solutions than in rhetoric.\nNevertheless, ALEC Chairman Dave Frizzell, a Republican Indiana legislator, announced Tuesday the group is refocusing our commitment to free-market, limited government and pro-growth principles and would abandon advocacy of the other controversial issues.\nMeanwhile, Credo and Color of Change, said AT&T had given ALEC more than $150,000 to sponsor state voter identification laws, which they charge are racist.\nALEC's board is top-heavy with conservative Republicans, including former chairmen Owen Johnston, a New York state senator with Republican and Conservative Party backing, and Tom Craddick, a former Republican speaker of the Texas House of Representatives.\nIts board of scholars includes Arthur Laffer, the inventor of the Laffer curve in economics, as well as Stephen Moore, a former president of the Club for Growth, which backs Republican candidates, who now writes for Rupert Murdoch's News Corp. (NYSE: NWS).\nAT&T, McDonald's and Johnson & Johnson and State Farm have not commented on the controversy. Shares of AT&T fell 11 cents to $30.78, while Johnson & Johnson fell $1.10 to $63.13 in midday Wednesday trading.\nWall St snaps 4-day streak on GE, inflation worry\nALEC Ends Legal Work On Guns, Voter ID","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1612052"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6918665170669556,"wiki_prob":0.30813348293304443,"text":"The Washington National Cathedral lit up for an event. Courtesy: Washington National Cathedral\nExcerpts from the newly released documentary Villa Visconti Borromeo Litta: four centuries of history will be screened with a presentation by Film Director Francesco Vitali and Dr. Allison Luchs, Curator of Early European Sculpture at the National Gallery of Art, who will illustrate the tradition of sculpture gardens in Renaissance Italy and two masterpieces from Villa Litta now part of the NGA’s collection. To enhance the audience’s appreciation of the documentary, the screening will be accompanied by a concert featuring some music by the composers who enjoyed the patronage of the Villa’s residents during the 16th-18th centuries. Directed by Tina Chancey of Hesperus, the musical performances will feature Mezzo-soprano Kristen Dubanion-Smith and tenor Rob Petillo joined by William Simms, theorbo and renaissance lute, Elizabeth Field, baroque violin, Paula Maust, harpsichord, and Dr. Chancey, renaissance violin and viola da gamba. 6:00 – 9:00 p.m. at the Embassy of Italy 3000 Whitehaven Street NW. Tickets at https://iicwashington.esteri.it/iic_washington/en/gli_eventi/calendario/2019/02/villa-visconti-borromeo-litta-documentary.html\nMusical reception\nJoin the Citizens Association of Georgetown for the February CAG Public Meeting. A moderated conversation on the DC Jazz scene including well known musicians will accompany a reception including refreshments from Stachowski’s and Potomac Wine & Spirits. 6:30 at Mt. Zion church on 29th St. Free.\nThursday, February 21st\nIn his latest book, Enemy of the People: Trump’s War on the Press, the New McCarthyism, and the Threat to American Democracy, distinguished journalist Marvin Kalb pulls from recent history to prove that the great American experiment would suffer certain failure if not for a free and vigorous press. Mr. Kalb is currently a nonresident senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a senior advisor at the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting. His work includes award-winning reporting for both CBS and NBC News as chief diplomatic correspondent, Moscow bureau chief, and anchor of NBC’s “Meet the Press.” The book will be available for purchase and signing. 11:30 p.m. at the Woman’s National Democratic Club, 1526 New Hampshire Avenue, NW. Tickets $30 https://events.r20.constantcontact.com/register/eventReg?oeidk=a07efyd4cpjf369464b&oseq=&c=&ch=\nCaral: The earliest civilization in the Americas. Caral is not only a city but also the name of an entire civilization of at least 25 sites centered on the Supe Valley in Peru.The Caral Civilization is considered one of the six “cradles of civilization”, joining Mesopotamia, Egypt, China, India and Mesoamerica. Having begun about 5000 years ago, it is now recognized as the wellspring of South American societies. A photo exhibit features more about this fascinating civilization. 6:00 – 8:00 p.m. at the Embassy of Peru,1700 Massachusetts Avenue NW. Free. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/caral-the-earliest-civilization-in-the-americas-tickets-55595179679?aff=ebdssbdestsearch\nFriday, February 22nd\nThe Korean Cultural Center Washington, D.C. proudly presents the opening of The Culture of Time and Space, a new exhibition of digital media art that explores the convergence of Korean traditional beauty and contemporary technology, featuring works by Korean media artist HyeGyung Kim. Kim focuses on the convergence of digital media and Taoism through the medium of East Asian antiques. She experiments with connections between digital media and traditional Oriental art that represents Korean beauty through projection mapping and interactive media. She presents not only projection mapping onto Korean traditional crafts such as porcelain and antique wooden furniture, but also interactive media art that integrates light, sound, and movement. Ultimately, Kim hopes to provide an experience beyond space and time through this artistic dialogue. This exhibition aims to introduce the vibrancy of Korean contemporary media art and the deep connections possible between traditional aesthetic values and Korea’s prominent digital technology of today. 6:00 p.m. at Korean Cultural Center, 2370 Massachusetts Ave. NW. Free, though registration is required at www.KoreaCultureDC.org.\nSparkplug: Light Liminal illustrates how ten participating artists literally and symbolically employ light and darkness in painting, drawing, sculpture, and photography. The exhibition explores themes of communication and empathy. Opening Reception 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. at DC Arts Center, 2438 18th NW Street, Washington DC, 20009. Free.\nStudio Gallery, DC’s oldest arts collaborative, partners with StageFree for an evening of local art and electro-acoustic music. With five musical works written in the last four years, the program offers, a local take on new music. Featured composers include Armando Bayolo, Duncan Boatright, Ashi Day, Bradley Green, Christopher Newman, and Charles Perryman. 7:30 p.m. at Studio Gallery, 2108 R Street NW. Tickets $20. https://www.stagefree.org/concert-24\nSaturday, February 23rd\nTensions rise when Gyembo a teen who dreams of becoming a soccer player is chosen as the next guardian of the family monastery in Bhutan. Join in for a free film screening of “The Next Guardian” followed by a a tashi labay performance and Q&A discussion with the filmmakers Dorottya Zurb and Arun Bhattarai, and Communication and Program Manager for the Bhutan Foundation in Washington, DC, Tshering Yangzom. 6:45 p.m. at the National Museum of Natural History, 10th St NW & Constitution Ave NW. Free. http://go.si.edu/site/Calendar?id=102681&view=Detail&s_src=scene_web_scene_text_er&s_subsrc=NxtGrd_190223\nFor more than twenty-five years, a cappella singers have joined together to help DC’s homeless. The Sing Out for Shelter (“SOS”) concert, organized by DC’s own Augmented 8, has brought together the best of contemporary a cappella singing and raised more than $250,000 to help the homeless in the Metropolitan DC area.\n8:00 p.m. at the National United Methodist Church, 3401 Nebraska Avenue NW. Tickets $20 -140. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/a-cappella-groups-sing-out-for-shelter-sat-february-23rd-to-help-dcs-homeless-tickets-51944287763\nStories and Songs of Hope in concert supports refugees seeking asylum in the U.S. A choir and guest musicians will perform musical selections on the theme of “sanctuary,” with several asylum seekers sharing their stories. Reception to follow. 4:30 p.m. Cleveland Park Congregational UCC, 3400 Lowell St. NW. Free www.asylumprojectdc.org.\nCelebrate Mardi Gras and the Carnival of Nice on French soil at a special evening at the Embassy of France! From the elegance of classical French culture to the most celebrated Rivera nightlife of the 21st Century, experience a special evening of fantastic French food (buffet-style) and wines, late night DJ and a nightclub experience that will turn the venue into “The Embassy of Lights,” with a spectacular Riviera-style ambiance, as well as attractions and shows. Enjoy the flavors of Nice, Monaco and St. Tropez in the beautiful and festive Maison Francaise. Mardi Gras Style beads will be offered to all guests upon arrival. And be on the lookout for some special Cirque Style Carnival Characters! 6:30 p.m. Embassy of France, 4101 Reservoir Road NW. Tickets $89- 800. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/french-embassy-carnival-celebration-a-night-on-the-riviera-tickets-54587746419?aff=ebdssbdestsearch\nThe combined forces of the AU Symphony Orchestra, Chorus, and Chamber Singers are joined by the Strathmore Children’s Chorus and guest soloists Janice Meyerson and Rob McGinness to perform the North American premiere of Arnold Saltzman’s A Choral Symphony: Halevi. Completed in 2017, this large-scale composition is a lush and evocative symphonic setting of English translations of texts by the twelfth-century Hebrew poet Judah Halevi. 4:30 p.m. at the National Presbyterian Church, 401 Nebraska Ave. NW. Tickets $5-15. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/north-american-premiere-saltzman-a-choral-symphony-halevi-tickets-53926882758\nDC Fashion Week hosts the 30th International Couture Collections Show. Designers from around the world present their Autumn/Winter 2019 couture collections at the Embassy of France. 5:00 – 8:00 p.m. at Embassy of France, La Maison Française, 4101 Reservoir Road, NW. Tickets $70 -150. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/30th-international-couture-collections-presented-by-dc-fashion-week-tickets-53019616099?aff=ebdssbdestsearch\nMonday, February 25th\nDoes putting together a cheeseboard for your next party seem daunting? Do you stand in front of the cheese counter perplexed as to how to proceed? Fear not, cheese lovers! Whether it’s learning how to pick out cheeses and accompaniments that will wow your guests, or put them together in a thoughtful and crowd-stunning way, this How To Build a Cheeseboard class will give you cheese confidence and hone your plating skills. Led by cheesemonger and owner of Cheesemonster, Alice Bergen Phillips, this class is all about making the art of the cheeseboard a bit less intimidating. Talk, taste, and play around with various plating components, and at the end of the night, you”ll go home with your very own personal cheeseboard! 7:00 – 9:00 at The Lemon Collective, 808 Upshur Street. Tickets $45. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/how-to-build-a-cheeseboard-tickets-54597853650?aff=ebdssbdestsearch\nChef Sammy has had the #1 Cooking class sold on the internet for 5 years straight, and now he is offering the class direct to consumers. The class will be held at Chef’s newest restaurant CATCH 22 in the District of Columbia. Unlimited drinks will be served throughout the evening! 7:00 – 10:00 p.m. at Catch 22, 5832 Georgia Ave. NW. Tickets $40. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/chef-sammy-davis-spring-cooking-class-tickets-56045426379?aff=ebdssbdestsearch\nTuesday, February 26th\nTrivia event\nTake a break from being The World’s Best Boss, your classes at art school, or beet farming to prove you know the most about the Dunder Mifflin family. Prizes will be awarded in lieu of Dundees, and you don’t want to be left empty handed… that’s what she said! 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. at Pinstripes Georgetown,1064 Wisconsin Avenue Northwest. Free. https://officepgrgtwn.eventbrite.com\nCultural discussion\nIn honor of Black History Month, join in for a panel discussion featuring members of the African diaspora who are using creative ways of bridging the continental gap and contributing to Africa’s development. Food and Drinks will be served. 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. at 1957 E Street Northwest. Free. https://www.eventbrite.com/e/diaspora-dialogue-how-we-can-be-more-involved-in-empowering-africa-tickets-56215484026?aff=ebdssbdestsearch\nPrevious articleArt and politics collide at GW Museum’s new Norman Rockwell exhibit\nNext articleDistrict Digest: Week of 2/20/19","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line851186"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.670279860496521,"wiki_prob":0.670279860496521,"text":"Women's Outdoor Track and Field\nRecords (through 17-18)\nNationals Qualifiers and All-Americans\nRecruiting Standards\nKrahe Sets School Record in 800 at Hopkins/Loyola Invite\nBALTIMORE, Md. - Freshman Allison Krahe took fifth among Divison III athletes and set a new school record in the 800 with a time of 2:21.35 at the Hopkins/Loyola Invitational. Krahe's time also gave her a spot into this season's ECAC Outdoor Championships.\nFreshman Rachel Panek missed out on a school record in the 400m hurdles by just .02 seconds with a time of 1:05.25, but did finish first overall in the event. Panek's time is currently second best in the region and the MAC. Sophomore Dyonne Hicks, who owns the current school record in the event, placed sixth with a time of 1:07.64.\nJunior Kelly Winklbauer clocked a 4:55.68 in the 1500m run, giving her fifth among DIII athletes in the event. Winklbauer's time just made the qualifying cut of 4:55.70 for the ECAC Championships.\nSophomore Achol Odolla qualified for ECAC's in the 3000m Steeplechase with a time of 12:39.29.\nIn the long jump, sophomore Kimberly Hammond placed first among DIII athletes with a leap of 5.29m. Hammond also placed third among DIII athletes in the 100 and 200 with times of 13.30 and 27.68.\nIn the shot put, junior Jess Rega's toss of 11.94 meters gave her third among DIII athletes, while sophomore Kiarra Nowell placed fifth with a 10.93. Nowell also had a toss of 37.19 meters, giving her second in the DIII field, while junior Lauren Dioses threw a 35.38.\nJunior Allison Bishop set a personal best in the hammer throw with a 42.25m toss (2nd in DIII), while freshman Jordan Mitchell had a leap of 10.21m in the triple jump (3rd in non-DI).\nThe Mustangs finished seventh out 15 schools with 43 points. Hopkins won the team title with 197.\nStevenson is scheduled to compete in the Oscar Moore Invitational, hosted by Rowan University, on Saturday, April 7.\nThu, 05/16 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field AARTFC Championship 13th/32, 18 points RC\nWed, 05/15 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field AARTFC Championship t-23rd/28, 3 points RC\nMon, 05/13 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field Swarthmore Last Chance Meet N/A RC\nSat, 05/04 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field MAC Championship 5th/10 (80) RC | R\nFri, 05/03 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field MAC Championship 4th/10 (42) RC | PH\nThu, 05/02 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field MAC Championship t-2nd/8, 18 points RC | V\nSat, 04/27 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field Paul Kaiser Classic NTS RC | R\nSat, 04/20 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field Morgan State Legacy 17th, 1 point RC\nWed, 04/17 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field York (Pa.) College Twilight 1st/8, 186 RC\nFri, 04/12 | Women's Outdoor Track and Field Mondschein Multi NTS RC | R","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1269961"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7643308639526367,"wiki_prob":0.7643308639526367,"text":"Rahul likely to become LS Congress leader\nPankaj Vohra\nJune 30, 2018,\nMallikarjun Kharge’s appointment last week as the general secretary in charge of the Maharashtra Congress, could possibly pave way for Rahul Gandhi to be elected as the leader of the party in the Lok Sabha ahead of next year’s Parliamentary elections. Kharge, who has held the position since 2014, could therefore, be relieved of the dual charge in line with the original Congress policy of “one-man one-post” that was followed by both Rajiv Gandhi and P.V. Narasimha Rao as party presidents; this however, was reversed during Sonia Gandhi’s nearly 20-year-long tenure. As per the original practice, no party leader, other than the president, could hold two portfolios, though this principle was relegated to the background with several functionaries occupying multiple offices.\nSources in the party have confirmed that Rahul was expected to expand his own role, so as to also include the responsibilities of leading the party in the Lok Sabha for enhancing his political profile. Last year, the Congress president underwent an image makeover after he visited the Berkeley University campus in California prior to the Gujarat state elections and projected himself as a serious politician who was not hesitant to gamble with fresh ideas and new faces.\nDespite being a very seasoned player, Kharge’s appointment as the leader of the Congress group in the Lok Sabha had raised many eyebrows, given that ideally speaking the position at that point should have gone to Kamal Nath, a nine-time Member of Parliament from Chhindwara, and a Doon School-mate of both Rajiv and Sanjay Gandhi. It is evident that some members of Sonia Gandhi’s team were uncomfortable with the idea of handing over the prestigious office to Nath, who is also viewed by many in the party as a person with extraordinary organisational skills, immense experience and the capacity to deliver. However, after Nath was sent to Madhya Pradesh as the state unit president, he for the time being is not in the reckoning for a party slot in Parliament.\nKharge’s induction was part of the party’s plan to project a Dalit on the national stage in the Lok Sabha while endorsing Ghulam Nabi Azad’s nomination in the Upper House. He now has been sent to Maharashtra to reassure the old guard in general and Dalits in particular, that the leadership was well aware of their overall concerns. Ironically, the party’s best known Dalit face, Sushil Kumar Shinde, a former Chief Minister, continues to be amongst the tallest leaders from that state and thus it is difficult to comprehend how Kharge’s appointment would assist the party in Maharashtra so far as the Scheduled Caste votes were concerned.\nTherefore the political inference of his being named as an AICC general secretary is that his utility in his home state of Karnataka is not of as much relevance as it was prior to the Assembly elections. In other words, by assigning him an important state, the pivotal Lok Sabha berth could be vacated for Rahul Gandhi. As of now, Sonia Gandhi and Rahul have been monitoring the parliamentary proceedings in a low-key manner. However, Rahul’s probable elevation would definitely help in increasing his visibility and performance on the floor of the House prior to the 2019 clash.\nA couple of months ago, Rahul had challenged the Prime Minister to debate with him on vital issues confronting the country and the Congress president apparently is toying with the intention to take on Narendra Modi head-on during the monsoon session. Although his critics may argue that nothing was preventing him from confronting the Prime Minister, yet this move is aimed at sending a signal to the Opposition, which currently is in the process of formulating a joint strategy to curb the influence of the Bharatiya Janata Party.\nThe Congress, despite being the largest party, does not figure prominently in the Opposition’s scheme of things as several top leaders are in favour of giving more importance to the regional parties and players. On its part, the Congress appears inclined to play second fiddle to smaller organisations, as was obvious when the party backed Janata Dal (Secular) nominee H.D. Kumaraswamy for the Chief Ministership of Karnataka. There are indications that even for the Rajya Sabha Deputy Chairperson’s election the Congress was willing to support a candidate of either the Trinamool Congress or the Biju Janata Dal; this despite being the largest Opposition group in the august House. It is apparently clear that the Congress’ topmost priority is to somehow divest the BJP of power at the Centre, and once it was done, it could do a rethink on its overall blueprint.\nThe Congress is confident of doing well in the forthcoming Assembly polls in Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and Chattisgarh, and some of its leaders believe that when the election outcome in these states goes against the ruling dispensation, the party can proportionally increase its country-wide profile to play a stellar role in national politics.\nRahul’s core team is impelling him, to replicate in the Lok Sabha, his assertive performance in public meetings, so as to counter the BJP’s perennial criticism labelling him a reluctant or part-time politician. However, with the football season on, he has to understand that unless the whole team performs in entirety, even iconic players like Lionel Messi, fail to hold any water. His notability alone is not enough, the Congress as a single outfit, needs to rise to the occasion. Between us.\nReplies to “Rahul likely to become LS Congress leader”\nN S Rajan says:\nHe is certain to make Mallikarjun Kharge look better.\nSunil Dang says:\nGood analysed\nDr. Pardeep Kumar says:\nGreat, correct assessment and well understand the politics of INC\nLeave a Reply to N S Rajan Cancel reply\nCool Breeze: A Congress Crisis Memo\nMarkets should be allowed to work freely\nUS report on religious freedom in India questionable\nGod’s love is unconditional","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line980864"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.512444257736206,"wiki_prob":0.512444257736206,"text":"Category Archives: University of Strathclyde\nAcademic IELTS, CAE Exam Preparation, English Courses, English Exams, English Language School, English Testing, eurospeak, Eurospeak Reading, Eurospeak Southampton, FCE Exam Preparation, GCSE English, General IELTS, Glyndwr University, IELTS Exam Preparation, IELTS Preparation, international student card, Language Learning, Language School, Learn English, Life in Reading, Reading, Reading University, Southampton, Southampton University, Study Abroad, Universities in UK, University of Strathclyde\nHow many words do I need to know to be fluent in a foreign language?\nLet’s say that our vocabulary counts are using headwords and word families that are included in our active vocabulary (the vocabulary that you can quickly remember and actively use when writing, speaking and thinking).\nSo, we are not counting all the different forms of a given word, and we are not counting anything that’s only in our passive vocabulary (the vocabulary that you are passively able to understand when you see it or hear it, but that you cannot use—or that you are unsure of how to use—when writing, speaking and thinking.\nWhen we reduce our perspective like this, we can start making approximations.\nFunctional beginner: 250-500 words: basic, everyday conversations. In most of the world’s languages, 500 words will be more than enough to get you through any tourist situations and everyday introductions.\nConversational: 1,000-3,000 words: With around 1,000 words in most languages, you will be able to ask people how they are doing, tell them about your day and talk about everyday life situations like shopping and public transport.\nAdvanced: 4,000-10,000 words: Past the 3,000 word mark in most languages: C2 level. Moving beyond the words that make up everyday conversation and into specialized vocabulary for talking about your professional field, news and current events, opinions and more complex, abstract verbal feats.\nFluent: 10,000+ words: Near-native level of vocabulary, words for talking about nearly any topic in detail and understanding the unfamiliar ones from context.\nWell-educated Native: 10,000-30,000+ words: Total word counts vary widely between world languages, making it difficult to say how many words native speakers know in general. As we discussed above, estimates of how many words are known by the average native English speaker vary from 10,000 to 65,000+.\nAcademic IELTS, CAE Exam Preparation, Culture, English Courses, English Exams, English Language School, English Testing, eurospeak, Eurospeak Reading, Eurospeak Southampton, FCE Exam Preparation, GCSE English, General IELTS, IELTS Exam Preparation, IELTS Preparation, international student card, Language Learning, Language School, Learn English, Life in Reading, Reading, Southampton, University of Strathclyde\nSymbols of the UK (Part 2)\nLand of kilt and Highlanders, Scotland is a land of contrasts, which uses symbols that we all know.\nThe Scottish Thistle is the oldest recorded ‘National Flower’ and is probably one of the most well-known, and easily recognized symbols of Scotland. This flower perfectly represents the history of Scotland. Indeed, it has beautiful flower heads, viciously sharp thorns, a stubborn and tenacious grip on the land and the defiant ability to flourish despite efforts to remove it.\nWith Scotland being famed for its love of myths and legends, it is no surprise that a fabled creature such as the unicorn is Scotland’s national animal. Symbol of purity and innocence, the unicorn was first used on the Scottish royal coat of arms by William I in the 12th century. This proud beast represents the ideal of the Scots which is to be untameable.\nLion Rampant of Scotland\nSymbol of the kings of Scotland, it occupied the shield of the royal coat of arms of the ancient Kingdom of Scotland. Together with a royal banner displaying the same, it was used by the King of Scots from the 12thcentury until the Union of the Kingdoms of England and Scotland.\nIt’s a long piece of fabric (tartan) tied around the waist then fastened in place with a thick, leather belt. Originally, the rest of the cloth was thrown over the shoulder and tucked into the belt at the back, but not anymore. Each tartan is closely identified with a particular Scottish Clan. During the Jacobite wars in the 18th century, the kilt became a symbol of opposition to English domination and was therefore prohibited. It reappeared in the 19th century in Wales and Cornwall where it began to be worn during celebrations.\nUniversities in UK, University of Strathclyde\nThe University of Strathclyde in UK\nThe University of Strathclyde is a leading international technological university based in Glasgow, Scotland. The University’s history dates back to 1796 and today we are the third largest University in Scotland and one of the largest providers of postgraduate education in Europe. Strathclyde’s achievements in teaching and research have led to major successes at the prestigious Times Higher Education Awards three years running – including winning the UK University of the Year award in 2012, and UK Entrepreneurial University of the Year at the most recent ceremony in November 2013.\nStrathclyde has been ranked top in Scotland for Engineering and Law, and in the UK top ten universities for Business and Physics. We offer a broad range of undergraduate, postgraduate and research courses across four Faculties – Engineering, Humanities and Social Sciences, Science and the Strathclyde Business School, all of which are united by our commitment to tackling modern global challenges and our founding principle of ”useful learning”. We take pride in our close links with business and industry, and the scholarships, internships and placements we offer to students. What is more, many of our programmes are fully accredited by professional bodies.\nThe University is currently undergoing a £370m campus redevelopment, including the construction of the new Technology and Innovation Centre (TIC), which will offer unprecedented opportunities for students, academics and industry professionals to work together and share knowledge and expertise. We also have an award-winning careers service with life-long membership for graduates, excellent sports facilities and a thriving Students’ Association, with clubs and societies to cater for every interest.\nThe University welcomes around 2,000 international students each year from over 90 different countries worldwide, and our campus is located in the city centre of Glasgow. Glasgow is the host city for the 2014 Commonwealth Games and one of Europe’s most stylish cities, boasting world-class arts, shopping and sport, and within easy reach of both London and the beautiful Scottish countryside.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line912070"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7862706184387207,"wiki_prob":0.7862706184387207,"text":"NINTENDO 3DS Europe USA\nNintendo 3DS eShop Sale Discounts SteamWorld: Dig, Zen Pinball Games\nBy Ishaan . March 13, 2014 . 9:00am\nGalaga is available for the Nintendo 3DS Virtual Console this week in North America. The game costs $4.99. Additionally, a few games of note are going on discount sale on the 3DS eShop in both North America and Europe.\nIn North America, SteamWorld: Dig is available for 50% off from today until March 16th, while Zen Pinball 3D, Marvel Pinball 3D and Star Wars Pinball 3D are 50% off from March 17th through March 31st.\nMeanwhile, in Europe, Zen Pinball 3D, Marvel Pinball 3D and Star Wars Pinball 3D are on discount from today until March 20th. Zen Pinball 3D costs €2.49/£2.24 (down from €4.99/£4.49), while Marvel and Star Wars cost €3.49/£3.14 (down from €6.99/£6.29).\nRead more stories about Marvel Pinball 3D & Nintendo 3DS & Nintendo eShop & Star Wars Pinball & SteamWorld Dig & Zen Pinball 3D on Siliconera.\nPhantom Breaker: Battle Grounds Coming To Vita On July 29th\nBatman: Arkham Origins, Dragon’s Crown And More On Sale On PSN In U.S.\nMega Man II’s Wily Castle Stage Will Be In Super Smash Bros. For 3DS, Too\nYo-kai Watch 1 Gets Nintendo Switch Version In Japan The Day The Switch Lite Releases","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line108415"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9348810315132141,"wiki_prob":0.9348810315132141,"text":"Conduit Labs unveils Loudcrowd social music game site\nDean Takahashi\t March 16, 2009 9:00 PM\nMicrosoft is closing down asset platform Remix 3D\nHow to get Minecraft: Windows 10 Edition for free if you own the PC version\nConduit Labs is launching a public beta for its Loudcrowd social music game site today in an attempt to create a community that combines social networking with casual game play.\nThe site is a platform for multiple web-based games, and the Boston company is kicking it off with a party at the South by Southwest conference this week in Austin, Texas.\nConduit is billing Loudcrowd as a place where you can listen to original music from new artists and play a game that lets can express yourself through dance and your taste in music. When you log onto the site, music starts playing. Everyone hears the same song, like with a radio station. You can rate the song and chat about it.\nThere are two games available on the site right now, with a third launching next month, and more in the works.\nIn the games, you create an avatar, picking options such as skin color, hair, and gender. The avatar is cartoonish, with enough details to uniquely identify you. You also upload a photo of yourself and link to your Facebook account. You use your real name and real friends in this game, in contrast to many online games. The games are free, but Conduit hopes to make money through the sale of virtual goods.\nOne game is Dance. If you score high with your dance moves, you earn points that you can use to buy music tracks, other games, or clothes for your avatar. While you’re dancing, others can join you on the dance floor. If they score high enough, then they can meet you via chat. You can choose to make your avatar dance in a way that is flirty, flashy or funny.\nIt’s a little like Guitar Hero comes to the web. Nabeel Hyatt, chief executive and co-founder, says that games such as Guitar Hero prove consumers don’t mind paying for music when it is part of a cool experience.\nThe other game is Spin, where you take on the role of DJ and create your own version of a song. You can capture gems from two spinning vinyl records on a DJ turntable. You can challenge your friends for the best score in the gem-capture game and win the ability to host parties and share music with others. It’s similar to the early version of the site that our writer Dan Kaplan managed to see in a sneak peak last year.\nThe site currently features more than 50 new artists and has 250 songs — more songs than popular console music games currently ship with. Initial artists include Santigold, Cut Copy, Justice, Spank Rock, and The Twelves who have provided Loudcrowd with exclusively mixed tracks. As those names suggest, this isn’t a top 40 music site.\nConduit Labs was founded in July, 2007, by Hyatt, a serial entrepreneur on his fifth startup, and Dan Ogles. They have 18 employees. The site has been in a closed beta for about four months, and so far 60 percent of the visitors are women, which is typical of casual games.\nThe company has partnerships with indie music labels including DFA, Downtown Records, Domino, the Beggars Group and Modular. The company has raised $5.5 million from Charles River Ventures and Prism VentureWorks. Hyatt was an entrepreneur in residence at Prism, which helped him recruit his management team.\nIt will be interesting to see if this site catches on with the college crowd and up. Doppelganger failed to draw many fans to its Vside music-oriented virtual world. Competitors are less the music console games and more like Pandora or Lastfm, which focus on building communities around music. Another challenger is Acclaim’s recently unveiled Rockfree game. Hyatt said he expects to raise a new round of money later this year.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line916438"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.841559648513794,"wiki_prob":0.841559648513794,"text":"Filter by Shop the Catalog\nblowout sale!\nIt Isn’T Always That Easy\nYour user name or password are incorrect.\nRemember me Don't have an account, create one now Forgot Password\nBe With Records\nBEWITH004SEVEN\nFirst time on vinyl\nCHOOSE FORMAT\nEstimated Ship Date 08/23/19\nWe adore Big Star and Alex Chilton more than words can express. Being able to present two of Alex’s staggeringly beautiful demos on vinyl for the first time (on a cute picture sleeve 7\", no less) is an absolute honour for us at Be With.\n“It Isn’t Always That Easy” and “If You Would Marry Me” both sound like templates for some of Alex’s best-known Big Star numbers. These demos come from the transitional recording sessions he made with Terry Manning at the Ardent studio in 1969, but were missing from the vinyl version of the wonderful Free Again compilation that was released in 2012.\nCaught between the end of the Box Tops and the birth of Big Star Alex’s song-craft was already remarkable – as these demos prove – and this release represents a fascinating, exploratory period in the career of one of pop’s most enigmatic talents.\n“It Isn’t Always That Easy” is the real knockout. A tender, acoustic ballad that, stylistically, could have appeared Big Star’s “#1 Record”. Yes, it really is that good. A deeply affecting, ruminative lament that explores the ravages of Alex’s short career to date, it is also one of the sweetest and most delicate melodies he ever wrote. A song this stunning shouldn’t just be kept for the Big Star completists.\nOver on the flip, “If You Would Marry Me” finds Alex in earnestly romantic mode. It’s just him and a piano, albeit one that is played in a poppy, uplifting fashion to complement the optimistic mood: “I could make you feel so glad inside and so alive” he confidently declares. It’s quite the gem. It really should be mandatory for this to be played at every wedding.\nUnfortunately there seem to be no photographs of Alex from around the time he was making these recordings. But luckily we were put in touch with Pat Rainer who was photographing the Memphis music scene that Alex was still part of a few years later.\nHappy to be described as “a friend with a camera who was hanging around”, Pat’s candid pictures of Alex included one of him asleep on the floor of the Ardent studio. Even though the photograph was taken 9 years after the demos were recorded, we think this intimate portrait makes a fitting cover for these equally intimate songs.\nIf You Would Marry Me Baby\nAlan Vega, Alex Chilton, Ben Vaughn\nCubist Blues\nThe Evil One\nCD $14\nOut of Stock |\nDon't Slander Me\nSmooth Noodle Maps","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line652627"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6566407084465027,"wiki_prob":0.6566407084465027,"text":"Gaming engines and VR are coming into the building industry\nLudvig Lovén has always loved computer games. He is now using the underlying techniques to draw building projects in Virtual Reality (VR).\nImagine taking a walk through a 3D model of a future building project, exactly as you can in a computer game? By combining building drawings with gaming techniques this is now fully possible.\nLudvig Lovén is a System developer in BIM and VR at ÅF, and works at generating visualisation models of the company’s building projects.\n“Drawings and CAD-models can be difficult to interpret, but visualisation makes it easy for customers and the general public to understand what it will look like when finished,” he says.\nBuilding a model of the East Link\nCurrently he is working on the first part of the Swedish rail network for high speed trains - project East Link - a stretch of 160 kilometres between Södertälje and Linköping.\nThe aim is to generate a lifelike model of the complete stretch and the surrounding environment, including everything such as existing buildings, vegetation, lights and materials, and animations of trains hurtling past.\n“The purpose is to show the inhabitants and the company owners what is going to be built and how this will influence their immediate area,” explains Ludvig Lovén.\nSince such visualisations are so lifelike they are termed Virtual Reality, for which many people think about VR glasses.\nHowever, the model of the East Link will be displayed and navigated using a screen, exactly like a normal computer game. It is even possible to generate films and pictures from the games engine.\n“In my view VR glasses are the up and coming thing, because then you can walk around in the model as if you were actually there and you get a feeling of scale and distance that is unobtainable in any other way,” says Ludvig Lovén.\nBased on gaming techniques\nWe have had visualisation at ÅF for approximately three years, and it is part of a method of working called BIM, Building Information Modelling.\nIn technical terms the process involves Ludvig Lovén and his colleagues developing a script which exports the CAD models from the project to a game engine. In the game engine they later develop an application around the model, with an interface and functionality.\nIn this case the game engine is called Unreal Engine 4 and has existed for nearly 20 years.\n“The technique is not new, but it is only now that it has become both powerful and advanced that we have been able to use it for a construction project,” says Ludvig Lovén.\nVisualisation becoming ever more popular\nHe says the demand for visualisations is increasing, not just within construction, but also in related industries, like architecture and interior design. This is therefore an opportunity to make the process simpler, and the large CAD developers have developed applications that make it possible to generate visualisations without being a games developer.\n“But there are limitations to the finished solutions, so we tailor make the models for the customers. But, for the future I believe that visualisation will be more easily available, and will also be used for smaller projects,” says Ludvig Lovén.\nLudvig Lovén trained as a civil engineer in municipal planning, but he has always loved computer games and was educated in IT at upper secondary school. He has been working at ÅF for five years, firstly as model coordinator, then as designer, project manager, BIM Strategist, and his current position is System developer in BIM and VR.\nGet More Inspiration\nSee more cases\nLudvig Lovén\nBIM VDC & Data Solutions\nludvig.loven@afconsult.com\nEnvironmental & Social Impact Assessment","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line899348"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6159243583679199,"wiki_prob":0.6159243583679199,"text":"More businesses blocking access to social media\nNews by Dan Raywood\nThe number of businesses that have chosen to block access to social networking sites has risen over the past year.\nAccording to research by Clearswift, there has been a 20 per cent increase in the number of companies blocking access to social media sites, with 91 per cent of those doing so mainly concerned about security and data loss.\nThe figure was obtained from an online survey of 1,529 employees and 906 managers in the UK, US, Australia, Germany, the Netherlands and Japan.\nAndrew Wyatt, chief operating officer of Clearswift, told SC magazine that the increase was due to a \"knee-jerk reaction\" to media reports about data loss.\nHe said: “Blocking the internet does not stop [employees] using it at home. [There has not been enough] education to get a hold on what is sensible and what is not with social media, and we are learning by mistakes.”\nDespite the statistic, managers continue to view social media as critical to business success, with 58 per cent citing web collaboration as a pivotal tool, and 31 per cent of companies planning to increase their investment in social media this year. The survey also revealed that 48 per cent of companies are convinced that the benefits of social media outweigh the drawbacks, although only 12 per cent are using it as a driver of growth.\nWyatt said lack of control of social media has made businesses wary of it. There is widespread concern among managers about social media usage, with 58 per cent expressing security fears, 46 per cent worried about the loss of confidential data via employees and 41 per cent concerned about data loss via external hacking.\nThe research also found that 57 per cent of managers believe employees are ignorant of security concerns. Wyatt said: “Companies do not do education. People are oblivious – a lot of the time the IT policy is seen only when you join [a company]. Employees do not know about the technology or the associated risks and they just take their own route.”\nLooking at the future of social media in business, Wyatt said companies' understanding of it will improve as they will have no choice but to educate staff and put better mechanisms in place.\nPodcast: SC Intel in Five [10 July]\nPodcast: SC Intel in Five [7 June]\nBreach of bill collection agency may affect 11.9 million Quest Diagnostics patients\nGandCrab ransomware operators put in retirement papers\nBlackSquid malware wants to wrap its tentacles around web servers and drives\nFind this article useful?\nGet more great articles like this in your inbox every lunchtime\nRegister Find out more about our daily bulletins","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1084938"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6505561470985413,"wiki_prob":0.34944385290145874,"text":"Mark Twain gives us advice about our wars\nLarry Kummer, Editor\tHistory\t 22 September 2014 21 September 2014\nSummary: Most of America’s wars have been counterinsurgencies, fought before Mao brought 4GW to maturity after WW2. As we start a new war, let’s take advice from wise men of our past about such conflicts. Such as Mark Twain (1835-1910), who lived during America’s golden age of counterinsurgency. Today we have two of his articles. One gives advice. The other is something to shock us into sense.\nMark Twain’s advice about Counterinsurgency\nThe War Prayer\nOther notes from the past\n(1) Advice\n“Mark Twain on Counterinsurgency“\nby Mike Few at the Small Wars Journal\nReposted with his generous permission\nIn a month when we’re asking the experts hard questions on the need to reform FM 3-24 Counterinsurgency and rethinking the colonial methods, Mark Twain, the quintessential American writer, decided to chime in. Nearly 100 years after his death, Mark Twain is finally publishing his autobiography. In his political views, Twain was decidedly anti-imperialist. Twain wrote in “Returning Home” (interview in the New York World, 4 October 1900):\nYou ask me about what is called imperialism. Well, I have formed views about that question. I am at the disadvantage of not knowing whether our people are for or against spreading themselves over the face of the globe. I should be sorry if they are, for I don’t think that it is wise or a necessary development.\nAs to China, I quite approve of our Government’s action in getting free of that complication. They are withdrawing, I understand, having done what they wanted. That is quite right. We have no more business in China than in any other country that is not ours.\nThere is the case of the Philippines. I have tried hard, and yet I cannot for the life of me comprehend how we got into that mess. Perhaps we could not have avoided it — perhaps it was inevitable that we should come to be fighting the natives of those islands — but I cannot understand it, and have never been able to get at the bottom of the origin of our antagonism to the natives. I thought we should act as their protector — not try to get them under our heel.\nWe were to relieve them from Spanish tyranny to enable them to set up a government of their own, and we were to stand by and see that it got a fair trial. It was not to be a government according to our ideas, but a government that represented the feeling of the majority of the Filipinos, a government according to Filipino ideas. That would have been a worthy mission for the United States. But now — why, we have got into a mess, a quagmire from which each fresh step renders the difficulty of extrication immensely greater. I’m sure I wish I could see what we were getting out of it, and all it means to us as a nation.\nMore of Twain’s biography and his thoughts on counterinsurgency at NPR.\n(2) An attempt to shock us into sense\n“The War Prayer” by Mark Twain One of his most powerful works. Unpublished at his death in 1910 (as sacrilegious), it was published in 1923. Opening:\nIt was a time of great and exalting excitement.\nThe country was up in arms, the war was on, in every breast burned the holy fire of patriotism; the drums were beating, the bands playing, the toy pistols popping, the bunched firecrackers hissing and spluttering; on every hand and far down the receding and fading spread of roofs and balconies a fluttering wilderness of flags flashed in the sun; daily the young volunteers marched down the wide avenue gay and fine in their new uniforms, the proud fathers and mothers and sisters and sweethearts cheering them with voices choked with happy emotion as they swung by; nightly the packed mass meetings listened, panting, to patriot oratory with stirred the deepest deeps of their hearts, and which they interrupted at briefest intervals with cyclones of applause, the tears running down their cheeks the while; in the churches the pastors preached devotion to flag and country, and invoked the God of Battles beseeching His aid in our good cause in outpourings of fervid eloquence which moved every listener.\nIt was indeed a glad and gracious time, and the half dozen rash spirits that ventured to disapprove of the war and cast a doubt upon its righteousness straightway got such a stern and angry warning that for their personal safety’s sake they quickly shrank out of sight and offended no more in that way.\nIt should be required reading for all citizens in every nation before it goes to war.\nFrom the 3rd century BC, Polybius warns us about demographic collapse, 11 June 2008\nPresident Grant warns us about the dangers of national hubris, 1 July 2008\nA warning from Alexis De Tocqueville about our military, 7 August 2009\nAnother note from our past, helping us see our future, 16 September 2009 — by Daniel Ellsberg\nFrance gives us tips for the Afghanistan War, from their successful role in the American Revolution, 11 March 2010\nAdvice from one of the British Empire’s greatest Foreign Ministers, 18 November 2011 — by Lord Palmerston\nGeorge Orwell sends us a note, giving some perspective on our situation, 22 January 2012\nThomas Jefferson saw our present peril. We should heed his warning., 21 April 2012\nVoices from the past describe the coming New America, 1 February 2013\nMartin Luther King Jr’s advice to us about using violence to reform America, 20 January 2014\nmike few\nwar prayer\nPublished 22 September 2014 21 September 2014\nPrevious Post Elysium Shouts Big, Loud Messages About Health Care & Immigration Reform. Gun Control, Not so Much\nNext Post Chuck Spinney asks why we choose to lose at 4GW\n22 thoughts on “Mark Twain gives us advice about our wars”\nCurious says:\nThe article states, ” we’re asking the experts hard questions on the need to reform FM 3-24 Counterinsurgency and rethinking the colonial methods.” Hasn’t FM 3-24 been rethought? The New FM is pretty blunt about other states being the driving factor and not us. http://armypubs.army.mil/doctrine/DR_pubs/dr_a/pdf/fm3_24.pdf\nEditor of the Fabius Maximus website says:\nJust as the 2006 version placed great emphasis on building the legitimacy of the “host” state. Pointless verbage, completely ignored in practice. Eight years of experience has shown that the recommended tactics are all that matters from FM 3-24; the rest is pleasant foliage to cover the neo-colonial tactics.\nTo what extent have the tactics changed? Is there any recognition of the near-total record of failure by foreign armies — everybody’s armies — fighting local insurgencies since Mao brought 4GW to maturity after WW2?\nI think it does separate what we did in Iraq/Afghanistan from other ways the United States may enable a host nation in defeating an insurgency. Chapter 1 does tell the reader over and over again that other societies have to solve their own problems. Counterinsurgency is only seen as a “range of various methods”. The “method” we did in Iraq and Afghanistan is boxed off into one chapter (Direct Approach). In sum, I think it makes the case for using security cooperation and various capabilities (i.e. intelligence assets) to enable a society to control an insurgency movement when it is in US interests. That is with the understanding the United States is not the primary driver in the development of other societies.\nMoreover, what we are doing in Syria and Iraq currently is different from the past. We are working through others and not trying to directly drive the conflict or its solutions. I have seen very little thought in the US clear-hold-building in Iraq or Syria. I would just suggest that you are trying to have a debate with a position that the other side no longer takes. Even if it doesn’t say, “we really suck and we have failed at this over and over in the past”, directly in the text.\nMikeF says:\nThis post is about what Samuel Clemens thought about the secondary and tertiary effects of our involvements overseas. At the time, pre-WWI, we were expanding our sphere in the Pacific and Americas. Teddy Roosevelt and others felt that we had a moral obligation to rule the uncivilized world.\nIt didn’t work.\nFM 3-24 (new or old) is irrelevant in this discussion. A rose is a rose by any other name. While we might not occupy Iraq or Syria, conducting unconventional warfare to force regime change while simultaneously conducting shaping operations in Africa to disrupt “rat-lines” is going to lead to horrible effects.\nIn the beginning, our goal may or may not have been noble. However, Clemens conclusions are probably how we’ll all think about this mess in 10 years,\n“But now — why, we have got into a mess, a quagmire from which each fresh step renders the difficulty of extrication immensely greater. I’m sure I wish I could see what we were getting out of it, and all it means to us as a nation.”\n“I would just suggest that you are trying to have a debate with a position that the other side no longer takes.”\nYou are misreading what the critics are saying. FM 3-24 is not all about invasion and occupation, US involvement in CI seldom been invasion and occupation, and it fails for deeper reasons than the occasional use of ground forces.\nWe first became involved in Vietnam in the early 1950s, in Afghanistan in the late 1980s, and in Iraq in the early 1990s. Invasion and occupation were late stages of these conflicts. Yemen and Pakistan are early stage involvements, as was Libya. Not all early stages run to the late stage; few are successful at any stage.\nIf we continue our tactics, curiously changed little over 60 years (despite many different labels and formal doctrines), history suggests we will be drawn into other adventures with “boots on the ground”. General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has told us so about our next chapter in Iraq.\n“That is with the understanding the United States is not the primary driver in the development of other societies.”\nThat has always been what we’re told. That’s what we were told when we had 500 thousand troops in Vietnam.\n“I think it makes the case for using security cooperation and various capabilities (i.e. intelligence assets) to enable a society to control an insurgency movement when it is in US interests.”\nI think you mean bombing, providing weapons, sending trainers and advisers, and inserting special operations forces. Those are the major common elements from the 1950s through today. The program seldom works. Local governments often win, but the post-WW2 record shows that those that win seldom get more than arms and money.\nThat we can provide more useful intel on insurgencies in foreign lands than the local government is absurd, unless we have a large local establishment (in which case we assume many of its functions, and vaporize its legitimacy).\nSkidding fast down the slippery slope, eyes closed:\n“Gates: ‘Small number’ of US ground troops needed in ISIS fight”.\nhttp://thehill.com/policy/defense/218439-gates-small-number-of-us-ground-troops-needed-in-isis-fight\n“Military missions don’t creep anymore, they accelerate towards disaster”: horrifying quotes from our blind leaders.\nhttp://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/09/21/1330822/-Military-missions-don-t-creep-anymore-they-accelerate-toward-disaster\n“what we are doing in Syria and Iraq currently is different from the past. We are working through others and not trying to directly drive the conflict or its solutions.”\nLike, say, what took place in the 1980s with the contras in Nicaragua, or has been with the Ethiopians, Kenyans and others since the 2000s in Somalia? Success with those methods has proven elusive too.\n“Success with those methods has proven elusive too.”\nOn the other hand, we eagerly try again. We’re not too bright when it comes to foreign 4GWs, but we make for it by our unwillingness to learn.\nEditor and others,\nDefine success. If “success” is achievement of the policy goals of the United States at the time of the conflict, the record is mixed. But it isn’t all negative. If success is a nebulous thought that the world would be a better place if the US wasn’t so involved, then it is an impossible case to prove either way. One would simply state, “look, everything is terrible.” But how does one prove the counterfactual. What does the world look like without the US ensuring access to the global commons, for example. And if the world looks terrible, doesn’t it look a lot better then it used to? Conflict is not more likely, it is less likely. For example, see Steven Pinker’s The Better Angels Of Our Nature.\n” If “success” is achievement of the policy goals of the United States at the time of the conflict, the record is mixed.”\nI believe everybody older than 12 knows that few things are black and white. That’s a pure form of the false dilemma fallacy. But the net balance of results on foreign counterinsurgencies since WW2 is overwhelming negative, despite vast expenditures in blood and money. By now only the blind do not see that.\nThe History of COIN, one of almost uniform failure by foreigners fighting local insurgents:\nMore paths to failure in Iraq, 16 December 2006 — Myths about COIN in Iraq\nHow often do insurgents win? How much time does successful COIN require?, 29 May 2008\nMax Boot: history suggests we will win in Afghanistan, with better than 50-50 odds. Here’s the real story., 21 June 2010 — Boot discusses 7 alleged victories by foreign armies fighting insurgencies.\nA major discovery! It could change the course of US geopolitical strategy, if we’d only see it, 28 June 2010 — Andrew Exum (aka Abu Muqawama) points us to the doctoral dissertation of Erin Marie Simpson in Political Science from Harvard. She examines the present and past analysis of counter-insurgency. This could change the course of American foreign policy, if we pay attention.\nA look at the history of victories over insurgents, 30 June 2010\nCOINistas point to Kenya as a COIN success. In fact it was an expensive bloody failure., 7 August 2012\nAbout our wars:\nA look back at the madness that led us into our wars. How does this advice read 6 years later?, 26 June 2010\nTime to ask about lessons learned from our wars, a last opportunity to gain something from them, 30 October 2013\nAbout Afghanistan:\nAbout Iraq:\nIf we won in Iraq, what did we win? Was it worth the cost?, 15 July 2009\nWe collect our winnings in Iraq, 27 December 2009\nOne criterion of victory in Iraq: when will the oil flow?, 3 February 2010\nAbout our successful nation-building in Iraq, 31 August 2010\nThe end of our Expedition to Iraq: war-boosters cheer despite its long-predicted failure., 24 October 2011\nPeter Van Buren explains “What We Lost in Iraq and Washington in 2009-2012″, 10 April 2012\nIraq gives us another opportunity to confront our mistakes, and learn from them, 27 June 2014\nOne point on this. It isn’t better or worse. It is different. I would assume a person conducting a local insurgency would like access to the various types of intel assets we have. Moreover, I would assume they would like capabilities that could do things like disrupt the funding of the insurgency.\n“what we are doing in Syria and Iraq currently is different from the past.”\nNo, it’s not. If you don’t see that, there is no point in continuing. Nothing can help the blind.\nDessenter says:\n“It’s a racket.”\nDissenter,\nThat is nice to know, but operationally useless as an insight. Either to understand (causes, dynamics), to predict, or to persuade.\nAs phrased, it is what my grandmother called “giving them a piece of your mind”. You feel better afterwards, but that’s all.\nPingback: Mark Twain's Advice On War Is Surprisingly Relevant Today\nI should have included the following from Wikipedia …\n“War Is a Racket is the title of two works, a speech and a booklet, by retired United States Marine Corps Major General and two time Medal of Honor recipient Smedley D. Butler. In them, Butler frankly discusses from his experience as a career military officer how business interests commercially benefit (including war profiteering) from warfare.”\nPresent company excluded, but if it shocks some into thinking about the subject at hand further, then yes, I feel better.\nDessenter,\nThat’s my point exactly. Shouting “war is a racket” accomplishes nothing.\nI have written about Butler’s analysis, and I agree that it is a provocative –although limited in scope — analysis. Works like it and “War is the health of the State” help us understand the deep role of warn our social, economic ic, and political systems.\nBREAKING: According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO), the rich are getting richer while the poor in America continue to get poorer. And the government is contributing to all this.The mathematical measure of wealth-inequality is called “Gini,” and the higher it is, the more extreme a nation’s wealth-inequality.\nThe Gini for the U.S. is 85; Canada, 72; and Bangladesh, 64. Nations more unequal than the U.S. include Kazakhstan at 86 and the Ukraine at 90. The African continent tips in at just under 85.\nOdd company for the “exceptional nation.”\nhttp://wemeantwell.com/blog/2014/09/19/hah-hah-you-are-so-poor/\nHah Hah: You are So Poor\nI do not know if you are familiar with PVB’;s wbsite:\nhttp://wemeantwell.com/blog/2014/08/30/dinner-with-morris-berman/\nDinner with Morris Berman\nGoogle Morris Berman\n“Berman’s book is no feel-good experience with a happy ending. In that sense, and it matters, Spinning Straw picks up the themes from his previous books and slaps them down inside you. In an interview, Berman spelled it out:\nI was living in Washington, D.C. for eight years before I moved to Mexico, and I told myself I would be like the proverbial lotus in a cesspool. All that happened was that I became a dirty lotus. I discovered that the best way of escaping American values—values that were killing me—was to escape America. It was the smartest decision I ever made. Most of us don’t realize how the corporate-commercial-consumer-militarized-hi-tech-surveillance life has wrapped its tentacles around our throats, and is squeezing the life out of us. We merge with “our” narrative so as to have some measure of safety in our lives; but what if it’s a death-oriented narrative? (Usually it’s some version of the American Dream, which is the life of a hamster on a treadmill)… Life has a tragic dimension, and no amount of Oprah or Tony Robbins can change that. To hide from sadness—and one way or another, that’s what Americans struggle mightily to do—is to remain a child all your life. Most Americans have never grown up. Americans are probably the most superficial people on the planet. To dull your sadness with Prozac or cell phones or food or alcohol or TV or laptops is to suppress symptoms, and not live in reality. Reality is not always pleasant, but it does have one overriding advantage: It’s real.”\nhttp://wemeantwell.com/blog/2014/09/05/morris-bermans-new-book-spinning-straw-into-gold-chicken-soup-for-reality/\nMorris Berman’s New Book, Spinning Straw into Gold: Chicken Soup for Reality\nInterview by Naomi Prins:\nhttp://www.alternet.org/world/154453/why_the_american_empire_was_destined_to_collapse\nWhy the American Empire Was Destined to Collapse\nAuthor and social critic Morris Berman says the fact that we’re a nation of hustlers lies at the root of our decline.\nConversations with Great Minds with Morris Berman, Part 1. Why America Failed\nConversations with Great Minds with Morris Berman, Part …\nView on http://www.youtube.com\nPreview by Yahoo\nConversations with Great Minds with Morris Berman, Part 1.\nhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k6MBzA9lGSQ&feature=related\nWhy America Failed – The Roots of Imperial Decline\nhttp://www.c-spanvideo.org/program/WhyAmer\nCSPAN Book Video of Morris Berman’s latest book\nhttp://www.greanvillepost.com/2011/05/19/rainbow-pie-morris-berman-remembers-joe-bageant/\nRainbow Pie: Morris Berman remembers Joe Bageant\nhttp://www.truthdig.com/avbooth/item/morris_berman_tolls_the_bell_for_american_society_20120210/\nMorris Berman and the Decline of America\nhttp://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0,1518,778396,00.html\nBerman also discussed here:\nhttp://theautomaticearth.org/Finance/to-where-our-oppositonal-culture-takes-us.html\nhttp://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2014/03/anglo-american-capitalism-run-strategies.html\nHas Anglo-American Capitalism Run Out of Strategies?\nPosted on March 25, 2014 by Yves Smith\nYves here. The Real News Network commemorates the 30th anniversary of the coal miners’ strike in the UK, which was in many ways labor’s last stand, with a broad-ranging interview with George Irvin, research professor at the University of London. He takes a broad historical perspective to show how the rise of a low-wage, debt driven economy and the pressure to reduce the role of government have painted Anglo-Saxon capitalism in a corner.\nI did write one sentence poorly. Of course many of the activities we are doing in Syria and Iraq aren’t new. Some that make use of cyber capabilities are new, but most aren’t. However, it isn’t the activities being new or old that make something new. It is the mixture of those activities to meet a certain context. And that mixture changes, rather the conflict is World War II and Korea or Vietnam and Syria. It is how to effectively meet ones policy goals with the correct mixture of ways to achieve them that is the question.\nThat said, editor provided me with a long list of COIN “failures”. If we are arguing about the fact that we don’t meet our policy goals, shouldn’t the debate be about what to do, not if we should do anything? Most of the posters here seem focused on the policy. That is fine. But it provides a position that is impossible to move. If you don’t think we should do anything, what is the point of bring what we can do? What is the point of bring up FM 3-24, if any answer it provides is wrong?\nWhy bring it up?\nBecause after four decades of interfering in the Middle East (Doing something), we’ve yet to learn anything.\nMikeF,\nWhich would be my point. Is this really about the methods in FM 3-24 or that we are doing something. If it is about doing something, what have this in the article: “In a month when we’re asking the experts hard questions on the need to reform FM 3-24 Counterinsurgency and rethinking the colonial methods.” If we should not be involved, there is no need to discuss reform of doctrine to do something.\nLeave a Reply to Editor of the Fabius Maximus website\tCancel reply","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line865450"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6169248223304749,"wiki_prob":0.38307517766952515,"text":"Ancient mosaic with esoteric celestial elements discovered during recent Pompeii excavations\nimage: @PlanetPompeii 26 January, 2019\nSpecial thank-you to a specialist in ancient philosophy and history who alerted me to the recent excavation of an amazing floor mosaic which has lain buried under the ash and debris from the eruption of Vesuvius which engulfed the city of Pompeii and all of its remaining inhabitants in AD 79, and which has only recently again seen the light of day during an ongoing archaeological project in the Regio V section of the ruins.\nOn a late autumn night (long thought to have been August 24, but based on recent discoveries and analysis now believed to have been in either late October or November) in the year we today call AD 79 (or, if you prefer, 79 CE), the volcano known to the Romans as Vesuvius Mons erupted violently, sending a deadly and basically inescapable pyroclastic flow of superheated ash and toxic gas billowing down the mountainside over the seaside town of Pompeii, killing everyone who had not left the city during the preceding earthquakes and tremors which had provided ominous warning that the volcano was preparing to explode.\nThe ash flowed around and over buildings, people, and animals, preserving them even as it entombed them for centuries, eventually burying them in hardened volcanic material over 80 feet deep. For conveying the human impact on the men and women and children who were overcome by the eruption on that night, as well as providing an outstanding examination of the city of Pompeii in ancient times and after it began to be excavated in earnest beginning in the 1700s, I recommend Professor Mary Beard's Fires of Vesuvius: Pompeii Lost and Found (2008).\nRecently, new archaeological excavations have been underway in the section of the city which is designated \"Regio V.\" The buried city of Pompeii was divided into Regiones (\"regions\" or \"wards\") during the 1800s by archaeologist Giuseppe Fiorelli (1823 - 1896), who began to study the ruins of Pompeii in 1848. As Professor Beard explains in her book:\nIn the absence of ancient addresses, modern gazetteers to the city use a late nineteenth-century system for referring to individual buildings. The same archaeologist who perfected the technique of casting the corpses, Giuseppe Fiorelli (one-time revolutionary politician, and the most influential director of the Pompeian excavations ever), divided Pompeii into nine separate areas or regions; he then numbered each block of houses within these areas, and went on to give every doorway onto the street its own individual number. So, in other words, according to this now standard archaeological shorthand, 'VI. xv. 1' would mean the first doorway of the fifteenth block of region six, which lies at the northwest of the city. 20 - 21.\nBelow is a map showing the Regiones and Insulae (\"islands\" or \"blocks\") of Pompeii, from a book by Eustace Neville-Rolfe (1845 - 1908), entitled Pompeii Popular and Practical: An easy book on a difficult subject (1893):\nAs the reader can see from the above map, in 1893 when Eustace Neville-Rolfe's book was published, much of Regio V was still buried under the layers of ancient ash as well as the earth that had covered over it during the intervening nineteen centuries since the eruption. However, blocks (or Insulae) in the regiones which had been excavated up to that year are numbered according to Fiorelli's system.\nEach of these blocks within the regiones contain dozens of individual buildings, as can be perceived by looking closely at the gorgeous 1911 map below:\nAs can be seen in that map as well, large portions of the city remained under layers of ash and later soil deposits in 1911, including most of the northern parts of the city in the region designated by Giuseppe Fiorelli as Regio V. However, as you can see in the map, some of the edges of the buildings lining the avenue leading across the town from the Porta di Nola (the \"Nola Gate\") were excavated prior to 1911. This important cross-town artery has been dubbed the \"Via di Nola\" in modern times, although as Professor Beard explains in her book linked above, we do not know the original name of the street, or whether the ancients even had \"street names\" in the way we think of them today (20).\nBelow is a map of Pompeii showing in different colors the periods in which various areas of Pompeii have been excavated thus far, prior to the new excavations in Regio V: V. xv. 1).\nAs you can see from this map, significant portions of the south-eastern side of the city were excavated in the years following the publication of the 1911 map shown just above it (the areas in orange), as well as some additional forays deeper into the blocks indicated in green than were shown in the 1911 map. Nevertheless, large sections of Regio V, where excavations are ongoing today, are still uncolored in the above map.\nHere is a link to an excellent modern map from the Visiting Pompeii website, showing the Regiones and outlines of buildings that have been excavated thus far, and also labeling the streets with their modern names.\nThe recent push to excavate more deeply into Regio V as part of the Great Pompeii Project (to prevent damage including water damage to unexcavated archaeological treasures) is turning up amazing new discoveries. Here is a short article from March of 2018 with some photographs showing excavated portions of Pompeii next to portions of Regio V which are still covered with undisturbed ash and soil, entitled \"New Pompeii District to be Uncovered.\"\nThis previous post discusses one such new discovery, an amazing fresco containing an erotic depiction of the scene of the mythical episode of Leda and the Swan, in which the artist has Leda \"breaking the fourth wall\" by staring provocatively at the viewer no matter where in the room the viewer is located. That post also contains a video I made entitled \"The Divine Spark descends to the Mortal Realm,\" discussing some of the celestial aspects of the myth of Zeus and Leda, and of other myths involving Zeus and his amorous affairs with mortal women, as well as possible esoteric messages conveyed by these erotic myths.\nThe cubiculum (probably a bedroom) containing the newly-discovered painting of Leda and the Swan was unearthed in Regio V during the 2018 excavations as part of the Great Pompeii Project. It was found in a villa located in a block along the Via del Vesuvio, near the well-known House of the Vettii (the House of the Vettii, in fact, is the house indicated by the example address given by Professor Beard in the quotation above: V. xv. 1). The avenue known today as Via del Vesuvio runs to the gate known as the Vesuvius Gate, along the northern wall of the city: you can find it in the multi-colored map above along the north wall, where two streets descend in an inverted \"V\" from a point at the gate (the Vesuvius Gate can easily be seen along the north wall because it is the point that has a larger \"green-colored\" section north of the wall, representing excavation that was performed between 1879 and 1923).\nThe Via del Vesuvio is the \"right-hand\" street extending down from the point of this inverted V, traversing all the way across the city from north to south (or northwest to southeast) and exiting at the Porta di Stabia (the \"Stabian Gate\"). It changes names from the Via del Vesuvio to the Via Stabiana when it crosses the Via di Nola.\nIn addition to the striking recently-unearthed depiction of Leda and the Swan, an even more-recently uncovered mosaic from a Regio V villa was revealed to the public in January of this year. This is a mosaic found in the so-called \"House of Jupiter\" or \"Casa di Giove\" (\"House of Jove\"), a villa along the Via di Nola which had been partially excavated in the late 19th century but which has rooms further back which are only now being unearthed. Here is an article from the Daily Mail dated August 2018 describing the ongoing excavations in the Casa di Giove (an article published a few months prior to the unearthing of the floor mosaic shown at the top of this post and discussed below).\nThe Casa di Giove is designated V. ii. 15 and it is linked to the building designated V. ii. 16 under the system of Giuseppe Fiorelli. You can see the actual floor plan of these buildings if you look closely enough on the close-up map contained in this article from the Visiting Pompeii website. I have taken the close-up map from that article and circled (in dark blue) the label indicating \"block\" or \"insula\" V. 2, and placed a blue arrow pointing to the buildings designated V. ii. 15 and V. ii. 16 (you can see the tiny \"door numbers\" indicated along the edge of the block facing the street labeled \"Via di Nola,\" if you look very closely):\nThe striking mosaic recently revealed in the Casa di Giove is shown at the top of this post. It depicts a winged anthropomorphic male figure shown from the waist up, emerging from a large scorpion. Below the scorpion is a massive coiled cobra, rearing up like an Egyptian uraeus.\nAbove the winged figure is another winged figure, angelic in form (with feathered wings, unlike the somewhat \"moth-shaped\" wings of the first figure who is rising up out of the scorpion). This angelic figure has an upward-stretching arm pointing skyward (in a hand-gesture or mudra which is seen in other sacred artwork, such as the mudras discussed here, or those depicted in the Last Supper by da Vinci, for example). This same angelic figure also has a downward-reaching hand holding a torch, and this torch is extended downwards towards the head of the first figure (the one rising out of the scorpion). The torch is setting the head of the first figure aflame.\nAbove this angelic winged figure with a torch, we see a third winged figure holding a crown which appears to be made of laurel branches (a \"laurel crown\"). This top figure with the laurel crown is extending both arms downwards, offering the laurel crown to one of the two figures below.\nThe twitter account of the Pompeii-based website Planet Pompeii tweeted about this remarkable mosaic on 26 January of this year (link to tweet).\nIn that tweet, they called the mosaic \"enigmatic\" and then offered their interpretation, saying: \"it would be the transformation of the gigantic Orion constellation after its fight against the scorpion.\"\nThis interpretation is worthwhile, and is at least pointing in the right direction, by perceiving that this ancient mosaic, buried beneath the debris of the eruption for 1, 940 years, is in fact based upon celestial figures found in the heavens above. While I commend their attempt to interpret the scene celestially, I disagree that the ancient mosaic depicts \"the gigantic Orion constellation.\"\nJust because the scene contains a large scorpion (which the author or authors of the tweet correctly suggest may be related to the constellation Scorpio) does not mean that the figure rising up from the scorpion is necessarily Orion. In fact, I would argue that the winged figure rising up from the Scorpion is associated with a different constellation, one situated immediately above the constellation Scorpio in the heavens: the constellation Ophiuchus.\nThe reason we can be quite confident that the winged man emerging from the scorpion and rising towards the heavens (where he is anointed with fire by the downward-facing torch of the angelic figure above, while another angelic figure descends with a laurel crown) is associated with Ophiuchus is the fact that the figures above him can almost certainly be associated with the constellation Hercules, located directly above Ophiuchus in the sky. The presence of a crown in the artwork, connected to the angelic winged figures, is yet another confirmatory clue, because this crown can almost certainly be identified with the constellation Corona Borealis, the Northern Crown, which is located immediately in front of the constellation Hercules and indeed is envisioned as being \"grasped\" by the figures associated with the constellation Hercules in a great many myths from around the world.\nBelow is a star-chart showing the relevant constellations in the night sky, juxtaposed with an image of the newly-uncovered artwork from the long-buried mosaic in the Casa di Giove:\nWorking our way upwards in the mosaic, beginning with the giant scorpion, we can be fairly confident that the scorpion corresponds to the figure of Scorpio, in the heavens. I have drawn an arrow from the constellation Scorpio as we see it in the sky to the giant scorpion depicted in the ancient mosaic.\nImmediately above the scorpion in the mosaic we see the human figure, rising up with arms upraised, with moth-like wings on either side. This figure, I am convinced, can be identified with the position of the constellation Ophiuchus in the night sky. The constellation Ophiuchus is an extremely important constellation, one which plays a central role in many of the Star Myths of the world. Ophiuchus figures in ancient myth include Dionysus, Odin, Christ, and many others. Note that all of these Ophiuchus figures are mystical figures, associated with ecstasy or transfiguration -- just as we see the figure in this enigmatic ancient mosaic from the floor of the House of Jove in Pompeii undergoing some sort of transfiguration.\nThe moth-winged figure undergoing some sort of transfiguration apparently has his head set aflame by a downward-reaching winged figure immediately above him. I would suggest that this winged figure with the torch can be clearly identified as being associated with the constellation Hercules. The constellation Hercules is located directly above Ophiuchus in the heavens. What's more, the constellation has a leg which appears to be stepping on one side of the triangular \"head\" of the constellation Ophiuchus. In the ancient mosaic from the floor of the Casa di Giove in Pompeii, this \"forward leg\" is instead envisioned as a \"downward-pointing torch,\" but the outline and body position still match the outline of the constellation Hercules.\n(The reader may note that the artwork on the mosaic appears to be \"mirror-image\" to the constellations in the night sky -- this is not unusual for artwork based on celestial scenes; for example, note that the tail of the scorpion in the mosaic points to the right as we face it, but the tail of Scorpio in the heavens points towards the left, or east, as we face the star-chart above: this is why the two angelic figures above the moth-winged transfigured man are also facing to the left with their feet extending to the right, even though Hercules in the heavens faces to the right or west with his feet extending to the left or east).\nThe reader may wonder about the massive weapon which the constellation Hercules in the heavens appears to be brandishing (this feature in the outline of the constellation shows up as a weapon wielded by mythical figures associated with this constellation in many of the world's ancient Star Myths, such as the club wielded by the hero Heracles in Greek myth, or the mighty mace wielded by the hero Bhima in the Mahabharata of ancient India). There is evidence that this portion of the outline of the constellation, often envisioned as a weapon, was alternately envisioned as forming the \"wings\" of an angelic-looking figure instead. For example, below is artwork from ancient Greece, showing the famous scene in which Achilles drags the body of Hector after defeating him in battle, as described in the Iliad:\nNote that immediately behind the figure of Achilles in the chariot we see a winged figure whose leg position indicates beyond any doubt that this figure (usually interpreted as representative of the spirit of the deceased Patroclus) is associated in this particular piece of artwork with the constellation Hercules in the night sky. I discuss this scene in more depth in my 2016 book Star Myths of the World, and how to interpret them, Volume Two (Myths of Ancient Greece). The other figures in the artwork are shown in that volume to be associated with other nearby constellations, thus confirming that the winged figure is indeed associated with Hercules (for example, Achilles in the chariot can be shown to be associated with the figure of Bootes in the heavens, who is located directly in front of Hercules and thus matches this ancient artwork on the vase quite precisely).\nAdditional confirmation that winged figures such as those found in the Pompeiian mosaic and the Greek vase above can be identified as being associated with the constellation Hercules can be found in depictions of the Annunciation by the Angel Gabriel to the Virgin Mary down through the centuries. In these artistic depictions, the Angel Gabriel is almost invariably depicted in a posture characterized by a \"deep knee-bend\" and a \"downward reaching arm,\" corresponding to the outline of the constellation Hercules. The other distinctive aspect of the constellation Hercules, the \"upraised club\" (or other powerful weapon) is instead envisioned as the over-arching wing or wings of the angel.\nBelow is an example of an Annunciation scene, painted around the year AD 1270, and showing the Angel with characteristics distinctive to the outline of the constellation Hercules:\nNote that in the above Annunciation scene, the artist has chosen to depict the Virgin Mary standing in front of a tall rectangular tower with a triangular roof: this tower's shape is clearly evocative of the outline of the central body of the constellation Ophiuchus in the heavens (towards which the downward-reaching arm of the constellation Hercules can be seen to be pointing).\nThese examples should confirm that the angelic image in the mosaic recently unearthed in the Casa di Giove in Pompeii is associated with the constellation Hercules, and this helps to confirm as well that the moth-winged man being transfigured in that mosaic, just below the angelic figure, is associated with the constellation Ophiuchus.\nJust above the first \"angelic\" figure we see another similar angelic-looking figure with feathered wings, this time reaching downward and extending a laurel crown. The arc of this wreath of laurels is almost certainly associated with the dazzling arc of the Northern Crown in the heavens, Corona Borealis (as indicated in the star-chart above, where I have drawn a green arrow pointing from the Northern Crown in the chart to the laurel wreath crown in the artwork).\nIt is an undeniable fact that figures associated with the constellation Hercules in ancient myth and ancient artwork are frequently described or depicted as grasping an arc-shaped object which is associated with the Northern Crown (Corona Borealis). Indeed, the Northern Crown is located immediately in front of the constellation Hercules in the heavens, and although the constellations are not \"usually\" or \"normally\" seen as being connected, we can easily envision a line from the downward-reaching arm of Hercules to the nearby stars of the Northern Crown:\nThere are a great many myths from around the world in which a Hercules figure is envisioned as grasping a figure associated with the Northern Crown. One familiar episode on which I have written extensively in the past is the story of the Judgment of Solomon, from the book of 1 Kings in the Bible. In that story, Solomon directs a figure (whom we can designate as the \"Swordsman\") to cut a living baby in half and give one half to each of two mothers who each claim the baby to be her own (the swordsman does not actually cut the baby in half, in case you are not familiar with the story -- Solomon commands \"Stop!\" before the baby is actually divided, by which fact we know that Solomon is talking to someone else with a sword, and is not wielding the sword himself in that story).\nIn that episode of the Judgment of Solomon, the Swordsman can be convincingly shown to be played by the constellation Hercules in the heavens, while the infant being held by the Swordsman is associated with Corona Borealis, the Northern Crown. Artwork down through the centuries consistently represents the Swordsman in a posture reminiscent of the outline of Hercules, with sword held overhead, and consistently shows the baby in a \"hard arch\" representative of the arc of the Northern Crown in the heavens:\nFinally, we can address the coiled cobra snake depicted beneath the scorpion in the mosaic. As shown in the star-chart above, I believe this serpent corresponds to the constellation Hydra in the night sky, which is located just to the west of Scorpio, and which features a \"circlet\" at the front of the sinuous serpent shape, very suggestive of the hood of a cobra. Indeed, the outline of Hydra could be envisioned as suggesting a cobra with head rearing up. I have drawn an arrow in the star-chart between the constellation Hydra and the coiled serpent in the mosaic. Note that once again the serpent in the artwork is \"mirror-image\" to the direction of the constellations in the sky -- this mirroring is consistent throughout the mosaic and appears to have been a deliberate choice on the part of the artist. Again, such mirroring is not unusual in sacred artwork depicting figures who are based on heavenly constellations: sometimes the scene is mirror-image to the way we see it from earth looking to the sky.\nThus, we can see that the evidence supporting the assertion that the recently-unearthed mosaic from the Casa di Giove in Regio V of the ruins of Pompeii depicts a scene that is patterned after the celestial figures in the heavens is quite abundant, and quite compelling (I would say conclusive).\nThe scene does not appear to depict the constellation Orion: rather, I would argue that it depicts a transfigured mortal who is depicted in the position of the constellation Ophiuchus in the heavens, directly above a great scorpion (the constellation Scorpio) and a coiled cobra-snake (the constellation Hydra). Above, we see an angelic being with a torch, setting the head of the rising man aflame: this angelic being can be confidently associated with the constellation Hercules. Above that, we see yet another angelic being, also (according to my analysis) based on Hercules, but this time offering a crown instead of a flaming torch. This crown is almost certainly identified with the Northern Crown in the heavens, which is often envisioned in other myths as being held in the hand of the constellation Hercules.\nThe parallels to other artwork and other myths in this newly-discoverd mosaic are striking. The fact that I have published analysis of other artwork based on these same constellations from other myth-traditions years before the \"mosaic of the transfigured man\" from the floor of the Casa di Giove was ever revealed to the world is powerful confirmation that the previous analysis was correct, and that these ancient patterns based on the constellations were used in myths from many cultures (and are even found in artwork that we have not re-discovered at the present date).\nIt should be fairly self-evident that the image of the \"transfigured man\" contains many symbols which are today thought to belong to literalist or Biblical Christianity. The mosaic depicts an angel bringing a crown down towards a transfiguring mortal: this iconography is a direct parallel to scriptures describing the awarding of a crown by a heavenly angelic figure, found in the Biblical passages of Isaiah 62: 3, 1 Corinthians 9: 25, 2 Titus 4: 8, 1 Peter 5: 4, Revelation 2: 10, and Revelation 4: 4.\nSimilarly, the mosaic depicts an angelic being placing flames upon the head of the transfiguring mortal: this iconography is a direct parallel to scriptures describing flames coming down upon the heads of the assembled faithful at the Pentecost gathering described in Acts 2: 3. The scene can also be seen as having parallels to the scene described in Isaiah 6: 6 - 7 in which a cherubim brings a live coal held with tongs and places it upon Isaiah's lips.\nI would argue that these parallels arise because the scenes described in the scriptures and the scene portrayed in the mosaic are based upon the same celestial figures, the important constellations Ophiuchus and Hercules, as well as the Northern Crown.\nIt is quite moving to think of this piece of ancient artwork, buried by the deadly eruption of the powerful volcano Vesuvius in AD 79, a full 1, 940 years ago this year, resting under its heavy blanket of congealed ash and debris, waiting patiently in darkness and in silence, bearing its powerful message through the centuries, to finally emerge at this date to proclaim it again.\nIt is a message which declares that the world's ancient myths and scriptures are celestial and esoteric in nature, and that they are united by an ancient system of metaphor which has been forgotten or suppressed for many centuries (although it was obviously known during the years prior to the eruption of Vesuvius Mons).\nAnd it is a message of our connection to the heavenly realm, the realm of the Higher Self, associated with the higher elements of air and fire, with which we are actually connected even during this incarnate life, imprisoned as we are for a time in the realm of the lower elements of earth and water, and surrounded by serpents and scorpions.\nWe can only wonder what other ancient treasures await re-discovery underneath the yet-unexcavated Regiones of the ancient city of Pompeii.\nContemplating aspects of the terrible crash of February 19, 1979 in Norman Ollestad's \"Crazy for the Storm\"\nForty years ago on February 19, 1979, a small plane carrying young Norman Ollestad (11), his father Norman Ollestad, Sr (43), his father's girlfriend Sandra Cressman (30), and pilot Rob Arnold (27) crashed into the side of a rugged 8,600 foot mountain in a blizzard.\nThe story of young Norman's harrowing journey down from the peak alone after the deadly crash is told by Norman thirty years later in his 2009 memoir Crazy for the Storm, interspersed with his memories of his relationship with his father and the lessons his father taught him growing up which helped the 11-year old survive.\nHere is a link to a blog post I wrote in 2015 about this remarkable book and Norman's gripping account of his childhood and adolescence and that terrible day in February of 1979. Entitled \"Crazy for the Storm, and the inner connection to the Infinite,\" the post examines some of the terrain maps of the site of young Norman's ordeal, as well as touching on some of the other aspects of the story which are extremely noteworthy and turned out to have been essential to Norman's survival that day.\nIn particular (and those who have not read the book itself may want to stop and do so before reading further), there were several \"synchronicities\" which enabled the 11-year-old to be found prior to nightfall after he made his way down off the rugged mountain during the blizzard.\nA young mother named Pat Chapman was awakened on the morning of the crash by what she describes as a loud thud. \"Her first thought was that it sounded like a plane crashing,\" she explained (263). She also heard a strange beeping sound and a coyote who wouldn't stop howling. The text continues:\nLater that morning, nagged by a remote yet unshakable feeling that something bad had happened on the mountain, she led her two sons on a miserable hike to the meadow. They called out toward Ontario Peak, above the crown of rock, into the long apron that she called Gooseberry Canyon. Although the canyon was several thousand feet away, their voices echoed off the canyon walls. The wind and heavy fog buffered their voices some that day. When no one answered, she figured that her hunch was wrong. 263.\nAs it turns out, young Norman was trying to make his way towards this meadow, which he thought he had seen from the steep cliffs near the top of the mountain, and towards which he steered after he made his way down through the terrifying ice-chutes and funnels formed by the rock faces of the mountainside below the crash site.\nWhen he finally did make it to the meadow, it was only because he saw Pat's bootprints in the snow and followed them that he was able to trace his way through the forested areas surrounding the meadow back to a dirt road where he was eventually found by another person who followed a hunch, a teenaged boy named Glenn Farmer.\nIn addition to these \"coincidences,\" which enabled the injured 11-year old to be found after his hours-long ordeal on the mountainside, Norman later returned to the mountain twenty-seven years later (during the warmer months this time) and was surprised to discover that there was no way to see the meadow at all from the part of the mountain that he had traversed -- it was hidden by another ridgeline the entire way!\nAnd yet, if he had not navigated towards that meadow, and then followed the bootprints left in the snow by Pat Chapman and her two children, young Norman Ollestad might not have found anyone to help him in that remote location. Writing his book nearly thirty years later, he considers this thought, and the perplexing fact that based on the unmistakable physical layout of the terrain, he could not have actually seen the meadow at any point as he made his way down off the side of Ontario Peak:\nAnd even in the face of insurmountable contradictory evidence I still have a vivid memory of heading toward that meadow, compelled to reach it, believing that it would guide me to safety.\nBears and wolves navigate wilderness by instinct, and migratory birds are guided by an internal compass, so maybe the notion that I had to see the meadow in order for me to perceive it is an artificial concept.\nMaybe I sensed a place where I could rest from the steep ice and broken terrain -- a place where other humans like Pat were compelled to go -- just as a wolf or bear can sense such places. Maybe the footprints of Pat and her boys, those human markings, called to me, and because I was cut off from civilization I was able to access my animal instinct and hang on to life. 267.\nThis revelation, and Norman's reflections upon it almost thirty years later, are among the most important lessons from an entire book filled with insights of all sorts about life in general (and in modern society in particular), in my opinion.\nThe fact is that some part of us, which we might call \"the subconscious\" but which appears to stretch even beyond what is usually allowed by that term, appears to have access to information of tremendous importance, and to which we are usually completely unaware. Sometimes, such as in life-threatening situations like the one 11-year-old Norman Ollestad faced that day on February 19, 1979, that information makes itself known to our conscious mind.\nAs the book also notes, when Pat Chapman told the sheriff's deputy later that day about thinking that she had heard a plane crash (the thudding sound that woke her up that morning, and which later caused her to hike out to the meadow with her children, on a \"hunch\"), the sheriff's deputy told her that it was impossible for her to have heard the crash, due to the distance from her house. It must have been the snowplow she had heard, they said (263 -264).\nAs Norman Ollestad notes in his own reflections on this information, the animals of the natural kingdom appear to have access to this kind of awareness, which goes beyond what can be explained by the five physical senses alone, and which is usually dismissed as \"instinct.\" We ourselves are usually cut off from that awareness which is retained among the animal kingdom -- cut off by the complex entanglements of human society (the complexity of which, and the trauma with which these entanglements are imposed upon us as we grow up in the modern world, are depicted in graphic detail during the other parts of Norman Ollestad's powerful memoir).\nIn a sense, we are cut off from a very important part of ourselves by this process (necessary as it is in order to function in human society). I am convinced that healing this division, and becoming re-integrated with that part of ourselves from which we have been severed, is a central part of the message of the world's ancient myths, and of ancient practices such as meditation. Previous posts dealing with this question are numerous, and include:\n\"What lies beneath the scurrying of the superficial mind?\"\n\"Paul Selig reveals a secret menu that's available to all of us\"\n\"Descending into Darkness\"\n\"You may have a Higher Self, and He or She wants you to know it\"\n(among many others).\nNote that in one of the above-linked blog posts, there is an embedded video entitled \"Greatest dad saves EVER!!!\" in which some amazing rescues, primarily of infants or very young children, by dads are caught on film. One of these, fairly early in the video beginning at about the 0:06 second-mark in the clip, involves a dad who actually appears to be asleep when his hand suddenly shoots out to catch an infant about to fall head-first off a couch -- an infant the \"dad\" was not even looking at when his arm extends seemingly on its own to save the baby from potential disaster.\nThese types of incidents, which are barely explainable by our strictly \"materialist\" conventional paradigm, even with the vague catch-all phrase \"instinct,\" indicate that some part of ourselves (our subconscious, which is a useful term as long as we realize that our subconscious appears to be tapped into a much wider field of awareness than is usually admitted by conventional science) has a level of awareness or sensitivity that goes beyond anything that can be explained by the five physical senses. In the case of Pat Chapman (who was awakened by the \"sound\" of a crash that was seemingly much too far away for her to have heard it from her location) and the meadow \"seen\" by young Norman as he made his way down off the mountain during his life-or-death ordeal, it appears that the subconscious (or whatever term we want to use) can in fact be aware of information at distances greater than what is possible for our physical senses.\nThese life-saving aspects of the historical facts surrounding Norman Ollestad's survival on that terrible day of February 19, 1979 are reinforced by many other incidents in which \"ordinary\" people had experiences or premonitions that are equally difficult or impossible to explain under the conventional paradigm, the accepted paradigm which ignores or dismisses them as \"coincidence\" or \"superstition\" or some kind of psychological projection.\nI believe these are extremely important subjects to contemplate.\nI highly recommend reading Norman Ollestad's remarkable memoir Crazy for the Storm, about the plane crash forty years ago but also about so much more. We should be grateful for his willingness to share such a personal story.\nIn a way, it can be seen as another one of the \"greatest dad saves EVER.\"\nWelcome to new visitors from 13 Questions podcast! (and returning friends)\nBig thank-you to Darren Grimes and Graham Dunlop, the hosts of the successful Grimerica Show podcast, who have assembled a new team to launch a brand-new podcast in addition to the Grimerica Show entitled \"13 Questions to be a Better Man,\" in which they explore questions of \"manhood in the digital age.\"\nThe podcast is born out of a desire to provide perspectives on difficult questions we face during this particular time in history, and hearing heartfelt answers from a wide variety of guests can be quite eye-opening and very helpful, and something that I think would be of interest to all men and women, even though they are tackling these subjects from a \"modern manhood\" perspective.\nTheir plan is to interview a wide variety of guests while asking the same \"13 Questions.\" Above is an interview with Christian Takes Gun Parrish, the artist and Native American dancer Supaman, answering the 13 Questions with Darren and Graham in the second-ever episode of the new show. Below is a video of Supaman with world champion dancer Acosia Red Elk (White Swan Rising from the Water) dancing to Supaman's song \"Why.\"\nI hope you will check out the new 13 Questions Podcast. Even if you don't agree with every single point of view offered by every guest on the program (and it would be impossible for everyone to agree with everyone else on these questions), I believe that Darren and Graham and team are providing a really valuable new forum that can really change lives. The podcast lets you hear a wide variety of people pondering difficult questions and offering things they have learned in these different areas from their own varied life experiences. Gaining just one new perspective or one new thing to try from each interview would make listening to that interview worthwhile, even if you disagreed with everything else!\nI was humbled to be asked to be on the show as they were launching the podcast. These aren't easy questions to answer! Looking back since the interview, I have thought of many other things I could have said in answer to some of the questions, but hopefully something here or there in my interview will be helpful to someone. More importantly, I think what is most valuable about this podcast is to listen to it as a kind of a tapestry or \"quilt\" in which all the pieces add up to something bigger than any of the individual strands or squares.\nLinks to add the show to your regular line-up of podcasts to listen to are below. There is a subscription option that is explained at the beginning of each show, offering extended content, a regular newsletter, valuable online courses, and (most valuable of all) the opportunity to record your own interview asking the 13 Questions to someone you respect, and send the interview in to the 13 Questions team to be shared with the world.\nDirect Downloads\nhttps://directory.libsyn.com/shows/view/id/13questions\nhttps://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/13questions-podcast/id1452014616?mt=2\nhttps://open.spotify.com/show/4YifirYW3zOxFuVwAlslJg?si=wCF21ABrTHGlpy0WgCKqSw\nhttps://mobile.twitter.com/13questions2\nhttps://www.facebook.com/13-Questions-Better-Men--316039365915936/\nWhat lies beneath the scurrying of the superficial mind?\nIn the summer of 1989, I was beginning my third year at West Point. My summer assignments that year included what was called \"Beast 1,\" followed by a \"voluntary summer training\" commitment as part of the West Point parachute team, followed by Airborne School in Fort Benning Georgia (even though I was already an experienced skydiver with hundreds of skydives, freefall skydiving is completely different from military-style static-line airborne operations, so I had to report to Fort Benning to go through Airborne School after spending almost two weeks skydiving about six times a day).\n\"Beast 1\" meant acting as part of the \"cadre\" during the first half of \"cadet basic training\" at West Point, which since the early 1800s has been unaffectionately known as \"beast barracks\" and which consists of full-time indoctrination of the \"new cadets\" arriving for their first summer at the Military Academy. By indoctrination I mean very intensive inculcation (in the new cadets, by the \"beast cadre\") of a complex set of rules, norms, behaviors, attitudes, drills, and responses which are completely different in many ways from the rules, norms, behaviors and attitudes which are drilled into us as we grow up in \"normal\" society.\nHere's a photograph of me and one of my good friends from that summer (I'm on the left as you face the picture, and Scott is on the right) to give you an idea of the level of hostility that is generally involved in the process of foisting this new super-structure of rules, norms, behaviors, attitudes and responses upon the new cadets during their initial summer at West Point:\nNot very friendly-looking young people, I think it is safe to say, especially if you happened to be a new cadet in the summer of 1989. By the way, at the time this photograph was taken, Scott aka \"the Cyborg\" could probably bang out over 100 pushups in a row without stopping to rest, and could easily run two miles in around 11:00 minutes and change (and, I believe, he probably can still do that today, almost three decades later).\nAnyway, on this particular summer morning at West Point in 1989, we went through our usual routine as part of being the \"Beast 1\" cadre for the new cadets during the first half of their summer training, waking the new cadets up at a very early hour to conduct physical training (that day I believe it consisted of what were called \"guerrilla drills\" -- a variety of calisthenics and other exercises in a grassy field, involving a lot of crawling around in the grass until your face and body are covered in grass-stains), followed by personal hygiene, a couple of formations, breakfast at the mess hall, and then marching the new cadets down to Eisenhower Hall where they were receiving some kind of lecture in a large-group setting.\nWhile the new cadets were sitting in Eisenhower Hall receiving their lecture or other training, only a small contingent of cadre members had to stay with the new cadets, and the rest of us had a break and could leave the new cadets in Eisenhower Hall for their lecture and come back to get them again in an hour or so. On this particular morning, I distinctly remember walking back from Eishenhower Hall after dropping off the new cadets for whatever lecture they were getting, and finally having a free moment to myself.\nAs I was walking back, I suddenly realized for the first time that day that it was my birthday. I was twenty years old.\nHere's where I was at the moment, walking back alone and finally having a bit of breathing room to collect my thoughts:\nimage: Google maps.\nIf you are familiar with West Point, you can just barely make out the enormous red-brick wall of Eisenhower Hall rising up behind the little white \"Gingerbread House\" near the center of the photograph (this \"Gingerbread House\" can be seen in the 1955 movie Long Gray Line, the real-life protagonist of which is Master Sergeant Marty Maher, who was an instructor at West Point from 1899 to 1928).\nThe \"X\" on the sidewalk shows how far I had walked, alone with my thoughts, after leaving my charges at Eisenhower Hall and getting a little bit of a break, before I finally remembered for the first time that it was my birthday. I had managed to get up that morning (prior to waking up the new cadets), lead physical training (involving plenty of yelling at new cadets in order to continue their full-court-press indoctrination), get through a couple of formations and breakfast (involving more yelling at new cadets), and then march my squad of new cadets down to Eisenhower Hall to drop them off without my brain ever registering the fact that it was my twentieth birthday.\nThe point is that even though my mind \"knew\" that it was my birthday, the pre-occupation with rules, infractions, yelling at infractions, norms, behaviors, and the rest of the knotted maze of entangling social constructs that are part of life at West Point (and in particular, the even more extreme environment of \"beast barracks,\" in which as a cadre member I was responsible for trying to imprint this same set of entangling constructs onto the brains of other young men and women going through their first weeks at the Military Academy) had kept me from realizing that fact for several hours.\nIt was only when I was finally alone for a few minutes with my own thoughts, walking back by myself along the somewhat empty stretch of sidewalk pictured above, that the significant (to me, at least) fact that \"today is my twentieth birthday\" could finally surface. Until that moment, I was not consciously aware of it.\nWhat is the point of this story?\nIt's not just a story about a real-life incident that happened to someone else (me) in a very unique environment (beast-1 cadre at West Point during the late 1980s), a situation to which very few people can probably relate unless they happened to go through military training themselves. As such, it might be \"interesting\" but not particularly \"applicable\" to the very different life experiences that each of us encounters from day-to-day, most of which don't involve the kinds of things that were part of my life in the summer of 1989. Indeed, that was such a different time and place that it seems foreign even to me today, almost thirty years later.\nBut in a sense, this little vignette is illustrative of experiences that we all go through as part of the process of interacting with the entanglements of society, no matter what country or culture (or decade) we live in -- and thus, even though those societal entanglements and indoctrinations are probably very different (on a superficial level) from the various norms, rules, behaviors and attitudes encouraged (and enforced) at West Point during cadet basic training, the fact is that none of us are free from the demands of the norms and rules and behaviors and attitudes that are laid upon us over the years as we grow up in a society and learn to interact with other people, and which can be envisioned as being like a complex \"superstructure\" of intersecting lines of yarn laid down over our brains as part of the decades-long inculcation we went through during our first couple decades of human life, and which continue to be adjusted, reinforced, or added upon as we go through life even after reaching adulthood.\nThese norms and behaviors and rules and expectations are rather demanding, absorbing a lot of our mental energy as we go through the day. They include questions like who gets to go first at an intersection when we are driving, or what kinds of clothes we can wear to work, or which tasks out of the many demands on our time we decide to address first, and a host of other relationships with other people that we negotiate on a daily basis. Often, we no doubt find ourselves becoming angry at another driver who is not \"following the rules\" or \"going out of turn,\" or we have to spend energy at work addressing issues that result from others making choices that we don't agree with, and these kinds of issues absorb our thoughts and our attention in very much the same way that the various demands of cadet basic training absorbed my thoughts and attention that morning in 1989, to the point that I did not even consciously realize that it was my birthday until several hours (and several dozen or more interactions with other people) had been navigated.\nIt was not until I was actually alone with my thoughts for a few moments that a piece of information, and a piece of information of great importance (to me), was able to surface to the point that my conscious mind became aware of it.\nObviously, I had known all along, somewhere beneath the surface of my conscious awareness, that it was my birthday that day. If I had not known it, then the realization would not have popped into my conscious mind once I got away from the entangling demands of acting out my role as a beast cadre-member. I knew it, but I did not become aware of it until I had a moment of time alone. At that point, the realization surfaced and I became conscious of the fact (to my surprise) that it was my birthday.\nI only share this (rather personal) story because I believe it illustrates a point which can be helpful to our lives every single day. Our conscious mind operates inside of its own self-imposed (or society-imposed) constructs, navigating an incredibly complex set of rules and decision-trees and hierarchies and relationships as part of the process of functioning within a society that includes other people.\nAll of these tasks and judgments and decisions are necessary and important.\nHowever, they can (and do) so distract our conscious mind that it regularly overlooks and misses an enormous amount of important information that is available to our subconscious, or to the part of our being that operates beneath the \"tangle of yarn\" imposed like an artificial meshwork maze over the very tip-top of the iceberg that is our deeper consciousness.\nThis neglected part of ourselves is aware of an enormous amount of information that we would find to be of tremendous importance, if we were to become conscious of it. However, unless (as in the story above) we somehow get a \"moment to ourselves\" to relax our focus on the tangle of yarn, so to speak, we can remain in complete ignorance of even the most obvious knowledge.\nThat's why regularly spending time alone with your subconscious (or whatever term we want to use) is incredibly valuable and necessary, and appears to have been practiced in ancient cultures around the globe. Ancient disciplines such as meditation, or the practice of Yoga, or the practice of drumming or shaking a rattle at a specific rapid beat for a sustained period of time, or the chanting of mantras (including mantras containing the sacred syllable \"OM\" or \"AUM\"), were passed down from one generation to the next as vital tools for stilling the chattering of the superficial mind on a daily basis, in order to spend time listening to our deeper subconscious and our wider being.\nPractices such as those mentioned above (and many others) can enable \"messages\" or insights or realizations to bubble up to our conscious attention, in much the same way that the realization that it was my birthday suddenly bubbled up into my conscious mind as I was walking back along the sidewalk pictured above on that summer day long ago.\nIndeed, there is abundant evidence which suggests that our subconscious mind is actually aware of more than we can possibly explain -- that our subconscious is in fact somehow tapped into sources of awareness which could not be available to us through our five physical senses alone. Examples include the experiences, too many to simply dismiss as \"coincidence\" or \"superstition,\" of those who receive premonitions about loved ones far away, only to have those premonitions confirmed later (these premonitions are not always negative in nature, either -- for example, in the harrowing story of young Norman Ollestad's descent from the side of a steep ice- and snow-covered mountain after a deadly plane crash in 1979, the premonition of more than one person brought them out to a road where they were able to see Norman after he had made his way down off the mountain -- even though nothing in their five physical senses could have detected Norman's presence on that day).\nIn a very real sense, our subconscious appears to transcend the boundaries of the physical self and connect to a wider realm which is not bounded by laws we can explain through physics. Indeed, it may be that this part of our wider being is the connection to what the ancient myths of some traditions refer to as our \"Higher Self,\" and which is dramatized in the countless world myths involving twins (one of whom is often divine, while the other is mortal), including Krishna and Arjuna, Gilgamesh and Enkidu, Polydeuces and Castor, Eros and Psyche, Jesus and Doubting Thomas, and many others.\nWhen we realize that quieting our chattering \"superficial mind\" is a way of spending time with and listening to our subconscious (and perhaps even to our Higher Self), then suddenly meditation (or the other similar disciplines which we can incorporate into our daily lives) no longer seems like a \"chore.\" Instead, it is a way of spending time with someone very close to us, someone who indeed cares about us very deeply, someone we should not neglect -- and someone whose help we can use on a daily basis. Why would we not want to do that? Why would we not want to do that every single day?\nSpending time quieting our superficial mind, and setting aside its entangling \"maze of yarn,\" does not mean that those various norms and social structures and rules and customs that we have learned and incorporated into our lives are worthless or unhealthy -- indeed, they are necessary for interacting in a society that contains other people, and for navigating our way through the range of complex situations in which we find ourselves on a daily basis. To say that these learned structures are unimportant would be as foolish as to say that stop signs and lane dividers and all the rules of safe driving are unimportant: as long as we have to negotiate roads on which there are other drivers, the very complex set of laws and customs of the road are necessary.\nBut if we do not regularly give ourselves a chance to take a break from living within those artificial structures and entanglements, then we are very much in the situation that I was in, in the story related above, in which my focus on all the minute-by-minute minutia of cadet life (and in this case the very artificial, albeit very demanding, constructs of West Point's \"beast barracks\" indoctrination program) caused me to remain blissfully unaware of something I should have known, for quite some time, until I had a chance to \"pause\" and my mind became aware (as if out of the blue) of something it hadn't been focusing on at all.\nI have had many experiences in more recent years in which my conscious mind would \"receive\" an answer or a \"message\" or an insight about something that I had been pondering, often upon waking up in the morning (when my conscious mind was shut down, but my subconscious was obviously still active, and used that \"little break\" in the scurrying and clattering of the conscious mind to deliver the \"answer\" to me that I had been looking for).\nI am convinced that it is through the pathway down below the conscious mind that we make contact with the inner connection to the Infinite which the ancient myths portray again and again in various episodes and adventures, in sacred traditions from virtually every culture around the globe.\nBasing his arguments on the evidence that he found in myths from around the world, Alvin Boyd Kuhn in his 1940 masterpiece Lost Light declares:\nThe kingdom of heaven and the hope of glory are within. They lurk within the unfathomed depths of consciousness. Divinity lies buried under the heavier motions of the sensual nature and the incessant scurrying of the superficial mind. 46\nIn the image at top we see a famous statue from ancient Egypt, depicting the 4th dynasty king Khafre, thought to have lived somewhere around the time we call 2500 BC (or BCE, if you prefer). Behind the king's head, and in fact invisible from the front, we see the falcon-god Horus -- perfectly depicting the concept of the Higher Self or connection to the Infinite, to which we all in fact have access, at any time.\nThis image, in fact, can be helpful to consider while beginning to meditate, or to spend time with your own subconscious or deeper and wider consciousness.\nLooking at this ancient statue, we might ask ourselves, \"Why would we not want to spend time each day getting in touch with our own subconscious -- or, indeed, our own Higher Self?\"\nI am thoroughly convinced that doing so has tremendous benefits. We may not hear \"mystical voices\" (when I realized that it was my birthday, that realization did not come to me in the form of a voice -- and when some insight about some issue or question that I am working on makes itself available to my conscious mind upon waking up in the morning, for example, or while sitting in meditation, it just arrives as a \"thought,\" and not as a \"voice\" -- at least in my own personal experience, although for others it might be different). But we will undoubtedly be made aware of things which we might otherwise have overlooked.\nI also have a suspicion that regularly spending time setting aside the superficial tangle of yarn made up of the norms and value-judgments and societal expectations that we have absorbed can help us to be less \"fanatical\" about \"enforcing them\" on others (less likely to fly into a rage, for instance, when someone else doesn't observe the expected strictures, and \"cuts\" ahead of us in traffic, for example).\nAnd I am convinced that this very important teaching can be found to be at the heart of many ancient myths, given to humanity in most remote antiquity, for our benefit and blessing -- and pertinent to our lives even in this modern day and age, even in our \"ordinary\" lives, even if we are not in the middle of cadet basic training, and on all three hundred sixty-five (and a quarter) days of the year, and not just on our birthdays!\nSeizing Venezuela's natural resources is an Affront to the Gods\nAbove is a new video I've just posted entitled \"Seizing Venezuela's Natural Resources is a Grave Assault on the Rule of Law.\"\nIf you still believe that the united states stands for the \"Rule of Law\" -- well, the coup attempt currently underway in Venezuela should be a wake-up call.\nThe preceding post argued that fiscal austerity has as its ultimate goal the privatization of the natural resources given by the gods (or, if you prefer, by nature) to the people of a nation. In the above video, you will hear National Security Advisor John Bolton of the united states announce that the goal of the overthrow of the elected government of Venezuela is to have \"American oil companies invest in and produce the oil capabilities in Venezuela.\"\nIn other words, the current leaders of the united states are not happy that the elected government of Venezuela has chosen to \"invest in and produce\" the natural resources with which their nation has been blessed by the divine realm, for the benefit of their own economy and their own people. The current leaders of the united states would prefer to have \"American oil companies invest in and produce\" those natural resources instead.\nThe natural resources of Venezuela were given to the people of Venezuela. If the government of Venezuela wants to use those resources to benefit Venezuela, instead of opening them up to foreign corporations (for the benefit of the shareholders of those foreign corporations), then that is the right of the people of Venezuela, who elected that government more than once, in monitored elections.\nFor the current leaders of the united states to engineer a coup d'etat in order to replace the elected government with a puppet who will happily sell-out the natural resources which belong to the entire nation (in exchange for a piece of the revenues to be obtained from those stolen resources) declares to the world, \"We only support democracy and elections up to the point where the results benefit our corporations and our ability to privatize your nation's natural resources.\"\nIn the above video, you will hear united states National Security Advisor John Bolton declare that Juan Guiado is the president of Venezuela, even though Juan Guiado was not elected by the people of Venezuela but instead declared himself president on January 23, 2019 (and was simultaneously declared president by current leaders of the united states and some of their client states, indicating collusion between Guiado and the leaders of the united states whose interests he serves).\nIn the above video, you will also hear united states National Security Advisor John Bolton declare that any action taken against Guiado (who himself has called the elected government illegitimate, urged its overthrow, and declared himself the new president) by the elected government of Venezuela will be viewed by the united states as \"a grave assault on the rule of law.\"\n(!!!)\nSo, by making such pronouncements, the current leaders of the united states (engaged in an active coup d'etat against the elected leaders of another sovereign nation, in order to seize the natural resources given to that nation by the gods) attempt to robe themselves in the mantle of the so-called \"rule of law\" -- a preposterous and transparently ridiculous claim to which they have no right under heaven.\nApparently, this coup d'etat is on behalf of \"democracy and prosperity in Venezuela\" -- because the \"rule of law\" now means that if the men and women of another nation vote in a way your nation does not like, then you can overturn their vote (in the name of \"democracy\"), and if the elected leaders of another nation decide that they want to use the natural resources given to their nation for the benefit of the people of their nation, then you can seize their natural resources and develop them with the corporations of your nation (in the name of \"prosperity\")!\nThank goodness for the \"rule of law\"! What would the men and women of the world do without this \"rule of law\" and those who so diligently support it? If we didn't have such defenders of the \"rule of law,\" how could private corporations and well-connected individuals and families seize the natural riches of the earth given by heaven for the benefit of the people?\nAnyone who pays any attention at all to such developments cannot help but conclude that the united states no longer cares about democracy, the will of the people, or this vaunted \"rule of law\" which its leaders constantly invoke in support of their serial coups around the globe (if indeed it ever did care about such things).\nHowever, such a conclusion is deeply unsettling and even threatening to the paradigm or vision of the world which is pounded into citizens of the united states from their earliest days in school and which is reinforced by lying media from all directions and on a continuous and ongoing basis. To the degree that one's conscious mind has incorporated such propaganda into one's own identity and \"sense of self,\" evidence which exposes the lies upon which these mental structures or constructs are built will be viewed as dangerous and hostile, and may be vigorously resisted and even mentally filtered out.\nAs explained in the previous post, our conscious mind is quite capable of buying into constructs which do not accurately reflect reality at all, although our subconscious (which detects and absorbs far more information than does our conscious mind) can and does know what is going on, even if the subconscious is filtered out by the conscious mind.\nThus, it is quite possible for men and women who have bought into (and even built their own identity, at least in part, upon) assertions such as:\n\"the united states is the world's leading democracy, and a proponent of democracy and a defender of democracy around the globe,\" and\n\"the united states stands for the glorious 'Rule of Law,' unlike more benighted countries of the world where they don't operate under a 'Rule of Law' like we do,\" and\n\"the united states is for 'free markets,' which is related to the 'Rule of Law' and means that we like to 'let the market decide,' unlike more benighted countries of the world where men and women foolishly hanker after socialism, which is pretty much the same as worshiping the devil,\"\nto actually filter out and refuse to see the plain evidence being played out in front of their very eyes which indicates that the present leaders of the united states does not care about democracy and the expressed will of the people of Venezuela whatsoever, nor do they care about free markets or the rule of law, but instead they are perfectly willing to brazenly engineer a coup d'etat in order to overturn the expressed will of the people and seize the assets belonging to the men and women of another sovereign nation, in complete disregard for their oft-repeated reverence for the sacred \"Rule of Law\" and the concept of \"free markets\" (except to the extent that \"free markets\" means \"free to trample over any laws which stand in the way of private profits\").\nEven for those who are so committed to the paradigm expressed in the above ridiculous assertions, however, it is impossible for their subconscious to see the brazen coup d'etat presently being inflicted upon Venezuela (only a few years after a similar coup d'etat was inflicted upon the people and elected government of the Ukraine, which itself was only a recent manifestation of a pattern which has been going on for decades and even for more than a century in the foreign policy united states) and to reconcile this coup d'etat with the professed ideals of \"democracy,\" \"freedom,\" and \"Rule of Law.\"\nAgain, to employ the brilliant characters developed for the long-running popular television series \"The Office\" (united states version), without implying that these actors would in any way agree with the assertions made in any of my blog posts, the conscious mind and its (often unrealistic and idealistic constructs and sense of self) can be likened to the cringe-worthy and often clueless (albeit good-natured and generally likable) regional manager Michael Scott, pictured below:\nAs we look at the above image, we can imagine him repeating mantras such as \"Rule of Law\" and \"free markets\" and \"good for the economy\" and \"at least it's not socialism!\"\nAt the same time, as discussed in that preceding post, our subconscious is not so easily fooled by the constructs and mental structures which the conscious mind has built up and to which it clings for safety and for the preservation of identity. It perceives much more of what is going on in the surrounding world (and indeed in the wider universe itself, to which the subconscious appears to have a mystical and inexplicable connection). As the conscious mind repeats, \"Rule of Law,\" and \"overthrowing the government on behalf of democracy and prosperity,\" the subconscious mind responds:\nSuch a massive disconnect will inevitably create a \"schism\" within our own psyche, resulting in a background level of angst or anxiety which our conscious mind cannot necessarily explain or even detect, but which will impact everything we are doing and feeling as we are going about our lives.\nThose who are perpetrating these crimes against the rights of men and women -- and indeed crimes against heaven and against nature itself -- rely upon their ability to reinforce the false paradigms and constructs which keep our conscious minds clueless and oblivious to what is actually going on in the world around us. They will reinforce those \"talking points\" and artificial structures relentlessly using mass-media and carefully researched propaganda techniques, and will vigorously attack any counter-narratives that become too popular or begin to show signs of demolishing the mental structures that they have diligently imposed upon the minds of the populace (especially their very useful and longstanding \"fear of socialism\" framework, which is showing increasing signs of strain and may begin to crumble despite their best efforts to maintain it).\nFor a previous video opposing the smug commentators who for the past several months have been loudly proclaiming that Venezuela's crisis is a natural consequence of \"socialism\" and a textbook example proving that \"eventually you run out of other people's money,\" see this post from September of 2018.\nEngineering a coup d'etat against another sovereign nation in order to seize their natural resources is a grave affront to the gods (or, if you prefer, \"the divine realm,\" or Nature), who are the source of those gifts and who gave them to the men and women whom they allowed to be born in that nation.\nThat this coup d'etat is being engineered in the name of \"democracy,\" \"freedom,\" \"prosperity,\" and the \"Rule of Law\" is an affront to those concepts and an insult to those who actually support them.\nThat this coup d'etat is being done in the name of the citizens of the united states (and in the name of the citizens of other nations including Canada, France, UK, Ireland, Spain, Denmark, Sweden, Brazil, Germany, Austria, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Iceland, Malta, Poland, Portugal, Ecuador, Australia, and many others) is a profound misrepresentation of those men and women in those countries who actually see what is going on and who are revolted at such a criminal act of aggression being perpetrated supposedly with their support or consent.\nWith this blog post and above video I am hereby voicing my strongest condemnation of this illegal and despicable attempted coup against the people and government of Venezuela, and I urge others to oppose it and raise their voices in whatever way possible, including through participation in nonviolent protest, to help stop this grave violation.\nIt is well past the time to shake off the mental cages which we ourselves have constructed (out of tinkertoys given to us from the time we were very young, and reinforced by an overtly dishonest mass-media apparatus) and which keep our conscious mind happily insulated from the reality that is going on all around us, imposing a deep schism and sense of alienation and anxiety upon the human psyche, while at the same time enabling the crimes and depredations of those oppose democracy, freedom, and human dignity, along with their cynical collaborators who are willing to sell out their own nations and fellow citizens for a share in the dishonest gain.\nAusterity is an Affront to the Gods\nHere is a video I made entitled \"Austerity is an Affront to the Gods,\" which refutes austerity-mongers who are presently to be found in control of both the \"right\" and the so-called \"left\" (who are not really left) in most nations of the global west.\nThe term \"austerity\" as used here means \"fiscal austerity,\" which seeks to limit the ability of elected governments representing the people to use fiscal policy (including sovereign spending and tax policy) to influence the economy for purposes of full employment and economic benefit.\nAusterity in practice involves increasing taxes and reducing sovereign spending on infrastructure and on social welfare.\nAusterity has been implemented to a greater and greater degree since the rise of \"monetarist\" policy beginning in the late 1970s and especially after 1980; the monetarist school wants to supplant fiscal policy (implemented by a nation's elected representatives) with monetary policy (implemented by central banks), using monetary policy almost exclusively to manage the economy and trying to encourage full employment and price stability, even though monetary policy is a very clumsy instrument for these tasks and actually admits to using increased unemployment as a counter to inflation.\nAusterity reflects a vision of scarcity rather than a vision of plenty. It is enabled and sustained by a general lack of understanding of the abundance of the natural resources given to a nation by the gods (or, if you prefer, by Nature), including the most important gift of all which are the talents and abilities and ambitions of the men and women whom the gods (or Nature) allow to be born into that nation.\nAdvocates of austerity (whom we could legitimately label \"austerity mongers\") seek to limit the ability of a nation to implement fiscal policy to such a degree that spending on infrastructure and social welfare is drastically curtailed, taxes are increased (or threatened to be increased for any increased spending on infrastructure or social welfare, which we are told we \"cannot afford\" otherwise), underemployment and unemployment rise which means that men and women are unable to fully use their gifts (given to them by the gods, or -- if you prefer -- by Nature), and standards of living are dramatically reduced.\nUltimately, the end result of austerity policy, as explained by Professor Michael P. Hudson in a quotation included in the above video and cited from an interview he gave in February of 2014 (the entire interview is linked in this previous post), is the straitjacketing of representative government to the degree that it must sell off natural resources to private parties (corporations or hyper-wealthy individuals), a process known as privatization -- which has, not coincidentally, increased at a steady pace since the implementation of monetarist austerity regimes beginning around 1980.\nProfessor Hudson explains:\nAnd stage two is when the governments have to pay by selling off the public domain: the land, the natural resources, the forests, the ports, the electrical systems, the natural monopolies, and the infrastructure -- the roads and the bridges -- and the economy's turned into a tollbooth economy, and so you're going very rapidly back to feudalism.\nAusterity mongers on the right typically argue for privatization and for drastic cuts to spending on social welfare (but not cuts to spending on military arsenals and standing armies). Austerity mongers on the supposed \"left\" typically argue for increased spending on social welfare but for simultaneous massive increases in taxes on the people, consistent with the paradigm of austerity -- and they are usually not opposed to privatization either (in fact, many of them argue for more of it).\nUltimately, as this video attempts to demonstrate, the entire paradigm of austerity is built upon a false and even \"upside-down\" vision of the world, including the role of the sovereign government in the creation of money, as a small but growing group of economists in the so-called Modern Monetary Theory school have demonstrated. The MMT economists show that men and women have been basically deceived with a bunch of claptrap about how macroeconomics operates, and which actually has nothing to do with reality.\nI would argue that this situation is very much illustrative of many other situations in which our \"conscious mind\" has accepted a false paradigm or framework which actually goes against reality and nature itself. In these cases, I would argue, we actually know deep down (in our gut, in our bones, or in our subconscious) that the vision we have accepted and under which we are operating is completely false -- and yet our conscious mind may not know it.\nOur conscious mind is quite capable of accepting a false paradigm, reinforcing it, and operating as though it is true -- even to the point of filtering out evidence which challenges that false paradigm, in some cases to the point of actually not seeing something (or telling ourselves we didn't see something) which would upend the false paradigm in which our conscious mind is operating.\nMeanwhile, our subconscious is not so easily fooled, and actually knows the truth -- creating an internal schism and a kind of alienation from one's own self which is extremely characteristic of the modern world.\nTo illustrate using the brilliant characters created for the popular television series \"The Office\" (united states version), without implying that these actors would in any way agree with things asserted in this blog, I have in the past compared the conscious mind and its constant chatter to Michael Scott, who often appears to \"believe his own line\" even when it is obviously ridiculous, with a kind of unshakeable good humor and cringe-worthy self-confidence:\nMeanwhile, our subconscious mind (which is aware of much more of what is going on around us and even in the wider universe than is the conscious mind), is not so easily amused, and not so ready to accept the elaborate paradigms and constructs which the conscious mind buys into:\nIf we see increasing numbers of hungry, homeless men and women in the streets and yet continue to tell ourselves that the economy is just fine (and even \"nearing full employment\"), then I would suggest that it is very likely that we have (in our conscious mind) bought into a false construct of one sort or another (see top picture, above) but that deep down our subconscious mind knows better (see bottom picture, above) and we will then be living with a kind of \"schism\" within our own psyche, creating a background level of angst or anxiety which our conscious mind cannot necessarily even detect or explain, but which will influence everything we are doing and feeling as we go about our lives.\nThe same situation would apply to a man or woman who knows deep down (at the level of the subconscious, which detects much more than does the conscious mind) that his or her wife or husband or boyfriend or girlfriend is having an affair, but whose conscious mind refuses to see the evidence, in order to maintain a paradigm or world-view or sense of self which is not in line with reality and which eventually will likely come crashing down (but, until it does, the disconnect will create a deep sense of background anxiety and general psychic discomfort).\nI would argue that much the same thing is going on with regard to massive criminal events such as the collapse of three steel-frame high-rise buildings into their own footprints on September 11, 2001, supposedly due to \"fire\": our conscious mind can (desperately) cling to the false narrative which is constantly repeated for our acceptance (see top picture, above) even though our subconscious mind knows deep down that this narrative cannot possibly match reality (see bottom picture, above). The threat to our paradigm and vision of the world is so great that our conscious mind will resist looking at or even refuse to see things which threaten the paradigm or structure or vision of the world which the conscious mind has constructed.\nThe good news is that the ancient myths given to humanity are all about showing us how to heal the schism between our conscious mind and our subconscious mind, in every way.\nThis fact explains why the ancient myths remain so relevant to those who are trying to fool humanity, impose austerity on men and women, and take for themselves and their cronies the gifts given by the gods (or, if you prefer, by Nature) to the people of various nations.\nAnd it explains why going to the ancient wisdom given in the world's myths, scriptures and sacred stories points us to the solution for the schism we find within ourselves, and in the wider world around us.\nAncient mosaic with esoteric celestial elements di...\nContemplating aspects of the terrible crash of Feb...\nWelcome to new visitors from 13 Questions podcast!...\nWhat lies beneath the scurrying of the superficial...\nSeizing Venezuela's natural resources is an Affron...\nHappy Lunar New Year: Propitious Year of the Pig!\nPaul Selig reveals a secret menu that's available ...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line369900"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9646561145782471,"wiki_prob":0.9646561145782471,"text":"More companies are buying insurance to cover executives who sexually harass employees\nFILE PHOTO: Harvey Weinstein arrives at the 89th Academy Awards in Hollywood, California, U.S. on February 26, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo (Mike Blake/Reuters)\nBy Danielle Paquette\nDanielle Paquette\nWest Africa bureau chief\nCompanies have dramatically increased their insurance coverage against sexual harassment complaints in recent years following high-profile scandals, as corporate America reckons with the growing risks of workplace misconduct.\nEmployment practices liability insurance (EPLI) plans, which cover sexual harassment, racial discrimination and wrongful-firing claims, have spread rapidly over the past decade from major corporations to midsize and smaller firms, industry experts say.\nBut lawyers and some women's groups say the policies, which shield businesses and executives from costly lawsuits and reputational damage, may also help perpetuate abuse by allowing companies to avoid confronting the problem head-on.\n\"Payouts can provide some monetary help and peace of mind going forward, but they create a stronger culture of silence,\" said Kim Churches, chief executive of the American Association of University Women. \"It doesn't only prohibit victims from speaking up. It means we're not encouraging colleagues to stand up to sexist language or harassment and call it out on the spot.\"\n[How confidentiality agreements hurt - and help - sexual harassment victims]\nSexual harassment surged to public attention in 1991 when law professor Anita Hill accused her former boss and then-Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas of repeatedly asking her out on dates and talking about porn while at work.\nHill's testimony at Thomas's confirmation hearing awakened workers to what could qualify as office misconduct, women's groups say. For Victoria Stone, a Los Angeles insurance broker, Hill's willingness to go public marked a cultural shift.\nAt the time, only five insurance companies offered EPLI policies, according to the Betterley Report, which tracks EPLI trends.\nStone said she sensed a business opportunity and mailed out fliers to her clients urging them to adopt those early policies. Few took her up on the offer. Even a decade later, some remained skeptical.\nNow, though, practically all of the roughly 200 business leaders she works with have bought a plan, Stone said. As accusations mounted last month against the Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, two more opted in. One of the buyers was a small factory with just 39 employees, most of them men.\n\"So many people feel like, 'it'll never happen to me,' \" said Stone, senior vice president at Poms and Associates Insurance Brokers in Los Angeles. Now, she added, \"more people are pulling the trigger\" — including one client who reluctantly purchased a plan, she said, and was later hit with a $300,000 sexual harassment and wrongful-termination claim.\n\"He hasn't stopped thanking me,\" Stone said.\nU.S. companies spent an estimated $2.2 billion last year on insurance policies covering the legal fallout from sexual harassment, racial discrimination and unfair-dismissal accusations. The market is projected to grow to $2.7 billion by 2019, according to MarketStance, a research firm that tracks insurance trends.\nThat's a fraction of what enterprises spend on legal and medical malpractice insurance, but industry experts said EPLI coverage is surging into the mainstream, with the biggest growth coming from small and midsize companies.\nAbout 41 percent of firms with more than 1,000 workers report having some kind of plan to cover sexual harassment and discrimination, said Frederick Yohn, managing director of MarketStance.\nAbout one-third of companies with at least 500 employees carry such coverage, though it remains unusual for start-ups, Yohn said. Only 3 percent of companies with fewer than 50 carry such coverage.\nBut since 2011, firms with annual revenue less than $250 million have increased their spending on adding and renewing such plans by 28 percent, according to Advisen, another insurance data firm.\nMeanwhile, Nationwide, one of the country's largest insurance companies, recorded a 15 percent increase in EPLI sales between fall 2016 and September 2017 — a stretch that coincided with the ousters of Fox News's Roger Ailes and Bill O'Reilly.\n[After Harvey Weinstein, Hollywood assistants urged to break culture of silence]\n\"We can speculate that it is due to increased awareness in the need for this type of coverage,\" said Karen Johnston, casualty technical consultant for Nationwide Insurance Staff Commercial Underwriting.\nThe cost of such policies varies according to the size of the business and the level of protection. For firms with annual revenue below $25 million, the median coverage purchased is about $1 million, which costs about $4,900 a year, said Jim Blinn, executive vice president of client solutions at Advisen.\nAt the other end of the spectrum, firms with more than $5 billion in annual revenue typically pay about $285,000 a year for a $30 million limit.\nBefore carriers pick up any expenses associated with a claim, such as court fees and damages, companies must pay a retention, which is similar to a deductible. For start-ups, the cost ranges from $1,000 to $10,000 per complaint, Betterley said. For large firms, retentions could reach $1 million.\nWith the recent sexual harassment scandals, companies were looking to increase their coverage and expand workplace training programs meant to discourage misconduct and resolve complaints before they escalate.\n\"We will be thinking more about limits,\" said Richard Betterley, a risk management consultant in Boston who publishes the annual Betterley EPLI report. \"You're buying X million — should we be thinking about more?\"\nKen Daveler, president at Alliance Insurance Services in the District, said companies no longer see such coverage as optional; it's essential. \"Each year, we sell more. You can point to these things in the news and say it's irresponsible not to have it. It's getting to the point where it's not if you get a claim, it's when,\" he said.\nHis largest client, an education company that had purchased an EPLI plan, had also turned to him for advice on anti-harassment training. \"Nobody has ever asked me that before,\" he said.\nBut lawyers say the growth of sexual harassment insurance coverage has had uneven results when it comes to providing redress to victims.\nAlexis Ronickher, an employment lawyer at Katz, Marshall & Banks in Washington who specializes in sexual harassment law suits, said insurance coverage made it easier for companies to provide some form of remedy to workers who suffer harassment.\nLast month, two of her clients — women who held low-paying service jobs — settled sexual harassment claims with a local employer and, through the company's insurance, were promised checks for about twice their annual wages.\n[Not just Harvey Weinstein, the depressing truth about sexual harassment in America]\n\"In cases against smaller or midsize employers, it can help,\" Ronickher said. \"Because if you have a significant claim, they might not have the capital or liquidity to pay such a claim without the insurance.\"\nBut in Ronickher's experience, insurance claims adjusters may intervene to try to limit the size of the award. That can significantly prolong negotiations, even if an employer would prefer to offer more money and wrap things up.\n\"It's a curse and a benefit,\" Ronickher said.\nThe knowledge that a harasser may rely on the coverage to lessen the potential financial consequences of a harassment claim can also be toxic, according to a 33-year-old woman who said her male boss shoved her into a wall and stalked her after she rejected his advances.\nShelley, who asked that her last name be withheld because she fears retaliation, said she was outraged to learn that her former employer had such coverage.\n\"It was infuriating,\" she said. \"It's like: You're treating me as if you hit my bumper when you kind of ruined my life.\"\nEven so, the existence of EPLI provides an important alternative to the other main avenue for redress: filing a complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.\nFewer than one in four sexual harassment complaints made to the agency last year — 1,485 of 6,758 claims — ended with a settlement of some kind, government data show.\nWith EPLI, a worker who encounters harassment on the job does not have to lodge a formal complaint to the EEOC for a chance to receive compensation. Claims can be triggered when a victim's lawyer writes a letter to a company.\n\"It's often in the best interest of the carrier to simply settle or pay a claim, rather than go through the legal process,\" said Yohn, the insurance market researcher. \"The insurance company pays them to make them go away.\"\nIt's unclear how many complaints are settled with the insurance each year — or the scale of compensation to women who suffer sexual harassment. Nearly all settlements come with nondisclosure agreements, lawyers say.\nWorkplace fairness advocates said such confidentiality agreements are potentially damaging.\nKate Bahn, an economist on the women's initiative at the Center for American Progress, a left-leaning think tank, said companies that prioritize their reputation over their workers' safety risk encouraging harmful behavior.\n\"That might be a rational economic decision for businesses to make — to pay into insurance, to mitigate the risk,\" Bahn said. \"It helps your bottom line, but it's really terrible for women. It upholds existing power structures that are toxic and misogynistic.\"\nDanielle Paquette Danielle Paquette is The Washington Post’s West Africa bureau chief. Before becoming a foreign correspondent in 2019, she spent five years writing about labor, gender and the economy. Follow\nDow 27,319.33\nToday 0.05%\nS&P 3,011.53\nNASDAQ 8,250.88\nLast Updated:2:51 PM 07/15/2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line672703"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7621294856071472,"wiki_prob":0.7621294856071472,"text":"Logging for Water\nA battle is brewing over whether cutting down trees will increase California’s water supply.\nBy Will Parrish\nClear-cuts in Battle Creek Watershed, with Mount Lassen in the background, give the area a look like leprosy on the skin. Photo by Zeke Lunder.\nThe day after an unseasonal June rain swelled the streams of the northern Sierra Nevada, Marily Woodhouse steered her 2003 Dodge Dakota through 65 miles of winding mountain roads near Mount Lassen. Woodhouse first traversed the area on horseback shortly after moving here 25 years ago. Back then, the land was lush with life, and its towering conifer forests furnished refreshingly cool air on days that were blistering hot beyond the canopy’s shade.\nNow, acre after acre of land of the Battle Creek Watershed is parched as far as the eye can see. Nonnative plants like star thistle and mullein compete to cover bare ground that was once studded with pines, firs, and cedars. Rather than finding sanctuary in the forests, Woodhouse now collects data that she says demonstrates the epic damage that has been wrought by the state’s largest timber corporation, Sierra Pacific Industries, or SPI.\nNearly every week, for more than seven years, Woodhouse has stopped at the same 13 stream locations in the watershed. At each spot, the founder of the environmental group Battle Creek Alliance uses specialized equipment to examine and record water temperature, water pH, soil temperature, and “turbidity”: a measure of individual particles that are generally invisible to the naked eye, similar to smoke in the air.\nIn 2012, the Ponderosa Fire torched 27,234 acres in the watershed. But Woodhouse says SPI inflicted much greater harm through post-fire “salvage logging,” which involved removing virtually every large- and medium-sized tree in the burned area—both living and dead—and deep-ripping the denuded soil to a depth of three feet with heavy machinery in order to accelerate the growth of newly planted trees.\n“I used to think clear-cutting was the worst thing, but it’s not,” Woodhouse said regarding the salvage logging. “They took everything down to bare dirt. The water quality went crazy bad.”\nSPI officials have repeatedly defended their logging practices in Battle Creek and elsewhere, and have even argued that they eventually improve the health of forests and streams.\nFor decades, environmentalists have countered that industrial logging, in fact, damages watersheds because it involves removing vegetation that anchors hillsides and constructing logging roads that cause chronic erosion that chokes streams and rivers with sediment.\nHowever, during the past year, a growing chorus of academics and conservationists has given comfort to the state’s logging industry by arguing that California would actually benefit from more logging, especially after years of punishing drought.\nAt the heart of the debate is the increasing realization that forests throughout the Sierra, Klamath, Siskiyou, and Coast mountain ranges—like the forests that once stood in Battle Creek—are important components of California’s water system. Not only do the trees store and filter huge amounts of water, but they also provide shade for the mountain snowpack so that it will melt gradually to fill the state’s reservoirs with a steady, year-round supply of water.\nMarily Woodhouse, founder of Battle Creek Alliance, measures the water quality of the Battle Creek Watershed. Photo by Will Parrish.\nCenter for Biological Diversity’s Justin Augustine doubts upsides for water users. Photo courtesy Justin Augustine.\nKatherine Evatt, an expert on the Mokelumne, has logging concerns. Photo courtesy Katherine Evatt\nAnd an expanding number of scientists and environmental groups are now arguing that many of California’s forests, because of years of fire suppression and other unsound ecological practices, have become overcrowded with trees and that these forests are holding too much water in the soil. Cutting or thinning the trees, they say, will release the groundwater into streams and rivers so that California’s dams and reservoirs can capture it.\nA leading proponent of this thinking is UC Merced chemical engineering professor Roger Bales, chairman of UC’s Sierra Nevada Research Institute. The institute operates 1,300 sensors that measure the geochemical balance of water in the Sierra Nevada’s forests, meadows, and streams. “Our groundwater is our largest storage reservoir,” Bales noted in a May presentation at Yosemite National Park. Given that 60 percent of the water supply used in California comes\nfrom the Sierra Nevada alone, Bales encourages people to think of the iconic mountain range as “California’s water tower.”\nAnother proponent of logging for water is the environmental group the Nature Conservancy, which is helping to bankroll Bales’ work. Last year, the group caused a stir in the state’s environmental community when it published a report called “Estimating the Water Supply Benefits from Forest Restoration in the Northern Sierras.” The report mainly focused on how thinning national forests impacts the forest’s ability to store snow and use water more efficiently.\n“The broad point we are making is that the Sierra Nevada and other forested watersheds are the source of most of California’s water,” said David Edelson, co-author of the report and the Nature Conservancy’s Sierra Nevada project director, in an interview. The report concluded that, if the current rate of forest thinning in the Sierra Nevada increases three-fold, there could be up to a 6 percent increase in the average annual streamflow for some watersheds that supply the state’s reservoirs.\nBut many environmentalists reject the idea of cutting down more trees in order to increase water supplies. While some do not oppose thinning forests that are dense with young trees, many agree that the claims of increased water runoff via more logging are greatly exaggerated, and that such an approach could wreak havoc on forests and river systems alike.\n“Saying that more logging produces more water is Orwellian ‘lies are truth’ speak,” Woodhouse said.\n“It’s amazing that this idea has cropped up again,” said veteran hydrologist Jonathan Rhodes, referring to logging for water. “I’ve seen it come and go throughout my career, and it always ends up thoroughly debunked.”\nEarlier this year, Rhodes and fisheries biologist Christopher Frissell released a comprehensive study that found the Nature Conservancy’s report to be deeply flawed. Rhodes and Frissell’s study—which was commissioned by the private environmental foundation Environment Now and drew on roughly 230 scientific research citations—concluded that in order to substantially increase the state’s water supplies, California would have to do much more than thin forests. “If people really want to take the approach of creating more water runoff through logging, we will be looking at draconian levels of forest removal in this state,” Rhodes warned in an interview.\nNonetheless, the logging-for-water idea has recently gained traction in Sacramento and among some other environmental organizations. The conservation group Pacific Forest Trust is currently sponsoring legislation, Assembly Bill 2480, written by Assemblymember Richard Bloom, D-Hollywood, that could increase forest thinning in certain watersheds to release more water for the state’s reservoirs.\nThe state Assembly has approved AB 2480, and it’s scheduled for another hearing in the state Senate later this summer. It if passes, it would head to Gov. Jerry Brown’s desk.\nMany of the state’s municipal water agencies oppose the bill, however, because it could require ratepayers—California consumers—to pick up the tab for forest thinning. “Our principal concern is the financing methods,” San Diego County Water Authority representative Glen Farrell noted at aJune 28 state Senate Natural Resources and Water Committee meeting.\nEnvironment Now director Doug Bevington said in an interview that it’s crucial for municipal ratepayers to scrutinize claims being made by logging-for-water proponents. “Bay Area water users are being asked to subsidize damaging logging to the Sierra Nevada and won’t see any supply benefits,” he said. “They may even have to pay more later on to address the damage to watersheds from all that logging.”\nThe theory of thinning or clearing forested areas in order to significantly increase water supplies has been around since at least the 1950s, and has always enjoyed timber industry backing, environmentalists say. Bevington, the author of the 2009 book, The Rebirth of Environmentalism, compares the logging-for-water theory to the logic used by deer hunters as they contributed to the extinction of wolves in the American West.\n“The claim that cutting more trees would get us more water is similar to the old idea of slaughtering wolves to improve deer hunting, which actually wound up messing up deer populations,” he said. “In both notions, a simplistic mindset ignores natural complexity, leading to harmful results.”\nOver the years, the logging-for-water arguments never gained widespread acceptance, in part because of the deepening recognition of logging’s monumental impacts on watersheds.\nA case in point is the primary watershed serving the East Bay. The Mokelumne River is the main water source for 1.4 million East Bay residents, including those in Oakland, Berkeley, Richmond, and Alameda. The river’s headwaters are in the Stanislaus National Forest in the central Sierra Nevada, and a major reservoir—the Pardee—traps the Mokelumne’s water before releasing up to 325 million gallons per day into the 95-mile-long Mokelumne Aqueduct, which conveys it to the East Bay Municipal Utility District’s distribution system. Research suggests that 60 percent of the Mokelumne’s flow comes from water stored in the Sierra soil, as opposed to snowmelt.\nAccording to Katherine Evatt, one of the state’s leading experts on the Mokelumne, historic logging has damaged the watershed through road-building and soil compaction. Logging roads are the main source of soil erosion and landslides in disturbed forests, and they also alter runoff patterns and permanently disrupt subsurface water flows. Further damage comes from the use of heavy logging machinery, the cutting of trees, and then dragging them out of the forest. Burning leftover brush and applying herbicides create even more havoc.\nIn the late-1990s, Sierra Pacific Industries purchased approximately 78,000 acres in the Mokelumne watershed. And SPI has conducted a considerable amount of clear-cutting in the area, which Evatt said has greatly increased the amount of sedimentation in EBMUD’s reservoirs—a cost that is ultimately passed onto utility ratepayers, because it reduces the reservoirs’ storage capacity.\nBut it’s not just the Mokelumne and Battle Creek watersheds that have experienced these impacts. From 1997 to 2014, the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection approved more than 512,000 acres of clear-cutting in the state, or about 800 square miles: an area approximately as large as Alameda County. And SPI has completed most of these clear-cuts.\nFrom overhead images, such as those from Google Earth, the checkerboard pattern of clear-cuts in watersheds like the Mokelumne gives the land a disturbed appearance reminiscent of leprosy on human skin. Other large timber firms, such as Seattle-based Green Diamond Resources Company, which owns more than 400,000 acres of mainly redwood and Douglas fir forestland in Humboldt, Del Norte, and Trinity counties, also rely heavily on clear-cutting.\n“If you walk in a more natural forest, you’ll hear birds, insects, see evidence of small mammals, feel moisture in the soil—it looks, feels, sounds, and smells like a forest,” said Evatt. She is also president of the environmental group Foothill Conservancy, which is dedicated to protecting the Mokelumne River and its watershed. “But when you walk into a clear-cut or young plantation, it’s nearly devoid of life—dry and hot.”\nThe main architect of SPI’s success is Archie Aldis “Red” Emmerson, who, according to Forbes magazine, is worth $3.6 billion. Emmerson’s son, Mark Emmerson, argued during a 2011 presentation to the UC Berkeley School of Forestry that his company’s techniques are helping restore forests over the long run and are essential in the fight against climate change. “In the next 70 years, we will triple the inventory in our forest,” he said. “Our tree size will go up from 17 to 30 inches in diameter. We will have pulled 500 million tons of carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere.”\nBut critics say SPI’s claims are based on scientific models that are calculated to put a happy face on the company’s activities, which they say are permanently degrading the forests through converting them to plantations. Healthy forests are layered, with multiple canopies, small openings where the sun shines through, and darkened hollows where it does not. Different plants and animals thrive in the different habitats.\n“SPI is very good at growing trees,” said Calaveras County resident Susan Robinson of the conservation group Ebbetts Pass Forest Watch. “But they are also very good at turning forests into something more like cornfields or almond orchards.”\nSPI is the state’s largest private landowner and controls more than 1.8 million acres of forestland. Roughly 80 percent of California’s timber production currently comes from logging on private lands, with 20 percent of logs sourced from national forests. Thirty years ago, however, it was the reverse: 80 percent of logging occurred in national forests.\nThe timber industry has relentlessly lobbied to open up more logging on public lands. According to critics, that is partly because of the pace at which many logging companies are decreasing forest stocks on property they own.\nCurrently, there is little disagreement over the fact that national and private forestlands have sustained enormous damage from logging practices and from a century of fire suppression. Numerous forests today are more crowded with trees than ever before. And many of the trees are approximately the same age, an unnatural condition resulting from clear-cutting and other harvesting methods known as “even-aged management.”\nSome proponents of forest thinning, including UC Merced’s Bales, see a synergy between removing trees to guard against fire and extracting more water from mountain runoff. “From a water-resources perspective, there is a sweet spot in between too many and too few trees,” Bales wrote to The East Bay Monthly in an email.\nThe ideal forest pattern, Bales argues, involves creating openings in the forest that are big enough to allow snow to pile deeply, while leaving a sufficient number of large trees to shade the snow and extend the melting season until late summer.\nIn June, during a presentation to the California Senate Committee on Water and Natural Resources concerning AB 2480, Laurie Wayburn, president of the Pacific Forest Trust, made a similar assertion to that of Bales. She argued that “overly dense, even, closed-canopy forests” had altered runoff patterns in the national forests, and that thinning—followed by the reintroduction of prescribed fires—would be a means of restoring “more water-rich forests.”\nAt the June 28 meeting, committee chairwoman state Sen. Fran Pavley, D-LA, said Wayburn had given a “fantastic presentation” showing that increasing water supply through improved forest management would be a cost-effective measure.\nBut the Center for Biological Diversity’s Justin Augustine contends that such claims are fodder for “a get-rich-quick scheme” that will ultimately benefit timber companies like SPI, rather than watersheds and downstream water users. And Hydrologist Rhodes and fisheries biologist Frissell, who wrote the Environment Now report, say the benefits of logging for water are vastly overstated, and that proponents are omitting its enormous downsides.\n“The idea is that if you aggressively cut timber, then you’ll have a bigger timber supply, more water, and less fires,” Rhodes said in an interview. “Well, only one of those things is true.”\nOverall, Rhodes and Frissell’s report found that “the effects of logging on water flows are often negligible, nonexistent, or negative, and even in the more optimistic scenarios, the potential effects are small, transient, and ill-timed.” The report concluded that during drought years, water supply increases from logging would be minuscule.\nIn addition, logging produces substantial environmental harms: Rhodes and Frissell identified nine types of damage that result from logging-for-water projects, such as increased water pollution from logging and erosion from logging roads.\nThese effects can also be expensive to the downstream communities using the water, Frissell and Rhodes wrote. According to their report, numerous scientific studies have also concluded over the years that sustaining increased runoff through tree removal would mean clearing large areas of forest at a high frequency—as much as 25 percent of a watershed area every 10 years. The physical principle involved is straightforward: When forests are thinned, the trees that remain tend to consume whatever water becomes available. As a result, loggers would have to fell large numbers of trees in order to substantially increase water runoff, Rhodes noted, and that runoff would invariably be heavily polluted with sediment because of the amount of logging involved.\nMany environmentalists have a mixed view of the ideas touted by the Pacific Forest Trust and the Nature Conservancy, as well as of AB 2480. The bill, for example, calls for reducing the number of rural roads through forests, a move that all involved agree would be beneficial to watersheds. But it also includes language that could pave the way for logging-for-water projects.\nEnvironmental groups’ divided positions on the bill are reminiscent of the political battles concerning the 2014 state water bond, Proposition 1, which earmarked hundreds of million of dollars for environmental restoration projects but also furnished $2.7 billion for new water storage projects, a compromise that many fear will lead to the construction of new dams in California.\nIzzy Martin, CEO of the Nevada City-based Sierra Fund, supports the ideas on which AB 2480 based. She labels it a great starting point for restoring forests through thinning, though her organization has not taken a position on the bill due to concerns that it may finance ineffective projects.\nJohn Buckley, executive director of the Central Sierra Environmental Resource Center, said he is withholding support from AB 2480 because it focuses only on five watersheds, rather than addressing the totality of California’s forests, and also because the bill doesn’t address logging practices or other impacts to watersheds. He supports the idea of thinning to enhance watersheds, but said he would rather the bill create incentives for selective logging practices that thin out overly crowded forests, resulting in “lower levels of bare soil, greater protection for watersheds, and significant other ecological benefits.”\nMartha Davis, who helped lead the campaign to restore Mono Lake in the eastern Sierra in the 1980s and ’90s, has promoted stronger links between forest restoration and water supply planning as an adviser to state agencies during the last decade. But while she has not taken a public stance on AB 2480, she said that some of the ideas about increased water yield through logging are far too one-dimensional. “Some of the studies I’ve seen so far are treating watersheds like a dam, such that if you just tweak the knob, there could be more water coming out of these systems,” said Davis, now the policy director for the Inland Empire Water Agency in Riverside County. “That’s not the way it works at all.”\nEvatt of the Foothill Conservancy has supported a new collaboration by the U.S. Forest Service and the Amador Water Agency to thin forests to reduce wildfire risk, protect water quality, and improve water yield. But she says legislation like AB 2480 is dangerous, because it would fund forest-thinning projects specifically for a single purpose: increasing water yield. “Watershed management and restoration approaches should be more holistic, not focused on a single output or commodity, whether that’s timber products, recreation, or more water,” she said.\nGiven what opponents describe as AB 2480’s vague language, which promises funding for projects that improve watersheds, some fear that companies like SPI may receive public financing for damaging projects that they claim are beneficial. The Feather River is one of five watersheds that would get special attention under AB 2480. Others are the Trinity, Pit, McCloud, and Sacramento river watersheds.\nIn total, these watersheds encompass some 7 million acres, about 62 percent of which is publicly owned, mainly by the U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management. SPI also owns a considerable amount of land in the watersheds, and the company is the largest purchaser of logs from logging on public forests in those areas.\nBattle Creek is a 350-square-mile drainage fed by water from melting snow that drips down the western slope of Mount Lassen. It’s also one of the most critical watersheds of the northern Sierra. Because of the creek’s ample year-round flow of cold water, state and federal wildlife managers have deemed it the most welcoming area in California for the reintroduction of endangered Sacramento River winter-run Chinook salmon. Baby Chinook must have cold water to survive.\nAs a result, Battle Creek is the focus of an ongoing $128 million state and federal restoration effort that involves dynamiting hydroelectric dams and constructing fish ladders. The Battle Creek Salmon and Steelhead Restoration Project is one of the most expensive aquatic species restoration programs ever undertaken on the West Coast. Only the removal of two dams on Washington’s Elhwa River in 2014 entailed a bigger investment.\nBut critics say the fisheries agencies’ progress in restoring the winter-run Chinook has been persistently undermined by SPI’s destructive logging practices upstream. In addition to the salvage logging, the company has clear-cut thousands of acres of Battle Creek’s forests in 20-to-40-acre swaths since the 1990s.\nThe impacts from erosion in the area have been dramatic. Jim Smith, a biologist with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, is one of numerous state and federal agency employees administering the Battle Creek Salmon and Steelhead Restoration Project. “Since the fire, we’ve seen an extremely high level of sediment input into the watershed,” he said. “Some of our deep pools in the south fork, which were some of the best areas for the salmon, just aren’t deep anymore.”\nThe question is how much of it has to do with the 2012 Ponderosa Fire versus SPI’s logging practices. Smith, as with other state and federal employees, pins most of the blame on the fire. And SPI Research and Monitoring Manager Cajun James asserted in a report that her company’s salvage logging actually reduced soil erosion, contending that sites in Battle Creek “disturbed only by fire produced substantially more water runoff and soil erosion than did sites that received post-wildfire salvage logging.”\nHowever, most studies of fire-induced erosion show that it dramatically declines a year later, once grasses and forbs grow back. By contrast, the use of heavy equipment in post-fire logging compacts the soil, and the application of post-fire herbicides prevents vegetation from re-establishing itself. Without adequate vegetation to anchor them, hillsides erode into roads, ditches, and culverts for years afterward.\nWoodhouse has hired Jack Lewis, a retired statistical hydrologist from the U.S. Forest Service, to analyze the data that she collects on her weekly trips through the watershed. His findings strongly support her claims, pointing to significantly increased erosion in areas impacted by salvage logging and clear-cutting.\nFollowing a 2011 Sacramento Bee investigation of SPI’s logging in Battle Creek, the California Natural Resources Agency directed four state agencies, including the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection, or Cal Fire, to study the impact of clear-cutting on creating sediment-filled runoff, but reported finding “only one instance of low-magnitude sediment delivery (less than 1 cubic yard) directly associated with a clearcut.”\nWoodhouse said the study’s participants failed to find any evidence of logging-induced erosion because they conducted their study at the worst possible time: early fall, before winter rains that would have begun washing sediment into the creek basin. In an email, which was obtained via the California Public Records Act, Cal Fire forester Duane Shintaku later wrote to SPI executive staff members asking permission to conduct further studies, which, he said, “would provide the evidence we need if anyone questions the validity of the Task Force’s findings.” Despite the friendly nature of this entreaty, the SPI staff turned down the request.\nThe 1973 California Forest Practice Act was designed to strengthen protections against streamside logging and compel timber companies to harvest selectively. And in a 2009 letter to the Board of Forestry and Fire Protection, a nine-member governor-appointed board that is the policymaking branch of state forestry, Deputy Attorney General Anita E. Rudd opined that the 1973 law “requires the [b]oard to adopt regulations that include . . . measures for soil erosion control, water quality and watershed control, [and] flood control.”\nBut many environmentalists say this isn’t really happening in California, and the main reason is the pro-timber bias of the state Board of Forestry. The board includes three representatives of the timber industry, and over the years, a majority of the board’s members have had some association with logging. Currently, two of the seven members of the board have worked for SPI—company forester Richard Wade and Stuart Farber, now of the timber consulting firm Beatty & Associates—while two other members currently or formerly have worked for other timber companies\nUnder California law, a lumber company must submit a timber harvest plan—a sort of scaled-down version of an environmental impact report—to the state before logging a forest. The so-called “lead agency” for reviewing timber harvest plans is Cal Fire. In an interview, Russ Henly, assistant secretary of Forest Resources Management for the California Natural Resources Agency, said he thinks Cal Fire staffers are “doing a very good job” with their timber harvest plan review responsibilities. “I know they give a hard look to the cumulative impacts of logging as part of the harvesting plans,” he said.\nBut critics contend that Cal Fire is uniquely favorable to the industry it regulates and that it routinely rubber stamps logging companies’ plans. The agency’s approvals also greatly aid the industry when environmentalists attempt to challenge timber plans through litigation.\n“In court, it’s not about who gave the better argument, but rather about whether an agency—in this case, Cal Fire—simply has some basis in evidence for their conclusion,” said Augustine of the Center for Biological Diversity. Augustine has been involved in several lawsuits against SPI timber harvest plans. “That’s a very low bar, unfortunately, that allows agencies to do bad things and still get away with it.”\nIf organizations like the Nature Conservancy are keen on protecting the state’s water supply, some say, they should be advocating for reforms of the Board of Forestry and Cal Fire. Instead, the Conservancy has teamed up with the state’s main timber-lobbying firm—the California Forestry Association, or CalForests—to promote logging-for-water proposals.\nShortly after the release of the Conservancy’s 2015 report, CalForests Chairman David Bischel and the Nature Conservancy’s Edelson co-authored an op-ed in the Mercury News, calling for an increase in “the pace and scale of fuels reduction in [national] forests as an important part of the state’s water strategy.”\nThe fact that SPI also claims that clear-cutting helps restore forests—and, thus, improves the health of watersheds—worries opponents of logging for water, like Environment Now’s Bevington: “SPI’s promotion of clear-cutting is a particularly audacious example of a disturbing trend in which harmful logging projects get repackaged to seem like they are somehow beneficial to forests, when, in fact, they are not.”\nHe says that the Nature Conservancy’s collaboration with CalForests is roughly akin to collaborating with SPI itself. SPI CEO Mark Emmerson is the board chairman of CalForests. And according to CalForests’ financial statements, SPI gave $71,500 to the organization from 2011 to 2015, more than any other company.\nGiven that avenues for increased forest protection are largely blocked at the state level, environmental activists have sought other options to build momentum for change, including an effort to create a groundswell for reform in cities and counties. In 2015, the city of Berkeley became one of seven California cities to call on the state Legislature to enact a ban on clear-cutting, joining San Francisco, Daly City, Davis, Menlo Park, Monte Sereno, and Brisbane. The resolution cited Berkeley’s desire to protect its water supply from sedimentation and pollution caused by SPI.\n“We’ve talked to lots of legislators,” said Sierra Club volunteer Karen Maki, who is an organizer of the campaign for a statewide clear-cutting ban and a resident of Los Gatos. “They’re sympathetic, but they aren’t doing much yet. We figured if we got a lot of cities to pass the resolutions, it would start to have some influence.”\nMaki acknowledges that a ban on clear-cutting is not a cure-all. But it is an important step, she said, in terms of protecting California’s water supply and quality alike, and one that most environmentalists should be able to rally around. In 1990, a ballot initiative called Forests Forever that would have banned clear-cutting throughout the state lost by only three percentage points.\nMenlo Park City Councilmember Catherine Carlton presented her city’s resolution calling for a clear-cutting ban to the League of California Cities annual convention in 2014, and she said she received a strongly favorable response from other city councilmembers and mayors. “It’s an idea that makes sense, so I’m sure it will keep coming up,” she said.\nThe municipal resolutions call attention to another aspect of forest degradation: climate change. The Berkeley version asserts that the timber industry accounts for roughly 10 percent of the state’s greenhouse gas emissions.\nAccording to scientific predictions, global warming is causing more variability in California’s climate, with more intense storms, longer dry periods, and less snowpack, with more precipitation falling as rain instead of snow.\nHydrologist Rhodes says the renewal of logging-for-water claims is particularly frustrating given that there are lower-cost ways of restoring these watersheds on public lands that don’t involve logging. Three of these methods include the reduction or cessation of livestock grazing near streams and meadows in headwaters, reductions in the extensive network of logging roads in national forests, and the restoration of beaver populations, which helps to slow water on its course downstream so that it trickles into the ground.\nBut Bevington said it’s not surprising that the logging-for-water claim has gained renewed attention in California during the recent intense drought.\n“In desperate times, people are more susceptible to believing promises of easy water, rather than looking closely at the problems with those claims,” he continued. “But if EBMUD or other utilities end up subsidizing logging in the Sierra Nevada and other mountain ranges, Bay Area residents are likely to see no significant benefits in terms of water flows.”\nWill Parrish is an independent journalist who specializes in investigative and environmental reporting and lives in Ukiah. His work also appears in the Anderson Valley Advertiser, East Bay Express, North Bay Bohemian, and Counterpunch.\nAuthor adminPosted on August 22, 2016 November 10, 2016 Categories Environmental Impacts, Logging Impacting watershed, Main Article Archive, Preservation Issue\nPrevious Previous post: Last Stands","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1661535"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6941026449203491,"wiki_prob":0.6941026449203491,"text":"Polish Open Badminton\nPolish Open live stream\n*You must have a funded Sports account or have placed a bet within the last 24 hours in order to view bet365 streams | Geo-Restrictions apply | T&Cs apply\nWatch Live Polish Open Badminton Streaming\nWatch Polish Open badminton live stream and follow the action from one of the oldest badminton tournaments in Eastern Europe.The inaugural tournament was held in 1975 and until 1990 Polish Open was one of the few tournaments held in the Eastern Bloc countries.During the years, the tournaments took place annually, except for 1989 and 2001, when we didn't see any competition.\nDomestic players enjoy much success in the tournament. They won the title in every contest, and Przemyslaw Wacha is one of the most successful players here, with three titles in men's singles competition. However, Czech Michal Maly was even more successful, with four titles in men's singles.\nIn women's singles, Monika Hasens from East Germany dominated during the early years, by conquering first six tournaments, from 1975 to 1980.\nIn 2017, Tan Jia Wei from Malaysia won the title in men's singles, while Japanese Yui Hashimoto won the title in women's singles competition.\nHow to watch live badminton Polish Open streams\nTo add to the In-Play excitement, bet365 (18+, T&C Apply) stream over 100,000 events live to your PC every year - so you can bet as the action unfolds. Highlights include Masters Series Tennis tournaments and matches from some of the top domestic Soccer leagues in the world.To use the Live Streaming service you will need :\nTo be logged in and have a funded account or\nTo have placed a bet in the last 24 hours\nAny fixture/event on our website which has the Play or Video icon next to it is scheduled to be shown via Live Streaming","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1040569"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7080495953559875,"wiki_prob":0.29195040464401245,"text":"Carbon Pricing Response\nHome /Social Sciences /Economics / Carbon Pricing Response\nAlthough a relatively new policy mechanism, carbon pricing has shown some very promising potential. It has been known for quite some time that certain industrial outputs can be harmful to the environment, both on a global and regional scale, but it has taken quite some time for economists to catch on and develop policy around curbing emissions. This being such a new utensil in the economic tool kit, governments should be extremely cautious in its implementation.\nLike any uncharted policy territory, one must always watch out for the law of unintended consequences. Incentives to discontinue or reduce certain industrial practices that lead to pollutants aren’t any good if it causes a switch from one environmental issue to another. For example, a policy aimed at taxing carbon outputs in the energy industry may break down if producers switch to use of natural gas, for which the mining of comes with its own share of pollutants.\nThe goals of such a policy should also be taken into consideration when determining the proper application. If the desire is to combat global warming, odds are such policies wont have much effect. It would be as if trying to get extra memory on a hard drive by deleting the text files. In that case, it becomes difficult to properly set the price of a tax. Teitenberg also mentions the possibility of a global carbon policy. This may inflict huge damages on developing countries that cannot keep up with the costs of production.\nIn theory such carbon policy strategies look highly promising and extremely beneficial. In practice they show signs of promise, but there is no real long-term evidence to show that carbon policies are totally effective. The next decade should prove to be the ultimate test to carbon policies. The concerns above may need to be addressed in that time span, and carbon policy may go through dramatic transformation in order for it to be successful.\nEconomics / Social Sciences\t6:04 pm , May 15, 2018\t0\nOdinity.com Copyright 2018 | Terms and Conditions | Privacy Policy","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line323979"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6036897301673889,"wiki_prob":0.6036897301673889,"text":"Studio Zung is a modern studio integrating architecture, design and the artistry of living.\nWe are a team of architects, thinkers, designers and makers inspired by a holistic lifestyle and sensuous, luxurious design.\nOur approach is immersive; a fluid union of ideas and aesthetics that combines the physical and sensuous storytelling of architecture and design. We believe that every project starts with a smart, visionary idea, and ends with a beautiful, sustainable, and memorable human environment.\nStudio Zung is a modern design studio integrating architecture, design and the artistry of living.\nIf our mind was a room\nTommy Zung | B.Arch | Principal\nWith over 30 years of experience in the design world, starting in hospitality management, delving into fashion, and his most recent endeavor: an eponymous architecture and design studio, Tommy Zung has transformed what it means to be a designer in today’s world. His unique and balanced perspective - a mix of professional experience countered with years spent surfing, negotiating the oceans unpredictable and formidable nature, gives rise to his commitment to an authentic and holistic lifestyle, and modern, and essential design.\n+ Read More - Read Less\nZung had the privilege of growing up among some of the world’s greatest architects and thinkers. His father, Thomas T.K. Zung was a partner and friend of the visionary R. Buckminster Fuller (their firm aptly named Buckminster Fuller, Sadao and Zung Architects), in addition to working with architectural luminaries, Eero Saarinen and Edward Durell Stone. Intelligent and intuitive, Zung’s approach to architecture, and life, is informed by his unusual background, world travels, philosophy, and -- not least of all -- surfing. Ask him about his work and he’ll comfortably discourse on the humbling nature of the ocean -- as well as theories about proportion, scale, and materials.\nZung’s multi-disciplinary approach began with his early studies in Hotel and Restaurant Management, eventually leading Zung to become a key collaborator and assistant general manager of the celebrated Moomba Restaurant and Lounge in NYC.\nIntent on branching out and exploring different areas of design, Zung established his own clothing label and ready-to-wear line which sold to over 300 accounts internationally. The success of the label received praise from Vogue, Harper’s Bazaar, Arena, L’Uomo Vogue, GQ, The Face, and i-D magazine. In addition to his clothing line, Zung designed and created clothing lines for Mitsubishi Corporation, Itochu Fashion, and Sebu as well as creating and guest hosting design segments featured on the Fox Network, F/X.\nStarting his architecture firm Zung Design in 2001, Zung went on to evolve and rebrand as Studio Zung in 2013, expanding further on the design principles and environmental integrity of his godfather, Buckminster Fuller. Studio Zung, a multidisciplinary architecture, design, and holistic lifestyle studio, harnesses Zung’s hands-on experience from his various successful and creative business ventures. His architectural work focuses on boutique contemporary design, blending worldly elements with a mindful and integrated approach.\nHoward Collinge | Associate\nHoward Collinge was born in Hong Kong to a Chinese mother and a British father. He was raised in Australia, but has spent most of his career between London, Asia and New York City.\nHis advertising and branding work has garnered numerous international awards, including thirteen Gold Lions at the Cannes Festival, as well as numerous Clio’s and One Show awards. He has created campaigns for some of the world’s leading brands, including Uniqlo, Levi’s, MTV, Jetblue and Heineken. His attention-grabbing ideas have lead to a “most watched” viral video as well as an award-winning branded content series for MTV.\nHoward has one of the most diverse creative and entrepreneurial portfolios in his field, founding the fashion and culture blog, The Unique Creatures, which garnered praise from the likes of Vogue, Net-a-Porter and Blackbook Media. He is also the author of Beautiful Economics: How Art, Design, Beauty & Unicorns Will Save the Universe. The book can be found in leading gallery bookstores such as The Gagosian NY, and LACMA (LA Contemporary Art Museum).\nThrough Howard’s multi-disciplinary cross-pollination approach, he has developed a reputation as an astute creative director across a spectrum of industries, from travel and fashion, hotels and hospitality, wellness and health.\nWith a passion for “beautiful economics” and environmental sustainability, Howard was invited in 2013 to become an associate of Studio Zung, a multidisciplinary architecture, design and branding firm associated with the visionary R. Buckminster Fuller.\nYou can view Howard's website here.\nThomas T.K. Zung | B.Arch, M.S. Design Science, AIA | Associate\nThomas T.K. Zung, president of Buckminster Fuller, Sadao and Zung Architects was a student of Buckminster Fuller. Prior to joining Fuller, he served as principal designer and project architect to the internationally renowned architect, Edward Durell Stone for many years. While associated with Edward Durell Stone, Zung worked on such notable designs as the New Orleans International Trade Mart; the Master Plan for the United States Naval Academy at Annapolis, Maryland; the General Motors Headquarters building in New York; and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.\nZung established Thomas T.K. Zung Architects, Inc. in Cleveland, Ohio and the following year, 1968, designed the first elongated geodesic dome in association with Buckminster Fuller Synergetics organization. Thomas T.K. Zung Architects and R. Buckminster Fuller merged to form Buckminster Fuller, Sadao and Zung Architects designing numerous Geodesic domes, tensegrity structures, vector equilibriums, museum exhibitions, publications, and Fuller’s last invention, ‘Hang It All’. A founding member of Buckminster Fuller Institute and SNEC, he is a Distinguished Senior Fellow to the Stanford University Libraries, and author/editor of Fuller’s Anthology for a New Millennium published under St. Martin’s Press.\nBuckminster Fuller, Sadao and Zung Architects is a member of The American Institute of Architects.\nKupal Fontaine | B.Arch | Senior Architectural Designer\nKupal Fontaine received his Bachelor of Architecture from the New York Institute of Technology in 2010. Kupal started architectural drawing at the age of 15 and has since advanced through the field. Kupal’s assets lay in design build projects and is responsible for all aspects of schematic design, design development, and working drawings. Kupal’s exacting command of drawing enables him to simultaneously design bridging plan and section without compromising the architectural form.\nMr. Fontaine is currently pursuing his ARE to become a licensed architect.\nPhillip Yang | B.Arch | Junior Architectural Designer\nPhillip received his Bachelor in Architecture from the University of Southern California School of Architecture in 2017. Prior to Studio Zung, Phillip spent a semester abroad in Japan and various part of China including Hong Kong, Beijing, and Shanghai. As a Los Angeles native, Phillip originally fell in love with painting and drafting in high school leading him to eventually pursue a path in architecture.\nHis past work includes large-scale installation projects to residential renovations with the Los Angeles firm Paragon Architects.\nHugues De Blignierères | M. Interior Architect\nArchitect of Interior & Designer (graduated from ESAG Penninghen - Excellent Mention)\nHugues went through internationally renowned agencies such as Gilles & Boissier, India Mahdavi and Joseph Dirand. With these experiences he defines the interior architecture as elegant and timeless. He motivates his creations by the perpetual search of the beautiful in order to sublimate at every moment the facts and gestures of everyday life. Fascinated by the hand of Man, his projects are part of a desire to preserve an authentic know-how.\nTalley Carlston | BA | Graphic Designer\nTalley received his Bachelor of Arts from the University of Portland, where he studied Advertising and Graphic Design. With a strong interest for graphics and fashion, he spent a semester abroad in Paris where he studied luxury brand management developing a strong understanding of high tier branding and design. Since graduating he has worked at Baron & Baron, Laird+Partners, Love&War as well as other notable advertising agencies building his expertise as a multi disciplinary designer in branding, graphic layout, and visual design.\nMr. Carlston’s works as a graphic designer for Studio Zung through visual graphic collateral and visual brand material.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1185544"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8874661326408386,"wiki_prob":0.8874661326408386,"text":"HomeContentSpecial issues100 (Suppl.I) March 2005\nMEM INST OSWALDO CRUZ, RIO DE JANEIRO, 100 (Suppl.I) March 2005\nPAGES: 67-71 DOI: Full paper\nNitric oxide and the resolution of inflammation: implications for atherosclerosis\nCatherine A Shaw, Emma L Taylor*, Ian L Megson, Adriano G Rossi* +\nCentre for Cardiovascular Science, Hugh Robson Building, George Square\n*MRC Centre for Inflammation Research, University of Edinburgh, Teviot Place, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK\nThe ubiquitous free radical, nitric oxide (NO), plays an important role in many biological processes including the regulation of the inflammatory response. Alterations in NO synthesis by endogenous systems likely influence inflammatory processes occurring in a wide range of diseases including many in the cardiovascular system (e.g. atherosclerosis). Progression of inflammatory conditions depends not only upon the recruitment and activation of inflammatory cells but also upon their subsequent removal from the inflammatory milieu. Apoptosis, or programmed cell death, is a fundamental process regulating inflammatory cell survival and is critically involved in ensuring the successful resolution of an inflammatory response. Apoptosis results in shutdown of secretory pathways and renders effete, but potentially highly histotoxic, cells instantly recognisable for non-inflammatory clearance by phagocytes (e.g., macrophages). However, dysregulation of apoptosis and phagocytic clearance mechanisms can have drastic consequences for development and resolution of inflammatory processes. In this review we highlight the complexities of NO-mediated regulation of inflammatory cell apoptosis and clearance by phagocytes and discuss the molecular mechanisms controlling these NO mediated effects. We believe that manipulation of pathways involving NO may have previously unrecognised therapeutic potential for limiting or resolving inflammatory and cardiovascular disease.\nThe inorganic free radical, nitric oxide (NO), was first identified as an endothelium-derived endogenous messenger responsible for the regulation of vascular tone (Furchgott & Zawadzki 1980, Palmer et al. 1987). However, since then it has become clear that NO is the signalling molecule responsible for several diverse physiological and pathophysiological processes. Synthesised from L-arginine by three isoforms of the enzyme nitric oxide synthase (NOS), NO is now known to control vascular smooth muscle tone, inhibit platelet and inflammatory cell adhesion and activation, and to be a transmitter at non-adrenergic non-cholinergic (NANC) synapses (Moncada et al. 1991, Quinn et al. 1995). Recent studies have revealed that NO can also modulate apoptosis, or programmed cell death, in a variety of cell types, including human inflammatory cells (Taylor et al. 2003). Apoptosis of inflammatory cells is a highly regulated process whereby cellular death occurs without the disruption of the cell membrane and subsequent release of the pro-inflammatory and histotoxic contents of the dying cell (Haslett 1997, Rossi et al. 2003). Apoptotic cells are instantly recognised and ingested by phagocytes, such as macrophages, using mechanisms that down-regulate pro-inflammatory mediator release and increase the release of agents with anti-inflammatory potential from the ingesting cell (Meagher et al. 1992, Fadok et al. 1998, Liu et al. 1999). Hence, apoptosis represents a non-inflammatory mechanism to remove potentially damaging pro-inflammatory cells from the site of inflammation and is therefore critical to the successful resolution of the inflammatory response. Pharmacological manipulation of the rate of apoptosis in inflammatory cells, such as granulocytes and macrophages, may represent a potential therapeutic strategy for the treatment of chronic inflammatory disorders (Ward et al. 1999, Gilroy et al. 2004).\nNO can be both pro- and anti-apoptotic, depending on local concentrations and the specific cell type in question (Quinn et al. 1995, Kim et al. 1999, Taylor et al. 2003). Current evidence suggests that lower concentrations of NO produced by the constitutive endothelial and neuronal isoforms of NOS (eNOS and nNOS) are cytoprotec-tive, whilst supraphysiological concentrations produced by the inducible NOS isoform (iNOS) trigger cell death (Nicotera et al. 1997). This paradox may be explained, at least in part, by the free radical nature of NO and hence the ease with which it will react with other radicals, particularly reactive oxygen species, present in the milieu to form various NO-related species in vivo. For example, NO combines rapidly with inflammatory cell derived superoxide anions (O2-) to form highly cytotoxic peroxynitrite (ONOO-) (Maxwell & Lip 1997).\nNO AS A MEDIATOR OF INFLAMMATORY CELL APOPTOSIS\nThe pro- and anti-apoptotic actions of NO have been well documented in many cell systems. For example, high concentrations of either exogenous or endogenous iNOS-derived NO have been shown to induce apoptosis in murine macrophage cell lines (Albina et al. 1993, Sarih et al. 1993). However, pre-treatment with low concentrations of exogenous NO protects RAW 264 cells against cell death upon subsequent exposure to higher concentrations of NO which would normally be cytotoxic (Yoshioka et al. 2003). However, despite the apparent reduced capacity of human macrophages in comparison to murine macrophages (Albina 1995, Schneemann & Schoedon 2002), to generate iNOS derived NO (Thomassen & Kavuru 2001), human macrophages do undergo apoptosis in response to exogenous NO. For example, the NO donors, S-nitrosoglutathione (GSNO), and spermine diazenium diolate (SPER/NO) induce apoptosis in primary human monocyte-derived macrophages (von Knethen et al. 1999). Exogenously delivered NO from NO donors (e.g., sodium nitroprusside; SNP and GSNO) induce apoptosis in human neutrophils (Fortenberry et al. 1999, Singhal et al. 1999). However, it has also been established that NO may have anti-apoptotic potential in neutrophils; low concentrations of NO generated from the spontaneous NO donors, SPER/NO and DEA/NO, reduce the rate of neutrophil apoptosis (Taylor et al. 2001). In contrast, the same study showed that the oxatriazole derivative, GEA-3162, at equivalent concentrations produced no such inhibition. However, it was demonstrated that GEA-3162 decomposes to co-generate both NO and O2-, which then react to form ONOO- (Taylor et al. 2004). This suggests that the pro- or anti-apoptotic effects of NO may be critically governed by the specific NO-related species generated.\nInterestingly, the production of ONOO- may be of particular importance at sites of inflammation where the concentration of reactive oxygen species is likely to be elevated (Crow & Beckman 1995). However, the precise role of ONOO- in inflammatory cell apoptosis remains to be fully elucidated. There is some evidence to suggest that ONOO- at high concentrations increases apoptosis in murine RAW 264.7 cells (Sandoval et al. 1997), whilst at lower concentrations it may have a protective effect against lipopolysaccharide (LPS) and interferon (IFN)-g-induced apoptosis in these cells (Scivittaro et al. 1997). A scavenger of ONOO-, uric acid, had no effect on apoptosis induced by the NO donors GSNO or SPER/NO in RAW 264.7 macrophages, but abolished apoptosis induced by the ONOO- generator SIN-1, suggesting that ONOO- is a mediator of apoptosis, at least not in this cell type (Brockhaus & Brune 1999).\nAs is the case with macrophages, there are conflicting reports about the ability of ONOO- to induce or suppress apoptosis in neutrophils. Several investigators have demonstrated that SIN-1 and GEA-3162 increases the rate of apoptosis in human neutrophils (Blaylock et al. 1998, Ward et al. 2000, Taylor et al. 2004). Conversely, Blaylock et al. (1998) reported SIN-1 produced no significant increase in neutrophil apoptosis. However, this may be due to experimental differences and the exact amounts of ONOO- present rather than a true difference in the effect of ONOO- (Taylor et al. 2003).\nNO AND APOPTOSIS IN THE RESOLUTION OF INFLAMMATION\nThe ability of NO to induce apoptosis is particularly relevant during the resolution phase of inflammation. In a mouse model of kidney inflammation, activated macrophages have been shown to induce apoptosis in neigh-bouring mesangial cells prior to their ingestion by phagocytes (Duffield et al. 2000). The ability of these activated macrophages to induce apoptosis is greatly reduced in the presence of the NOS inhibitor N-É-monomethyl-L-arginine (L-NMMA), suggesting that macrophage-directed apoptosis of mesangial cell apoptosis occurs via a NO-dependent mechanism (Duffield et al. 2001). Similarly, several studies have demonstrated that activated macrophages infiltrating murine tumours induce apoptosis via a NO-dependent pathway in both activated anti-tumour T cells and in the tumour cells themselves (Saio et al. 2001, Chattopadhyay et al. 2002). Thus, it appears that macrophages have the capacity to induce apoptosis of nearby cells by the liberation of NO to enhance the clearance of apoptotic cells and thereby promote the resolution phase of inflammation (Figure).\nMECHANISM OF ACTION OF NO\nThe classical pathway by which NO exerts many of its actions is via activation of the enzyme soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) (Moncada et al. 1991) and resultant conversion of guanosine 5'-triphosphate (GTP) to the second messenger 3', 5'-cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) (Ignarro et al. 1999). However, recent studies have established that NO can also act via cGMP-independent pathways in various systems, particularly during the inhibition of platelet aggregation and regulation of inflammatory cell apoptosis (Gordge et al. 1998, Sogo et al. 2000, Ward et al. 2000, Crane et al. 2002).\nIt is generally thought that lower concentrations of NO inhibit apoptosis via cGMP-dependent mechanisms, whilst higher concentrations are cytotoxic on account of cGMP-independent signalling. For example, Yoshoka et al. (2003) demonstrated that pre-treatment of RAW 264 cells with a low concentration of the NO donor SNP, inhibited cell death upon subsequent exposure to higher concentrations of NO. This protection was negated in the presence of sGC inhibitors and could be mimicked by cGMP analogues, suggesting that the cellular protection was conferred by cGMP.\nConversely, at higher concentrations, NO has been shown to induce apoptosis in rabbit macrophages _ an effect which was unaffected by antagonism of cGMP-dependent kinases and not mimicked by cGMP analogues, suggesting that the pro-apoptotic action of NO is cGMP-independent (Wang et al. 1999). The peroxynitrite generators, SIN-1 and GEA-3162, have also been shown to produce a marked concentration-dependent induction of apoptosis in isolated human neutrophils (Ward et al. 2000). Again, this induction was unaffected by inhibitors of sGC, and cGMP analogues failed to elicit a pro-apoptotic response suggesting that a mechanism independent of cGMP signalling also featured in neutrophils. Interestingly, superoxide dismutase (SOD), the enzyme responsible for converting O2- to hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), antagonised the actions of SIN-1 and GEA-3162, whilst \"authentic\" peroxynitrite mimicked their effects. This result may, therefore, highlight the critical importance of NO-related species in determining an anti- or pro-apoptotic response, with the final outcome depending on the balance between reactive oxygen and nitrogen species.\nAtherosclerosis is a multi-factorial condition with a complicated aetiology, and, in combination with the associated cardiovascular syndromes, such as myocardial infarction and stroke, is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. However, it is now widely recognised that there is an inflammatory component to the disease pathogenesis and progression (Ross 1999a, b, Ludewig et al. 2002).\nAtherosclerosis is characterised by the development of lipid-rich atherosclerotic plaques in the subendothelial space of conduit vessels, such as the coronary artery and aorta (Badimon et al. 1993). These plaques are usually eccentric, with the lipid rich core encapsulated by a fibrous, collagen-rich cap of smooth muscle cells and extracellular matrix (Davies 1997). The underlying causes of atherogenesis remain largely unknown, although a critical early stage is thought to be an insult to the endothelium, either physical or through oxidative stress. The consequences of this insult are multiple; firstly, in contrast to the situation in healthy endothelium, the injured endothelium becomes dysfunctional and production of NO by eNOS decreases, promoting vasoconstriction and platelet and inflammatory cell adhesion. Secondly, a protective inflammatory response is triggered. However, depending on the nature and duration of the insult, this protective response becomes excessive and over a period of years, comes to constitute the disease process itself (Ross 1999a, b). The inflammatory process begins with the expression of chemotactic and adhesion molecules for monocytes and lymphocytes, such as vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1), on dysfunctional endothelial cells. Circulating monocytes adhere to the site of endothelial damage and translocate to the sub-endothelial space (Vogel 1997). Colony stimulating factors secreted from areas of endothelial damage induce monocytes to differentiate into macrophages, which then express scavenger receptors on their membranes, facilitating the in-ternalisation of oxidised low density lipoprotein (ox-LDL). The accumulation of ox-LDL continues unchecked as, unlike LDL receptors, scavenger receptors are not down-regulated by cells in the cholesterol-replete state (Maxwell & Lip 1997). In this lipid-laden state, macrophages are known as foam cells and it is an aggregation of these foam cells in the vessel intima which form the earliest recognisable lesion of atherosclerosis _ the fatty streak (Ross 1993). The plaque continues to grow via the accumulation of further macrophage foam cells and eventually becomes overlaid with a layer of smooth muscle cells forming a fibrous, collagen-rich cap. The cap serves to keep the highly thrombogenic contents of the plaque separate from the circulation. However, if the plaque cap is compromised and the contents exposed to the circulation, platelets are rapidly recruited and activated resulting in thrombus formation, leading to the more serious acute cardiovascular syndromes (Badimon et al. 1993).\nINFLAMMATORY CELL APOPTOSIS IN ATHEROSCLEROSIS\nRecruitment of inflammatory cells, particularly monocytes and macrophages, is the major driving force behind plaque growth and development. However, the plaque is dynamic and inflammatory cells are constantly turning over within the core. It is well established that apoptotic cells, particularly macrophages, are present in atherosclerotic plaques in both human and animal models of the disease. Apoptotic macrophages and smooth muscle cells have been identified by TUNEL staining in sections from human plaques by various authors (Bjorkerud & Bjorkerud 1996, Haunstetter & Izumo 1998). Because apoptotic cells are ingested by phagocytes without initiating any further proinflammatory response, it has been suggested that apoptosis may represent a mechanism to regress the plaque. NO is a particularly promising candidate for this strategy because, as well as the pro-apoptotic actions discussed above, it has several other powerful anti-atherogenic characteristics including a powerful inhibitory effect on platelet and inflammatory cell activation (Moncada et al. 1991, Armstrong 2001). Evidence is emerging in support of this hypothesis. For example, administration of L-arginine (the substrate for NOS) to hypercholesterolemic rabbits increases the number of apoptotic macrophages in intimal lesions by three fold. This increase in apoptosis was associated with a regression of the plaque, suggesting that manipulation of the NO synthase pathway may well represent a therapeutic approach to resolving the inflammatory response in the vessel wall (Wang et al. 1999). However, care must by exercised when considering this approach because NO is also known to induce apoptosis in smooth muscle cells (Labelle et al. 2004). Loss of cells from the fibrous cap during the latter stages of atherosclerosis may well be detrimental, destabilising the plaque and promoting rupture (Kockx & Knaapen 2000).\nApoptosis of inflammatory cells is a tightly regulated process whereby cells are removed from the site of inflammation without triggering a subsequent pro-inflammatory response that would instigate further tissue injury. Pharmacological manipulation of apoptosis during chronic inflammatory conditions, such as atherosclerosis, may aid the resolution of inflammation and hence halt, or delay, disease progression. The ubiquitous signalling molecule and inducer of apoptosis, NO, is a likely candidate for such manipulation and may represent a novel therapeutic target for the treatment of such conditions.\nAlbina JE 1995. On the expression of nitric oxide synthase by human macrophages. Why no NO? J Leukoc Biol 58: 643-649.\nAlbina JE, Cui S et al. 1993. Nitric oxide-mediated apoptosis in murine peritoneal macrophages. J Immunol 150: 5080-5085.\nArmstrong R 2001. The physiological role and pharmacological potential of nitric oxide in neutrophil activation.Int Immunopharmacol 1: 1501-1512.\nBadimon JJ, Fuster V et al. 1993. Coronary atherosclerosis. A multifactorial disease. Circulation 87: II3-16.\nBjorkerud S, Bjorkerud B 1996. Apoptosis is abundant in human atherosclerotic lesions, especially in inflammatory cells (macrophages and T cells), and may contribute to the accumulation of gruel and plaque instability. Am J Pathol 149: 367-380.\nBlaylock MG, Cuthbertson BH et al. 1998. The effect of nitric oxide and peroxynitrite on apoptosis in human polymorphonuclear leukocytes. Free Radic Biol Med 25: 748-752.\nBrockhaus F, Brune B 1999. Overexpression of CuZn superoxide dismutase protects RAW 264.7 macrophages against nitric oxide cytotoxicity. Biochem J 338 ( Pt 2): 295-303.\nChattopadhyay S, Das T et al. 2002. Protein A-activated macrophages induce apoptosis in Ehrlich's ascites carcinoma through a nitric oxide-dependent pathway. Apoptosis 7: 49-57.\nCrane MS, Ollosson R et al. 2002. Novel role for low molecular weight plasma thiols in nitric oxide-mediated control of platelet function. J Biol Chem 277: 46858-46863.\nCrow JP, Beckman JS 1995. Reactions between nitric oxide, superoxide, and peroxynitrite: footprints of peroxynitrite in vivo. Adv Pharmacol 34: 17-43.\nDavies MJ 1997. The composition of coronary-artery plaques. N Engl J Med 336: 1312-1314.\nDuffield JS, Erwig LP et al. 2000. Activated macrophages direct apoptosis and suppress mitosis of mesangial cells. J Immunol 164: 2110-2119.\nDuffield JS, Ware CF et al. 2001. Suppression by apoptotic cells defines tumor necrosis factor-mediated induction of glomerular mesangial cell apoptosis by activated macrophages. Am J Pathol 159: 1397-1404.\nFadok VA, Bratton DL et al. 1998. Macrophages that have ingested apoptotic cells in vitro inhibit proinflammatory cytokine production through autocrine/paracrine mechanisms involving TGF-beta, PGE2, and PAF. J Clin Invest 101: 890-898.\nFortenberry JD, Owens ML et al. 1999. S-nitrosoglutathione enhances neutrophil DNA fragmentation and cell death. Am J Physiol 276: L435-442.\nFurchgott RF, Zawadzki JV 1980. The obligatory role of endothelial cells in the relaxation of arterial smooth muscle by acetylcholine. Nature 288: 373-376.\nGilroy DW, Lawrence T et al. 2004. Inflammatory resolution: new opportunities for drug discovery. Nat Rev Drug Discov 3: 401-416.\nGordge MP, Hothersall JS et al. 1998. Evidence for a cyclic GMP-independent mechanism in the anti-platelet action of S-nitrosoglutathione. Br J Pharmacol 124: 141-148.\nHaslett C 1997. Granulocyte apoptosis and inflammatory disease. Br Med Bull 53: 669-683.\nHaunstetter A, Izumo S 1998. Apoptosis: basic mechanisms and implications for cardiovascular disease. Circ Res 82: 1111-1129.\nIgnarro LJ, Cirino G et al. 1999. Nitric oxide as a signaling molecule in the vascular system: an overview. J Cardiovasc Pharmacol 34: 879-886.\nKim YM, Bombeck CA et al. 1999. Nitric oxide as a bifunctional regulator of apoptosis. Circ Res 84: 253-256.\nKockx MM, Knaapen MW 2000. The role of apoptosis in vascular disease. J Pathol 190: 267-280.\nLabelle M, Beaulieu M et al. 2004. Integrating clinical practice guidelines into daily practice: impact of an interactive workshop on drafting of a written action plan for asthma patients. J Contin Educ Health Prof 24: 39-49.\nLiu Y, Cousin JM et al. 1999. Glucocorticoids promote nonphlogistic phagocytosis of apoptotic leukocytes. J Immunol 162: 3639-3646.\nLudewig B, Zinkernagel RM et al. 2002. Arterial inflammation and atherosclerosis. Trends Cardiovasc Med 12: 154-159.\nMaxwell SR, Lip GY 1997. Free radicals and antioxidants in cardiovascular disease. Br J Clin Pharmacol 44: 307-317.\nMeagher LC, Savill JS et al. 1992. Phagocytosis of apoptotic neutrophils does not induce macrophage release of thromboxane B2. J Leukoc Biol 52: 269-273.\nMoncada S, Palmer RM et al. 1991. Nitric oxide: physiology, pathophysiology, and pharmacology. Pharmacol Rev 43: 109-142.\nNicotera P, Brune B et al. 1997. Nitric oxide: inducer or suppressor of apoptosis? Trends Pharmacol Sci 18: 189-190.\nPalmer RM, Ferrige AG et al. 1987. Nitric oxide release accounts for the biological activity of endothelium-derived relaxing factor. Nature 327: 524-526.\nQuinn AC, Petros AJ et al. 1995. Nitric oxide: an endogenous gas. Br J Anaesth 74: 443-451.\nRoss R 1993. The pathogenesis of atherosclerosis: a perspective for the 1990s. Nature 362: 801-809.\nRoss R 1999a. Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease. Am Heart J 138: S419-420.\nRoss R 1999b. Atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease. N Engl J Med 340: 115-126.\nRossi AG, Ward C, Dransfield I, Haslett C 2003. Apoptosis of inflammatory cells. In NF Adkinson et al. (eds),Middleton's Allergy: Principles and Practice, Chapt 26, 6th ed., Mosby-Harcourt, p. 412-424.\nSaio M, Radoja S et al. 2001. Tumor-infiltrating macrophages induce apoptosis in activated CD8(+) T cells by a mechanism requiring cell contact and mediated by both the cell-associated form of TNF and nitric oxide. J Immunol 167: 5583-5593.\nSandoval M, Ronzio RA et al. 1997. Peroxynitrite-induced apoptosis in epithelial (T84) and macrophage (RAW 264.7) cell lines: effect of legume-derived polyphenols (phytolens). Nitric Oxide 1: 476-483.\nSarih M, Souvannavong V et al. 1993. Nitric oxide synthase induces macrophage death by apoptosis. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 191: 503-508.\nSchneemann M, Schoedon G 2002. Species differences in macrophage NO production are important. Nat Immunol 3: 102.\nScivittaro V, Boggs S et al. 1997. Peroxynitrite protects RAW 264.7 macrophage from Lipopolysaccharide/interferon-gamma-induced cell death. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 241: 37-42.\nSinghal PC, Patel P et al. 1999. Ethanol-induced neutrophil apoptosis is mediated through nitric oxide. J Leukoc Biol 66: 930-936.\nSogo N, Magid KS et al. 2000. Inhibition of human platelet aggregation by nitric oxide donor drugs: relative contribution of cGMP-independent mechanisms. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 279: 412-419.\nTaylor EL, Megson IL et al. 2001. Dissociation of DNA fragmentation from other hallmarks of apoptosis in nitric oxide-treated neutrophils: differences between individual nitric oxide donor drugs. Biochem Biophys Res Commun 289: 1229-1236.\nTaylor EL, Megson IL et al. 2003. Nitric oxide: a key regulator of myeloid inflammatory cell apoptosis. Cell Death Differ 10: 418-430.\nTaylor EL, Rossi AG et al. 2004. GEA 3162 decomposes to co-generate nitric oxide and superoxide and induces apoptosis in human neutrophils via a peroxynitrite-dependent mechanism. Br J Pharmacol 143: 179-185.\nThomassen MJ, Kavuru MS 2001. Human alveolar macrophages and monocytes as a source and target for nitric oxide. Int Immunopharmacol 1: 1479-1490.\nVogel RA 1997. Coronary risk factors, endothelial function, and atherosclerosis: a review. Clin Cardiol 20: 426-432.\nvon Knethen A, Brockhaus F et al. 1999. NO-Evoked macrophage apoptosis is attenuated by cAMP-induced gene expression. Mol Med 5: 672-684.\nWang BY, Ho HK et al. 1999. Regression of atherosclerosis: role of nitric oxide and apoptosis. Circulation 99: 1236-1241.\nWard C, Dransfield I et al. 1999. Pharmacological manipulation of granulocyte apoptosis: potential therapeutic targets. Trends Pharmacol Sci 20: 503-509.\nWard C, Wong TH et al. 2000. Induction of human neutrophil apoptosis by nitric oxide donors: evidence for a caspase-dependent, cyclic-GMP-independent, mechanism. Biochem Pharmacol 59: 305-314.\nYoshioka Y, Yamamuro A et al. 2003. Nitric oxide at a low concentration protects murine macrophage RAW264 cells against nitric oxide-induced death via cGMP signaling pathway. Br J Pharmacol 139: 28-34.\n+Corresponding author. E-mail: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.\nReceived 8 November 2004","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1262239"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5134243369102478,"wiki_prob":0.5134243369102478,"text":"What can we learn about best practice from EU colleagues?\nSimon Cadbury examines the key areas of European banking excellence, and whether innovation in digital banking alone is the key to success.\nThe UK has a vibrant and innovative digital banking sector, but it’s in the pack rather than leading. Across Europe, incumbents and upstarts alike continue to raise the bar when it comes to innovation. The vibrancy of the continent’s digital banking is evidenced by the Forrester 2015 Global Mobile Banking Functionality Benchmark, with five of the top 10 places taken by European players. The top spot was taken by Spain’s CaixaBank, and it was joined in the top 10 by two banks from Poland and one from Turkey. One British bank made the top 10.\nWhat this indicates is that no one country is leading outright. The various demographic, regulatory and market conditions across Europe create a very different environment, for companies and their customers, in each country.\nThe UK, which many argue is the heart of the European financial services industry, leads when it comes to online banking adoption. Germany also has high levels of online banking adoption, but it’s combined with relatively low branch and mobile usage. Meanwhile, in Spain – home to two of Europe’s most innovative banks, BBVA and CaixaBank – the population remains firmly wedded to its branches.\nIn this article, we’ll explore what’s happening across Europe, why it’s happening, and what UK financial institutions can learn from it.\nThe areas of excellence and innovation seen in banks across and beyond Europe are broad, covering everything from customer experience to social media. Here, we highlight some of the most interesting and important developments.\nDelivering the best possible digital customer journey is central to the success of digital banking, and across the continent banks are constantly refining their products, apps and websites. The bolder banks are starting to move beyond traditional ways of working and starting to tackle the more fundamental obstacles to full digitization. In Spain, BBVA is taking on one of the last vestiges of paper-based banking with remote signatures; legal signatures that can be applied to digital bank documents from anywhere, via the bank’s mobile app or website.\nPoland’s mBank has made traditionally complicated products simple enough to fit into a mobile-first strategy: its one-click 30-second loan provides customers with near immediate access to funds via their smartphone, for example. And, after years of being the next big thing, biometrics is finally a viable option for authentication. In the UK, Barclays’ customers can authenticate themselves with finger vein recognition, NatWest and RBS customers via the iPhone’s Touch ID fingerprint sensor, and HSBC is rolling out voice authentication for all its 15 million retail customers. Digital-only Atom Bank plans to let customers choose how to log in via one of three identity credentials (face, voice and passcode).\nDigital banking is changing physical branches across Europe, too. In France, BNP Paribas is stratifying its network into three layouts: Express, Advice and Projects. Each is aimed at maximizing customer satisfaction in a different range of scenarios, from self-service in the Express branch to expert consultation in the Project.\nIn a similar vein, PKO – owner of a network of 2,000 branches across Poland – is pursuing an omni-channel strategy that will see the three-story branches built in the 1960s and 70s replaced by two to three smaller branches. In part, PKO is responding to relentless innovation by local competitor mBank, which is pursuing a ‘light branch’ concept. The unapologetically digital light branches feature large movement and touch-responsive screens, and are sited in high consumer traffic areas such as malls, and are modeled on boutiques rather than banks.\nSpain’s CaixaBank is so mobile-focused that it now has over 70 apps (available from its own app store, CaixaMóvil Store.) The bank also has a digital wallet integrated into its mobile banking app, which lets customers make contactless payments with their phones.\nIn Poland, mBank is thinking big and pivoting to a modern mobile-first strategy, making its mobile app the preferred gateway to all banking channels.\nWhen it comes to social media, German bank Fidor is leading the way. It has built a community of about 250,000 users called the Fidor Smart Community. The bank invites prospects to ‘bank with friends’ and gives members financial rewards for giving and receiving knowledgeable financial advice, as well as evaluating and reviewing the financial products and services they’re interested in. Its current account offers tiered interest rates on credit balances based on the number of ‘likes’ Fidor receives on Facebook.\nWith over 50 million cards issued, and Apple Pay already rolled out, the UK is leading the way in deploying contactless payments, but it’s the Czechs and Poles using it the most. Mastercard reports that, in 2015, 77% of in-store transactions in the Czech Republic, and 55% in Poland, were contactless (though neither are subject to the £30 cap applicable in the UK).\nThe UK is also leading in Europe on peer-to-peer payments (such as Paym and Barclays’s Pingit), in part thanks to its pioneering investment in Faster Payments, but adoption is nowhere near that of services seen in the developing world, such as mPesa.\nP2P payments are also a feature of Blik, a Polish mobile payment system developed by PKO, but then shared with its five largest competitors: Alior Bank, Bank Millennium, Bank Azchodni WBK, mBank and ING Bank. Blik makes it available to 80% of the market, avoiding fragmentation and establishing a de-facto standard.\nExcellence outside Europe\nOutside of Europe, Australia, New Zealand, Canada and the US stand out as hotbeds of digital banking innovation. In the US, where checks remain stubbornly popular, USAA bank was the first to deliver remote check deposits via smartphones – a move since copied by US giants such as Bank of America, Citibank, Chase and Wells Fargo.\nAustralasia is pioneering lifestyle apps such as CommBank’s Property App, smartphone software that can help you find a home, work out if you can afford it, and help you apply for a loan.\nAnd in New Zealand, WestPac has released an augmented reality app that superimposes 3D balances, transaction history, spend locations and other information onto your cards when you point your smartphone’s camera at it. The concept was the winner in the bank’s recent crowdsourced Global App Challenge competition.\nBroader lessons\nWhat drives innovation?\nVariations in demographics, competition, government regulation, access to talent and even luck can create different environments in which different levels and types of innovation are successful. Disruptive innovation can trigger a virtuous loop; if one bank innovates, then competitors respond in kind. This can lead to different countries specializing in particular types of innovation.\nIn other markets, environmental factors play a bigger part. Recent challenger banks have struggled to grow beyond 100,000 customers and match the success of mBank. Jacek Iljin, mBank’s managing director of retail banking, attributes the bank’s success in part to the favorable conditions in the Polish market when it started in 2000; interest rates and margins were high and there were “a significant number of unbanked and under-banked individuals”. The technology of the time was advanced enough to provide digital banking, but (according to Iljin) simple enough that “you could buy a banking system and have it up and running in 100 days”.\nSimilar conditions exist today in Turkey, and banks such as ABank are looking to demographics to give them escape velocity. Half the population is under 25, the average age is 21 and, according to ABank’s Ahmet Ertan Algan, they’re tech savvy and demanding innovation.\nAcross Europe, banks in mature markets are changing their culture to enhance their ability to innovate and take advantage of new opportunities, with Spain in particular playing host to a variety of different strategies:\nBBVA has acquired Simple, taken a stake in Atom and is transforming itself into a ‘software company’. BBVA is on a journey that will increase the number of employees working on digital banking from 3% to 50% within five years.\nElsewhere, CaixaBank has built an internal crowdsourcing platform, where employees can enact what the bank insists is their ‘desire’ and ‘responsibility’ to innovate.\nSantander has created a dedicated corporate venture fund so that it can invest in a portfolio of startups.\nFintech insurgency\nWhen it comes to fintech, it seems European eyes are trained on London and the disruptive potential of its startups. Technologies such as blockchain, and new regulations such as PSD2, are years from playing a significant role in retail banking, but when they do they just might turn it upside down.\nJakub Grzechnik, head of mobile and internet banking at PKO, is deeply concerned that if they don’t move fast enough, “We’ll be left with costs while the profitable areas are taken up by fintech providers”. His bank is betting on creating a customer experience that’s good enough to stop customers looking elsewhere.\nOthers are looking to embrace the potential for disruption. Turkey’s ABank is “planning to open our systems to third parties”, while the UK’s Starling is planning to partner with fintech companies and integrate the best of its services into its own offerings, alongside its current accounts.\nOther early examples of bank/fintech partnerships include:\nPeer-to-peer: Santander has partnered with Funding Circle.\nSME lending: BBVA has partnered with On Deck, and ING with Kabbage.\nForeign exchange: Virgin Money has partnered with World First, while Currencycloud’s clients include Mediterranean Bank and Fidor Bank.\nIs innovation enough?\nThe pace of change in digital banking technology is relentless, and it’s easy to find competitors or peers who are piloting, prototyping or rolling out something you are not, but an advantage in innovation doesn’t always translate to a commercial advantage.\nPoland’s mBank is a successful digital bank and a multi-award-winning innovator, but the much older (and more traditional) PKO remains Poland’s favorite bank. PKO isn’t as agile or innovative as its smaller rival, but it is it seems innovating enough even for a youthful and expanding market.\nPKO is an unashamed copier of good ideas, a strategy known as ‘fast follower’ that, according to Gregory Carpenter from the Kellogg School of Management, can suit companies that are agile enough to do it and have deeper pockets than their upstart rivals:\n“A lot of times, pioneers aren’t very well funded … They create a competitive game … competitors enter quickly and, with more resources, are able to win the game that the pioneer has created.”\nForrester says you should measure the success of every innovation from the outset using metrics such as sales through digital channels, development of new digitally enhanced products and services, customer acquisition through digital channels, cost reduction, digital customer experience, and perception of the company as an innovator.\nThere are organizations pushing the envelope all over Europe, but no one European market leads. Banks are watching each other (and increasingly watching technology companies outside of banking) for ideas and innovations. In today’s fast-moving environments, the benefit of being a first mover is often short-lived.\nThe different environments in each market trigger different types of innovation, so while there’s plenty of inspiration to be had, banks must be mindful of the conditions that made them possible – innovations do not always travel.\nMore significant than any one innovation, product or feature is the way banks themselves are embracing digital. The only way for traditional banks to stay on top is to embed digital from the ground up. They need an organizational structure, culture, technological architecture and appropriate KPIs that embrace digital. Only then can they call themselves a truly digital business, and more importantly be well positioned in a battle that’s set to get bloodier.\nieDigital can help your organization deploy a digital self-service platform that gives you the foundations to foster a relationship with your customer and, in time, extend and flex your value proposition. We can also work with you to better understand your customers’ needs and to prototype, test, and try out new concepts and ideas with them.\nFor more information, please click here to request a chat or demo.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1043985"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5028432607650757,"wiki_prob":0.5028432607650757,"text":"AdvertisingBranding\nTier10 | On 20, Jun 2019\nTier10 won two awards in the 40th Annual Telly Awards competition for outstanding video creative under the Automotive category of Branded Content and Regional TV. Both entries demonstrate the full-service agency’s focus on creativity and excellence in video production.\n“Acura + Precision Crafted Performance” received the Silver Award in the “Branded Content: Automotive” category. The long-form video follows Acura’s victorious return to the racetrack after an extended period of absence. Several prominent individuals connected to Acura Racing are featured in the video including, but not limited to, Acura Vice President & General Manager Jon Ikeda, and legendary racecar drivers Juan Pablo Montoya and Helio Castroneves.\nProduced for the Greater Twin Cities Honda Dealers, “Driving What’s Next | Minnesota Youth Football” received the Bronze Award under the “Regional TV: Automotive” category. The commercial depicts the determination of young athletes as they train to be the best they can be, and how they are always aiming to beat their greatest opponent, themselves.\nThe Telly Awards honors excellence in video and television across all screens and is judged by leaders from video platforms, television, streaming networks, production companies and including Vice, Vimeo, Hearst Digital Media, BuzzFeed, and A&E Networks. Last year, The Telly Awards attracted more than 12,000 entries from top video content producers including Condé Nast, Netflix, Refinery29, RadicalMedia, T Brand Studio, and Ogilvy & Mather.\nThis recognition places Tier10’s creative at the same level as some of the best in the industry. In addition to the Telly Awards, the full-service advertising agency was named in this year’s Muse Creative Awards, Hermes Creative Awards, and the American Advertising Awards – DC. Tier10’s award-winning videos and more can be viewed at the agency’s Vimeo page.\nCreative Awards Telly Awards\nTier10 Wins Three Davey Awards November 16, 2018 | Nikki Manning","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line674607"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6124842762947083,"wiki_prob":0.6124842762947083,"text":"November 4, 2014 by PrairieChat\nThe Lambs of the Prairie\nAs a child my mother spoke gently of her family’s story and those that went before. She spoke of a special recollection of young children buried way too young on the plains of North Dakota. Her haunting stories spoke of the children buried beneath the plain white markers embossed with fading lambs representing their youth. The Prairie Rest Cemetery is solitary remembrance dedicated to the youngest lambs who died while establishing our state many years ago.\nBeneath the broad Dakota blue\nOn a hilltop kissed with morning dew\nWere the silent lambs on prairie old\nLying peacefully, a family’s tears consoled.\nSoundless sentinels endlessly resting\nReverent callers gazes arresting.\nTheir fading faces don’t betray\nMachine etched stones, long in decay.\nAn eternal place of gathering,\nSweet memories in stone are offering\nOld stories lost and gone\nWaiting together for their eternal dawn.\nPosted in Family Memories, Poetry\t| Tagged Barnes County, Family Stories, Farming, Genealogy, Graveyards, Homesteading, Immigrant, North Dakota, Poetry, Prairie, Tombstone, Valley City | Leave a comment\nThe Sharing Economy – Sharpen Your Fork\nLyft, Airbnb, and Uber have created quite a stir. Some have claimed it’s “The End of Capitalism” or “The Millennial’s American Dream” another says. Social medial can’t seem to get enough of the “new” ways to provide goods and services.\nTo the proponents of these dreams, I say “Beware, sharing is not all it’s cracked up to be!”\nFirst of all, I must acknowledge that I have a predisposition to suspect the motives of anyone who wants to share. From a very early age I learned to be leery of anyone who asks for you “a little bite” of your hotdog or a “sip” of your chocolate milk. Experience taught me that not only would the little bite from the hot dog not be small, but there was a good chance they would also take the remaining wiener, leaving you with only a smear of ketchup and mustard on an empty, soggy bun. And as for sipping your chocolate milk, if it wasn’t slurped in one big gulp, chances are very good there would be left over hot dog bun floating on the top.\nIf the “no sharing” lesson didn’t take hold in grade school, college should have finished off the sharing spirit. It only took you one time to learn that if you hold a keg party in your house and put a cup out for people to “chip in” not only will you not get any money, but someone will steal the cup. At the same time the keg is being emptied other “guests” will share everything in your cupboards or refrigerator (cooked or raw).\nOf course, everything changed when I graduated from college and entered into the world of grown-ups and business. Times were tough and because I was living on a tight starting salary it made sense to me to share an apartment. It turns out that sharing included roommates skipping out in the middle of the night with my record collection in tow and leaving me to discover that he had a girlfriend four states away that loved to talk on the telephone –funny how he thought it would be a great idea to get a phone line under my name only.\nNow I hear of the great idea called Airbnb that suggests sharing my home with completely unknown individuals, who were paired with me by a computer program, over the internet. I mean what could go wrong with that idea? Or better yet, I should drive and pick up a stranger (Lyft anyone) and take them on a ride like a taxi to a destination of their choice. Again, what could go wrong with that? (Hasn’t anyone noticed that taxi cabs have sturdy bullet proof dividers between them and their customers?)\nNow many would think that I am over reaching and my fears of “someone is being taken advantage” of are totally unfounded but, I still have misgivings. I guess it is hard to get over going to a local diner with high school buddies and ordering french fries. I learned pretty quick it was a good idea to order that side of fries with a sharp fork to defend them with.\nPosted in Foolish thoughts, Marketing\t| Tagged Humor, Immigrant, satire, Youth | 1 Comment\nJuly 31, 2014 by PrairieChat\nTales From The Rosencrans Family Tree\nWhile my primary genealogy research has been on my family, I have done quite a bit of research on my wife’s paternal family tree (Rosencrans/Rosenkrans/Rosenkranz). While I knew that her family was an early arriver to America from Europe, I was surprised to discover just how early in colonial history it was.\nMy wife’s 7th great grandfather was Harmon Hendrick Rosenkrans, who was born in Norway in 1634 and had moved to Amsterdam in New Netherlands prior to 1657. According to census figures, the non-native American population was less than 60,000. Harmon married Magdalene Dirckse on March 3, 1657 in New Netherlands. Apparently his new wife had a sense of humor as illustrated by court records dated just a few days later.\n“Only a few days after the wedding of Herman and Magdalena, the court records of New Amsterdam registered the following: [March 15, 1657] “The Scout N: de Silla, plaintiff v|s Madaleen Dirck and her bridegroom, defendants. The plaintiff says that the defendants have presumed to insult the Firewardens of this City on the public highway, and to make a street riot, according to the complaint made to his Worship. Requesting for the maintenance of the aforesaid gentlemen’s quality that the petitioners [?] be publicly punished or fined as their Worship shall think proper. Defendant Madaleen Dirck appears alone in Court; admits, that she and her sister passed by the door of the Firewarden Litschoe, and as they always joked, when the Firewarden came to their house, she said: ‘There is the chimney sweep in the door, his chimney is well swept, and not another word was said about it.’\nSuch behavior cannot, and ought not to be tolerated on account of its bad consequences, the Burgomaster’s condemn, as they do hereby, the above named Madaleen Dirck in a fine of two pounds Flemish, to be applied, one half for the Church and one half for the Poor, and notify her at the same time to avoid all such and similar faults, or in default thereof other disposition shall be made. Done in Court at the City Hall at Amsterdam in N. Netherland.”\n-The Records of New Amsterdam, 1653 – 1674, VII., p. 146.\nTo understand the seriousness of the fine, consider that a Flemish Pound was equal to 6 Dutch Guilders. On May 24, 1626 Peter Minuit, Director of the Dutch Colony was reported to have bought the entire Island of Manhattan from the Native Americans for goods valued at 60 Guilders. That would mean the fine leveled in Amsterdam on my wife’s 7th great grandmother was equal to one fifth the purchase price of Manhattan.\nObviously whatever was intended by her remarks was taken quite seriously.\nPosted in Family Memories, Genealogy\t| Tagged Colonial History, family history, Genealogy, Immigrant | 3 Comments\nJanuary 24, 2014 by PrairieChat\nSwedish Saga\nThe story of the Anders Erikson (Holm) Family\nAnders Erikson (Holm) was born in Eggvena Parish of Herrljunga, Alvsborgs lan, Sweden on February 2, 1829. He was the son on Erik Larson and Maja Andersdotter. They lived in a small village of Herrljunga in the southern portion of Sweden, also known as Götaland.\nAnder’s father was the second husband of Maja (Maja is the Swedish version of Mary) Andersdotter. Her first husband was Anders (last name unknown) and they had a son named Andreas Anderson, who was born three years earlier than Anders, in 1826.\nThe family’s life in Sweden would have been harsh. Property was handed down though the generations and was subdivided between the siblings. Parents remained on the farm and were then supported by the children. Because few children, born prior to 1750, survived into adulthood, the farms remained relatively intact. But, as advances were made in science and mortality decreased, the population doubled between the years of 1750 to 1850. The small farms were divided by larger and larger families.\nThe famous Swedish bishop and poet Esaias Tegne’r explained the population pressure in three words: “peace, vaccination and potatoes.” He was referring to the fact that Sweden had not been in war since the Russian war of 1809 and the war against the Danes in 1814. Smallpox vaccination had reduced the infant mortality from 21% in 1750 to 15% in 1850. Potatoes became more popular and were a nutritious supplement to the Swedish diet. The combined effects resulted in a growth in population which in turn produced other problems for society. In a country with few industries and cities, the burden had to be carried by the primitive agricultural society.\nBy the early 1820’s, farms were less that a few non contiguous acres that were spread over the entire village in small fields. Whatever production was achieved was shared with the State’s Swedish Lutheran Church, local government and the Swedish Monarchy through taxes. The combination of a growing population and an inefficient agrarian society pushed the economy of Sweden to its limits. A famine swept the nation, killing 22 out of every 1,000 Swedes.\nAt the same time that the farm economy was breaking down, Sweden was also forcing more and more people into compulsory military service. By the 1900’s Sweden had drafted almost all it males into compulsorily military service.\nThe Journey To Amerika\nIn 1852, the eldest of Maja’s sons, Andreas, left with his wife and children for America.\nAnders Erikson followed with Inga Stina Persdotter and a two year old son named Anders in 1855. Both families left well before the wave of emigrants from Sweden in 1865.\nIn order to leave Sweden they would have had to first obtain permission from the local and federal government to emigrate. Swedish emigration restrictions weren’t eased until about 1865, so the process in the 1850’s probably would have involved a certain amount of harassment, including extra red tape. Once permission was obtained, the families would meet with their church where it was notated in the church records that they had “Gone to Amerika” and their name was crossed off the roles.\nIt was very hard to get the permissions needed to emigrate, so hard that less the 1 in 2000 people were able to leave Herrljunga area during the period of 1850 to 1860. In fact, according to Swedish emigration records only 586 people total were allowed to leave Sweden in 1855. Anders and Inga were in the vanguard of emigrants to the new land. In contrast, during 1869 32,050 Swedes left for America.\nIt is difficult to imagine overseas migration without the common people of Sweden being able to read and write. Thanks to the Lutheran Church the rate of illiteracy had always been relatively low in Sweden. The Elementary School Act of 1842 almost erased illiteracy among the younger generation. These young Swedes read about America in newspapers, popular books or pamphlets. The “America-letters” brought news from relatives. Young people learned that success was available for everyone who emigrated. Those letters were circulated from person to person, cottage to cottage and city to city.\nLocation of Herrljunga in Sweden\nThe route Anders Erikson’s family took probably started with a walk of about 15 miles carrying their immigrant trunk to Lake Vänern followed by a barge trip on the Göta Canal.\nThe Göta Canal was built by 58,000 billeted soldiers from 16 different regiments. About 60,000 men, including a company of Russian war prisoners, and a number of civilian workers worked a total of about 7 million man-days, (each of 12 hours) during a period of 22 years.\nThe canal stretches all the way from Gothenburg on the Swedish west coast, combined with the river Göta älv and the Trollhätte canal, through the great lakes Vänern and Vättern, in parallel with Motala ström, and to Söderköping on the Baltic Sea.\nThe Erikson family’s canal trip would have ended at the Gothenburg Seaport. They would have boarded the two masted sailing brig call the Anna Margaretta. They sailed “on top of the cargo” or “between the decks”, spending months on the sea and finally, more dead than alive, landing in New York. At Castle Garden, in New York, they would have been inspected for disease, with the sickest ones being returned to Sweden at the ship owner’s expense. Many families were broken up at New York, with little prospect of being reunited.\nEmigrants Disembarking Near Castle Garden\nCastle Garden Interior\nMany of the emigrants landed at Castle Garden with very little funds, just enough to qualify for entry into America. Their first contact with America would have been the Labor Exchange located in Castle Garden. Some would end up as servants other would be recruited for labor. Many were hired to work on the new railroad lines being laid to Chicago and points west.\nCastle Garden Labor Exchange\nWhile we do not know for sure how Anders Erikson and his family got from New York to Minnesota, the normal route was a train to Buffalo, New York and the Great Lakes. From there they were taken by paddle steamer over the lakes to Chicago, Milwaukee or Duluth. The last part of the journey would have been on foot. Although his name was on the ship log as arriving in New York somewhere along the route to Minnesota, Anders first son perished. His name was not listed in the remaining church records, the 1860 US Census or tombstones in Minnesota.\nSettling Minnesota\nOnce Anders reached Minnesota the top priority would have been land selection, then shelter. The first home was a simple cabin much like the poor “torpstuga” in Herrljunga, Sweden, but built on Minnesota’s fertile soil. It is apparent that Anders arrived in Minnesota with enough money to buy 180 acres of land. They did not homestead, but instead bought land from Alexander Ramsey. The farm was located on a half mile north of Gotha, MN.\nCarver County, Minnesota\nThe area that Anders chose was in Carver County and was known as part of “The Big Woods”. Clearing the ground of stones in Sweden was replaced by the rooting out of stumps in Minnesota. Luckily the Swedes were use to wood as their principal material for the construction of tools, furniture, buildings, and fuel.\nNatural woodland in Wood-Rill Scientific and Natural Area, located near Orono, MN\nIn order to plant crops in the open meadows, the early settlers would have to break the sod. The sod was extremely thick and would normally need to turned and left to rot till the next crop season. Settlers could plant potatoes under the turned sod to aid in breaking it up and allowing them to get some food from the land.\nThe first years were tough, as the settlers cleared land and prepared fields. For some the only income received was from the wood they obtained and shipped by riverboat to Minneapolis for sale as firewood. Others foraged for the numerous wild ginger plants found in the woodland forest. The ginger was highly sought after and could be sold in the Orient. Ginger Agents paid handsomely for the prized roots. In fact, ginger harvesting paid so well, that many farmers abandoned their field preparations to work full time searching for the roots.\nWild Ginger- The roots were gathered for sale to oriental markets\nOther settlers moved into Benton Township quickly, including the Ranft family to Ander’s north and the Schug family to Anders’s west. Both of these Germanic families had been in America for a number of years, first living in Butler County, Pennsylvania, before moving to Minnesota.\nThe Swedish Evangelical Church\nReligion was still a major part of Anders and Inga’s life and they joined the Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Church in East Union (Also known as King Oscar’s Settlement) that lay to the East.\nIt was soon apparent that some regulations were needed by the Church Elders to guard themselves and their congregation against preachers who were not followers of the “true evangelical Lutheran doctrine”. “Some of the settlers apparently experienced emotional of spiritual unrest caused by missionary efforts of the Baptists, Methodists, and various fly-by-night preachers including a Lutheran minister who allegedly had problems with alcohol.” Speakers found it necessary to show church authorities their licenses or letters of recommendation before delivering messages from the pulpit at Oscar’s Settlement church.\nFrom the time members in the congregation organized at the Union Settlement, the community had been pushing farther west. Some families who were now located four or more miles beyond the church discovered the reality of Minnesota’s unpredictable and often harsh winter weather. Traveling even a few additional miles became a critical factor during an era when most pioneers depended upon a few fortunate sled-owning families to pick them up along the way to Sunday services; otherwise they walked. These factors prompted these distant members to seek support for their effort to build another place of worship.\nIn 1858, The East Union settlement church board approved a request made by some of its members to build a second church, creating two congregations of the same Lutheran denomination. Thus the East and West Union churches came into being in 1858. Anders Erickson, whose farm was a half mile NW of the new church was a charter member of West Union and served as a Deacon of the Church.\nSwedish Education\nOne of the first responsibilities assumed by the newly installed deacons at Union Settlement church was to plan for their school, which became the forerunner to Gustavus Adolphus College in St. Peter.\nChurch members were expected to help build the school and furnish the wood needed. Plans were drawn and then the boards and beams needed were divided among the members to bring to the school site. Strict instructions as to thickness and length were given for each board they were expected to bring.\nDuring the 1860’s, an increasing number of Scandinavians were entering Minnesota and the need for Lutheran pastors to serve grew. The residents of Carver County thought it would be beneficial to have somewhere to school these future pastors. After some politicking and fund raising, a school that was located in Red Wing was moved to East Union, near Carver, in order to prepare more students for the seminary. It was named St. Ansgar’s Academy in 1865 in honor of St. Ansgar, the first Christian missionary to Sweden. About half of the students attending were from Carver County. Some students were as young as 10 but many were grown men. In fact, the oldest student entered the academy at age fifty-six!\nWith hopes of strengthening the school financially and increasing attendance, the Lutheran Synod moved the school program from East Union to St. Peter in 1876. The school was re-organized as Gustavus Adolphus College. The original school building remains at this East Union site.\nMinnesota Statehood\nUntil the second half of the 19th century, immigration into Minnesota was slow. But, once the value of the state’s woodlands and fertile prairie was realized, settlers poured into the region with New England lumbermen leading the way. Between 1850 and 1857, the state population skyrocketed from 6,077 to over 150,000.\nOn May 11, 1858, Minnesota became the 32nd state admitted into the Union. Minnesota’s application for statehood was submitted to President James Buchanan in January, but became entangled with the controversial issue of Kansas statehood, delaying it for several months until it was finally approved by Congress.\n1862 Indian Wars\nOn August 15, 1862, Santee Sioux Chief Little Crow went to the Indian Agency located on the Minnesota River to ask government agent Thomas J. Galbraith to distribute the Indians’ government-stockpiled provisions to his hungry people. “We have no food, but here are these stores filled with food”, he yelled at Galbraith. “So far as I’m concerned, if they are hungry, let them eat grass or their own dung”, retorted trading post operator Andrew J. Myrick. The angry Indians left, but a few days later Myrick’s corpse was found- with grass stuffed in his mouth.\nOn Sunday, August 17th, four teenage Sioux killed a white family of five in a dispute over farm eggs. Rather than hand the boys over to the army, some of the Sioux chiefs decided the time to fight had come. By dawn the next day, the horrible uprising had begun. At approximately the same hour ironically, a government wagon left St. Paul, carrying $71,000 in gold coins. The long overdue annuity payment was finally on its way.\nLittle Crow had never wanted to battle the white man. He was highly intelligent and had the bearing of a gentleman. He was considered an expert in dealing with the media of the day. Both on the reservation and in Washington he charmed reporters with his wit and subtle use of sarcasm. He knew the futility of trying to subdue the dominant culture. He gave his most impassioned speech of his life to the young warriors who came to him that morning of August 17th. He had never been more forceful, more passionate, more persuasive, and if he had stopped the council then, there might never have been a war. But another chief who favored war declared Little Crow a coward who was really afraid of the white man. In a resigned, nearly desolate voice, Little Crow responded, “I am not a coward. I will die with you.”\nBy the end of September, the Sioux uprising in Minnesota was mostly over, though other Sioux tribes in neighboring territories had taken to the warpath. The U.S. troops who were rushed to Minnesota contained the uprising, but not before an estimated 800 white settlers had been murdered and several million dollars’ worth of property had been destroyed. Of 2,000 Indians captured and tried, a military board sentenced 303 to be hanged. President Abraham Lincoln reviewed the list and trimmed it to 38. (With France undecided as to which side it should enter the Civil War on, Lincoln wisely reconsidered the image of hanging over 300 Indians!) The United States’ largest public mass execution was held December 26, 1862, when the 38 Indians were hanged.\nSAINT PAUL, December 27, 1862. – To The PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES:\n“I have the honor to inform you that the thirty-eight Indians and half-breeds ordered by you for execution were hung yesterday at Mankato at 10 a.m. everything went off quietly and the other prisoners are well secured.\nRespectfully, H. H. SIBLEY, Brigadier-General.”\nEarly Agriculture\nPennock’s Horse Drawn Seed and Grain Planter, circa 1846\nIn 1859, Wendelin Grimm and his wife Julianna, German immigrant farmers came to Carver County carrying a wooden box full of alfalfa seeds that he soon planted on the Carver County prairie. He gathered the seeds from the alfalfa that survived the first winter and re-planted every year until he had a full crop. Grimm Alfalfa became the most winter-hardy strain of alfalfa available and was an important contributor to the rise of the local dairy industry. Grimm’s Alfalfa was still in use on the Holm’s farm in North Dakota.\nBesides Wendelin Grimm, numerous other early pioneers practiced agricultural and horticultural experimentation. Charles Luedloff of Dahlgren Township and Andrew Peterson of Scandia (near Waconia) experimented with apples, plums, and cherries. James Robinson of Dahlgren Township developed the Robinson apple seedling. Louis Suelter of Carver developed several types of grapes including the “Beta.”\nNaturalization and a New Name\nSurnames were given based on the father’s first name as per Swedish custom. Erik Larson’s son would be “Eriksson” and daughters would be “Eriksdotter”. So Ander’s name was Anders Eriksson. (Later shortened to Erikson) Swedish naming customs were changed by the military beginning in 1820, when the surname stayed with the family. The adoption of surnames made it much easier to track people and information. Many Swedes took that time to adopt a name they liked. Many took names to reflect the area they lived in or a trade association.\nThe US Census of 1860 listed Anders last name as Erikson. After his final naturalization papers were completed his surname was changed to Holm. Anders was reported to say “There are too many Erickson’s in Minnesota” so he took the last name of his wife’s father, John Petter Andersson Holm.\nHolm is a common Scandinavian name. The name has multiple meanings but the most common one refers to an island or a hill. John Petter probably added the surname Holm (his right as a soldier) based on the geographical features of his farm in Sweden. Because his farm lay miles from the sea, we can surmise his farm was located on a hill.\nAnders Erickson Holm\nHancock Township, Carver County, Minnesota\nThe children of Anders and Inga\nAnders Peter Erikson 1853-1855?\nJohn Erikson Holm 1857-1926\nAnder Peter Holm 1860 – abt 1923 “Outwest”\nEmmeli Kristina Holm Pehrson 1861 – 1901\nMatilda Holm Noyed 1864 – 1916\nJohn Erickson Holm\nIn the 1880 Census John E Holm was listed as the head of household, with Anders E Holm listed as a dependent.\nNorth Dakota Statehood 1889\nIn 1876, units of the 7th Cavalry commanded by Lt. Col. George A. Custer left Fort Abraham Lincoln near Bismarck to search for the Dakota who had refused confinement on reservations. The resulting annihilation of Custer’s immediate command at the Little Big Horn River in MontanaTerritory made names such as Crazy Horse, Gall, and Sitting Bull familiar throughout the nation. Many Dakota moved to Canada to escape relentless punitive expeditions sent by the army, and remnants finally surrendered at Fort Buford in 1881. Nine years later Sitting Bull, the leading opponent of reservation life, identified with the Ghost Dance religion, one that forecast the return of traditional Plains Indian ways. Standing Rock Reservation Indian police were sent to arrest the elderly leader at his home in 1890, and Sitting Bull was killed.\nSignificant immigration commenced when the westbound Northern Pacific Railway built to the Missouri River in 1872 and 1873. A great settlement “boom” in northern Dakota occurred between 1879 and 1886. During those years, over 100,000 people entered the territory. So significant was this foreign immigration that in 1915 over 79% of all North Dakotans were either immigrants or children of immigrants.\nAround 1885, John E Holm moves to ND for first time, settles in Hobart Township, Barnes County. He rents land from John Anderson. The accompanying ledger page from the John Anderson Collection at the Minnesota Historical Society lists the first purchases John E Holm made at that time.\nThe purchases demonstrate the necessities needed to began a farming operation at that time. Purchases include a team of horses (named Jack and Jennie) $400, a mule (named Sallie) $150, a wagon $50, 150 bushels of oats $45, one hay stack $16, a cow calf $60 and other miscellaneous items. The total for this for the first few months of purchases was $1,184.49. According to an inflation calculator an 1885 dollar would be worth about 20 dollars in 2005 dollars. That would mean John E Holm’s purchase would have been nearly $24,000 in today’s (2006) dollars. It was interesting to notice that on the 1887 ledger pages, John E was given a $75 credit for a “Dead Mule”. Obviously, a warrantee clause was invoked.\nAccording to an interview of Kathryn Ranft Holm, kept by the North Dakota Historical Society, John E’s farm is destroyed around 1889 by fire and he returns to Carver County. This seems to be backed up by an 1888 notation in the ledger saying that the account had been balanced and closed by mutual agreement.\nJohn E Holm family returns to ND in about 1891 and settles in Cuba Township, Barnes County. He bought a quarter section of land on crop payments from John Anderson. John Holm’s family moves back and forth with the seasons between Cologne and Cuba for four years, using the railroad which has lines located in Cuba and Cologne. The farm was established and a home was finally completed in 1895, so they were finally able to take residence in North Dakota.\nJohn Anderson was the first cousin of John E. Holm, and the son of Andreas (Anders Erickson Holm’s half brother). John Anderson managed over four thousand acres of land in and around Barnes County, ND. He was one of the original owners of the “Cuba Farmers Cooperative Mercantile Co”,\nalong with John E Holm. He also was a major shareholder in stores located in Oriska, ND and Glencoe, MN.\nIt appears from the ledger books he maintained, that he and John E Holm still had a very close business relationship. The books we examined showed Anderson carried a credit line for John E Holm. Because of this line of credit, John E was able to increase his land holdings, even in the face of multiple years of crop failure in the Dakotas. Evidence of their friendship was found in pictures, found in the files, of John Anderson and John E Holm taken in 1907 in Los Angeles, CA while they were visiting relatives.\nJohn & Mollie (Haish) Anderson moved to Valley City in 1882. During the 1880’s John served as the Valley City Justice of the Peace and ran for Mayor of Valley City. In the late 1890’s, John moved Mollie and the children back to Minnesota. John maintained a business presence in Valley City for the remainder of his life. He was one of the original members of the Masons in Valley City and was given a Life Time Membership from the group. The certificate presented to him was signed by Stanley Mythaler and Vernon Gale. After returning to school to attain his Law Degree in 1891 from the University of Minnesota, he continued to operate out of Valley City.\nOne of John Anderson’s sons was Leslie Anderson. Leslie, a veteran and a Harvard Graduate, went on to become a District Court Judge of Minneapolis. Leslie was also very active in the National GOP Party. The National GOP gave him the assignment of creating the Young Republicans Group in Minnesota. Leslie was married, but unfortunately his wife died of a brain aneurism within a few months of that marriage.\nA daughter of John Anderson, named Ruth, became a Home Economist and found employment with a Minneapolis Flour Co. Her department there was better known as Betty Crocker. Ruth’s job was to answer consumer questions under the pen name of Betty Crocker.\nCuba Mercantile and Partners\nJohn E Holm Threshing Crew – Cuba, ND\nThreshing Machine – Cuba, ND\nJohn Holm photographing John E Holm (in white shirt) and friends\nJohn E Holm’s Children\nJohn Holm 1883 – 1951\nGeorge Holm 1884 – 1964\nHenry Albert Holm 1887 – 1963\nEdward Paul Holm 1888 – 1945\nAnna Matilda Holm Dill Smith 1891 – 1946\nCatherine Mary Holm Kreidlkamp 1894 – 1944\nHerman (Fritz) Frederick Holm 1897 – 1976\nFor many, however, the economic hardships of the Depression could not be overcome. Thousands of North Dakotans lost their farms and either moved into the cities and towns or from the state. One historian estimates that over 70% of the state’s people required one form or another of public assistance. The toll in broken dreams, physical hunger and hardship, and displacement will never be completely measured. Still, most North Dakotans stubbornly held on, husbanding their resources and spending carefully. Even during the hard times, for example, drought-stricken counties and cities rarely missed bond payments, and indeed the public debt in the state was substantially reduced during the Depression years.\nPosted in Family Memories, Genealogy\t| Tagged Carver County, Farming, Immigrant, Minnesota, North Dakota, Settler, Sweden | Leave a comment","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1474079"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5025242567062378,"wiki_prob":0.5025242567062378,"text":"Adult Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology Fellowship - Leadership & Faculty\nKelly Ural, MD - Program Director\nDr. Kelly Ural joined the Ochsner department of anesthesia in 2011 and assumed the role of Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology Fellowship program director in 2014. She completed her anesthesiology residency at Ochsner Medical Center, and then completed a Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology Fellowship at Cleveland Clinic Foundation, serving as chief fellow during her year there. She is board certified by the American Board of Anesthesiology and by the National Board of Echocardiography in advanced perioperative transesophageal echocardiography. She currently serves on the SCA Fellowship Program Director's council and the cardiac education subcommittee for the ASA.\nDavid M. Broussard, MD, MBA - Chair, Department of Anesthesiology\nDr. Broussard joined Ochsner in 2004 and assumed the role of Chair, Department of Anesthesiology at Ochsner Medical Center -New Orleans in 2017. Dr. Broussard earned his medical degree from the Louisiana State University Medical Center - New Orleans and completed his internship and residency at Ochsner Medical Center. Dr. Broussard is board certified by the American Board of Anesthesiology and the National Board of Echocardiography in advanced perioperative transesophageal echocardiography. He received his MBA from Tulane in 2009 and recently completed two terms on the Board of Directors of the American Society of Anesthesiologists.\nEmilie E. Donaldson, MD\nDr. Donaldson earned her medical degree from Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans and completed her internship and residency at Ochsner Clinic Foundation. She also completed her fellowship in Adult Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesiology at Texas Heart Institute at St. Luke's Episcopal Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine. She is board certified by the American Board of Anesthesiology. She has been at Ochsner since 2008.\nJason Falterman, MD\nDr. Falterman earned his medical degree from Louisiana State University School of Medicine in New Orleans and completed his internship and residency at Ochsner Clinic Foundation. He also completed his fellowship in Cardiothoracic Anesthesia at Emory University Hospital where he served as Chief Fellow. He is Board Certified by the American Board of Anesthesiology and National Board of Echocardiography in Intraoperative Transesophageal Echocardiography. He has been on staff at Ochsner since 2008.\nLogan Kosarek, MD\nDr. Kosarek earned his medical degree from Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center New Orleans, LA and completed both his internship in Internal Medicine and residency in Anesthesia at Ochsner Clinic Foundation New Orleans, LA. He also has completed a fellowship in Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology at Emory University, Atlanta, GA. He is board certified in anesthesiology and has been on staff at Ochsner since 2013.\nT. Michael Truxillo, MD\nDr. Truxillo earned his medical degree Louisiana State University School of Medicine New Orleans, LA and completed his residency in Anesthesia at University of Washington, Seattle, WA. He also did a fellowship in Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology at Emory University, Atlanta, GA. He is board certified in anesthesiology and has been on staff at Ochsner since 2010.\nAdult Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology Fellowship Program\nAnesthesiology Residency Program\nAnesthesiology at Ochsner","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line41579"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7490568161010742,"wiki_prob":0.2509431838989258,"text":"About Our Seminars\nFree Preliminary Evaluation\nFull Assessment\nAbout the Ask Us Service\nAbout Australia & New Zealand\nUnit 2M, Level 2\nREGULAR POSTS FROM NEW ZEALAND & AUSTRALIA\nPosts in category: Lighthearted\nMigrating is more than just filling in forms and submitting paperwork; its a complex process that will test even the most resilient of people. Understanding Australia & New Zealand at a grass-roots level is paramount to your immigration survival, and to give you a realistic view of both countries, its people and how we see the world, as well as updates about any current or imminent policy changes, subscribe to our regular blog posts by entering your details below.\nA Day in Threatened Paradise - I am a Lucky Man\nPosted by Iain on June 28, 2019, 7:38 p.m. in Lighthearted\nI have been having one of those magical New Zealand days that reminds me why I was so lucky to be born in this country.\nIt is mid winter, yet temperatures continue to be mild; it’s dry and for the most part sunny but certainly not tropical. It can be a fantastic time of year with days of blue skies, little wind and bookended by chilly nights snuggling up in front of a fire with a glass of good New Zealand red wine. The days are perfect for getting outside, working in the garden and taking long walks in our patch of rainforest or along local beaches.\nMy wife and I try and spend Friday working from our beach house in Northland. The beach house sits high on a hill overlooking Bream Bay and the coast, lined with fine whitish sand which sweeps in a wide arc to the north of us.\nI was chatting to a client on my cell phone this morning when I looked out and saw the unmistakable fine mist of an exhaling whale. I nearly dropped the phone.\nOrca are regular visitors to this part of New Zealand and while massive schools of pygmy pilot whales and bottlenose dolphins regularly hunt and pass through the bay, large whales are a rarity but are increasingly being seen. There is a resident population of around 200 Brydes whales in the Hauraki Gulf that lies between us and Auckland to our south, and many years ago through my telescope I saw a pod far out to sea from our deck.\nThe two whales this morning however were very large and no more than 300 m offshore. I was clearly looking at a mother and her calf.\nFor a while they were rolling onto their sides exposing their massive dorsal fins. I wonder if in fact they were not Brydes but Humpbacks or possibly Southern Right whales, once incredibly common around New Zealand and clearly making a comeback.\nThen, this afternoon, when I was talking to my colleagues in Melbourne and Auckland on a Skype call I heard the unmistakable song of a bellbird outside and then saw it sipping from a banksia flower, a tree planted many years ago to provide winter food for nectar loving native species. Bellbirds are quite a small bird, olive green with a flash of yellow on their wings but possess an outsized call that is incredibly melodic and beautiful to listen to. This forest bird is very common in some parts of New Zealand where predator control takes place but they are rare at Langs beach where we are. Like the whales however they are making something of a comeback.\nWith more and more people stepping up trapping programmes and controlling the numbers of rats and mustelids on their properties, thus creating safer environment for our native birds to breed and raise chicks, I am increasingly seeing species like Bellbird that we have never seen in the 23 years we have owned this property.\nI have to say, it lifts my spirit.\nHaving recently returned from another three weeks in Asia cooped up in concrete and glass buildings and being surrounded by so many people so far removed from nature, I find it hard to not feel a certain level of despondency when I think of leaving this corner of the world behind. I certainly feel claustrophobic in those cities. I actually question the future of humanity when most of the population lives in cities and have no connection to the natural world. They consume relentlessly without understanding the damage they do to the environment that sustains us and every other living creature on the planet.\nThat disconnection from nature, a connection that by and large as New Zealanders we take for granted, might explain the oceans of plastic I encounter when I go scuba-diving in Asia and the mountains of rubbish that line the roads in countries like Malaysia. I’ve almost stopped looking out of airplane windows flying over Malaysia and Indonesia as I bear sad witness to the intense destruction of the rainforests.\nOver this weekend however my ritual of clearing and re-baiting our traplines of possums, rats, mice, the odd feral cat and occasional stoat or weasel will continue.\nI absolutely love the time that I spend in the rainforest and I tell myself that over time as we continue to eliminate the introduced predators one at a time, we will be creating a home for native species like the Bellbirds. After 18 months of trapping we are now approaching 500 dead possums, mustelids and rodents but it seems as fast as we kill them, the faster the traps we set fill up.\nIt is not an exaggeration to call it a war and one which never seems to end. A war I'm happy to fight even though I’d prefer not to be killing what in other situations are extremely cute animals.\nWhen the reward is the song of Bellbirds, the promise of our embattled Kiwis (birds) being seen in their ancestral forests once again and our seas have enough food in them to sustain migrating and resident whales passing through in peace, it is all so very worthwhile.\nI am indeed a lucky man.\nUntil next week...\n>> Southern Man on Instagram (New Zealand)\n>> IMMagine Australia & New Zealand on Instagram\n>> IMMagine Australia & New Zealand on Facebook\nPosted by Iain on Feb. 26, 2017, 4:26 p.m. in Lighthearted\nSun. Rain. Wind.\nIt is interesting how much of a role climate - perceived or real - plays in terms of where migrants might choose to live.\nIf you are Singaporean or Malaysian you love the fact that New Zealand is, for the most part, both drier and for most of the year, cooler, than you are used to. Comfortable is the word I hear a lot. Migrants from these countries tell me how much they love the climate of ‘New Zealand’ (they are usually referring to Auckland or Christchurch).\nIf you are a South African you tended historically to perceive the climate in New Zealand as being both cold and wet. I should say as thousands more South Africans settle here this perception is changing as expectation hits reality.\nIf you are from the UK you’ll report back to friends and family that it seems you have moved to the tropics (which the very north of New Zealand it is starting to become).\nRainfall in Auckland is around 1200mm per year. Tauranga 1100mm. Hamilton, the same. Christchurch 600mm. Dunedin 700mm.\nDurban has around 950mm. Johannesburg 500mm. Cape Town around 700mm. Singapore and Kuala Lumpur average 3000mm or more. London, believe it or not, comes in around 750mm.\nAs many readers know I have a beach house which is 160km north of Auckland and about 50km south of Whangarei (NZ’s last northern most biggish city). Nestled along the east coast temperatures here and only 90 minutes drive north of Auckland are at least 2 degrees warmer at any given time of year. Rainfall in Whangarei is 1500mm per year which makes it probably the wettest big city in the country.\nTemperatures up here last week were in the low 30 degrees (Celcius) with temperature records being set almost monthly.\nThis part of NZ lies in the sub-tropics and I was reading an article recently which said if temperatures increase by as little as 1 degree Celsius then this region will begin to be more tropical than ‘sub’.\nWhile it has been a funny old summer (it came later than ‘normal’ and many evenings have been far cooler than normal) and climate change is playing its part, we have had a preponderance of South Westerlies which is unusual for us in summer. Lying on the east coast of the North Island the rain shadow effect has been amplified so I suspect the summer has been a far drier one for Northland than ‘normal’.\nHaving said that in the past 8 years there has been drought in all but three years up this way. So ‘big dry’ summers are very much the norm. The fields and paddocks are the colour of the Serengeti. Stock has been moved off many farms. Many of the small villages that rely on rainwater and don’t have water bores for their water supply have dry tanks and have to buy it in from water tankers.\nSpending so much time up here the annual pattern of rain has almost started to mirror the tropics insofar as there is increasingly a rainy season and a dry one - both of around six months.\nI have 6000 square meters of land here which I am slowly planting out in native trees and shrubs. By September each year I consider laying drainage across the property so my trees do not drown. By November I have to irrigate. The past few years here in January there are cracks in the hillsides big enough to lose a toddler down (okay, slight poetic license) such is the lack of rain.\nWhen it does rain here in summer, it rains. A week ago I suggested to some friends that what we desperately needed was a solid 24 hours of non stop light rain or my water bills for irrigation will go through the roof. I got my wish and then some. I suspect we have had close to 70mm the past 24 hours. Today the sun is out, the temperature is around 25 degrees and the humidity must be around 90%. I can almost watch the plants grow. It feels very much like a cool day in the tropics.\nAt the same time and 1000km to the south Christchurch has been reeling as a massive fire has spread through thousands of hectares of farm and forest on the city’s outskirts destroying homes, buildings and resulting in one death. That part of the country gets half the rainfall we get up here ‘normally’. Their summers are warm and the wind they often get coming down off the Southern Alps, desiccates the land. These fires are the result.\nIn the Hawke’s Bay where summer temperatures are routinely over 30 degrees and their rainfall is closer to 600mm per year they too are coping with a lack of rain, drought and fires.\nNorthern Canterbury (north of Christchurch) has seen no significant rain for three solid years.\nOne only needs to travel 100km or so to the west (and through the weather system blocking Southern Alps) and rainfall is in the order of Singapore or KL - 3000mm plus.\nSo rain falls in very different quantities in very different ways across the country.\nIt is overwhelmingly wetter in winter (although the wettest month in Dunedin in the deep south is actually December) and much drier in summer.\nThis country has such rugged terrain with mountains and plains, hills and valleys all spread across 1600km of (relatively) thin islands and is surrounded by very warm oceans in the north and cold ones in the south. It means you can drive 30km and find very different microclimates. For those from larger countries with more consistent topographies and spread over fewer degrees of latitude it can be quite a climatological shock.\nIn fact we probably have a far more varied climate than Australia for example which is probably 20 times our size. This myth of sun, surf and BBQs everywhere there is exactly that. Myth. Many parts of Australia are far wetter than many here in New Zealand. Many parts of New Zealand have far hotter summers than parts of Australia.\nI am constantly surprised for example how cold Melbourne is whenever I am there between April and October - far colder most of the time than, say, humid Auckland.\nPerceptions and realities.\nThe climate you find when you get here might in the end be very different to what you perceived the climate and rainfall to be like before you emigrated.\nIain MacLeod\nSouthern Man - Letters from New Zealand\nThat Summer Feeling\nPosted by danni on May 6, 2016, 8:07 p.m. in Lighthearted\nOne thing that surprised me as a South African migrant was just how summery New Zealand is so much of the time.\nMaybe it’s because I’m from Johannesburg that being surrounded by beaches means “holiday” to me, but I’ve travelled quite a bit and really think that Auckland in particular has one of the nicest, most ‘summery’ summers ever. And it seems to last forever too…\nA few short weeks ago I started writing a blog post about this in the midst of a scorcher of a summer – a post sparked by having to slow my car down to allow what can only be described as a shimmy across the street to the big blue ocean by a gaggle of ladies (all over 70), their polka dot towels flung over their bikinied bodies. Even today – and it’s definitely cooling down – on my way to work I saw two people frolicking in what must have been a pretty cold ocean in the mist at 7am. We South Africans don’t believe this kind of life will be the case when moving to New Zealand! Not weather wise necessarily but this perpetual summer feeling.\nIt’s so beautiful and temperate so much of the time and while it does rain, it’s often just a mild spurt a few times a minute. For the remaining seconds it’s really quite pleasant and often quite bright and sunny...(sometimes experiences committment issues, the weather does).\nHaving looked up the average rainfall for both cities, it seems it rains twice as much in volume in Auckland as in Johannesburg. Sometimes it rains hard for days at a time…but it doesn’t happen too often. (And it’s quite nice when it does, isn’t it?)\nBefore moving to New Zealand I was sure the weather would be different and particularly rainy and a lot of potential migrants do too - while it’s different (lightning storms are pretty scarce, I miss those on the Highveld) it’s never felt “rainy”. It still looks and feels like I’m on holiday outside so much of the time - 6 years and counting.\nLast weekend my husband was lucky enough to be invited aboard a 50ft yacht for a sail through the Hauraki gulf – the weather was perfect although autumn has definitely started taper off. That summer feeling really never does! (Have a look at the shots below he got from the ferry on his commute to work in the city from Gulf Harbour - these photos are a day apart although a very extreme example!)\nThis week at Little Manly beach on the Hibiscus Coast (close to where two of us from IMMagine live and about 45 minutes from the city) locals were treated to a visit by a pod of dolphins. Not just once but every single day for almost a week. On one occasion when the dolphins where particularly close to shore, they stayed for nearly 7 hours just playing with the people who’d gathered in the water to be with them.\nIt even got a mention on the news – you can read about it and see some pictures here. I saw this spectacle right in my back yard and thought…you can’t beat this. It’s a good place to live and honestly, the weather’s great. Mostly.\n- Danni Balsaras, Auckland Office\nNew Ausland\nPosted by danni on April 15, 2016, 6:07 p.m. in Lighthearted\nOne of Crowded House’s most well known songs is called “Better Be Home Soon” – but where, actually, is “home” to the band?\nThis is just one of the topics Australians and Kiwis argue over in what’s often termed a “sibling rivalry” between the two countries. It’s a question many of us ‘down under’ have heatedly discussed (and that includes New Zealand, by the way. Given its geographical location, you might say NZ is even further \"under\" than Australia but let's not argue!) - Are Crowded House a Kiwi band, or are they Australian?\nThis is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the banter between these two brother nations. It doesn’t help the ego of either to learn that many people around the world admit to not even knowing that Australia and New Zealand are individual countries to begin with! Who could forget the Olympics faux pas when our medal count was combined for the country \"New Ausland\"?\nI must admit I enjoy the rivalry – when two countries have the time and inclination to focus on things like who really invented the Pavlova, it means that they’re clearly not desperately trying to avoid being hijacked in South Africa or blackening of their children’s lungs from the filthy, polluted air in parts of Asia.\nMy husband, upon touching ground in New Zealand, declared himself an instant Kiwi by immediately denouncing any form of affection for Australia and adopting the ‘Pavlova Stance’. He said it’s a rite of passage into Kiwihood! He can’t be blamed – his South African father is notorious for saying that he supports the Springboks “and any team playing against Australia” so the country was never given a fair chance in his eyes.\nI can only speak from my own perspective, but frankly, I love Australians. (I can hear the wailing from my New Zealand office mates and the cheering from my colleagues in Melbourne…) Maybe you need to be a real Kiwi to really feel it, but I love their slightly dark humour, their often brash approach, their ‘salt-of-the-earth’ realness and as a South African, I especially love their accents. (And yes, fellow Saffas, it is possible to tell the accents apart…eventually!)\nAs for the actual country of Australia – the contrast of beauty and danger in the wilderness, the great expanse of the Outback, the harshness of the land and environment – all of that is character building! I often joke that I’ll send my kids to school in the Outback so that they develop strong spines and the ability to defend themselves. It’s not that this is impossible in New Zealand, but it is a more delicate comparison! (On the North Island, anyway. My husband always reminds me that the South Island exists and that the environment there is harsh in many ways, too.)\nI put together this list of some of the things both the Aussies & Kiwis lay claim to, just for fun:\nCrowded House were a rock band formed in Melbourne, Australia, in 1985. The founding members were New Zealander Neil Finn (vocalist, guitarist, primary songwriter) and Australians Paul Hester (drums) and Nick Seymour (bass). So if you're going by numbers, Australia should probably take this one...(sorry, Paul) - although, granted, Neil's Kiwi brother Tim joined the band later which balanced it out a little.\nPhar Lap\nChampion horse Phar Lap, the thoroughbred foaled in New Zealand but trained and raced in Australia where he forged an incredible career. Phar Lap was best known for being much faster than other horses and has since been a disputed possession for both nations.\nThe Pavlova\nIn 2007, insurance company NZI ran a humorous series of television advertisements in New Zealand highlighting what are locally considered to be historic New Zealand icons being adopted elsewhere, including the pavlova playing on its status as a common feature of the friendly trans-Tasman rivalry. NZI's parent company is Australian owned!\nWell, I'm not sure why either country wants to claim him, but he was in fact born in New Zealand. What's really funny is after Mel Gibson (who was born in Australia) lost the plot and became the anti-semetic lunatic he is, Australia instantly disowned him and called him an American!\nTo be honest, while researching the finer points of this post I found very few Australians ranting about New Zealanders, and many New Zealanders expressing their thoughts about Australians – make of that what you will! – perhaps there’s an underlying sense of living in Australia’s shadow, and Kiwis do not like that.\nNew Zealand has a very strong sense of “little New Zealand nationalism” whereby we take national pride in being small and punching above our weight. We revel in being the plucky country that surprises everyone. The two countries do however share language and cultural traits as well as similar political, legal and economic institutions. The Anzac spirit forged at Gallipoli in 1915 has endured through theatres of war in Europe, Africa and Southeast Asia and the way I see it is, like brothers we are rivals. But in war & times of crisis, we are united.\nJust don’t mention the rugby...\n- Danielle Balsaras, Marketing Coordinator, Auckland Office\nThe Great Australian Visa Lolly Scramble\nOi Mate\nPieter Van Schalkwyk commented on The Great Australian Visa Lolly Scramble on July 13, 2019, 9:29 a.m.\nRare commented on Oi Mate on July 10, 2019, 10:08 a.m.\nCharmain van der Watt commented on Parent Category - What To Do With It on July 8, 2019, 8:43 p.m.\nJason N commented on Oi Mate on July 8, 2019, 7:43 p.m.\nIan commented on Oi Mate on July 5, 2019, 9:01 p.m.\nMotlalepula mokgothu commented on Oi Mate on July 5, 2019, 7:09 p.m.\nRod Harris commented on Oi Mate on July 5, 2019, 6:12 p.m.\nKobus Duvenage commented on Oi Mate on July 5, 2019, 5:29 p.m.\nNkosingiphile Scott commented on Oi Mate on July 5, 2019, 5:13 p.m.\nGraham commented on A Day in Threatened Paradise - I am a Lucky Man on June 29, 2019, 11:35 p.m.\nIt's just a thought...\nAttend a\nFREE SEMINAR\nAttend a seminar as a starting point to learn more about the lifestyle of each country, their general migration process and a broad overview of Visa categories.\nDo I stand a chance?\nComplete a\nHave a preliminary evaluation to establish which Visa category may suit you and whether it’s worth your while ordering a comprehensive Full Assessment.\nI'm ready to talk strategy\nLet us develop your detailed strategy, timeline and pricing structure in-person or on Skype. Naturally, a small cost applies for this full and comprehensive assessment.\nJoin over 35,000 people who subscribe to our weekly newsletters for up to date migration, lifestyle and light-hearted updates\nLevel 2, 55-57 High Street, Auckland, New Zealand\n+64 9 359 9319 | Contact Form\nLevel 2, 517 Flinders Lane, Melbourne, Australia\n+61 3 9628 2555 | Contact Form\nAll of our advisers are individually licensed by the Immigration Advisers Authority (IAA)\nAll of our advisers are individually licensed by the Migration Agents Registration Authority (MARA)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line457924"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6783356666564941,"wiki_prob":0.32166433334350586,"text":"Identity, where does it come from?\nCurrent Events, Family, gay, History, Insights, leadership, Politics, psychology, World\nDefinition of identity\na: the distinguishing character or personality of an individual : INDIVIDUALITY\nb: the relation established by psychological identification\nOur identities are composed of many parts. Some are visible, and some are not. One way to explain the widespread emergence of self, as separate from the rest, would be in the 1500’s with Martin Luther, in what today is Germany. Once we understood that we could communicate with god directly, without intermediaries; I could pray to god, I can relate to god, and I can relate to others. I can get to know myself, and thus the emergence of personal identity.\n“On the plane of ideas, we can see that the distinction between inner and outer, and the valorization of the former over the latter, starts in an important sense with Luther.*” 1\nWe have our identity and we depend on it to transact business, to relate to others, and to choose what we do. We all agree on what documents will prove our identity. We fight hard to be who we are. We struggle to gain acceptance, so we can safely say, “I am this way”. However, we haven’t had to prove we are not something else. Identity disbelief. How far has the concept of identity gone to where it has been weaponized, to deny something to someone?\nIncluded in the references are two short video interviews. The first one is a parody, the second, to give the first context, is an interview that delves deeper into immigration issues in Europe. The videos are from Jazza John, a YouTube blogger and activist.\nThe video clips show how individuals are asked to prove they are gay, to be granted asylum on such grounds. To prove their sexual identity in a vacuum. Once the idea of identity is established, it can be denied. The interview ends with a parody that shows how identity can be used as a weapon. Something purely conceptual. The video also illustrates what are believed to be ways to prove who you are. What kind of questions would prove your sexual identity.\nIdentity derives from a mutual understanding that we will both see each other. We will recognize each other, as friend or foe. When the management of identity is given to an institution, aspects of identity can be deleted from the roster. In the USA, it is said that transgender could be removed from the possible identities, then transgender people could become a non-identity. This rings to the inter war era where individuals were striped of their nationality, becoming stateless.\nThe 2004 movie The Terminal, with Tom Hanks and directed by Steven Spielberg is a spoof about a stateless traveler. This movie is an adaptation of a 1994 French film Tombés du ciel . Nationality is an important part of identity, especially our professional and financial identity. We have social identity and identity theft. This last one costing consumers 16 billion in 2017.\nI believe It would be difficult to prove one’s identity without trust or good faith; Without one’s peers. It’s not factual. One ought to keep in mind that often people are forced to obfuscate who they are in order to survive. How could one turn it around and be genuine, when all you’ve had is persecution? Individuals become guarded. We learn to deflect and obscure, and that eventually becomes part of our identity.\nProve you are straight, parody.\nFull interview\n1) from “Identity: The Demand for Dignity and the Politics of Resentment” by Francis Fukuyama.\nNote; Many centuries before Martin Luther, Augustine went through a similar tortured exploration of his inner self in his Confessions. Unlike Luther, however, his writings did not devalue established social institutions or trigger massive upheavals in the politics and society of his time.\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Luther\nhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Augustine_of_Hippo\nhttps://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/stripping-naturalized-immigrants-their-citizenship-isnt-new-180969733/\nhttps://www.cnbc.com/2017/02/01/consumers-lost-more-than-16b-to-fraud-and-identity-theft-last-year.html\nhttps://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/identity\nhttps://www.ags.school.nz/at-grammar/student-services/guidance-and-counselling/identity/\nhttps://www.imdb.com/title/tt0362227/faq\nNovember 29, 2018 Current Events, education, gay, information, Insights, Politics, success\nPrevious Previous post: NEWS!-LITTLE BOOTS LIVE from Allaire Studios | HEADSPACE by AKG and Mixmag- mellow rhythmic voice\nNext Next post: Giuseppe Ottaviani live at Dreamstate SoCal 2018-Amazingly brilliant!!! So lost in the music I felt transcended!!! Giuseppe is the master!!!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line883115"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6620050668716431,"wiki_prob":0.6620050668716431,"text":"Big Project ME\nConstruction Machinery ME\nME Consultant\nTruck&Fleet ME\nVideo: The View at The Palm\nWhy choose LACASA?\nALEC’s BIM Journey\nWhat makes LACASA different\nVideo: MBR Solar Park, a CNN mini-doc\nRetail & Hospitality Construction Summit 2019\nAccess and Handling Summit\nME BIM Summit 2019\nBig Project ME Awards 2019\nME Consultant Awards 2019\nInterview: Andrew Mackenzie, partner at Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla\nBy Gavin Davids\nDeveloping a firm’s construction arbitration practice and where the region’s industry is headed\n“That’s what’s very typical of this region, especially on government-related projects. They’re told that everything will be fine, but then they get to a level where the budget isn’t there to clear these costly claims”\nAt the start of the year, international law firm Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla announced that it had expanded its capabilities in the GCC region through the appointment of Andrew Mackenzie as partner in its UAE Arbitration practice. Coming off the back of a recent shake-up of the UAE practice, the appointment of Mackenzie was hailed by executive chairman Dr Habib Al Mulla, who said the move would allow the firm to support clients operating in the Middle East through the lifecycle of their operations, from structuring and advisory all the way through to dispute resolution.\nJoining Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla from Hogan Lovells in the UAE, Mackenzie brings with him an expertise in international arbitration law, with a particular focus on construction, engineering, energy and insurance disputes. He has been based in the UAE for more than eight years and has full rights of audience in the Dubai International Financial Centre courts, and has also been admitted as a solicitor in both his native Scotland and England and Wales, where he is also a solicitor advocate in the higher courts.\nMckenzie acts for international corporations and governments across the Middle East, Africa and Asia on complex commercial disputes under a variety of civil and common law systems, having tried cases in all of the major arbitration forums (both treaty-based and commercial), representing developers, contractors and consultants from around the world for a variety of projects.\nWith the senior leadership of Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla determined to establish the firm as a leader in construction arbitration across the GCC and wider MENA region, Mackenzie’s expertise and experience is invaluable to their plans for expansion and growth over the coming years.\n“Myself and Dr Habib have one vision, which is to ensure that the team based in the UAE works regionally – more so than we already do. We focus on working in Saudi Arabia, in conjunction with our colleagues there, in Bahrain, Kuwait and Muscat – across the GCC and the wider region. Baker McKenzie benefits from the fact that we’ve got a very hefty footprint in Africa – we’re in Johannesburg, Cairo and Casablanca – and because of that, we can tap into the MENA region, the northern African states, where there are more than a trillion dollars worth of projects ongoing,” Mackenzie says during an interview with Big Project ME at the Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla offices in Business Bay, Dubai.\n“It also means that we can become a legal hub. We’re already a business hub for sub-Saharan Africa. We want to be seen as, both externally and internally, a centre of excellence for arbitration across all industries,” he continues.\nHaving been brought in to head the international arbitration and construction team, Mackenzie aims to put a particular focus on disputes, arbitration and litigation. With seven lawyers under him – soon to be eight – all construction and arbitration specialists themselves, he hopes to put in place a team that will offer a range of services and expertise to clients from all over the region.\n“I also do front-end construction work as well, I know my way around ECP contracts and the drafting of the usual standard forms. The team ranges in levels as well, which is good, because I obviously can’t be everywhere at once. Dr Habib is a very well-known arbitrator and UAE law expert, and the calls on his time are very demanding as well.\n“But the nice thing is that we have a wonderful synergy at Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla. We have the local law experience – by that I mean all regional local laws – we have the common law background – which is mine – and we obviously have the construction and engineering arbitration expertise. We’re also trying to be multilingual as well, which helps. It means that we can tender for work that would usually fall outside my remit, because proceedings are usually conducted in Arabic or because it’s for a particular client in a style or culture that other international firms would find it difficult to adopt into.”\nHaving moved to Dubai at the tail end of 2009, Mackenzie had a first-hand look at how the construction industry in the region operated right when external pressures were at the highest levels. With the real estate market in collapse, he was able to focus on the construction boom disputes that inevitably arose.\n“It was chiefly construction disputes at the time. Projects like Dubai Mall and the Dubai Airport – that’s probably one of the most heavily litigated buildings in the world. I think everyone has been involved in it, one way or another. I cut my teeth on some very sizeable and complex disputes, involving multiple parties on the contractor, consultant and government end as well. It was nice to have that experience and exposure to all the different sectors and the different viewpoints in the industry.\n“From there, I broadened my practice to a degree, focusing on services beyond construction to other general commercial disputes as well. Arbitration was about 90% construction and engineering-related, and I picked up a number of disputes that were typically main contractor, subcontractor and developer. But then I started doing work for architects and engineers, which then involved the insurers – who are a very active and often neglected part of the construction industry,” he says.\n“People don’t often see things from an insurer’s perspective, so it was fascinating to gain that insight and see how disputes that are on the face of it very clearly construction disputes often evolve into very complex coverage claims under contractual risk or professional indemnities policies.”\nThis experience is likely to stand him in good stead, given that the last few years have seen a slump in performance for the regional construction market. While experts predict that 2018 is likely to see an increase in project awards in Saudi Arabia and the UAE, the region is still grappling with the issue of funding for developments. As a result, the likelihood of disputes and arbitration in the industry is likely to increase, especially since Mackenzie says one of the fundamental lessons from 2009 still hasn’t been learnt – the importance of adhering to a contract.\n“Sometimes these parties take months, if not years, to negotiate and sign these documents. They can run into hundreds of pages, with many different schedules, and then typically what happens is that the client takes it and sticks it into a drawer [and forgets about it]. They just never read it, and they forget that the contract is supposed to be the fundamental basis upon which they’re delivering their project.\n“And when they forget about it, it ultimately leads to disaster because they forget to put notices in and they forget to comply with the provisions of the contract. You do have this honeymoon period when both parties get on really well and neither party wants to break that by appearing too contractual or notice-oriented, but what that ultimately leads to is smaller issues building up, snowballing and becoming global claims that ultimately lead to large-scale arbitration, because the parties are poles apart.”\nDespite having been very successful at arbitration for the last twelve years, Mackenzie insists that if he can stop a client from going into arbitration, he always will. Not only is it an all-consuming process, it is also time-intensive, costly and rarely results in both parties walking away fully satisfied with the result.\n“That’s what’s very typical of this region, especially on government-related projects. They’re told that everything will be fine, but then they get to a level where the budget isn’t there to clear these costly claims. This leads to another issue – communication. Because these claims aren’t going through, because these warnings aren’t coming in to the people with the purse strings, they then turn around and say, ‘Well, we’ve paid $2.4 billion for this project, but now you’re saying it’s going to cost $3.8 billion – and you’re telling us this at the eleventh hour. What do you expect us to do?’\n“That is an issue that often arises, but adherence to the contract would stop all of that,” he asserts.\nHowever, Mackenzie does point out that there has been some improvement, particularly in regard to companies being more reluctant to press ahead with formal dispute resolutions and go straight into arbitration.\n“Basically, that was the only real outcome of the crash in 2009. Everyone was going into arbitration, those who could afford to at least. The others that couldn’t just had to pull out of the market. Their bonds were called and there was very little they could do about it.\n“There’s a reluctance now to go into formal proceedings, and there’s certainly more adherence to the contract. I find that there’s certainly an understanding internally, for those who had learnt their lessons and lived through it, that they had to take contracts more seriously and update their internal processes and procedures.\n“Unfortunately, those lessons were learnt through a baptism of fire. You saw companies go through these horrendous disputes which were very time-intensive and costly, and as a result of that, they’ve learnt that catching things as they arise on a project could save you years of grief that you have to go through during arbitration. However, I would say that they’re in the minority. I think a lot of these big contractors, subcontractors and engineers, even the sophisticated international ones, still don’t fully appreciate the things that they could be doing now to stop a repeat of what happened in 2009,” he warns ominously.\nThis is especially frustrating, as he says it’s not like there hasn’t been enough opportunity. The market has gone through three dispute cycles since 2009, he points out, adding that it looks likely to be edging towards a fourth.\n“2017 was quiet, but again, without sounding too corny, it was perhaps too quiet! People were battening down the hatches. Clients certainly said that to me. They just wanted to get through 2017 and hope that 2018 would bring more growth. But tie that in with the oil price rise, and tie that in with the increase in liquidity, which will slowly return to the market, and I think we’re going to see people get a bit more prone to launch formal proceedings. We’ve already seen that in January.”\nDespite his wariness, Mackenzie does see positive developments on the horizon. Based on recent experiences with government-backed developers, he believes that change is coming – and not a moment too soon, with events like Expo 2020 coming up in a couple of years.\n“Dubai Properties has actually put out a call-out for a contractor-led framework [for tendering]. Basically, the old traditional form of tendering is seen as outdated, outmoded and generally not fit for purpose. It generally leaves the contractor exposed, which ultimately leaves the developer being unable to complete. I think Dubai Properties and Nakheel have felt that most keenly, and so it’s slightly more contractor-led at the moment.\n“I think the fact that developers like Dubai Properties are prepared to look at it seriously is a good indicator that a quasi-government entity is thinking to itself, ‘Do we just want to carry on as normal?’ They’ll ultimately come out the better party, but you compare it to Emaar’s model, where they adopted an approach to the market focused on completing specific projects and delivering for its customers, and not getting entangled in big, hefty disputes.”\nWhile these steps are certainly welcome, Mackenzie does think more can be done by government entities, particularly when it comes to developing communication and relationships with the region’s contractors. This will allow all stakeholders to move away from the traditional design and build contract model and find a better way to develop projects in a more collaborative manner.\n“If you have that framework in place and an understanding that a number of contractors have fed into that framework, then it’s quite clever in a way, because while the developers are still setting the rules of the game, the contractors are going in there with their eyes wide open.”\nAnother positive development in recent years has been the work done with the DIFC courts, he adds. Although there was initial resistance to the idea, and a lack of awareness of what was on offer, Dubai’s leadership has acted quickly to allay concerns and position the courts as the region’s premier dispute resolution service, he says. The DIFC courts have been so successful that other countries in the region have tried to emulate the system, though with considerably less success.\n“It’s great that many of our competitors, from a GCC perspective, have tried to copy – in various different guises – what the Dispute Resolution Authority and the DIFC have done. But they’ve not done it successfully, because they haven’t really followed through.\n“To give you an example, Qatar tried to create an adjudication process, but there was no appetite for it. I had advised on it, way back in the day with a number of other peers, but there was no real push from the government to embrace it. In hindsight, given the problems with Qatar Rail and other projects, that would have been very sensible.\n“Other bodies around the GCC have done likewise, but with no real follow through. With the DIFC, they’ve not only given people access to things like the Small Claims Court, but they’ve also launched their own specific Construction Technology Court, which is similar to the TCC in London. There’s an education process ongoing, and I think it’s far better for the industry.”\nFinally, Mackenzie brings up another topic that he believes will have a significant impact on the construction industry. January 1 was the launch of VAT in the UAE, and he is keen to stress that entities in the region, particularly in the construction industry, need to start considering the implications.\n“For the sophisticated players, the ones who are used to working in regions where this is already in existence, or have been keeping an eye on it and planning for it, it will be a far smoother transition. What’s noticeable, and using VAT as a prime example, is that some entities didn’t even contemplate – even though it was discussed widely in the market – what the implications were for the introduction of VAT.\n“Be under no illusions, the introduction of VAT is merely the beginning of greater regulation, and indeed taxation of the industry – of all industries. Corporation tax is already under discussion; they do say it’s in the early stages, but I think we should expect to see a draft law within the next two of three years,” he forecasts.\n“Many of our clients, and other players in the industry, have not fully planned for the introduction of VAT, hence why they have approached us and we have taken various steps to not only provide them with advice and guidelines prior to the introduction, but also, as of the beginning of this year, created a tax specific department.”\nCoupled with this is the UAE’s – and Dubai’s – ambitions to become a greener, more efficient state that uses smart technology and renewables. In the last few years, stringent regulations around green building codes and energy usage have been put in place by the authorities, while government agendas and policies have been adopted to drive change across the economy.\nAs a result, companies will have to change and adapt to keep up with the new reality, and Mackenzie says that process will not be easy if companies do not prepare.\n“I think part of the industry is prepared, but the ones that aren’t are going to suffer. Many companies have had it good for too long. They haven’t had much regulation, they haven’t had to adhere to specific building codes. Dubai, and the region in general, has been reactive rather than proactive.\n“[Moving from a reactive to a proactive stance] is an inevitable part of a growing and developing industry. I think the industry players will try and hold on to the good old days for as long as possible and live in denial, but these regulations are coming.\n“VAT is difficult [to dodge] because it’s so heavily regulated and they’ll be punished if they don’t comply, but other players will attempt to get away with regulations that are looser in nature and have more wriggle room. However, I think that you’ll see the ones that are adhering to the regulations and abiding by them will begin to be singled out by the government, who wants to see this agenda pushed – they’ll want to see that the industry is responding to them.\n“Therefore, I think that these companies will begin to win a larger share of the work, as opposed to the ones who do it on the cheap and provide things that are not in compliance,” he concludes.\nRelated Items:Baker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla, construction disputes, law\nBaker McKenzie Habib Al Mulla: Appeals win sets precedent…\nSaudi mid-day break rule introduced\nNew Dubai law amends Performance Bond requirements of contractors\nDubai Municipality cracks down on lawbreakers\nLaw firm calls for off plan sales regulation\nNew contract will address gaps in market\nA new generation, a new style\nGeberit Gulf debuts 2019 product range at glitzy Dubai…\nABB to help deliver clean energy in Dubai\nInterview: Omer Al-Jamel, KONE MEA, on changing regulation and demand in the region\nRegion could be heading towards fourth dispute cycle since 2009\n‘We have the firepower to build Saudi’s future,’ Red Sea Project chief tells MECN\nAldar Properties wins multiple AUH contracts\nProject Profile: How the Coco-Cola Arena was delivered ahead of schedule\nEllisDon wins Canada Pavilion contract for Expo 2020 Dubai\nAl Bawani wins $89mn commercial tower project from Asharqia Chamber\nSaipem wins $3.5bn worth contracts in Saudi Arabia\nArabtec Holding appoints Adel Al Wahedi as acting Group CFO\nPeugeot introduces all-new 2020 Partner in GCC\nTarget wins additional work on ADNOC Onshore project\nSiemens wins $319mn contract for Maisan Combined Cycle Power Plant\nMEConstructionNews.com is the central website of leading construction magazines - Big Project Middle East, Construction Machinery Middle East, Middle East Consultant and Truck & Fleet Middle East.\nA one stop shop updated daily with industry news, interviews, analysis, expert opinion, videos and more.\nJohn Pagano on creating a tourist destination the size of Belgium from scratch, while...\nContractors will be appointed immediately to commence works on Saadiyat Island, Yas Island and...\nASGC and HPBS on creating and building Dubai's new state-of-the-art multi-purpose arena\nComplementary including business, investment attraction and cultural components will unfold in the Canada Pavilion\nAsharqia’s chairman explains Chamber is moving to a new stage that will strengthen its...\nfeaturednews featuredpost dubai constructions saudi arabia United Arab Emirates the big picture PROJECTS MACHINERY construction abu dhabi qatar infrastructure uae Oman Property development real estate network magazines development sustainability Bahrain Egypt middle east Nakheel\n© 2019 CPI Trade Media. All rights reserved New Template","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1574163"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5559321641921997,"wiki_prob":0.4440678358078003,"text":"20th century fiction\nDeath has Deep Roots – Michael Gilbert\nVictoria Lamartine is on trial for the murder of Major Eric Thoseby. The murder was committed in a small in the Family Hotel in Pearlyman Street, run by Monsieur Sainte, who came to London after the war. Vicky is another French refugee, assisted by the Société de Lorraine, an organisation set up to help French citizens in London, to find work after suffering imprisonment & torture by the Gestapo for her role in the Resistance in the Angers region. Thoseby had been the SOE contact in the area. He knew Vicky & she had been in contact with him after the war, trying to trace Lieutenant Julian Wells, the father of her baby. Vicky gave birth in a prison camp & the baby later died of malnutrition but Vicky didn’t believe the story that Julian had been killed by the Gestapo in the same raid when she was caught. Thoseby was at the hotel that night to meet Vicky & she was discovered standing over his body. The murder weapon, a kitchen knife, has her prints on it & the very efficient method used to stab Thoseby was taught to Resistance fighters during the war.\nNap Rumbold is the junior partner in his father’s firm of solicitors. He is surprised to be contacted by Vicky’s solicitors two days before the trial commences & asked to take on the case. Vicky was dissatisfied with her counsel, who obviously believed her guilty, & she had heard of Nap through Major Thoseby (they were wartime colleagues). Nap agrees to see Vicky & is impressed by her story. The police case is that Major Thoseby was the father of Vicky’s child & that she murdered him when he refused to support her. Nap believes her innocent but realises how difficult it will be to prove her innocence & discover the true murderer. Nap enlists Major Angus McCann, a private investigator, to pursue the London end of the investigation while he goes to France to look into the wartime roots of the relationship between Vicky & Thoseby. The investigation is complicated by the other guests at the hotel, including alcoholic Colonel Alwright & Mrs Gwendolyne Roper, whose evidence seems damning until her own activities are scrutinised.\nThis is a great combination of courtroom drama & adventure story. The background of the war & the French Resistance is exciting & Nap’s investigations in Angers reveal many secrets that desperate men would kill to keep hidden. The chapters alternate between the trial & Nap’s investigations & this structure works very successfully. I’ve always been a fan of courtroom drama (Witness for the Prosecution is one of my favourite movies) & the sober recounting of evidence contrasts well with the chapters in France as Nap tries to break through the obstructions of people who have many secrets. The wartime background is fascinating as the motives of everyone involved are untangled & the time constraints involved ramp up the tension beautifully. It was a real treat to have the opportunity to read Death has Deep Roots for the 1951 Club.\nThe 1951 Club has been a wonderful excuse to read & reread some terrific books. There are lots of links to more reviews on Simon’s blog here. As well as the two books I’ve reviewed, I’ve also listened to the audio book of The Daughter of Time by Josephine Tey, read by Derek Jacobi. This is one of my favourite books & I must have read or listened to it over 20 times. I’ve also reviewed My Cousin Rachel by Daphne Du Maurier (I’m looking forward to the new movie very much. There’s a trailer here). Other reviews on the blog – The Blessing by Nancy Mitford, Round the Bend by Nevil Shute, There are so many more that I read pre-blog, 1951 must be one of my favourite reading years! One that brought back happy memories when I saw it in the Goodreads list was Désirée by Annemarie Selinko, a romantic novel about Napoleon’s first love. I’ve also read The End of the Affair by Graham Green, They Came to Baghdad by Agatha Christie, The Day of the Triffids by John Wyndham (after seeing the TV series with John Duttine back in the 70s), Ellen Tebbits by Beverly Cleary (a childhood favourite), Night at the Vulcan by Ngaio Marsh, Duplicate Death by Georgette Heyer, A Game of Hide and Seek by Elizabeth Taylor, An English Murder by Cyril Hare, The Lute Player by Norah Lofts & Florence Nightingale by Cecil Woodham-Smith. I’d recommend them all, even though I read many of them over 35 years ago. What a great year for publishing!\nThe Quiet Gentleman – Georgette Heyer\nApril 11, 2017 April 8, 2017 / preferreading\t/ 25 Comments\nGervase Frant, sixth Earl of St Erth, returns to Stanyon, his family home in Lincolnshire, a year after the death of his father & after several years as a soldier on the Continent. The unregarded son of his father’s first, unhappy, marriage, his return is disconcerting for his stepmother, the Dowager Countess, & especially for her son, Martin. Martin has been the spoiled darling of both his parents, treated almost as the heir, & the reappearance of his half-brother is a source of jealousy. The estate has been stewarded by a cousin, Theo Frant, a steady hand who has kept in touch with Gervase. Miss Drusilla Morville, the daughter of a local gentry family, is visiting Stanyon as the guest of the Dowager while her parents are on their travels.\nGervase’s quiet good manners soon recommend him to the Dowager & the rest of the household. All except Martin, whose resentment is plain. When Gervase rescues the beautiful young heiress, Marianne Bolderwood, after she is thrown from her horse, Martin’s jealousy is aroused. Marianne’s easy, flirtatious manners have led Martin to believe that she returns his love although she is too innocent to realise it. When Gervase’s friend Lord Ulverston arrives, the attraction between him & Marianne is obvious to everyone but Martin. He tries to force his attentions on Marianne at a ball at Stanyon by proposing to her & then tries to force Ulverston to fight a duel.\nMore seriously, Gervase is the victim of several “accidents” which could be something more sinister. Martin forgets to warn his brother of a rickety bridge & a rope pulled deliberately across the road trips his horse. When Gervase is shot while out driving, & Martin disappears, everything seems to be pointing in the direction of a jealous young man with murderous intent. But is this really the answer? Gervase is determined to avoid scandal but can he believe that Martin was not involved?\nI love Georgette Heyer. Of course, there’s also romance as well as intrigue in this sparkling story. Drusilla Morville is a quiet, elegant young woman from an intellectual family who has an easy, companionable friendship with the whole family. She’s on the spot when Gervase is thrown from his horse & takes on the burden of nursing him after he’s shot. Her impeccable manners & competence impress Gervase but Drusilla will not allow herself to think of anything but friendship with a rich nobleman, her parents’ landlord to boot, who will surely marry an heiress. Gervase’s initial impression of Drusilla on his first evening at home,\n” And who, pray, is that little squab of a female? Was she invited for my entertainment?Don’t tell me she is an heiress! I could not – no, I really could not be expected to pay my addresses to anyone with so little countenance or conversation!”\n‘Drusilla! No, no, nothing of that sort!” smiled Theo. “I fancy my aunt thinks she would make a very suitable wife for me!”\n“My poor Theo!”\nsoon changes as they become acquainted & he realises that she has plenty of humour & conversation as well as quiet good sense. She even discusses Mary Wollstonecraft’s life & work with Gervase quite matter of factly which I loved. Drusilla is one of Heyer’s older heroines & much more interesting to me than flighty Marianne Bolderwood with her beauty & her train of suitors. I also adored the Dowager Countess with her Lady Catherine-like pronouncements & her complete self-absorption. The mystery of the attacks on Gervase is absorbing, I loved the descriptions of the estate, the house & the countryside & altogether, this is now one of my favourite Heyer novels. My enjoyment was enhanced by listening to the audio book read by Cornelius Garrett, one of my favourite narrators. I like to listen to an audio book for 15 mins or so before I go to sleep but some nights I was desperately trying to stay awake for just a few minutes more to find out what would happen. I’ve listened to several Heyers on audio & enjoyed them all. I still have Frederica, read by Clifford Norgate in my Audible library but the next one I want to read is Venetia as I want to listen to the Backlisted podcast which you can listen to here or wherever you get your podcasts.\nIt was a real treat to read The Quiet Gentleman for the 1951 Club. Thanks Simon & Karen for the opportunity to read a book that had been in the tbl (to be listened) list for too long.\nOne, Two, Buckle my Shoe – Agatha Christie\nMarch 14, 2017 March 13, 2017 / preferreading\t/ 12 Comments\nHercule Poirot visits his dentist, Mr Morley, reluctantly. It’s just a check up but he’s apprehensive. The visit goes smoothly, nothing out of the ordinary happens except that as Poirot is leaving, he sees a middle-aged woman arrive at the surgery. As she steps from her taxi, she catches her shoe & the buckle is torn off. Poirot politely picks up the buckle & hands it to her. He is amazed to hear from Chief Inspector Japp that, just hours after Poirot’s visit, Mr Morley has been found shot dead & it appears to be suicide.\nPoirot is suspicious. Mr Morley seemed perfectly normal & untroubled & there seems no motive for suicide until one of his patients, Mr Amberiotis, dies suddenly of an overdose of the anaesthetic drug administered by Mr Morley. Was it remorse at making such a terrible mistake that led to the dentist committing suicide? Then, another patient, Miss Sainsbury Seale (she of the buckled shoes), disappears after a visit from Poirot & Japp. Poirot’s investigations will involve everyone who was in Mr Morley’s house that day – Alfred, the page boy who can’t remember anyone’s name correctly; his assistant, Gladys Nevill, who should have been at work that day but was mysteriously called away to visit a sick aunt who is perfectly healthy; Gladys’s unsatisfactory young man, Frank Carter; Howard Raikes, a young American who left the surgery waiting room without keeping his appointment; Mr Morley’s partner, the alcoholic Irishman Reilly; Mr Morley’s sister, Georgina, & her maid, Agnes, in the flat above the surgery; financier Alistair Blunt (whose niece, Jane, is in love with Raikes) & the mysterious Mr Barnes who hints to Poirot about espionage. What could connect this disparate group of people & why was Mr Morley murdered?\nThis is a classic Christie plot with red herrings galore & some quite subtle misdirection. I had always thought of Christie as quite a bloodless writer (in the sense of not dwelling on the physical details of her corpses) but there’s a very gruesome scene where a decomposing body is found that was startling. There’s also humour in the reaction of people to Poirot & the way he takes advantage of their rudeness or dismissal of him as a “bloody foreigner”.\nI haven’t read any Agatha Christie for years. I read all her novels when I was a teenager – like many people, her books were my introduction to detective fiction. There have been a couple of recent blog posts about audio books (on Christine Poulson’s blog & here at Bridget’s blog A New Look Through Old Eyes) the comments have been full of great recommendations. Christine mentioned Hugh Fraser’s narration of the Poirot audio books &, as I always enjoyed his portrayal of Captain Hastings in the David Suchet series, I thought I’d try a Christie again after many years.\nI loved it. It was the perfect bedtime audio book & I thought Hugh Fraser did a great job. I especially liked his Inspector Japp, he did an excellent imitation of Philip Jackson who played Japp in the series. His Poirot was very subtle, the accent not too overpowering. I’ve put some more Christies into my Audible wishlist. I know that her golden period is considered to be the 1930s-1950s & I’ve avoided any where I can remember the solutions. I’ve chosen After the Funeral, The Hollow, Taken at the Flood, Dumb Witness, The ABC Murders & Hickory Dickory Dock. Any other classic Christies I should try? I’ve just checked my Poirot DVDs & I have the Suchet version of One, Two, Buckle my Shoe so I may have to have a look & see if they made any major changes to the plot. Lovely way to spend the afternoon. By the way, does anyone have a favourite narrator for the Miss Marple books? I see that most of them are read by Joan Hickson or Stephanie Cole, both of whom I imagine would be perfect. I’ve just listened to Stephanie Cole reading the sample of Sleeping Murder & she has Gwenda’s New Zealand accent just right so that’s a good sign. Then, there’s The Moving Finger read by Richard E Grant, another favourite voice.\nThe Uninvited – Dorothy Macardle\nJanuary 26, 2017 / preferreading\t/ 11 Comments\nRoddy Fitzgerald is a writer & critic, living in London with his sister, Pamela, who has been nursing their father & is mentally & physically worn out. The Fitzgeralds are tired of London life & are on the lookout for a place in the country. On a road trip, they discover Cliff End, a remote, slightly dilapidated but beautiful Georgian house on the coast in Devon. Pamela falls in love immediately & can see the possibilities while Roddy doesn’t think they can afford to buy it. Surprisingly, the owner, Commander Brooke, agrees to sell it for a nominal price, leaving the Fitzgeralds to pay for renovations. The Commander, a gruff man, seems uneasy about the house but says little about its history. He lives with his orphaned granddaughter, Stella, who has led a sheltered life at boarding school. Stella lived at Cliff End as a young child until the tragic death of her mother, Mary, who fell from the cliff. Her father, the artist Llewellyn Meredith, left England & the Commander cared for Stella with the help of Mary’s friend, Miss Holloway. Mary’s death combined with the scandal of Meredith’s relationship with his Spanish model, Carmel, may account for the Commander’s dislike of the house but local rumour whispers of the house being haunted.\nPamela begins the renovations with local help & Roddy winds up their London life. He plans to write a book but soon begins a play. Lizzie Flynn, the Fitzgerald’s Irish housekeeper, completes the household. Lizzie soon picks up the local gossip & her cat, Whiskey, refuses to go upstairs. Stella is fascinated with the house & the Fitzgeralds are keen to invite her but her grandfather refuses absolutely, without reason, to allow the friendship to develop. Stella does visit the house & the manifestations seem to be stimulated by her presence. Stella’s reveres the mother she can barely remember but the spirit in the house seems to be both loving & vengeful. Is it trying to protect Stella or harm her? However much Roddy & Pamela love the house, there’s an unpleasant atmosphere in some of the rooms. Sobbing in the night & patches of intense cold lead to more frightening manifestations.\nMy hand groped, trembling, for the light switch; I turned it on and ran bare-foot downstairs. everything was as we had left it: a white cloth, thrown over the laden table, made it like a bier; the nursery was empty, the curtains closed; face powder strewed the dressing table; the scent of mimosa lingered, potent still.\nI leaned against the wall, waiting for my heart to recover its natural beat, but a cold shivering had taken me and I longed for my own room. I turned the lights out and tried to go upstairs.\nI could not do it; I trembled at the knees and shuddered convulsively, sick with the chill that seemed to shrink the flesh on my bones and wrinkle my skin.My breast was hollow and a breath blew over my heart. If I had not clung to the newel-post, fighting, I would have panicked; I would have shouted for Max or pulled the front door open and torn out of the house. I thought something was coming down the stairs.\nThe Uninvited is a genuinely creepy tale of ghosts & the influence that the past can have on the present. The familiar tropes of the ghost story – the remote, abandoned house, the noises in the night, patches of unexplained cold, the cat who refuses to go into certain rooms – are there but very much grounded in a domestic story of renovating a house, making a home. Roddy’s growing love for Stella is protective but his desire to rescue her from whatever is haunting the house is combined with a recognition that she is her own person. She has been stifled by her grandfather & by the image of the saintly Mary, encouraged by the sinister Miss Holloway (whose obsession with Mary reminded me of Mrs Danvers) as well as the locals. The Commander’s desire to root out any influence from Stella’s artistic, immoral father is almost pathological.\n“She is her father’s daughter. She remembers him; that is the trouble. … She resembles him physically. The influence of that strain in her is so potent that it has been my life’s aim to break it down. God knows, I’ve left nothing undone! When Mary died I retired from the navy and dedicated myself to that purpose – to make Mary’s child the woman Mary would have wished her to be. I paid an exorbitant salary to Mary’s confidential nurse; I surrounded Stella with Mary’s pictures, gave her Mary’s books, sent her to the same school. It was a sacrifice: I missed her. But when she returned home a year ago I was pleased. She would always be without her mother’s grace, charm, beauty, but she was good. She was serious; she carried out her duties conscientiously; she continued her studies under my direction. I planned to take her abroad.”\nTo combat this stifling atmosphere becomes the goal of both Roddy & Pamela. In the course of this struggle for Stella’s future happiness, they are fighting not only her stubborn grandfather but also the uninvited inhabitants of Cliff End. Their determination to win through & release Stella from the ties of the past leads to a truly exciting climax.\nThe Uninvited was made into what is considered one of the best supernatural movies ever made, one of the first to treat ghosts seriously & not just as comic relief. Starring Ray Milland, Ruth Hussey, Donald Crisp (one of my favourite character actors) & Gail Russell as Stella, it has a screenplay by Dodie Smith (of I Capture the Castle & Look Back with Love fame). I watched the movie first & it was very close to the book. The friends who visit the Fitzgeralds, Roddy’s play writing & most of the locals are left out but that just heightens the solitary atmosphere of the house & the supernatural manifestations. The Irishness is also almost completely removed. Macardle was an Irish writer, very active in the Republican movement, & much is made of the Irishness of the Fitzgeralds in the book. Lizzie’s Catholicism is very potent & more than just peasant superstition (which it tends to be in the movie) & the local priest, Father Anson, has a greater role.\nThe lovely new edition I read is part of Irish publisher Tramp Press‘s Recovered Voices series (I reviewed the first of the series, A Struggle for Fame by Charlotte Riddell, a couple of years ago). It’s a beautifully produced book with French flaps & an informative introduction by Luke Gibbons.\nBecause of the Lockwoods – Dorothy Whipple\nJanuary 10, 2017 January 9, 2017 / preferreading\t/ 11 Comments\nHarriet Evans, in her Preface to this edition of Because of the Lockwoods, writes of the “readability factor” in Dorothy Whipple’s work & speculates that she is not better known & valued as a novelist because her books are just so satisfying to read that critics think she can’t be writing “real literature“. Well, I can testify to the unputdownability of her work. It was a very hot day last Saturday & I sat down at about 11am with a glass of iced tea & Because of the Lockwoods . I was at about p130 & I finished the book that evening. Apart from necessary breaks for more iced tea, lunch & opening the door to the cats & trying to convince them that they should stay inside, I read over 300pp in a day. I can’t remember the last time I did that. I kept planning to stop but then “I’ll read just one more chapter. I must find out how Thea gets on at the Pensionnat or whether Martin will accept the dress clothes from Mr Lockwood or will Oliver’s plans for Molly work out?”. In the end I just forgot about the heat & anything else I should have been doing & raced on to the end of a very satisfying novel.\nThe Hunters & the Lockwoods are neighbours. Richard Hunter’s early death leaves his widow at a loss, emotionally & financially, & she eagerly clutches at the idea that William Lockwood will step in & help her with her finances even though he does this with a very bad grace. Money is going to be tight & Mrs Hunter has three children to bring up so they must sell their house on the pleasant outskirts of Aldworth, a Northern manufacturing town. The house they buy in Byron Place is cramped & inconvenient. The neighbourhood is not what the Hunters have been used to & Mrs Hunter struggles on, trying to make ends meet, keeping her distance from the neighbours. The Hunters are patronised by the Lockwoods, expected to be grateful for invitations to Christmas parties. Mrs Hunter is an ineffectual woman, pathetically grateful for Mrs Lockwood’s cast-off clothing & completely unable to reassess her circumstances & pull herself out of the slump she went into at her husband’s death.\nMolly & Martin Hunter are forced to leave school early. Mrs Lockwood finds work for Molly as a governess & Martin, who longs to be a doctor, ends up as a bank clerk. Neither are suited for these jobs but they seem unable to change their circumstances. Thea, the youngest of the Hunter children is a different proposition altogether. Thea resents the Lockwoods & their unwilling patronage. She endured humiliating visits to Mr Lockwood’s office as a child, watched his contemptuous dismissal of her mother & suffered through the torments of social occasions with the monstrously self-satisfied twins Bea & Muriel Lockwood. She manages to stay on at school, convinces her mother to allow her to go to France as an au pair for a year (unfortunately to the same pensionnat as the Lockwoods) &, when that ends disastrously, is the catalyst for the turn around in the family fortunes that comes after much heartache & misery.\nHer mother, Molly and Martin wrote every week, mostly to say they really had no news. Their letters seemed to be both wistful and flat. Now that she was at a distance from her family, with only their letters to represent them, she noticed a factor common to all three: a lack of interest in what they were doing, in the way they had to spend their lives. Her mother wasn’t interested in housework, Molly wasn’t interested in governessing, Martin wasn’t interested in the bank. Thea was shocked to make this discovery. Not only was it a waste of life, but she wondered, too, if it was a fault inherent in the family. With anxiety, she examined herself to see if it was in her as well. But though she had to admit to frequent dissatisfaction, resentment, indignation, she didn’t think she could be accused of lack of interest.\nThea is the life force in the Hunter family but it’s Oliver Reade who really makes change a reality through sheer energy & will. When the Reades move into Byron Place they see it as a step up from Gas Street where they had lived in poverty. Oliver’s hard work has taken his mother & sister to a respectable home. The difference in the two families is as simple as their attitude to Byron Place. For the Hunters, it’s a humiliating drop in social status & Mrs Hunter’s pretensions to gentility prevent her from becoming part of the neighbourhood. She’s lonely & her children are unhappy in their uncongenial jobs. For the Reades, it’s an upward move. Oliver pursues Thea & is undeterred by her cold indifference. His attempts to become friends are rejected but he gradually becomes a friend of the family, helping Molly & Martin to eventually break free of the inertia they seem unable to overcome. His attempts to better himself, attending night school & taking elocution lessons are endearing rather than comic & his steadfast love for Thea is very touching. Oliver is successful despite his origins & the Hunter’s superior social class is no help to them without the money to keep up the lifestyle they once had. Eventually Oliver is the catalyst for the tremendous & very satisfying conclusion to the novel when the Lockwoods & the Hunters get their just desserts.\nI loved everything about this book. The first sentences set the tone for the relationship between the two families. “Mrs Lockwood decided to invite Mrs Hunter and her children to Oakfield for New Year’s Eve. It would be one way of getting the food eaten up. There was always so much of it during Christmas week, thought Mrs Lockwood with a sense of repletion.” Mrs Lockwood is skewered in those few sentences – her condescension, her canny thrift, her self-satisfaction in her own charity. Who are these Hunters who are to be condescended to? Immediately the reader wants to know & the New Year’s Eve party is so awful that we can’t wait to discover how the Hunters (whose side we’re immediately on) found themselves in such a position. We know from the beginning that Mr Lockwood has indulged in a shady bit of subterfuge to get hold of a paddock adjoining the Hunter’s house that he has always coveted. Part of the reason why we race through the novel is to see just how that dishonesty will be revealed & in what circumstances. Along the way though, we lose sight of it because we’re so involved in Thea’s romance with a young man in Villeneuve, a provincial French town where manners haven’t changed since the 19th century; Martin being taken up by the Lockwoods as a presentable young man to squire the girls around & then secretly falling in love with the youngest daughter, Clare; Molly blossoming when she finds work that suits her; Angela Harvey, a friend of the Lockwoods, defying convention by planning a career on the stage.\nThank goodness Persephone Books have reprinted nearly all Whipple’s novels & short stories. The rediscovery of Dorothy Whipple is emblematic of everything that Nicola Beauman has tried to do since Persephone was founded in 1999. Whipple’s Someone at a Distance was one of the first three Persephones & I can still remember the sheer joy I felt when I realised that there were authors like Whipple, Susan Glaspell, Dorothy Canfield Fisher & Marghanita Laski that I had never heard of but could now read. The beauty of the books as objects just added to my excitement. Harriet Evans’ Preface to this edition of Because of the Lockwoods is a passionate rallying cry for Dorothy Whipple & her place in 20th century fiction. Evans wants Whipple to be up there with Barbara Pym & Georgette Heyer as rediscovered & reclaimed authors now taken seriously by critics as well as fans. The same Preface could be written for all the authors I mentioned above & many others who have been reprinted by Persephone to the delight of lovers of absorbing novels, short stories, memoirs & diaries. I’m so pleased that this was the first book I finished this year. It’s a wonderful start to my year of reading from my tbr shelves & getting back to the books, the authors & the imprints that I’ve neglected over the past few years.\nThe Poisoned Chocolates Case – Anthony Berkeley\nJanuary 5, 2017 January 2, 2017 / preferreading\t/ 10 Comments\nAt a meeting of the Crimes Circle, convenor Roger Sheringham has a surprise for his fellow club members. He has invited Chief Inspector Moresby to outline the circumstances of an unsolved murder to the Circle with the idea that the members of the Circle do some investigating of their own. Scotland Yard have run out of ideas & are left with the unsatisfying theory that the murder was committed by a lunatic. Sheringham believes that, with the facts laid out as known by the police, the solution can be found & who better to put their minds to the task than the members of the Crimes Circle, six people who have passed the stringent conditions of membership.\nJoan Bendix has been poisoned by liqueur chocolates laced with benzadrine, handed to her by her husband, Graham, who also fell ill after eating some of the sweets. However, it seems that Joan was not the intended victim. Graham had been given the chocolates at his club by Sir Eustace Pennefather. The box arrived in the post as a publicity stunt & Sir Eustace had been only too pleased to hand them on to Bendix who needed a box of chocolates for his wife in settlement of a bet they had made at the theatre the previous night. Sir Eustace is an unpleasant man with many enemies & it seems that Joan has been the victim of a tragic accident. The police have followed up the clues – the chocolates; the letter, written on the letterhead of the Mason’s, the confectioners; the wrapping paper – but every lead has become a dead end.\nThe members of the Circle – novelists Sheringham, Morton Harrogate Bradley & Alicia Dammers, QC Sir Charles Wildman, playwright Mrs Fielder-Flemming & Mr Ambrose Chitterick – take up the investigation with varying degrees of enthusiasm & confidence. Several of the group know the Bendixs & Sir Eustace. They sympathise with the Bendixs who seemed to be a very happy, prosperous couple. On the other hand, Sir Eustace was widely disliked, particularly for his predatory relationships with women. His wife was in the process of divorcing him & the circle of potential suspects for his murder would have been wide. The Circle have a week to formulate their theories & then they will reconvene to outline them & do their best to convince their fellows & Scotland Yard that they have cracked the case.\nThis is an immensely enjoyable & inventive story, rightly called one of the standout novels of the Golden Age of detective fiction. It began life as a short story & I may have read that at some stage as one of the theories sounded very familiar to me. Then again, it became such a famous book that I could have read another mystery using one of these ideas. Berkeley was certainly profligate with his ideas to use so many terrific plots in just one book because all the theories, as I was reading them, sounded more or less convincing. Even the outlining of the case so many times as each theory is explained didn’t pall because each person came to the case from a different angle & with such a range of motives from jealousy to gain to a lust for killing. The range of accused murderers also held some surprises with a final, satisfying twist as the murderer is revealed. I also enjoyed reading about the real-life cases that each member uses to reinforce his or her idea. This book really is a master class in writing sparkling fiction with humour & ingenuity.\nThis edition of The Poisoned Chocolates Case, reprinted as part of the immensely successful British Library Crime Classics series, also includes two additional solutions to the mystery. In the 1970s, Christianna Brand (best known for Green for Danger, one of my favourite mystery novels) wrote a new solution for a US edition of the novel. This is reprinted here for the first time along with yet another solution by Martin Edwards, consultant for the series & author of The Golden Age of Murder. Anthony Berkeley, who also published as Francis Iles, is probably the least well-known of the great Golden Age writers. He was a complicated man & Martin’s book is invaluable reading if you want to know more about him. Interestingly he had the idea for the Detection Club, a dining club for mystery writers that survives to this day, based on the Crimes Circle in this novel.\nIf you’re a fan of Golden Age mysteries, & haven’t yet read The Poisoned Chocolates Case, you’ve missed out on a treat. On a purely aesthetic level, the British Library have produced an attractive book with beautiful cover art based on a travel poster of the day. No wonder the Golden Age is popular again.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1124390"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7169787883758545,"wiki_prob":0.2830212116241455,"text":"Top Tutors In\nOUR Los Angeles, California TOP TUTORS\nClub Z! offers highly qualified, experienced tutors in Los Angeles, California to meet all of your tutoring and test preparation needs. Whether your child is struggling with math subjects such as algebra, geometry, and calculus or science subjects such as biology, chemistry, and physics, our experienced tutoring staff will help your child achieve their academic goals. On average students that are enrolled in Club Z! tutoring increase their grades by two full letters in as little as 60 days! Students that receive test preparation for the SAT see their scores increase by over 160 points and students that receive test preparation for the ACT see their score increase by four cumulative points. Our Los Angeles,California tutors work with students one-on-one in-home and online and can provide everything from homework help and test preparation, to building lifelong study skills or even learning a new language. Our online tutoring is offered on Club Z!’s proprietary platform. Our online platform is a two-way video chat where both student and tutor can interact in real time the same as they would with an in-home session. Your student and their tutor have access to our interactive whiteboard where they can work on problems together live.\nClub Z! Tutoring has been an industry leading tutoring company for more than 20 years and provides your student in Los Angeles, California with nothing but the most certified tutors and a personalized tutoring program tailored to your student’s specific academic needs. Our Los Angeles, California tutors are experts in their subject area and are carefully matched with students based on educational needs and preferences, using our proprietary “Z! Tutor Match” system. Many of our Los Angeles, California tutors are certified teachers, and all have successfully met our stringent qualification requirements. Also, our tutors are thoroughly screened, and background checked before hiring. With our “Z! Guarantee” you get the right tutor every time, guaranteed! Our talented tutors will help your student in Los Angeles, California get the grades he or she deserves at an affordable price. With options ranging from hour by hour tutoring to bundled hour packages, you control the frequency of tutoring to meet your child’s needs perfectly. Our proven programs help build self-confidence, and lead to better grades in the classroom and higher test scores on the SAT, ACT, and other standardized tests. Fill out the form or select your own Los Angeles, California tutor today!\nVivian W.\nMath, Science\nJessie P.\nMath, ACT Math, Actuarial Science, SAT Writing, SAT Math\nPeter J.\nACT Reading, English, Grammar, American History, Art History\nPhil L.\nEnglish, Test Preparation, Algebra 1, ACT Math, ACT Reading, Common Core, Elementary Math\nAli P.\nACT Reading, ACT English, Common Core, American History\nSydney C.\nMath, Science, English, Elementary Education, Test Preparation, History, Special Needs*, Computer, ACT Math, Actuarial Science, Algebra 1, Algebra 2, Calculus, Common Core, Discrete Math, Econometrics, Elementary Math, Financial Accounting, Finite Math, GED, Geometry, GMAT, GRE, Linear Algebra, Logic, Managerial Accounting, Microsoft Excel, Prealgebra, Precalculus, Probability, SAT Math, Statistics, Trigonometry, ACT Science, Anatomy, Anthropology, Archaeology, Astronomy, Biochemistry, Biology, Biostatistics, Chemical Engineering, Chemistry, Civil Engineering, Elementary Science, Genetics, Geology, Mechanical Engineering, Microbiology, Organic Chemistry, Philosophy, Physical Science, Physics, Physiology, PSAT, Psychology, Social Work, Sociology, ACT English, ACT Reading, English, Grammar, Literature, Proofreading, Public Speaking, Reading, SAT reading, SAT Writing, Vocabulary, Writing, ACT English, ACT Math, ACT Reading, ACT Science, AFOQT, ASVAB, Bar Exam, College Counseling, Common Core, COOP/HSPT, GED, GMAT, GRE, IELTS, ISEE, LSAT, MCAT, Regents, SAT Math, SAT reading, SAT Writing, TOEFL, USCIS, USMLE, Common Core, Elementary (k-6th), Elementary Math, Elementary Science, Grammar, Handwriting, Homeschool, Phonics, Reading, Spelling, Study Skills, Vocabulary, Writing, American History, Anthropology, Archaeology, Art History, Classics, Criminal Justice, European History, Geography, Government and Politics, Music History, Political Science, Religion, Social Studies, World History, ADHD, Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD), Dyslexia, Hard of Hearing, Adobe Flash, Adobe Illustrator, Adobe InDesign, Adobe Lightroom, Adobe Photoshop, Angular, Animation, ASP.NET, C, C#, C++, COBOL, Computer Engineering, Computer Gaming (game design), CSS, Desktop Publishing, DOS, Dreamweaver, Fortran, General Computer, GIS, Graphic Design, HTML, Java, JavaScript, jQuery, Linux, Mac, Mathematica, MATLAB, Microsoft Access, Microsoft Excel, Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft PowerPoint, Microsoft Publisher, Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Word, Computer Networking, Oracle, Pascal, Perl, PHP, Python, QuickBooks, R, Revit, Ruby, SAS, Sketchup, SolidWorks, SPSS, SQL, STATA, Swift, UNIX, video Production, Visual Basic, Web Design\nLuis F.\nScience, ACT Science, Elementary Science, Anthropology\nGeorge J.\nAlgebra 1, Probability, SAT Math, PSAT, Psychology, SAT Writing, TOEFL, USCIS, Elementary Math, ADHD, GIS, Graphic Design, HTML\nI absolutely love Club Z. They were great with my kids. Very personal and the fact that they come to your home is amazing! I have referred all my friends to Club Z!\nI have referred all my friends to Club Z!\nSabrina B\nThank you Club Z! for helping me raise my score 270 points! The most helpful strategies for me were the pretest self-motivation and exercises. I also found the visualization tactics for memorizing concepts and vocabulary extremely useful. I now routinely do this for tests in college.\nThank you Club Z!\nJody R, CA\nWe used Club Z for our son in order to help him improve his SAT scores. The results were outstanding. He was able to use the skills and the knowledge he acquired through Club Z to increase his scores to a level where he now qualifies for great scholarships. He could not have accomplished this without the phenomenal help of Club Z\nThank You Club Z\nRicky Kampf\nI was very pleased with the tutoring services of Club Z. I felt both tutors my 14 year old son worked with were well informed, enthusiastic, engaging and connected well with my son. They worked collaboratively with him to set goals and expectations. They were flexible as to which subject to work on for each session. They were also flexible with scheduling. Most importantly, they were genuinely concerned about my son's progress. I would highly recommend Club Z's services!\nMy son loved Club Z!\nMary Beth Fahey\nTOP TUTORS IN Los Angeles, California\nWhy We Help Students in Los Angeles, California Succeed\nLos Angeles is known by many names such as the City of Angels and La La Land to name a few, and it is the country’s second most populous city. L.A.’s eclectic range of city-living, natural wonders, sprawling film industry and surfer-friendly beaches attract a diverse population of over 10 million Angelenos.\nThe city’s surrounding area, Los Angeles County, is the largest county in the country. Some of the most popular locations in L.A. include famous names like Beverly Hills, Hollywood, Malibu, Santa Monica and Venice. Some of the most populous cities in L.A. county are Long Beach, Glendale, Santa Clarita, Lancaster, Palmdale, Pasadena and Inglewood. These cities are home to some of the highest-rated middle and high schools in California.\nThe Los Angeles Unified School District is California’s largest public school district and the second largest in the country, serving over 735,000 students and 26,000 teachers. Some of the district’s top public schools include Troy High School, Northwood High School, University High School and Oxford Academy. Charter schools are another popular option in L.A. county, with top schools such as Granada Hills Charter, High Tech Los Angeles, Palisades Charter High, New West Charter and Da Vinci Science. L.A.’s private schools are among the most exclusive in the country and offer the best chances of securing elite college admissions with schools such as The Archer School for Girls, Brentwood School, Carlthorp School, Harvard-Westlake School and Geffen Academy at UCLA.\nThe University of California, Los Angeles (known by most as UCLA), is one of California’s largest and most well-known public universities. Other top California universities in the area are University of Southern California (USC), Loyola Marymount University and California State University. California schools - especially universities in the L.A. area - have competitive admissions and require high test scores on the CAP, SAT and ACT. Attending your desired Los Angeles university or high school can be tough without excellent grades, test scores and well-rounded experiences. Tutoring can make all the difference in attending the school of your choice and helping students stand out during the admissions process.\nL.A.’s future moguls begin their journey with well-rounded experiences and by spending quality time expanding and engaging their interests. With the area’s rich culture, history, gorgeous beaches and major tourist attractions, Los Angeles County has a wealth of opportunities for growing minds.\nHotspots like Disneyland, Universal CityWalk Hollywood, Santa Monica Pier, Rodeo Drive, Sunset Boulevard, Grauman’s Chinese Theatre, Griffith Park, Getty Museum, the Hollywood sign, Santa Monica Pier and Hollywood’s Walk of Fame propel L.A.’s booming tourism industry to the tune of $35 billion annually.\nGriffith Park is located amidst the Santa Monica Mountains and covers over 4,310 acres of land. Established in 1896, and sometimes referred to as the Central Park of Los Angeles, Griffith Park is still the second-largest park in California and one of the largest in the nation. Popular attractions in Griffith Park include Griffith Observatory (a great viewing platform for the Hollywood Sign), Greek Theatre, Live Steamers Railroad Museum, L.A. Zoo and Travel Town Museum.\nSanta Monica Pier is not too far from the metro areas of the city of Los Angeles, and the nearby beaches and attractions have served locals and tourists for over 100 years. Pacific Park, located along the pier, is a family amusement park with an impressive solar powered ferris wheel, original 1920’s-style carousel hippodrome, aquarium, trapeze school and world-class restaurants.\nThe J. Paul Getty Museum, known by locals as the Getty, is an art museum tucked away on a hill above Sepulveda Pass and the I-405 highway. The Getty is known for its breathtaking views of the Brentwood area and an art collection that ranges from the Middle Ages to present day.\nL.A. is one of America’s biggest and brightest cities and its local sports teams echo that sentiment.Many of the major sports leagues have several teams from the same sport in L.A.. Overall, Los Angeles has eleven major league teams. From the Los Angeles Lakes and Los Angeles Clippers of the NBA, to the Rams and Chargers of the NFL, the Anaheim Ducks and Kings from the NHL, the Angels and Dodgers of the MLB, L.A. FC and L.A. Galaxy in MLS and the WNBA team Sparks - L.A. has no shortage of top-tier athletic entertainment.\nWith so much to do in the Los Angeles area, it can be hard to maintain focus. Club-Z! Tutoring will keep students on the right track with online or in-home tutoring with one-on-one, private instruction and test preparation.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1578659"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7420054078102112,"wiki_prob":0.2579945921897888,"text":"What a difference straight teeth can make! A great-looking smile can boost your self-confidence and have a positive impact on social and professional opportunities. Orthodontic treatment is the original smile makeover tool — and you will be happy to know that you're never too old to take advantage of it. But it isn't all about looks: Properly aligned teeth help you to bite, chew and even speak more effectively. They are also easier to clean, which helps keep your mouth free of tooth decay and gum disease.\nThe amazing thing about orthodontics is that it harnesses the body's natural ability to remodel its own tissue. With the application of light, constant force, orthodontic appliances gently reshape bone and move teeth into better positions. Some examples of these appliances are traditional metal braces, inconspicuous clear or tooth-colored braces, and clear aligners, a relatively new option for adults and teens.\nBite Problems and How to Fix Them\nOrthodontic treatment can resolve a number of bite problems, which often become evident by around age 7. These include underbite, crossbite or excessive overbite, where upper and lower teeth don't close in the proper position; open bite, where a space remains between top and bottom teeth when the jaws are closed; and crowding or excessive spacing, where teeth are spaced too close together or too far apart.\nTo correct bite problems, teeth need to be moved — but doing that isn't as hard as you might think! Teeth aren't fixed rigidly in their supporting bone; instead, they're held in place by a hammock-like structure called the periodontal ligament, which is very responsive to forces placed on the teeth. Orthodontic appliances move teeth by careful application of light, constant pressure. This force can be applied via metal wires that run through small brackets attached to the teeth (braces), or via the semi-rigid plastic of clear aligners.\nOrthodontics is for Children — and Adults\nHaving orthodontic treatment in childhood is ideal in order to take advantage of a youngster's natural growth processes to help move the teeth into proper alignment. Like the rest of the body, the teeth and jaws are now changing rapidly. So at this time it's possible (for example) to create more room for teeth in a crowded mouth by using a “palatal expander” to rapidly widen the upper jaw. This phase of growth modification can shorten overall treatment time and ensure the best result if additional orthodontic appliances are needed.\nBut remember, healthy teeth can be moved at any age, so you've never “missed the boat” for orthodontic treatment. In fact, about one in five of today's orthodontic patients is an adult. Several new technological developments — including tooth-colored ceramic braces, clear aligners and invisible lingual braces — have made orthodontic appliances less evident, and enhanced the treatment experience for grown-ups. Before treatment, adults are carefully examined for signs of periodontal (gum) disease, which will be brought under control before treatment begins.\nTypes of Orthodontic Appliances\nWhen you imagine someone wearing braces, you probably picture small metal brackets bonded to the front of the teeth, with a thin wire running through them. This time-tested style remains very popular — but it's no longer the only option. Clear braces use brackets made of ceramic or plastic which, except for the slim archwire, are hardly visible. Lingual braces are just like traditional metal braces — except they're bonded to the back of your teeth (the tongue side) so that no one can see them.\nRemovable clear aligners are an alternative to fixed orthodontic appliances. They consist of a series of clear plastic “trays” that fit over your teeth exactly; each one moves your teeth a little bit, until they are in the proper position. Whether fixed or removable, each type of appliance may have advantages or disadvantages in particular situations. After a complete examination, the best treatment options for you will be discussed.\nRetention & Post Orthodontic Care\nOnce your orthodontic treatment is completed, it's extremely important to wear a retainer as directed. That's because teeth naturally tend to drift back to their original locations — which is the last thing you want after you've gone to the trouble of straightening them! Wearing a retainer holds your teeth in their new position long enough for new bone and ligament to re-form around them, and helps keep your gorgeous new smile looking good for a lifetime.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1118575"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6986398696899414,"wiki_prob":0.6986398696899414,"text":"Home Biography Elizabeth Vargas\nElizabeth Vargas Biography\nUpdated On 27 May, 2015 Published On 27 May, 2015\nFacts of Elizabeth Vargas\nElizabeth Anne Vargas\nPaterson, New Jersey\n3 million dollar\nMarc Cohn (m. 2002)\nALMA Award for Outstanding Host in a National Information Program\n20/20 Since 1978\nRelationship short Statistics of Elizabeth Vargas\nWhat is Elizabeth Vargas marital status ? ( married,single, in relation or divorce):\nHow many children does Elizabeth Vargas have ? (name):\nIs Elizabeth Vargas having any relationship affair ?:\nIs Elizabeth Vargas Lesbian ?\nAn American television journalist currently working at ABC channel and is an anchor of news magazine 20/20. Previously, she was an anchor of World News Tonight. She is a daughter of Rafael \"Ralf\" Vargas and Anne Vargas. She has graduated with bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Missouri. She debuted as reporter/anchor for NBC affiliate KOMU-TV. She instantly rose into fame after she became weekend anchor of World News Tonight. She became the first woman to anchor in a network evening newscast in the U.S.\nThere was once a rumor that she went to rehab for alcoholism for two months. About her personal life, she is already married to her lover whom she dated for three years. After more than a decade of their marriage, they filed for divorce. It is said that her alcoholic behavior was the reason behind their breakup. She had two step children from her husband's first marriage. She has two children of her own from him.\nElizabeth Vargas Affairs\nFirst Affair with Michael Douglas\nHe is professionally an actor. They were romantically linked until he started to date another girl named Maureen Dowd.\nSecond Affair with Tico Torres\nThey were reported to be dating when he broke up with his former lover. But the relationship didn't last long.\nElizabeth Vargas Married\nFirst Marriage with Marc Cohn\nMarried date: July, 20, 2002 Divorce\nOccupationally, he is a singer-songwriter. They came to know each other from their common friend named Andre Agassi at the 1999 U.S. Open. After dating for some time, they got married. However, their relation did not last long which is suspected to be because of her alcoholism.\nElizabeth Vargas Children\nSON : Zachary Raphael\nFather: Marc Cohn\nHe is very cute and adorable boy.When he was born he weighed 7 lbs. 13 oz.\nSON : Samuel Wyatt Cohn\nHe is the youngest child of the family. When he was born he weighed 7 lbs, 9 oz.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line238448"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7918782830238342,"wiki_prob":0.7918782830238342,"text":"IIHS Homepage\nUrban Lens 2018\nAbout IIHS\nOn Practice\nNo Ângulo das Ruas (Around Corners)\nInes Alves\nLourenço Marques and Maputo, two cities separated by time, that occupied the same space. But the dimensions of one get mixed up with the past events of the other. It’s been 41 years since João, a Portuguese man, the father of the director, left Mozambique. This was one year after the country became independent from Portugal.\nIn this film the director travels to Maputo, the capital, former Lourenço Marques, for the first time, bringing her father’s memories and the desire to meet the people that live in this post-colonial city today.\nDirector’s Bio\nInês was born in Portugal (1987). She holds an international Master’s degree in Cultural Narratives and a second Master in Documentary Film from University of the Arts London (Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation’s Scholarship). Inês has been involved in several artistic, cultural and pedagogic projects. She is a member of Gato Aleatório Colective based in Lisbon, with whom she organizes MOVIMENTO: laboratory and exhibition of collaborative cinema.\nRun Time 30 mins\nLanguage Portuguese\nCountry Mozambique\nYear of Production 2018\nLife in Gray Ek Inquilab Aur Aaya\nAnica Mann-Kapur\nAnica Mann-Kapur is a consultant with Tata Trusts and the India Country Team Lead for Global Xplorer. She was a 2017 YES Global Institute Fellow, and as a cultural practitioner who engages in antiquities through art history, she was also an Art Advisor for Delhi Art Gallery in 2016. In addition to writing extensively about arts and culture, she was a research associate at Jindal School of Liberal Arts and Humanities as well as a researcher at Kyoto University.\nParmesh Shahani\nParmesh Shahani is the head of the award winning Godrej India Culture Lab, and the author of the book Gay Bombay: Globalization, Love and (Be)Longing in Contemporary India (Sage Publications, 2008). He is a TED Senior Fellow, a Yale World Fellow, and a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader.\nJasmine Lovely George\nJasmine Lovely George is a Tedx speaker, lawyer, and a sexual and reproductive health advocate from India. She has founded Hidden Pockets, a community interest startup working on access to sexual and reproductive health in cities. She is passionate about changing technology spaces and making them more inclusive for people of all genders. She is also the member of RESURJ – a transnational feminist collective.\nAromar Revi\nAromar Revi is the founding Director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlements, a global expert on Sustainable Development; and Co-Chair of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, from where he helped lead a successful campaign for an urban Sustainable Development Goal (SDG 11) as part of the UN’s 2030 development agenda. He is also member of the Managing Board of Cities Alliance the global partnership for sustainable cities and urban poverty reduction and UNISDR’ Global Assessment of Risk. Aromar is one of the world’s leading experts on global environmental change, especially climate change. He is a Coordinating Lead Author of the 2018 IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C that assesses the feasibility of mitigation and adaptation options and defines potential implementation pathways and investment needs to implement the Paris Climate Agreement.\nSudharak Olwe\nSudharak Olwe has been a Mumbai based photojournalist since 1988 and has worked as a press photographer with some of the leading newspapers in India. His photography captures resilience, courage and change in both rural and urban communities across the country. His work has been exhibited in Mumbai, Delhi, Malmo (Sweden), Lisbon, Amsterdam, Los Angeles, Washington and Dhaka. Apart from photographs, Olwe has also received the Padma Shri in 2016 for his documentaries on maternal and child mortality. Currently, he is the Photo Editor for the country’s most widely read Marathi newspaper, Lokmat. (http://www.sudharakolwe.com/)\nRajula Shah\nRajula Shah is a Visual artist, Poet and Filmmaker. After dropping out from the Fine Arts faculty Baroda, and completing a Masters in English Literature, she studied filmmaking at FTII, Pune specializing in Film Direction. Her work is located in the interstice of Poetry, Cinema and Anthropology. A keen interest in the indigenous knowledge systems, its practitioners and the changing practices thereof form the core of her study; her practice emerges through a close collaboration with people, their histories and environments.\nShe has been producing/ directing / writing/ editing & photographing films for well over a decade and continues to explore boundaries of fiction/non-fiction, photography, video essay, digital art and multi media installation. With her recent work, Pilgrimage in Nomad’s land she explores the emergent domain of Interactive Trans-media. It can be watched online @ www.nomadsfilmschool.com\nSameera Jain\nSameera Jain is a filmmaker and editor, and has worked for over 30 years in the arena of film and video. Sameera has edited several award-winning documentaries and some fiction feature films. Her directorial ventures “Portraits of Belonging”, “Born at Home” and “Mera Apna Sheher (My Own City)” have been acknowledged for cinematic excellence at national and international festivals. Sameera has been on film juries and participated in curriculum formulation at various institutions. She has been mentoring film students and filmmakers at diverse platforms and has been invited to teach filmmaking at many places, including her alma mater FTII. She has conceptualized, and is Course Director of the Creative Documentary course at SACAC (Sri Aurobindo Centre for Arts and Communication) in New Delhi.\nRanjani Mazumdar\nRanjani Mazumdar is Professor of Cinema Studies at the School of Arts & Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University. Her publications focus on urban cultures, popular cinema, gender and the cinematic city. She is the author of Bombay Cinema: An Archive of the City (2007) and co-editor with Neepa Majumdar of the forthcoming Wiley Blackwell Companion to Indian Cinema. She has also worked as a documentary filmmaker and her productions include Delhi Diary 2001 and The Power of the Image (Co-Directed). Her current research focuses on globalisation and film culture, and the intersection of technology, travel, design and colour in 1960s Bombay Cinema.\nRitesh Uttamchandani\nRitesh began his journey as a photographer watching his elder sister take photos of his family but sadly, he didn’t register it back then and began his journey as a professional in 2004 as an intern at the Indian Express. Inspired by the work of Reza Deghati, David Alan Harvey and of course, the usual suspects, Henri Cartier Bresson, Eugene Smith etc, he moved over to the Hindustan times and finally the OPEN Magazine where he worked for seven years before stepping into the fascinating and often scary world of freelance.\nIn his decade-long experience as a photojournalist, he has reported and documented some of the major events of national and international importance in the Indian subcontinent and has recently self-published his first photo book, The Red Cat and Other Stories, which looks at the city of Bombay through the lens of a fable his mother used to narrate to him when he was a child. The book, equal parts travelogue and journalism, is a tribute to the beauty in the mundane.\nRatheesh Radhakrishnan\nRatheesh Radhakrishnan teaches at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Bombay, Mumbai. He completed his PhD from the Centre for the Study of Culture and Society (Bangalore), and was a Post-Doctoral Fellow with the Chao Centre for Asian Studies, Rice University (Houston, USA). While at Rice University, he founded and curated TITLES: A Festival of Experimental Films from India (2011- 2014). He is currently part of the India programming team of MAMI – Mumbai Film Festival. His research on Malayalam cinema has appeared in a variety of journals and other publications, both in English and in Malayalam.\nJabeen Merchant\nJabeen Merchant is a film practitioner with a wide and varied experience within the independent filmmaking community as well as the mainstream film industry. She is well known for her work editing and co-scripting a number of internationally celebrated documentaries in collaboration with some of India’s best filmmakers. Side by side, she has edited a range of fiction feature films, including the critically acclaimed ‘Anaarkali of Aarah’; commercially successful thrillers like ‘NH10’ and ‘Manorama Six Feet Under’; the off-beat comedy ‘The President Is Coming’; art-house films such as ‘Kadvi Hawa’ and the soon to be released ‘The Sweet Requiem’. Apart from editing films, she teaches, consults on scripts and occasionally writes on cinema.\nSwati Dandekar\nSwati Dandekar is a film practitioner with a special interest in creating visual narratives of the living history around her; of people, places, ideas, traditions and practices. Her most recent work is “Neeli Raag”, a feature length documentary on the natural dye indigo, and the few remaining craftsmen who still work with it.\nHer earlier work includes a series of essay films that look at urban India, in particular at the changes taking place in small towns and cities, and explore the relationship between land, people, resources and the institutions that govern them. She was also closely involved in documenting best practices in elementary education, as well as designing and making radio and video programmes for rural school children. As part of Vikalp, Swati has been involved in screening documentary films in the city for over 10 years.\nSwati teaches film at the Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore.\nAmit Mahanti\nAmit Mahanti is a filmmaker, cameraperson and editor, who has worked on films and video installations that explore questions of ecological transformation, culture and politics. His films include ML 05 B 6055 (2008), Malegaon Times (2012), Every Time You Tell A Story (2015) and Scratches on Stone (2017).\nHe has also been selected for art/film residency programs at Khoj Studios, New Delhi; Parco Arte Vivente Experimental Centre of Contemporary Art, Turin; Kran Film, Brussels and Centre for Contemporary Art, Ujazdowski, Warsaw. He was also a recipient of the Charles Wallace India Trust Short-term Fellowship, 2016.\nSushma Veerappa\nAfter a Post-graduate diploma in Social Communications Media from Sophia Polytechnic, Mumbai, Sushma joined the CIEDS Collective Here, she conceived and executed a film education programme for school children. Post this experience, she worked as Assistant Director and Scriptwriter with filmmaker M.S.Sathyu for 4 years. She began making documentaries in 1998.\nAs Producer / Director, her focus has been on documenting the work of grass root organizations working in Karnataka’s remote villages. Her films have been used as communication tools by these organizations to further engage with the people they work with. Her work encompasses a wide spectrum – about people’s co-operatives, leadership imaging as participatory research tool, training modules for blue collar workers, issues relating to water, women and violence.\nHer concerns with the city in transition led her to produce and direct her first independent documentary WHEN SHANKAR NAG COMES ASKING. Her last short film SHEELA GOWDA AT BATTARAHALLI CORNER was screened at the 13th IAWRT (International Association of Women in Film and Television) Festival. Along with 4 other filmmakers, Sushma is part of Vikalp Bengaluru, a group which has been screening documentaries in the city since 2005.\nSabari Pandian\nSabari Pandian works as an assistant director in documentary films. Some of the films that he has assisted on are ‘Nostalgia for the future’ and ‘Electric Shadows: Journeys In Image-making’. Based in Bombay he also loves to travel and take photographs. He is currently pursuing his Bachelor of Science in Information Technology from Mumbai University. An avid film buff, Sabari loves being part of film festivals and has provided technical support for film festivals such as Urban Lens Film Festival (2016) and the IAWRT Asian Women’s Film Festival (2017).\nKunal Deshpande\nKunal Deshpande is an alumnus of the Srishti School of Art Design and Technology, Bangalore. His diploma film, Daryache Raje (Kings of the Sea) was selected and screened at the 6th Kirloskar Vasundhara Environmental Film Festival.\nHe has since worked as a cinematographer, director and editor on projects ranging from documentaries on the water resources and climate adaptation practices in the north-east, to lifestyle exploration films in Kutch, and people-oriented films. He has worked on feature films like Ferrari Ki Sawaari, on television shows and various other projects.\nKunal also worked at the IIHS where he was part of the Media Lab, creating a variety of audio visual outputs for teams and projects. He worked on videos on the process of campus development, on climate change adaptation, and on festivals such as the Urban Lens film festival and Cityscripts. He is now engaged with IIHS in the capacity of an External Consultant.\nHe is currently producing and directing SupperClub India, a food and travel web series, as well as producing videos for several corporate clients and brands.\nTejInder Singh\nTejInder, is an independent photographer and researcher. He is also senior urban fellow at Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore. He has had a range of work experiences from that of a trainee architect to managing electoral campaigns, participating in Model UN conferences, and documenting and archiving contemporary issues. He has photo documented Gaurav Gagoi’s campaign for Assam assembly elections, Occupy UGC movement, Swaraj Abhiyaan’s Jai Kisan Andolon, City Scripts – The IIHS Urban Writing Festival, 2017 IAWRT Asian Women’s Film Festival, Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival Word to Screen Bootcamp and many more conferences and events across India. His work on Ennore Creek Power Plant has been published by Scroll.in and Urbanisation – a SAGE journal.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1192094"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9872693419456482,"wiki_prob":0.9872693419456482,"text":"Home»A FEATURED STORY»Susan Gibson still making a name for herself after ‘Wide Open Spaces’\nA FEATURED STORY/ALL EVENTS/GREAT FALLS Performances/PERFORMING ARTS\nSusan Gibson still making a name for herself after ‘Wide Open Spaces’\nJake Sorich / January 28, 2015 /\t0\t/\t1k\nSusan Gibson\nMany musicians go their entire careers searching for that one hit, that one piece of music that strikes a cord and connects with millions of people across the world. Some are lucky enough to do it once or twice after years of toiling in anonymity. Some never get that chance.\nBut, what happens when an artist catches that lightning in a bottle at the very start of his or her career?\nSuch was the case for Susan Gibson, a Grammy-winning singer/songwriter in Texas with lots of ties to the Treasure State.\nGibson is best known for writing the hit Dixie Chicks song “Wide Open Spaces.”\nAfter writing the song in 1993, Gibson had it produced by Lloyd Maines, father of the new lead singer for the Dixie Chicks in the mid 90s, Natalie Maines.\nGibson returns to Montana on Friday to play a free show at the Mighty Mo Brewery at 5 p.m. She’s also playing a private house event this weekend, which was what allowed her to come play a free public show, also.\nEven if she never reaches that level of success again commercially, Gibson said in an interview with Big Sky State Buzz that she’ll be forever grateful for the doors that “Wide Open Spaces” opened for her.\nAfter coming out on July 28, 1998, the song hit No. 1 on the U.S. Country Singles chart, where it stayed there for four weeks.\nIt was named the Country Music Association Awards Single of the Year in 1999 and won Gibson the American Songwriter Professional Country Songwriter of the Year award in early 2000.\n“I had been writing songs since I was going to school at the University of Montana right at the beginning of my career, but it wasn’t really even a career yet, just an expensive hobby,” Gibson said. “(Wide Open Spaces) put me on the map as a songwriter and that affirmation is really kind of indescribable because here we are, 17 or 18 years after that song was No. 1 in on the country music charts and I’m still getting to talk about that song and the doors it opened for me. One of those doors, for example, was the ability to work with some pretty cool folks.”\nWhile Gibson’s career hasn’t reached that level of mass appeal since then, to say she hasn’t written anything as authentic or as high-quality would be a mistake.\nThe Second Hand (2014) by Susan Gibson\nSince 2003 Gibson’s release four solo albums, “Chin Up” (2003), “Outerspace” (2005), “New Dog, Old Tricks” (2008) and 2011’s “Tight Rope.” She also released an album of live tracks titled “The Second Hand” last year.\nGibson plays acoustic country with folk elements. She said most of songs tell a story that touches on some kind of thought or feeling that she had while writing it.\n“I love telling stories and about kind of how I got to the song or how the song got to me,” she said.\nBeing a songwriter, she said that immediately after “Wide Open Spaces,” she felt that pressure to produce another hit that was just as popular, if not more so.\nShe said eventually she came to the realization that what mattered to her more was writing songs that resonated with her and her audiences rather than the millions of people who only knew her from that single track she wrote as a college kid.\n“I had to go through a period where I would try not writing ‘Wide Open Spaces’ again and just let every that song be exactly what it was,” she said. “Because when I wrote that song, I wasn’t a songwriter, I was a college student who played open mics once and a while, and really I hope I’m always getting better as a writer.\n“The fact that I had that song right out of the gates by no means means it’s my best song I’ve ever written. As I’ve grown, too, I think my goal is now to have, you know, 20 years from now, a body of work that I still love to sing that still resonates with people, that is timeless in a way.”\nGibson added that as long as she has new stuff to perform to mix in with her old tunes, she’ll always love coming back to Montana to play.\n“My dad is from Missoula and he has cabin on Flathead Lake, where we spent all of our summers and … so I’ve always felt very connected and at home in Montana,” she said. “I have a nice career going for me down in Texas, but man, I would love to live in Montana all the time. I think it’s a great state.”\nShe said she’s also excited to play a small venue such as the Mighty Mo because it’s a much more intimate experience for both her and her audience.\n“In a show like this one there’s more accountability, and in a sense the rewards are greater because there’s really no separation between you and the audience,” she said. “I don’t know how else to put it but it’s very direct. There isn’t a big stage with big sound and big lights that feed your ego as a performer, it’s ‘here’s this song in its most bare-bones form,’ because it shouldn’t be all about me. It’s about bringing songs to people and putting that out there and having an experience with them.”\nAlong those same lines, Gibson said while many of the songs she performs are personal in nature, she said once they’ve been written, they have to stand on their own, meaning she can’t take offense if that song doesn’t reach someone as much as other songs do because music is so subjective.\n“If I get feedback from people, no matter what it is, say someone laughs at a line or they poke their boyfriend after hearing a line or they whatever, I need that kind of feedback and that’s why I care more about playing live than I do about selling records because I want to be in the room with you and I love getting a reaction from people who hear my music,” she said. “I think one of my biggest strengths is in that kind of relationship and connection I get with my audience when you know, you’re able to open up and show the puppet strings on your songs.”\nFor more information on Susan Gibson, check out her website here.\nTags:Dixie ChicksMighty MoSusan Gibson\nInternal morality examined at Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hyde performance on Thursday\nRussell Museum showing Western Art inspired films starting in February\nAlt-country star Cindy Jollotta’s new single ‘Ghosts’ a personal powerhouse\nMighty Mo Brewery hosting month-long music events for local charities in February\nSpokane’s Marshall McLean joins Ryan Johnson for free show at Mighty Mo on Saturday\nA FEATURED STORY/ALL EVENTS/BILLINGS Community/COMMUNITY EVENTS/MMA\nFusion Fight League hold’s first sanctioned MMA event in Montana history next weekend","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line762227"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6027640700340271,"wiki_prob":0.6027640700340271,"text":"Reviews of “Wilson” by A. Scott Berg\nPosted by Steve in 3rd Party Reviews, U.S. Presidents\nbiographies, book reviews, Henry Adams Prize, presidential biographies, Scott Berg, Woodrow Wilson\nby A. Scott Berg\nHenry Adams Prize (2014)\nBoston Globe review from September 2013\nNew York Times review from September 2013\nWashington Post review from September 2013\nThe Washington Times review from September 2013\nThe Dallas Morning News review from September 2013\nMiami Herald review from September 2013\nSouth China Morning Post review from October 2013\nThe Oregonian review from October 2013\nNPR interview with A. Scott Berg from September 2013\n“One hundred years after his inauguration, Woodrow Wilson still stands as one of the most influential figures of the twentieth century, and one of the most enigmatic. And now, after more than a decade of research and writing, Pulitzer Prize–winning author A. Scott Berg has completed Wilson—the most personal and penetrating biography ever written about the twenty-eighth President.\nIn addition to the hundreds of thousands of documents in the Wilson Archives, Berg was the first biographer to gain access to two recently discovered caches of papers belonging to those close to Wilson. From this material, Berg was able to add countless details—even several unknown events—that fill in missing pieces of Wilson’s character, and cast new light on his entire life.\nFrom the visionary Princeton professor who constructed a model for higher education in America to the architect of the ill-fated League of Nations, from the devout Commander in Chief who ushered the country through its first great World War to the widower of intense passion and turbulence who wooed a second wife with hundreds of astonishing love letters, from the idealist determined to make the world “safe for democracy” to the stroke-crippled leader whose incapacity—and the subterfuges around it—were among the century’s greatest secrets, from the trailblazer whose ideas paved the way for the New Deal and the Progressive administrations that followed to the politician whose partisan battles with his opponents left him a broken man, and ultimately, a tragic figure—this is a book at once magisterial and deeply emotional about the whole of Wilson’s life, accomplishments, and failings. This is not just Wilson the icon—but Wilson the man.”\nEnjoy presidential biographies? Check out: http://www.bestpresidentialbios.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line463915"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7311111092567444,"wiki_prob":0.2688888907432556,"text":"Why We Give: The Jones Family\nIn December, the Jones family pledged their support in the form of a multi-year pledge as a Partners in Hospitality Sustainer. Here’s why:\nWhy is the Family House important to your family?\nSeveral years ago, my wife Sara’s parents were involved in a near-fatal automobile accident near Augusta, GA. They were air-lifted to the Medical College of Georgia and she and her sister spent a month there while their mother was in intensive care. Their experience in Augusta was extremely stressful, and the situation was compounded by staying at a lonely bare-bones hotel and having many nights of eating fast food or at best, institutional meals in the hospital cafeteria. This experience allowed us to understand first-hand the need for a welcoming place like the SECU Family House to relax and unwind after long hours in the hospital.\nWhat is your favorite Family House memory?\nDuring the first year I was on the Board of Directors, our family volunteered to serve Thanksgiving dinner to the Family House guests. Instead of having guests sit at individual tables to eat, we decided to push all the tables together to create one big family table. It was truly amazing to watch individuals and families with heartbreaking situations come together as one big family sharing a meal. There was a lot of laughter and comfort shared that night, as well as delicious pumpkin pie.\nTo this day I don’t know who received the biggest blessing that night, the families staying at the Family House or our own family.\nWhy support families and guests who are in a medical crisis when there are many other worthy non-profits?\nWe have always tried to keep our charitable donations local. With Sara working at Wake Forest Baptist School of Medicine and myself spending 28 years with the State Employees’ Credit Union, as well as our own family experience with medical crises, it just makes sense for us to support the SECU Family House.\nWhy should others consider a multi-year pledge?\nOrganizations like the Family House need to be able to plan for the future and multi-year pledges give them a solid basis from which they can commit to helping people into the future…The Jones Family has participated in the Family House since the doors opened. Jeff served on the board of directors as a SECU representative from 2010-2016. His son Matthew completed his Eagle Scout project here in 2017.\nThe Jones Family has participated in the Family House since the doors opened. Jeff served on the board of directors as a SECU representative from 2010-2016. His son Matthew completed his Eagle Scout project here in 2017.\nLearn About Partners in Hospitality Read More Stories","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1706172"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5047726631164551,"wiki_prob":0.5047726631164551,"text":"S7 Airlines Starts Flights from Novosibirsk to Guangzhou\nS7 Airlines is starting direct flights from Novosibirsk to Guangzhou (China) on May 21, 2019. Tickets are already available.\nThe flights will be operated on Tuesdays and Sundays. Departure from Tolmachevo Airport is at 21:10, and arrival in Guangzhou is at 04:15 local time on the following day. The return flight departs on Wednesdays and Mondays at 05:15 and arrives in Novosibirsk at 10:50.\n“Guangzhou, the third largest city in China, was added to the S7 Airlines schedule at the end of last year, when the airline started direct regular flights from Irkutsk. Now we are pleased to offer flights to Guangzhou to passengers from Novosibirsk as well. This is an attractive destination both for sightseeing and for business travel. Every year, the Canton Fair is held in Guangzhou, representing a platform for dialogue with Asian partners, ” said Igor Veretennikov, commercial director of S7 Group.\nAt the same time, passengers from China will appreciate the opportunity to travel comfortably to the cities of the route network with convenient connections in a key Siberian hub — Tolmachevo Airport.\nS7 Airlines also operates direct flights to Beijing from Novosibirsk, Vladivostok, Krasnoyarsk and Irkutsk, to Shanghai from Novosibirsk and Vladivostok, to Hong Kong from Vladivostok, Irkutsk, and Novosibirsk.\nMembers of the S7 Priority loyalty program will be able to earn 500 miles for a flight from Novosibirsk to Guangzhou. Accumulated S7 Priority miles can be used to get award tickets and additional services.\nGuangzhou S7 Airlines\nWorld’s Largest Aircraft Completes First Flight\nSpiceJet to Launch New International Flights from Mumbai\nBelavia Carried Out the First Flight to Munich\nOn July 15, 2019 Belavia carried out the first regular flight on the route Minsk-Munich-Minsk. Flights will be carried out 4 times a week on Mondays, Thursdays, Fridays and Sundays with the departure from Minsk at 12:30...\nS7 Airlines Starts Testing a Face Recognition System\nS7 Airlines launched a face recognition system pilot at the Domodedovo hub airport. The system is currently operational at the executive lounge in the domestic departures area. The software...\nHeathrow and First Bus Launch a New Service to Guildford\nHeathrow has teamed up with First Bus to offer passengers and colleagues traveling from Guildford a more sustainable way of getting to and from the airport, starting this month. The partnership sees the launch of a new...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line751171"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5756556987762451,"wiki_prob":0.4243443012237549,"text":"The Virtual Reality Roving Vehicle Project\nDR. WILLIAM WINN, Director Human Interface Technology Laboratory's Learning Center University of Washington Seattle, Wash. Between November 1994 and June 1995, almost 3,000 students in grades four through 12 throughout the state of Washington experienced Virtual Reality (VR) in their classrooms. Another 365 built their own Virtual Worlds. The Virtual Reality Roving Vehicle project (VRRV, pronounced \"verve\") was funded by the US WEST Foundation to bring VR equipment and experiences to children in all areas of the state. The project was based at the Human Interface Technology Laboratory (HITL), part of the Washington Technology Center on the University of Washington campus in Seattle. The VRRV team consisted of software designers and engineers from HITL, Educational Technology faculty and students from the College of Education, a cadre of \"Van Techs\" who did everything from loading and driving vans to giving presentations and demonstrations in schools, plus students and teachers in close to 70 schools. Here, I describe what we did, how we did it, what we learned and what we plan to do next. What We Did Our goals were ambitious. First, we wanted as many children as possible to experience immersive VR and to discuss with them its potential and limitations. Popular media has hyped VR to excess and we felt that youngsters need to understand that VR is a technology that still has to mature before it is used widely. Second, we wanted to get our high-end workstations and software out of the lab and into children's hands, confident that they would use them effectively and imaginatively. And third, we wanted to see whether having students build virtual worlds that embodied concepts and principles they were learning as part of their regular curriculum would help them understand what they were studying. We were especially interested in determining whether this radically new technology and the learning strategies it supports can help children who are judged by traditional criteria to be less likely to succeed in school. Experience has shown that the only way technology can be successful in schools is if teachers and students have access to the machines they need, have the software to make them work, and have the knowledge and skill to take control of both. We addressed the access issue by setting up a van-based outreach program that carried VR workstations to schools. In the schools where worlds were built, we addressed software and control issues by providing the schools with modeling software that teachers and students learned to use, by building our own Supercard tool for automatically generating computer code that made virtual objects behave in particular ways, by putting on training workshops for teachers, and by working long hours with children as they planned and built their worlds. We used two vans. Each was equipped with a Division, Inc. Provision 100 workstation, a head-mounted display that provides stereo vision and audio, a hand-held \"wand\" for moving through virtual worlds and manipulating virtual objects, and an electromagnetic tracker that tracked both the position and attitude of the student's hand and head. The Provision 100 is a 486 system running UNIX. It achieves its high rate for rendering graphic images by graphics boards that provide massively parallel graphic processing. The system has sound capability. It runs dVISE software from Division (based in the U.K., with a U.S. office) that uses a C-like scripting language that serves to build and run virtual worlds. A limited amount of authoring and editing can be done through a graphic interface that runs under X-Windows. Centered Around Two Projects Our plan centered around two projects, which we called the \"Hors d''euvre\" and the \"Entreé.\" All schools enjoyed the hors d''euvre; 14 stayed for the entreé. For the hors d''euvre, we took a van to each of the VRRV schools for a day, longer in a few cases. We began by giving a presentation about VR to one or two classes of students and their teachers, spending time discussing VR with them. The rest of the day we demonstrated commercially produced virtual worlds to as many as 50 students. Each student spent 5-10 minutes in a virtual world. We showed each one how to move around in the world and to interact with its objects using a \"wand,\" a joystick-like device you hold in your hand. As you move it vertically, horizontally, towards you or away from you, the virtual hand you see in the helmet moves correspondingly. You can also tilt your hand around any axis. Five buttons control how you pick up and move objects and how you \"fly\" through the world. One may also walk around in the world, but this is limited by the tracker's range and the length of the cable attaching the wand and helmet to the computer. Once briefed, students put on the helmet and visited the world. For the entreé, we spent a number of days over an average of six weeks in each school working with teachers and their students. Our first visit was set up to take place at the point in the class where the teacher had taught enough content for students to be able to design effective worlds. We began our work in the schools by explaining the four-step world-building process: Planning: Students decided how they would represent the concepts and principles that their world embodied. Modeling: They drew and built their objects on Macs using Macromedia's Macromodel 3D graphics software. Programming: Students determined how objects were to interact with each other and with the participant, which guided HITL's programmers on how to put the worlds together. Experiencing, where students visited the worlds they had created and performed their assigned tasks. In subsequent visits, we worked with them at each step in the process, spending at least three days in each school. Students visited their worlds on the final visit. How We Did It We identified our initial group of VRRV schools through a questionnaire distributed at the NCCE Conference in Spokane in the spring of 1994. During the summer and early fall of 1994, teachers who had indicated an interest were invited to HITL in groups of two or three. We briefed them on the project and had them experience VR for themselves. (Other schools joined along the way.) In late fall of 1994, we held a day-long workshop for VRRV teachers and administrators on the University of Washington campus. In the morning, HITL staff gave presentations about previous work on educational applications of VR, other HITL projects and a more detailed overview of the VRRV program. In the afternoon, teachers brainstormed on how to use VR in their curriculum while the administrators met with VRRV staff to discuss how the project might best be implemented in their schools and districts. At day's end, teachers interested in being part of the world-building phase of the project were invited to submit proposals to us describing what they would like to do. Fourteen of these were selected by the end of the year; others went on a waiting list for the 95-96 school year. Worlds proposed and actually built included: A space station in which students could recycle waste materials; a medieval castle; a microcomputer, parts of which students had to assemble themselves; a rain forest whose over-exploitation resulted in an ecological disaster; a fly-over of Washington state that helped students learn their local geography; and nine others. In early 95, two full-day workshops were held for teachers selected for the entreé, during which we introduced them to the Macromodel software. Meeting in a school computer lab, the entire day was devoted to \"hands-on\" activities. At the end, one teacher from each school was given a set of disks to load onto their own machines. (A number of schools had to upgrade machines to 12MB of RAM and to add a math processor to run the software well.) We provided the software for free under a site license that we had purchased from Macromedia. Subsequently, several elementary teachers told us the software was too complex for their students to learn in the available time, so we modified the project for the elementary schools. Elementary students would all work on a common \"Tree World\" in which their task was to make a tree healthy by providing it with sunlight, water and nutrients. HITL staff built the basic Tree World. Students contributed objects that depend on healthy trees for their own survival -- everything from fruit to giraffes. We added these to the basic Tree World, creating a different version for each elementary school. In this way, everyone was able to contribute to the world without having to master 3D CAD. Finally, in February 95, we held another full-day workshop in which we covered four topics: instructional design, what VR can do best, assessment of learning from VR, and project management. At its end, each school signed up for a start date when VRRV staff would make their first visit to the school. We intended the projects to be staggered to spread our workload over the rest of the school year. Perhaps predictably, this did not work! A lot of the labor piled up at the school year's end. We also provided each school with a Teacher's Manual on world-building that we had written. The hors d''euvre had started in November and was well underway by this time. Indeed, the hors d''euvre operated fairly independently from the entreé, with its own van, personnel and computer system. We hired a pool of people who loaded, drove and unloaded the van; gave presentations to students; and ran the school demonstrations. Initially, these operated an easy day's drive from Seattle, returning to HITL at the end. Later in the year, we took vans to other areas of the state with a crew (always two people) that visited four schools a week. A lot of effort went into coordinating the program with schools throughout the state and we remain grateful to those who were flexible enough to accommodate our last-minute schedule changes caused by computer crashes, bad weather and the occasional scheduling conflict. What We Learned Needless to say, we were anxious to find out whether we had been successful in achieving our goals of helping children understand VR and of using world-building to teach content. However, our research agenda extended beyond simply determining if the students had learned anything. Any technology tends to be better at supporting some pedagogies over others. Our approach to teaching and learning was based on the premise that the acts of planning, designing and building virtual environments would help students construct an understanding of the topic they were working on. This \"constructivist\" approach required that most of the decision-making be placed in the hands of the students. We therefore spent a lot of time facilitating discussion in small groups of students as they argued and debated about the appearance and functionality of their world. Our role was largely one of keeping students' ambitions within the limits of what our VR systems could actually do. We were anxious to find out whether using constructivist pedagogy that VR supports so well would lead to different outcomes when compared to outcomes from students learning similar content in more traditional ways. In schools where more than one class was studying the same material (in some of the secondary schools), we were able to compare what students learned from world-building with what others learned from more traditional teaching. However, the VRRV project was by no means a controlled experiment and our findings to date are more suggestive than conclusive. We were also curious about how student characteristics affected how well they learned from world-building. We measured all students' general ability and middle and high school students' spatial ability. We also looked at how gender affected the outcomes. Pre- and post-tests of content were given to the secondary students. We also gave exit questionnaires to all students, interviewed some and videotaped others. The tests of content were teacher-built. They varied considerably in the content they tested, since at the secondary level each class built a different world in a different area of the curriculum. They also varied in scope and format. For this reason, we standardized test scores before conducting our statistical analysis. Finally, we gave a questionnaire that assessed students' attitudes towards science and computers. For the hors d''euvre, we gave every student an exit questionnaire. This asked them to rate on a five-point scale everything from how much they enjoyed the experience, to how easy it was to navigate in the virtual world, to the extent to which they experienced \"presence\" -- the conviction that they were really in another place when in the virtual world. We have gathered a large amount of data. The following is a brief description of some of the most important findings -- the tip of a very big iceberg. Beyond the purely descriptive data, the results that we mention below come from statistical analyses whose findings were significant at the .05 probability level. The Hors d''euvre Group Results From questionnaires given to 1,001 students in elementary schools, 922 students in middle schools and 949 high school students who experienced VR as part of the hors d''euvre: Students rated their enjoyment of the experience as very high with a negligible number of reports of queasiness. The latter finding is important because it allays the fear that exposure to VR, at least over short periods, has bad side effects. Difficulty moving around the world and interacting with it, as well as ratings of disorientation inside and on leaving the virtual world, decreased with age. The wand was difficult to hold and manipulate if you had small hands! Rated enjoyment of the experience and the sense of presence decreased with age. Perhaps the older children were more jaded in their attitudes to the technology. A factor analysis of the scale scores on the questionnaires showed remarkably consistent results across elementary, middle and high school students. In each case, the VR experience was shown to have three clear dimensions: Enjoyment/presence, disorientation/ malaise, and the ability to perform tasks. Interestingly, these three factors -- identifying affective, physiological and cognitive dimensions to the VR experience -- have been found, with very different populations, in other HITL projects. The Entrée Group Results From data obtained from 365 middle and high-school students who took part in world-building, not all of whom completed all tests, we can report: Students who built virtual worlds did learn the content they were expected to. Students who built virtual worlds did equally well regardless of their general ability. In the case of students who learned equivalent content in traditional ways, low-ability students did less well than high-ability students. This suggests that knowledge construction through a world-building activity helps students who might not learn well from traditional methods. This effect was most noticeable for boys. Students who built virtual worlds had consistently better attitudes towards science and computers after the experience, stating more frequently, for example, that scientists were honest, that they would consider taking science and computer courses in college, and follow careers in science and computing. Students learned more and enjoyed the project more who: used 3D models to visualize their world before they built their object on the computer; were easily able to find the object they had made when they visited their virtual world; and reported experiencing a high level of presence.\nStudents who had difficulty navigating in the virtual world or who lacked a clear understanding of the tasks they were to perform in it learned less and enjoyed the experience less. Students who collaborated with other students learned more and enjoyed the project more. Girls with low spatial ability reported feeling less presence. At the elementary level, boys reported they had learned more about VR than girls and also that they needed less time than girls to build their worlds. At the secondary level, boys enjoyed the world-building more than girls and spent more time on the computers. We can report, anecdotally, that boys often tended to \"hog\" the computers and to dominate a lot of the activities, which could account for these findings. High spatial ability was correlated with enjoyment, learning and the feeling of presence. Suggested Conclusions Our findings suggest a number of conclusions, all of which require confirmation under more rigorously controlled conditions. First, it worked! Our students did learn from designing and building virtual worlds. Notice that we do not claim that visiting the worlds they created taught them content. (We have learned in other projects, however, that students can learn from worlds built for them by someone else.) The acts of researching, designing and constructing worlds was the deciding factor. Next, the project seemed to level the playing field for less-able students. We believe that VR takes advantage of visual and kinesthetic abilities and learning strategies that are less likely to be used by students in more traditional, symbolic modes of instruction. Next, working with VR is motivating, as one would expect. Finally, general ability, spatial ability and gender all influence the cognitive and affective outcomes of working with VR. What We Plan to Do Next From now until the end of the academic year, the hors d''euvre part of the project moves to Nebraska. With further funding, we hope to take the project to other states in subsequent years. Of course, we are looking forward to the day when the entire project can be conducted over a network and we can dispense with the vans. But, again, to take that step requires significant resources that we do not yet have. World-building will continue in some Washington schools where the project's research on the effectiveness of world-building and of world-visiting will continue. Our studies will be more carefully designed and executed so that we can begin to explore more thoroughly the questions concerning what aspects of VR contribute to what kinds of learning, and the influence of general ability, spatial ability and gender on learning from building and visiting worlds. Further Information: Several reports about our work on educational applications of VR can be found at HITL's Web site (www.hitl.washington.edu) under \"Publications.\" Information about HITL's Learning Center and the VRRV project can be found under \"Projects\"; information about our team is under \"People.\" We will continue to make our reports available on the Web as we complete them. In the meantime, we are encouraged by the progress we report in this article and are looking forward to \"pushing the envelope\" with the help of the creative and energetic children in our the public schools here and around the country. William Winn, a professor in the Educational Technology program in the College of Education, is also Director of the Human Interface Technology Laboratory's Learning Center at the University of Washington. He holds an adjunct professorship in Technical Communication in the College of Engineering. Winn's research focuses on how people perceive and learn from maps, diagrams and pictures and on how cognitive and constructivist theories of learning can be used effectively by instructional designers. His work on the applications of Virtual Reality to education, some of which is reported here, brings together these two research interests. The VRRV project started while Winn was on sabbatical at the Human Interface Technology Laboratory during part of the 1994-95 school year. E-mail: billwinn@u.washington.edu Products mentioned in this article: Provision 100 system, dVISE software; Division, Inc., Chapel Hill, NC, (919) 968-7797 Macromodel 3D; Macromedia, San Francisco, CA, (415) 252-2000\nDelivering Desktops Virtually\nAs Lubbock Independent School District makes the transition from Windows devices to Chromebooks, it's relying more and more heavily on virtual desktop infrastructure to give users — both students and staff — access to the learning and work applications and other tools that still require Windows access. At the beginning of 2019, over a single weekend, the Texas district implemented hyperconverged infrastructure, and it's not looking back. As Chief Technology Officer, Damon Jackson, and Senior Platform Technology Engineer, Jason Blackburn, discuss, HCI has given them the \"Easy Button\" they sought for network management and delivered \"remarkably faster\" performance. Read more...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line471171"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5709357261657715,"wiki_prob":0.4290642738342285,"text":"Epiphany Of Our Lord Parish Church\nPrayer Message For My Husband SAN ANTONIO – Family, friends and loved ones gathered for a prayer. McDonald’s husband, Andre McDonald, is facing a charge of tampering with evidence in connection to her disappearance, and those. While they all offered their own prayers, the message was the same: Let’s all work together to. “Even in horrible things, God can bring\nThe church’s bell, for instance, was donated to another church, Epiphany of Our Lord B.C. Church in Annandale, Va., Puhak said. That parish is building a new $6 million church; the bell, an expensive.\nPeter and Paul Cathedral in 2016 “because the cathedral is the mother church of the archdiocese and should set the example for each parish in the archdiocese. manifestation of the Lord, the.\nClass of ’71. Do you have old school chums who don’t know the Lord? Did you do dirt to other kids in jr high/middle school? You confessed to a priest, but still want to make reparation and pray for them?\n“Like the magi, our life must be a journey of faith, searching for Jesus Christ,” with Him as our star.” But that journey, said Pham, involved remembering “that Jesus asks all of us to be a type of.\nEpiphany of Our Lord Church is a Catholic Christian community committed to the Gospel message that Jesus Christ is our Savior. Therefore, our mission is to.\nFr. Jack encourages all of us to watch the 2019 Catholic Faith Appeal video! Not only does it feature many friendly faces from our parish and school, but it also details all the good that is done throughout our Diocese with the support of the CFA.\nThe Church of the Epiphany of the Lord is a Catholic Parish in Northwest Oklahoma City, where you can grow together with your neighbors in faith, hope, and love.\nEpiphany of our Lord is a Byzantine Ruthenian Catholic parish of the Eparchy (or Diocese) of Passaic, NJ which stretches from Maine to Florida along the US East Coast.\nAll Saints Catholic Church, 310 S. Ninth St., Keokuk. Divine Mercy Catholic Parish, Burlington and West Burlington, will celebrate the Epiphany of Our Lord, one of the oldest Christian feasts, on.\nEpiphany is a vibrant Roman Catholic Parish lighting the way to Christ for all people. Access quality Catholic studies, books, movies and resources through our.\nChurch of the Epiphany Welcomes You! Church of the Epiphany is a vibrant, Roman Catholic parish community located in North Chesterfield, Virginia.\nEpiphany is a vibrant Roman Catholic Parish lighting the way to Christ for all people through life-long faith formation, education, sacraments & service.\nLinda DiCampli, Coordinator Office of Religious Education Epiphany of Our Lord 3050 Walton Rd. Plymouth Meeting, PA 19462 Tel: 215-367-5853 Fax: 215-367-5855\nJan 02, 2017 · \"And when Jesus was baptized, immediately he went up from the water, and behold, the heavens were opened to him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and coming to rest on him.\" The feast of the Epiphany is January 6th. On the following Sunday we.\nCatholic Church Katy, Texas. the video formats available. Click here to visit our frequently asked questions about HTML5 video. Tweets by @epiphanykaty.\nEpiphany of Our Lord Mission Statement: Our God-given mission is to evangelize and thereby produce Saints.We strive to provide the supernatural grace of the Sacraments which God gives in and through His One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church; to preach, teach and live the Truth regardless of its popularity or lack thereof; to encourage all men to be fully, faithfully, joyfully and.\nEpiphany of Our Lord Parish, Saint Louis, Missouri. 654 likes. Weekend Mass: 4PM Sat, 8AM and 10:30 AM Sun Confession: 10-10:20AM Sun, 7:30-7:50AM Sat,\nFaithful Friend Minus One He knew he would endure the wrath of the Windy City faithful. that offsets that one airport episode. \"[They’ve said], ‘Aw, man, we were rooting for you guys,’\" Kipnis said. \"It’s one thing to hear. “Truth minus love. t have any friends. If we walk in and filter what we say through the fruit of\nHundreds of Catholics trooped to Lingayen’s Epiphany of Our Lord Parish Church to watch live on a large screen the mass officiated by the pope. “We strongly felt the presence of the Holy Father even.\nOur purpose is symbolically to re-enact the Christmas story with Bible passages and songs of the season. Special service Saturday at 5:30 – 6:30 p.m., at Ponderosa High School, 2384 N. Steves Blvd.\nZubik said the five parish mergers are a result of the ongoing On Mission for The Church. and Our Lady of the Angels (Lawrenceville). • City Center/Hill District Grouping, which comprises the.\nThe allegation was referred to law enforcement and public announcements were made to the media as well as the parish communities where Logrip. Bishop Kenrick High School (1974-1983); Epiphany of.\nApr 15, 2018. Sunday, April 15, 2018 | Sunday, April 12, 2020 at Epiphany of Our Lord Catholic Church, Tampa, FL. Find event and ticket information.\nEpiphany of Our Lord. Report On The Parish School Previous 5 Years (PDF). The sign language interpreter is provided on a regular basis or your church is.\nEmail: [email protected] | Phone: (215) 334-1035. Epiphany of Our Lord Church. Parish Giving & Donations. However you choose to give.\nREP Registration. To learn more about our parish Religious Education Program (REP) or to register, click the link below. Read More\nChevy Chase United Methodist Church, 7001 Connecticut Ave., Chevy Chase, Md. Parking lot and entrance off Shepherd Street. Free. 301-652-8700. Saturdays through April 8, 11:30 a.m.: All are welcome to.\nTake it to the Lord in prayer. Morning Prayer, that is. We’re coming to the conclusion of the season of Epiphany. On March 1, next Wednesday, we begin our journey through. one of the members of the.\nYates to the Sacred Order of Priests during a Eucharist service on the Feast of the Epiphany of Our Lord. At 25 years of age. Yates said personal interaction within a church community is partly why.\nWe’ve been coming all our lives. It makes you feel good.” The annual pilgrimage is hosted by the Sisters of St. Basil the Great and conducted under the patronage of the Byzantine Catholic.\nToday we celebrate Epiphany, that is, the “manifestation” of the Lord. This Solemnity. collaborate in the mission of the Church. I thank you for this and I bless you! I greet all of you present.\nThe parish. Church. — St. Raymond parish will close and merge with St. Leo the Great parish. 7th Ward– Epiphany parish will close and merge with Corpus Christi Parish. — St. Francis de Sales.\nConnect with Epiphany of Our Lord Parish, Church in Saint Louis, Missouri. Find Epiphany of Our Lord Parish reviews and more.\nBAY CITY, MI — Choral Evensong for the Seventh Sunday after Epiphany takes place Sunday, Feb. 23, at 4 p.m. at Bay City’s Trinity Episcopal Church. Rev. Ann Grady. Powell and “Thou Knowest Lord the.\nUnderstanding what we must do to be saved is very simple, but not easy to live. God explains salvation to us each and every time we pray the Our Father: \"Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven.\" From Jesus’ lips to our ears, we hear what we must do to be saved – God’s Holy Will, not our own human will which is strongly attached to our personal subjective opinions.\nBulletins. June 2, 2019 · May 26, 2019 · May 19, 2019 · May 12, 2019 · May 5, 2019 · April 28, 2019 · April 21, 2019 Easter · April 14, 2019 · April 7, 2019.\nMasjid Rahmah Newark Nj Prayer Schedule Our Call. At, Masjid Rahmah, we call to Islam according to the Qur'an and the Sunnah of the Messenger (may Allah raise his rank and grant him peace), upon. Phone, (973) 621-8833 · Address. 657 Martin Luther King Jr Blvd; Newark, New Jersey 07102. November 11, 2018 ·. Beautiful time at sisters Luncheon, such beautiful\nThe Church of the Epiphany of the Lord is a Catholic Parish in Northwest Oklahoma. Holy Thursday — Morning Prayer 9 am, Mass of the Lord's Supper, 7 pm. Let us therefore celebrate our families, our homes, our relationship with Christ.\nEpiphany of Our Lord Catholic Academy. 3150 Pharmacy Avenue Agincourt,ON, M1W 1J5. View Map Online. Phone: 416-393-5378; Fax: 416-393-5602.\nEpiphany of Our Lord Parish is currently comprised of the people of. children wishing to join our parish or enter more fully into the Catholic Church by receiving.\n\"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life,\" says the Lord. The Church is the sign of Christ’s presence in our midst. Epiphany Parish is called to be the way, the truth and the life of Christ for all of us.\nThe same thing happens to Father Kendall Harmon every year during the 12 days after the Nativity of Our Lord Jesus Christ. The faithful take their Christmas trees to church and build a bonfire as.\nThe Parish Church of Epiphany of Our Lord, formerly Three Kings Parish Church, is a Roman Catholic church located in Lingayen, Pangasinan in the.\nToday, the Feast of the Epiphany of the Lord, the Gospel presents three. vigor and communion among all of us Christians, who recognize Him as our Lord and Saviour. Epiphany is marks Youth Mission.\nEpiphany of Our · Lord Parish · Bulletins · New Parishioner Registration · Online Giving. Search. Home · Sacraments · Baptism · First Communion · Confirmation.\nHannah Prayer For A Child Offred/June becomes pregnant (to Nick), and Serena ‘rewards’ her with a fleeting glimpse at the resettled Hannah. The ‘treat’. Hannah reminds us of the fragility of life, the immediate loving bond of parent and child, and the enigma of God’s divine providence. The doctors, nurses and staff at Baylor University Medical Center. NOTICE IS HEREBY\nFind the best Epiphany of our lord, around North Collins,NY and get detailed driving directions with road. Epiphany of Our Lord Byzantine Catholic Church.\nProceeds from this sale go to our Outreach work in the city. of silent prayer and meditation followed by a short period of prayer for the parish. Church of the Epiphany, 1317 G St. NW. Information:.\nEpiphany of Our Lord Parish is a bilingual (English/Italian) and mutual. and the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church and providing diverse opportunities.\nA byzantine rite ukrainian catholic church under pope benedict xvi. orthodox in communion with rome.\nAn Example Of Freedom Of Religion Other examples are just as ironic. irrational laws that restrict people’s freedom based not on any public interest, but on personal religious beliefs that should remain private. Alexandria. Definition of religion written for English Language Learners from the Merriam-Webster Learner’s Dictionary with audio pronunciations, usage examples, and count/noncount noun labels. For example, Saudi Arabia, which\nWorld Most Populated Religion Oct 05, 2018 · The Vatican City, San Marino, and Liechtenstein rank as the three least populated European countries. Vatican City is Europe’s least populated country, with a population of under 1,000. According to the World Factbook, the European Union hosts a. May 12, 2019 · The largest state in the USA by population is California, which\nGet reviews, hours, directions, coupons and more for The Epiphany Of Our Lord Catholic Church at 44 Pennsylvania Blvd, Monessen, PA. Search for other.\nPrevious PostPrevious What Faith Can Do Lyrics And Chords By Jayesslee\nNext PostNext Masjid Rahmah Newark Nj Prayer Schedule","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line869260"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5177921652793884,"wiki_prob":0.5177921652793884,"text":"Nationwide Children's Legislative Advocacy\nSearch Newsroom:\nViewing: 1-10 of 24 | All\nColumbus Family Travels to Washington D.C. to Advocate for Children’s Health and Patient-Centered Research\nThe Gibson family’s advocacy efforts this week are in conjunction with the annual Children’s Hospital Association’s Speak Now for Kids Family Advocacy Day, June 25-26. Family Advocacy Day provides families, like the Gibson’s, the opportunity to meet members of Congress and discuss issues that affect children’s healthcare.\nABMS Names Nationwide Children’s Hospital as Recipient of its First-Ever Quality Improvement Award\nThe American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS), the leading not-for-profit organization overseeing physician certification in the United States, has awarded Nationwide Children’s Hospital its first-ever ABMS Multi-Specialty Portfolio Program™ (Portfolio Program) Outstanding Achievement in Quality Improvement Award.\nFamily Advocacy Day\nOne central Ohio family is traveling to Washington D.C. next week to seek support for the reauthorization of the Children’s Hospitals Graduate Medical Education Act (CHGME). Funding from the program enables children’s hospitals around the country to increase training for pediatric specialists, a field of great shortage in children’s health care.\nLett Family Travels to Capitol Hill to Advocate for Childrens Health Care Funding\nAs Congress continues working on legislation that could impact the health care of all Americans, the Lett family is delivering an important and timely message on Capitol Hill.\nMEDIA ADVISORY: 2016 Candidates Forum on Children & Youth\nWHAT: Nationwide Children’s Hospital will host the 2016 Candidates Forum on Children and Youth WHEN: Monday, October 17, 2016 Breakfast at 7:30 a.m., program begins at 8 a.m. WHERE: Nationwide Children’s Hospital Ann Isaly Wolfe Education Building, Stecker Auditorium 575 S.\nBellville, Ohio, Teen and Family Travel to Capitol Hill to Advocate for Pediatric Cancer Research\nThe Reed family of Bellville, Ohio, is taking their story to Capitol Hill to deliver an important message to their members of Congress. Nationwide Children’s Hospital patient, Grant Reed, 15, and his family will join more than 40 other pediatric patients and their families to meet with\nNational Study Finds Rising Rate of Marijuana Exposure Among Children 5 Years Old and Younger\nDebates about legalizing marijuana have focused on crime rates, economic benefits, and health effects among adults. But a study published today from researchers at Nationwide Children’s Hospital shows that the risk to young children of swallowing, breathing in or otherwise being exposed to\nNationwide Childrens Hospital Lauds House Passage of Legislation in Support of Funding for Pediatric Residency Training\nNationwide Children’s Hospital applauds the U.S. House for passage of S. 1557, the Children’s Hospital GME Support Reauthorization Act of 2013.\nMedia Advisory: Ohio First Lady Karen W. Kasich and Nationwide Childrens Hospital Introduce Time For 10! Fitness Program to Ohio Schools\nM E D I A A D V I S O R Y WHAT: Ohio First Lady Karen W. Kasich and Nationwide Children’s Hospital Introduce “Time For 10!” Fitness Program to Ohio Schools A collaboration between Nationwide Children’s Hospital and Ohio First Lady Karen Waldbillig Kasich, Time For 10! is a\nColumbus Area Child and Family Travel to Capitol Hill to Push for Childrens Health Care Access and Research\nOne local family is taking their story to Capitol Hill to deliver an important message to their members of Congress. Nationwide Children’s Hospital patient, Patrick Bibbee, 2 (Columbus, 43235), and his family will join nearly 30 other child patients and their families to meet with members of\nFamily Health & Safety\nPhilanthropic News\nInjury Research and Policy","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line453778"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6544751524925232,"wiki_prob":0.6544751524925232,"text":"New Bible resources for Gaelic speakers released\nPublished on 18 June, 2019\nThe Scottish Bible Society, the Gaelic Books Council and the Church of Scotland’s Gaelic group have announced new resources to help Gaelic speakers engage with the Bible and practice their Christian faith.\nThe Gaelic NT New Translation is available to buy now online through the Scottish Bible Society and the Gaelic Books Council, or by calling 0141 337 6211\nThe Scottish Bible Society and the Gaelic Books Council have released a modernised Gaelic version of the New Testament and Gaelic audio versions of the four Gospels, while the Church of Scotland’s Gaelic group has employed a Gaelic development officer to progress the work of the Kirk’s Gaelic Language Plan over the next year.\nThe work of the Gaelic Group was approved during the General Assembly of 2018, with their report advising that they would be “exploring a number of different opportunities to receive funding for this work, both internal and external to the Church.”\nDuring this year’s General Assembly the group announced they are delighted to have secured funding from Bòrd na Gàidhlig, an internal Church of Scotland grant, and from Action of Churches Together in Scotland (ACTS). The group also published a Gaelic version of the Thy Kingdom Come prayer diary.\nA modern Gaelic translation of the New Testament\nDid you know? There are about 54,000 Gaelic speakers in Scotland.\nThe Scottish Bible Society.\nMembers of the Kirk’s Gaelic Group worked in conjunction with the Scottish Bible Society and the Gaelic Books Council to publish the newly translated version of the New Testament.\nRev John Urquhart, a Church of Scotland minister who is part of the team, said:\n“It has been a decade since the Scottish Bible Society brought the translation team together to begin the New Testament project.\n“Though we were drawn from different places and different churches, we all shared the same aim: that the Scriptures of the New Testament should be made available to Gaelic speakers in modern Gaelic, faithfully translated.\n“Throughout our work, we kept our focus on fidelity to the Greek and the clarity of the Gaelic.\n“The translators hope that putting the word of God into contemporary Gaelic will enable every person who reads it to hear God’s voice speaking to them, and that through this they will come to know the peace and salvation that are to be found only through Christ.\n“Our desire is that all praise, and honour, and glory, be given to God and to God alone.”\nPreviously released in old Gaelic, this new version of the New Testament is designed as a more modern translation and aims to put the Word of God into contemporary Gaelic, enabling every person who reads it to hear God’s voice speaking to them.\nThe ecumenical team of translators who worked on the project over a 10-year period included representatives from the Church of Scotland, the Free Church of Scotland and the Roman Catholic Church.\nGifted, committed and passionate translators\nThe New Testament was first translated into Scottish Gaelic by Rev James Stuart, minister of Killin, and published in 1767 – barely 20 years after the battle of Culloden. His son John, minister of Luss, was the main translator of the Old Testament, completed in 1801.\nIn recent years, the future of Gaelic in education and public life has received much attention as the language flourishes. However, the gap between everyday Gaelic in common use and the Gaelic in the most recent Bible edition continues to widen.\nElaine Duncan, Chief Executive of the Scottish Bible Society, said:\n“It’s been our pleasure to support a group of gifted, committed and passionate translators throughout this project.\n“Their faithfulness, love of the Bible and handling of the Greek and Gaelic languages have been essential to the success of this project.\n“We are thankful for the partnership and support of the Gaelic Books Council, and we pray that God’s Word will be appreciated and understood more through providing the New Testament in the New Gaelic Translation.”\nAlison Lang, Director of the Gaelic Books Council, said:\n“We are proud of the translation team who have worked to produce this New Testament in modern Gaelic, and delighted to have been able to support the Scottish Bible Society with this project.\n“It is appropriate that this new translation is being published in the UNESCO International Year of Indigenous Languages, and we hope that churches, schools and individual readers will enjoy this beautiful book.”\nThe work comes at a time of opportunity in the development of Gaelic. As the translators worked through the New Testament they were very much aware of the importance that this new translation will have for education and for the churches.\nAlasdair Allan, MSP for the Scottish National Party welcomed the new translation in a motion lodged at the Scottish Parliament last month.\n“The Parliament warmly welcomes the new translation of the New Testament, and praises the huge amount of work that has been put into this by Rev John Urquhart, Rev Ruairidh MacLean, Rev John Lincoln and the late Canon John Angus MacDonald over the course of ten years,” Alasdair said.\n“The Parliament also considers that this new publication represents one of the many ways in which the Gaelic world will be celebrating the International Year of Indigenous Languages in 2019.”\nThe Gaelic NT New Translation is available to buy now online through the Scottish Bible Society and the Gaelic Books Council, or by calling 0141 337 6211.\nWhat’s next for the Gaelic Group?\nAs a result of the new funding awarded by both the Church of Scotland and Bòrd na Gàidhlig, a Gaelic development officer has been hired on a consultancy basis for one year in order to progress the Gaelic Group’s work including the Gaelic Language Plan.\nDuncan Sneddon, the current co-editor of Na Duilleagan Gàidhlig (the Gaelic supplement to Life and Work magazine), will take up the role in October.\nThe next steps for the Gaelic Group include a national conference considering the needs and ways of promoting Gaelic ministry and mission, as well as offering support and encouragement to Gaelic speaking ministers and anyone using Gaelic within the Church context. This follows the Next Steps conference in 2015 which looked at the place of Gaelic in Scotland’s churches.\nAlso currently in the works is a Gaelic audio version of the four Gospels, which is due to be released in the autumn.\nACTS awarded the Church of Scotland’s Gaelic Group a £9,000 grant towards the development the audio resources, as well as translations for inclusion in the recent Thy Kingdom Come global prayer initiative, including a Gaelic invitation recorded by Very Rev Dr Angus Morrison.\nThe project to develop the four Gospels into Gaelic has been managed by Nicola Thomas of the Gaelic College in Skye over the last nine months.\nWith voices sought from a wide range of Scottish church denominations, contributors are so far confirmed from Lewis, Skye, South Uist and Tiree.\nThe audio gospels are being recorded at Studio Ostaig, based at Sabhal Mòr Ostaig, the National Centre for Gaelic Language and Culture, and will be available in text format, audio, as well as for download as an audiobook.\nMore information on the audio translation project will soon be released on the Scottish Bible Society’s Gaelic website, which also features a Gaelic Scriptures mobile app (available for download on Android and iOS).\nFormer Moderator accepts honorary doctorate with historic Gaelic address | The Church of Scotland\nGaelic group takes first steps toward national plan | The Church of Scotland","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line739348"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8415768146514893,"wiki_prob":0.8415768146514893,"text":"Heralds of the failing state\nTHEY’RE known as “public service programs” and have been in Philippine radio for decades, particularly after 1986, when the laws restricting the media were lifted. But they have proliferated in recent years, and every radio station includes at least one example in its programming, although that one may run several hours, in addition to the regular news and commentary programs.\nThe template is straightforward. The program host accepts complaints from listeners through phone calls and text messages as well as personal visits to the station, puts his phone conversations on the air, reads text messages and interviews complainants.\nThe grievances could include being duped in a private transaction that went sour, fired by an abusive employer, ignored or given the run around in a government office, and wronged by an abusive policeman. Once armed with the details of the complaint, the host either calls the government office involved, or makes arrangements to confront the wrong doer and even to cause his arrest, during which he’s usually present, and which is duly recorded in sound and video.\nIn one episode of a popular program that runs for several hours in the afternoon, the host interviewed a construction worker who had lost his job, and for P4,000, pawned his motorcycle to a neighbor, who, he complained, lent the motorcycle to someone who in turn “pawned” it to someone else. The worker’s neighbor was demanding P60,000 to return the motorcycle, which was still in the hands of the last person to whom it had been pawned. The complainant named all three people involved. The host instructed an assistant to call the police and to arrange for the arrest of the man holding the motorcycle, during which both he and the complainant would be present. The arrest would of course be recorded.\nThe host interviewed next a taxi driver who said he’d been pulled over by a policeman for ignoring a red light. He admitted the offense, but complained that the policeman, after confiscating his license, was angling for a bribe, which he said was obvious from the fact that he (the policeman) wanted him (the taxi driver) to get out of his cab and to talk to him in the shadows of a pedestrian underpass. When he did not comply, the policeman did not write him a traffic ticket, but refused to return his license.\nThe host managed to somehow call the policeman and to ask him if he was authorized to apprehend traffic law violators, since that task is primarily the responsibility of metro Manila traffic enforcers. At the same time, his assistant had managed to call the policeman’s immediate superior, a police captain. The host gave the policeman an ultimatum: return the cab driver’s license or else. The “or else” part was no idle threat: he proceeded to extract from the policeman’s superior a promise to discipline him unless he complied, at one point berating the captain for hesitating to order the policeman, while on the air, to return the license.\nThe two cases took all of one hour to air. Both were demonstrations not only of the appalling state of law enforcement, the desperate straits of the poor, and the absence of plain civility in much of Philippine society. It was also a display of media power.\nTo anyone whose radio was tuned in to the program, the host’s action in both the worker’s and taxi driver’s cases would be something to applaud, leading him or her to thank “the media” for helping curb the abuses so rampant in Philippine society and bringing its most abusive elements to account.\nPublic service programs over Philippine radio do serve what has become an urgent need to curb abuses so egregious they defy explanation. They also help justify the need for a free press. (Without the media, a listener observed, abusive officials would get away with it.) In addition, these programs either prod government agencies to provide the citizenry the service they’re entitled to but seldom get (e.g., being served promptly at the local office of the Social Security System), or provide the service themselves (e.g., getting the complainant taxi driver’s license back).\nThe downside of the media’s assuming roles government institutions are supposed to be playing in behalf of a sane, safe and orderly society is not only the encouragement of media arrogance and a sense of entitlement.\nThe media practitioners killed on November 23, 2009 assumed themselves immune from harm. Others presume they’re entitled to various perks, including the usual envelope and the deference of government officials and of the public as a whole. In addition there’s the tendency on the part of many media practitioners, especially the untrained, to take on such dubious roles as the entrapment of criminal suspects, and other functions way beyond their mandate of providing information and commentary.\nBut the proliferation and popularity of these programs speaks for itself. It is the direct result of the decline or outright failure of the institutions of Philippine governance, particularly of the police and judicial system — some would say of the entire justice system.\nThe killing of journalists, for example, has continued because of the culture of impunity — the police and judiciary failure to identify, investigate and prosecute the killers that’s based on the weaknesses of the justice system particularly at the community level. That failure has compelled private intervention in the form of journalist and media advocacy groups’ having to go on fact-finding missions and to hire private prosecutors, not only in the November 23, 2009 Ampatuan Massacre, but in numerous other cases as well.\nWhat’s happening in the Philippine media echoes the privatization of functions that are the government’s responsibility but which it is unable to perform because of the failure of its institutions. That failure has been evident for decades in, for example, such private initiatives as the development of more and more gated communities in response to runaway criminality; the hiring of private garbage collecting companies; the institution of “the little divorce” and co-habitation without the benefit of either law or clergy, etc. Public service programs are part of the same environment of government failure. They are heralds of the failing state.\n(BusinessWorld)\n(Reprinted with permission from Mr. Luis Teodoro)\nSource: LuisTeodoro.com\nURL: http://www.luisteodoro.com/\nUnang Dalawang Tula: Para Kay Ericson Acosta\nSome in AFP, PNP like Roman soldiers: Brutal tortu...\nEU-NAVFOR: Pirates seize ship with 15 Filipino sea...\nPriest tells RH bill supporters to leave Mass\nTropics in Decline as Natural Resources Exhausted ...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line711433"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5747149586677551,"wiki_prob":0.4252850413322449,"text":"The Fascinating Racial Component of 'Louie'\nBy Dustin Rowles | Think Pieces | May 28, 2014 |\nBoth Louis C.K.’s stand-up comedy and his television show are heavily based on the real life of Louis C.K., his co-parenting relationship with his ex-wife Alix Bailey, and the two children he takes care of for half of each week as a part of their shared custody arrangement. Louis talks so openly, honestly, and realistically about parenting, and the relationship he has with the two actresses who play his daughters on Louie feels so genuine that I often forget that those aren’t his real daughters. Louie is obviously not a documentary, but it has a very autobiographical feel.\nBut in reality, Louis’ daughters’ names aren’t actually Lily and Jane (their names are Mary Louise and Kitty Szekely), and they don’t look anything like the actresses who portray them on TV (in fact, they look like adorable versions of Louis). Even Louis’ name is spelled differently in the show (I don’t know how many times over the years that I’ve basically used the two spellings interchangeably). In fact, in real life, Louis’ ex-wife Alix Bailey is not black, although Janet (Susan Kelechi Watson), the character based on Bailey, is.\nI never gave it much thought until this week, when during one of the episodes, there was a flashback sequence to the near break-up of Louie and his ex-wife and the conception of their first child. Funny thing: In the flashback sequence, Louie’s wife was white.\nIt was confusing, and even a little jarring at first, because I initially thought it was a flashback to an earlier relationship with someone before his ex-wife, but then I realized that Louis was just fucking with us. And it didn’t even occur to me until that very moment that it was strange that Louie’s ex-wife was black and the two children he has with her are white.\nI don’t know if it was intentional or not, or if he was just messing with us, but the flashback opened the door to my own curiosity. Is Louis’ ex-wife black? (No). Are his children mixed race? (No) What the f*ck is going on? Then there’s the other element, which is that Louis himself is half Mexican but he passes for white, and now I don’t know what — if anything — Louis is trying to say about race in Louie.\nWhy did Louis cast his ex-wife in Louie with a black actress? He’s actually spoken to this, basically saying that his kids on the show are “extremely white” but that race wasn’t a factor in casting.\n“If the character works for the show, I don’t care about the race,” he told Jimmy Kimmel in an appearance on his show in 2012, adding that it was all about delivery: “When a black woman tells you to get a job, it’s just more … ” he said, trailing off with a laugh.\nSo what is Louis doing? Is he attempting to challenge us with his casting choices, or is he not doing anything at all? is he suggesting that a black woman is a better choice to play a very vocal, very forceful ex-wife? Should we even think about race? Or is it inescapable?\nI don’t know, but the whole thing reminds me of the conversation between Donald Glover and Lena Dunham’s character in a scene on Girls when he accused her of just wanting to date a black guy. “Well, the joke’s on you,” she said, “because I never thought about the fact that you are black, not once.”\n“That’s insane,” he responded. “Because you should, because I am.”\n← Rick Baker's Original E.T. Designs Will Chew Through Your Face to Eat Away At Your Fond Childhood Memories\nMarvel And Netflix Find Their New Daredevil →","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1021170"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7006314992904663,"wiki_prob":0.2993685007095337,"text":"Things to do in Harrogate\nTurkish Baths and Health Spa\nAs befits a fashionable spa town, Harrogate boasts several well-equipped spas and health clubs to relax the day away. Harrogate Turkish Baths and Health Spa offers a wide range of treatments, ranging from quick facials to full-day experiences, and is just 10 minutes’ walk from our Harrogate Town Centre hotel.\nDating back to the Victorian era, the spa has been lovingly refurbished and restored with the stunning tiled interiors matched by the imposing exterior. Opened in 1897, the spa was one of the main tourist destinations in Harrogate, welcoming thousands of visitors from across Europe every summer, and it’s one of only seven spas from the Victorian period that remain intact. While the focus might be on the treatments, it’s well worth having a good look around and taking in their impressive arches, glazed brickwork, arabesque ceilings and Italian terrazzo floors.\nAimed at purifying the body and mind, the process takes you through a range of experiences. From the plunge pool to the frigidarium (the coldest room) through to the laconium (the hottest room available), each step aims to clear your body of toxins and remove stresses. Thankfully, some of the original treatments are no longer featured, including the worrying sounding plombière douche and galvanism process.\nIf you’re looking for alternative therapy treatments, they offer everything from 25-minute Indian head massages to hour-long hot stone therapy and even the mysterious art of Reiki: an ancient Japanese healing therapy that aims to help relieve stress and aid relaxation.\nIf you prefer the more hands-on approach, they have a range of massages, including a choice of sweet almond or grapeseed oil. A quick back, neck and shoulder massage takes 25 minutes, while a full-body workover takes up to an hour.\nAlternatively, you can opt for one of their packages including the signature Turkish Baths experience, which takes in a full-body spa, facial, lunch and a long session in the Turkish baths, saunas, hot rooms and plunge pool. The more inquisitive can also opt for a 45-minute guided tour, which explains the heritage and history of the 120-year-old spa, taking in the decor, treatments and how the baths were recently renovated to bring them back to their Victorian splendour.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1265411"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5424661636352539,"wiki_prob":0.5424661636352539,"text":"JillianTubeHD Bio\nJillianTubeHD is an American YouTuber. Check out this biography to know about her childhood, family life, achievements and fun facts about her.\nBirthday: October 3, 2008\nSun Sign: Libra\nBorn in: Pennsylvania\nFamous as: YouTuber\nfather: Jared\nmother: Alisa\nsiblings: Evan\nU.S. State: Pennsylvania\nVloggers #472 Instagram Stars #84\nJillianTubeHD is an American YouTuber and social media influencer with over a million subscribers on her channel as of March 2018. As her parents have decided to keep their surname a secret due to security reasons, she is known online simply as Jillian. The younger sister of YouTuber EvanTubeHD—one of the most successful and popular young creators on the platform—Jillian set up her own channel in March 2013. However, she waited until January 2016 to upload her first video. Since then, her personal image as a social media influencer has grown slowly but steadily and she has found her own audience beyond the spotlight of her brother’s fame. She mostly posts challenge videos, vlogs, and piano recitals.\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dlLVCf4zCxA\nhttp://celebsroll.com/top-10-richest-youtuber-kids/\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DJa9vQUTSJU\nPennsylvania YouTubers\nJillianTubeHD\nThe Meteoric Rise to Fame\nThe family’s journey to internet stardom began in late 2011, when Evan approached his father, who is an amateur filmmaker, about a potential YouTube channel. Initially, for both of them, it was a way of bonding with each other. The channel, EvanTubeHD, was set up on September 20, 2011, and they posted their first video that very day. Since then, the channel has grown exponentially, garnering over 5 million subscribers. They have also launched four more channels, EvanTubeRaw (for vlogging), EvanTubeGaming (for gaming), DTSings (for music), and Jillian’s JillianTubeHD.\nJillian made her first appearance in April 2012 on her brother’s channel, where she was introduced by her current social media name, JillianTubeHD.\nLibra Women\nOn March 11, 2013, when she was only four years old, her parents decided to set up a channel for her and name it after her online persona JillianTubeHD. The idea was to attract the younger audience members who were not that interested in Evan’s content, which primarily focused on toys, gaming, and challenges. It proved to be a smart and sensible move. Jillian, with her natural charm and charisma, began to attract young girls—who find in her an ideal same-aged role model—to her channel.\nIn January 2018, she reached one million subscribers and as of March 2018, she has just over 1 million 86 thousand subscribers. Besides YouTube, Jillian is not that active on other platforms of social media although her parents have set up a Facebook page for her.\nJillian was born on October 3, 2008, in Pennsylvania. Her parents are Jared and Alisa. She has an older brother, Evan. The family has a Goldendoodle named Chloe.\nHer parents are well aware of the dangers of too much exposure on social media. They are striving to maintain a level of privacy for their children as they are growing up in front of millions of viewers. Not only have they kept their surname a secret, they have also not mentioned where exactly they live. For a long time, Jared and Alisa went by their YouTube aliases on social media, DaddyTube and MommyTube, respectively.\nLast Updated : March 15, 2018\nJillianTubeHD Bio As PDF\nJillianTubeHD Fans Also Viewed\nBen Hampton\nPenelope Juliette\n21st Century | Celebrity Names With Letter J | Female Celebrity Names With Letter J","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1081409"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6116924285888672,"wiki_prob":0.3883075714111328,"text":"May 1 - 6, 2018 / Nice, France\n2018 Nice UltiMED\nJoin the action for the 49er/FX and Nacra 17 worlds\nDecember’s 49er, 49erFX and Nacra 17 world championships are expected to dish up some spectacular racing and fans are invited to venture to Auckland to experience some of the action.\nAs many as 400 sailors are expected to compete at the world championships at the Royal Akarana Yacht Club from November 29-December 8.\nMost of the top teams will be competing, given world titles and Olympic qualification are on the line, and many countries will also be using it as an Olympic selection event. Olympic champions Peter Burling and Blair Tuke will be looking to win their fifth world title and first since returning to the class after a two-year break and the Nacra 17 fleet will be looking to knock Ruggero Tita and Caterina Banti off their perch after the Italians dominated the class in 2018.\nThere will be spectator boats for anyone wanting to get close to the racing while big screens will also be operating at the fanzone at the event venue.\n“We have spent so many hours training on the Waitemata Harbour over the last 10 years, so to have a world championship here is super-exciting,” Tuke said. “We are really looking forward to welcoming the world and giving Kiwis an upclose look at Olympic sailing at the highest level.”\nSituated only 10 minutes drive from the heart of Auckland’s central business district, this new marine precinct will become the event village. This will include the boatpark, yacht club, competitors’ hub, and fanzone for supporters from around the world and local audiences.\nAfter a day on the water, in no time at all you can be lazing on the white sands of Mission Bay indulging in ice cream or fish & chips, cycling your way along Tamaki Drive – a picturesque waterfront promenade – dining in one of Auckland’s many food precincts or relaxing back at your accommodation.\nAuckland is a sophisticated international city, with a world-class food and beverage industry as well as the other exciting attributes which make up a thriving and diverse city.\nDecember is a good time to explore Auckland beyond the boat park, with a host of sights and activities including many on the Hauraki Gulf itself like the Auckland Whale and Dolphin Safari, America’s Cup yacht experience or the Maritime Musuem.\nSome might like to discover a little more of what New Zealand has to offer before or after the world championships with a trip to somewhere like the Bay of Plenty, Taupo, Fiordland or Northland.\nSee here for more on Auckland or here to help you with some ideas or visit here for information on New Zealand.\nThe notice of race for the world championships has been released and entries will open soon.\nAustrian FX sailors tell us about their training in Auckland\nCheck out this event preview to see what this spectactular sailing concept is all about.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line211552"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6139150857925415,"wiki_prob":0.3860849142074585,"text":"Pregnant women ‘suffering in silence’\nMercy Sister Angela Mary Doyle is a legend in Australian health care and she used International Women’s Day to spread a much-needed message about the stigma attached to perinatal mental health issues. Source: The Catholic Leader.\nSr Doyle, an award-winning humanitarian and Member of the Order of Australia, was a guest speaker at the Springfield City Group International Women’s Day event on March 8.\nShe spoke about her work in healthcare, touching on the work she did in the 1980s for AIDS sufferers, a condition with stigma attached to it to this day.\nBut it was another issue with stigma attached that she focused her message on – perinatal mental health issues. “Perinatal” refers to the period of time before and after childbirth.\nSr Doyle stressed the importance of spreading awareness about the condition and the need for more services to support women and families suffering in silence.\n“It’s a disturbing situation, largely hidden and, if not recognised and treated, can have severe and long-lasting consequences,” she said.\n“Surprisingly this condition affects as many as one in 30 pregnant women and, while it may not be an overtly visible condition, many women will suffer in silence, often not understanding that they have a mental health issue.\n“The effects can be distressing for the woman and those around her and, if left untreated, can result in adverse effects on the child, relationship breakdown, isolation and even maternal suicide.\n“If this situation is to be addressed adequately, a range of services is required, including expert psychological and psychiatric support, ensuring the mother is having adequate sleep, taking her food, and that mother and baby are treated together and not separately.\n“Important too is support for her husband or partner who can often feel lost or bewildered in a situation with which he may not be familiar.\n“Throughout Queensland there may be only four beds dedicated to this purpose, so a lot more beds need to be provided, and in a loving, caring and professional way.”\nMercy Sister Angela Mary Doyle becomes a leading voice for women suffering in silence (The Catholic Leader)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1158868"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9628923535346985,"wiki_prob":0.9628923535346985,"text":"Zuckerberg discloses Facebook working with Russia probe\nLoop News Created : 10 April 2018 Business\nFacebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg disclosed Tuesday his company is \"working with\" special counsel Robert Mueller in the federal probe of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential campaign — and working hard to change its own operations after the harvesting of users' private information by a Trump campaign-affiliated data-mining company.\nThe founder of the social media giant publicly apologized for his company's errors in failing to better protect the personal information of its millions of users, a controversy that has brought a flood of bad publicity and sent the company's stock value plunging. He seemed to achieve a measure of success: Facebook shares surged 4.5 percent for the day, the biggest gain in two years.\nZuckerberg told the Senate Judiciary and Commerce committees that he has not been personally interviewed by Mueller's team, but \"I know we're working with them.\" He offered no details, citing a concern about confidentiality rules of the investigation.\nEarlier this year Mueller charged 13 Russian individuals and three Russian companies in a plot to interfere in the 2016 presidential election through a social media propaganda effort that included online ad purchases using U.S. aliases and politicking on U.S. soil. A number of the Russian ads were on Facebook.\nDuring Tuesday's at-times-contentious hearing, Zuckerberg said it had been \"clearly a mistake\" to believe the data-mining company Cambridge Analytica had deleted user data that it had harvested in an attempt to sway elections. He said Facebook had considered the data collection \"a closed case\" because it thought the information had been discarded.\nFacebook also didn't alert the Federal Trade Commission, Zuckerberg said, and he assured senators the company would handle the situation differently today.\nHe began a two-day congressional inquisition with a public apology for the way Facebook handled the data-mining of its users' data. He took responsibility for failing to prevent Cambridge Analytica, which was affiliated with Donald Trump's presidential campaign, from gathering personal information from 87 million users.\nSeparately, the company began alerting some of its users that their data was gathered by Cambridge Analytica. A notification that appeared on Facebook for some users Tuesday told them that \"one of your friends\" used Facebook to log into a now-banned personality quiz app called \"This Is Your Digital Life.\" The notice says the app misused the information, including public profiles, page likes, birthdays and current cities, by sharing it with Cambridge Analytica.\nZuckerberg had apologized many times already, to users and the public, but this was the first time before Congress. He also is to testify Wednesday before the House Energy and Commerce Committee.\nSen. John Thune, R-S.D., the Commerce Committee chairman, told Zuckerberg his company had a 14-year history of apologizing for \"ill-advised decisions\" related to user privacy. \"How is today's apology different?\" Thune asked.\n\"We have made a lot of mistakes in running the company,\" Zuckerberg responded. \"I think it's pretty much impossible, I believe, to start a company in your dorm room and then grow it to be at the scale that we're at now without making some mistakes.\"\nZuckerberg said Facebook is going through \"a broader philosophical shift in how we approach our responsibility as a company.\" He said the company needs to take a \"more proactive role\" that includes ensuring the tools it creates are used in \"good and healthy\" ways.\nSen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, said Zuckerberg's appearance marked the most intense hearing for a tech company since entrepreneur and businessman Bill Gates testified before Congress in March 1998.\nMany of the senators' questions seemed to focus on Facebook's basic functions, such as its privacy settings and what it does and doesn't do with user data. Because each of the 44 senators had just 5 minutes to ask questions, there was little time for tough follow-ups. On some subjects, that allowed Zuckerberg to tell the lawmakers that his people would get back to them with more information.\nIn the hearings, Zuckerberg is trying to both restore public trust in his company and stave off federal regulations that some lawmakers have floated. In his opening statement, he also apologized for his company's involvement in facilitating fake news and Russian interference in the elections.\nDemocratic Sen. Bill Nelson of Florida said he believes Zuckerberg was taking the congressional hearings seriously \"because he knows there is going to be a hard look at regulation.\"\nDemocrats like Nelson have argued that federal laws might be necessary to ensure user privacy. Republicans have yet to get behind any such legislation, but that could change.\nSen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., asked Zuckerberg if he would be willing to work with lawmakers to examine what \"regulations you think are necessary in your industry.\"\nAbsolutely, Zuckerberg responded, saying later in an exchange with Sen. Dan Sullivan, R-Alaska, that \"I'm not the type of person who thinks that all regulation is bad.\" He called for a \"full conversation about what is the right regulation not whether it should be or shouldn't be.\"\nAnd Texas Sen. John Cornyn, a member of the Judiciary panel and the No. 2 Republican in the Senate, appeared open to regulation in a speech ahead of the hearing. Cornyn said apologies are \"not enough\" and suggested legislation could eventually be needed to give consumers more control over their data privacy.\n\"This is a serious matter, and I think people expect us to take action,\" Cornyn told reporters after his speech.\nAt the hearing, Zuckerberg said, \"We didn't take a broad enough view of our responsibility, and that was a big mistake. It was my mistake, and I'm sorry. I started Facebook, I run it, and I'm responsible for what happens here.\"\nAfter resisting previous calls to testify, Zuckerberg agreed to come to Capitol Hill this month after reports surfaced — and the company confirmed — that Cambridge Analytica had gathered Facebook users' data. Zuckerberg said his company has a responsibility to make sure that doesn't happen again.\nHe acknowledged that the company was too slow to respond to Russian election interference and said it was \"working hard to get better.\" The company has said that as many as 146 million people may have received information from a Russian agency that's accused of orchestrating much of the cyber meddling in the election.\nHe outlined steps the company has taken to restrict outsiders' access to people's personal information. He also said the company is investigating every app that had access to a large amount of information before the company moved to prevent such access in 2014 — actions that came too late in the Cambridge Analytica case.\nUS Congress grills Facebook founder on data row, Russia\nFacebook users to learn if they were part of privacy scandal\nFacebook data scandal 'hit 87 million users'","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line554187"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6752657890319824,"wiki_prob":0.6752657890319824,"text":"Philadelphia area consumers paid more than the U.S. city average for electricity\nPhiladelphia area consumers paid more than the U.S. city average for electricity (26.2 percent) and utility (piped) gas (41.1 percent), but less than the national average for gasoline (-2.3 percent) in May 2009 according to data from the Consumer Price Index (CPI) published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor. Sheila Watkins, the Bureau’s regional commissioner, noted that local consumers have consistently paid more than the national average for electricity and utility gas during May over the last 10 years. On the other hand, local gasoline prices in May over the last decade were typically lower than or close to those for the United States as a whole.\nSelected key characteristics of Average Energy Prices in the Philadelphia Area for May 2009\nA kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity cost Philadelphia area consumers $0.159 in May 2009—4.6 percent higher than one year earlier, and 43.2 percent more than in 2000 when the local price was at its lowest May level over the last 10 years.\nA therm—a measure of constant heating value—of utility (piped) gas, commonly referred to as natural gas, in the Philadelphia area averaged $1.483 in May 2009, a decrease of 2.9 percent from the previous May.\nOver the last decade, the price per gallon in the U.S. and the Philadelphia area has generally trended upward; however, since last May, gasoline prices dropped 39.3 percent in the U.S. and 39.5 percent in Philadelphia. (Please see attached PDF file for a full version of the release.)\nAverage prices are estimated from Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for utility (piped) gas, electricity, and gasoline to support the research and analytic needs of CPI data users.\nGerald L. Perrins, Jr. Regional Economist and Branch Chief Bure\nMiss Hispanic Delaware 2009\nBridgeville Man Charged with Assault Following an Attempt to Enter Court with a Knife","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line410504"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6900414228439331,"wiki_prob":0.6900414228439331,"text":"Should You Get Tested for the 'Breast Cancer Genes'?\nTUESDAY, Feb. 19, 2019 (HealthDay News) -- Women who have specific mutations in genes known as BRCA are at increased risk for breast and ovarian cancers. Now, an influential expert panel reaffirms that certain women should be screened for the genes.\nThe draft recommendation comes from the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, whose advisories often guide physician practice and insurance coverage. The guidelines -- which restate a 2013 advisory -- encourage genetic testing only for women with either a family history of breast or ovarian cancer, or an ethnicity or ancestry associated with BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations.\nWomen who fall into these categories should receive genetic counseling to help them understand their risk and, if indicated, get genetic testing for BRCA, the recommendation says.\nWomen without a family history or ethnicity associated with these mutations should not be screened, counseled or tested, the task force says.\nThe BRCA genes first gained media attention when actor and director Angelina Jolie announced in 2013 that she had undergone a preventive double mastectomy after discovering that she carried one of the BRCA mutations. She later had her ovaries removed, as well. Jolie's mother died from ovarian cancer.\nHowever, the USPSTF panel stressed that the gene tests are not advised for most women.\n\"BRCA testing is beneficial for the small number of women in the United States who are at increased risk for BRCA1 or BRCA2 mutations,\" said task force member Dr. Carol Mangione. She is chief of general internal medicine at UCLA's David Geffen School of Medicine.\n\"The test results are complex and testing comes with some harms, so we recommend women who get tested meet with a licensed genetic counselor who can guide them through the process,\" Mangione said in a task force news release.\nOnly a few women have a personal or family history, ethnicity or ancestry associated with a risk for a BRCA mutation, according to the task force.\nCurrent test results also do not definitively tell if a woman has harmful mutations that will lead to cancer. But for some women, testing and counseling will be a guide to their potential risk.\n\"Women should talk with their primary care clinician if they have questions about their risk for BRCA mutations,\" said Dr. Douglas Owens, vice chair of the task force, and a professor of medicine at Stanford University.\n\"This discussion can be part of a routine office visit and is the first step in determining if counseling and testing are needed,\" he said.\nThe U.S. National Cancer Institute offers more details about BRCA mutations.\nSOURCE: U.S. Preventive Services Task Force, news release, Feb. 19, 2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1488854"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.890663743019104,"wiki_prob":0.890663743019104,"text":"Pronk Press\nThe Benghazi cover story\nPosted on November 13, 2013. Filed under: Central Intelligence Agency, Columns, Congress, Crime, Foreign Policy, Homicide, Law, Liberty, People, Philosophy, Politics, War, Weapons | Tags: al-Qaida, Andrews Air Force Base, Ansar al-Shariah. Senator Lindsey Graham, aul Schemm, Benghazi, Benghazi Cover Story, Benghazi Scandal, Central Intelligence Agency, CIA Annex, Cover Up, Economics, Elections, Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Glen Doherty and Ambassador Chris Stevens, Gregory Hicks, Jihadist, Lara Logan, Libya, Lt. Col. Andy Wood, Lying, Michael Maggie, Politics, President Barack Obama, Raymond Thomas Pronk, Sean Smith, Susan Rice, Terrorist Attack, Tyrone Woods, U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice, United Nations General Assembly, YouTube Video |\nBy Raymond Thomas Pronk\nPresident Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton speak at transfer of remains ceremony at Andrews Air Force Base for Americans killed in Benghazi. Credit:www.vosizneias.com\nThe Benghazi cover story was an awful, offensive, crude and disgusting online video that insulted believers in Islam lead to a spontaneous protest that killed four Americans in Benghazi, Libya.\nOn Sept. 14, 2012 during the transfer of remains ceremony at Andrews Air Force Base, then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton made remarks to the families of the four Americans killed in Benghazi. She briefly reviewed the careers and lives of the deceased: Sean Smith, Tyrone Woods, Glen Doherty and Ambassador Chris Stevens.\nClinton said, “We’ve seen the heavy assault on our post in Benghazi that took the lives of those brave men. We’ve seen rage and violence directed at American embassies over an awful Internet video that we had nothing to do with.”\nOn Sept. 16, 2012, United Nations Ambassador Susan Rice appeared on all five Sunday morning TV news shows. The interviewers on all five shows asked Rice to provide the Obama administration’s explanation for the murder of the four Americans in Benghazi.\nOn ABC’s “This Week,” in response to a question by Jake Tapper, Rice answered, “But our current best assessment, based on the information that we have at present, is that, in fact, what this began as, it was a spontaneous — not a premeditated — response to what had transpired in Cairo. In Cairo, as you know, a few hours earlier, there was a violent protest that was undertaken in reaction to this very offensive video that was disseminated.” Rice repeated this explanation on all five shows.\nOn Sept. 25, 2012, President Barack Obama addressed the United Nations General Assembly in New York. He also repeated Rice’s explanation for what happened in Benghazi. Obama said, “That is what we saw play out in the last two weeks, as a crude and disgusting video sparked outrage throughout the Muslim world. Now, I have made it clear that the United States government had nothing to do with this video.”\nAccording to an Associated Press story by Paul Schemm and Michael Maggie: “Within 24 hours of the attack, both the embassy in Tripoli and the CIA station chief sent word to Washington that it was a planned militant attack,” and “there was no sign of a spontaneous protest against an American-made movie denigrating Islam’s Prophet Muhammad.”\nThe terrorist attackers numbering about 150 are suspected of being members of the powerful militia organization Ansar al-Shariah. Their members espouse a jihadist al-Qaida-like ideology. They fought in the Libyan civil war that overthrew the 42-year dictatorship of Moammar Gadhafi.\nGregory Hicks was deputy chief of mission and charge d’affairs at the U.S. Embassy in Tripoli, Libya on Sept. 11. He was called to testify before the House Oversight Committee that is investigating Benghazi on May 9. Hicks said, “I thought it was a terrorist attack from the get-go. I think everybody at the mission thought it was a terrorist attack from the beginning.”\nOn Oct. 27 CBS’s 60 Minutes Lara Logan said, “Contrary to the White House’s public statements, which were still being made a full week later, it’s now well established that the Americans were attacked by al-Qaida in a well-planned assault.”\nLogan’s reporting coup was an interview with a new source, a British security officer, who uses a pseudonym. He said, “On his first drive through Benghazi, he noticed the black flags of al- Qaida flying openly in the streets and he grew concerned about the guard forces as soon as he pulled up to the U.S. compound.”\nAlso interviewed was Lt. Col. Andy Wood, chief security officer in Libya, and Hicks. Wood said, “Al-Qaida — using a familiar tactic — had stated their intent in an online posting, saying they would attack the Red Cross, the British and then the Americans in Benghazi. They made good on two out of the three promises. It was a matter of time ‘til they captured the third one.”\nWood added, “I made it known in a country team meeting, ‘You are gonna get attacked. You are gonna get attacked in Benghazi. It’s gonna happen. You need to change your security profile.’”\nOn Oct. 28 Fox News interviewed Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC). He said, “So I am calling for a joint select committee. … The people who survived the attack in Benghazi, have not been made available to the U.S. Congress for oversight purposes. I’m going to block every appointment in the United States Senate until the survivors are being made available to the Congress.”\nThe truth was known from the beginning that the terrorist attacks were planned and well-organized by a militia group called Ansar al-Shariah and had absolutely nothing to do with a YouTube video. The Benghazi cover story was a lie repeatedly told to deceive the American people during an election year.\nRaymond Thomas Pronk presents the Pronk Pops Show on KDUX web radio from 4-5 p.m. Monday thru Thursday and from 3-5 p.m. Friday and authors the companion blog http://www.pronkpops.wordpress.com.\nRaymond T. Pronk\nHealth Care Insurance\nMacroeconomis","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1015331"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8813093304634094,"wiki_prob":0.8813093304634094,"text":"Aisha Tyler: Forever a Friend of “Friends”\nSteve Gidlow\nBehind the Scenes in Hollywood\nSince leaving CBS’ The Talk a year ago, life has been non-stop for self-admitted workaholic Aisha Tyler. Not only has she produced and directed her first feature film (Axis, currently streaming on VOD platforms), she continues to provide the voice of Lana Kane for FX’s animated hit Archer (as she has for the past nine years); heads her own chat show on AMC titled Unapologetic with Aisha Tyler, continues her role as Dr. Tara Lewis on CBS’ Criminal Minds, and hosts The CW’s Whose Line Is It Anyway? She has been called the female Ryan Seacrest and she agrees. But back in 2002 the stand-up comic turned multifaceted performer was reeling from the cancelation of Talk SouponE! (the show she’d hosted for a year). That same year Tyler made the decision to switch career gears, expand her resume and try acting. Little did she know the decision would lead to a groundbreaking guest spot on one of her favorite shows -- Friends. It would also become something that would forever change her life.\nSteve Gidlow has written about television and pop culture since 1994, beginning in Australia. Since moving to Hollywood in 1997, Steve has focused on celebrity interviews for the weekly market. He has been a contributing editor to In Touch Weekly, Life &… read more","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line836441"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8936206102371216,"wiki_prob":0.8936206102371216,"text":"\"Discovering Lucy Angel\" Premieres On AXSTV Tonight\nLearn more about a the family trio's new Docu-series here.\nMother-daughter trio Lucy Angel and their family, The Andertons, will receive their shot at fame with the premiere of the original docu-series Discovering Lucy Angel. Produced by Taylored TV and Eggplant TV, AXS TV’s first original docu-series premieres Tonight, Tuesday, January 13, at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT. The country music themed series is set to air its 13-episode season during AXS TV’s Tuesday night primetime block.\nDiscovering Lucy Angel follows the mother-daughter trio Lucy Angel and their family, the Andertons, as they work together to launch their music career in Nashville. The original docu-series captures the ups and downs of the family’s lives as they make a name for themselves in country music and highlights the endearing group while out on tour and at their family home in Franklin, Tennessee. In the premiere episode the Anderton family members rehearse and prepare for the biggest performance of their career: a live concert at the Pocono Raceway.\nIn addition to the premiere, their debut self-titled album debuted as New and Noteworthy on iTunes TODAY and will be available in Walmart and Target stores January 27th.\nAfter watching Lucy Angel's program last night at the live premiere in Franklin, TN. The show is entertaining, uplifting and features a good cast of characters.\nLucy Angel\nMatt Bjorke\nThe Editor of Roughstock since 2008, Matt Bjorke also enjoys a sip of good whiskey, watching and discussing films, a good vinyl LP and road trips. He is a graduate of the University of Washington.\nThomas Rhett, Kelsea Ballerini return to host CMA FEST TV Program","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line554003"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7717417478561401,"wiki_prob":0.7717417478561401,"text":"Neutral's Not Enough: Institutionalizing Gender Equity for the Health of Women and Girls\nPhoto credit: Warren Zelman, Democratic Republic of the Congo.\nFor over four decades, MSH has promoted equal access to healthcare for women and girls in more than 135 countries, as we work toward our vision of \"a world where everyone has the opportunity for a healthy life.\" Health for all is a human right, and we believe strengthening health systems within a gender framework can help achieve this vision.\nGender shapes the ways in which health systems are planned, delivered, and experienced by beneficiaries and providers. To meet the specific health needs of women and girls, and to address gender within the health workforce, gender must be mainstreamed globally within and throughout health systems. What does that mean? Transforming the framework of health systems from being gender neutral (not taking the interests, needs, priorities, and contributions of different genders into account)—to being gender equitable (taking into account the interests, needs, priorities, and contributions of all).\nOur gender equity approach promotes access to all aspects of care. We integrate activities to empower women and girls and address gender-specific health needs into maternal, newborn and child health; family planning and reproductive health; and HIV & AIDS programs. For example, we integrate screening for cervical cancer with HIV & AIDS services for women; treatment and prevention of gender-based violence and gender-specific health risks from early or forced marriage with primary health services; and Option B+ in maternity clinics (the latest World Health Organization-recognized approach for preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV and treating the mother for life, regardless of the progression of the disease).\nWomen and girls have a right to have their health needs institutionalized as a consistent part of the health system. Women and girls have a right to have family planning and reproductive health services mainstreamed into the health system. Women and girls have a right to access quality care.\nStrengthening the role of women leaders wherever they are within the health system (e.g. working in maternal, newborn and child health or HIV/AIDS, as advocates, or as leaders) contributes to closing gender gaps and to achieving gender equality. Greater participation of women as health service providers and planners increases the likelihood that health services meet women’s needs and rights. MSH, through USAID’s Leadership Management and Governance Project, works to create more opportunities for women to move into leadership, management and governance positions within health systems by:\nShifting the perception of women as mere beneficiaries to include their role as providers of health care and as leaders within health systems\nIncreasing awareness of the critical role gender plays in health systems\nStrengthening governance structures to be more gender responsive and gender accountable\nBuilding the capacity of health ministries and related institutions to address gender inequality in the health workforce\nPromoting research and knowledge exchange on the role of women in the health workforce\nEstablishing partnerships and carrying out advocacy to promote women leaders\nOur global efforts to mainstream gender in health systems include supporting Ethiopia's ministerial-level efforts to integrate gender into health systems; addressing gender inequalities that affect women and may limit the impact of health interventions in Nigeria and supporting orphans and vulnerable children by addressing the livelihoods of women caregivers; working with partners in Democratic Republic of the Congo integrating cervical cancer screening with other health services and addressing the needs of women who are victims of gender-based violence (while working to prevent the violence); empowering women leaders with disabilities; and more.\nWithout targeted efforts, women won’t have a fair chance at health. As a global health organization specializing in health systems strengthening around the world, MSH is in a unique position to support gender integration in policies and programs to help reduce the significant gender gaps in access, quality, and availability of health services to women and girls. With access to all key stakeholders and institutions that contribute to health improvement, along with strong technical expertise and advocacy, MSH can help level the playing field for women’s health.\nUnited Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women: Women 2000 and Beyond: The role of men and boys in achieving gender equality\ngender, gender equity\nGovernance in the Spotlight: Gender Responsiveness in Governance\nInternational Women's Day 2014: Celebrate Women Health Leaders Inspiring Change\nIn The Name of Culture: A Reflection on International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting\nRelated to Neutral's Not Enough: Institutionalizing Gender Equity for the Health of Women and Girls","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line881922"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5193758010864258,"wiki_prob":0.4806241989135742,"text":"Justia Patents Electric Current Or Electrical Wave Energy Through Earth For TreatingUS Patent for Method for reducing power loss associated with electrical heating of a subterranean formation Patent (Patent # 4,010,799)\nMethod for reducing power loss associated with electrical heating of a subterranean formation\nSep 15, 1975 - Petro-Canada Exploration Inc.\nMethod for reducing the loss of power accompanying the transmission of electrical energy down a wellbore to heat a subterranean formation via electrical conduction between a plurality of wells completed therein, characterized by providing a low frequency alternating current to the conductors in the wellbore. Also disclosed are specific embodiments of the invention.\nLatest Petro-Canada Exploration Inc. Patents:\nAzeotropic dehydration process for treating bituminous froth\nDevice for splicing cable ends\nBlending tar sands to provide feedstocks for hot water process\nControl of process aid used in hot water process for extraction of bitumen from tar sand\nSkimmer apparatus for recovering bitumen\nThis invention relates to a method for the electrical heating of a subterranean formation. More particularly, the present invention is concerned with the reduction of the power losses associated with the transmission of electrical energy down a wellbore to effect the heating of a formation via electrical conduction between a plurality of wells completed therein.\nThere is a considerable body of prior art relating to the general field of so-called electrothermic processes for raising the temperature of hydrocarbonaceous subterranean formations, all of which rely upon the electrical conductivity of the formation. Known techniques typically involve sinking a well into the formation having an electrode positioned near its bottom in electrical contact with the formation. The electrode is formed as part of an alternating current circuit extending through the wellbore from the surface with the circuit being completed through the formation.\nThis large body of prior art discloses very little information which is concerned with the loss of power in the transmission thereof between voltage sources and downhole electrodes. The efficiency with which an electrical heating effect is provided in a formation is dependent upon producing electric power at the electrodes. Accordingly, it has been previously recognized that it is most desirable to provide good conductive paths between voltage sources and electrodes to obviate any unnecessary voltage losses; and also to insulate against any extraneous current paths which would carry the flow of current outside the desired paths. The prior art does disclose various insulating means to aid in lowering power losses. For example, insulating tubing, casing fluids, and coatings which act as barriers or shields have all been disclosed as means for defining a conducting path for the current.\nHowever, it has been found that while transmitting power downhole in an electrical heating operation a considerable amount of the power is lost due to the magnetic hysteresis effect and the induced eddy current in the casing. The use of insulating casing, tubing, fluids, and coatings aid in the reduction of this loss but by no means eliminate it. Further, the use of insulating materials such as fiberglass, epoxy coatings and the like present their own problems in regard to lack of strength and their lack of ability to withstand high temperature.\nAccordingly, it is an object of this invention to provide a method for heating electrically a subterranean formation.\nA further object is to provide an efficient and economical method for transmitting power downhole in order to electrically heat a subterranean formation.\nIt is another object of this invention to provide a method for minimizing the power loss which occurs when transmitting electrical energy down a wellbore to heat a subterranean formation.\nThese and other objects will become apparent from the following descriptive matter, particularly when taken in conjunction with the appended claims.\nIn accordance with this invention, a subterranean formation intermediate a plurality of wells completed therein is heated via electrical conduction by passing a low frequency alternating current through the conductors in the wellbore significantly reducing the power losses associated with the transmission of the electrical energy down the wellbore.\nIt has been found that when transmitting power downhole in an electrical heating operation, as a result of using 60 cycle alternating current, considerable power is lost through induced eddy currents in the conductors and magnetic hysteresis. As a piece of steel is alternately magnetized and demagnetized, energy is dissipated and converted to heat due to the hysteresis loop resulting in a net power loss in the system. It has also been found that this loss can be as great or better than 10% of the total power carried by the conductor downhole. The present invention provides a method for significantly reducing this power loss to only as much as 10% of what the loss would be otherwise. The utilization of alternating current is preferred in order to reduce the effects of electrode corrosion and polarization which accompany the use of direct current.\nThe FIGURE is a side elevational view, partly schematic and partly in section, illustrating one simplified embodiment of this invention.\nReferring to the FIGURE a plurality of wells 11 and 13 have been drilled into and completed within a subterranean formation 15. Each of the wells 11 and 13 have been completed so they may be operated as either injection or production wells. Specifically, the wells have a string of casing 17 that is inserted in the drilled bore hole and cemented in place with the usual foot 19. A perforate conduit 21 extends into the subterranean formation 15 adjacent the periphery of the wellbore that was drilled thereinto. Preferably, the casing 17 includes a lower electrically insulated conduit for constraining the electrical current flow to the subterranean formation as much as practical. The perforate conduit 21 may be casing having the same or a different diameter from casing 19, or it may be large diameter tubing inserted through the casing 19. As illustrated, the perforate conduit 21 comprises a separate string of conduit extended from the surface for better preserving the heat content of an injected immiscible fluid.\nEach of the wells 11 and 13 has an electrode 23. The respective electrodes 23 are connected via electrical conductors 25 and 27 with surface equipment 28 and a source of electrical current, illustrated as alternating current (A.C.) source 29. The eletrical conductors 25 and 27 are insulated between the electrodes 23 and the surface equipment. The surface equipment 28 includes suitable controls that are employed to effect the predetermined current flow. For example, a switch (SW) 31 and voltage control means, such as rheostat 33, are illustrated for controlling the duration and magnitude of the current flow between the electrodes 23 in the wells 11 and 13 by way of the subterranean formation 15. It is preferred that the alternating current source 29 be adjusted to provide the correct voltage for effecting the current flow through the subterranean formation 15 without requiring much power loss in surface control equipment, exemplified by rheostat 33. The respective electrical conductors 25 and 27 are emplaced in their respective wells 11 and 13 with conventional means. As illustrated, they are run through lubricators 35 in order to allow alternate or simultaneous heating, and injection and production, without having to alter the surface accessories, such as changing the configuration of the well head 37, with its valves and the like.\nAs illustrated, the well 11 is connected with an immiscible fluid injection system by way of suitable insulated surface conduit 39. The illustrated fluid injection system comprises a storage tank for injecting fluid which has a specific resistivity less than that of the connate water in place. The injection system 41 is constructed and operated in accordance with conventional engineering technology that does not, per se, form part of this invention and is well known and is not described in detail herein. The conventional injection system technology is contained in a number of printed publications which are incorporated herein by reference for details.\nThe perforate conduit 21 in well 13 is connected to surface production facilities by way of a second surface conduit 45. The production facilities are those normally employed for handling normally viscous crude oils and are not shown, since they are well known in the art. The production facilities include such conventional apparatus as heater treaters, separators, and heated storage tanks, as well as the requisite pumping and flow facilities for handling the oil. The production facilities also are connected with suitable conventional oil processing facilities (also not shown), such as are employed in the conventional processing of the oil after it is recovered from the formation by surface mining techniques, or otherwise. Since these production and processing facilities do not, per se, form a part of this invention, they are not described in detail herein.\nIn operation, the wells 11 and 13 are completed in the formation 15 in accordance with conventional technology. Specifically, bore holes are drilled, at the desired distance and patterning, from the surface into the subterranean formation 15. Thereafter, the casing 17 is set into the formation to the desired depth. As illustrated, the casing 17 may comprise a surface string that is cemented into place immediately above the formation. Thereafter, a second string of casing, including an insulated perforate conduit 21, is emplaced in the respective bore holes and completed in accordance with the desired construction. For example, a perforate conduit 21 may have its foot cemented in place, or it may be installed with a gravel pack or the like to allow for expansion and contraction and still secure the desired injectivity and productivity.\nIn any event, the electrodes are thereafter placed in respective wells. For example, the formation may be from 100 to 300 feet thick and the respective electrodes 23 may be from 50 to 100 feet or more in length. The electrodes 23 are continuously conductive along their length and are connected with the respective electrical conductors 25 and 27 by conventional techniques. For example, the electrodes 23 may be of copper based alloy and may be connected with copper based conductors 25 and 27 by suitable copper based electrical connectors. Thereafter, the alternating current source 29 is connected with the conductors 25 and 27 by way of the surface control equipment, illustrated simply as switch 31 and rheostat 33. If the desired current densities are obtainable without the use of the rheostat, it is set on the zero resistance position to obtain the desired current flow between the wells. The electrical current will flow primarily through the formation, although some of the electrical energy will flow through the oil-impermeable shales, as illustrated in the dashed lines 47. In one embodiment of the present invention the low frequency alternating current utilized herein is provided by a low frequency generator.\nIn another embodiment, the low frequency alternating current is provided by using a frequency convertor to convert high frequency alternating current to a low frequency alternating current.\nIn still another embodiment low frequency alternating current is provided by generating a direct current and reversing the direction thereof in a periodic manner with suitable switching means to produce a current approaching a \"square wave\" rather than a sinusoidal wave of ordinary alternating current. In this manner a commercially available alternator of 60 cycles, for example, could be utilized to produce a square wave with a frequency of only a few cycles per second or less. The direct current could also be provided by rectifying an alternating current. In order to produce a current approaching a square wave the time interval between reversals in current direction should be equal (symmetrical). A solid-state switching device would be suitable for accomplishing this reversal of current direction.\nThe low frequency alternating current of the present invention regardless of means through which it is provided should have a frequency of less than 60 cycles per second in order to achieve reduction in power loss. The lower the frequency the greater the reduction in power loss that will be achieved. However, at the extremely low frequencies of less than about 0.10 cycles per second, problems of corrosion and polarization associated with the use of direct current again begin to enter into the operation to reduce the advantages thereof. At a frequency of from about 0.10 to about 5.0 cycles per second the largest reduction in power loss is achievable.\nBy taking advantage of the fact that the power losses resulting from induced voltage and hysteresis are directly related to the frequency, the present invention has the overall effect to drastically reduce the loss of power associated with transmitting power downhole to electrically heat a formation. Such a reduction in power loss is extremely critical to the overall efficient and economic performance of a system whereby a subterranean formation is heated via electrical conduction between a plurality of wells completed therein.\nThe following example illustrates the applicability of the invention in lowering the power loss associated with the transmission of power downhole.\nExample ______________________________________ 1000 feet, copper cable 270 amperes 1000 feet, 7-inch steelcasing having a Brinell hardness of 188 magnetic hysteresis frequency, cycles and eddy current reduction in power per second power loss, watts loss, % ______________________________________ 60 15360 40 11280 26.6 20 8400 45.4 10 5280 65.7 5 3360 78.2 2 1340 91.3 ______________________________________\nUtilizing a commercial generator powered by a diesel engine the low frequency alternating current is transmitted down a wellbore through a copper cable running the length of a 1000 foot seven-inch steel casing. The varying frequency is achieved by varying the speed of the generator. The very low frequencies are provided by gearing down the generator to very low speeds. As can readily be seen from the above table, utilization of low frequency alternating current significantly reduces the power loss associated with transmitting power down a wellbore as a result of induced eddy currents and magnetic hysteresis. Power loss to cable is not included in this example. The particular size cable used determines that amount of loss. However, regardless of the size of cable utilized, the use of low frequency alternating current will significantly reduce induced eddy current and magnetic hysteresis loss when compared to the use of high frequency alternating current.\nIt should be noted that when employing the present invention to heat a subterranean formation via electrical conduction between, for example, two wells completed therein, the reduction in power loss illustrated by the above example will be approximately twice that shown because of the circuit being completed through the formation and up the second wellbore. Power losses in the second well will also be reduced an equivalent amount by the use of low frequency alternating current.\nHaving thus described the invention, it will be understood that such description has been given by way of illustration and not by way of limitation, reference for the latter purpose being has to the appended claims.\n1. Method of reducing power losses associated with transmission of electrical energy down a wellbore to heat a subterranean formation via electrical conduction between a plurality of wells completed therein, which comprises, passing an alternating current having a frequency of from about 0.10 to about 5.0 cycles per second through the conductors in said wellbore.\n2131585 September 1938 Curtis\n2748868 June 1956 Carpenter\n3507330 April 1970 Gill\n3594492 July 1971 Edison et al.\n3829707 August 1974 Pflanz\n\"Composite Catalog of Oil Field Equipment & Services\", 25th Rev., vol. 1, 1962-1963, World Oil (Gulf Publishing Co.), Houston, Texas, p. 197.\nDate of Patent: Mar 8, 1977\nAssignees: Petro-Canada Exploration Inc. (Calgary), Imperial Oil Limited (Toronto), Canada-Cities Service, Ltd. (Calgary)\nInventors: Loyd R. Kern (Irving, TX), Thomas K. Perkins (Dallas, TX)\nPrimary Examiner: Stephen J. Novosad\nAttorney: Ronnie D. Wilson\nCurrent U.S. Class: Electric Current Or Electrical Wave Energy Through Earth For Treating (166/248); Electrical Heater In Well (166/60)\nInternational Classification: E21B 4324;","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line302604"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.984004020690918,"wiki_prob":0.984004020690918,"text":"Some Rod Blagojevich convictions tossed; wife tells him disappointing news\nBy Jason Meisner and Bob Secter\nA federal appeals court threw out five of 18 counts against Blagojevich, vacated his 14-year sentence and ordered him retried on the five counts.\nMore than three years ago, Rod Blagojevich stood with his family on the steps of his Chicago bungalow and vowed to dozens of supporters to fight to overturn his conviction on corruption charges and his 14-year prison sentence.\nOn Tuesday, 1,224 days after the disgraced former governor checked in to a federal prison in Colorado, his lawyers staged a news conference at the same spot on the Northwest Side. This time, however, there were no cheering crowds or autographs to be signed. The pained look on the faces of Blagojevich's wife, Patti, and 18-year-old daughter, Amy, spoke volumes.\nIn a long-awaited ruling just hours earlier, a federal appeals court in Chicago threw out five of the 18 counts against Blagojevich and ordered his sentence vacated. The three-judge panel tempered the small legal victory by calling the evidence against Blagojevich \"overwhelming\" and making it clear he will likely remain locked up for years to come.\nThe same judge who imposed the original sentence — a frequent target of the defense for his alleged unfairness — will still decide his punishment.\nCalling her husband an eternal optimist, a somber Patti Blagojevich said she broke news of the ruling to the former governor, who is more than three years into his sentence.\n\"This has been a long road for our family. We've waited a long time for this decision. We are very disappointed,\" Patti told reporters. \"There's been so much in the last 3½ years that Rod's missed — high school graduations, proms, birthdays — and so if there's any silver lining for us it's that possibly this is a step in the right direction to getting him home with us and with his girls where he belongs.\"\nAs she listened, Amy began to cry, resting her head on her mom's shoulder.\nBlagojevich's lawyers blasted the ruling as legally unsound and said they'd consider asking the full 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals to rehear the case or possibly filing an appeal before the U.S. Supreme Court — both considered long shots at best.\nThe ruling came 19 months after oral argument, and at 23 pages, it was surprisingly concise. Its author, Judge Frank Easterbrook, said the court could have produced \"a book-length opinion\" because of the complexities of Blagojevich's two trials but chose to stick to \"the most important facts\" and the \"principal arguments\" of the lawyers.\nBlagojevich's appellate attorney, Leonard Goodman, said he was stunned that the court didn't address many of the issues and alleged evidentiary errors that the former governor's appeal raised.\n\"And the ones it does address it gets it wrong,\" said Goodman, referring in particular to the trial judge's decision to exclude testimony from Blagojevich that he believed his actions were lawful. \"So it's shocking to me that after a year and a half this could be the result of the court's work.\"\nThe ruling left uncertain how Blagojevich's fate would ultimately be resolved. Prosecutors could opt against a third trial, throw out the five overturned counts and proceed to a resentencing on the remaining convictions.\nIf prosecutors elect to drop the counts that were thrown out on appeal, then U.S. District Judge James Zagel, who presided over two criminal trials for Blagojevich, should \"proceed directly to resentencing,\" the opinion stated.\n\"It is not possible to call the 168 months unlawfully high for Blagojevich's crimes, but the district judge should consider on remand whether it is the most appropriate sentence,\" Easterbrook wrote in the unanimous opinion. In ordering a sentencing redo, the judges indicated that Blagojevich might not expect a more generous outcome from Zagel this time around.\nThe U.S. attorney's office in Chicago had no immediate comment Tuesday. Both U.S. Attorney Zachary Fardon and his top assistant, Joel Levin, likely won't be involved in deciding how the office responds to the court's ruling because of conflicts of interest. Both represented clients connected to the Blagojevich case while in private practice.\nJeffrey Cramer, a former federal prosecutor, said the ruling wasn't a vindication for Blagojevich \"by any stretch of the imagination,\" noting the court did not find that he was wrongfully convicted.\n\"This is a technicality on jury instructions,\" he said of the decision.\nCramer said the government will almost certainly throw out the five counts reversed by the court and attempt to defend the 14-year prison sentence Zagel already handed down. In fact, the court noted that Zagel had already found that the original sentence called for under federal guidelines was too harsh.\n\"He had already given (Blagojevich) more than half off,\" Cramer said.\nBlagojevich, now 58, was convicted of misusing his powers as governor in an array of shakedown schemes, most famously for his alleged attempts to sell the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Barack Obama after his 2008 election as president. Blagojevich, incarcerated in a federal prison in suburban Denver since March 2012, is not scheduled to be released until May 2024, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons website.\nThe appellate court had mulled the ruling since holding oral arguments in December 2013, a delay that led to speculation over a split among the panel of three judges — Easterbrook, Ilana Diamond Rovner and Michael Kanne.\nBlagojevich has long claimed he was no different than other elected officials who leveraged their political power, and much of the appellate opinion focused on that sometimes gray line between traditional political horse-trading and flat-out bribery.\nThe court ruled that the instructions given to the jury in Blagojevich's second trial should have differentiated between Blagojevich's various schemes to sell the Senate seat, in particular his idea to seek a position in Obama's Cabinet in exchange for appointing longtime Obama adviser Valerie Jarrett. The opinion called that a \"common exercise of logrolling,\" essentially the swapping of political favors.\nAnother aspect of the scheme — to give the seat to Jarrett in exchange for money — represented a much brighter line of criminal activity, the court held.\n\"The (jury) instructions treated all proposals alike,\" the opinion stated. \"We conclude, however, that they are legally different: a proposal to trade one public act for another, a form of logrolling, is fundamentally unlike the swap of an official act for a private payment.\"\nThe opinion also invoked a key exchange from the 2013 arguments when Easterbrook pressed a federal prosecutor on how Blagojevich's conduct differed from a famous political deal supposedly struck more than 60 years ago: President Dwight Eisenhower's nomination of Earl Warren to the U.S. Supreme Court in exchange for the California governor's support in the 1952 election.\n\"If the prosecutor is right, and a swap of political favors involving a job for one of the politicians is a felony, then if the standard account is true both the President of the United States and the Chief Justice of the United States should have gone to prison,\" the opinion stated.\nBut the opinion was also clear that the evidence against Blagojevich was overwhelming, \"much of it from Blagojevich's own mouth\" as a result of wiretaps on his phone and his rambling testimony in his second trial. The opinion also upheld what perhaps was the most brazen of Blagojevich's extortion and bribery convictions: a deal to name then-U.S. Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. to the Senate seat in exchange for $1.5 million in campaign cash.\nWhile it was forced to reverse convictions on the five counts, the court wrote, prosecutors could focus at a retrial on the then-governor's more straightforward efforts to swap Jarrett's appointment for money, not a Cabinet post.\nIn his remarks to reporters outside Blagojevich's home, Goodman said he had not yet spoken to Blagojevich so he wasn't sure about the next course of action. But he said his advice to Blagojevich will be to continue to fight the case.\n[Most read] Top floors of Macy’s flagship evolving from Frango mints and furs to thousands of office workers »\n\"The evidence that would have acquitted him was excluded at trial, and my advice to the governor is that he should fight on,\" Goodman said.\nPatrick Collins, another former federal prosecutor who helped secure a corruption conviction against former Gov. George Ryan, said the opinion's legacy may be in the way it attempts to draw a clearer distinction between logrolling and behavior that is clearly corrupt.\n\"It really tries to draw a bright line, and that gives some helpful guidance to politicians, particularly those who operate in the gray zone,\" Collins said.\nIG: Cook County needs revamp on sexual harassment outside of work following allegations against Preckwinkle ex-chief of staff\nDespite residency rules, World Business Chicago VP, Wilmette school board president holds a key role in Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s orbit\nOn ‘Face the Nation,’ Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin discusses fear in Latino community over planned immigration raids, Trump tweets\nFeds raid home of second Speaker Madigan ally, ex-Ald. Mike Zalewski\nIllinois gambling expansion could take a while. Here’s a look at what’s to come.\nChicago Tribune's Dawn Rhodes, John Chase and Jeff Coen contributed.\njmeisner@tribpub.com\nbsecter@tribpub.com\nTwitter @jmetr22b\nJails and Prisons","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1690478"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7306388020515442,"wiki_prob":0.2693611979484558,"text":"5 WEDDING DRESS SHOPPING BLUNDERS TO AVOID\nSeptember 03, 2014 / mirabridal\nIf you're like us, you've probably spent one too many Friday nights watching TLC's \"Say Yes to the Dress\" marathons with a glass of wine and a fistful of tissues. Thousands of brides — approximately 17,000 a year, to get specific — strut through Kleinfeld's doors in search of their perfect dress, which is why when had a few questions about potential shopping pitfalls, we took them straight to Kleinfeld's Fashion Director Terry Hall. Here is his expert take on what not to do on your wedding dress journey. 1. Don't Shop Before You've Set the Date \"Whenever a bride comes in and she doesn't have the date and the venue, we really don't know where to begin because we don't know what the time frame is, and it really is all about the time frame,\" Hall says. \"Many designers take four to even eight months to make a gown,\" he elaborates, so if you're not sure what timeline you're working with, consultants won't know what dresses to show you.\n2. Don't Bring Too Many People \"More people equals more opinions and most of the time you're not always going to agree so it's really important that the bride chooses only those whose opinions she really values,\" Hall suggests.\nSee More: 5 People You Should Not Go Wedding Dress Shopping WIth You\n3. Don't Forget to Factor Alterations Into Your Budget To keep expectations in check, be sure to set a budget that includes alteration costs. \"Alterations can be several hundred dollars and if there are any changes that need to be made to the dress, those all have costs involved and really can significantly add to the budget,\" Hall explains. 4. Don't Forsake Trendy Dresses \"Oftentimes I hear brides say, 'I love this dress, but I know it's kind of a hot trend right now so I think I should wear something a bit more classic because what am I going to say about this picture in 20 years?' What I say to that is: 'You're not getting married 20 years from now, you're getting married right now.' It's not about whether or not that dress is timeless or not, it's about that day, and that picture should be frozen in time,\" Hall notes.\n5. Don't Get Camera Happy \"I understand brides want to take pictures of their dress, and a lot of times family members or friends can't make it to the appointment. But I always discourage them from taking photos, mainly because most of the photos today are taken with a cell phone and oftentimes the way the dress photographs, isn't the way it really looks in person. So the person that's receiving the photo on the other end is seeing something different than what the bride is seeing, and she may not get the answer that she wants. Also, I've seen emailed pictures of the dress accidentally be posted, or shared with people that weren't supposed to see it,\" Hall warns. \"When it's absolutely necessary, I encourage them to either Facetime or Skype in real time, because you can actually speak to any of the differences, and those images aren't going to be saved.\"\nSee More: FAQ for Wedding Gown Shopping\nSeptember 03, 2014 / mirabridal/\n5 WEDDING DRESS SHOPPING BLUNDERS TO AVOID, BRIDAL ADVICE, BRIDAL SHOPPING ADVICE, BRIDLA ADVICE, WEDDING GOWN SHOPPING\nOUR FALL 2014 MAGGIE SOTTERO BRIDAL ...\n5 PEOPLE WHO SHOULD NOT GO WEDDING ...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line932141"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5396909117698669,"wiki_prob":0.5396909117698669,"text":"Man from southern NJ faces criminal charges for shooting at pilot whales\nBy editor on February 22, 2015 Comments Off on Man from southern NJ faces criminal charges for shooting at pilot whales\nNEWARK — A Cape May man surrendered to U.S. Marshals Thursday for shooting at pilot whales off the New Jersey coast, U.S. Attorney Paul Fishman announced.\nDaniel Archibald, 27, is charged by complaint with one count of violating the Marine Mammal Protection Act. He appeared Thursday afternoon in Newark federal court before U.S. Magistrate Judge James Clark III in Newark federal court. He was released on $10,000 unsecured bond, with travel restricted to the United States, except for fishing in international waters. He is required to surrender all firearms and firearms purchaser identification cards and is prohibited from using or possessing a firearm on land or sea.\nAccording to the complaint unsealed today: Archibald, a tuna fisherman, allegedly shot at pilot whales while aboard the fishing vessel “Capt Bob.”\nPilot whales are protected under the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, a statute that prohibits the hunting, killing, capture or harassment of any marine mammal. Harassment under the statute includes any act of pursuit, torment or annoyance that has the potential to injure a marine mammal in the wild.\nOn Sept. 24, 2011, an 11-foot, 740-pound pilot whale beached itself in Allenhurst, and died shortly thereafter. A necropsy uncovered a .30 caliber bullet lodged in the whale’s jaw. The bullet wound triggered an extensive infection that caused the whale to starve to death a month later.\nReview of the Capt Bob’s vessel monitoring system confirmed that it was in New Jersey fishing waters for much of August 2011, the approximate time that the whale was shot. Also, nearly a month before the pilot whale washed ashore, defendant Archibald posted a Facebook photograph of a tuna head on a hook with the caption “thanks a lot pilot whales.”\nSpecial agents eventually searched the Capt Bob and found a Mosin-Nagant, a World War II rifle that has not been manufactured in several decades. Forensic analysis revealed that the bullet found in the whale was similar in all general rifling characteristics to test bullets fired from Archibald’s rifle. When interviewed by special agents, Archibald admitted that he had “spray[ed]” bullets at pilot whales in an effort to chase them away.\nThe violation charged carries a maximum penalty of one year in prison and a statutory maximum fine of $100,000 or twice the gross gain or loss resulting from the offense.\nFishman credited special agents of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Law Enforcement, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Jeffrey Ray, with the investigation leading to the charges.\nThe charges and allegations contained in the complaint are accusations, and the defendant is considered innocent unless and until proven guilty.\nMan from southern NJ faces criminal charges for shooting at pilot whales added by editor on February 22, 2015","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line369102"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6798444390296936,"wiki_prob":0.6798444390296936,"text":"Daily Ratings and News for NVIDIA\nComplete the form below to receive the latest headlines and analysts' recommendations for NVIDIA with our free daily email newsletter:\nObermeyer Wood Investment Counsel Lllp Buys Shares of 191,677 NVIDIA Co. (NVDA)\nPosted by Anthony Sawyer on May 16th, 2019\nObermeyer Wood Investment Counsel Lllp bought a new position in NVIDIA Co. (NASDAQ:NVDA) in the first quarter, HoldingsChannel reports. The firm bought 191,677 shares of the computer hardware maker’s stock, valued at approximately $34,418,000. NVIDIA accounts for 3.2% of Obermeyer Wood Investment Counsel Lllp’s investment portfolio, making the stock its 14th biggest position.\nA number of other hedge funds and other institutional investors also recently made changes to their positions in NVDA. Bay Harbor Wealth Management LLC grew its holdings in NVIDIA by 41.4% during the first quarter. Bay Harbor Wealth Management LLC now owns 205 shares of the computer hardware maker’s stock worth $37,000 after purchasing an additional 60 shares during the period. LS Investment Advisors LLC grew its holdings in NVIDIA by 0.5% during the first quarter. LS Investment Advisors LLC now owns 11,952 shares of the computer hardware maker’s stock worth $2,146,000 after purchasing an additional 62 shares during the period. Tradewinds Capital Management LLC grew its holdings in NVIDIA by 19.8% during the first quarter. Tradewinds Capital Management LLC now owns 393 shares of the computer hardware maker’s stock worth $71,000 after purchasing an additional 65 shares during the period. Sky Investment Group LLC grew its holdings in NVIDIA by 0.9% during the first quarter. Sky Investment Group LLC now owns 7,160 shares of the computer hardware maker’s stock worth $1,286,000 after purchasing an additional 67 shares during the period. Finally, Atlas Brown Inc. grew its holdings in NVIDIA by 1.7% during the first quarter. Atlas Brown Inc. now owns 4,227 shares of the computer hardware maker’s stock worth $759,000 after purchasing an additional 70 shares during the period. 70.03% of the stock is owned by hedge funds and other institutional investors.\nGet NVIDIA alerts:\nA number of brokerages have recently issued reports on NVDA. TheStreet upgraded NVIDIA from a “c+” rating to a “b-” rating in a report on Thursday, April 4th. BidaskClub upgraded NVIDIA from a “buy” rating to a “strong-buy” rating in a report on Friday, April 5th. DZ Bank cut NVIDIA to a “sell” rating and set a $170.00 price objective for the company. in a report on Friday, April 12th. Nomura began coverage on shares of NVIDIA in a research report on Tuesday, April 2nd. They issued a “neutral” rating and a $147.00 price target for the company. Finally, Zacks Investment Research upgraded shares of NVIDIA from a “strong sell” rating to a “hold” rating in a research report on Monday, April 1st. Three equities research analysts have rated the stock with a sell rating, twelve have issued a hold rating and twenty-six have given a buy rating to the stock. The company currently has a consensus rating of “Buy” and a consensus price target of $200.51.\nIn other NVIDIA news, EVP Debora Shoquist sold 5,823 shares of the business’s stock in a transaction on Wednesday, April 3rd. The shares were sold at an average price of $185.00, for a total transaction of $1,077,255.00. Following the sale, the executive vice president now owns 171,783 shares of the company’s stock, valued at $31,779,855. The transaction was disclosed in a legal filing with the SEC, which is accessible through this link. Also, CFO Colette Kress sold 14,092 shares of the business’s stock in a transaction on Thursday, March 21st. The stock was sold at an average price of $183.33, for a total transaction of $2,583,486.36. The disclosure for this sale can be found here. In the last ninety days, insiders have sold 20,029 shares of company stock worth $3,678,385. Insiders own 4.64% of the company’s stock.\nShares of NVDA opened at $162.04 on Thursday. NVIDIA Co. has a one year low of $124.46 and a one year high of $292.76. The company has a market cap of $96.42 billion, a price-to-earnings ratio of 26.70, a PEG ratio of 3.82 and a beta of 1.85. The company has a debt-to-equity ratio of 0.21, a current ratio of 7.94 and a quick ratio of 6.76.\nNVIDIA (NASDAQ:NVDA) last announced its quarterly earnings data on Thursday, February 14th. The computer hardware maker reported $0.80 EPS for the quarter, beating the consensus estimate of $0.53 by $0.27. NVIDIA had a net margin of 35.35% and a return on equity of 41.78%. The business had revenue of $2.21 billion during the quarter, compared to the consensus estimate of $2.22 billion. During the same period in the previous year, the business earned $1.72 earnings per share. The company’s revenue was down 24.3% on a year-over-year basis. On average, sell-side analysts anticipate that NVIDIA Co. will post 4.46 earnings per share for the current fiscal year.\nCOPYRIGHT VIOLATION WARNING: “Obermeyer Wood Investment Counsel Lllp Buys Shares of 191,677 NVIDIA Co. (NVDA)” was published by Week Herald and is the property of of Week Herald. If you are reading this piece on another site, it was illegally stolen and republished in violation of U.S. and international trademark & copyright laws. The legal version of this piece can be viewed at https://weekherald.com/2019/05/16/obermeyer-wood-investment-counsel-lllp-buys-shares-of-191677-nvidia-co-nvda.html.\nNVIDIA Company Profile\nNVIDIA Corporation operates as a visual computing company worldwide. It operates in two segments, GPU and Tegra Processor. The GPU segment offers processors, which include GeForce for PC gaming and mainstream PCs; GeForce NOW for cloud-based game-streaming service; Quadro for design professionals working in computer-aided design, video editing, special effects, and other creative applications; Tesla for artificial intelligence (AI) utilizing deep learning, accelerated computing, and general purpose computing; GRID, which provides power of NVIDIA graphics through the cloud and datacenters; DGX for AI scientists, researchers, and developers; and cryptocurrency-specific graphics processing units.\nFeatured Story: Average Daily Trade Volume – What You Need to Know\nWant to see what other hedge funds are holding NVDA? Visit HoldingsChannel.com to get the latest 13F filings and insider trades for NVIDIA Co. (NASDAQ:NVDA).\nReceive News & Ratings for NVIDIA Daily - Enter your email address below to receive a concise daily summary of the latest news and analysts' ratings for NVIDIA and related companies with MarketBeat.com's FREE daily email newsletter.\nSounDAC Trading 9% Higher This Week (XSD)\nAmerican Airlines Group Inc (AAL) Stake Lessened by State Board of Administration of Florida Retirement System","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1207312"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.929275631904602,"wiki_prob":0.929275631904602,"text":"Derby winner Country House out of Preakness\nBy STEPHEN WHYNO AP Sports Writer\nAfter being declared the winner of the Kentucky Derby by disqualification, Country House will not run in the Preakness because of illness, ending any chance a Triple Crown this year.\nTrainer Bill Mott said Tuesday the long shot winner of horse racing’s biggest event was no longer being considered to run in the second jewel of the Triple Crown after it looked like Country House was getting sick. After the horse started coughing, which Mott called unusual, blood work showed he was harboring some sort of virus.\n\"Hopefully just rest and a little time is going to be what the doctor ordered,\" Mott told The Associated Press. \"Other than that, he doesn’t actually act sick. He’s kind of a big, tough horse, but there’s signs that things are not going in the right direction with him.\"\nCountry House was elevated to the winner’s circle at the Kentucky Derby in sloppy conditions Saturday after Maximum Security was disqualified for impeding other horses. His absence at the Preakness means there won’t be a third Triple Crown winner in five years. Bob Baffert-trained Justify and American Pharoah have each won it since 2015.\nCountry Horse is the first Kentucky Derby winner not to enter the Preakness since Grindstone in 1996. Grindstone, who was found to have bone chips in one of his knees, was the first Derby winner to be retired immediately after that race since Bubbling Over in 1926.\nBecause of how the Kentucky Derby went, Mott said he and those around the horse were not as disappointed by this as they would’ve been under normal circumstances.\n\"I guess it’s been an unusual ride anyway,\" Mott said of his first Derby victory. \"I don’t think it hit any of us as hard as what it might have. I think we’re grateful to have the win we had and hopefully he bounces back for some races later on.\"\nCountry House joins Maximum Security in skipping the Preakness.\nThe 1 3/16-mile Preakness is May 18 at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore. Though shorter than the Kentucky Derby, the race requires a quick turnaround. Maximum Security owner Gary West didn’t want to burden his colt with the Triple Crown off the table.\nWest on Monday appealed the decision to disqualify the horse from the Derby, which was quickly rejected by the Kentucky Horse Racing Commission because the stewards’ decision isn’t subject to appeal.\nCountry House was 65-1 to win the Derby, the second-longest odds in the 145-year history of the race. It was the first time the horse who crossed the finish line first was not declared the winner.\nWith trainer Mark Casse’s War of Will and other contenders expected to enter the Preakness, Country House likely would not have been favored to win. Even his Derby performance was a surprise.\n\"I thought he showed amazing improvement from his previous race,\" Mott said. \"Even his running, he was up in the race, he looked like a different horse the first half of the race.\"\nIn a statement, the Maryland Jockey Club and the Stronach Group that owns Pimlico said Country House not running \"doesn’t take away from the excitement\" and that they anticipate more interest from owners and trainers to enter the race.\nWhile the stakes barn behind Pimlico will not have a Derby champion for the first time in more than two decades, Mott said Country House is a possibility to run in the third jewel of the Triple Crown, the Belmont Stakes in New York on June 8. Keeping him out of the Preakness, though, was a no-brainer for the 65-year-old trainer.\n\"I’ve never liked training a horse that’s given an indication that he’s sick,\" Mott said. \"We will monitor him and he’s off the training list.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1437954"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7308447957038879,"wiki_prob":0.26915520429611206,"text":"Tate Promoted to President in Pryor, Okla. Region\nTuesday, May 30 at 07:15 AM\nIndustry veteran will serve bank's Pryor, Okla. region.\nPRYOR , Okla. – Arvest Bank is pleased to announce Brandon Tate has been promoted to community bank president.\nTate will serve as Arvest’s community bank president for the bank’s Pryor, Okla., region, which includes Pryor, Tahlequah and Wagoner. He will office at the Arvest branch at 1521 W. Highway 51 in Wagoner.\nHaving held various roles in his banking career, Tate most recently served Arvest as senior vice president and commercial relationship manager. In his role as community bank president, he will formulate a hierarchy of objectives, standards of performance, strategies, plans, and budgets, among other duties, for the Pryor region.\nTate earned a bachelor’s degree in business administration at Northeastern State University, with a major in finance and minor in accounting.\nActive in numerous civic organizations, Tate is chairman of the board of the Wagoner Lions Club, as well as vice president and board member of the Fort Gibson Lake Association. He’s also an active member of the Wagoner and Coweta chambers of commerce, and the Home Builders Association of Greater Tulsa.\nTate lives in Wagoner with his wife, Heather, and their son.\nTags: Associates, Oklahoma, Press Release, Tulsa","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line412146"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6765046715736389,"wiki_prob":0.3234953284263611,"text":"EXCLUSIVE: ‘Mafia’ 'Lost My Appetite' Blu-ray Clip\nEXCLUSIVE: Mafia 'Lost My Appetite' Blu-ray Clip\n— January 31st, 2013\nWe have an exclusive clip from the upcoming crime thriller Mafia, debuting on DVD February 5. Ving Rhames stars as crime lord Renzo Wes, who must deal with an obsessive cop (Pam Grier) determined to take him down, and is willing to break the law to do so. The plot thickens further when the cop's clean partner (Robert Patrick) gets involved. Take a look at this exclusive scene, along with the trailer.\nRuthless crime boss Renzo Wes (Ving Rhames) rules the underworld. But when he crosses a cynical, jaded cop bent on revenge (Pam Grier) she becomes obsessed with bringing him down and is willing to break the law to do it. Her partner (Robert Patrick) is a clean cop who wants to do the right thing, but when his personal life intersects with Renzo's, loyalties are tested. The three of them are on a collision course with destiny - and no one will emerge unscathed.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1140060"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8541681170463562,"wiki_prob":0.8541681170463562,"text":"The company's control and monitoring system made a complex live production much smoother with intuitive control of 80 external sources.\nCerebrum, Axon Digital Design's customizable control and monitoring system, played a significant part in helping CTV Outside Broadcast deliver a much smoother service to its broadcast customers during this year's Open Golf Championship in St. Andrew’s, Scotland.\nFor the second year running, CTV was responsible for live mobile production services for both IMG Media/ESPN and The Golf Channel. To meet the demands for wider coverage, the team drew on lessons learnt in 2014 to improve the workflow and established Cerebrum as the nerve centre for routing control for this year’s event.\nHamish Greig, CTV OB's Technical Director, says: \"Due to the scale of this production and the increased number of sources and destinations, particularly on the ESPN side, we needed to simplify the operation and make it more manageable. We worked hard to improve the flow of information on the technical front, and brought Axon's Cerebrum into the heart of the workflow to support us. It’s perfectly suited to this complex production environment and gave us much smoother control over elements such as tally, UMD and cameras. It truly was the nerve centre of the production.”\nLive broadcasts, especially complex productions that involve a fleet of Outside Broadcast vehicles, benefit hugely from an 'always on' control and monitoring system that can deliver comprehensive system management in an easy and operator-friendly way. By linking together all the main broadcast equipment from major manufacturers, Cerebrum's advanced functionality and broad range of features simplifies multi device control onto one easy-to-use interface. It supports a wide range of devices including routers, production switchers, servers, audio desks, camera control units, receiver decoders, multiviewers and waveform monitors – using either SNMP (Simple Network Management Protocol) or third party protocols.\nCTV has equipped two of its OB trucks with Cerebrum and both of these vehicles were integral to the production of the championship at St Andrew’s.\n\"Primarily, we used Cerebrum for tally, UMD and multi-viewer control and monitoring, remote colour balance and the control of both the bunker cameras and the Panasonic pan and tilt cameras,\" Greig explains. \"In total, the system supported 80 external sources, each individually pre-set on the panel. This meant that just one operator was able to manage set-ups, signal routes, QC, tally and multi viewers in a very smooth and efficient way. Cerebrum enabled our engineer to achieve tasks in minutes that previously would have taken hours to complete – that’s impressive.\"\nAdrian Richmond, Axon’s Director of Sales UK and Africa, says CTV OB is just one of a number of broadcast companies that are realizing the benefits that Cerebrum can bring to their productions.\n\"The Open is a great example of how Cerebrum can make light work of large, complex events by integrating seamlessly with other technology, providing reliable, scalable and flexible control and monitoring, simplifying workflow and significantly reducing the workload,\" he says.\nCerebrum is fast becoming the control solution of choice for mobile production, news and studio live production, master control and remote production, with recent installations including Indonesia's 24-hour news channel Metro TV and News UK, which has installed Cerebrum in its state-of-the-art broadcast facilities in London.\nNow that the Open is over for another year, CTV will be deploying Cerebrum with its OB11 production unit to cover the 2015 Ashes test match cricket series and with OB3 to deliver coverage of the upcoming Barclays Premier League football season for BBC’s The Match of the Day. Later this autumn, Cerebrum will also be helping other production companies make light work of top sporting fixtures, including Gearhouse at the US Open tennis at Flushing Meadows and Timeline’s 4K production of BT Sports UEFA Champions League coverage.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1047970"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6068983674049377,"wiki_prob":0.6068983674049377,"text":"One service to rule them all\nGoogle is making it easier for carriers to communicate over RCS\nGoogle \"hub\" model allows carriers to implement RCS with ease.\nRCS is a next-generation communication protocol with read receipts, group chat, support for high-definition images, and more. The goal with RCS is to bring SMS and MMS to feature parity with the likes of Facebook Messenger, and Google has been leading the charge on that front. Earlier this year, the company rebranded Messenger to Android Messages, making it the de facto messaging app for RCS.\nGoogle is also working closely with carriers to make RCS ubiquitous on Android — the platform's answer to iMessage. There are inherent challenges involved in getting carriers to talk to one another over the protocol — over the years, carriers have built additional features into their own messaging clients as a means of differentiation. For instance, AT&T and T-Mobile both offer RCS, but their version isn't compatible with Sprint's implementation, which uses Google's recommended universal profile.\nRogers is another carrier that uses the standardized universal profile, and earlier this week the Canadian carrier announced that its RCS solution is interoperable with Sprint. To bring further intercompatibility among carriers, Google's VP of communication products Nick Fox said that the company is using a \"hub\" model to get carriers connected to one another over RCS. For instance, a carrier connected to the hub will be able to connect to all the other carriers also connected.\nWe are deploying a \"hub\" model, so that carriers can interconnect to the hub once to get access to all other carriers connected to the hub.\n— Nick Fox (@RealNickFox) June 5, 2017\nThe model makes it far less cumbersome for carriers to get set up with RCS as they don't have to develop individual connections with other carriers, saving resources and time. The move should lead to more carriers adopting the messaging protocol in the future.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1314018"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6256780624389648,"wiki_prob":0.6256780624389648,"text":"How Exercise May Protect the Brain From Alzheimer’s Disease\nBy Amanda MacMillan\nRegular exercise may offer some protection against Alzheimer’s disease, even for people who are genetically at risk, according to recent research.\nIn the study, published in the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, people who did more moderate-intensity physical activity were more likely to have healthy patterns of glucose metabolism in their brains—a sign of healthy brain activity—than those who did less. Light-intensity physical activity, on the other hand, was not associated with similar benefits.\nThe study involved 93 adults with an average age of 64, all of whom had at least one parent with Alzheimer’s disease, at least one gene variation linked to Alzheimer’s disease, or both. This put them at high risk for developing the disease themselves, although none showed any cognitive impairment at the time of the study.\nTo illuminate the relationship between brain activity and exercise levels, everyone wore an accelerometer for a week to measure their daily physical activity and received PET scans to measure glucose metabolism, which reveals neuron health and activity, in several regions of the brain. For people with Alzheimer’s disease, these regions tend to have depressed glucose metabolism.\nResearchers found that people who spent at least 68 minutes a day engaged in physical activity at a moderate level—the equivalent of a brisk walk—had better glucose metabolism in all of those regions than those who spent less time doing so.\nThe amounts of time spent being sedentary or doing less-intense physical activity (like slow walking) were not associated with changes in any of the brain regions studied. Vigorous activity was linked to better glucose metabolism in one brain region—the hippocampus—but not in the others.\nLarger doses of high-intensity exercise may be needed to provide the benefits of just “a modest increase” in moderate activity, the authors wrote, suggesting that you don’t have to exercise to the extreme to get brain benefits. Past research comparing the brain-boosting power of moderate- and vigorous-intensity exercise has been mixed, says lead author Ozioma Okonkwo, assistant professor of medicine at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. But in general, he says, the evidence suggests that “light activity is insufficient, and vigorous activity might be unnecessary.”\nBeing able to quantify the connection between moderate-intensity activity and brain health is an exciting and important step in Alzheimer’s research, the researchers say, although further studies are needed in order to show a cause-and-effect relationship between exercise and glucose metabolism—and to demonstrate real-life benefits. (The team is currently recruiting people with concerns about their brain health for a clinical trial to help determine the right dose of exercise for people with mild memory problems.)\nBut Okonkwo points out that previous research has already established a connection between glucose metabolism and cognitive function. “We’re showing now that a moderate-intensity active lifestyle actually boosts neuronal function,” he says. “I don’t think it’s too much of a leap to make the argument that this probably is one of the pathways through which exercise prevents cognitive decline in middle life.”\nOkonkwo says this research offers reassurance that people can take steps to protect themselves against Alzheimer’s disease, even if they are at high genetic risk. “The evidence shows that it’s never too late to take up and maintain a physically active regimen,” he says. “It also suggests that the earlier you begin and the longer you continue it, the more benefits you tend to accrue.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1644970"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.964263379573822,"wiki_prob":0.964263379573822,"text":"Dominic Raab attempts to calm no-deal Brexit fears\nThe UK Brexit secretary says it is ‘very hard to imagine’ that Brussels would not act to help minimize disruption.\nBy\tCharlie Cooper\nUpdated 4/19/19, 1:43 AM CET\nBritain's Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab delivers his speech outlining the government's plans for a no-deal scenario | Peter Nicholls/AFP via Getty Images\nLONDON — There are no plans to deploy the military to secure food and medicines supplies in the event of a no-deal Brexit, Brexit Secretary Dominic Raab said Thursday, as the U.K. government published advice for citizens and businesses to prepare for a breakdown in talks with Brussels.\nCalling the documents a “practical and proportionate” approach to the threat of disruption in the event of no deal, Raab sought to debunk what he called “misinformation” about the consequences of no deal, insisting that neither the army nor air force would be called upon and that there would be no “sandwich famine.”\nHowever, he said he recognizes the risks of no deal “in the short-term.”\nAdvisory documents published today cover 25 different areas, including health and medicines regulation, trade, banking and insurance services, energy, farm payments, university research and tobacco regulations.\nSeveral of the documents raise explicit concerns about higher costs and red tape for business. The notice on trade with the EU acknowledges that traders who have never had to deal with customs declarations before will have to engage a customs broker, acquire new authorizations from the tax authority and buy the appropriate software to manage their new responsibilities, all of which “will come at a cost.”\nThe U.K. government now has 7,000 people working on Brexit preparations and funding is in place for another 9,000.\nIndividuals could also see the cost of card payments to the EU go up, the documents warn, and these transactions (covering everything from goods purchases from EU firms to Airbnb payments for holiday homes) would no longer be covered by rules that prevent businesses placing surcharges on transactions. But Raab pointed out that the problem of access to bank accounts would apply to EU citizens as well because in the event of no deal \"we are not considered, strictly, an EU member state.\"\nBut he said, “I would think that was a practical issue that we should be able to resolve.”\nBrexit holds up UK Labour split — for now\nTom McTague\nNo-deal Brexit could send UK cigarette labeling up in smoke\nCharlie Cooper\nMuch of the no-deal planning is based on a unilateral approach, but Raab said he finds it “very hard to imagine” that the EU would not cooperate with the U.K. to minimize disruption.\nHe said that the U.K. government now has 7,000 people working on Brexit preparations and there is funding in place for another 9,000 people to join the civil service for Brexit-related work. The U.K. Border Force is recruiting an extra 300 staff, he said, with plans “in the pipeline” to recruit a further 1,000 people.\nRaab and the EU's chief Brexit negotiator Michel Barnier | John Thys/AFP via Getty Images\nThe documents say that a no-deal must not disrupt the terms of the Good Friday Agreement and acknowledge that there would be “very significant challenges” surrounding trade for Northern Ireland in the event of no deal and this represents a “unique and highly sensitive context.”\n“The U.K. would stand ready to engage constructively to meet our commitments and act in the best interests of the people of Northern Ireland,” the trade technical notice says, and pledges to “provide more information in due course.”\nOn medicines regulation, the U.K. would continue to recognize drugs and medical devices approved by the EU, but sharing information on databases on medicines safety would cease in the event of no deal, the documents say. EU laws governing the regulation of tobacco would cease to apply in the U.K., but the government would seek to replicate them. However, every cigarette pack in the U.K. would need to change immediately from exit day, because the health warning photos used on them are copyrighted by the EU.\nRaab also claimed that while the U.K. wants a deal, there are some “opportunities” from a no-deal outcome, including regulatory freedom, the ability to set an independent trade policy immediately, and to put in place an independent immigration policy. The U.K. would also be able to cease its payments to the EU budget.\nJosh Hardie, deputy director general of the Confederation of British Industry said: “By now, few can be in any doubt that ‘no deal’ would wreak havoc on economies across Europe. These papers show that those who claim crashing out of the EU on World Trade Organisation rules is acceptable live in a world of fantasy, where facts are not allowed to challenge ideology.\"\nKeir Starmer, Labour's shadow Brexit secretary said: “We are eight weeks out from the deadline for reaching an agreement. Ministers should be getting on with the job of negotiating a Brexit deal that works for Britain, not publishing vague documents that will convince no one.\"\n“A no-deal Brexit has never been viable and would represent a complete failure of the Government’s negotiating strategy,” he added.\nDominic Raab said the papers published Thursday represent around a third of the total and he expects the rest to be published in batches before the end of September.\nBREXIT CHEAT SHEET\nGuide to the Brexit impact report industry\nWho’s who in the Brexit talks\nBrexit policy guides\nBrexit timeline: From referendum to EU exit\nImagining the Brexit cliff edge\nUK trade secretary: Johnson’s pre-Brexit US trade deal won’t work\nNegotiating a limited deal with Washington before Brexit would ‘breach’ EU law, says Liam Fox.\nUS regulators fine Facebook $5B for failing to protect users’ privacy\nDemocrat lawmakers dismissed the record-high amount as ‘chump change.’\nEU draws up measures against Turkey over Cyprus drilling\nIn response to gas exploration in Cypriot waters, bloc is prepared to cut pre-accession funding to Ankara.\nUS pressures France, UK on tech tax proposals ahead of G7\nUS lawmakers threaten to scuttle a UK trade deal if London tries to tax digital giants.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line171980"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5336447358131409,"wiki_prob":0.5336447358131409,"text":"Dean Baker, Contributor\nThe House Financial Reform Bill: Don't Touch the Banks, Get a Smarter Fed\n03/18/2010 05:12 am ET Updated May 25, 2011\nThose who like banks that are too big to fail will love the latest financial reform proposals circulating in the US Congress. The bill put forward by Barney Frank, the chairman of the House finance committee, does little to change the current structure of the financial system.\nThe \"too-big-to-fail\" banks will be left in place, even bigger and less accountable than before. There will be nothing done to separate commercial and investment banking, so giants like Goldman Sachs will be free to speculate with money guaranteed by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. The main difference is that the Federal Reserve Board will be granted even more power than it has now. And, we will tell the Fed to be smarter in the future, so that it doesn't make the same stupid mistakes that gave us the current crisis.\nWhile we all want a smarter Fed, it is not clear that the bill before Congress will get us one, even though it will definitely give us a more powerful Fed. The new Fed will be able to decide which financial firms need to be put through a bankruptcy-like resolution process, paid for with a virtually unlimited amount of taxpayer dollars.\nWhile the bill proposes that the cost of cleaning up after a big bank failure is supposed to be paid by other big banks, in fact the mechanism laid out in the bill virtually guarantees the opposite. Rather than raising a pool of money in advance from the big banks to cover the cost of a bailout, the bill proposes that large banks would be assessed a special fee only after a failure.\nTo see how strange this is, suppose Citigroup or some other major bank collapsed, requiring $100bn to pay off creditors. (We actually should not need a penny to pay off anyone other than insured depositors if we were serious about the banks not being too big to fail.) Either the failed bank was acting as a rogue institution, engaging in behaviour that was far more reckless than its peer institutions, or it was doing the same thing as everyone else.\nIn the first case, would it make sense to tax the other large banks $100bn because Citigroup acted recklessly? If the recklessness of one bank had led to its collapse in an environment where its competitors are sound, this would imply that there had been some serious failures of regulation. Why would we tax other large banks because the Fed, the FDIC and/or other regulatory bodies had failed in their job?\nAlternatively, suppose Citigroup collapses because it was doing the same thing as other banks, but was just slightly more reckless or unlucky. In this situation, which is similar to the one we faced last fall, all of the banks would be severely stressed. It would be impossible to hit them with a special fee. Could we have slapped a special fee on Citigroup and Bank of America last autumn to have them cover the cost of the failure of Lehman Brothers? At the time, imposing any significant fee would have almost certainly pushed several more banks to insolvency.\nThe bottom line is that this bill is almost certain to leave the taxpayers holding the bag for future bailouts. Even worse, it does nothing about the moral hazard created by having institutions that are too big to fail. There is nothing in the bill to lead creditors to believe that the government will not make good on their loans to Goldman, JP Morgan and the other banking behemoths.\nThere is a large and growing consensus across the political spectrum for breaking up banks that are too big to fail. Advocates of this position include former Federal Reserve Board chairmen Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan; Sheila Bair, the current head of the FDIC; and Simon Johnson, the former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund. There is no reason that we need financial institutions that are so big that they cannot be safely unwound without large commitments of government money.\nThe only people who seem to stand outside this consensus are those who hold power and are steering the process of financial reform. This is largely the crew whose regulatory failures gave us the current disaster. If they cannot learn from their mistakes then someone else will have to drive the reform process.\nBusiness Financial Reform Banks Financial Crisis Financial Regulation","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1238992"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9288255572319031,"wiki_prob":0.9288255572319031,"text":"Tanzania in pursuit of ICC Women T20 Qualifiers final\nSENIOR national women cricket squad will be out to make the most of its last chance for qualifying for the final of the ICC Women T20 Qualifiers, Africa, as it locks horns with Rwanda in the Group A duel at the Old Hararians Sports Club in Zimbabwe today.\nSenior national women cricket squad’s Fatuma Omary bowls against Indonesia in an international friendly game, which was played in Thailand last year.\nThe Tanzania girls will, however, not only need to grab victory over Rwanda but also pray the hosts, Zimbabwe, tumble to Nigeria in their last match, which will also be played today, if the East Africans are to book a place in the final, slated for tomorrow.\nZimbabwe, nevertheless, are strong favourites for progression to the final, given they have yet to lose a match in the Group A of the qualifiers, which also has Rwanda Mozambique and Nigeria.\nZimbabwe girls had, as of yesterday, been topping the Group A of the qualifiers with three wins in as many matches which have seen them collect six points and a net run rate of 5.617.\nThe Tanzania girls were positioned second with two wins and a loss, which have seen them record four points and a net run rate of 1.465.\nThey opened their campaign with a loss to Zimbabwe but then regrouped to record wins over Nigeria and Mozambique thereafter.\nAlthough Rwanda have tied Tanzania on wins, loss and points, the former have been placed third as they have an inferior net run rate of -0.691.\nNigeria and Mozambique come fourth and fifth respectively in the group. Nigeria girls have recorded one win and two losses, which have seen them collect two points and a net run rate of -1.935.\nMozambique girls have lost all four matches to end their campaign with no point and a net run rate of -3.817.\nIn Group B, Namibia have already cruised to the final, given they have won three matches to collect six points.\nUganda, Kenya and Sierra Leone have been placed second, third and fourth respectively in the group.\nIn today’s match, experienced players, Monica Paschal and Fatuma Omary, will have to be in great form to catapult Tanzania to a much-needed victory.\nThe duo showcased scintillating displays to help their team record an impressive 10-wicket victory over Mozambique, with Fatuma nailing 26 runs not out and Monica notching nine runs not out.\nFatuma is currently placed third in the list of the event’s top run getters, having recorded 97 runs in three innings and an average of 48.50.\nShe is trailing Zimbabwe duo of Sharne Mayers and Modeste Mupachikwa that have registered 167 runs and 121 runs respectively in three innings.\nMonica has been placed ninth in the list with 70 runs in three innings and an average of 70.00.\nThe Africa regional qualifying tournament for the ICC Women’s T20 World Cup 2020, which started on May 5, is set to climax on Sunday.\nThe five regional tournaments act as a dual qualifier for the 27 teams in their pursuit for ICC Women’s T20 World Cup Qualifiers places taking place in Scotland between 31 August and September 7 2019 where they will join Bangladesh, Ireland, Scotland and Thailand.\nChess League set to climax next month\nTanzania’s karate players win praise","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line203306"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7971809506416321,"wiki_prob":0.7971809506416321,"text":"Laurent Blanc Refuses To Commit Himself To Inter Just Yet\nBy Kunal | October 27, 2016 | 0\nREUTERS/Gonzalo Fuentes\nFormer Paris Saint Germain manager Laurent Blanc has refused to commit himself to Inter just yet, according to AS.\nBlanc, who had a trophy-laden spell during his time in the French capital, is currently being monitored by numerous clubs from all across Europe, but Italian giants Inter seem to be the most interested party, as per reports.\nThe Italian media is currently rife with rumours suggesting that Inter are ready to sack their current manager Frank De Boer, and have identified Laurent Blanc as the best possible replacement.\nBlanc has a history with the Serie A club, having already made 74 appearances for them as a player between 1999 to 2001.\nAs per Le Parisien, Inter had made contact with Blanc’s agent, Jean-Pierre Bernes, about a potential move, and Bernes’ reply had been a positive one, as his high profile client was rumoured to be very much interested in returning to his old club.\nHowever, new reports have now come to light, which suggest that Blanc is, indeed, keen to return to his former club as a manager – but the club isn’t Inter; it’s Manchester United.\nWatch: Real Madrid’s Nacho Scores Goal Better Than Zidane’s Champions League Volley\nAccording to AS, Blanc is trying his best to put a hold to his move to Inter, because he’s much more interested in securing a move to England.\nThe Frenchman, who retired at Old Trafford as a player in 2003, is currently monitoring Mourinho’s situation with the Red Devils, as he would very much like to get himself into the contention for the Man United job if the Portuguese ends up getting sacked.\nJose hasn’t had the best of starts to his life in Manchester, and his team currently sits 7th in the Premier League table – 6 points behind league leaders Manchester City.\nIf Jose’s mediocre performances continue, it won’t be a shock if the United hierarchy decide to part ways with him, and Laurent Blanc will then be one of the top contenders to replace the Special One at the Theatre of Dreams.\nFollow us on Twitter and Like us on Facebook\n← Mourinho Set To Bring The Axe Down On Four United StarsPolice Arrest Seven Fans Following Crowd Trouble At The Olympic Stadium →","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line282210"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.818307638168335,"wiki_prob":0.818307638168335,"text":"Home > Blog > Sarajevo\nTag: Sarajevo\nPosted on 31 March, 2014\tin1989 after 1989 End of Yugoslavia\nBy Ljubica Spaskovska\nA new socialist model is emerging in the western Balkans. Can its political vocabulary transcend the ethno-national dividing lines in the region?\n‘New project for democratic socialism in Yugoslavia’ read the title of the resolution for the last congress of the League of Communists of Yugoslavia. It was January 1990.\nAs the Yugoslav Party was writing the last pages of its seventy-year old existence, few were left who believed in the viability of the project of democratic socialism. ‘The liberal utopia which underpinned 1989’ was the idealized way the socialist East and South imagined ‘the West’ and liberal democracy. In the aftermath of the last Yugoslav party congress, even fewer could imagine that ‘democratic socialism’ could ever be resurrected as a viable political project.\nAlmost a quarter of a century later, however, the Slovenian ‘Initiative for democratic socialism’, the Democratic Labour Party and the Sustainable Development Party have announced the establishment of a ‘United Left’ coalition. These non-parliamentary leftist groups will present their bid for a new socialist model in Europe at the upcoming EU elections in May. While the recent wave of protests in Bosnia-Herzegovina, and on a smaller scale in Macedonia, have raised social concerns and acted as a vent for rebellion against the political and economic mismanagement by elites, Kosovan students at the University of Prishtina made a strong case against structural corruption and fraud, eventually succeeding in deposing the Rector.\nMany of those who found themselves at the forefront of these ‘acts of citizenship’ have been young people who came of age in the post-socialist period. The Kosovan student protesters, the Macedonian activists for social justice in the leftist groups ‘Solidarity’ and ‘Lenka’, the organizers of the Zagreb Subversive Forum, and the activists in the Slovenian Initiative for democratic socialism, belong in a pool of activists groups, initiatives or centres for research that espouse progressive politics while they have sought to deconstruct the ‘liberal utopia’ of the post-socialist period. They are unquestionably part of a new political generation (or, a ‘generation unit’, to use Mannheim’s terminology) whose political subjectivities, demands and visions represent a departure from those that twenty-five years ago ushered in the post-Yugoslav era.\nFrom the Bosnian youth magazine ‘Nasi dani’, 1988. Photo: Ljubica Spaskovska.\nHow to account for this sudden post-Yugoslav outburst of social discontent and the resurrection of a long-forgotten vocabulary, where social rights, democratic socialism, the working class and the dispossessed feature rather prominently? Beside the generational factor, one possible answers lies in the concluding paragraph of last month’s open letter to the international community signed by 130 scholars and academics from around the world:\n“In [the] spring of 1992, Bosnian citizens staged in Sarajevo the largest demonstrations ever against all nationalist parties. They were silenced by snipers, and their voices, from that point on, ignored by the international community. This time, the world should listen.”\nIndeed, the conventional narrative of the 1980s, as the climax of political skirmishing and ethnic hostility, has so far managed to conceal a major stream of critique that was silenced by the subsequent armed conflicts and progressively erased in the new nation-states. The last Yugoslav public opinion survey conducted in 1990, from a sample of 4,230 adults, revealed clear divisions along lines of ethno-national belonging.\nHowever, there was one part of the survey where Yugoslav citizens appeared strikingly unanimous. Namely, respondents were asked if expenditures on education, culture, healthcare and social security should be reduced. 74% of Bosnians, 66% of Montenegrins, 81% of Croatians, 71% of Macedonians, 72% of Slovenes, 79% of Serbs, 80% of Kosovans and 84% of Vojvodinians said this budget should be either increased or the present level of spending should be maintained. Moreover, the survey found that the ‘democratic optimism’, i.e. a support for a multi-party system was highest among Kosovans and Slovenes (19%) and lowest in Bosnia-Herzegovina (4%). Indeed, respondents from ethnically-mixed regions expressed fears that a multi-party system would exacerbate inter-ethnic divisions.\nOne of the spheres where many of these debates took place during the 1980s was the Yugoslav press and, in particular, the so far scarcely researched youth press. A commitment to exposing socio-economic structural inequalities and forms of corruption, especially among top Party officials, came to define the increasingly vocal youth press that was subject as a result to ongoing bans, trials and public discrediting throughout the 1980s. This led foreign scholars to observe that:\n“Of all the periodical publications appearing in Yugoslavia, it is the youth press which has proven the most consistently nettling to the authorities. Outspoken to the point of rebelliousness, the young editors […] have repeatedly ignored even the most fundamental taboos”.\nPedro Ramet, ‘The Yugoslav Press in Flux’, in Pedro Ramet (ed.) (1985), Yugoslavia in the 1980s, p.111\nYoung journalists tended to link these phenomena to the authoritarian traits of Yugoslav socialism, in particular the Party’s elites and their monopoly on power. In December 1984, for instance, the Croatian youth magazine Polet published an ironic call for the ‘Big, bigger, the biggest Yugoslav competition for the photograph of the most beautiful, richest, most luxurious and most unavailable house for the working class on the territory of the former Yugoslavia’, printed over a black and white photo of a big mansion. It also noted that ‘precedence will be given to the photographs which will also supply information about the location, the size, the owners and their occupation’. Four years later, the main Bosnian youth magazine Naši dani was at the helm of a big public debate which exposed the practice of building summer villas by high Bosnian political officials at the sea-side resort of Neum. One article unreservedly attacking high-ranking politicians put forward demands which could be heard in a modified form at recent protests: ‘To nationalise what had been robbed. To take away once and for all from the red bourgeoisie and give to the working class’. Finally, a similar affair burst into the open when Slovenian youth magazine Mladina accused the federal Minister of Defense of having a summer villa constructed for himself by army recruits in the sea resort of Opatija.\nAs the decade drew to a close and the Yugoslav sonderweg led many to believe that the multi-level crisis was a dead-end street and that violence was looming, many voices warned at the prospect of elites capitalizing on social discontent and posing as national saviours. Even regions like Macedonia, which were later spared from the violence of the dissolution conflicts, were mired in a new nationalist rhetoric and calls for prohibition of ethnic minorities’ political parties. The way the editor-in-chief of the youth magazine Mlad borec, Nikola Mladenov targeted the rise of nationalism in his editorials, both at Yugoslav and local level, captures this:\n“As if it became a civic duty to propagate national tragedy and vulnerability. In place of one collectivity – the class, we are being offered another one – the nation, the easiest way of manipulating the emotions of tomorrow’s voters. The propagating of one’s one history – always the most bloody and most difficult – hasn’t bypassed us either […]”\nFor two and a half decades former Yugoslavs were repeatedly reminded of their national tragedies, bloody histories, or their victimhood at the hands of neighbours. They were encouraged, if not forced, to erase out of their memories and identities that other collectivity – the class. What the Bosnian student magazine Valter wrote in 1990 indeed reads like a prophecy:\n“We should not have any doubts that this is a period where we’ll see a formal change of government, accompanied by strong disillusionment of manipulated voters. Because exclusive anti-communism does not imply automatic creativity; on the contrary, the motives are quite banal and easily recognisable – taking power.”\nA generational shift, growing inequality, deterioration in living standards and the withering away of social rights have undoubtedly proved crucial for the emergence of a new political vocabulary and a range of demands which appear to neglect, if not transcend, the ethno-national frame. However, it remains to be seen whether the social(ist) utopia that underpins this shift is going to successfully restore some of the betrayed hopes of the late 1980s.\nGeorge Lawson, Chris Armbruster and Michael Cox (eds.), The Global 1989: Continuity and Change in World Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2010).\nLjuljana Baćević, et al. Jugoslavija na kriznoj prekretnici (Beograd: Institut društvenih nauka/Centar za politikološka iztraživanja i javno mnenje, 1991).\nPedro Ramet, ‘The Yugoslav Press in Flux’, in Pedro Ramet (ed.), Yugoslavia in the 1980s (Westview Press, 1985), p.111.\n‘Veliki, veći, najveći’, Polet 292, 21.12.1984, p.10.\nRadmilo Milovanović, ‘Neum ili dolje crvena buržoazija’, Naši dani 949, 2.9.1988, p.7.\nNikola Mladenov, ‘Народе македонски’, Mlad borec 1971, 07.03.1990.\nGoran Todorović, ‘Sveti Ante’, Valter 28, 17.4.1990, p.2.\nTags:1980s, Albania, Balkans, Bosnia, Croatia, democratic socialism, ethno-national, Herzegovina, Kosovo, liberal, liberal utopia, Macedonia, Montenegro, politics, post socialist, Sarajevo, Serbia, Slovenia, socialism, socialist, United Left, Western Balkans, Yugoslavia","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line396298"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8902369141578674,"wiki_prob":0.8902369141578674,"text":"How to Be a Latin Lover\nHow to Be a Latin Lover Ratings & Reviews Explanation\nHow to Be a Latin Lover Videos\nHow to Be a Latin Lover: Trailer 2\nHow to Be a Latin Lover Photos\nIn this riches to rags comedy, an aging gigolo (Eugenio Derbez) is kicked to the curb by his 80-year-old millionaire wife, forcing him to move in with his estranged sister (Salma Hayek) and her young son. Anxious to return to the lap of luxury, he attempts to reignite his powers as a Latin Lover and win over the wealthy widowed grandmother (Raquel Welch) of his nephew's school crush. HOW TO BE A LATIN LOVER also stars Rob Lowe, Kristen Bell, Rob Corddry, Rob Riggle, Michael Cera, and Raphael Alejandro.\nPG-13 (for crude humor, sexual references and gestures, and for brief nudity.)\nKen Marino\nChris Spain, Jon Zack\nApr 28, 2017 wide\nPantelion Films\nas Maximo\nas Celeste\nRaphael Alejandro\nas Hugo\nNews & Interviews for How to Be a Latin Lover\nOn DVD This Week: Alien: Covenant, Riverdale Season 1, and More\nThe Matrix Trilogy, Bad Santa, Chef, and More on Netflix and Amazon Prime This Week\nBox Office: Guardians Vol. 2 Gives Marvel Its 15th Straight #1 Opening\nCritic Reviews for How to Be a Latin Lover\nOK, so it will never be mistaken for vintage Pedro Almodovar or Bigas Luna, but the feel-good satire How to Be a Latin Lover nevertheless gives you less cause to be a hater than you might have expected.\nMichael Rechtshaffen\nDerbez brings warmth and intermittent goofy humor to this too-broad and uneven comedy. The best moments are between him and co-stars Salma Hayek and young Raphael Alejandro, who both have an easy chemistry with Derbez.\nClaudia Puig\nSurprisingly deft in mixing Mr. Derbez's broad but accomplished style with more ostensibly hip-absurdist Anglo modes of humor.\nGlenn Kenny\nIts humor is broad, but most of the jokes work for the intended audience - with a few even breaking through to more resistant viewers.\nKimber Myers\nHow to Be a Latin Lover doesn't know how to be a comedy-at least not a 21st century one that can get away with dopey double entendres while promoting the importance of family ties over money.\nApr 28, 2017 | Rating: 1.5/4 | Full Review…\nSusan Wloszczyna\nHow To Be A Latin Lover is basically an Adam Sandler movie without the Happy Madison shingle.\nApr 28, 2017 | Rating: C | Full Review…\nIgnatiy Vishnevetsky\nIt's definitely on an Adam Sandler level of humor.\nMar 11, 2019 | Rating: D+ | Full Review…\nRachel Wagner\nrachelsreviews.net\nFilms like this, for more records that they break, respect, dignity and creative openness, diminish us more than what they bring us. [Full Review in Spanish]\nJan 20, 2019 | Rating: 2/5 | Full Review…\nSofía Ochoa Rodríguez\nEn Filme\nBy no means will this become a cult comedy classic, but it's an amusing diversion that's much better than it should be.\nLouisa Moore\nScreen Zealots\nThe result is stupid, self-conscious, but stupid after all. [Full review in Spanish]\nJun 30, 2017 | Rating: 2/10 | Full Review…\nCarlos Díaz Reyes\nVanguardia (Mexico)\nIt will be enjoyable to Eugenio Derbez fans but puts a rope around the Mexican comedian, about if he will dare once and for all to empty his talent into something more risky. [Full review in Spanish]\nMario P. Székely\nSiete24.mx\nA horrible mess full of clichés and jokes that feel worn, despite the efforts of Eugenio Derbez to make them work. [Full review in Spanish]\nMay 17, 2017 | Rating: 4.5/10 | Full Review…\nRafael Rosales Santos\nKonexión\nAudience Reviews for How to Be a Latin Lover\nYou know, I started thinking of this as I was watching the movie, but Eugenio Derbez reminds me of a male version of Ellen DeGeneres. This may seem odd to a lot of people seeing as, outside of both being humans and North Americans, they really don't have anything in common. What I mean by that is that, to me, Ellen DeGeneres is an incredibly likable, but not hilariously funny person. I find her more likable than she is funny. That's not to say that she can't make me laugh, because she has, but she's the type of person that your mother would find funnier than you would. Not that that's meant as an insult or anything, but that's just the demographic her humor seems to appeal to. Her humor, for the most part, is very safe. Which, again, is not an insult, since there should be something for everybody out there. Safe humor, however, doesn't appeal to me. This is what I mean when I compare Derbez and DeGeneres. Eugenio Derbez is more likable than he is funny and, like Ellen, I think he can get away with a lot of jokes that may be on the lame side because of his likability. But, and this bears repeating, the man can make me laugh, it's just that I think it might take a little bit more effort for him than others I find more naturally funny, like Hannibal Buress or Danny McBride. With that said, I wasn't really expecting much from this movie. Reason I picked it was rather simple. I just wanted something light to watch. These are moods we all go through. Sometimes you just wanna watch something that;s low-stakes. That's why I followed up Black Panther with Sydney White when I had originally planned on watching Infinity War. After Black Panther, I just wanted to decompress. And my idea of decompressing is not watching a movie in the MCU where the stakes have never been higher, where the Avengers either defeat Thanos or he destroys the universe. That's not exactly low-stakes, if you ask me. Though, at least in this case, I think I used this movie more to watch the bad taste that Hell and Back left in my mouth. Goddamn, that movie was atrocious. This movie is infinitely better than the aforementioned piece of crap. Though it's the kind of movie where you have to go in expecting it to be exactly what it is. It's a shameless and unabashed crowd-pleaser. I don't think anyone would ever expect a movie called 'How To Be A Latin Lover' to be high art worthy of comparison to the classics like the Godfather and Taxi Driver. But, in my opinion, I feel that this movie is much better 'enjoyed' if you know what you're getting. I put enjoyed in quotation marks because, to be fair, I don't really think I'd say that this was a good movie. What I can say is that it was a very pleasant and amiable experience. I think sometimes people confuse the two. I probably have been guilty of that one time or another. I'm not gonna tell people what they can or can't enjoy, but this is the type of movie where you really have to inspect deep down. It can't all be taken at face value. Because, if I did, I'd be saying that this was good. The thing about this movie is that it is put together in a way where it will be pleasing to the masses. And, hey, I have no problem with that. As I said in my Hell and Back review, variety is the spice of life. But, at the same time, there's also the fact that this movie's script is very basic and it relies almost entirely on Derbez's charm to carry it through. And, for the most part, it works. Even when Maximo, Derbez's character, is at his most asshole-ish, Derbez finds a way to make it an endearing character trait as opposed to making you hate his character for being such a gold-digging asshole that, inevitably, is gonna hurt his nephew and break his dreams once he finds out that Maximo was only using him to score another sugar mama. I do think that, while the concept isn't exactly amazing, there's far more potential for comedy with this concept than what they do end up doing. Maximo is used to an incredibly luxurious lifestyle where he has someone to do everything for him, even swipe his tablet. So you know the type of humor that they're gonna go for once his sugar mama (who's around 80 years old) has an affair with someone younger (in this case Michael Cera and, really, I don't know if that's an upgrade or a downgrade). He moves him with his sister, whom he estranged himself from after marrying getting together with his sugar mama, who lives in a modest apartment with her young son. Maximo expects the highest quality meals, he expects his sister to clean up after him, he doesn't remember Hugo's name and, shock of all shocks, he has to do something he's never had to do before in his life...get a job. It is predictable humor at best and, really, maybe even lazy at worst. With that said, the movie is sporadically entertaining. Obviously it's not consistent, but it's decent enough to get an average rating. But I do think that the movie butters its bread more on the bond that develops between Maximo and Hugo. I'll be honest, it wasn't as nauseating as I would have expected. It's certainly better and less melodramatic and manipulative that Derbez's last major movie foray into the American film market with Instructions Not Included. And, at the same time, the character of Hugo is not annoyingly precocious. I mean, they do try to make him into an adorable little muppet but, again, for some reason, it's executed better here than in other movies. Let's just say that I didn't wanna beat myself with a sledgehammer as a result of the bond that is built between Hugo and Maximo. It's still very much a fabricated bond, though Eugenio seems like someone who would work well with kids, but it's not as bad a nauseating bond as other flicks of this kind. The acting is...fine. I mean there's no one here that delivers anything more than an acceptable performance, but it gets the job done. Rob Riggle and Rob Huebel provide the comedic relief and they're, to me, the highlights of the entire movie. I don't know what else to say, I'm running out of shit. It's a movie that goes exactly where you think it's gonna go. You're not gonna be in for a transcendent experience. But Eugenio Derbez is likable enough and he manages to carry the movie for the most part. The movie isn't exactly the most tightly scripted and structured, but it's a decent enough little movie. It's not good, it falls quite short of that, but it is a pleasant and harmless experience. This is something you can watch with your sweet little abuelita. Wouldn't recommend it, but you could do far worse. Like Hell and Back. Yea, fuck that movie.\nJesse O Super Reviewer\nHow to Be a Latin Lover is just like all those movies that have previously failed in the box office. Not worth watching and looking forward by its visuals this movie gives us. I think if there's numerous attempts for a film to end up this soggy and, for some weird reason, clichéd. If you literally want to watch this, unfortunately for you, you won't get much of the fun found in this film.\nEpicLadySponge t Super Reviewer\nHow to Be a Latin Lover Quotes","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1167173"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6343488097190857,"wiki_prob":0.6343488097190857,"text":"Speaking of (spiritual) Sisters…\nby Linda Bloom June 8, 2011\nOne of the things I’ve always admired about the actress Victoria Clark, now performing in her 11th Broadway production, is that she isn’t afraid to talk publicly about her faith.\nOf course, when you’re playing a nun – she is now Mother Superior in the musical “Sister Act” – the topic of religion is bound to come up.\nIn a March 28 interview with Broadway Buzz on Broadway.com, she joked about the differences between her personal Protestant and professional Catholic experiences: “You know, I’m a United Methodist and I’ve been going to my church and feeling oddly out of place after wearing the habit. I’m not kidding! I was looking for the liturgy. I’m missing all the saints and saying, ‘Where’s my rosary, what’s going on?’ I guess she’s really getting to me.”\nThe church she is referring to is the Church of St. Paul and St. Andrew, a United Methodist congregation on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, where both of us have been members for years. For those who tuned in to the CBS broadcast of St. Paul and St. Andrew’s Christmas Eve Service, Vicki rocked the rafters with “O, Holy Night” and was instrumental behind the scenes.\nSince I’ve seen “Sister Act,” I can report that Vicki makes a convincing Catholic – so much so that she was nominated this spring for a Tony Award for Featured Actress in a Musical. She and her fellow cast members will be performing during the Tony Awards broadcast this Sunday (June 12).\nThis is not her first Tony nomination. In 2005, Vicki won the Tony Award for Leading Actress in a Musical, along with rave reviews, for “The Light in the Piazza.”\nWhen I interviewed her then, Vicki – a Dallas native with a music degree from Yale – talked about how church was “always the main venue for singing” as she was growing up. Her faith also helps her infuse meaning into the roles she plays. In “The Light in the Piazza,” for example, the “light” – to Vicki — signified compassion, redemption, grace and even forgiveness for Margaret Johnson, the character she portrayed.\nTo prepare for “Sister Act,” Vicki visited Mother Dolores, who served as inspiration for 1992 “Sister Act” movie, at the Abbey of Regina Laudis in Bethlehem, Conn. Mother Delores, who later saw the show on Broadway with some of her fellow sisters, helped the actress “make my character real.”\n“She said, ‘Do me a favor, don’t make her pious.’ So we talked about humanity,”Vicki told Celebrity Buzz: Diva Talk on playbill.com. “She was trying to teach us about how God wants our humanity, not our divinity.”\nPlaying Mother Superior has allowed her to both examine her own religious beliefs and become, well, more ecumenical.\n“I’m a United Methodist, where everything gets decided around the table, so there is food all the time, everywhere,” she said in the Diva Talk interview. “There is such a structure in Catholicism and so many different people that you can pray to. And learning about the saints, and learning about marriage intercession, and learning about all the different nuns and the orders, it’s just fascinating how much there is to learn.”\nVicki is not the only United Methodist-related connection to a show set in a convent. The playwright Douglas Carter Beane, another Tony nominee, was brought in to provide additional book material for the musical.\n“I’m getting all the liturgy down,” he told the New York Times in February. “If you’re raised Methodist, Catholicism is a bit of a workout. It’s sort of like you’re up, you’re down, you’re up, you’re down. It’s a continual hokey-pokey.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line417207"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5943608283996582,"wiki_prob":0.4056391716003418,"text":"Home > Airlines > Croatia Airlines\nCroatia Airlines is the flag carrier of Croatia and operates flights mainly between Croatia and other European countries.\nCroatia Airlines is for almost 100 percent owned by the government of the Republic of Croatia. The airline has about 1,000 employees.\nGovernment Asset Management Agency for the Republic of Croatia\nZagreb Airport\nCroatia Airlines was founded and started operating within Croatia in 1989. A few years later, the airline launched its first international flight to Frankfurt (Germany). At the end of 2004, the airline became a member of Star Alliance.\nCroatia Airlines offers Business Class passengers and Star Alliance Gold members access to multiple lounges across Europe. Please consult website Croatia Airlines for more information.\nEconomy Class passengers that fly with Croatia Airlines are permitted to bring one piece of cabin luggage with a maximum weight of 8 kg. In addition, passengers are allowed to take one personal item with them on board. Business Class passengers can bring two pieces of hand luggage of 8 kg and also a personal item. The amount of check-in luggage that passengers are permitted to bring depends on the travel class. Please consult website Croatia Airlines for more information.\nCroatia Airlines does not offer in-flight Wi-Fi.\nBani 75b, Buzin, Zagreb, Croatia\ncroatiaairlines.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1708885"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5207197070121765,"wiki_prob":0.4792802929878235,"text":"Effective Philanthropy\nAmicus Portfolio\nDonate for specific training\nPackaged giving in dollar and sterling\nPhilanthropists are paying more attention to how they give their money away: The Economist, May 26th 2005\nANDREW CARNEGIE would surely have approved of David Sainsbury. The supermarket tycoon turned politician is one of Britain’s richest men. It was reported this week that he not only intends to give away at least £1 billion ($1.83 billion) during his lifetime, but to insist that his charitable foundation spend both its income and capital before he dies. Few rich donors have yet gone this far. But Lord Sainsbury’s decision is part of a broad trend among a new generation of philanthropists to play an active role in seeing that their money is well spent. Such efforts should be applauded.\nIn his great 1889 essay on wealth, Carnegie—a steel magnate who gave away about $7 billion in today’s money—argued that the rich had a duty to use most of their money to benefit the community, and should do so actively during their lifetimes. He took a dim view of those rich folk whose philanthropy consisted only of bequests in their wills—“men who leave vast sums in this way may fairly be thought men who would not have left it at all, had they been able to take it with them”—even arguing in favour of a tough inheritance tax because “by taxing estates heavily at death the state marks its condemnation of the selfish millionaire’s unworthy life”.\nCarnegie’s belief in taxing estates remains as controversial as ever, though it may come as a surprise to learn that many rich people today feel the same way. Some 120 wealthy Americans, including Warren Buffett, George Soros and David Rockefeller among others, have opposed recent Republican efforts to scrap what Republicans like to call the “death tax”.\nWhether or not scrapping inheritance taxes makes sense, thoughtful and well-targeted philanthropy is clearly to be encouraged. Inevitably, controlling how donations are used is especially difficult once the donor is dead. True, some charitable foundations have played a positive role as their founders intended. Britain’s Wellcome Trust is reckoned to do a good job in supporting medical research, just as its founder, Sir Henry Wellcome, who died in 1936, would have wished. But the effectiveness of many of the older charitable foundations is increasingly being questioned. Right-wing American critics love to point out—probably correctly—that Henry Ford would spin in his grave if he knew about the many leftish causes now funded by the Ford Foundation.\nTrustees and charity professionals who run foundations after a founder’s death are rarely obliged to spend much of their capital (only 5% a year in America, for example), and may be tempted to put personal job security before the founder’s goals. There is no one (other than regulators, who may have their own agendas, and the press, who have theirs too) to hold them to account. And, says Carl Schramm, outspoken head of the Kauffman Foundation, many other foundations have “undertaken projects or programmes that were capricious, poorly thought out or just plain silly.”\nSo no wonder a growing number of wealthy donors are declining to leave the fate of their charity to chance. Indeed, many of today’s philanthropists—including Bill Gates, who has so far donated over $20 billion to his foundation—are, like Lord Sainsbury, intent on being far more active than previous generations of philanthropists in setting clear goals and devoting a lot of their own time and energy to seeing that their money is well spent, during their own lifetimes. This is certainly the best way to ensure that, as Carnegie put it, they do not “pass away ‘unwept, unhonoured and unsung’”.\nSource: http://www.economist.com/node/4009460\nBy admin| 2016-12-01T13:08:34+00:00\tOctober 27th, 2015|Categories: Giving while living|0 Comments\nHow much and for what causes do South Africans give\nBelastingvrystelling: bestaande en nuwe SARS-toegewings vir donateurs","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line359687"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7490968704223633,"wiki_prob":0.2509031295776367,"text":"The Abolition of the Apocalypse\nDecember 1, 2018 Radagast Uncategorized 1\nWoops. Turns out Mad Max has been canceled and you’ll have to deal with the real world after all.\nIt’s 2018 and I’m not living in the end of the world. Energy consumption hasn’t plunged by 20% since 2015. People still drive around in cars, I still have electricity and noticed no signs of any brownouts. The supermarket shelves are stocked. In fact, last time I checked I could choose between two dozen different types of peanut butter in my local supermarket. Exploding methane clathrates have not drowned me in a megatsunami, drought induced food shortages haven’t reduced me to eating my pets, roving gangs of criminals haven’t set my house on fire, Fukushima hasn’t made the Northern hemisphere uninhabitable yet, I ate Chinese seaweed without developing cancer, I haven’t died in any government orchestrated bioattack and haven’t been lobotomized.\nYou’ve seen the headlines in the media, claiming that the Club of Rome was correct. They feature this image. We see food and services per capita overshooting the projection, pollution below the projection and birth and death rates below the projection. How am I supposed to pretend the models were correct? The models are going to diverge further from reality in the years ahead and then you’ll never hear about them again. This is what happens when you try to use four or five different variables to predict the fate of the entire world.\nHow is this possible? Wasn’t everything supposed to go to shit by now? The big mistake I’ve noticed people tend to make is their assumption that technological innovation makes the world more fragile, rather than making it more resilient. It’s easy to assume human beings are going to drop dead like flies, if you reduce us in your mental model to an animal dependent on non-renewable resources for our survival. But we’re much more than just an animal that consumes non-renewable resources. The primary mistake made by Michael Ruppert, Gail Tverberg, James Howard Kunstler, Paul Ehrlich and the Club of Rome before them and numerous other prophets of the apocalypse, is that their view of man is both excessively pessimistic and simplistic. If you take all the problems we’ve caused for ourselves and willfully ignore all the new opportunities we have developed over the years, of course you’re going to conclude that everything is going to fall apart. What annoys me is that these people don’t admit they were wrong. They delay their apocalyptic predictions by ten years, or they quietly move onto a different expertise. Alex Jones and his crowd quietly went from predicting we’re all going to be murdered by the Illuminati in FEMA death camps to making fun of fat blue-haired feminists.\nI’m going to give you a very simple example of a new opportunity we have created, that I am convinced none of the high prophets has attempted to fit into their grand apocalyptic model: Wind turbines. You probably know wind turbines as ugly grey monoliths that inefficiently generate electricity. What you don’t know is that rows of wind turbines placed in the ocean can reduce wind speeds in hurricanes by 92 mph and reduce the storm surge by up to 79%. The modern huge wind turbines are more efficient than turbines built in the past, generating cheaper electricity and more efficiently mixing different layers of the atmosphere.\nBesides countering hurricanes, they have another noteworthy effect: By mixing different layers of the atmosphere, they reduce heatwaves. Wind turbines increase temperatures during the night, but decrease temperatures during the afternoon, when temperatures are normally highest. As a consequence, agricultural yields near wind turbines tend to increase. The most useful wind turbines are located in the sea however. Here the wind turbines serve as attachment points for mussels, giving birth to new oceanic ecosystems in places that were formerly barren.\nHow do you even fit such complexity caused by rational actors (human beings) interacting with a complex system (the world around us) into a scientific model? How do you predict that billions of people are going to die in a world where wind turbines boost agricultural yields? This is like a group of ornithologists trying to bet which branch a bird is going to sit on because they have specialized themselves in understanding various subsystems of the overall organism. The amount of complexity involved here is so immense that you become dependent upon heuristics, rather than on complex models.\nI do not imply that the climate models we have are wrong. Instead, the climate models we use tend to emphasize the huge range of uncertainty. If your scientific models can’t predict whether a doubling in CO2 will warm the world by three degree or by six degree Celsius instead, then you’re admitting that you’re dealing with a complex system the overall behavior of which is neigh impossible to predict. More importantly, the models can’t be used to predict how changes in our climate will affect our civilization, except under extreme conditions. Instead we should primarily base policy in cases like this on simple heuristics. One of such heuristics is the precautionary principle. If we’re radically changing the composition of the atmosphere at an unprecedented pace, it would be wise to stop carrying out such destabilizing actions in a complex system.\nAttempts are made to look at the collapse of various pre-industrial empires, to extrapolate conclusions for our own current situation. What’s generally missed however, is that the fragility of these civilizations tends to be a consequence of their complete reliance on a limited number of variable conditions and a near inability to react to changes in their environment in a productive manner. As a simple example, consider that we live in the first civilization in human history with access to reliable contraception and abortion. A decline in our standard of living is now generally met with a reduction in fertility. It’s much easier to envision catastrophe in societies where a temporary abundance of food leads to the birth of a dozen children per woman than it is in a society where we can voluntarily reduce our numbers.\nWhen it comes to food production, we have to comprehend the simple fact that almost all cases of starvation in recent history have been associated with war and political instability. People die of hunger, not because of a lack of food, but because they live in conditions that isolate them from the global economy. In the middle of a war zone we find ourselves unable to deliver food aid to people who are hungry. Biafra-child became a term associated with a child with a swollen belly, but Biafra was a Nigerian region placed under a severe military blockade. We live under conditions of food abundance, we throw away vast amounts of food and feed perfectly edible human food to animals. Almost ninety percent of edible tomatoes have to be thrown away due to their appearance, simply because consumers won’t buy ugly tomatoes. If we live under such circumstances, how can you imagine starvation to occur?\nThe economy is disrupted by sudden catastrophes. It adjusts itself to slow catastrophes. This is in contrast to previous eras of history, when slow catastrophes could not be adequately responded to. If the fish you ate slowly went extinct, you died out together with them. What happens to us when we can’t find fish in the ocean? We migrate to other food sources. In 1978, China produced 60,000 tons of mushrooms. In 2002, China produced 8.2 million tons of mushrooms. Today China is an industrial powerhouse, the world’s second largest economy. This is what happens in a society that is flexible and capable of grasping new opportunities when old ways of doing things become unsustainable.\nWhat people forget, is that ancient civilizations did not have the opportunities we have. Trying to apply simplistic mathematical models to our way of life is bound to set you up for embarrassment in the future, because technology has allowed human beings to respond to scarcity in one area by migrating to alternative ways of sustaining themselves. The Mayans, the Rapa Nui, the vikings in Greenland and all these other historical civilizations reduced to poor analogies in the minds of those praying for a catastrophe did not figure out how to grow shellfish and seaweed on ropes in the ocean, mushrooms on cow feces or rotten logs, meat in Petri dishes, Quorn in fermentation vats or tomatoes in Dutch greenhouses kept warm with waste-heat from nearby industrial facilities. They had two or three traditions on which the bulk of their economy depended and if those traditions became threatened by ecological exhaustion or environmental changes then they went down with the world around them.\nI’m not claiming the world is a paradise, or that it is soon to be a paradise. I’m claiming that preparing yourself for a global catastrophe means setting yourself up for disappointment. There’s a rough global transition underway, in some places it will be very rough. One thing that hasn’t changed from the past is that those places that will face the roughest transition are the places that refuse to transition to new ways of life. If people in West Virginia were to think that an economy based on coal production can be sustained, they would set themselves up for catastrophe. The lowest hanging fruit was exploited long ago, so today mountain tops are removed to mine the last easily accessible coal. Some grass is then sown and people will insist the mountaintop has been ecologically restored, even as the soil has become toxic and barren.\nAs another example of the problem, consider India. India simply doesn’t have enough accessible coal to develop an industrial economy for one and a half billion people. Much of the coal it does have is located under people’s houses and farmlands. If this nation were to pursue industrial development in a manner akin to that of Europe in the past, catastrophe would ensue. Keep in mind that I’m not just referring here to a lack of coal. India also doesn’t have sufficient cold water to power the turbines that drive a coal plant. A nuclear power plants or a coal plant needs cold water to cool the device, the warm water is then dumped into the local river or ocean, where it can kill the fish or rapidly evaporate. Half of all water consumption in India is caused by power plants right now, it’s not hard to envision what would happen if India pursued the same path of economic development as Europe did in the past.\nThis ties into another point I wish to make, which is that the different horror scenarios people envision tend to cancel each other out. In particular, the business as usual scenario of the IPCC envisions a world destroyed by global warming long after it has surpassed ecological limits that would destroy our civilization in the first place. In its business as usual scenario, the IPCC envisions global CO2 emissions tripling by 2100. How exactly is this supposed to happen? Am I supposed to ignore that the Netherlands has exhausted more than half of its natural gas reserves? Am I supposed to ignore that those same climate models suggest the Middle East will be too hot to survive in within a few decades? Am I supposed to pretend that India will dig up coal located underneath cities or in the middle of the desert and keep its turbines cool with water it won’t have due to the droughts caused by global warming? If you blindly extrapolate one or two variables without considering how they interact with the rest of a complex model, you’re going to get absurd results.\nTrump and other incompetent leaders are willing to sacrifice the rest of the world to sustain their own outdated model of society for a few more decades, but they fail to comprehend that they’re merely setting their nations up to become the world’s laughing stock. The kind of selfishness Trump endorses is a form of selfishness that eventually blows up in your own face. If you don’t want to transition your own society to using electric vehicles, you’re going to be buying your electric vehicles from Chinese companies. If you want to open the coal mines again, you’re going to find yourself faced with a polluted nightmarish landscape, children born with birth defects and a resource crisis when it becomes too expensive to dig up the coal. It’s in people’s own direct interest to transition to a renewable way of sustaining their economies, because they will eventually be forced to transition out of necessity.\nMy expectation is that we’re going to dramatically overshoot two degrees of global warming, but in contrast to what people assume, it’s not going to cause a global catastrophe, because the models used to predict catastrophe tend to assume that civilization is a placid actor utterly dependent on the stable conditions of the Holocene rather than an anticipating self-augmenting agent that adjusts to changing global conditions. If we notice the coral reefs around us are at risk of dying during an oncoming heatwave, we respond by spraying atmospheric sulfur into the atmosphere. If we notice shellfish are struggling to grow due to ocean acidification, we grow seaweed next to them to reduce the effect of ocean acidification.\nWhat matters more than anything else is avoiding technological, cultural and political stagnation. We need to avoid the mentality that makes people deny new insights that happen to contradict their own ideology. When new observations contradict your limited model of the world around you, it’s your model that is flawed, not the observations. Those who choose to embrace stagnation, end up embracing their own death. If Brazil under its new president chooses to embrace the cattle industry and sacrifices the Amazon rainforest, what happens to Brazil’s economy when lab grown meat is introduced to every supermarket? We’ve seen in the Soviet Union what happens to societies that cling onto an outdated economic model that doesn’t function. The denial of Darwinian evolution which was seen as politically incorrect lead to Lysenkoism, as people began to believe that rye can spontaneously transform into wheat and weeds can transform into actual crops. This lead to food shortages, the Soviet Union became dependent on American food exports.\nToday libertarians and conservatives see global warming as a politically incorrect fact. They cling onto obscure scientists who predict a coming ice age, or any other nutcase who allows them to deny the existence of negative externalities. Guess what’s going to happen to them when reality turns out to disagree with them, when it turns out that you can’t cling onto an inherited mentality forever and the world is not spontaneously transformed into a paradise by embracing your own selfishness a la Ayn Rand? If Brazil wishes to sacrifice its rainforest it will face consequences just as catastrophic as anyone else who chooses to deny the abundance of evidence that implores him to divert from business as usual.\nCatastrophe is not inevitable, it’s merely what happens when you close your eyes and press down the gas pedal with a brick wall ahead. There are people who feel like doing that, who just want to watch the whole world burn. They get exactly what they’re hoping for, but you tend to regret it when it actually happens. Consider for example, the Iraqi Baathists who helped ISIS conquer Mosul. These were relatively secular Sunni Arab Muslims, filled with anger and resentment against a society now dominated by Shiites. They ended up paying for it in the form of a society blown to smithereens and now governed by Kurdish people. My expectation is that most Americans who voted for Trump will similarly come to regret it.\nMoving on from the apocalypse\nMy suggestion would be to leave your apocalyptic fantasies behind you. There’s nothing wrong with preparedness, but focus on preparing yourself for problems that can actually happen, rather than preparing yourself for a sci-fi catastrophe that seems nice in your head. As an example, you might wake up one day with fifteen minutes left to flee before your whole village is incinerated in a forest fire. However, you won’t spend two years in an underground bunker eating stored food waiting for radioactive dust to sink into the soil.\nThis applies to all the people who imagine their own apocalyptic model to be more realistic too. You won’t be sitting by yourself with a couple of friends on your permaculture farm as all of us in the city die of hunger because we were too dumb to grow our own food. If something would genuinely happen that destroyed the society you live in, armed thugs with guns would visit you and seize your harvest. More likely than not, what happens instead is that you spend the next few years struggling to break even, before moving on with your life and applying for an office job. That’s how it works out, because that’s how I’ve seen it work out numerous times.\nThe biggest problem with the back to the land fantasy is that it tends to mean isolating yourself from society, which is always a bad idea equivalent to shooting yourself in the foot. It might be seductive to become a hermit and renounce the world, but that doesn’t mean it’s smart or virtuous. One day you’ll realize that for every ten guys willing to spend forty hours a week with their hands in the dirt for the privilege of living in a cold black mold-infested shack, there are three girls willing to do the same.\nI enjoy gardening, but I don’t enjoy it so much that I want to devote my whole life to it. I cultivate San Pedro cactuses, Salvia Divinorum and a few other plants, but the rest of my day is spent doing other things that I enjoy. If you want to devote your whole life to your permaculture farm, you’ll find yourself no longer enjoying gardening, not earning money and isolating yourself from society. There is also an intrinsic problem of privilege inherent to the “sustainable” back to the land movement. We city-dwellers don’t “choose” to live in the city because we’re mindless consumer drones brainwashed by material wealth. We live here because we can’t afford to own giant plots of land where we inefficiently produce food in a labor-intensive method dependent upon people willing to volunteer for us out of ideological considerations. Most people would enjoy living without having neighbors, but that means wasting resources.\nYes, you, the PDC guru in his sustainable bio-dynamic permaculture farm dependent on WWOOFers willing to work for free for the “experience” are in fact privileged. You might be deeply aware of the tragedies inflicted on Native tribes who lived in harmony with their environment, but you seem to turn a blind eye to all those “mindless consumer drones” who live in “unsustainable” cities not because they’re greedy and wicked, but because they have limited budgets that don’t allow them to live in accordance to your green delusions. The world is better off with a thousand office workers on bicycles than a single anarcho-primitivist traveling in his diesel pickup truck to his permaculture farm. In fact, the majority of studies show that Western people in cities have a smaller environmental impact than rural people. We can walk to the supermarket, we can take our bicycle to work and we can keep our radiator low because we share a wall with our neighbors. We live in communities, whereas you live in neofeudal palaces.\nPut this idea of catastrophe out of your head. In the real world, it’s not fun when society fails, it’s miserable. It doesn’t mean hunting deer on abandoned highways. It means ISIS in Syria running child sex-trafficking rings. Do you really want to make the world better? Sell your farmland, take the money and donate it to charities that deliver birth control to women in Congo. You don’t do that because it takes away your own sense of agency, whereas growing your own sweet chestnuts or shiitake mushrooms that you couldn’t sell for a profit if your life depended on it makes your life part of a grand narrative in which you are like Noah building his arc, as the rest of the world has slipped away into decadence and will soon be destroyed as a punishment for its wickedness.\nIn the fake world, the world of our imagination, collapse can mean whatever we want it to mean. Put your creative effort there, there where it can genuinely have an impact. There are thousands of people around the world, who have made simulations of the collapse of civilization that are a thousand times more fun than the real thing. Rather than preparing for the world to become worse, spend your time building things that make the world better. You will meet other people who value the same things as you.\nWhy would you endlessly browse news headlines and spend money on stored food, if you can play the Flame in the Flood? Why would you watch another boring documentary about Peak Oil, if you can watch A Boy and his Dog? There is an open-source procedural roguelike called Cataclysm Dark Days Ahead, where you can hunt and gather food in a forest and drive over zombies with stolen vehicles in the destroyed remnants of the city. If you want everything to go to shit, it’s already here for you and you’re welcome to help make it better.\nIn my mind I can build an apocalypse where negligibly senescent resurrected neanderthal women harvest oysters from underwater concrete skycrapers and radioactive blind albino rats inhabit dark abandoned metro tunnels where they nibble on green-glowing genetically manipulated mushrooms. In the real world apocalypse, gangs of militants in South Sudan and Syria mutilate and abuse children. If you’re really that utterly convinced that everything is soon going to hell in a handbasket that nothing I can say can convince you otherwise, don’t spend your days stocking up on stored food. Buy a pack of cyanide pills and go on with your life.\nThe moral narcissism of bourgeois white girls\nThe long overdue demise of Bitcoin\nUhm, well written, convincing, and certainly full of common sense! I will summarize what i think in just a few lines. I suppose it all boils down in how much faith in humanity you have. I mean, your line of reasoning depends on believing in a rational man that somehow do the right things and learn from past mistakes. Well i don’t know if i can fully agree with this, on the contrary there are sufficent things happening around the world to show that greed and selfishnes are more developed traits than foresight in the human species at large, but i certainly hope you are right! But as much as i don’t think it will all end up in a zombie apocalypse, paper like this http://www.feasta.org/2012/06/17/trade-off-financial-system-supply-chain-cross-contagion-a-study-in-global-systemic-collapse/ paints a certainly less distant but equally bleak scenario for the years to come (without touching other equally important aspects of what is going awry like that of the rampant loss of privacy and data of the population).","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1079460"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5222381353378296,"wiki_prob":0.5222381353378296,"text":"@BusyPhilippsFan\nBusy Philipps Fan\nyour #1 fan site dedicated to actress Busy Philipps Welcome to Busy Philipps Fan, the web's largest and most comprehensive fan site dedicated to actress, writer, and talk show host Busy Philipps!\nBusy is known for her roles on the TV shows \"Freaks and Geeks,\" \"Dawson's Creek,\" \"Cougar Town,\" and \"Vice Principals.\" She has appeared in movies such as \"White Chicks,\" \"Made of Honor,\" \"He's Just Not That Into You,\" and \"I Feel Pretty.\" She is now the host of the E! talk show, Busy Tonight airing Sunday-Wednesday nights at 10pm.\nYou can see the latest news, photos, and media featuring Busy here at www.busy-philipps.org and follow us on Twitter @BusyPhilippsFan for daily updates.\nHome > TV Shows: Series Regular > Busy Tonight (2018 - 2019) > From 2018 > Screen Captures > 2018 - November 28th (Captures)\nFilename: 0101.jpg\nAlbum name: Jennifer / 2018 - November 28th (Captures)\nURL: https://www.busy-philipps.org/pictures/displayimage.php?pid=95055\n© Busy Philipps Fan (www.busy-philipps.org) 2009 - 2018\nEstablished 2009, Re-Opened 2018\nTheme by CWD","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line406325"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8425531387329102,"wiki_prob":0.8425531387329102,"text":"Anchorage Concert Association Announces Ten More Shows of Upcoming Season Lineup\nComedy, classic Broadway, and even a hip-hop orchestra will inspire Alaskans\nANCHORAGE, AK – Anchorage Concert Association, the state’s largest arts and entertainment presenter, is pleased to announce 10 more shows from its 2019/2020 season line-up: Latin bluegrass band Che Apalache (Sept. 20), hilarious comedy group The Improvised Shakespeare Company® (Oct. 11-12), Hawaiian songbird Kalani Pe’a (Jan. 31), the finger-snapping The Doo Wop Project (Feb. 15), innovative chamber musicians PUBLIQuartet (March 7), fiddler extraordinaire Eileen Ivers (March 21), hypnotic hip-hop orchestra Ensemble Mik Nawooj (April 4), a celebration of Martin Luther King Jr. We Shall Overcome (April 10), Rodgers & Hammerstein’s The King and I (April 21-26), and YouTube sensation The Piano Guys (May 2). All shows will be at the Alaska Center for the Performing Arts.\nArgentina meets Appalachia with Che Apalache, a four-person string band based in Buenos Aires, with members from the U.S., Mexico, and Argentina. Singing in Spanish and English, they perform everything from bluegrass standards to Latin roots music, and originals that blend the best of both. Sept. 20, 2019, in the Discovery Theatre.\nThe Improvised Shakespeare Company® takes a suggested play title from the audience, and then improvises a two-act Shakespearean masterpiece. Plots could feature star-crossed lovers, sprites, fools, sword-play, and plenty of witty insults. Each performance is both a world premiere and a closing night. Oct. 11-12, 2019, in the Discovery Theatre.\nLike the warm waters that surround his home in Maui, the music of Hawaiian singer Kalani Pe’a comforts, relaxes, and transports audiences into peacefulness. The two-time Grammy winner sings in Hawaiian and English – hitting notes as high as Mauna Kea’s peak. Jan. 31, 2020, in the Discovery Theatre.\nThe Doo Wop Project sings classic tunes and today’s hits in the finger-snapping, close-harmonies style of doo wop and features stars of the Broadway musicals Jersey Boys, Motown: The Musical, A Bronx Tale, and more. Feb. 15, 2020, in the Atwood Concert Hall.\nProviding a fresh take on classical music, PUBLIQuartet performed a 90-minute improvised soundtrack to a live presidential debate on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” in 2016. March 7, 2020 in the Discovery Theatre.\nAwe-inspiring moments continue with fiddler Eileen Ivers, whom The New York Times called “the Jimi Hendrix of the violin.” March 21, 2020, in the Atwood Concert Hall.\nOakland’s Ensemble Mik Nawooj, led by composer/pianist JooWan Kim, subverts expectations with a multi-genre crew of flute, clarinet, violin, cello, drums, bass, an opera singer, and profound rhymes from mesmerizing MCs/lyricists Do D.A.T. and Sandman. Combining classical techniques and method sampling, EMN creates awe-inspiring arrangements that have been called “the cutting edge of hip-hop” (Huffington Post). April 4, 2020, in the Discovery Theatre.\nWe Shall Overcome: A Celebration of Martin Luther King, Jr. is a searing, soul-stirring soundtrack to the civil rights movement. Inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s words and actions, and the movement’s struggle for equality and justice, this show ties together a living lineage of African-American music and culture that includes traditional and modern gospel, soul, jazz, classical, Broadway, and spirituals. April 10, 2020, in the Atwood Concert Hall.\nOne of Rodgers & Hammerstein’s finest works, The King and I reminds audiences why they love Broadway — a classic opposites-attract romance, bold musical numbers, and lavish costumes and sets. Set in 1860s Bangkok, this musical marvel tells the story of the unconventional and tempestuous relationship that develops between the King of Siam and Anna, a British schoolteacher who travels to Siam to teach his children. Their clash of wills leads to compromise – and eventually love – through iconic moments and memorable songs like “Getting To Know You,” “Whistle a Happy Tune,” and “Shall We Dance.” April 21-26, 2020, in the Atwood Concert Hall.\nWith their serendipitous start in a small-town Utah piano shop, four dads set out to make a positive impact all over the world through music videos. That shared purpose struck a chord, and their stunning, self-made videos parlayed The Piano Guys into more than 1 billion YouTube views, six albums, a PBS special and a concert empire, including two sold-out shows in Anchorage in 2014. May 2, 2020, in the Atwood Concert Hall.\nCategories: Member-to-Member News","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line279491"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5166996717453003,"wiki_prob":0.5166996717453003,"text":"Conan the Barbarian and The Thread of Reason\nTales of Medieval Islam.\n“The power of ideas—Allah’s ideas—was all I ever needed.”\nThus spake the Sheikh of the Mountain, the leader of the medieval Assassin cult in real life, and one of the principal villains in my novel The Thread of Reason. In the book, the sheikh captures and imprisons the hero, Omar Khayyam, along with Omar’s assistant, Muhammad Baghdadi. At a confrontation in the sheikh’s study, Omar was characteristically skeptical about the sheikh’s grandiose claims of his power—basically it was the scene from every James Bond movie where 007 confronts the bad guy bent on world domination. But unlike Omar, Baghdadi was intrigued. He wanted to know how the sheikh commanded such unwavering loyalty from his Assassins, who were all too eager to die for their master on a suicide mission. In response, the sheikh offered Baghdadi a demonstration. “Let me prove how powerful an idea can be,” he said. “When it comes from Allah.”\nHe rose from his cushion and gestured for Baghdadi to follow him to the window. Putting one arm around Baghdadi’s shoulders, he pointed out to the courtyard, where dozens of men were working by torchlight. “Every one of my Assassins is completely dedicated to our cause,” [he] said. “Pick one of them out—any one—and I’ll show you how much.”\nStill at the table, Omar was absorbed in extracting the pit from a date when suddenly he jerked his head upward. He had just remembered something: a story from the history books. It gave him a bad feeling about where this was going. He scrambled to get to his feet and join the others at the window.\nBaghdadi had made his selection. “That one,” he said. He pointed to a young man stripped to the waist who was hustling across the courtyard at a good clip despite the two baskets of bricks hanging from a pole across his shoulders.\n“You there,” the Sheikh of the Mountain shouted. The porter dropped his burden and prostrated himself in the dust. “What is your bidding, O Sheikh of the Mountain?” he shouted back.\n“I want you to climb the ramparts and—”\n“Stop this right now,” Omar said firmly…\n“Why do you say stop? You don’t even know what I’m going to tell him.”\n“You mean you’re not planning to order him to jump off the castle wall?”\n“Now you spoiled the surprise.”\nIf the scene seems familiar, it’s probably because you saw something similar in the 1982 sword and sorcery flick Conan the Barbarian. In explaining how he made the transition from warlord to cult leader, the villain Thulsa Doom (James Earl Jones) tells Conan (Arnold Schwarzenegger), “There was a time, boy, when I searched for steel, when steel meant more to me than gold or jewels.”\n“The riddle...of steel,” Conan replies.\n“Yes! You know what it is, don't you, boy? Shall I tell you? It's the least I can do. Steel isn't strong, boy, flesh is stronger! Look around you. There, on the rocks.” He beckons to one of his followers standing above them on a ridge. “A beautiful girl. Come to me, my child...” The girl calmly steps off the edge of the cliff and plummets to her death.\n“That is strength, boy!” says Thulsa. “That is power! What is steel compared to the hand that wields it?”\nBut lest you think the Sheikh of the Mountain plagiarized Thulsa Doom, it was in fact the other way around. The story has been associated with the Assassin cult ever since the Crusaders returned to Europe with tales of their adventures. Bernard Lewis, in The Assassins: a Radical Sect in Islam, relates “a somewhat questionable story” of one of the later Assassin leaders:\nCount Henry of Champagne, returning from Armenia in 1198, was entertained in his castle by the Old Man, who ordered a number of his henchmen to leap to their deaths from the ramparts for the edification of his guest, and then hospitably offered to provide others for his requirements: and if there was any man who had done him an injury, he should let him know, and he would have him killed.\n(From the “continuation” of William of Tyre’s History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea.)\nBut even in 1198, the story was already old. An earlier version occurred during the Qarmatian Rebellion. The Qarmatians were one of the strangest sects in the history of Islam. They were communists. A dissident Shiite offshoot, dedicated to the brotherhood of mankind, they threw off the authority of the caliphs and established their own egalitarian utopia in the early 900s, with their capital at Lahsa, near Bahrain. Naser-e Khosraw, who visited the Qarmatians around the year 1050, described what he found:\nThey neither pray nor fast, but they do believe in Mohammad and his mission…They take no tax from the peasantry, and whenever anyone is stricken by poverty or contracts a debt they take care of his needs until the debtor’s affairs should be cleared up. And if anyone is in debt to another, the creditor cannot claim more than the amount of the debt. Any stranger to the city who possesses a craft by which to earn his livelihood is given enough money to buy the tools of his trade and establish himself. If anyone’s property or implements suffer loss and the owner is unable to undertake necessary repairs, they appoint their own slaves to make the repairs and charge the owner nothing. The rulers have several gristmills in Lahsa where the citizenry can have their meal ground into flour for free, and the maintenance of the buildings and the wages of the miller are paid by the rulers.\n[From Naser-e Khosraw, Book of Travels (Safarnama), W. M Thackston, Jr., tr. (1986)]\nYou may wonder how a communist state can afford to be so generous and survive, let alone prosper for 150 years, when every other experiment in communism that litters the pages of history collapsed under the weight of its own poverty. The answer is buried in the passage above: slavery. “At the time I was there,” Khosraw writes, “they had thirty thousand Zanzibar and Abyssinian slaves working in the fields and gardens.”\nThe Qarmatians supplemented the stolen product of their slaves' labor with plunder from neighboring communities. In 930, for example, under the command of Abu Tahir Suleiman Janabi, they sacked Mecca, killed several pilgrims in the holy precincts of the Kaaba, stole the sacred Black Stone that was kept there, and brought it back to their capital. According to Khosraw, “They said that the stone was a ‘human magnet’ that attracted people, not knowing that it was the nobility and magnificence of Mohammad that drew people [to Mecca].” After Janabi’s death his successors returned it for a ransom. At some point during its theft and captivity it got shattered—to this day a silver frame is used to hold the pieces together.\nThe raid on Mecca was not the Qarmatians’ only attack on Muslim cities. Two years earlier, Abu Tahir Suleiman Janabi and his men had marched on Baghdad, capital of the Commander of the Faithful, the Caliph al-Muqtadir. Edward Gibbon, in The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, tells us what happened next:\nBaghdad was filled with consternation; and the caliph trembled behind the veils of his palace. In a daring inroad beyond the Tigris, Abu Tahir advanced to the gates of the capital with no more than five hundred horse. By the special order of Muqtadir the bridges had been broken down, and the person or head of the rebels was expected every hour by the commander of the faithful. His lieutenant, from a motive of fear or pity, apprised Abu Tahir of his danger, and recommended speedy escape. “Your master,” said the intrepid Qarmatian to the messenger, “is at the head of thirty thousand soldiers: three such men as these are wanting in his host:” at the same instant, turning to three of his companions, he commanded the first to plunge a dagger into his breast, the second to leap into the Tigris, and the third to cast himself headlong from down a precipice. They obeyed without a murmur. “Relate,” continued the imam, “what you have seen: before the evening your general shall be chained among my dogs.”\n[Spelling updated for consistency with modern use]\nAbu Tahir Suleiman Janabi's boastful prediction was not to be. The Qarmatians were driven away from Baghdad and al-Muqtadir, despite a turbulent reign, remained unchained.\nI put the “Riddle of Steel” scene in The Thread of Reason because I wanted to make a serious point about the power of ideas and because the book is about the Assassins and the scene is a timed-honored part of Assassin lore. But I couldn't resist poking fun a little at how often it has appeared, not only in Conan the Barbarian and The Thread of Reason, but in many other works as well (1964’s The Long Ships and 2005’s The Keeper: The Legend of Omar Khayyam come to mind). And so, when the Sheikh of the Mountain accuses Omar of ruining his surprise, I have Omar reply, “When Suleiman Janabi performed that demonstration—a century and a half ago—it was a surprise. Now it’s just a cliché.”\nAs for whether the porter actually jumps, you’ll just have to read the book.\nPhoto credit(s): You Tube, Crystalinks\nPosted by Michael Isenberg at 9:04 AM\nLabels: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Assassins, Conan the Barbarian, Islam in the Middle Ages, James Earl Jones, Omar Khayyam, Riddle of Steel, The Thread of Reason\nA well-loved tax collector\nProfessor Lewis Strikes Back","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1691183"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7391974329948425,"wiki_prob":0.26080256700515747,"text":"Center for Inflation Research\nNational Economy and Monetary Policy\nFinancial Markets and Banking\nHouseholds and Consumers\nIndicators and Data\nBeige Book\nIndustrial Heartland\nBanker Resources\nNewsroom and Events\nCleveland Fed Digest\nMultimedia Storytelling\nInfographics Library\nThe Cleveland Fed\nOur Officers\nTreasury Services\nLearning Center and Money Museum\nHistorically, the nation's industrial heartland has relied heavily on manufacturing—and, to a lesser degree, it still does today. See all of our industrial heartland work.\nWhile black people account for 15% of Fayette County’s population, they make up only 5% of home buyers there. Explore our analysis of home lending data in this Kentucky county.\nRead about Cleveland’s last 50 years compared to other industrial heartland MSAs'.\nColumbus’s employment expanded by 2% in the second half of 2017. Read more in Metro Mix.\nWhat are business people in Kentucky, Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia saying about economic conditions? Check out the latest Beige Book.\nWe offer state-level data sets on employment and other labor categories. Download them here.\nRead about small business credit and financing in the Fed's 2016 Small Business Credit Survey.\nWelcome to our region. Here you’ll find data, maps, research, analyses, and articles related to the diverse economies and communities of the region served by the Cleveland Fed.\nOur region encompasses all of Ohio, western Pennsylvania, eastern Kentucky, and the northern panhandle of West Virginia. Within our borders lies a range of industries—from manufacturing, healthcare, and agriculture to oil and gas extraction—and communities, including urban and older industrial cities to rural Appalachian areas. Explore our work.\nThe States of the Fourth District\nOur Region: The States of the Fourth District\nOur district encompasses all of Ohio, western Pennsylvania, eastern Kentucky, and the northern panhandle of West Virginia. We find it useful to compare data at the state, Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), county, city, or local levels, where the availability of data makes such comparisons possible. We compare data for the region against data at the national level, too, to gain a sense of how the states we represent in the Fourth Federal Reserve District are faring relative to the nation.\nThe Cleveland Fed’s district includes the entire state of Ohio, comprising 88 counties, 12 Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs), and a range of community types, from urban, older industrial, and suburban to rural, agricultural, and Appalachian. In our work, we focus on topics related to the well-being of the economies, industries, and people of our district—topics like labor market productivity, small business credit conditions, and affordable housing. We compare data for the state to data for other states in our district as well as to data at the national level, to better answer the question, “How is Ohio faring relative to nearby states and the nation?” And as a core part of the nation’s industrial heartland, Ohio is a subject of our study on the rise, the fall, and the resurgence of manufacturing in the region.\nOhio is also home to two of our three locations: the main office in Cleveland and a branch in Cincinnati (the other branch is located in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania).\nThe Cleveland Fed’s district includes 56 counties in Kentucky, all of which are located in the eastern portion of the state. Because data are often available at the state level, we look at data for the entire state, not just eastern Kentucky. We also conduct in-depth analyses, focusing on eastern Kentucky and the largest and only metropolitan area in the region, Lexington.\nIn our work, we focus on topics related to the well-being of the economies, industries, and people of our district; in Kentucky specifically, our focuses are economic and community development, energy and extraction industries, and workforce development. We compare data for the state to data for other states in our district, as well as to data at the national level, to gain a sense of how Kentucky is faring relative to nearby states and the nation.\nRegionally, we partner with other Reserve Banks—including the Richmond Fed, the Atlanta Fed, and the St. Louis Fed—and with educational and nonprofit organizations to examine the issues affecting the economics, communities, and people in the Appalachian communities of the nation.\nThe remaining 64 counties of Kentucky are served by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, the Eighth District. Visit the St. Louis Fed’s website to learn about their work.\nThe Cleveland Fed’s district includes 19 counties in the western third of Pennsylvania. Because data are often available at the state level, we typically examine data for the entirety of the state. We also conduct in-depth analyses that focus on western Pennsylvania and the two metropolitan areas in the region, Pittsburgh and Erie. We compare data for the state to data for other states in our district as well as to data at the national level, to gain a sense of how Pennsylvania is faring relative to nearby states and the nation.\nIn our work, we focus on topics related to the well-being of the economies, industries, and people of our district; in Pennsylvania specifically, our focuses include economic and community development, energy and extraction industries, and workforce development. We partner with the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia on applied research and events relevant to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, including quantitative assessments of opportunity occupations and the Cleveland Fed’s biennial Policy Summit.\nThe remaining 48 counties of Pennsylvania are served by the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, the Third Federal Reserve District. Visit the Philadelphia Fed’s website to learn about their work.\nThe Cleveland Fed’s district includes just 6 counties in West Virginia, located in the northern panhandle of the state. Because data are often available at the state level, we typically examine data for the entirety of the state. We also conduct in-depth analyses that focus on the largest and only metropolitan area in the region, Wheeling. We compare data for the state to data for other states in our district as well as to data at the national level, to gain a sense of how West Virginia is faring relative to nearby states and the nation.\nIn our work, we focus on topics related to the well-being of the economies, industries, and people of our district; in West Virginia and the area surrounding the northern panhandle, our focuses include economic and community development, energy and extraction industries, and workforce development. We partner with other Federal Reserve Banks on quantitative studies, outreach, and events on topics that are relevant to the state and the region.\nThe remaining 49 counties of West Virginia are served by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, the Fifth District. Visit the Richmond Fed’s website to learn about their work.\nWe welcome your feedback and questions: Contact us.\nThe Beige Book, released 8 times a year, contains reports of economic conditions across the United States by region. Reports are based on information gathered primarily through interviews with business people and are prepared by each of the 12 Federal Reserve Banks for their respective Districts.\nBeige Book: Economic activity in the Fourth District has risen modestly\nInterviews with our Fourth District Beige Book contacts suggest that recent business activity in the region has risen modestly. Find specifics on wages, prices, spending, and industries in report. Read More\nAn Uneven Recovery: Home Lending in the Fourth District by Race and Income\nFocusing on seven counties across Ohio, Pennsylvania, and Kentucky, our researchers used Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data to examine application and origination activity by income and race during the past 27 years (1990–2016). In a 13-year span preceding and following the Great Recession (2004–2016), three trends were consistent across all seven counties. Read More\nColumbus—Labor Market Cruising at a Slightly Slower Pace\nThe Columbus metro area’s economy is sturdy, with a low and relatively stable unemployment rate. Total employment grew at a slower rate recently than the metro area’s average pace in the current economic expansion, but the growth was broad-based across sectors. Read More\nToledo—Economy Rebounds\nSeveral measures—the number of jobs, the unemployment rate, output per person, and median personal income—indicate the economy of the Toledo metro area has essentially bounced back to where it was at the end of 2015. This represents a recovery from the 2017 closure of the Jeep Cherokee plant that reduced the number of jobs and increased the unemployment rate in the region. Read More\nOpioids and the Labor Market\nThis paper studies whether the opioid epidemic is causing workers to leave the labor force or whether a shock to the labor force like the Great Recession causes greater opioid abuse. We find evidence for the former but not for the latter. Individuals in areas with higher prescription rates are less likely to participate in the labor force. And the Great Recession had no effect on the share of people abusing opioids. Read More\nA Long Ride to Work: Job Access and the Potential Impact of Ride-Hailing in the Pittsburgh Area\nWhether measured by proximity or commute time, data show that for the average transit rider, jobs are increasingly out of reach. Cleveland Fed researchers explored one solution for improving job access. Here’s your ticket to ride. Read More\nThe Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) for Smaller Communities and Rural Regions\nWhat’s one key element to drive funding to low-income areas of the country? Meaningful and productive partnerships between banks and community-based organizations (CBOs). Read More\nChanges in the Occupational Structure of the United States: 1860 to 2015\nThis Commentary describes how the mix of occupations in which people have been employed in the United States has evolved over time. After 100 years of dramatic change, the mix of occupations has been more stable since 1970. This trend adds occupational structure to the growing list of ways our nation’s economy has become less dynamic in recent decades. Read More\nPopulation, Migration, and Generations in Urban Neighborhoods\nThe number of people living in urban neighborhoods has been rising in recent decades. This Commentary investigates changes in the number, ages, and financial status of those who have been moving into and out of urban neighborhoods, using data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York/Equifax Consumer Credit Panel. I find that since 2000, the increase in urban populations is the result of young adults migrating into urban neighborhoods and senior citizens aging in place. Urban populations have also become more educated and well to do. While declining urban neighborhoods may still outnumber growing urban neighborhoods within some regions, urban leaders there can work toward population or tax base growth knowing that consumer tastes and national trends are favorable to those goals. Read More\n© 2019 Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line719331"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7984029650688171,"wiki_prob":0.7984029650688171,"text":"Crome, Edward (DNB00)\n←Crombie, James\nCrome, Edward\nby Charles Trice Martin\nCrome, John (1768-1821)→\nCrome, EdwardCharles Trice Martin1888\nCROME, EDWARD (d. 1562), protestant divine, was educated at Cambridge, taking the degrees of B.A. in 1503, M.A. in 1507, and D.D. in 1526. He was a fellow of Gonville Hall; but although his friend Archbishop Cranmer, also a Cambridge man, speaks of him as having been 'president of a college in Cambridge,' his name does not appear in the lists of heads. It may be that he acted as deputy to Dr. Bokenham, master of Gonville Hall, who was seventy-seven years of age when he resigned in 1536. In 1516 Crome was university preacher. He resided without interruption at Cambridge until he attracted the king's notice by his approval of Cranmer's book demonstrating the nullity of his marriage with Catherine of Arragon, and by his action as one of the delegates appointed by the university, 4 Feb. 1530, to discuss and decide the question of the same purport proposed by the king. During the following Lent he was three times commanded to preach before the king, and shortly after (24 May) was one of the representatives of his university who, together with a like number from Oxford, assisted the Archbishop of Canterbury and Bishop of Durham in drawing up a condemnation of the opinions expressed in certain English religious books, such as ‘The Wicked Mammon’ and ‘The Obedience of a Christian Man,’ which assailed the doctrines of purgatory, the merit derived from good works, invocation of saints, confession, &c.\nIt was probably about this time that he became parson of St. Antholin's Church in the city of London, a rectory in the gift of the dean and chapter of St. Paul's, but owing to the destruction of the registers in the fire of 1666 it is impossible to fix the date.\nWhile at Cambridge Crome had gained some insight into the ideas of religious reformers by attending the meetings of ‘gospellers’ at the White Horse in St. Benet's, and in spite of his acquiescence in the prohibition of their books, his preaching was so coloured with their views that he was convented before the Bishop of London and examined, the king himself being present. The answers he gave were in accordance with the popular articles of belief, even in such matters as purgatory and the efficacy of fasting. There is extant a copy of them with remarks apparently added by him when reading them in his church, in which he endeavoured with some success to explain away the discrepancy between the articles he was reading and his previous opinions. His confession was immediately printed by the bishops, but his old friends thought it ‘a very foolish thing,’ and openly said that he was lying and speaking against his conscience in preaching purgatory.\nArticles were formally produced against him, Latimer, and Bilney in the convocation of March 1531, but in consequence of his previous recantation no further steps were taken against Crome. In 1534 he removed to the church of St. Mary Aldermary, which Queen Anne Boleyn procured for him by her influence with Archbishop Cranmer, the patron. He was unwilling to make the change, and did not accept it until the queen wrote an urgent letter to him on the subject. A few years later (1539) Archbishop Cranmer tried to obtain for him the deanery of Canterbury, but was not successful.\nAbout this period Crome is frequently mentioned in connection with Latimer, Bilney, and Barnes, and he was one of the preachers appointed by Humfrey Monmouth, a leading London citizen and great favourer of the gospel, to preach his memorial sermons in the church of All Hallows Barking.\nAfter the passing of the Act of Six Articles in 1539, in consequence of which Latimer and Shaxton, bishop of Salisbury, resigned their bishoprics and were imprisoned, Crome preached two sermons which his enemies hoped would give them a handle; but hearing of his danger he immediately went to the king and prayed him to cease his severities. No proceedings were at that time taken against him, and not long after (July 1540) a universal pardon was granted. Crome did not, however, alter his opinions and preaching, and a controversy between him and Dr. Wilson having caused some stir in the city, they were both forbidden to preach again until they had been examined by the king and council. This was done on Christmas day 1540. The articles alleged against Crome were denial of justification by works, the efficacy of masses for the dead and prayers to saints, and the non-necessity of truths not deduced from holy scripture. His answer was an argument that these articles were true and orthodox; but the king, averse to severity in his case, only ordered him to preach at St. Paul's Cross and read a recantation with a statement that he would be punished if hereafter convicted of a similar offence. This he did, but as his sermon contained but little reference to the formal recantation which he read, his license to preach was taken away. This prohibition did not endure many years, for in Lent 1546 he again got into trouble for a sermon preached at St. Thomas Acres, or Mercers' Chapel, directed against the sacrifice of the mass. Being brought before Bishop Gardiner and others of the council he was ordered as before to preach in contradiction of what he had said at St. Paul's Cross, but his sermon rather hinted that the king's recent abolition of chantries showed that he held the same opinion. This was not considered satisfactory, and he had to perform a more perfect recantation on Trinity Sunday.\nDuring the reign of Edward VI he appears to have lived quietly, for the only notices of him are a casual mention by Hooper a short time before he was made bishop of Gloucester, that Crome was preaching against him, and a letter, referred to by Strype, from a poor scholar asking for help. After Queen Mary's accession he was again arrested for preaching without license and committed to the Fleet (13 Jan. 1554), but a year elapsed before he was brought up for trial. In January 1555 many of his friends were examined and condemned. Hooper, Rogers, Bishop Ferrars of St. David's, and others were burnt. Crome was given time to answer, and having had some practice in the art of recantation made sufficient compliance to save himself from the stake. It was proposed that he, Rogers, and Bradford should be sent to Cambridge to discuss with orthodox scholars, as Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer had done at Oxford, but they refused, not expecting fair play. Their reasons were published in a paper which is printed by Foxe. How long he was kept in prison is doubtful. He died between 20 and 26 June 1562, and was buried in his own church, St. Mary Aldermary, on the 29th.\n[Cal. of State Papers of Henry VIII, vols. iv. v. vii. viii.; Strype's Memorials, i. i. 492, ii. 369, iii. i. 92, 157, 221, 330, ii. 192; Annals, i. i. 545; Strype's Cranmer, 487, 495, 566, Par ker Soc. 3 Zur. 208, &c. (see Gough's Index); Foxe's Acts, v. 337, 351, 835, vi. 413, 533, 536, 588, vii. 43, 499; Burnet's Hist. Ref. i. 150, 271, iii. 254, 264, 346; Wilkins's Concilia, iii. 725, 737; Machyn's Diary, 51, 80, 81, 286; Newcourt's Repertorium, i. 436; Cooper's Ath. Cant. i. 215.]\nC. T. M.\nRetrieved from \"https://en.wikisource.org/w/index.php?title=Crome,_Edward_(DNB00)&oldid=4307873\"\nDNB biographies\nPages with noyear","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1169869"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7022032141685486,"wiki_prob":0.2977967858314514,"text":"Call us +977-01-4485120\ninfo@weinspirenepal.org\nHealth and Education\nBehavioral Change Communication\nWomen Empowerment and Child Protection\nYouth Leadership and Civic Engagement\nInternship with us\nApply for our recent fellowship program\nWe Inspire Nepal / Health and Education\n“His wit and vision conquer every state and kingdom is the man with the sound mind, sound body, and wisdom”.The physical, mental, emotional and intellectual wellbeing of mankind is never to be compromised for the wellbeing of the nation, the world rather. Here at We Inspire Nepal ( WIN), we are aware of the importance of good health and good education to every human being and try the best to work in these areas.\nWe Inspire Nepal (WIN) inspire Nepal to be aware of their health and provide people with the needed knowledge and information. WIN mainly focuses on the issues of sexual and reproductive health as these issues are regarded as taboo in many developing countries and mainly in Nepal. Sexual and reproductive health are often belittled despite of their importance. It is often found that people do not feel comfortable to talk about such issues and thus we raise such issue in front of the masses to make them aware of their importance.\nFurthermore, we advocate for people about their proper sexual and reproductive health and the method is generally policy level advocacy. There are many examples of people, mostly women who have been victimized because of their sexuality and reproductivity and many people in the society have been abandoned by sexual and reproductive rights. We see many examples but since these issues are considered as a taboo subjects, we get minimal interest of people to advocate on such issues. These drawbacks of the society inspire We Inspire Nepal to advocate on such topic.\nIn order to seek solution for the problems in the health sector and also to make people aware of further problems, we conduct programs mainly focusing on awareness, conveyance and solution of health issues. We conducted awareness program about the most odious disease, HIV-AIDS . Also, the WIN reached the lives of rural people during the time of crisis by distributing medical support.\nApart from working in the field of sexual and reproductive health, WIN inspire Nepal to be healthy physically, mentally and emotionally. WIN realized the lack of resources and facilities to local people for maintaining proper health but explored solution to these by conducting a revolutionary dance program entitled “Dance for Nepal”. WIN conducted it for couple of years and brought revolution in the mindset of people about health. The people who used to have lack in resources for proper health found dance as the cheapest and the best way for having a proper health. With this dance program, WIN not only brought changes in people’s health but also in the attitude by inspiring them to think out of box and explore new alternatives in their life. Dance for Nepal was implemented by WIN in Kathmandu in association with Restless Development Nepal. WIN has lots of plans and policies to work on various health issues and it does its work realizing the urgency of health issues. WIN realized Peer Education Program as the crucial one for adolescents and youth of the country. It went to the door steps of about 500 different schools of different parts of Nepal and conducted the Peer Education Program. This program helped the students, teachers and parents to know different unspoken and hidden problems and simultaneously helped WIN to know the different problems of different regions of Nepal and to set a new vision for conducting further programs. The psychological counseling programs of WIN has touched many hearts and raised awareness about mental health.\nWe Inspire Nepal inspire the heart to educate the mind. There is no other way of gaining wisdom, knowledge and intellectual strength without proper education. Education is something that differentiate human beings from other animal beings. It is a matter of great disappointment that many people have been deprived of getting quality education. Quality education which is the basic right of every individual has also been victimized of gender, social, cultural and political issues in the country. WIN is a group of eduacated people from all over the country and we realize the effect of education in our lives and work to bring changes in the field of education.\nEducation, one of the basic right is the most important right and need of the people. The development of the country solely depends on the education it provides to its people. The data and statistics of Nepal shows the progress in literacy rate but there are still many things lagging behind in the education sector. The research done by WIN in many regions and sectors of Nepal makes WIN unsatisfied about the educational systema and it continuously conduct many programs for educational system’s upliftment.\nMoreover, WIN tries to prioritize the importance of sustainable education amongst people. It provides knowledge to the people about the meaning and importance of sustainable education. It has realized that education has been provided to the public but it has not brought effect in the lives of them for longer time and there is where the need of sustainable education arises. The education for each and every human being which educate the mind, enhances the personality and provide a unique vision for every unique individual is the education of this age and hence is the sustainable education. WIN by doing advocacy for sustainable education want to bring changes in educational system of Nepal. It has done many awareness and advocacy programs on Sustainable Development Goals in education, conducted many sustainable education conferences.\nSustainable education is never accomplished without the complete participation of triple factor of education and they are parents, teachers and students. WIN has conducted many programs focusing on these important people. It has worked not only for making students aware of sustainable education but also has made many parents aware of their role for sustainable education. It conducted teachers training programs in over 500 schools of different regions of Nepal where it provided knowledge and information about new, scientific and effective methods of teaching and the WIN has always inspired students to be the leader tomorrow and for this, it has conducted many leadership programs to over 10,000 students. The leadership program mainly focused to get information about students’ personalities, provided them knowledge about leadership skill and inspired them to be a leader for tomorrow. Apart from programs and seminars, WIN has different ways of promoting sustainable education and thus adopted debate programs to participate students and other general public in it. The success of these programs could be felt by the change in people’s vision and attitude towards the educational system.\nVisit us Battishputali, Kathmandu, Nepal\n© 2017 – We Inspire Nepal. All rights reserved","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line442498"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5209388136863708,"wiki_prob":0.47906118631362915,"text":"Michael Shaw Is Fast\nIncoming recruit Michael Shaw saw his high school track career end prematurely when the OSHAA ruled he had transferred to Trotwood-Madison illegally, but dude got it awwwwn at nationals:\nTrotwood-Madison OH coach Randy Waggoner, honored earlier in the day as the meet’s Coach of the Year, couldn’t help blinking back tears at the courage and gutsy efforts of his Waggoner’s Raiders team after they toppled favored Dominguez CA in the marquee 4x400 (3:11.33 to 3:11.41).\n“I’ve been coaching since the ‘60’s,” Coach Waggoner said of his 46.4 anchor, Mike Shaw, “and I’ve coached a lot of guys, but he’s one of the best.”\nShaw had a huge meet for his team from Ohio, anchoring the Raiders to a Friday win in the 4x200 (1:25.18), then taking the 200 title (21.19 in a headwind) and anchoring the 4x400 win on Saturday.\n“We all promised each other we were going to lay it on the track for each other,\" Shaw said. \"Last race of the season, and even though I was dead from the 200 [earlier in the day], I told them that if it was close, I’m going to win it.”\nAye, that he did:\nShaw also qualified for the final in the 100 M but finished last. Dunno what happened there.\nDude is ninja fast, though. He runs the forty in femtoseconds. I use him instead of fiber-optic cable. I had him take a message to South America and when he got there it was Gonwanaland.\nMIKE SHAW IS FAST.\nLabels: football, recruiting","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1609072"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6921506524085999,"wiki_prob":0.30784934759140015,"text":"There are numerous species of snakes in NYS the vast majority of which are NOT POISONOUS. In fact in NYS there are timber rattle snakes and copperheads which are about the only two that are poisonous. However, in some snakes the saliva can cause an allergic reaction but this is much different from a poison. That said the most important thing when reporting a snake is the color and detailed description which is obviously used for identification purposes although not only do patterns change from species to species but individual to individual, male to female and young to adult. The location of the snake is also important starting with is it inside or outside and what time of day the snake(s) are typically seen. Being cold blooded snakes are attracted to warmer areas but like to hide in hard to reach crevices. Snake dens are often rocky areas with many crevices such as underneath concrete slabs or decorative rock beds. Various snake species will breed at different times but typically young are hatched from eggs in the spring. All snakes are carnivorous and eat small mammals, amphibians and birds. One way to prevent problems with snakes is to eliminate or reduce suitable habitat such as long grass and swampy areas which typically house many prey species and eliminate crevices and other entrances into your house such as water pipes leading to a sump pump or downspouts that allow a snake to stay around your home. Snakes don’t typically cause “damage” per se and in fact are in most cases beneficial from an ecological standpoint but are so misunderstood that they often instill fear in homeowners. Droppings are difficult to identify and about the only tell tale sign other than an actual sighting is a “shed” which is an older skin layer left behind as the snake grows. Snakes fees are the same as mice - $250 for a two week cleanout and $450 for a year long service.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1308278"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6917318105697632,"wiki_prob":0.3082681894302368,"text":"The Forgotten Dream of a Russian Africa\nThe Forgotten Dream of a Russian Hawaii\nVladivostok – Once More a Free Port\nReflections on Vladivostok\nThe Latest Stratfor Predictions for Russia\n10 Surprising Coloni… on The Forgotten Dream of a Russi…\nReblogging the… on The Forgotten Dream of a Russi…\nRussia Considering O… on Vladivostok – Once More…\ntowardsthegreatocean on The Latest Stratfor Prediction…\nTowards the Great Ocean\nAll things Russia\nAuthor Archives: towardsthegreatocean\nPosted on January 25, 2015 by towardsthegreatocean Tagged ВладивостокДВФУДальний Восток РоссииРоссияРусский ОстровFEFURussiaRussian Far EastRusskiy IslandVladivostok\tCommentsNo Comments on Back in Business\nIt’s been a while since I wrote an article for the blog, way too long infact. I started out with the aim of writing articles about developments in the Russian Far East, and it all faded away after I returned from my summer trip there. I got caught up with a lot of work through the end of 2014, but it’s no excuse really. Now that I’ve arrived here in Vladivostok to spend six months living in the city, it’s time to be far more regular with my output. I’ll have a post up over the next couple of days to give my impressions after a month in the city, and I’ve got some other posts planned after that, mostly contemporary stuff but also some historical stuff from time to time to mix it up and give you an idea of how the region has developed over the past 150 or so years. The past several months has seen a lot of attention given to Russia, with a lot of negative and gleeful coverage provided by the western media due to the civil war in Ukraine and the massive devaluation of the ruble. But in terms of the east, the relationship with China has dominated headlines, and for those of us who focus on these eastern regions it’s interesting to see just how far the economic relationship will go between the two powers, and how the overall development of the region will progress with tighter budgets and changing priorities. In short there will be plenty to talk about it in the articles to come.\nPosted on July 25, 2014 by towardsthegreatocean Tagged AsiaRussiaRussian Far EastSoft Power\tCommentsNo Comments on Russia Through Asian Eyes\nRussia Through Asian Eyes\nAfter finishing my trip to Russia around 5 weeks ago, I headed onwards to six other Asian countries and made the most of my summer holidays. I first took in Japan then onwards to South Korea, The Philippines, Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia. Aside from relaxing and doing all the fun things that you’d expect on a holiday, I tried to keep an eye out for any sort of Russian presence in these countries and to ask the locals what they thought about the country. As with my time in Russia this amounted to a handful of people in each place, but I think the feedback I got is the starting point for a better understanding of exactly how Russia is viewed by the average citizen in these countries and how far away Russia is from achieving its goal of a greater presence in Asia.\nThe Asian leg of my journey began in Sapporo, capital city of Hokkaido prefecture and home of the Hokkaido Slavic-Eurasian Research Centre. At the airport things looked promising; as well as having signs written in Japanese and English, they also had directions in Russian. After I left the airport however, that was virtually the last I would hear of Russia beyond the university. English was ubiquitous in transport areas, and some of the locals spoke English, but I didn’t hear a single word in Russian. Despite this it was a great honour to meet the staff and students at the Slavic-Eurasian Research Centre, with my trip very fortunately coinciding with an end of year BBQ that I was invited along to! There was a range of research projects amongst the group, and researchers from a variety of backgrounds, and it was good to see Russia receiving at least some academic focus at the university. It seemed that very few focused on the Russian Far East, aside from some continuing research on the Kuril Islands dispute, suggesting that the region still has much to do to capture the imagination of foreign scholars. Overall it was good to meet fresh faces who focus on Russia, and with any luck it won’t be my last visit to the institute. After this I was able to meet some other citizens of the city, but they knew little of Russia. One girl had met some Russians before and noted that once she got to know them they were great people, friendly, dependable, great sense of humour, but of the country and its development she knew little. She knew vaguely that the Kuril Islands were disputed, but felt that her own generation cared far less about it than older ones, and was not too concerned if territorial claims were dropped. Carrying on my trip in Japan to Tokyo, I was hoping for at least some more awareness of Russia, but none was forthcoming. Once a day I might hear some Russian words from tourists, but nothing more. I spoke with an older businessman who confessed he had little idea about Russia and had read only one Russian novel when he was younger. I spoke with a group in their 20s and 30s who occasionally met a tourist from Russia, but had never had the desire to visit Russia for themselves. For them it was a cold place all year round, far away, with little to do or see. For some it was even a dangerous place as any news they heard about it was invariably negative.\nAfter Japan I moved on to Seoul in South Korea, and yet the same familiar answers were to be found, even amongst some European expats. For all of them Russia was a country that existed on the news, not something they came across in their everyday lives. Oil, wars and cold weather were common stereotypes to be found amongst Russians, and there was no presence of Russian goods, companies or the language in public places. No-one knew of any Russian restaurants or bars, Russian goods, Russian companies, Russian residents…undoubtedly there were some tourists, but not so many to be a common sight. Journeying next through The Philippines and Indonesia brought no change, though I must say I didn’t visit places like Bali or Cebu which may have had more Russian tourists. The most promising lead I had was the Pochta Rossii symbol on a restaurant in Davao, but the waitress informed me it was just a random picture the owner had found and thought would look cool as a decoration. In Jakarta I managed to meet one girl who thought Putin was the sexiest thing to happen to the world in a long time, though she was most certainly an outlier. Indeed it was only a short time before my flight to Singapore that I started to get a few messages from the people I had met in Asia about Russia, regarding the MH17 flight going down over Eastern Ukraine. The impression they had, after the initial shock and confusion, was that Russia had deliberately shot down the plane over a Russian region called Eastern Ukraine. I had to clarify the geography and nature of the civil war in the Ukraine to make them aware that Russia was not shooting down civilian airliners, but at times it was difficult as their news was mostly recycled into their own language from western media outlets, which have shown since the event that they are heavily invested in blaming Russia for the tragedy. Unfortunately I was unable to read websites and media in the local languages for myself, so whether Russian statements were given full coverage I can’t say.\nAfter reaching Singapore I noticed a definite increase in the amount of Russian language I heard; still not much, but it seemed to have some popularity as a tourist place, particularly amongst Asian-looking Russian speakers. It was here that I thought I’d hit the jackpot and finally found a Russian bar, with a street of bars and restaurants apparently having one called ‘Rasputin’. Alas when I got there, despite the street being lively and all the bars open, Rasputin’s was closed. Permanently or temporarily I don’t know for sure, but perhaps it was appropriate to find it closed after seeing so little Russian presence up until then. From there I finished my journey in Malaysia, where discussion was understandably still focused on MH17 and what exactly happened to the aircraft. As with the other Asian countries I visited, Russia was cast in a negative light by the media stories being filtered through, and people were interested to know if, as a researcher of Russia, I could confirm if it was all true. I may have given those few a clearer overview of the situation, but that still leaves hundreds of millions of more who hear a very one-sided of interpretation of Russia being presented in the media.\nWhat then can I take from my trip across six Asian countries, and Russia’s presence there? For one, it’s almost non-existent to the point of being damaging. There was little or no knowledge about what Russia is, about its territorial presence in Asia, and what the country stands for. On a soft power level there was no Russian food, Russian drinks, Russian bars and restaurants, consumer goods…no Russian anything. Even the vodka on sale was usually Scandinavian or European rather than Russian! News was generally coming through western outlets, meaning that if someone did take an interest they would generally meet a wall of negative propaganda about the country. Russian tourism in Asia seems to be focused most prominently in resort areas given the lack of any information and signage in Russian throughout tourist sights and hotels. All of the above is a worrying sign if Russia is serious about making a presence in Asia. Ask people around the world about Asian countries such as China, Japan, Korea, Thailand, Singapore, Philippines…there’s a good chance you’ll hear at least one thing positive, whether it’s the holiday resorts, the food, the people, the technology, the sunshine or the culture. Wherever the natives of these countries go, they take part of their culture and offer it to the host country. Russia needs to offer something positive about itself to Asian countries, not just from the government but from businesses and citizens as well. Pick a country and you’ll find an Irish pub there, but chances are you’ll not find a Russian one. It’s hard to say if there are bureaucratic problems that prevent such moves, or if Russian businesses lack the drive and ambition to expand and take a chance abroad. But if it wants to be part of the Asian development story, and develop its own Far East, something has to change in that attitude. A greater Russian news presence and a greater Russian cultural presence are possible beginnings of that. Make a person interested in your story and they might just pay you a visit and try your borshcht.\nPosted on June 20, 2014 by towardsthegreatocean Tagged KorsakovRussiaRussian Far EastSakhalinYuzhno-Sakhalinsk\tComments3 Comments on The End of the Line in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk\nThe End of the Line in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk\nOver 29 days I had travelled 15,000 km, starting in Glasgow and going across Russia all the way to Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. Some of it has been good, some of it has been great, but at the end of every chapter there’s a bit of reflection, and as I sit here in the departure area of Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk airport there’s a fair few thoughts going through my mind. It’s hard to really describe what my expectations for the city were; written material about it usually focuses on the oil and gas industry, or on the nature and scenery, and you get the odd mention of Chekov’s journey and his brutal description of the place. Perhaps with that in mind I expected to see a bit more vibrancy and wealth on show in the capital of the island, or at least some kind of energy and excitement about the place. I’d been told at different times it was expensive, or full of expats, or an island with increasing revenues to spend on the place…but that’s not what I found here.\nI’m getting used to flying into minimalist regional airports in Russia, getting onto the bus and sitting in a cramped seat for at least half an hour, and Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk was no different. The sky was grey and rain was threatening, but it looked like I had avoided the storm that battered the island only a few days before. Evidence of its impact was everywhere, from trees and branches strewn across pavements and streets, to bus stops that had been mangled and blown over walls. However the city lived on, the buses ran, people found their way to work, and shops were open as normal. I would be staying with a guy called Maxim in the city, he works for an international company and was kind enough to offer me a room for a couple of nights. I dropped off my bags with him and set out to explore the city on foot, though I’ll admit I wasn’t too impressed with the weather on this occasion. The conditions were as close to Scotland as I’ve come across in Russia, with temperatures at 7C at the best of times, with gusts of wind and the odd shower of rain a constant presence. My first impressions of the streets were a sense of depression and sporadic development; the pavements were non-existent at times or lost beneath decades of muck, other times there were gaping holes every few steps. Dirt and debris covered every roadside and cars would speed past missing parts of their anatomy. I can accept that the storm caused damage and a lot of the debris is likely from that, but the rest has been there for the long-term and really is in need of repair. Whatever the money from the Sakhalin projects is being spent on, it’s not fully making its way to the benefit of the general population. I continued walking away from the main streets of the city, hoping to see some of the Japanese architecture that is said to remain, but even this seemed an exaggerated claim at best; some of the sites I visited were crumbling. I tried the botanical gardens, but the storm had seen it having to close for a while. A walk through Gagarin Park was a mixed bag; the storm had damaged a few kiosks and rides, but it’s hard to imagine great weather bringing much more beauty to the area. As I walked back towards the centre from the north, the streets blurred into a mish-mash of decrepit wooden buildings and peeling flats covered in Soviet murals from yesteryear. I began to wonder if I was entering the local equivalent of a favela. Maxim would later tell me of an area called ‘Shanghai’ which in the 1990s was the hotbed of crime and poverty in the city, though there is at least a greater sense of safety than in those days.\nAs I headed back to meet Maxim I had started to completely write the city off as a dead-end, that the city could turn up all of the Tsar’s missing gold and it wouldn’t make a single difference to the development of the city. I tried to remind myself that you can’t just fly into a city for a few hours, make a quick judgement and head off again with a few sensationalist headlines. For all the negatives I had seen, I wanted to find positives amidst the gloom, even if it was only one or two. At worst, I would be able to tell myself I had given it a fair crack of the whip. Maxim’s grandmother cooked a meal for us, and I’ll give my compliments to the chef as it’s one of the few times I’ve been satisfied with a bowl of cabbage soup. I asked him about his life in the city, he told me that he was born and raised here with a few spells abroad including the USA and China, and had been to Europe a few times on holiday. He told me that although he still likes Europe and the UK for music and culture, he was comfortable living in Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk and was in no rush to move. I enquired about the reasons why, usually those who are such big fans of foreign cultures want to go there, but he described a sense of local pride. It was in sync with Russia, but people had their differences. At this point Alexei arrived and he added to it, feeling that the sense of humour in the city had differences to that in the west of the country, more intelligent and less direct. He said people on the island were more hospitable and helpful than the mainland, with people willing to do a favour even for someone they didn’t know. I won’t pretend to know for sure if that’s the case, but the next day we would see an old woman lying on the ground, and there was no shortage of help and a willingness to stay with her until help arrived, despite lots of those workers previously rushing to make it to the office by 9am.\nAfter dinner we went on a tour of the city, taking in a few of the local monuments to the war heroes, the Lenin statue and best of all a trip to the top of the nearby hills for a view of the city. In the winter the place turns into a great place for skiing and snowboarding, with both Maxim and Alexei telling me it rivals nearby Sapporo for the experience. We would then meet Katya and head off for Korsakov. I asked them about the Japanese cars, and the fact that many vehicles seemed to be bashed, broken or looking the worse for wear, and they told me, quite expectedly, that the second-hand car market here is huge, with most cars from Japan, some from Korea, and even fewer from Russia. However the run-down nature of the cars is because everything delivered to the island is raised in price, even from the Russian mainland. Maintaining a car in perfect condition can be an expensive business, especially with the poor quality of roads. Maxim in particular wasn’t too happy about the degradation of the roads, and it’s something the city really needs to sort out. Korsakov itself is dominated at night by the flaming gas and the lights of the facilities. You can see tankers creeping out or arriving from Japan, and there are usually a few people at the peak of the town looking out on the view. If you’re ever in town it’s something to do when the sun goes down.\nWe talked more about the development of the island, and all were in agreement that it was lopsided and usually the benefits were in areas important to the gas industry. This I can understand, international companies don’t get into business for the benefit of the average citizen, but it sounded like the regional government had work to do to win over the hearts of the populace. There didn’t seem much optimism about seeing results, though I should add that it didn’t make them want to leave, they still felt comfortable here despite the problems. I asked my obligatory question about the fortunes of the local football team, FK Sakhalin, who had just earned promotion to the second tier of the Russian system, and with it a crazy schedule of matches stretching as far away as Kaliningrad; they weren’t too interested in the team. Football just didn’t seem too popular in general; even hockey was of limited interest for the league on the island. People were more interested in individual sports, winter ones in general, and the forthcoming World Cup matches were more of a novelty than a deep concern. I took a walk to the stadium the next day; it’s a really small place with one stand and it’s hard to imagine it hosting bigger games next season, though it had strong links with local youth programs which was good to hear.\nThe weather the next day was just as dismal as the last, but I endeavoured to keep up my walking and reach the 10km mark. I paid a visit to the regional museum, set in an old Japanese building that really is a marvel on the eye. The grounds were kept in great condition despite the storm, with only a few signs of disturbance. Inside there’s two floors, covering some fauna and archaeology at the bottom, through to exploration of the islands and life during and between the wars. It’s not the biggest museum I’ve ever been to but it’s definitely the best one on the island and worth a visit. If nothing else the price is an example for all of Russia, 70 rubles to get in, no extra cost for foreigners and 100 if you want to take pictures. Afterwards I tried the local art museum, with some interesting work there from a local artist and even a room of works by North Korean artists. However if you come here as a tourist be aware there’s a very limited amount of things to do and see. Even the local brewery had shut its restaurant doors, and many cafes or restaurants never opened before lunchtime. Either you live and work here, or you find yourself a hobby during your visit and get out to see the surrounding nature.\nI met Maxim and Alexei again, as well as a few others, and this time we went out for a beer. They opened up a bit after a while and I began to get more of an insight into the local culture. There was a good sense of solidarity as I had begun to see earlier, and people looked out for each other. However the one thing I had noticed on the streets was the divide between the Koreans and the Russians. There was a bit more mixing than in Yakutsk, but there was definitely a divide there. I asked the group about it, and they agreed that there was a social divide between the two races. The Koreans were born here, they spoke Russian, but they still retained their own cultural preferences, the social structures still related to the Korean mainland, and the Russians could feel that. Not that they complained or held resentment, they understood it as normal, different peoples have different ways of life. There was a bit more resentment for immigrants from Central Asia, though it wasn’t as strong as I’ve come across in other Russian cities. The numbers are very limited and hasn’t reached any sort of tipping point, and interestingly enough a number of construction works have North Korean workers here. I didn’t see any, but I’ll have to take the group’s word for it that they’re there. Indeed one non-Russian group who got the most flak were Americans, with a disappointment that some would stay for several years and learn barely more than a few words of Russian in that time. The numbers are so small that it is unlikely to become an issue, but even here on Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk people like long-term visitors to make an effort. With the beers starting to add up we left the conversation there and called it a night.\nWith that my stay was at an end, the next day taking the lunchtime flight on to Sapporo in Japan. I’d like to offer firm conclusions and thoughts about Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, but I feel like I was only scratching the surface. The problems that exist there are very visible, possibly permanent, and I couldn’t imagine any Russian moving there unless it was for the energy and resource industries. At the same time the people I spoke with were comfortable living on the island, they had a basic sense of regional pride and there were a number of sub-cultures going on that just didn’t have any obvious outlet. Life will continue to amble along here no matter whether there’s investment or not, and perhaps appealing to foreign investors and even tourists is just completely unnecessary here outside of the nature and adventure tourists. What the island did give me was a few things to chew over about the Russian Far East in general, and I’ll try to approach those issues in future articles.\nFor now it’s on to Japan and a few other Asian countries. I won’t be posting the same articles as I have done so far, but I do aim to get talking to the natives and find out what people in Asian countries think about Russia and the Russians. It’s time to see Russia from the outside, through the eyes of others.\nPosted on June 15, 2014 by towardsthegreatocean Tagged ArtemKhabarovskRussiaRussian Far EastRusskiy IslandVladivostok\tCommentsNo Comments on Two Tribes: Khabarovsk and Vladivostok\nTwo Tribes: Khabarovsk and Vladivostok\nThe first time I ever travelled to Khabarovsk and Vladivostok was five years ago in the winter of January 2009, the last legs of a Trans-Siberian journey that also took in Yekaterinburg, Irkutsk, Lake Baikal and Ulan-Ude. The winter wasn’t particularly vicious but I sure as hell felt the cold, and endless days of snow and ice meant that while I could see the cities and talk to people, any underlying beauty remained hidden. This time I was hoping to see both cities in full bloom, and despite some rain I got to see just that. Both cities would probably consider themselves the big dog in the far eastern yard and I wanted to try and get a better idea of whether that manifests itself in everyday life.\nMy first stop was Khabarovsk, fresh from another red-eye flight out of Yakutsk. The airport greets you with a message telling you that it’s the capital of the Far East, a not-so-subtle reminder to anyone who was ever in any doubt. A cheap ride on the trolleybus later and I’m set up in my flat and ready to explore the city. At least, that’s what I thought. It turns out I’m not immune to jet-lag; jumping numerous time zones and taking several flights over the space of a few weeks was catching up with me. After closing my eyes for ‘forty winks’ I woke up several hours later and the day was mostly gone. Given I was only going to be in Khabarovsk for a few days I kicked myself for not being able to stay awake. However the lesson is always have a ‘Plan B’, and I set off for a shorter walk through a few of the parks. I already knew a Korean-Russian girl called Ola before I arrived, and she met me for a walk and afterwards a beer. I wanted to ask about life in the east, but it seemed like I was the one being interviewed at first, with the conversation revolving around what I thought about other cities in Russian, and whether I noticed any difference in dialect and accent between Khabarovsk and Moscow. For the record I’m honest enough to admit I’m not good enough at the language to detect any subtle differences, but at a basic level there’s little or no difference to my ears. Eventually I get the conversation back towards the east, and Ola tells me about her thoughts on Khabarovsk. She likes it, it’s her home city, she’s very proud of it. But as with so many, there’s always a ‘but’…Ola wouldn’t mind living elsewhere, preferably in southern parts of Europe. The climate is terrible, and she has dreams to fulfil with her boyfriend. I ask about her the development of the region, is it making a difference to life there for the average citizen? She thinks certain things have improved, but the important things aren’t; housing is still a problem, both in costs and availability. Wages aren’t high enough for the cost of living out east, and variety in opportunities is lacking. The politics and management of the development are out of people’s reach, and there’s a resigned tone to her voice. I push a little deeper, I ask her if she likes Vladivostok, if there’s really a rivalry between the two, but she’s not really interested in any rivalry. She prefers Khabarovsk; even Vladivostok is too far away to inspire a competitive instinct. I let the conversation drift again briefly, but the night is young and soon enough I would get a chance to talk to her boyfriend Roberto about life in Khabarovsk.\nRoberto isn’t ethnically Russian either, he’s a Serb who moved out east after he met Ola, and he ended up going to the local university for a few years. He’s the outsider on the inside, and he tells me about his life in the city. He gives the almost mandatory complaint about the climate, saying he prefers to be elsewhere when the snow and ice arrive. He loves his homeland but after enduring the east for years to be with Ola he’d be happy with anywhere in Southern Europe as well. Perhaps I shouldn’t be surprised that his answers began to resemble Ola’s, long-term couples often agree on these things. I let the beer kick in a bit more and turn to entertainment in the city; he tells me that not much happens out east, it’s not a popular spot for music and famous performances. He nods at the beer and the pub around us, smiles, and says drinking is a local pastime when there’s nothing else to do. We raise a toast to that and I turn off my interview mode and enjoy the rest of the evening.\nI meet Roberto again the next day and we head for a trip to the museum of regional history. I had somehow missed it the first time I was in the city and I was interested to see how deep it went into the earliest history of Khabarovsk. It’s empty aside from the staff, which in Russia I usually take as a good sign of the content. Some of the history is well-known to me, of Nikolay Nikolayevich Muravyev-Amurskiy, its founding as Khabarovka, early conditions and the strategic value beside China. They even had a small display about the disastrous Khetagurova campaign to populate the east so props to them on that front. There’s a great collection of posters and documents throughout the various rooms, and I’ve now got over a dozen pictures which I need to work on translating. In the second room we get talking to the middle-aged lady who keeps an eye on things from her seat. She’s passionate about local history, and she tells us more about the Japanese and Allied presence in the Far East and Siberia during the Russian Civil War. She’s impressed that a Scotsman would go all the way to Khabarovsk for more than just Trans-Siberian tourism, and jokes about a Scot and a Serb being the only two visitors of the day; she assures us however that it’s usually busy with Russians. We talk modern events, and she’s happy living her life in Khabarovsk. She sounds hopeful on the future, and that since the city has an interesting past, it can also have an interesting future. There’s a hint of ‘love is all you need’ about her outlook, but I’m happy to hear some real positivity. Sometimes it’s easy to drift into resignation instead of doing something positive.\nI talk to Roberto about sport afterwards, and ask him if he’s found a place in his heart for SKA-Energiya Khabarovsk, or Amur Khabarovsk. He looks a bit sheepish and says he’s not really interested in them, and that in general people in the city only get interested in the teams when they’re doing well. The worldwide phenomenon of choosing a Spanish, German, Italian or English team instead has crept up even in this corner of Russia. Individual sports are more popular, though it’s hard to say if any one individual sport is more popular than the rest. At this point we meet Ola again, and I need to offer a huge amount of thanks to her for what happened next; I had wanted to get a scarf of SKA-Energiya, but with the season over it was nigh-on impossible. Just when prospects looked bleak, she made a phone call, and that someone made another phone call…well it only turned out that they knew the managing director of the club, who had a brand new scarf sent over for me free of charge. A great gesture and one I’m extremely grateful for.\nLater that day Ola introduces me to Vladimir, a Siberian lad who has made Khabarovsk his home and who knows a lot about local history. Given that most people aren’t too interested in the topic I’m looking forward to talking more with him. We discuss the progress of Khabarovsk over the years, and the conversation drifts towards the modern era. Despite not being born and bred in Khabarovsk, Vladimir has come to enjoy the city. He’s lived and worked across the country, served in the military for a while, and settled down with another Korean-Russian girl from the city. He says Khabarovsk is definitely a better place to live than Vladivostok, and he wishes more people would stay to try and improve the region. Given the cold nature of his own home city he doesn’t get scared off by cold winters here, he just grins and bears it. As with almost everyone else he wonders why the hell I’d be interested in researching the Russian Far East, but respects the fact that I’m giving it a go. We talk a lot more as the evening draws on, but with the beer flowing some of the details of our conversation by then drift from memory. As we walk the street during the evening I realise how good this city is for a pedestrian as compared with other Russian cities; wide pavements, well-maintained and generally in full repair, combined with decent-looking buildings and efficient services. It’s a refreshing sight, and something that the local authorities and planners in other cities should learn from.\nMy final day in the city was a bit more pedestrian, but it picked up near the end; I finally got around to eating some dogs. I have to thank Ola again, (if you need something done in Khabarovsk, talk to a Korean!) she was able to find an unregistered restaurant who served the dish, and an interesting meal was had. (Apparently there are three in the city, though I’ve no idea where the dogs come from) Afterwards I got a lift to the train station from the owner of the flat I had stayed in, and I talked to her a bit more about the city. Much like Vladimir she was happy here; she operated a number of small businesses and appeared to have a successful job on top of it all. She lamented the quality of Russian goods, and one look at her car and the contents inside told you that Japanese and Korean products were preferred. She felt that the development of the region wasn’t resulting in many changes on the ground for ordinary people, and she was concerned about whether things would ever really change. Once again there was a hope and desire for improvement, but a sense of resignation that there was little she could do individually to make a difference. As we reached the station I repeated the question I had given to others, and asked her about Vladivostok; Khabarovsk was better, but she didn’t really see it as a rivalry. Khabarovsk happened to be more professional whereas Vladivostok was dirtier and less organised. In the end they were all Russian though, and both cities just happened to be close to each other. An interesting perspective, and at that we said our goodbyes as I headed to Vladivostok on the overnight train.\nThe sun was already shining bright as the train pulled into Vladivostok station, and it inspired me to take the walk to where I was staying. It was a move I almost regretted, lugging my case uphill virtually all the way for about 3km, then again up several flights of stairs. Compared to Khabarovsk the city is a logistical nightmare, with houses and buildings strewn across a wide area. The main difference I noticed right away is that Vladivostok looks very similar to the way it did five years ago, from the Lenin statue opposite the station right down to the roads and pavements off the main streets that are often in need of solid repairs. I’ve heard it said that it adds to the charm of the city, but they don’t have many excuses for letting things get to this stage, especially with the drive to modernise the city structures during the 2012 APEC conference. Nevertheless the two bridges constructed as part of those preparations loom large in the skyline and are an imposing feature of the landscape.\nI was staying with a Korean-Russian for the first night of my stay, and we got to talking before she had to go to work. Olga works in the medical tourism industry for a South Korean company, and for those of you who don’t already know South Korean companies are aiming for growth in the Russian market, with rising success in a short period of time. She was born in the Primorskiy region and has lived in some cities abroad, but despite her time away she still loves her city and enjoys living there. I told her my first impressions of the city and asked her how she would compare Vladivostok to Khabarovsk; her response was far more favourable to Vladivostok, saying that it had more culture and events happening. She admitted the place could be tidied up and repaired, but didn’t worry too much about it. I moved on to the APEC legacy, and posed that the bridge was obvious but had anything else changed? Again she seemed positive, but couldn’t really specify anything else significant that had occurred, and after a while mentioned the Russkiy Island developments for use by the Far Eastern Federal University. I didn’t press on the issue, but I got the impression that whilst obvious changes weren’t easy to point out, there may well have been a boost in morale amongst the city, a positive outlook pushing through amidst several years of pessimism as shown by Olga’s feeling that things were on the up.\nAfter our chat I took a walk along the main square and down to the docks to see the fleet. If there’s one thing that definitely hasn’t changed, it’s the prominent presence of the monuments on the main square, celebrating the partisans who defended the revolution in the east and brought the Far Eastern Republic back into the fold once the Whites and foreign forces were pushed out. They’re huge and dominate the street, though the image is lessened slightly when you see donkey rides and children hiring out electric bikes around the square. Further on at the dock area there’s some work being done, though the submarine museum is still there, and the fleet still looks imposing.\nFor lunch I fancied a game of bilyard, but it was hard to find a decent place. I settled on a dinghy looking rock bar that showed some potential, and even though there was no bilyard table I got talking to a guy at the bar who told me his thoughts on the city. Unfortunately I forget his name, but he was a musician (it’s a rock bar!) who trained at university. He was a bit more pessimistic about the economic direction of the region and felt that there was a lack of opportunity to get a solid career. I asked if he thought about setting up his own business since he had ideas, but he complained of too much paperwork and regulation. At this point I should admit I felt a bit unsympathetic, here he was in a bar at lunchtime complaining about not finding good work, however he moved on to cultural life in the city and things picked up a bit. He told me that despite his previous pessimism he still loved the city dearly, and had more regional pride than he did national pride; Vladivostok first, Russia second. I expected him to be opposed to Putin and United Russia at this point, but he was relatively happy with them, it was simply a mentality he said existed in the east. He spoke of the creativity in the city, the tendency to be different, and that Khabarovsk by comparison was a dull and sterile place. He suspected they were in greater favour with the federal government, and would never move there. He became more wistful of his future musical dreams at this point, but I shared a drink with him before heading back out into the city.\nIt never fails to amuse me that Vladivostok has a series of beaches; yes it’s by the sea but the water always looks dirty and the weather is only occasionally inviting for ‘taps aff’ sunbathing. However I ventured on down to the beach anyways with the consolation in my mind of taking a wee look at the stadium of Luch-Energiya. I hate to be critical but it felt a bit soulless again, the highlight being a fountain that sprayed its water in tune with piped music. Songs by ‘Busted’ and dance remixes of Celine Dion’s song from ‘Titanic’ just don’t work for me I’m afraid, and it looked like they didn’t quite work for the sparse crowd either. There are some factors that the city can’t control when it comes to their beaches, but the public entertainment can surely improve. After the trek to the beach I met up with another local called Anna, this time a twenty-something PR worker who was born and raised in the Primorskiy region. She had been to Khabarovsk and a couple of other cities, and even lived in Komsomolsk-Na-Amure, but for her Vladivostok was better than the rest. It seemed to be a theme amongst the natives, there’s a definite feeling of pride no matter how good or bad things are. Like my first host she struggled to think of any visible changes beyond bridges and other infrastructure development, and after thinking about it she raised some exasperation at how money was spent and decisions reached in the region. She told me that although there was development in some sense, it was not a development that was benefiting ordinary people, and was primarily for the political and business elites to benefit further from foreign investment and domestic kickbacks. Housing was a big complaint, with tales of high costs and limited availability. Things were so bad that even as a full-time worker with a university education, she was staying in shared accommodation akin to a dorm in order to save money. I asked if such circumstances meant she would be looking to move elsewhere, but aside from the dream of a trip to Manchester to watch some football, she was content staying in Primorsky. A very tasty Armenian and Azeri style dinner later and I was spent for the day, but I still had time for one more brief chat with a local PhD student who was working on Korean history. Her experience mirrored that of the rest, a strong local pride, a concern about opportunities and costs, and a desire to see the region fulfil its potential.\nMy second day in the city turned to more academic matters when I met up with a local professor and PhD student to talk all matters Russian Far East. I won’t go into too much detail on all their views as they were numerous and detailed, but it was good to have the opportunity to sit and talk away about the region, a situation that unfortunately doesn’t arise too often back in Scotland. I got the impression that even in Russia specifics about the development of the Russian Far East aren’t too common, with more focus on Russian relations with Asian countries. We agreed that whether Russia will remain focused on Korea, China, Japan and India, or whether their relations start reaching out more towards Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Philippines and other South-East Asian nations, will be very interesting in future. I spoke about my desire to spend more time in the Far Eastern regions, whether to learn Russian language, carry out fieldwork or both, and it’s something I’ll be following up in the weeks and months ahead. After dinner I was given a tour of the campus on Russkiy Island, and I have to say it looks better than any other facility I’ve seen in Russia. It was of course designed to host the APEC conference and house the attendees, but the fact it’s being put to good use is a positive sign for the city. Combine that with the gorgeous scenery all around the island and you have a great environment for students in the years ahead. Russia could do with a lot more construction and development in the university sector, especially if it wants to attract paying students from other countries such as Korea and China.\nThe rest of my time in the city was devoted to more walking and sightseeing, with the highlight a trip to the top of Sparrow Hills to look out over the bay. You can see the panorama picture below this paragraph, but if you ever make it to the city you should climb up and take a look out there for yourself. (If you’re not up to walking the funicular can take you up) On that note I also noticed by the end of my stay that I’ve been losing some body fat, despite indulging my taste buds on a few occasions out here. I guess keeping up my workouts, walking at least 10km a day and a few beers here and there is a great way to keep in shape!\nAs a bonus to this article on Khabarovsk and Vladivostok, I spent half a day in Artem. I didn’t go out exploring the town, instead heading straight for the hostel before an early flight the next day, but it was a really depressing sight from what I did see. I don’t know if I just happened to see all the bad parts, but from exiting the train station, getting a taxi to the hostel, and taking a look around the area at the streets and buildings, everything and everyone just looks utterly depressed. Even the taxi driver said the place was dire. The cafe worker at the hostel couldn’t think of anything nice to say about the town. If that’s the state of affairs across all of the second tier towns and cities of Eastern Russia, it’s going to need more than a wee bit of development to sort out. However when it comes to Khabarovsk and Vladivostok, there are definitely some differences between the two cities, whether it’s the architecture, the industries and prospects, regional pride with Vladivostok more competitive towards Khabarovsk than vice versa, and expectations for the future. I think both of them can still make something of themselves, and probably they’re the only two real contenders to develop serious urban hubs in the Russian Far East, but it’s still going to take some work. People from the west don’t want to go there, and those from the east want to stay but can’t always do so due to limited opportunities. Fresh ideas are needed from those with the ability to implement change, but I’m pessimistic about it in the immediate future.\nNext up is Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, where the weather has been hurricane-esque. Hopefully all will be well when I arrive, but rest assured I’ll let you know my thoughts on the city sooner rather than later.\nPosted on June 11, 2014 by towardsthegreatocean Tagged RussiaRussian Far EastYakutiaYakutsk\tCommentsNo Comments on A Long Weekend in Yakutsk\nA Long Weekend in Yakutsk\nOver the past few years my interest in Yakutia has grown. At first I only came across the usual articles on Oymyakon, a cold and God-forsaken place at the arse-end of Russia where people live and toil through a brutal winter that lasts most of the year. It makes for a sensational headline, but I wanted to see the republic for myself and get an idea of the pace of life. Recent times have only added to my interest, with stories ranging from the big-money industries of gold, diamonds, oil and gas, to grand dreams of resurrecting the woolly mammoths, and the potential role of Yakutia in opening up the Northern Route through Russia’s Arctic waters. So it came to be that in the early hours of a sleepy Thursday morning I stepped out of the airport and looked out on the city of Yakutsk, still draped in sunlight and conveying the contrast of modern buildings with old wooden shacks that still had people living in them.\nI was met at the airport by my friend Alina and her uncle (both Yakuts), a level of hospitality that would continue over the following days, and I’ll be forever grateful for their help during my time in the city. I was able to take a look around the streets while the city slept, wide roads covered in dust, pavements pocked with bumps and divots where the permafrost was moving, puddles and dirt almost ever-present. Most buildings were colourful, but uniform in style, the practicalities of protecting themselves against the winter more important than aesthetics. There was something quaint about the city; despite the appearance there was a sense that people here had made it a home. Just when I thought the row of buildings would continue on forever, an area of park or stretches of the river would appear to remind me that nature still reaches out here during the summer months.\nI had few firm plans for my time in the city and spent the first day exploring it by foot with Alina. We took a trip to the university, and whilst you normally need to show a student card to get in, when I told them I was a foreigner just coming to visit they laughed and waved me in. As with most places you get a wee bit of leeway when you say that you’re from Scotland! The university isn’t much to look at, built for function, but the students work hard and there’s a positive atmosphere about the place. As we walked around the campus I asked Alina more about her studies and where she sees her future, and her outlook was to be repeated to me by most of the people I met in the city. She talked about wanting to get out of Yakutsk while she was young, to visit European countries and use her English and German language skills, and see more of the world in general. She saw little hope for a professional future in Yakutsk, but as a Yakut she wanted to return when she was older and live the rest of her life in her homeland. Apparently there was a fad in the city for a while for UK-themed clothing and London was a local favourite, though she laughed and denied it when I asked if she had joined in. When I asked her about the development of the city and whether things were changing, she was more pessimistic. I’ve mentioned the problems that the weather and the permafrost bring, and she felt that life in the city was unlikely to change much no matter how much money was spent on development. To be fair I could understand her point, you can build roads and bridges, but you can’t change everyday life in the city by government planning. If Alina and others study languages, or indeed most other subjects, they’re going to need to leave to use those skills. I didn’t see any other foreigners during my time there, and only heard two foreign voices around the airport. Tourism is still at an absolute minimum, even by Russians.\nAfter the university we took a stroll around some of the local museums, and were joined by one of Alina’s friends. I asked her a few of the same questions, and she was absolute in her desire to get out of Yakutsk once she had finished her university education. Western Russia and Europe were once again mentioned, and there was a sense of inevitability about her future. I asked her what she liked best about Yakutsk, at which point she screwed up her face, laughed and simply said nothing was best about Yakutsk. She appreciated that it was her homeland, and that she could lead a comfortable life there, but to do anything with her life she felt she would have to move sooner rather than later. We finished up our walk around the museum and headed back out onto the streets. The old town looks great in the summer, old-style wooden buildings inhabited today by bars and shops, and there’s a large monument to the founder of the city, Pyotr Beketov, who got the ball rolling here in 1632. As with most Russian cities there’s a large monument to the war heroes, including a warrior on a horse which is an important part of Yakut folklore.\nLater on I would get a chance to meet Alina’s grandmother and try out some reindeer meat. As a man who eats meat for most of his diet, I loved it. There are more succulent meats out there, but it has plenty of chewing in it and fills the stomach. As I ate she asked me about what I do and where I come from, and she seemed confused as to why anyone would visit Yakutsk for fun. She didn’t believe that anyone would get funding to study the Far East, and she would later ask Alina if I was some sort of spy! In some ways it’s understandable to wonder why anyone would go out of their way to visit the city, but as we talked more I got the sense it was another reflection of how far away everything seems from Yakutsk, and that development is something that does not affect everyday people. Why go to Yakutsk when you can go to the beach in Europe or in Asia?\nMy second day in Yakutsk saw me fulfil one of my goals on the trip; make a visit to the Tuymaada stadium. I’m a big football fan and being able to get into the stadium, walk about (and if you want you can also exercise on the athletics track and use the pitch) was good value at only 20 rubles. I didn’t bring my football boots on this occasion, but it was great to sit in the stand and look out on the pitch. I missed the last game of the season by a day, so unfortunately my quest to see the team play and get a scarf will have to wait for another visit. Near the stadium there’s also a theme park of sorts, but if I’m being honest it was probably the most depressing theme park I’ve ever seen. It was around lunchtime so I didn’t expect many people to be about, but to give you an example there was a lonely-looking tent which claimed to be a house of horrors. A picture of the clown from ‘IT’ was featured on the door, and the sounds of canned screaming from within did not quite get the adrenaline flowing. Afterwards we took a trip to a facility within the nearby hills, it’s frozen inside all year round with mammoth remains, ice sculptures and gives you the chance to eat stroganino and drink vodka from an ice glass. The best part though is a slide made of ice, good fun until it freezes your arse! Once you’re done you can take a walk up the hills and look out over the city, well worth doing to see the view. Later on we would meet another friend of Alina’s, also a student at the university. As with others she wanted to get out of Yakutsk, though she was inspired to go and live the rest of her life in Romania because she loved the stories about Transylvania and vampires. I can’t say I was expecting that response, but fair play to her for dreaming of something a wee bit different! She liked Yakutsk, but she didn’t see any future in the city and didn’t expect development to change that. I asked her if she knew much about the plans for the city and what the money was to be spent on, but beyond a vague notion that a bridge might get built over the Lena she hadn’t heard anything.\nThe third day saw me fulfil my second dream in the city, a trip to the mas-wrestling and my very first lesson. For those of you who haven’t heard of it mas-wrestling is a Yakut sport, you basically have two people across from each other with legs pressed against a wooden divider, and both with a grip on a wooden stick. The goal is to pull the wooden stick away from the other person or at the very least pull them over to your side of the divide. It’s straightforward and each round is quick, but it’s great fun. Don’t let the description fool you either, the sport requires a lot of strength and determination. Even warming up I could feel muscles being used that rarely get much action, and that’s despite me doing pull-ups, push-ups and various other bodyweight exercises on a regular basis. I lost the stick almost every time, but I’ll put that down to the 30kg weight difference between me and the trainer! Next time I’m in Yakutsk I’ll be doing it again. The trainer was also pretty happy and surprised to see a Scotsman giving it a try, though he seemed crest-fallen when I told him that no one in Scotland, or most other countries, has heard of the sport. If there’s any justice in the world he’ll get to see it as an event at the Olympics one day.\nIf there’s one good way to recover from a bout of mas-wrestling, it’s with a trip to the Lena to cook some shashlik and do some fishing. The roads there are akin to a bouncy castle and are in perpetual need of repair, but it’s a great scene when you finally arrive. The Lena is a mighty river, and there’s history in the area too with the 1912 massacre of goldfield workers. On this occasion it was quiet and peaceful, with pockets of Yakuts enjoying the sunshine, picking wild spring onion, and cooking up plenty of meat. I took the opportunity to talk more with Alina’s uncle, a middle-aged man with a successful career and a different perspective on life in Yakutsk. He had travelled around the country with his work, and enjoyed visiting Moscow and St. Petersburg, as well as trips to other cities such as Yekaterinburg and Irkutsk. No matter how far he travelled though he loved Yakutsk the most and had no desire to leave the city. He pointed out to the river, to the endless fields around, and asked why he would need to live anywhere else. He was happy about the future construction of the bridge across the river as it was only in winter that you could drive across instead of a huge detour, and he was comfortable with exploiting the various resources of the republic to bring in money. He reminisced about the Soviet era, saying that even in Yakutsk the lengths of Soviet power had made its presence felt. He welcomed the political and economic changes after 1991, saying capitalism and opening the markets had brought roads, infrastructure, goods and development to the region. It was a stark contrast with younger people who wanted to leave, though it’s hard to say if it’s simply generational, a sense of homeland or his experience in other cities which had given him that outlook. Perhaps it’s all three. It was refreshing though to hear someone who saw a future for the city, and who wanted to be there to help it along.\nMy final day in the city was spent talking with more locals, all younger people, and there was almost a unanimity about the desire to leave at some point. One guy had previously studied in Yekaterinburg and was looking to move to another city in Russia when he had finished his studies in Yakutsk. Others were less fussy but saw their future anywhere west of the city. There wasn’t much interest in Asia at all, either for work or travel, and there was a strong wariness of immigrants who had arrived from Central Asia. Some of the group loved rock music, but said that Russian bands rarely ventured to Yakutsk to play, never mind foreign groups. Even the local beer didn’t have a good reputation. (EDIT: I was told of a Chinese presence in the city although I only saw a couple of Chinese people walking around. You can buy ‘Harbin’ beers in some of the shops and bars though which means there’s probably some kind of presence!)\nOverall the atmosphere was one of inevitability and a resignation that leaving was the only way forward. Returning later in life to see out their days was rarely considered aside from Alina. As we ended the day at the main hang-out area beside the Lenin statue, I got the sense that whilst industrial development of the region may bring dividends, and the opening of the Northern Route may benefit the Arctic parts of the republic, social development would find little traction here. The local youth may well find their dreams elsewhere, and it’ll be a hell of a challenge to attract anyone else to set up shop here for even a few years.\nNext up is Khabarovsk, Vladivostok and Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, where I’ll aim to find out the local outlook from the more populated and prosperous cities of the Russian Far East. Until then, enjoy some political graffiti from Yakutsk.\nPosted on June 3, 2014 by towardsthegreatocean Tagged MoscowRussiaRussian Far EastYekaterinburg\tComments2 Comments on Looking East from Moscow and Yekaterinburg\nLooking East from Moscow and Yekaterinburg\nThe last time I travelled to Russia was six years ago, during which I spent nine months abroad as part of my time at university. My first experience of the country was daunting, arriving into a jam-packed airport at the same time as several other flights, waiting in a massive queue to hand in my migration card form, and waiting another lifetime at passport control, before heading into a sea of people beyond the arrival gates. I was not looking forward to a repeat performance, but to my surprise, it was a completely different story this time. There were no other flights, there was no need to fill in the migration card myself, and after waiting a couple of minutes in line for passport control, I passed through the gates, received my migration card, and stepped into a virtually empty arrivals area. Sure, a few taxi drivers were touting aggressively for a fare, but in a matter of minutes I was heading into the sun-kissed city on the express train to Paveletsky station. If the airport can keep up that kind of standard in future, there will surely be more repeat visitors to the country.\nMy trip on this occasion is of course partly about just travelling, relaxing and seeing a few sights, but I also made the time to talk to some of the people I met about their thoughts and ideas of the Russian Far East. The questions weren’t detailed or conducted interview-style, just a few minutes each on the topic. The sample size is quite small, twelve people in total, a fairly even split of male and female, and most of them in the 18-30 age-ranges, so I would stress that the opinions I’ve heard should not be considered as definitive or necessarily representative of the entire population. However it’s still interesting to hear what people think of Russia’s eastern lands, even if, as you will see, the results are maybe to be expected. In addition, I’ve left out the names of the respondents. The main limitation in going further was my language ability; whilst I can get through the day and talk for hours about simple things, I’ve not yet reached the stage where I can talk or understand in detail about complicated topics. It’s one of my main priorities for the rest of the year, and hopefully next time I’m in Russia I can provide more detailed observations than on this occasion.\nThe first couple I spoke to were of a mixed-marriage, the guy from western Russia and the woman from Italy. They had visited the east a year ago, heading as far as Lake Baikal and Ulan-Ude during the summer-time. They had enjoyed the visit, and inspired a desire to see a few more cities in the country, but their knowledge of the east did not spread any further than the trip. They confessed to knowing little about the region, and the only events they could recall were the recent deal with China and the Amur floods of last year. They had vague recollections that the region was being developed, but had no idea of the cost, and when I asked if they would consider living in the eastern regions the answer was a definite no. They were happy near Moscow, with a preference to move a bit further away from the city and nearer the surrounding countryside. Adding something extra to their salary would not make any difference in their choice.\nThe second couple I had the chance to speak with were both natives to Moscow, their families mostly from the region too, and both had finished university in recent years. As with the first couple their knowledge of the region was limited. The woman had a classmate from Sakhalin and had heard of the great nature there, as well as in Kamchatka. She said she wouldn’t be against going to see the region one day, but expressed regret that the cost was far too high, and with a baby on the way, it was unlikely it would ever happen in the years to come. They both expressed a desire to remain in Moscow, to live and work there, and no amount of extra money would change that. Once again the floods of last year were something they knew about, and they remembered the numerous appeals for donations on TV. The gas deals with China were fresh in the news, though they admitted they only listened to the headlines of the deal. The only other major events they could recall were spending on the APEC 2012 conference, and there being reports of poor construction standards on the roads.\nThe third couple I spoke with had a more eastern-oriented background; although the man was from the Moscow regions, the woman was born in Yakutsk, spending her early years there. She’s an ethnic Russian, and had moved to Moscow with family when she was still a child. At this point I expected to hear some more detailed opinions on the region, but as it turns out the woman had absolutely zero interest in the city anymore. She had little desire to go back, and only did so once every several years around New Years’ time to visit older relatives. Particularly interesting was how deep the desire not to go back was, with their intention to live and raise children in Moscow. The woman had heard they wanted to develop the east, and knew about the various mineral and hydrocarbon reserves in Yakutia, but did not know much about the details. Outside of Yakutsk their knowledge was even more limited.\nAs well as talking to couples I spoke with some single people in the city, firstly with a girl who had moved to Moscow from Tatarstan. She knew there was talk of developing the east, but as with the others she had little idea about the details and expenditure. Her interest was firmly in the west, being very happy living in Moscow and occasionally visiting relatives back home, as well as a love of the New York area after spending some time working there. When asked whether she would consider moving east if the job and money were right, she responded with a laugh and a firm ‘nyet’, unless moving east carried her all the way back to New York. The second single person was from the Moscow regions, in his late-20s and what could be considered as a more liberal representative of the city, with one eye firmly on Europe. He was comfortable talking about events in Moscow and Russian elite politics, but when it came to the east he also had little idea of what was going on in that region. He was aware of the development, but was surprised by the amount of money being spent, albeit he was happier for the money to head east than to the Caucasus. As with all the previous respondents mentioned, he found it highly unlikely that he would move to the region, even for a better or higher-paid job. His preference was Moscow or the UK, and even a holiday east seemed time-consuming, expensive and not particularly interesting.\nPerhaps the most interesting set of respondents was on the train from Moscow to Yekaterinburg. I didn’t take the much-feted platzkart option, having done it several times before, and on the previous occasion having enjoyed the atmosphere of a train full of young army conscripts living it up on the 25-hour ride from St. Petersburg to Murmansk…it was definitely kupe this time! It provided less people to talk to, but I had a lot more time to talk to them individually. One of the other passengers in my cabin was a middle-aged surgeon from Kazan, who had experience of living in other countries and travelling to a few cities. He knew of Sakhalin, having visited a friend there, and he spoke warmly of the nature and scenery you can find when you move beyond Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk. He was interested in seeing Kamchatka one day, but admitted it was unlikely since he had to work, his relatives were all in Western Russia, and he was at the stage of his life where he enjoyed the quiet life, which he said also meant he was unlikely to ever consider moving to the eastern cities. He knew about the development of the region without having heard many details, but believed it was ultimately fruitless and that the region was unlikely to benefit much, as was usually the case with grand initiatives. As an added bonus he was eager to talk about Scottish independence, and couldn’t understand why Scottish people would want to leave something like the United Kingdom. It was an interesting discussion, but I’ll leave that for another day.\nThe other passenger in my cabin was an older woman, curious about other countries despite never having travelled, and born and raised in Yekaterinburg before heading to Moscow after university for a work assignment. Her answers ranged from the Far East to the Urals, but she was very bitter about the situation in the country with regards to wages and social benefits such as healthcare, particularly when she was asking about what older people received in the UK. She said that buying train tickets to visit her relatives in Yekaterinburg every now and then was far too much for someone like herself who was making a basic wage in Moscow, so even imagining going to the Far East was just crazy. She loved her home-region, but felt it needed development as much as the east did. As with the surgeon, she mentioned how trying to develop the Far East, and even researching it as I do, was a dead-end and would lead to nothing. She confessed that she didn’t have much knowledge of the region, but from the rare piece of news she had heard it was not a place she would have moved to even as a youngster. Overall it was interesting that the two older people I spoke to on the train had more knowledge and opinions of the east, or regional development in general, than any of the younger people in Moscow. It’s often said that the capital lives in a bubble, and my conversations seemed to reinforce that stereotype, even for those who had previously lived or travelled to the region.\nFinally I spoke with two people in Yekaterinburg about the east, with hope that residents of a very proud region would know a bit more about events around the country than those in Moscow. Unfortunately that was not the case, as both had very limited knowledge of the east. The first did not know much more than the names of some cities, though expressed a love of the ocean. I asked if she was referring to the Pacific Ocean, but alas no, it was the Atlantic Ocean after having worked in the USA. Her interest was definitively about preferring to go back to the USA rather than moving to the Russian Far East. The final person I spoke to had a more interesting background, with ties to the region through her mixed Tatar and Mari heritage, a local girl whose father had lived in a small town in Primorsky Krai called Olga. She said he sometimes spoke about his life there, but the stories were short, and the overwhelming impression she got was that it was a place for soldiers and the navy. Given the time-frame involved, her father living there decades ago during the Soviet era and early days of the post-Soviet Russia, this is only to be expected. However once more she did not know much about the region beyond those stories, and had never visited. Whilst she had no desire to move to Moscow, Europe or the USA, she loved the Urals area, and would stay there as long as her relatives did. Holidays were a possibility, but cost, time and distance were once again raised as an issue.\nOverall I think there was a clear pattern to responses, with zero interest in relocating to the region, limited or no knowledge of the development plans in the east, limited interest in taking even a holiday there, and any interest restricted with the distances, time and costs involved in getting there and back. It’s perhaps no help that the region rarely features on the national or regional news outside of the east unless there is a catastrophe or energy deal, and it’s viewed as almost a faraway country at times. If the Russian government is serious about developing the region and encouraging skilled workers to relocate there, particularly the married ones when you consider that Russians commonly settle down relatively early and meet their future husbands and wives during their university years, then it will need to utilise far more of its new-found soft power abilities on its own internal projects. Without serious internal initiatives to raise awareness of the region, all the energy deals, mineral extractions and infrastructure development won’t change the demographic and workforce issues that are ever-present.\nMy next stop is in Yakutsk where I’ll spend five days exploring the city, and where I’ll be taking advantage of the trip to talk to more people; it should be really interesting to hear how people in the northern parts of the Russian Far East think about developments, and in particular if there’s any difference in opinion within the city between ethnic Yakuts and ethnic Russians.\nPosted on May 20, 2014 by towardsthegreatocean Tagged RussiaRussian Far East\tCommentsNo Comments on Welcome to “Towards the Great Ocean”\nWelcome to “Towards the Great Ocean”\nThe main objective of “Towards the Great Ocean” is to offer commentary and original analysis on the development of the Russian Far East, to develop my academic research on the region, and to establish a dedicated outlet for a part of Russia which receives relatively scant attention in the English-speaking world.\nWith the continued economic rise of a number of Asian countries, and a massive drop in relations between Russia and the West, Russia has once again cast its eye east and earmarked huge sums of money to develop its eastern territory, a program which has been described by the Russian government as a national priority for the rest of the century.\nMuch of the development is based on exploiting the region’s vast energy and mineral resources, and a highly ambitious level of foreign investment is sought to go along with funds earmarked from the federal budget. My research aims to look beyond the headline goals of the project and examine how the targets and ambitions of the federal government match up to the realities and perceptions on the ground.\nFor those who don’t recognise the phrase used as the title of this blog, it comes from the construction of the Trans-Siberian railway at the end of the 19th century, with a call to expand Russian presence and power all the way to the Pacific Ocean. Given the rhetoric around the contemporary development of the region, it’s a timeless representation of long-term Russian desires and frustrations in the east.\nI’ll be visiting Russia for the second time during May and June, taking in Moscow, Yekaterinburg, Yakutsk, Khabarovsk, Vladivostok and Sakhalin. My time in the country will be limited on this occasion, but whilst I’m there I aim to find out more about local thoughts on the development of the Russian Far East and share my findings through this blog.\nAll comments, discussion and feedback is welcome, with the usual caveats on not being a troll.\nFollow Towards the Great Ocean on WordPress.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line625284"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6509646773338318,"wiki_prob":0.6509646773338318,"text":"Dr. Carlos Bustamante\nWebShield Advisor, EP3 Foundation Trustee\nProfessor of Biomedical Data Science and Genetics at Stanford University\nDr. Carlos D. Bustamante is an internationally recognized leader in the application of data science and genomics technology to problems in medicine, agriculture, and biology. He received his Ph.D. in Biology and MS in Statistics from Harvard University (2001), was on the faculty at Cornell University (2002-9), and was named a MacArthur Fellow in 2010. He is currently Professor of Biomedical Data Science, Genetics, and (by courtesy) Biology at Stanford University.\nDr. Bustamante has a passion for building new academic units, non-profits, and companies to solve pressing scientific challenges. He is Founding Director of the Stanford Center for Computational, Evolutionary, and Human Genomics (CEHG) and Inaugural Chair of the Department of Biomedical Data Science. He is the Owner and President of CDB Consulting, LTD. and also a Director at Eden Roc Biotech, founder of Arc-Bio (formerly IdentifyGenomics and BigData Bio), and an SAB member of Embark Veterinary, the Mars/IBM Food Safety Board, and Digital Ventures.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1177976"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.727931797504425,"wiki_prob":0.727931797504425,"text":"TELESOFT HAS ANOTHER PAIR OF REAL-TIME ADA CROSS-COMPILERS\nNEW SOFTWARE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTRE PLANNED BY JAPAN INC\nCABLE & WIRELESS SPRINGS SURPRISE AS MERCURY BEGINS TO PICK UP RESIDENTIAL SUBSCRIBERS\n- CBR Staff Writer\nMercury Communications Ltd is growing its residential customer base at a rate of 15,000 a month, 5,000 of which are coming in on the back of cable television sales, said chief executive Mike Harris, speaking at Cable & Wireless Plc’s annual results meeting in London yesterday. A total 130,000 customers were pulled in in 1992, […]\nMercury Communications Ltd is growing its residential customer base at a rate of 15,000 a month, 5,000 of which are coming in on the back of cable television sales, said chief executive Mike Harris, speaking at Cable & Wireless Plc’s annual results meeting in London yesterday. A total 130,000 customers were pulled in in 1992, bringing the total number of customers to 250,000 at the year end. Mercury hopes that, largely through relationships with various cable television companies, it will achieve 2m subscribers by the middle of the decade. One agreement Mercury has is with the TCI-US West joint venture, which is claimed to have access, by cable, to some 2.9m homes. Mercury also has an agreement with Videotron in the UK, for access to 1.2m homes in Southampton and London, and with Nynex, which has access to a further 250,000 homes in Portsmouth. On the recent Office of Telecommunications ruling, (CI No 1,939), Harris said he expects the impact of the new pricing proposals to be neutral in the short to medium term, while the new principles of interconnect are favourable to Mercury. Mercury reported trading profits up 34% at UKP155m on revenues up 30% at UKP915m. Cable & Wireless, meanwhile, turned in trading profits up 27% at UKP727m on revenues up 22% at UKP3,176m. Return on net assets was up at 25% from 21%, capital spend as a percentage of revenues was down to 27% from 32%, and net gearing was 26% at the year end. Pre-tax profits rose a modest 6% to UKP644m, after UKP70m exceptional charges taken above the line this time, up from just UKP9m last time. These comprised UKP37m group rationalisation costs this time, UKP15m outlay on Mercury PCN, as well as UKP18m to reflect the fall in the value of the Jamaican dollar (from $Ja15 to the pound, to $Ja40) following the lifting of exchange controls in September. The fall of the Jamaican dollar, which has now apparently stabilised, has had a major effect on the result of Cable’s third largest business, Telecommunications of Jamaica (of which Cable & Wireless owns 79%), when translated into sterling. Cable has now been refocused to concentrate on three core business areas: premium and business services; basic telecommunications and mobile communications. Majority-owned Hong Kong Telecommunications’ trading profit was up 28% to UKP475m on sales up 20% at UKP1,367m. Its international telephone traffic rose by 15% while traffic between Hong Kong and South China increased by 35%. The full digitalisation of the network is nearly complete. Guangdong is planning to double the number of telephone lines in use in the next three years, and HongKong Telecom is poised to reap the benefits. With Hong Kong as the hub for a surging South China, Cable & Wireless chairman Lord Young expresses confidence about the firm’s prospects in the region. Negotiations with the Hong Kong government have come to a conclusion, the new pricing regime to ensure that the communications environment in Hong Kong will continue to compete with any other part of the Pacific Rim; at the same time, the govenment has allowed Hong Kong Telecom’s current investment programme to continue. Investment in Telecommunications of Jamaica, meanwhile, has brought up the number of telephone lines from 90,000 to 130,000 during the last two years. And, in addition to the improvement in Cable’s shareholding in Barbados, the group has extended its Cayman Islands franchise for a further 20 years. The Global Digital Highway, providing a broad band fibre optic network linking Cable & Wireless customers in the main financial and commercial centres of Europe, North America and the Pacific Rim, is now in operation, taking the group a step nearer its goal of conquering the world (or the bits that are worth conquering). Optus Pty Ltd in Australia, in which Cable & Wireless has a 24.5% stake, is trading at a loss, though the group feels that this will be contained within the next two to three years – regulatory conditions Down Under are described as favourable, with equal access from the start of operations. The Optus consortium has won t\nhe opportunity to establish a second national network in Australia.\nAs well as long distance and international, Optus also has satellite and mobile licences. During the year, Cable & Wireless was invited by Intertelecom, Russia’s long distance and international carrier, to undertake a feasibility study for a 50-50 partnership to develop long-distance and international telecommunications services in certain business areas. The group has also joined Sovam Teleport, the Russian-US data networking company serving the whole of the former Soviet Union. Mercury’s personal communications mobile phone venture, Mercury Personal Communications, owned 50% by Cable & Wireless and now linked up with Unitel’s PCN operation, expects to have its Personal Communications Network up and working within the M25 London ring by May 1993. Once it has been proved, and as demand dictates, this will be expanded in stages around the country. Lord Young reckons Cable & Wireless now has its management team for the 1990s – in addition to the appointment of Mike Harris as chief executive of Mercury in February, the group in April took on British Petroleum Plc managing director James Ross as & Wireless group chief executive.\nPrevious ArticleTELESOFT HAS ANOTHER PAIR OF REAL-TIME ADA CROSS-COMPILERS\nNext ArticleNEW SOFTWARE RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT CENTRE PLANNED BY JAPAN INC\nUniversity of Bradford Uses HPC System to Build 3D Models of Lost Heritage Sites\nConor Reynolds Conor Reynolds 23rd May 2019\nMet Office Publishes New Supercomputer Requirements, Inches Closer to Procurement\nEd Targett Editor Ed Targett 14th May 2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line425745"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6836226582527161,"wiki_prob":0.6836226582527161,"text":"Amenmesse\nAmenmesse ruled briefly towards the end of the nineteenth dynasty (New Kingdom), but possibly only over part of Egypt. It was originally thought that he ruled in the period following the death of Merenptah, before being ousted by Seti II. More recently it has been suggested (by Krauss and Dodson) that he managed to gain control of the area around Thebes for a few years during the early part of the reign of Seti.\nThis has not been proven, but does chime with the fact that no references to year 3 or 4 of the reign of Seti have been found in Thebes or the surrounding area, while Amenmesses is well documented in that area alone. In the excerpt from Africanus Manetho credited him with a four year reign, but in both Eusebius and Jerome gave him a rather unbelievable twenty-six year reign.\nThe events of this turbulent period are not clear, and a number of scenarios have been put forward by scholars:\nAmenmesse was a son of Ramesses II, and therefore brother to Merenptah and cousin of Seti II (Yurco, Wilkinson).\nAmenmesse was another son of Merenptah, making him the brother of Seti II (Kitchen, Yurco, Von Beckerath)\nAmenmesse was the son of Seti II and his wife, Takhat, who was probably a daughter of Ramesses II (Dodson). It is suggested that Seti II planned for his eldest son Setimerenptah B to succeed him, but Amenmesse (his younger son) tried to assert his right to rule and managed to wrest control of Thebes from his father for a short period.\nAmenmesse was the Viceroy of Kush during the rule of Merenptah, referred to as Messuy or Messuwy (Krauss, Dodson). Although there are a couple of tantalising hints that this man may have taken on kingly insignia such as the ureaus (although this is disputed by Yurco) and he used the title kings son himself, the fact that Messuys images and titles were not defaced after Seti II came to power would seem to argue against this. Yurco also notes that ushabti and other burial goods are known from the burial of Messuy at Aniba which would seem to date his death to the rule of Merenptah.\nMessuy at Amada with added ureaus\nHis other familial relationships are similarly obscure. While it is generally agreed that his mother was a woman named Takhat, Dodson has pointed out that there seem to have been more than one royal woman bearing that name and the usurping of statues depicting these royal women can make it hard to be sure which woman is being referred to. Similarly, it had been assumed that his wife was a woman named Baktwernel who appears in the tomb of Amenmesse. However, it is now generally agreed that her burial was a later intrusion and she was probably the wife of Ramesses XI. Aldred proposed instead that the wife of Amenmesse was Tia, the mother of Siptah. This would make the accession of Siptah more understandable as a move to mollify the supporters of Amenmesse. It may also confirm Siptah as a relative of Seti II, but also explain why he required the support of Tausret as co-regent.\nWe know little about his reign. He is referenced in monuments from the Theban area, and his names and titles display a notable Theban bias which may support the suggestion that he only held sway in the south. Although his Nebty name is the same as that of Horemheb (another ruler whose rise to power was by unconventional means) be must be careful not to read too much into this as Nebty names asserting the divine connections were also adopted by pharaohs (like Ramesses II) who had no need to bolster their legitimacy.\nSome consider that the Tale of Two Brothers may be referring to the dynastic difficulties of the period, but more direct evidence of the disruption comes from details of a feud in the Workers Village of Deir el Medina. Papyrus Salt 124 (dated to the beginning of the twentieth dynasty) records that on of the chief workmen (Neferhotep) died and was replaced by Paneb, his adopted son. Neferhoteps brother (Amennakhte) accused Paneb of numerous serious crimes including rape, theft, attempted murder, bribery and corruption. According to the document Neferhotep had prevoiously complained about the behaviour of Paneb to the vizier, Amenmose, who had punished Paneb. However, Paneb had then successfully complained to Mose or Msy – possibly Amenmesse himself. Whatever the truth of either sides accusations, it is clear that this was a fairly turbulent period.\nThere is little doubt that Seti undertook to remove references to Amenmesse’s reign, but he too seems to have been guilty of usurping monuments. As the sculptors often took great pains to entirely remove the name being replaced we cannot be sure who was named in the original text. Texts in the Cachette Court of Karnak are considered by some to have been originally carved for Ramesses II, usurped by Merenptah, then Amenmesse and finally Seti II! Brand concluded that it was most likely that Amenmesse began removing text of Merenptah in order to remove a link to the crown-prince Seti Merenptah whose position he had usurped. Once Seti II had regained or taken control of the monument, he removed the names of Amenmesse replacing them with his own, but leaving any undamaged examples of Merenptahs name intact.\nWe do not know how his reign came to an end, but there is no evidence that he was ever buried in the tomb he had planned for himself (KV 10). If he was it is likely that the burial was despoiled shortly after his death. His mumy did not turn up in any of the later caches and his tomb was clearly defaced. Strangely the cartouches were not entirely removed but rather scarred and scratched. leaving them still readable. References to him in more public places were more thoroughly destroyed.\nPharaoh’s Names\nHorus Name: Ka nakht mery Maat semen tawy (Strong bull, beloved of Maat, he who strengthen the Two Lands)\nHorus Name: Nub hebu sed mi Tatenen (Lord of Sed Festivals like Tatenen)\nPrenomen: Men mi Ra, Setep en Ra (Enduring like Ra, chosen by Ra)\nNomen: Amenmesse heqa Waset (Born of Amun, the Ruler of Thebes)\nNomen: MAmenmesse Mery Re (Born of Amun, beloved or Re)\nNebti: Wer biaut em Ipet-sut (Great of marvels in Karnak)\nGolden Horus: Aa khepesh saa waset en messu (Great of strength who glorifies Thebes for the one who bore him)\nBrand, Peter J (2009) Usurped Cartouches of Merenptah at Karnak and Luxor from Causing his Name to Live: Studies in Egyptian Epigraphy and History in Memory of William J Murnane Edited by Peter Brand and Louise Cooper\nDodson, Aidan (1987) “The Takhats and Some Other Royal Ladies of the Ramesside Period” from The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Vol. 73 (1987), pp. 224-229\nDodson, Aidan (1995) “Amenmesse in Kent, Liverpool, and Thebes” from The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Vol. 81 pp. 115-128\nDodson, Aidan (1997) “Messuy, Amada and Amenmesse” from Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt Vol. 34 pp. 41-48\nDodson, Aidan (1999) “The decorative phases of the tomb of Sethos II and their historical implications” from The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Vol. 85 pp. 131-142\nDodson, A and Hilton, D. (2004) The Complete Royal Families of Ancient Egypt\nDodson, Aidan (2010) Poisoned Legacy: The Fall of the 19th Egyptian Dynasty\nDodson, Aiden (2016) The Royal Tombs of Ancient Egypt\nHardwick, Tom (2006) “The Golden Horus Name of Amenmesse?” from The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Vol. 73 (1987), pp. 224-229\nVan Dijk, Jacobus (2000) “The Amarna Period and later New Kingdom”, in The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt Ed I. Shaw\nWilkinson, Richard H. Editor (2012) Tausret: Forgotten Queen and Pharaoh of Egypt\nWilkinson, Richard H and Weeks, Kent Editors (2016) The Oxford Handbook of the Valley of the Kings\nWilkinson, Toby (2010) The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt\nYurco, Frank J (1979) “Amenmesse: Six Statues at Karnak” from Metropolitan Museum Journal Vol. 14 pp. 15-31Yurco, Frank J (1997) “Was Amenmesse the Viceroy of Kush, Messuwy?” from The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology Vol. 92 pp. 255-260","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1062548"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9180593490600586,"wiki_prob":0.9180593490600586,"text":"6 months after Hurricane Maria, life in Puerto Rico is better — but will 'never be normal again'\nPuerto Rico 6 months after Hurricane Maria: 'We’ll never be normal again'\nAuthor: Rick Jervis, USA TODAY\nPublished: 8:20 PM PST February 27, 2018\nUpdated: 11:56 AM PST March 5, 2018\nMichelle Rebollo cooks dinner in her kitchen by solar and battery-powered light, using a propane camp stove in Toa Alta, Puerto Rico after a major power outage hit the island earlier that day, March 1, 2018.\nCARRIE COCHRAN, USA TODAY NETWORK\nTOA ALTA, Puerto Rico – Life is better for Michelle Rebollo since Hurricane Maria upended her world last year. The electricity vanishes at times, often for hours, but is largely back on, water flows steadily from faucets and work crews finally hauled away piles of debris left by the storm.\nYet life is still far from normal. She’s a month behind in her bills. Her income is unsteady. Worst of all, the jovial unity forged among her neighbors in the storm’s immediate aftermath has faded to sullen despair.\n“Recovery here has been so slow that it’s affected people,” said Rebollo, 45. “Everyone’s tense. No one’s talking to one another. You see it in their faces: They’ve changed.”\nThe powerful Category 4 Hurricane Maria raked across the island Sept. 20, killing at least 60 people and causing widespread damage. It was the strongest storm to hit the U.S. territory in 89 years.\nAs the six-month anniversary of the storm approaches, Puerto Ricans are trudging slowly away from survival and into the difficult realities of long-term recovery.\nLife for Michelle Rebollo since Hurricane Maria is still a struggle\nMichelle Rebollo cooks dinner in her kitchen by solar and battery-powered light, using a propane camp stove in Toa Alta, Puerto Rico after a major power outage hit the island earlier that day, March 1, 2018. Power was restored for Rebollo a month and a half after Hurricane Maria struck Puerto Rico, but it's not steady. She says she and her family experience outages every few days. Nearly a half-year after the hurricane, they've adapted, she says, but it's tiring to still be prepared to live like they are camping inside their own home.\nShortly after Hurricane Maria, Michelle Rebollo had to siphon water from a mountain stream. Today, her home has electricity and water but other challenges still loom, including earning enough income to feed the seven other members of her household.\nUSA Today first met Michelle Rebollo, right, just over a week after Hurricane Maria struck the island, as she was collecting water from a stream on the side of a mountain outside of Naranjito, Puerto Rico.\nAfter a major power outage hit the island, Michelle Rebollo's grandson, Josstin Ramos arranges dominoes on their veranda in Toa Alta, about 18 miles outside of San Juan, March 1, 2018: When power goes out, they often hang out there, where it is cooler than inside the house.\nMichelle Rebollo transfers water from one barrel to another as she collets rainwater from her downspouts because her family has been without running water for the past seven weeks, Nov 4, 2017.\nMichelle Rebollo shows some of the MREs (meals ready to eat) her family received from federal aid workers,Nov 4, 2017. Rebollo was working for UNICEF, preparing merchandise for shipping in damaged stores, until she is able to find customers for her adventure travel company, Aventura Total. Her company has had no business since Hurricane Maria battered Puerto Rico and brought tourism to a halt on the island.\nMichelle Rebollo opens her empty refrigerator, Nov 4, 2017. Her family has been without power and running water for the past seven weeks.\nMichelle Rebollo and her daughter Nicole load up their car with water gather from the side of a mountain from a natural water stream in the town of Naranjito in Puerto Rico, Sep 30, 2017. Drinking water is critical issue on the island and people are gathering it for multiple uses like flushing toilets to bathing. Most of the water is not potable.\nMichelle Rebollo's grandsons, Josstin Ramos and Jesús Ramos sing and listen to music from their tablet while Rebollo cooks by camp stove in her kitchen, March 1, 2018. Seven family members now live with Rebollo in Toa Alta, about 18 miles outside of San Juan.\nMichelle Rebollo dances with her grandchildren, Josstin Ramos, Bethany Cruz and and Jesús Ramos n their living room March 1, 2018.\nNearly 200,000 families and businesses — 16% of the island — remain without power. The island faces a growing mental health crisis as people wrestle with their losses from the storm. And the Federal Emergency Management Agency, or FEMA, is answering tough questions about botched contracts in its recovery effort.\nSo far, the agency has approved $1 billion in individual assistance grants, which goes to households, and an additional $558 million in public assistance grants for things like repairs to bridges and government buildings.\n“Wheels are spinning, but things don’t seem to get off the ground,” San Juan Mayor Carmen Yulín Cruz told the non-profit news site Democracy Now!\nFor Rebollo, recovery has been slow and frustrating. USA TODAY first met Rebollo in October as she captured water from a mountain stream on the side of a highway near Naranjito, about 20 miles southwest of San Juan. The following month, electricity and water returned to her home, though she was still washing clothes by hand because Maria damaged the washer and dryer she kept outside on the patio.\nToday, her top concerns are the lack of revenue from her tour business and the darkening moods of Puerto Ricans. She lives in a small concrete home in Toa Alta, about 20 miles west of San Juan, with seven other family members: her two grown daughters, her 12-year-old son and four grandchildren. \"I have a lot of mouths to feed,\" Rebollo said.\nHer tour company, Aventura Total, relies on young Puerto Ricans and foreigners wanting to take trips such as kayaking near Culebra Island or hiking in El Yunque National Forest. But many people are leaving Puerto Rico in the wake of the storm and foreigners are still hesitant to visit, she said. Where she would organize trips of 15 or 16 people every week or every other week before Maria, today she averages around six or seven people — and sometimes none, she said.\nJASPER COLT/USA TODAY NETWORK\nA FEMA worker visited Rebollo's home in mid-January — four months after she applied for assistance — but she said the federal disaster agency denied her any money because she has home insurance. The federal agency routinely doesn't award disaster grants until a claim is first processed through the homeowner's private insurance.\n“It’s hard,” Rebollo said. “I feel the weight of the world on my shoulders.\"\nElectricity returned to the Rebollo home last year. But outages still routinely hit the neighborhood. On a recent afternoon, the lights went out at the home as Rebollo prepared to go shopping with her daughter. Rebollo quickly set up solar-powered lamps around the home as the sky darkened outside.\nUsing a Coleman propane camp stove she keeps under the sink, she boiled water in a large pot to cook pasteles and rice while the children played dominoes by camp lamplight outside, where it's cooler. \"Unfortunately, this is normal,\" she said.\nAnother concern has been money. A temp agency that once assigned her jobs cleaning out molded merchandise at a storm-damaged Home Depot in Caguas now only offers work placing tarps on roofs. But the company doesn't offer insurance, and Rebollo said she can't risk falling off a roof and leaving her family without an income-earner.\nThrough the hardships, Rebollo has been awed by the random kindness of strangers. One JetBlue flight attendant reached out to her via her firm's Facebook page, took her, her daughter and grandson out to breakfast in San Juan and left her a suitcase full of batteries, solar-powered lamps and other gifts. A former boss at her Home Depot temp job gave her a $500 Walmart gift certificate for Christmas and a $200 check for groceries.\n\"I fell to the floor, crying,\" she said.\nBut she's worried about her fellow Puerto Ricans. Whereas not long ago everyone on the street was asking about the welfare of each other or handing out plates of food, today everyone seems to be tense and quiet, she said. While waiting in line at the bank recently, Rebollo started telling jokes out loud to break the tension.\n“That trait of helping each other out, asking if you had power or water, we’ve lost that,” she said. “I’d like to see it return.”\nAfter a major power outage hit the island, Michelle Rebollo's grandsons, Josstin Ramos, 7, left, and Jesús Ramos, 9, sing and listen to music from their tablet while Rebollo cooks by camp stove in her kitchen.\nRebollo is taking online classes at Bayamón Central University several hours a week and plans to graduate in August with a bachelor’s degree in social work. She hopes to someday open a senior center to help the island’s elderly population, one of the hardest hit by the storm.\nBut she realizes life will likely never return to what it was before the storm.\n“We’ll never be normal again,” Rebollo said. “Maria really clobbered us. For better or for worse, we’ve all changed.”\nFollow Jervis on Twitter: @MrRJervis.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line353694"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5392791628837585,"wiki_prob":0.46072083711624146,"text":"Barbershop harmony is a style of vocal music characterized by consonant four-part chords for every melody note, except for occasional short passages which may be sung by less than four voices. It is invariably sung without accompaniment and is described as “A Cappella” music.\nThe parts, or voices, from highest to lowest, are called Tenor, Lead, Baritone and Bass. The melody is usually carried by the Lead, with Toner consistently singing higher harmonizing notes, the Bass singing the lower harmonizing notes, and the Baritone completing the chord, either above or below the Lead. The melody may occasionally be sung by the Baritone or Bass, but not by the Tenor except for an infrequent note or two to avoid awkward voicing of a chord, or for special effects, such as in introductions or in the coda (“tag” or song ending).\nBarbershop music uses a minimum of sixth and ninth chords, and dissonant chords containing the Major 7th or Minor 2nd intervals. It features triads and Major-Minor 7th chords (“Barbershop seventh chords”) resolving primarily on the circle of fifths. The basic harmonization may be embellished with additional chord progressions wherever these may artistically serve to maintain rhythmic interest, to carry over between phrases, and to introduce or close the song effectively.\nBarbershop music is not sung in the tempered tuning of mechanical keyboard instruments, but in more acoustically correct tuning in which the singers pay close attention to enharmonic pitch adjustments, thus producing a clear interlocking of the voices and a reinforcement of the overtones which gives the characteristic “ring” of the chords.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1187226"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8433035612106323,"wiki_prob":0.8433035612106323,"text":"Geologists Warn Arkansas Lies in Major Earthquake Zone\nCasper Neighborhood a Finalist for Kindest Place in U.S.\n2020 Democratic Presidential Hopefuls Share Views in 5 Iowa Cities\nFarm to Summer Week: MN Kids Enjoy Locally Grown Food\nCensus Reveals Bright Spots, Challenges for Ohio Farming\nIowans with Disabilities Urged to Make Their Votes Count\nWomen Empowered by Hillary Clinton's Nomination\nFemale politicians in Indiana hope more women become inspired to take on leadership roles in government. (whitehouse.gov)\nINDIANAPOLIS – Indiana doesn't have a good track record when it comes to electing women to political office, and advocates hope the Democratic Party’s nomination of Hillary Clinton to run for president will bring a change to the Hoosier State's political makeup.\nIndiana ranks 34th in the nation for the percentage of women serving in the legislature. It is one of eight states that never have had a female governor or U.S. senator.\nIndiana's four largest cities – Indianapolis, Fort Wayne, Evansville and South Bend – have never had female mayors.\nGary Mayor Karen Freeman-Wilson is the only female mayor of a city of 30,000 or more in the state. She says an attitude needs to be adjusted, adding that just recently she was approached by someone needing to fill some jobs.\n\"He said, 'I'm looking to hire some guys,’” she relates. “’The job pays $13 dollars an hour. It's entry level, no skills, but it really has to be guys because this environment isn't good for women.'\"\nWomen aren't the only under-represented group. Blacks make up more than 9 percent of Indiana's population, but hold 8 percent of the seats in the legislature.\nHispanics make up almost 7 percent of the state's population, but less than 1 percent of the legislature.\nMara Candelaria Reardon in 2006 was the first Latina woman elected in Indiana. She says women often underestimate themselves, and more need to step up because they make great leaders.\n\"I think that our womanhood isn't threatened by compromise and finding solutions to problems, where I think often times men's manhood is threatened if they're not successful in 'my way or the highway,'” she states. “And I don't think that works for anybody. Look at the stalemates we have going on in Congress right now.\"\nShelli VanDenburgh is a former state representative in Indiana and is running for office again. She thinks Hillary Clinton's nomination will inspire women.\n\"My 13-year-old daughter has so much to say about Hillary running and the potential of her becoming president, and she was even asking me, 'Can she be president, Mom, because she's a woman?'” VanDenburgh tells. “You know it's changing the way that younger women think.\"\nVeronica Carter, Public News Service - IN","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1643623"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7037582397460938,"wiki_prob":0.29624176025390625,"text":"Dates, Times Announced For Phase 2 Of Parks Plan Listening TourThe Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy is ready to deliver feedback.\nPittsburgh Catholic Diocese Announces Closing Of Saint Sylvester School In BrentwoodSaint Sylvester School in Brentwood will not reopen for the 2019-2020 school year due to rapidly declining enrollment.\nTarget Raising Minimum Wage From $12 To $13\nFiled Under:Minimum Wage, Target\nNEW YORK (AP) — Target is raising the minimum hourly wage for its workers for the third time in less than two years.\nThe discounter said Thursday it plans to raise the hourly starting wage to $13 from $12 in June.\nThe Minneapolis-based retailer announced in 2017 a plan to raise its starting hourly wages for workers to $15 by the end of 2020 and raised its starting hourly wage to $11. In March 2018, it boosted hourly wages to $12 after seeing a bigger and better pool of candidates.\nWith unemployment near rock bottom, retailers are under pressure to find qualified workers. In October, Amazon announced a minimum hourly wage of $15 for its U.S. employees.\nWalmart raised its starting pay to $11 an hour in early 2018.\n(© Copyright 2019 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1379636"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7067794799804688,"wiki_prob":0.29322052001953125,"text":"Home→Uncategorized→A note on hypocrisy\nA note on hypocrisy\nPosted by Joseph Heath on December 12, 2014 | Uncategorized\nThis is a long-standing pet peeve of mine. Many people, and most noticeably many journalists, do not seem to have a clear understanding of what hypocrisy is. To keep things simple, let’s go with the everyday definition of hypocrisy as “saying one thing, while doing another.” This is fine, except that it’s important, when accusing people of hypocrisy, to pay careful attention to what they are saying. In particular, it is important to pay careful attention to the distinction between what people would like the general rule to be, and what their preferences over their own actions are, given the existing rules. (Viktor Vanberg and James Buchanan introduced the term “constitutional preferences” and “action preferences” to distinguish the two, which is maybe not the best terminology, but their discussion of the distinction is invaluable.)\nLet me give a concrete example. I was reading a little article the other day about Bill Gates’s five favorite books of 2014. One of them was Thomas Piketty’s Capital in the 21st Century, which I think is kind of hilarious. Here is what Gates said “I agree with his most important conclusions: inequality is a growing problem and that governments should play a role in reducing it. I admire his work and hope it draws in more smart people to study the causes of, and cures for, inequality.”\nSome people’s knee-jerk response to this will be to say “Hypocrite! If you’re so keen on reducing inequality, why don’t you give your money away?” Of course, Gates has given away an enormous amount of his money — more that you or I will ever earn — and he has also made it clear that he is placing strict limits on how much money he intends to leave for his children. Nevertheless, he remains rich as Croesus, and he could certainly make a big dent in inequality by giving away a couple more billion dollars. So isn’t he “saying one thing, doing another” by calling for government to take a more active role in reducing inequality, while doing less than he could to reduce it on his own?\nThe answer is “no,” and the reason why hinges on the distinction between constitutional and action preferences. Most people think that the amount you are obliged to do, as an individual, to solve some particular problem, depends in part upon how much other people are doing. At the same time, you might wish that others were doing more, and you might also be prepared to do much more, if others were as well. So you can quite consistently support a rule change, that would force everyone, including yourself, to do x, while at the same time not volunteering to do x in the absence of such a rule. This is a really simple and obvious point, but often one that gets neglected in public debate. (I have always thought that G.A. Cohen’s book, If You’re an Egalitarian, How Come You’re So Rich? could have been a lot shorter, if he had just made this one simple point, although come to think of it, one of the defects in Cohen’s work is that he may not be able to avail himself of this point.)\nAnyhow, I think that taxes on the 1% should be higher, but I don’t voluntarily pay more in taxes — on the contrary, I have a crafty accountant who uses various strategies to reduce my tax liability. I think university professors should teach more, but I don’t volunteer to teach extra classes. I think we should be doing all sorts of things to combat climate change, yet my own carbon footprint is clearly not at a sustainable level. None of this makes me a hypocrite.\nThat having been said, it might not be a bad idea to come up with a term to describe the person who makes overly self-serving use of the “everyone else is doing it” excuse, or the “I’m happy to go along, once everyone else does too.” For example, the Government of Canada’s current position on climate change is that, at the constitutional level, we are all in favour of a binding regime of carbon mitigation, but at the action level, we are not prepared to do anything until absolutely everyone else has agreed to a plan. An analogy on the individual level would be a person who says ‘I think everyone should pay their taxes honestly,” but then as long as there is someone, somewhere, who is in some way avoiding them, says “why should I pay?” and engages in all sorts of dodgy tax-avoidance.\nThe general idea is that, if you have a constitutional preference in favour of action x being mandatory for all, this does not oblige you to choose x in circumstances in which is it not mandatory for all, but the constitutional preference should at least loosely constrain your behaviour — like you shouldn’t be choosing things that are totally antithetical to x. It would be nice to have a name for this sort of moral failure — “hypocrisy” clearly is not the right name for it.\nOh yeah, I suppose if you wanted a canonical example of hypocrisy, it would be this:\nA note on hypocrisy — 3 Comments\nHasko vk on December 12, 2014 at 11:32 am said:\nThe newly appointed deputy mayor of Toronto is a great example for someone who does not understand the distinction in play here.\nFrom the Toronto Sun:\n“Councillor Denzil Minnan-Wong says it is pretty clear residents don’t want to pay more taxes. Minnan-Wong drew that conclusion based on a report received by the executive committee Wednesday that showed just 218 taxpayers out of around 786,000 tax bills opted to pay more than the tax they owed the city last year through the city’s voluntary contribution program. … he reminded his colleagues the voluntary donation form idea came after they heard from speakers earlier in the term telling them that people want to pay more taxes.”\nThe last sentence goes to show that M-W is not the only one at City Hall who fails to understand what people mean when they say they want to pay more taxes.\nMinnan Wong didn’t use the term hypocrisy but he came close:\n“Minnan-Wong speculated those who claim they want to pay more, might only want others to pay more. ‘They don’t want to pay more taxes, they want everyone else to pay more taxes,’ he said.”\nOf course, what he doesn’t understand is that what (many) people (like Joe) want is for everyone – including themselves – to pay more taxes.\nJames on December 13, 2014 at 1:49 am said:\nIn collective action terms, it boils down to knowing what a free rider problem is. I think everyone can understand free rider problems, but almost no one bothers to think of the world in that way. And so they try to fit what you’re saying with the simpler and more intuitive hypocrisy idea.\nBensonBear on December 15, 2014 at 1:16 am said:\nI don’t think Bill Gates is a good example. He through his company violated the law pretty seriously in many ways. Also, just because someone *says* he would like the law changed in a way that would benefit most people but ostensibly harm themselves, does not imply that this is what they really want, or that they would have wanted it before they made off like bandits at the expense of society at large. The idea that Gates giving away much of what he “earned” makes him a good guy is suspect also, given that he “earned” it by extracting it from many not-so-well people. Nor is Gates “giving” it away in reality. What else could he do with it? He buys himself the adulation implicitly contained in this article. And that he limits the amount of money transferred to his children? Big deal. I think we can be sure they won’t want for anything.\nIt is definitely correct that one cannot rightly accuse a person of hypocrisy merely because they engage in behavior that is currently legally allowed while at the same time expressing a wish that it be legally disallowed. But Gates is not a good example of this.\nThere is a lot more to wealth that just money. I have not read Picketty but I wonder if he considers this to any great extent. People at the lower socio-economic scale, if they have *enough* (cf. Frankfurt “On Equality”), arguably have no complaint on that score. But if their daily activities are limited in the possibilities available to them (as they are, in one way, by the secret, proprietary Microsoft software), they arguably do have a complaint about that.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1672255"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.552052915096283,"wiki_prob":0.44794708490371704,"text":"Weekend Television Listings\nInternationals reign supreme once again on what should be a busy weekend for rugby watching. Saturday has the most action with the likes of Tonga vs. Italy, Georgia vs. Scotland, Australia vs. Ireland, and South Africa vs. Wales all on ESPN3/WatchESPN. England vs. Argentina is on The Rugby Channel. If that's not your thing there is Premiership rugby on NBCSN and the Pro12 on The Rugby Channel. There is of course the Women Eagles vs. France today as well.\nIf you know of an event or a tournament that is not on our list, please share it with us at thisisamericanrugby@gmail.com.\nConnacht vs. Cardiff, 2:35 p.m. et/11:35 a.m. pt (live on The Rugby Channel)\nGlasgow vs. Ospreys, 2:35 p.m. et/11:35 a.m. pt (live on The Rugby Channel)\nNorthampton vs. Newcastle, 2:45 p.m. et/11:45 a.m. pt (live on NBCSN)\nWomen Eagles vs. France, 3:00 p.m. et/12:00 p.m. pt (live on The Rugby Channel)\nTonga vs. Italy, 9:00 a.m. et/6:00 a.m. pt (live on ESPN3/WatchESPN)\nGeorgia vs. Scotland, 9:30 a.m. et/6:30 a.m. pt (live on ESPN3/WatchESPN)\nEngland vs. Argentina, 9:30 a.m. et/6:30 a.m. pt (live on The Rugby Channel)\nAustralia vs. Ireland, 12:30 p.m. et/9:30 a.m. pt (live on ESPN3/WatchESPN)\nSouth Africa vs. Wales, 12:30 p.m. et/9:30 a.m. pt (live on ESPN3/WatchESPN)\nExeter vs. Worcester, 12:30 p.m. et/9:30 a.m. pt (delay on NBCSN)\nDoncaster vs. Cornish Pirates, 9:00 a.m. et/6:00 a.m. pt (live on The Rugby Channel)\nHarlequins vs. Bath, 2:30 p.m. et/11:30 a.m. pt (delay on NBCSN)\nCircle G Artworks November 25, 2016 at 1:01 PM\nToo bad..! No NZL v. FRA\nDrea November 27, 2016 at 12:56 PM\nThanks for publishing these listings with all the details. It's much appreciated!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line239813"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6998114585876465,"wiki_prob":0.6998114585876465,"text":"2015 L.A. Auto Show: Mazda CEO talks rotary engines, hydrogen fuel\nBy Jerry Hirsch\nMasamichi Kogai, president and CEO at Mazda Global Motor Corp., is seen in a new Mazda at the Los Angeles Times. (Al Seib / Los Angeles Times)\nMazda is a quirky brand. It's the only automaker to have mass-produced vehicles equipped with rotary engines, and it is content to remain one of the smallest companies in the business.\nThe Japanese car company makes only about 1.5 million cars annually and controls about 2% of U.S. auto sales.\nAnd that's all right with Masamichi Kogai, Mazda's chief executive, who was at the Los Angeles Auto Show this week to introduce a redesigned CX-9, a seven-seat mid-sized crossover that replaces an aging model.\nKogai, through an interpreter, talked with The Times about Mazda's survival strategy, its plans for a new generation of rotary-engine vehicles and increasingly stringent environmental regulations.\nMazda U.S. sales are up just 2.9% through the first two months of this year, lagging the industry's 5.8% gain. Would you like to see greater sales in the U.S.?\nSales volume is not the only indicator. We need the right sales. If we put market share as a target, we might fall into the trap of discounting the product. That is a short-term strategy and a myopic view.\nSee the most-read stories this hour >>\nWhat we need to make sure we don't have too much aging of the existing products in the marketplace. We need a fresh lineup so that when our customers are ready to purchase another vehicle we have the product to sell them and they come back to us.\nWhere do you sell best?\nLooking at market share by region, we have about 10% in Australia, about 8% in Canada and that's all followed by Japan, Thailand and Mexico — each at about 5%. The top market by volume is the U.S.\nWe are allocating production to various regions based on the profit in that country and the number of customers who see value in Mazda's vehicles and the way they drive.\nPHOTOS: See the best of the L.A. Auto Show\nOne reason why Mazda isn't as focused on growth as other automakers is that it has fewer factories and they are running near full production. Have you considered building a new factory?\nBefore constructing a new plant, we will improve the output of each factory we already have. For example, the CX-5 crossover is a big hit product for us. It is built at our Hiroshima plant with a production capacity of about 240,000 units. We can increase that to 300,000 units without bringing on another factory.\nIf each worker at the plant improves the cycle time by just 0.1 second, we can get more production. We need small but steady increases like that. While our current production capacity is 1.5 million vehicles, I think that in three years time, we can increase to 1.65 million units.\nIf our sales capacity exceeds volume three years after that, we will study construction of new plant.\nL.A. Auto Show 2015: Mazda CX-9\nOther automakers are talking about mergers and how to gain scale in what is now a global industry. How does tiny Mazda survive?\nBecause we are a small-scale company we are able to focus on clearly identifying our brand. We have launched each new generation of vehicles with the defined Mazda design applied across the car line. We have demonstrated what our brand is about. That has established a solid base for our survival.\nThere is a saying in Japan that if you are just a small frog in a small pond, there will be bigger ponds, or worlds, that you have not seen. But somebody told me once that doesn't have to be true. Even if you are frog living in small pond, you can still look up into the sky. You can still look toward the long future and have a long-term vision, and that is what we do.\nWe also have entered into a comprehensive business cooperation agreement with Toyota. By working together on each element of technology, we have a critical mass and can reduce cost and improve efficiencies.\nCalifornia plans to ramp up its requirement for zero-emission and low-polluting vehicles. Mazda doesn't even have a hybrid in the marketplace. What are your plans?\nWe understand that we need to meet that regulation, and we are doing some research and working on the electrification of our vehicles. For the Japanese market, we have produced an electric vehicle. For hybrid systems, we have a license from Toyota and are continuing research in that area.\nL.A. Auto Show 2015: The 'Fiata' Jaguar XE and other highlights\nWe also are looking at our rotary-engine technology. It can combust hydrogen and use it as a fuel. The engine can run as a dual fuel system, switching between hydrogen and gasoline. We can also use rotary engines to charge the battery as a range extender in an electric vehicle.\n(Most vehicles use a piston engine where pistons travel up and down to transmit power to the drivetrain. In a rotary engine, the piston travels in a circular motion to transmit energy to the drivetrain. Generally these engines are smaller and lighter than piston engines. Because of their unique design, they can run on both gasoline and hydrogen fuel.)\nSpeaking of rotary engines, tell us about the RX Vision concept sports car introduced at the Tokyo Motor Show last month?\nThe RX Vision created so much buzz. Many customers who purchased our rotary-engine vehicles in the past keep asking us when the next rotary vehicle will be launched.\nWe have not been able to decide on when there will be sales of the RX Vision. But the RX Vision presents our dream vehicle that we would like to launch into the market.\nFor more automotive news, follow me on Twitter (@LATimesJerry) and Facebook.\nIn Malibu, Kelsey and Camille Grammer’s former compound aims for $19.95 million","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1619139"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6489315032958984,"wiki_prob":0.6489315032958984,"text":"Christmas 2017: December 2\nLake Alice (2017)\nOn the days when my podcast co-host and I have absolutely nothing else to do, we often find ourselves watching movie trailers on Youtube. Usually, we end up going down the rabbit hole of trailers for upcoming horror movies. I'm not talking about the glossy studio releases or the buzzy upcoming indies. I'm talking about the shit. The super low budget horror flicks that pack their trailers full of cliches and jump scares. More often than not, we laugh or roll our eyes. Occasionally, however, we come across something promising. I had not heard of “Lake Alice” before. Yet I found the trailer to be effective. The promise of a snowy, Christmas-set slasher seemed right up my alley. So I decided the film would fit in with my December watch list.\nSarah is returning to her home town, in rural Wisconsin, for Christmas. She's brought along her boyfriend Ryan, who her parents have never met before. Soon, the four are vacationing at the family cabin near Lake Alice, which is blanketed with snow this time of year. While there, Ryan proposes to Sarah, which she enthusiastically accepts. This happy holiday is soon interrupted. In the middle of the night, a masked figure knocks on the door. Soon, the family is being stalked by a knife-wielding killer.\n“Lake Alice,” the feature debut of director Ben Miliken and writer Stevie Jane Miller, is clearly a low budget film. It's one of those horror films that clearly couldn't afford big name actors or flashy make-up effects. So instead, the movie tries to compensate with some snowy atmosphere. And it almost works. “Lake Alice” is very much a slow burn. It spends the first forty minutes developing the characters and the town around them. So we spend a lot of time with the cast. The script goes out of its way to introduce three or four separate red herrings, most of which end up adding to the body count. Random stops by cops, visits to bakery, or trips to gas station become more ominous than they probably should be. An unseen figure watches and records the family's activities. The long build-up to the slashing makes you wonder if “Lake Alice” is actually attempting to create atmosphere or is just wasting time. I'm split on that myself, as the film is interchangeably tense and tedious.\n“Lake Alice” runs all of 77 minutes long and the carnage doesn't begin until the half-way point. If you're expecting a gore-fest, you're going to be disappointed. There's a throat slicing, a head bashing, and a full body burning but none of these scenes are especially explicit. The film attempts a certain voyeuristic edge, with the killer recording most of his murders. There's occasionally a tense moment but, too often, the murderer sneaks up on the victim in an obvious way. There's one clever twist involving the slasher's identity but it's still pretty easy to guess. The killer certainly has a neat appearance. The combination of a dark parka and a white ski mask, with the blackened eyes emphasized, is a striking look.\nThe film's cast is a mixed bag. Brad Schmidt plays Ryan as an optimistic guy and strikes an occasionally charming moment. Caroline Tudor, as Sarah, is obviously a novice performer. Tudor's delivery is often pretty flat. Her screaming is not especially convincing either. Peter O'Brien, a character actor of some note that is probably the movie's biggest name, plays the dad, Greg. (Unless, perhaps, Eileen Dietz – otherwise known as the demon face from “The Exorcist” – counts as a big name.) He does a good job of making his obvious contempt for his daughter's new boyfriend clear without being a jerk. Probably the best performance in the film is Laura Niemi as the mom and she's out of the movie for most of its run time.\nSo “Lake Alice” tries. I can appreciate that. However, the film ends up being a little anemic. The short run time and minimalist plot combines to make a movie that doesn't offer much. The choice of favoring suspense over gore, or even over jump scares, is an admirable one. It doesn't quite work though, as the film's cast and characters don't quite live up to its ambitions. I suspect the director's next film will probably be better. The film does utilize its December setting well, with a gift-giving scene around the Christmas tree and plenty of stomping around in the snow. [5/10]\nThe Simpsons: Marge Be Not Proud\nThe very first episode of “The Simpsons” was Christmas themed. Oddly, the series has not returned to the holiday too often in the years since. However, it's second Christmas episode – from the seventh season, a season packed with classic episodes – may be the show's best December-related offering. “Marge Be Not Proud” begins with Bart lusting after “Bonestorm,” a “Mortal Kombat”-style, hyper-violent video game. He asks for it for Christmas but Marge refuses, saying the game is too expensive and too violent. Bart wants the game so badly that he decides to shoplift it. He's immediately caught but the security guard lets him go, as long as he doesn't return to the store. Naturally, the Simpsons goes to that same store the next day for a family photo. The revelation ends up effecting Bart and Marge's relationship in a serious way.\n“Marge Be Not Proud” is packed full of fantastic gags. Lawrence Tierney has a hilarious guest spot as the store security guard, who becomes angry at a cheese-and-cracker set and baffles Bart with his odd words. This leads to an inspired weird gag, where Bart imagines the back of the car seat as the guard, who utilizes the built-in ash tray. Milhouse contributes some inspired moments, involving a ball-and-cup game or Bart trying to get close to his mom, desperate for mom-related affection. The boy's imagination leads to some great moments, such as an imaged dreary Christmas in prison or video game characters coming to life to egg on his theft. (Including, I must point out, Sonic the Hedgehog.)\nThis is a Bart centric episode, though Homer gets some great moments. Such as his insight into the “Police Academy” series, his reaction to Allan Sherman, or the particular way he sets up a baby gate. Lisa gets one or two funny moment as well, such as her metaphor about the bathroom rug, her comments about artificial snow, or her reaction to the final moment. There's some other free-roaming absurdity here, such as the reoccurring gag about a golf game or an insightful appearance from Troy McClure. And, of course, the “Bonestorm” commercial is a classic.\nUltimately, what makes “Marge Be Not Proud” a classic is its more poignant moments. In the beginning, Bart is uncomfortable with how his mom treats him like a little kid. Following his shoplifting episode, Marge begins to treat her son differently. She no longer sees him like a child. It's a feeling most kids and parents have to deal with eventually. The episode brings the subtle changes to a growing relationship to life in an effective way. The conclusion, which shows that familial love can overcome anything, is surprisingly touching. This mixture of hilarious absurdity and emotional character interaction is often when “The Simpsons” was at its best. That is clearly on display here. [8/10]\nPosted by Bonehead XL at 9:36 PM\nLabels: animation, christmas 2017, holiday horror, horror, other television, slasher films\nZack Clopton's 2017 Film Retrospective\nDirector Report Card: Lucky McKee (2017)\nCatching Up with the Bangers n' Mash Show Again\nDirector Report Card: Errol Morris (2016)\nChristmas 2017: December 24\nNO ENCORES: To All a Goodnight (1980)\nRECENT WATCHES: Star Wars: The Last Jedi (2017)\nWHY DO I OWN THIS?: Santa with Muscles (1996)\nDirector Report Card: Stephen Sommers (2013)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line257162"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6600462794303894,"wiki_prob":0.6600462794303894,"text":"I read an interesting paper recently by a group of psychology researchers who were investigating the influence of electromagnetic stimulation of parts of the brain in terms of how it affected the moral choices which people will make.\nTwo groups of people faced the same set of questions. One group was wired up to a machine which ran a small electromagnetic charge across the temperoparietal junction (TPJ) of the brain. The other group wasn’t.\nAn example of the types of moral judgements which the subjects were asked to make is as follows:\nExample 1.\nGeorge is having a coffee at John’s house. George asks for sugar in his coffee. John has two similar jars in his cupboard. One contains sugar but it says POISON on the label; the other contains poison but the label says SUGAR.\nJohn, knowing that the jars have the wrong labels, gives George a spoonful of poison from the SUGAR jar. George dies.\nDid John deliberately poison George?\nThe group which was NOT being subjected to the electromagnetic stimulation (EMS) almost unanimously said yes.\nRemarkably, there was a significantly high percentage of subjects in the other group which did not consider John to be guilty. Their reasoning was that John had taken the poison from the jar marked SUGAR and that was enough for them to believe he was off the hook.\nIn another example, John does NOT know that the labels have been switched. He believes he is putting sugar, not poison, into George’s coffee. George dies.\nGroup One (nonEMS) found him not guilty of premeditated murder. Most of Group Two found him guilty because George died.\nIn a third example, John thinks the labels have been switched, wants to poison George but inadvertently gives him a spoonful of sugar (believing it to be poison) and George finally gets a break, enjoys his coffee and goes off to watch the football.\nBy now, you’ll know what the groups’ verdicts are going to be. Group One condemned John for intending to poison George while a significant proportion of Group Two saw nothing wrong in what John did, simply because George survived.\nThere are numerous other variations of these experiments which all indicated the same confusion in moral judgement in subjects whose brains had been fogged by external stimuli such as electromagnetic charges. In all of them, the confusion arises from their inability to separate the facts of the matter from the intention of the agent. In moral judgements we regard somebody’s intentions as being the prime factor, regardless of whether they succeed in carrying out those intentions. In moral terms, attempted murder is just as serious as murder whereas being unwittingly involved in someone’s accidental death is not a criminal act at all. In assessing the guilt or innocence of an accused person, we need to establish if the accused had any motivation for causing or attempting to cause a death.\nAs an aside, the implications of this research are far-reaching and give rise to serious concerns about much of our Western lifestyle. We are surrounded by mobile phones, iPads and mp3 players (especially with headphones), digital televisions, wireless telephones, wi-fi computer connections, modems, so-called energy-saving light bulbs, microwave cookers, laptops and netbooks, transmission masts and numerous other appliances and devices, all of which emit electromagnetic radiation comparable to the EMS which was applied in the experiment. In the light of the experiment mentioned above, I find it to be inconceivable that our immersion in a veritable ocean of electromagnetic radiation is having no comparable effect. I also have information which indicates that a lot of research into these issues has been suppressed and marginalised. It’s not easy to adversely affect the corporate interest with hard, medical, scientific truth.\nMore generally, I’m struck by the fact that people can be so easily influenced to change their opinion of right and wrong by subtle environmental factors. You don’t necessarily need to have electrodes attached to your cranium in order to have your moral compass deflected off course. Fear of social unrest or other supposedly disruptive consequences may also affect someone’s idea of right and wrong. It’s very important to recognise that the members of Group Two who were making perverse judgements about John’s guilt or innocence genuinely believed in the value of their verdicts at the time. In their minds, it was clear that if George had survived, even though John had intended to poison him, then no condemnation of John’s character was warranted.\nThis experiment came to my mind when I read Lord Nimmo-Smith’s report of his inquiry into allegations that Rangers deliberately withheld and concealed parts of their arrangements to pay their playing staff. LNS at least managed to note that this was indeed what they had done. The registration conditions had not been met and Rangers had deliberately intended to keep part of their payment arrangements concealed. Those facts were recognised, hence the guilty verdict.\nLNS then demonstrated his Group Two credentials by stating that Rangers had not gained or sought to gain a competitive, sporting advantage by deliberately and continuously breaking the registration rules. He ignored the obvious fact that Rangers intended to acquire a stronger playing squad by avoiding the taxes due on £47 million of salary. He ignored the significance of the fact that Rangers intended to dupe the tax authorities by disguising players’ remuneration as loans through an EBT scheme. Registering these payments with the SPL (and SFA) as they should have done would have blown Rangers chances of pretending to HMRC that monies paid to their employees via EBTs were entirely discretionary. And despite media misdirection and propaganda stating that Rangers had “won” their appeal to the FTT over HMRC assessments, LNS had the facts in front of him which stated clearly that the FTT had ruled – and Rangers had accepted – that the EBTs were indeed contractual salary arrangements in the case of at least five players.\nLet’s recap that. LNS could see that Rangers paid players part of their salaries via EBTs. Those arrangements should have been part of the documentation submitted to the SPL as part of the player registration process. Rangers deliberately concealed that documentation. David Murray told the FTT , under oath, that Rangers used the EBTs to offer wage packages to better players whom they would not otherwise have been able to sign for the club. LNS concluded that Rangers, knowing full well that they were poisoning Scottish football regardless of what the label read, had not gained any sporting advantage from deliberately breaking the rules.\nRangers broke the rules. They knew they were breaking the rules. They were breaking the rules in order to sign better players than they could afford by keeping to the rules. They signed those better players and fielded them in hundreds of matches.\nAnd LNS, relabelling the jar to suit, says that no competitive sporting advantage was gained.\nThat is his Group Two moment; George survived, no harm done, let’s move on.\nEverything else proceeds from that viewpoint. Now that we’ve decided that John didn’t succeed in his attempt to poison George, we can indeed move on. We can move on to minimising John’s punishment. We might even avoid punishing John at all by dumping a fine onto hundreds of John’s long-suffering creditors. We can move on to finding somebody – anybody – whose interpretation of the penalty that should be imposed on a club which does not correctly register its players flies in the face of all reason, sense of fair play, precedent and practice.\nStep forward Sandy Bryson, the man who decides which labels belong on which jars, regardless of their contents. Bryson, lest we forget, was the man who was in charge of registrations at the time of the scandal which led to Jim Farry’s disgrace and downfall over the SFA’s failure to allow Jorge Cadete’s registration with Celtic. Farry pulled the trigger but Bryson provided the gun, supplied the ammunition and pointed it towards the target. (By the by, let us also recall that James Traynor has never varied from his outspoken opinion that Farry was a magnificent administrator.) But the panel decided that Bryson was wearing the SUGAR label.\nLNS and his fellow panel members decided that Bryson’s testimony was the be all and end all of interpretation of the SFA’s implementation of fair play. This was in spite of the fact that on the only occasion when his guidelines had been challenged in an independent judicial tribunal, the SFA’s case collapsed ignominiously before lunchtime on the first day of the hearing and the SFA immediately parted company with its long-serving Secretary. It was also in spite of the fact that Bryson’s advice to Celtic about FC Sion’s registration irregularities was that all was in order and nothing could be done; a perverse interpretation which was shot down in flames by UEFA who not only threw FC Sion out of Europe but also ordered the Swiss FA, on pain of being suspended from international competition, to retrospectively award victories to every one of Sion’s opponents in domestic league and cup fixtures in which improperly registered players had turned out for FC Sion. No matter; it says SUGAR on this jar of Bryson.\nA credible witness? A man on whose testimony the learned panel should base their verdict? Only if your capacity for making moral judgement has been disrupted could you conclude an inquiry by ruling that no cheating had taken place and no unfair competitive or sporting advantage had been gained. Furthermore, why did the LNS panel take evidence from the SFA’s registration officer in the first place, given that the SFA was already standing by to hear any appeal? What sort of appeals body turns up at the initial hearing in order to give evidence in support of one of the parties and what kind of panel is so morally confused that it thinks such an intervention is okay? It is little surprise that this panel had such a complete unawareness of the principle of fair play.\nMake no mistake about this. Scottish football has been run by Group Two members for a long time and continues to suffer for it. The poison in Scottish football’s coffee was put there deliberately, knowingly and with malign intent, regardless of what labels are on the jars. There is no excuse for asserting that the opinions of Group One and Group Two members have equal validity just because they may be sincerely held. They most certainly do not have equal validity.\nIt may well be the case from now on that football supporters in Group One decide that their only remaining option is to do without sugar or give up coffee altogether because they can recognise the futility of paying money into a sport which is being run along its present lines. It may well be the legacy of the LNS inquiry that George went home and decided not to bother watching the football after all.\nTags: contracts, corruption, David Murray, EBT, electromagnetic stimulation, experiment, FTT. LNS Inquiry, Henry Clarson, Lord Nimmo Smith, moral judgement, morality, psychology, Rangers, registration, remuneration, research, RFC, Sandy Bryson, SFA, SPL, temperoparietal junction\nHeads, You Win\nThe League Cup semi-final against Danny Lennon’s spirited St. Mirren side ended with another Hampden let-down from a Celtic team which is getting to the stage where it can be relied upon to under-perform in do-or-die matches where victory is expected.\nLast season’s League Cup Final was a fairly evenly contested game for the most part but Kilmarnock got the breakthrough and deserved to edge it in the end. But there’s no doubting that Celtic didn’t do themselves justice. The Scottish Cup semi-final against Hearts was another occasion in which the Hoops looked as if they had forgotten how to do their jobs.\nRoss County’s stunning upset at the same stage of the same tournament was well deserved on their part but it was a mystery that Celtic played so badly when they were in the middle of a superb winning streak in the league and should have had great confidence in their ability to overcome their First Division opponents.\nThis season, although Celtic eventually knocked Arbroath out of the Scottish Cup at the second time of asking, the performances in both matches belied the colossal gap in the status and resources of the two clubs.\nMany supporters would add to this list a severe disappointment in the Highlands a couple of years ago when Celtic seemed to be strong favourites to win the SPL until they lost an away match in Inverness. We should bear in mind, in fairness to the Highlanders, that they have consistently presented a difficult challenge to every club that visits them and it was Celtic’s turn to be ambushed that night but the result was still a shock. Personally though, I strongly maintain that the fix was in that season to ensure that Murray’s fraudulent enterprise got first dibs at the Champions League booty. The refereeing in that particular match was McCurryesque. That was a big factor in the ultimate result, not only in that match but also in the final league standings.\nBut there is no denying that Celtic have regularly failed to show the hunger and will to win which the supporters are entitled to expect of the team. There can no longer be any doubt that this is true. I think it is highly significant that after the match Neil Lennon stated in an interview that some of the players were like spoilt children in the first half. That is a very strong – and not entirely inaccurate – criticism of the side’s thoroughly abject display but it is also very unusual for a manager to say such a thing in public. It makes me suspect that he has tired of regularly feeling duty bound to shield players from well deserved criticism in the wake of performances which are far short of what is rightly expected from them. However, I don’t think it addresses the core problem. More on that later.\nAs far as the league is concerned, there has been criticism of the fact that Celtic haven’t won as many points this season as they had at the same stage of the last title campaign. I couldn’t care less how many points Celtic accrue so long as we end up with more than anyone else. Celtic fans are well aware of the nine-in-a-row which Jock Stein’s sides achieved. I doubt if there’s one fan in a hundred who could say how many points Celtic won in each of those years.\nWhen Wim Jansen’s team won the league title in 1998 with 74 points and stopped the nine-in-a-row achievement from being surpassed, I don’t remember a single Celtic supporter who grieved over the fact that Tommy Burns side had won more points in each of the previous two seasons while finishing second. (75 and 83, to save everybody looking it up.)\nWhat matters is winning the title.\nSo I’m prepared to cut the team some slack in the league because, highly paid or otherwise, there is a limit to the amount of physical wear and tear which professional footballers can withstand over the course of a season. A successful quadruple campaign would require at least sixty-five games. The possibility of cup-tie replays and representative call-ups could easily take that total above seventy. It’s too much to expect any player to perform in every one of those games at the required standard so I’m glad that we have the opportunity to use squad rotation to rest players who need a break. The fact that several points may be dropped without fatally damaging the title quest is nothing but good news in my book.\nBut in one-off, knock-out cup-ties, there’s a different set of criteria altogether and I don’t think the players have developed the correct mentality for these competitions. This is underlined to a certain degree by the fact that Celtic very rarely win a match in which they’ve lost the first goal. Games can be lost on the way to winning league championships but not in the course of a triumphant cup campaign.\nRecent Celtic teams have not shown that they have the ability to deal consistently with the pressure of playing in a match which they can’t afford to lose, most especially against opponents who set out to exploit that factor. There have been a few notable exceptions but Celtic’s best performances have generally come in games where they have felt that they have nothing to lose and lots to gain.\nThe current Celtic side has a number of good qualities but it only overcomes its numerous deficiencies when every player’s work rate, self-belief and resolve are at a very high level. It’s the players’ responsibility to ensure that they rise to that standard every time they are called upon to discharge their professional responsibilities. If they’re not self-motivated, they’re wasting everybody’s time.\nThe first-team coach can only encourage them and give them an opportunity to show that they are up to that challenge. If they don’t have the correct approach to their work, they need to look at themselves instead of hiding behind the management team. I expect that there are at least a dozen current Celtic players who are being honest with themselves tonight about why they froze this afternoon but they might not necessarily know how to find a solution.\nIt appears to me that the fear of losing to underdogs strongly inhibits the present side. Too many players tighten up and, as their performance consequently suffers, so the prospect of defeat further erodes their self-confidence and they enter into a negative feedback loop. Losing the first goal highly exacerbates the problem. The downward spiral continues as players begin to panic or show petulant signs of frustration. These responses in their turn further reinforce the sense of impending doom and self-doubt. Opponents sense this and are inspired to raise their own game still further, buoyed by the growing belief that they have the psychological upper hand. Meanwhile, baffled coaches watch from the technical area, trying to understand why under-performing players are behaving like “spoilt children” or why they don’t seem to have the same hunger as their opponents.\nThis is where I would have hoped and expected Jim McGuinness to earn his corn as part of Celtic’s coaching staff but I fear that his role is currently limited to working with youth players. I feel that Celtic would lose nothing by looking in the direction of professional advice from a successful sports psychologist to address some of the recurring issues that are afflicting the team. These regular pratfalls can no longer be dismissed as blips or off-days. They’re a direct result of well researched and fairly well understood mental processes and states of mind which need to be, and can be, adjusted with suitable programmes, specifically designed for each individual player.\nFootball is still years behind other sports in this field but Celtic could do a lot worse than to make room for a Head Teacher in the first-team coaching staff.\nTags: Celtic, Hampden Park, Heart of Midlothian FC, Hearts, Henry Clarson, Inverness, Inverness Caledonian Thistle FC, Jim McGuinness, Jock Stein, Kilmarnock FC, League champions, psychology, Ross County, Scottish Cup, Scottish League Cup, SPL, Sports Psychology, St. Mirren, Tommy Burns, Wim Jansen","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line368778"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9184658527374268,"wiki_prob":0.9184658527374268,"text":"L-39 Safety Officer: Zak Tomczak\nL-39 Safety Officer: Zak Tomczak\tadmin\t2018-04-19T20:00:25-04:00\nRobert J (Zak) Tomczak\nRobert J (Zak) Tomczak is President of Peregrine Defense Solutions. LLC. Peregrine provides consulting services regarding aviation safety program management to a select list of Corporations involved in unique flight operations.\nMr. Tomczak grew up in the northern Wisconsin city of Park Falls. The city’s airport was a privately owned 1800 ft dirt airstrip built by a neighbor, which essentially made it in his “backyard”. His father owned a 1947 Aeronca Champ so he began his flying career at age 16, paying for flying lessons by washing and waxing airplanes.\nHe graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a degree in business administration and was commissioned a second lieutenant in the USAF through the AFROTC program.\nMr. Tomczak served as an active duty U. S .Air Force fighter pilot for twenty-six years, retiring at the rank of Colonel. He flew both the F4 Phantom and F-16 Fighting Falcon and held various leadership positions including Operations Group Commander, Director of Operations of the Alaska NORAD region and fighter wing Vice Commander. During his career he also served as Chief Flight Examiner of the Air Force’s largest F-16 Wing, Flying Safety Officer, Chief of Flight Safety of the Air Force’s first F-16 combat wing and Chief of Safety of Air Combat Command at it’s headquarters at Langley Air Force Base Virginia where he was responsible for the Mishap Prevention Programs for the 120, 000 person command flying over 1800 aircraft.\nHe led numerous Air Force Mishap and Accident Investigations and was awarded the Air Force Chief of Staff Individual Safety Award for his flight safety program management and investigations of F-16 mishaps during the early operational use of the aircraft.\nAfter retirement from the USAF, Mr. Tomczak joined Lockheed Martin Corporation in Orlando Florida where he became Director, International Business Development, responsible for worldwide sales of airborne precision targeting systems. He retired from Lockheed Martin Corporation in 2015.\nMr. Tomczak holds a BS in Business Administration from the University of Wisconsin, a MS in Systems Management from St Mary’s University of San Antonio, is a graduate of the University of Southern California Institute of Systems and Safety Management Flying Safety Officer program and is a graduate of the U.S. Army War College.\nHe has over 3300 hours of flying time and holds Commercial, Instrument, Single and Multi engine ratings.\nFor more information about our UPRT program call (407) 846-4400 or contact us below:","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line387302"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7573438286781311,"wiki_prob":0.7573438286781311,"text":"United Way Receives $1.3M Grant from Wells Fargo\nBy: United Way Staff\nGreater Twin Cities United Way announced a $1.3 million grant from Wells Fargo to support United Way programs and nonprofit partners. Over the past five years, Wells Fargo has provided $6.5 million in grants improving household stability and economic opportunity for people and families experiencing poverty in our region.\nThis grant will help nearly 17,000 individuals by providing:\nCrisis resources for nearly 5,000 callers through United Way 2-1-1\nStable housing for over 300 youth and families\nGroceries and meals for nearly 11,000 people\nJob training for more than 200 low-income adults\nThe grant also will help us engage nearly 1,900 volunteers through community-wide volunteer projects and events, such as Action Day and Feeding Who’s Hungry.\n“Wells Fargo’s commitment to the community is inspiring,” said Trent Blain, interim president and CEO of Greater Twin Cities United Way. “We are grateful for our partnership and we look forward to continuing to work together to make the Greater Twin Cities a region where everyone thrives, regardless of income, race or place of residence.”\nRead the April 23 press release\nUnited Way Worldwide recently recognized Wells Fargo as its No. 1 Workplace Giving Campaign for 10 consecutive years. Over the past decade, Wells Fargo and its team members across the country have donated more than $713 million, and just last year, logged 31,000 volunteer hours.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1563092"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6112509369850159,"wiki_prob":0.6112509369850159,"text":"Connecting Kids with the Outdoors Comes Naturally to Bass Pro Shops\nBy Therese Ciesinski, In The Dirt newsletter editor\nPhotos courtesy of Bass Pro Shops and GardenSMART\nOutdoor retailer Bass Pro Shops and GardenSMART are partnering with the not-for-profit Whole Kids Foundation to address concerns that today’s children don’t spend enough time outdoors. Gardening is one way to bring kids back to nature. When kids garden, they see the fruits of their labors, and understand the importance of clean air, water, soil, and the environment.\nGetting children outside is core to Bass Pro Shops’ mission. “Introducing kids to the outdoors is critical to fostering the next generation of conservationists,” said Bass Pro Shops Founder Johnny Morris. “Bass Pro Shops is excited to connect even more people to nature and inspire students to discover, enjoy and protect the outdoors.”\nAs an incentive, Bass Pro Shops, Whole Kids Foundation, and GardenSMART are hosting a sweepstakes to plant gardens in schools. During the month of October, you can enter your child’s school to win a $2000 garden grant. Five lucky schools will each receive a grant to start a garden or improve an existing one. What’s more, each school will have the opportunity to showcase their garden on its own episode of GardenSMART.\nBass Pro Shops has been getting people into nature for over 40 years. By now, the story of Johnny Morris, Bass Pro Shops’ founder is almost legend: In 1971, Morris, an angler, drove across the country buying the fishing tackle that he couldn’t find locally, and selling it in his father’s liquor store. That success led to a mail order catalog and more stores. Today, 72 stores later (and more opening every year), the rest is outdoor retailing history.\nThe stores are enormous, each about 150,000 square feet, and each one is customized to reflect its location. From the aquarium and the wildlife displays to the merchandise, no two stores are alike. Combining education, conservation, entertainment and retail sales, every store is an experience, like a visit to a natural history museum and aquarium combined.\nYear-round events are a big part of how Bass Pro Shops gets its outdoor message across, and are tailored to all ages and experience levels, from hardcore anglers and hunters, to camping families, to kids playing in their backyards.\n“There’s a Father’s Day catch and release fishing event,” says Stan Lippelman, Vice President of Marketing. “In June and July we have outdoor camps for kids, with different seminars, including archery, shooting, and identifying animal tracks.” A family swim camp is held in summer. There are also fishing and hunting events in fall. “The stores are gateways to the outdoors,” he says.\nFrom October 24 to the 31, Bass Pro Shops is hosting in-store Halloween events for kids ages 12 and under. It includes a free photo with the Peanuts gang in a pumpkin patch. There are also costume parades, free gifts, craft-making sessions, and the opportunity to enter your child’s school in the sweepstakes to receive a $2,000 grant to start or improve a school garden.\nAnd on October 24, Bass Pro Shops, in partnership with Whole Kids Foundation and GardenSMART, will host a special “Grow A Pumpkin Patch” event for kids, with a garden craft and free gardening tips booklet.\nWhy gardens? “It’s all about the power of the outdoors and spending quality time in nature,” Lippelman says. “It’s getting kids off of couches. Being outside is good for kids’ physical and emotional well-being.\nBass Pro Shops is a sponsor of GardenSMART, and we thank them for their sponsorship and their commitment to nature and the outdoors. Sponsors are why GardenSMART can continue to bring you the quality garden programming it has for more than 17 years. We couldn’t do it without them.\nClick to download a PDF of the Grow A Pumpkin Patch Booklet. For more information about Bass Pro Shops, go to basspro.com.\nhttps://www.GardenSMART.com/?p=articles&title=Connecting_Kids_with_the_Outdoors_Comes_Naturally_to_Bass_Pro_Shops","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line1024541"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5142086744308472,"wiki_prob":0.5142086744308472,"text":"01. Freedom's Children - Sea Horse\n02. Freedom's Children - The Homecoming\n03. Freedom's Children - That Did It\n04. Freedom's Children - Fields And Me\n05. Freedom's Children - The Crazy World Of Pod (Electronic Concerto)\n06. Freedom's Children - 1999\n07. Freedom's Children - About The Dove And His King\nFREEDOM'S CHILDREN\nGalactic Vibes\nSHADOKS MUSIC\nSHAD 102CD SHAD 102CD\nThis is the third album by South Africa's Freedom's Children, originally released on the Parlophone label. The year is 1971, but the song is \"1999.\" The group is Freedom's and the vibes are galactic. And now just over 30 years later, we can look back at \"1999.\" This is a many-layered album, almost to the point of being cluttered, but this is what makes it interesting. Each time you listen you can hear something new, be it a tone in Brian Davidson's wailing vocals, a riff from Julian Laxton's screaming guitar, a sequence of notes from Barry Irwin's booming bass, the change from sticks to hands on Colin Pratley's awesome drumming, or merely putting your ear right up against the speaker to feel the presence of Ramsay MacKay on the live version of \"The Homecoming.\" The centerpiece of Galactic Vibes is \"The Homecoming,\" which appeared in a shorter version on Astra, but this live version has to be one of South Africa's epic tracks. Recorded live at the Out of Town Club (which, according to a copy of their flyer in the sleeve notes, advertised as a \"steak parlor\"), the track features a quite stunning and by all accounts legendary drum solo that lasts for the best part of 8 minutes before those dramatic guitar chords. Aside from this monstrous drumfest, the album features some blistering, fuzz-edged guitars on the thundering \"That Did It\" as well as the quieter and beautiful \"Fields And Me.\" There is also the experimental keyboard piece, \"The Crazy World Of Pod: Electronic Concerto,\" which is just short enough not to become irritating. The orchestration on \"About The Dove And His King\" adds a beauty and quality sheen to what is quite a rough rock sound, which is due mainly to the inventive recording methods used. With layers of overdubs and no noise reduction, this method created what the sleeve notes describe as a \"musical mystical mist of sound.\" This is a wonderful way to describe the slightly distorted guitars and vague hissing sounds. These guys were breaking barriers not only in South Africa's rather narrow 1970s rock world, but would have broken through numerous perceived limitations on the world stage, had the world bothered to listen. Galactic Vibes is an album that South Africans can be proud of, even 30 years later. It is a great musical achievement that can be hauled out again and again and simply marvelled at.\nOther releases on SHADOKS MUSIC\nOther releases by FREEDOM'S CHILDREN","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0000.json.gz/line980553"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6818189024925232,"wiki_prob":0.3181810975074768,"text":"Legislative Service Commission\nLSC Analysis of Senate Bill\nSub. S.B. 321*\n126th General Assembly\n(As Reported by S. Finance and Financial Institutions)\nSen. Carey\nBILL SUMMARY\n· Removes the Attorney General from the Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Foundation (TUPAC) Board of Trustees.\n· Changes the quorum requirements for the TUPAC Board of Trustees to a majority of voting members instead of a majority of the members.\n· Requires an affirmative vote of a majority of the quorum, instead of an affirmative vote of a majority of the members, in order for the TUPAC Board to take action.\n· Provides that not more than 5% of the total \"disbursements, encumbrances, and obligations\" (rather than \"expenditures\") of certain Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement foundations and funds in a fiscal year may be used for administrative expenses in the same fiscal year.\n· Makes changes to the law governing the Physician Loan Repayment Program including changes to eligibility requirements, reimbursement for certain expenses associated with Program recruitment, and Advisory Board membership.\n· Changes the requirements for participating in the Dentist Loan Repayment Program.\n· Changes certain procedures of the Dentist Loan Repayment Advisory Board.\nCONTENT AND OPERATION\nTobacco Use Prevention and Control Foundation (TUPAC) changes\nCurrent law establishes the Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Foundation (TUPAC). The purpose of the Foundation is to reduce tobacco use by Ohioans, with emphasis on reductions by youth, minority and regional populations, pregnant women, and others who may be disproportionately affected by tobacco use. The reduction in use is to be accomplished through a plan created by the Foundation that provides, among other things, for grants for research and programs related to tobacco use prevention and cessation. Grants are funded primarily using money distributed to the state pursuant to the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement entered into between the state and leading United States tobacco product manufacturers on November 23, 1998.\nThe general management of the Foundation is vested in a 24-member board of trustees that is made up of 20 voting members and four nonvoting members. Of the 20 voting members, the Director of Health, the Executive Director of the Commission on Minority Health (or the Executive Director's designee), and the Attorney General are ex officio members. Of the four nonvoting members, two are members of the House of Representatives and two are members of the Senate. A majority of the members of the board constitutes a quorum, and no action can be taken without the affirmative vote of a majority of the members.\nRemoval of Attorney General from Board of Trustees\n(R.C. 183.04)\nThe bill removes the Attorney General from the TUPAC Board.\nChange of Board of Trustees quorum requirement\nThe bill changes the quorum requirement for the TUPAC Board of Trustees to a majority of voting members, instead of a majority of the members. This change coupled with the removal of the Attorney General from the board will result in the quorum number requirement changing from 13 to ten.\nChange of vote requirement for Board of Trustees action\nThe bill provides that the TUPAC Board of Trustees cannot take action without an affirmative vote of a majority of a quorum, instead of an affirmative vote of a majority of the members.\nAdministrative expense limitations regarding certain Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement foundations and funds\nUnder current law, the money received by the state through the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement is divided up and distributed to various funds and foundations that include, for example, the Tobacco Use Prevention and Control Foundation, the Southern Ohio Agricultural and Community Development (SOACD) Foundation, and the Biomedical Research and Technology Transfer Trust Fund (BRTTTF). With respect to the TUPAC and SOACD Foundations, current law provides that no more than 5% of each foundation's total expenditures in a fiscal year can be for its administrative expenses. No more than 5% of the total expenditures of the BRTTTF by the Third Frontier Commission in a fiscal year can be used for the Commission's administrative expenses.[1] The 5% limitations do not apply, however, for any fiscal year for which the Controlling Board approves a spending plan submitted by the Commission or particular foundation.\nThe bill alters the 5% limitation by substituting \"total disbursements, encumbrances, and obligations\" for \"total expenditures.\" The bill also specifies that the 5% limitation in a fiscal year applies to the administrative expenses in the same fiscal year. Finally, the bill provides that the 5% limitation for the BRTTTF applies to expenses relating to the administration of that fund by the Third Frontier Commission, instead of applying to any Commission administrative expenses.\nPhysician Loan Repayment Program\n(R.C. 3702.71 through 3702.81)\nIn 1993, the General Assembly created the Physician Loan Repayment Program.[2] Under the Program, primary care physicians[3] agree to provide primary care services[4] 40 hours per week in a \"health resource shortage area.\"[5] They also agree to treat a percentage of Medicaid and Medicare patients equal to the percentage in their service areas. In return for their service, the physicians receive repayment of up to $80,000 of medical school debt ($20,000 annually over a four-year period).[6]\nProgram participants contract to provide an initial two years of service, then either enter into one follow-up contract for two years of service or two follow-up contracts for one year of service each.[7] The Director of Health may approve a physician for the Program only if the General Assembly appropriates funds for the Program, the Director finds that the physician is eligible for participation, and the physician's primary care specialty[8] is needed in a health resource shortage area.[9]\nEligibility to apply for Program\n(R.C. 3702.72)\nCurrent law. Under current law, a primary care physician may apply for participation in the Physician Loan Repayment Program if the physician has not received national health service corps tuition or student loan repayment assistance and meets one of the following requirements:\n(1) Has enrolled in the final year of an accredited program required for Board certification in a primary care specialty.\n(2) Is enrolled in the final year of a fellowship program in a primary care specialty.\n(3) Has been engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery or osteopathic medicine and surgery in Ohio for not more than three years prior to submitting the application.\nThe bill. The bill eliminates the requirement that an applicant for the Program cannot have received national health service corps tuition or student loan repayment assistance and instead requires that the applicant cannot have an outstanding obligation for medical service to the federal government, a state, or other entity at the time of participation in the Program. The bill also eliminates the requirement in (3), above that the applicant has been in practice not more than three years, and replaces it with a requirement that the applicant hold a valid certificate to practice medicine and surgery or osteopathic medicine and surgery from the State Medical Board of Ohio. The bill retains the requirements in (1) and (2), above.\nReimbursement for travel, meals, and lodging; referral to association\nCurrent law. Current law permits the Director of Health, when recruiting an applicant for the Program, to pay costs incurred by the applicant and the applicant's spouse for travel, meals, and lodging in making one visit to one health resource shortage area. Current law also permits the Director to refer the applicant to the Ohio Primary Care Association, Inc., for assistance in being recruited to a site within a health resource shortage area at which the applicant agrees to be placed.\nThe bill. The bill eliminates the Director's authority to undertake these activities.\n(R.C. 3702.81; R.C. 3702.79 and 3702.80 (not in the bill))\nCurrent law. Current law provides for a Physician Loan Repayment Advisory Board that must provide consultative services, along with the Ohio Board of Regents, to the Director of Health when the Director adopts rules governing the Program. The Advisory Board must also annually submit a report to the Governor and General Assembly describing the operations of the Program during the previous calendar year.\nCurrent law requires that the Board consist of 11 members as follows:\n(1) Six members appointed by the Governor: a representative of the Department of Health, a representative of the Ohio Academy of Family Practice, a representative of the Board of Regents, a representative of the Ohio Primary Care Association, Inc., a representative of the Ohio State Medical Association, and a representative of the Ohio Osteopathic Association.\n(2) Two members of the Ohio House of Representatives: one representative from each political party, appointed by the Speaker of the House.\n(3) Two members of the Ohio Senate: one representative from each political party, appointed by the Senate President.\nExisting law specifies that Board members serve without compensation but may be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary expenses incurred in the discharge of their duties.\nThe bill. The bill removes the requirement that one of the six members of the Advisory Board appointed by the Governor be a representative of the Ohio Primary Care Association, Inc., and replaces it with a requirement that one of these six members be a representative of the Ohio Association of Community Health Centers. The bill also eliminates the provision under which Board members may be reimbursed for reasonable and necessary expenses incurred in the discharge of their duties.\nDentist Loan Repayment Program\n(R.C. 3702.89 and 3702.92)\nSub. S.B. 51 of the 125th General Assembly created the Dentist Loan Repayment Program. The program provides loan repayment on behalf of individuals who agree to provide dental services in areas designated as dental health resource shortage areas by the Director of Health. The Department of Health is required to administer the program in cooperation with the Board of Regents and the Dentist Loan Repayment Advisory Board. Under the program, the Ohio Board of Regents may agree to repay all or part of the principal and interest of a government or other educational loan taken by an individual for tuition, educational expenses, and room and board. These expenses must have been incurred while the individual was enrolled in an accredited dental college or a dental college located outside of the United States that meets the standards set by the State Dental Board and must be determined reasonable by the Director of Health. The Director of Health is required to adopt rules in consultation with the Ohio Board of Regents and the Dentist Loan Repayment Advisory Board to implement the Program.\nTo be eligible to participate in the Dentist Loan Repayment Program, an applicant must not have received National Health Service Corps tuition or student loan repayment assistance and must be one of the following: a dental student enrolled in the final year of dental college, a dental resident in the final year of residency, or a dentist engaged in the practice of dentistry in Ohio for no more than three years prior to submitting the application. The application must be submitted to the Director of Health on a form the Director is required to prescribe. All of the following information must be included or supplied:\n(1) The applicant's name, address, and telephone number;\n(2) The name of the dental college the applicant is attending or attended and dates and verification of attendance;\n(3) If the applicant is a dental resident, the facility at which the dental residency is being performed;\n(4) A summary and verification of the educational expenses the applicant seeks reimbursement for under the Program;\n(5) If the applicant is a dentist, the verification of the applicant's license to practice dentistry in Ohio, and proof of good standing;\n(6) Verification of the applicant's United States citizenship or status as a legal alien.\nThe bill changes the requirements for participating in the Program by specifying the following:\n(1) That the individual is not receiving certain assistance in student loan repayment, instead of has never received such assistance;\n(2) That, if practicing dentistry, has been in practice for less than three years instead of less than three years in this state.\nDentist Loan Repayment Advisory Board\nSub. S.B. 51 also created the Dentist Loan Repayment Advisory Board. The Board consists of seven members: one member of the House of Representatives appointed by the Speaker, one member of the Senate appointed by the President, one representative of the Ohio Board of Regents appointed by the Chancellor, the Director of Health or an employee of the Department of Health designated by the Director, and three representatives of the dental profession appointed by the Governor from persons nominated by the Ohio Dental Association.\nThe Board must designate a chairperson and meet at least once annually. The chairperson is to call special meetings as needed or on the request of six members. Six members constitute a quorum.\nThe bill reduces from six to four the number of members of the Board that constitute a quorum and that are required to compel the chairperson to call a special meeting of the Board.\nReported, S. Finance & Financial Institutions\ns0321-rs-126.doc/kl\n* This analysis was prepared before the report of the Senate Finance and Financial Institutions Committee appeared in the Senate Journal. Note that the list of co-sponsors and the legislative history may be incomplete. In addition, this analysis does not include appropriations or other fiscal provisions. See the Legislative Service Commission's Fiscal Note for Sub. S.B. 321 for an analysis of those provisions.\n[1] The Third Frontier Commission administers the BRTTTF pursuant to the law governing the Commission. (R.C. 183.18 and Chapter 184.)\n[2] The Physician Loan Repayment Program was authorized by H.B. 478 of the 119th General Assembly.\n[3] A \"primary care physician\" is an individual authorized under Ohio law to practice medicine and surgery or osteopathic medicine and surgery who is Board-certified or Board-eligible in a primary care specialty. (R.C. 3702.71(A).) The terms \"Board-certified\" and \"Board-eligible\" are not defined in the Revised Code. However, according to the American Board of Medical Specialties (ABMS), a physician who is Board-certified has completed an approved educational training program and an evaluation process including an examination designed to assess the knowledge, skills, and experience necessary to provide quality patient care in that specialty. A physician who is Board-eligible is in the process of becoming Board-certified, although the ABMS discourages the use of this description. ABMS, FAQs (visited Mar. 2, 2004)Mark Gorton: [0:01] The automobile is a space hog, and the rest of us pay the price. Look at it. There is a demonstrated need for much wider sidewalks. Why? Because it's 10 people wide having to walk in the street! [0:14] I'm standing here at West 34th and Seventh Ave, and it is just an unpleasant place to be. We had a hard time finding a place to stand to just even talk. And just think about it. There are people, every day, just have to go through this crush of humanity. And you say, \"OK, New York's a big city. It's got a lot of people.\" But the reason it's so crowded here is not because there's not enough space. It's because we give all of our space to the least spatially efficient form of transportation available.[musical interlude]
Mark Gorton: [0:54] The people that are here, most all of them got here on mass transit. This is a mass-transit crowd. It's a mass-transit place. It's a mass-transit city. We're here near Penn Station. We're here near the subway. There's great accessibility to this location.
[1:09] Right now, the explicit policy of the city, that has accumulated over 100 years of policy making decisions, is to consciously try and promote automobile usage and suppress human activity, because there is a fight for space. You've got little kids. Think about what it's like being a little kid. It's not just the cars. It's the people. You're going to get stepped on. As a parent, it's not even safe to bring your kids here, just because it's so crowded. We've made our streets hostile, toxic places for people.
[musical interlude]
Mark Gorton: [1:47] Do you think anyone likes walking in the middle of Seventh Avenue, with all this nasty traffic and the honking and the buses and the danger? People don't want to do it. They're doing it because they're forced to do it. As a society, we tolerate this. We tolerate incredibly crowded, dangerous conditions.
[musical interlude]
Mark Gorton: [2:12] What we have here can be fixed in a day with action from the DOT, like we saw over in Herald Square. These sidewalks can be wider. You could just put out some temporary cones as a start. Paint the ground, a few barrels, a few planters. Bam. It doesn't have to be like this, because we have made a decision, as a society, to try and cram as many cars onto our streets as possible. It is very easy to make policy decisions that get rid of the cars.
[2:38] However much space we will give to cars, they will take. People will selfishly take it because we give it to them. Right here in the middle of New York City, if you had 16 lanes, you'd have 16 lanes of cars. If you have two lanes, you have two lanes of cars. It is that simple.
Former MLB players Luis Valbuena and Jose Castillo have been killed in a car crash in Venezuela, according to multiple media reports.
\nFormer MLB players Luis Valbuena and Jose Castillo have been killed in a car crash in Venezuela, according to multiple media reports.\nThe two were teammates on a winter ball team in Venezuela at the time of the crash on Thursday.\nCastillo was 37 at the time of his death and finished his career with the Houston Astros. Valbuena, 33, most recently played for the Los Angeles Angels and was a sought after free agent in this MLB offseason.\nDetails on what led up to the crash have not yet been released.\nA front office member of Luis Valbuena's Venezuelan winter ball team confirmed the former Astros third baseman was killed in a car accident in Venezuela on Thursday.\nValbuena was 33 https://t.co/cWALLPz3Io\n— Chandler Rome (@Chandler_Rome) December 7, 2018\nOur hearts are extremely saddened to hear the news of Luis Valbuena and Jose Castillo’s passing. Our thoughts and prayers are with their families, friends and anyone affected by this tragic loss. They’re now up there with the Angels in the outfield.\n— LA Sports Hub (@LA_SportsHub) December 7, 2018","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line534741"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5382683873176575,"wiki_prob":0.5382683873176575,"text":"Subscribe To Wait, They're Making A Theme Park Based On The Hunger Games? Updates\nWait, They're Making A Theme Park Based On The Hunger Games?\nBy Sean O'Connell\nTheme parks based on dangerous concepts tend to be terrible ideas. Just ask the folks behind Jurassic Park, who apparently didn’t learn their lesson. So you’ll forgive us for not embracing the concept of a theme park based on The Hunger Games, because from what we remember about those first two Games movies, not a lot of people make it out of the arena alive.\nLionsgate, however, has started down the path to bring both a Hunger Games and a Step Up theme park to Dubai through a partnership with Dubai Parks and Recreation. THR reports that the Motiongate Dubai parks would open in October 2016, and feature attractions, retail shops and stage shows inspired by both the Hunger Games and Step Up movie franchises. See, one of those makes a lot of sense! Step Up is a high-octane dance franchise that could inspire several DIY showcases for global talent.\nThe Hunger Games, on the flip side, just sounds deadly. Will there be a giant cornucopia filled with weapons that visitors will have to run to at the start of each morning? Instead of a traditional fireworks display, will each night end with cannon fire, signifying how many tourists gave their lives up in honor of the most exclusive, immersive vacation destination in film-fan history?\nWe’re exaggerating, of course. The rides and attractions at the Hunger Games theme park likely will do an excellent job of incorporating elements of the behemoth, dystopian YA film franchise, possibly letting you eat lunch in The Capitol, ride a roller coaster through District 13, or buy an Effie Trinket wig at a Hunger Games gift shop near the park’s entrance. You know a lot of girls will be leaving the Motiongate Dubai park with a customized Katniss Everdeen archery set.\nThis isn’t the only effort by Lionsgate to extend the Hunger Games brand after the final film, The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 opens in theaters on November 20. Variety reported last year that the studio is teaming up with Imagine Nation and Triangular Entertainment to bring a Hunger Games live show to the stage. The show will be established in the UK at Wembley Stadium in London. Can’t travel overseas to either Great Britain or Dubai? Not a problem. The trade also reported that a U.S. tour of The Hunger Games: The Exhibition is expected to hit numerous locations this summer.\nCould it work? Sure. Universal Studios has an extremely popular Harry Potter theme park in Orlando. There have been plans for a Fast & Furious theme park. So yeah, theme parks based on very popular movies are the new fad. Expect Divergent to follow up with a copycat attraction in coming weeks.\nA Hunger Games Prequel Is Coming, So Bring On The Movie Deals\nThe 10 Best Jennifer Lawrence Movies, Ranked\nJennifer Lawrence's Top 5 Roles So Far, Ranked","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1267144"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7459595203399658,"wiki_prob":0.7459595203399658,"text":"Softball Wins Three of Four, Sweeps Rival FDU\nWritten by ED MORLOCK | ASSOCIATE SPORTS EDITOR\nThe softball team went 3-1 last week, splitting with Villanova and sweeping a Northeast Conference (NEC) double-header against Farleigh Dickinson.\nThe Hawks (16-14, 7-5) are in fifth place in the NEC. They are two games behind the conference leader, Robert Morris. Monmouth also trails Long Island University - Brooklyn, Quinnipiac and Central Connecticut State.\nMU defeated their conference rival 6-5 in the first game and 8-0 in game two. Monmouth never trailed in either game.\n“These were very big wins for us. We control where we want to be at the end of the season, so if we just go out and take care of our business and not worry about anything else, that’s all we can do,” said head coach Louie Berndt. “We need to focus on one NEC game at a time and do what we did against FDU. Everyone needs to focus on their job and their job only and get it done. When we do that you saw against FDU the outcome that we can produce.”\nKate Kuzma led the team over the Knights (23-14, 5-7) with five RBI’s. She went three for eight with a double, triple and homerun. Kuzma also caught both games.\n“I think Kate Kuzma did an outstanding job of calling both games. It’s mentally challenging to catch back-to-back games and then to call them on top of that. I think Kate yesterday played her best ball games and I hope she continues to play as she did because we are so much stronger when our battery is on and they were on yesterday,” said Berndt. “Kuzma made a play with two outs and threw out the tying run at third base to end the game.”\nAlissa Schoelkopf (6-2) was the winning pitcher in game one. She pitched the entire game, allowing five hits and five runs, only one of which was earned. She struck out two and walked two.\n“Alissa was up in game one 6-1 in the bottom of the seventh before we started falling apart in that game,” said Berndt. “She continued to do her job and we just didn’t play behind her.”\nLauren Sulick (9-5) won the second game for the Hawks. She threw a complete game, three-hit shutout. She walked three and struck out three.\n“Lauren and Alissa both did a great job. I have been saying all along that our team needs to start in the circle with winning ball games and both pitchers really did a great job for us yesterday,” said Berndt. “Both Lauren and Alissa just mixed the ball and hit their spots and when our pitching staff takes care of business we are a pretty good ball club.”\nMonmouth laced 27 hits in the double-header against the Knights. Kaitie Schumacher led the team with five hits.\n“The offense was patient when they needed to be and to be honest they were all just in the zone,” said Berndt. “They all did a great job of just hitting the ball hard and making great contact.”\nChristine Scherr tallied four hits, including a home run. Freshman Vanessa Cardoza had three hits, as did Kayleena Flores.\nSulick was the losing pitcher in game one against Villanova. She allowed eight runs, four earned, in three innings of work. The Hawks lost 9-2.\nSchoelkopf defeated Villanova in the second game 5-1. She pitched the entire game, allowing one run on 10 hits.\nThe Hawks are on the road all this week. Wednesday, April 18 they travel to Philadelphia for a double-header against Temple. They return to NEC play over the weekend with double-headers against Bryant and Central Connecticut State.\nMonmouth has eight conference games remaining on their schedule. Four of these games are against teams ahead of them in the standings.\nPHOTO COURTESY of MU Photography\nSports: Articles By Volume","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line981551"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5736247897148132,"wiki_prob":0.5736247897148132,"text":"Wednesday, January 2, 2019 - The Wit and Ramblings of David Giard\n\"The Adventures of Augie March\" by Saul Bellow\nElizabeth Graham on Azure Logic Apps\nNatural Language Processing with LUIS\nAlex Mang on Azure Durable Functions\nQnAMaker\n\"The Way of Kings\" by Brandon Sanderson\nJim Wooley on Static Analyzers and Roslyn\n\"Appointment in Samarra\" by John O'Hara\nCreating a Chatbot in the Azure Portal\nFor Sharon\nAugie March is an unlikely and unassuming hero in an American saga.\nBorn of a working-class simple-minded single mother in depression-era Chicago during the Great Depression, Augie struggles to rise above his lot in life.\nSaul Bellow chronicles his struggles in The Adventures of Augie March.\nAugie March begins his way in the world as a small-time criminal - stealing books,\nSelf-described as \"an American, Chicago born\", Augie often drifts through life, finding work where he can and seeking love where he can. His adventures often occur because he follows others: He falls in love with a girl who takes him to Mexico to finalize her divorce and train an eagle; he accompanies a friend on a trip to smuggle workers into the US from Canada, but they become stranded when the police discover the friend is driving a stolen car.\nBut, Augie progresses. He travels the world and experiences life and meets a lot of people. He takes on a number of jobs: Running errands for a corrupt businessman; recruiting workers to a labor union; buying and selling on the European black market; eagle trainer; even a stint in the US Navy;\nOur hero's great hindrance is his desire to do the right thing. For example, his engagement to a rich girl is derailed when he helps a friend escape an abusive relationship and recover from a botched abortion. Augie's fiancé and her family refuse to believe he is not sleeping with the girl he is helping. He knows this will happen, but he does what he believes is right.\nchaos.\nIt's sometimes hard to tell where the story is going. There are so many characters and so much happens that the reader can't always see what is important. March seems to just travel through life experiencing his adventures, with little or no theme running through them all. He tries, and he fails, and he tries again - in his careers and in his romances. Repeatedly, he deals with the chaos that is life and moves on.\nBut I see Augie's life as a pursuit of the American Dream, which is bold in its reach, but limited in its explicit goals. March is more self-aware than most, seeing his weaknesses and strengths and he never stops growing. And he never stops trying to move forward. And he never stops dreaming.\nWednesday, January 2, 2019 5:46:58 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)\nDavid Giard | Disclaimer | Comments [0] |\nMicrosoft Global Black Belt Elizabeth Graham describes Azure Logic Apps and how to use them to solve integration and workflow projects.\nAzure | Interviews | Technology and Friends | Video\nMonday, December 31, 2018 9:06:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)\nGCast 28:\nLearn how to use Microsoft Language Understanding Information Service (LUIS) to build models that provide Natural Language Processing (NLP) for your application.\nAI | Azure | Cognitive Services | GCast | Screencast | Video\nThursday, December 27, 2018 9:53:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)\nAlex Mang describes Azure Durable Functions and some real-world examples of how he uses them.\nLearn how to use QnA Maker to create a bot that automatically answers questions.\nAzure | Bots | GCast | Screencast\nThe world of The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson is a dangerous one. The continent of Roshar on the planet Roshar is filled with perils. Violent \"highstorms\" destroy nearly everything in their path; giant carnivorous crustaceans roam the chasms; the Parshendi and the Alethi races have been at war for as long as anyone can remember with no victory in sight for either side; and godlike creatures battle each other every few thousand years to decide the fate of the planet.\nThe Alethi-Parshendi wars take place on the Shattered Planes - a vast series of high plateaus separated by deep chasms. Enslaved \"bridgemen\" push giant bridges between the plateaus in order for armies to advance and attack. These bridgemen also serve the purpose of drawing enemy fire away from the armies, keeping their survival rate close to zero.\nOn top of this is the caste system, which decrees at birth the fate of each person - from slave to king. There exist about a dozen specific castes, but they are grouped into two broad categories, based on eye color. The light-eyes are clearly at the top and dark-eyes are decidedly below.\nBut Roshar also has some marvels. The storms generate a mystical force called \"stormlight\" that can be captured in stones and other objects and can be harnessed by those with the power to do so. Powerful shardblades can cut through nearly anything and armor made of shardplate can protect the wearer from nearly any attack; soulcasters are devices that allow masters to transmute one object or substance into another; and spren - creatures made of light, who sometimes come to the aid of humans.\nThe book switches points of view between several characters. The most important are:\nKaladin, son of a physician, who goes to war to protect his younger brother. But ends up sold into slavery as a bridgeman - the most expendable people in the army. He begins to acquire powers from stormlight and learn how to use those powers to help his fellow bridgemen.\nShallan Davar, who apprentices herself to the heretic scholar Jasnah Kholin in an attempt to steal her soulcaster.\nDalinar Kholin, a decorated warrior, an honorable man, and the uncle of a king. Dalinar sees visions of ancient gods and begins to question the wisdom of the endless war waged by his countrymen.\nBy far, the most interesting story is Kaladin's. He progresses from idealist to cynic to reluctant super hero and it is all done with perfect plausibility. Kaladin miraculously survives every danger he faces, but often those closest to him perishes. Despite this, the other bridgemen rally around him and he eventually inspires and unites these dregs of society.\nFew of the stories overlap in this book, but we expect them to do so as the series progresses.\nAs he has done before, Brandon Sanderson does a masterful job of building a world in which to place his characters and stories. In fact, the first two-thirds of this book spends much of its time setting the scene for the final third.\nAt over 1000 pages, this is an intimidating book - particularly when you consider it is part 1 of a proposed 10-volume series (three volumes have been published as of this writing) It took me nearly a year to finish it as other patrons kept requesting it\nBut it was worth the time and effort. I loved the characters and the world and the plausibility of the world Sanderson creates. Sanderson doesn't simply allow magic to exist - he provides a source to that magic and a partial explanation of its uses and limits.\nThe Way of Kings not a perfect book. The story is long and the action is sometimes separated by hundreds of pages of character development. But it never suffers from the flowery language that often bogs down high fantasy stories\nThere is much to think about in this book. But one of Kaladin's men put it best when Kaladin asked the meaning of a story:\n\"It means what you want it to mean,\" Hoid said. \"The purpose of a storyteller is not to tell you how to think , but to give you questions to think upon. Too often, we forget that.”\nTuesday, December 18, 2018 9:38:00 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)\nMicrosoft MVP Jim Wooley describes how to use Roslyn to create your own static analyzers to verify the quality of your code.\nC# | Interviews | Technology and Friends | Video\nAppointment in Samarra by John O'Hara takes place over a 72-hour period in the small eastern Pennsylvania town of Gibbsville.\nBut three days is all it takes for Julian English to destroy everything good in his life.\nJulian had it made. He was born into a wealthy family; he owned a car dealer that was successful even during the great depression; and he had a beautiful, faithful wife, who loved him.\nBut he drank. And one night, at a party, he grew tired of listening to loudmouth boor Harry Reilly and threw a drink in his face. Julian quickly regretted his actions. Harry was an influential man in Gibbsville and Julian owed him money; but rather than correct the situation, Julian hurtles down a path of self-destruction for the next 3 days, alienating himself from the rest of society, burning bridges in his life, and spiraling quickly downward until he reaches a breaking point.\nAppointment is an excellent look at America of the 1930s. It shows us the social castes, the gossip, the overt racism, and life inside a bubble that is small town America.\nO'Hara does a masterful job of building the characters of this town and the dynamics between them. He gives us a backstory about Julian's wife, so we understand why he is lucky to have her and a fool to risk losing her. We learn about Julian's family and the pressure his father places on him, so we understand why he sometimes feels useless and helpless.\nInterestingly, none of Julian's acts of self-destruction are described in the book. We hear about them later as characters discuss what happened. Sometimes, it's unclear exactly what Julian did. For example, his wife sees him leave a night club with the girlfriend of a local mobster; then later finds Julian passed out drunk in his car. Did he commit adultery? It probably doesn't matter, as that was clearly his intent. And he is now in trouble with both his wife and the mob.\nThis is a book that got better as it went along. As the story progresses, Julian's downfall seems inevitable. But I could not look away. Appointment in Samarra is an American tragedy that is well worth watching.\nSunday, December 16, 2018 7:56:16 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)\nIn this video, I show how to create, deploy, and edit a chatbot completely within your web browser using the Azure Portal. You can event download the source code and edit it in Visual Studio, if you wish.\nAzure | Bots | GCast | Microsoft Bot Framework | Screencast | Video\nSharon Spry was one of the finest people I've known.\nShe had a gift for understanding and relating and empathizing with others. She had a bright mind and a wonderful smile. She had a sense of humor that allowed her to laugh at the world and to laugh at herself and sometimes to laugh at her troubles.\nShe was someone I called when I was feeling down. She never failed to cheer me up.\nShe was someone I called to share good news. It always made me feel better.\nShe was always interested in what I was doing and always asking about my immediate family.\nI was at her wedding where my 5-year-old son Timmy (now a grown man known as \"Tim\") served as a ring bearer.\nWhenever I visited San Francisco, I made a point to visit her family. I stayed at their house many times.\nShe came to visit me on multiple occasions and we got together at places away from our homes.\nA few years ago, she was diagnosed with cancer and was in and out of chemotherapy and other treatments. I’ve forgotten where the cancer started; but, by the end of this year, it had spread throughout her entire body.\nI will always admire the courage with which she faced this disease. She was always open and honest about her chances and what she was going through. She didn’t ask for pity, but she didn’t hide anything or downplay the seriousness from the rest of us.\nSharon passed away last night at the age of 55. The cancer she battled the last few years finally overcame her.\nShe leaves behind a husband and two young children.\nShe was my cousin and my friend.\nAnd I miss her.\nWednesday, December 12, 2018 9:41:27 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line712292"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.598064124584198,"wiki_prob":0.401935875415802,"text":"On the Record with Thelma Plum\nDanica Spear April 23, 2019 LatestMusic\nAhead of two major music festivals, Thelma Plum found the time to chat to Grok about musical inspirations, break-ups and her personal identity.\nTell me about how your latest single, Not Angry Anymore, came about?\nI wrote Not Angry Anymore after I broke up with my last boyfriend, who I was just so in love with. We had a beautiful, loving relationship, for the most part [Laughs]. I guess, after the breakup, you start to hold a lot of resentment, or you can build up a sort of resentment towards the other person. It took me a bit of time and a bit of reflection to understand that it wasn’t all on him and that I didn’t want to hold onto that anger anymore.\nI think it’s something a lot of people can relate to.\nYeah, well I hope so [Laughs].\nI loved the music video, it fit the so song perfectly. How was it working with Claudia Dallimore?\nOh my god, amazing. She’s just fantastic; she’s so good at her job and she makes working really enjoyable. She shoots predominantly women as well, which is great. She makes a really safe space, so I really liked it.\nWhere do you typically draw your inspiration from?\nSo many different things I guess, you know obviously love or heartbreak. With the last EP, I wrote it when I was 19, so it was a little while ago. I think now I’m ready to share a different part of me that isn’t just those love songs, it’s more of a reflection of how I feel being an Aboriginal woman in this country and how that felt growing up. I sing a lot about growing up, so a lot of the inspiration I draw now is from those experiences as an Aboriginal woman, which is something I hadn’t yet felt ready to share.\nSo, it’s been five years since the release of your last EP, Monsters, has your creative process changed over the years?\nYeah for sure. With this album, there was one before it that nearly came out and nearly happened, and there were some songs that were a couple years old. When it was time to record them, I was in such a different space, and with the music I release, I want it to be a reflection of who I am now, and I would like for it to show that I’ve grown as an artist and as a person. I guess with what I spoke about before, being more willing to share my experiences, so my vision has changed a lot in that way.\nIs it difficult sharing something so personal for you with the public?\nYeah for sure, but it’s like, I’m a huge oversharer. I share way too much [Laughs]. I need to get a little bit better at that.\nI guess music’s one good way to go about that.\nYeah, it really is. There’s something so therapeutic for me, in I guess a selfish way, to share things through my music and open up in that way. It’s vulnerable as hell, especially when other people are involved when you’re talking about lovers or people in your life and songs that are about certain things and times. It brings back memories, for not just me but other people as well. It can be nerve-racking, knowing that I might potentially make someone feel a certain way with what I’m sharing.\nDo you typically warn people when they’re going to be featured in one of your songs or just let them figure it out?\nNo never [Laughs]. Unless you’ve really wronged me, then you can find out on the radio like everyone else [Laughs]. I think it’s really important to be aware as an artist of some of the things you might share, because we share so much and sometimes people might think that’s none of your business, but when I’m inspired by something, I’ll want to write about it, but I am very mindful of making sure that everybody is safe and protected.\nYour single, Clumsy Love has been a massive success. Was this something you expected?\nNo! Because I hadn’t released music in so long, I was so nervous that I would come back and no one would want to listen to me. You know you have all those negative thoughts, but I also worked so hard on this song, and I’m really proud of that. I still didn’t expect it, but I am so happy.\nAre you excited to be touring with Groovin the Moo?\nI am! I’m so excited, crazy excited.\nI also saw that you were announced in the Splendour line up!\nIt is, it’s pretty wild. These are both two festivals that have been huge career goals for me, so I’m really, really happy.\nDo you prefer playing festivals over your private shows? I can imagine they’re very different experiences.\nYeah, they’re just so different. I couldn’t really choose, because there’s something so special about playing at a festival and seeing such a big crowd watching you, and it’s a bit like you’re on a holiday or on an island, somewhere really isolated, and just in that moment. And there’s always such good energy. But intimate shows are also really special, I think that they can be great, but I’ll let you know after these two festivals [Laughs].\nCan we expect the release of your new album soon?\nYes, you can! So, it’s coming out in the next couple of months, so maybe by the Groovin shows there might be a new single out from it.\nThelma Plum will be heading to Bunbury for Groovin the Moo festival on May 11.\nartist interviewon the recordThelma Plum\nPrevious ArticleOn the Record with Bella Nicholls from Demon Days\nNext ArticleRefuge at the John Curtin Gallery: Refugees, Immigrants and Australia\nDanica Spear\nWould you eat 3000-year-old honey?\nAdilah Ahmad July 14, 2019\n‘A White, White Day’: living between heaven and the earth\nVenus Choo J. Q. July 13, 2019\nThe Natural World is the Muse: ‘The Botanical: Beauty and Peril’ Exhibition at AGWA\nParis Doick July 13, 2019\n‘Stuber’ is an uninspired and personality-deprived ride\nDaniel Patterson July 12, 2019\nOn the record with Mayhills\nAilish Delaney July 12, 2019\nOn the Record with Kristian Hopes from Grinspoon\nJenny Maxwell July 11, 2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line858766"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5976428985595703,"wiki_prob":0.4023571014404297,"text":"Johnson & Johnson Ordered To Pay $72 Million For Ovarian Cancer Death Linked To Baby Powder – Here Are The Details\nJohnson & Johnson, an American multinational corporation that specializes in developing medical devices and selling pharmaceutical and consumer packaged goods, has been ordered to pay $72 million US dollars to the family of a woman whose death from ovarian cancer was linked to her decades-long use of the company’s talc-based Baby Powder and Shower.\nThe decision was made last Monday by a Missouri state jury, and The Globe & Mail has shared details of the verdict:\nJurors in the circuit court of St. Louis awarded the family of Jacqueline Fox $10-million of actual damages and $62 million of punitive damages, according to the family’s lawyers and court records. . . . Johnson & Johnson faces claims that it, in an effort to boost sales, failed for decades to warn consumers that its talc-based products could cause cancer.\nApproximately 1,000 more cases have been filed in Missouri state court, and another 200 in New Jersey, but this may well be the tip of the iceberg.\nIn this specific case, jurors actually found Johnson & Johnson liable for fraud, negligence, and conspiracy.\nJere Beasly, a lawyer for the family of the victim, revealed that Johnson & Johnson “knew as far back as the 1980s of the risk,” and yet resorted to “lying to the public, lying to the regulatory agencies.”\nA Johnson & Jonson spokeswomen, however, continued to negate these claims:\nWe have no higher responsibility than the health and safety of consumers, and we are disappointed with the outcome of the trial. We sympathize with the plaintiff’s family but firmly believe the safety of cosmetic talc is supported by decades of scientific evidence\nThe ‘decades of scientific evidence’ to which she refers clearly have not withstood the scrutiny of either this trial or concerned members of the public; it also fails to account for who funded the research.\nHer remark also makes plain a disturbing trend amongst big corporations, which is the blind trust of their employees.\nMany clearly believe what they are told about the products they represent, without questioning or doing their own independent research.\nScientific fraud induced by major corporations in this field is no secret, and various medical experts around the world have been speaking out against it for decades.\nDr. Richard Horton, current Editor-in-Chief of The Lancet, one of the largest medical journals in the world, has publicly and unequivocally called out the scientific community for this negligence and outright fraud:\nThe case against science is straightforward: much of the scientific literature, perhaps half, may simply be untrue. Afflicted by studies with small sample sizes, tiny effects, invalid exploratory analyses, and flagrant conflicts of interest, together with an obsession for pursuing fashionable trends of dubious importance, science has taken a turn towards darkness. (source)\nThe sheer volume of statements from very credible people, along with the documents and evidence, attesting to this disturbing trend, is simply overwhelming.\nSee also: The Science Behind Anti-Depressants May Be Completely ‘Backwards’\nYet the unfortunate reality is that employees of these big corporations stand behind their products, working under the assurances of corporately-funded science which, obviously, has profit in mind rather than safety.\nThis is a widespread and alarming problem, and it’s great to see more people raise their voice against these shady practices. Dr. Marcia Angell, a physician and longtime Editor-in-Chief of the New England Medical Journal (NEMJ), is another such professional to do so:\nIt is simply no longer possible to believe much of the clinical research that is published, or to rely on the judgment of trusted physicians or authoritative medical guidelines. I take no pleasure in this conclusion, which I reached slowly and reluctantly over my two decades as an editor of the New England Journal of Medicine. (source)\nIt’s no secret that many household products are toxic to our health. Science has been confirming their dangers for years now (not that many of us needed this confirmation); these products are literally littered with a number of hazardous harmful chemicals.\nResearchers in the UK, for example, found that domestic products such as anti-insect sprays, deodorants, cleaning products, cosmetics, and more contain a number of cancer causing chemicals.\nThe researchers, from the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, who concluded that these types of everyday household products maybe be contributing to 100,000 deaths every single year in Europe, warn that the public remains unaware of these risks.\nAnother example of an insider speaking out against the industry is Foster Gamble, the direct descendant of one of the founders of Procter & Gamble (a company similar to Johnson & Johnson).\nHe himself explains that he was groomed for the establishment, but his ethical concerns prompted him to change direction.\nTo the left you will see a picture of him with Gerald Ford.\nFoster decided to leave the business and instead raise awareness about many issues, including the hazards associated with everyday household products that the corporations like his father’s manufacture.\nHe’s had an interesting life to say the least, and you can watch a documentary he released a few years ago here.\nA Few Of Many Products You Don’t Want To Have In Your Home…\nUnfortunately, many personal care products, like the ones made by Johnson & Johnson, are demonstrably dangerous to our health, and putting these products on our skin makes absolutely no sense.\nCancer, for example, is caused by physical carcinogens, chemical carcinogens, and biological carcinogens, all of which we surround ourselves with on a daily basis, and all of which can be found in various personal care products, such as many deodorants.\nCorporate manufacturers also approve thousands upon thousands of chemicals for use in cosmetics.\nThis in-house validation is all that is necessary to get a product onto the shelves, there being no regulatory process for approving these chemicals, leaving plenty of room for bias to influence the decision.\nAgain, chemicals are very effectively absorbed via your skin. For example, the Faculty of Pharmacy at the University of Manitoba, Canada, conducted a study to quantify how many sunscreen agents penetrate the skin after it is applied, and their results demonstrated significant penetration of all sunscreen agents into the skin. We are talking about multiple chemicals entering multiple tissues within the body. (source)\nThe dangers are generally multiplied for women, as they tend to use several different products on a daily basis. This combining of products can contribute to an overload of toxic chemicals.\nMakeup, for example, is a huge source for heavy metals. In the report “Heavy Metal Hazard: The Health Risks of Hidden Heavy Metals In Face Make up,” Environmental Defense tested 49 different makeup items, including foundations, concealers, powders, blushes, mascaras, eye liners, eye shadows, lipsticks, and lip glosses.\nTheir testing revealed serious heavy metal contamination in virtually all of their products:\n96 percent contained lead\n90 percent contained beryllium\n61 percent contained thallium\n51 percent contained cadmium\n20 percent contained arsenic\nThe Environmental Working Group has a great database to help you find personal care products that are free of potentially dangerous chemicals. Better yet, simplify your routine and make your own products.\nA slew of lotions, potions, and hair treatments can be eliminated with a jar of coconut oil, for example, to which you can add a high quality essential oil for scent.\nHaving commercial cleaning products in your home is not a smart idea either. Combined with all of the above products, and all of the below, it becomes easy to understand the dramatic rise in disease we’ve seen over the past few decades.\nAlternatives include baking soda, white vinegar, lemon juice, hydrogen peroxide, liquid castile soap, organic essential oils, mixing bowls, spray bottles, microfiber cloths, and more.\nWhy is it that these products could be manufactured to be much less hazardous, and in some cases cheaper, but aren’t?\nIt’s not hard to see why so many people believe that corporations have no qualms about contributing to the decline of human health. It’s a scary thought to be sure, but there are things to do and preventative measures/ lifestyle changes you can make.\nIt is ironic that we are always talking about raising money and finding a cure for cancer without ever discussing cancer prevention. How can we ever hope to tackle a problem without addressing its source?\nWhen it comes to health, air fresheners are probably some of the worst products you can have in your home.\nThese commonly contain 2, 5-dichlorophenol (2, 5-DCP), a metabolite of 1,4 dichlorobenzene.\nThis stuff is present in the blood of nearly all Americans, has been linked to lung damage, and has been known to cause organ system toxicity. According to the National Resources Defense Council:\nAir fresheners have become a staple in many American homes and offices, marketed with the promise of creating a clean, healthy, and sweet-smelling indoor atmosphere. But many of these products contain phthalates (pronounced thal-ates) – hazardous chemicals known to cause hormonal abnormalities, birth defects, and reproductive problems. NRDC’s independent testing of 14 common air fresheners, none of which listed phthalates as an ingredient, uncovered these chemicals in 86 percent (12 of 14) of the products tested, including those advertised as “all natural” or “unscented.” (source) (source)\nSOURCEce\nThe Archbishop Currently Exposing Vatican Pedophilia Fears For His Life & Flees The Country\n‘A serious mistake’: Read Barack Obama’s statement on President Trump’s decision to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal\nCalifornia is about to become the first state in the US to require solar power installations on all new homes\nA retired US Navy admiral just laid out a major threat from North Korea — and experts warn it could wipe out 90% of...\nHungary Introduces “Stop George Soros” Bill Effectively Forcing Out the Billionaire’s Organization\nGerman state orders crosses mounted at government buildings\nHigh Alert: State Warns Drivers To Use Caution On 4/20\nSen. Chuck Schumer to introduce marijuana decriminalization legislation\nUS & UK Intel Admits They Bombed Syria With No Proof of Sarin Chemical Attack\nWorld’s Most Diverse Rainforests Are Cleared For Breakfast Cereals, Margarine & Shampoo\nClinton Foundation Allegedly Hacked Exposing Thousands Of Donor Databases; “Pay To Play” Folder\nThis is What Happens To Your Body When You Eat Pink Himalayan Salt","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1397598"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.667629063129425,"wiki_prob":0.33237093687057495,"text":"Book Review: Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie\nI have a love hate relationship with movie adaptations of books. Whenever I hear a new movie/TV show coming out is based on a book, I must immediately read said book, watch said movie/TV show, and proceed to point out all of the ways in which it differed from the book. How the characters look NOTHING like how I imagined (or EXACTLY as I imagined), and generally drive whatever poor soul is watching the film adaptation with me insane. Don't get me wrong- I generally end up enjoying the film version too, but I of course have to point out the minutia of differences between the two.\nWhich brings me to this weeks read, Murder on the Orient Express. When I saw it was being made into a movie, of course I had to read it so that I could watch the movie and dish ad nauseum on the similarities and differences to the book. Brief synopsis shall we?\nA man is murdered on an overnight train across Europe. Stabbed a dozen times and locked in his room bolted from the inside with a chain drawn across the door, the case is both intriguing and perplexing to Hercule Poirot, passenger and fortunately international detective. At the behest of his friend, and owner of the rail company, Poirot investigates the crime, interviewing the passengers on the train and examining evidence. When the train is held up, in the middle of nowhere, due to a snow drift barricading the tracks, there is nowhere for the killer(s) to hid. Someone on the Orient Express is guilty, but who?\nThis book was not what I was expecting, in the best of ways. It was insanely detailed and methodically planned out. It was like a grown up Nancy Drew meets Clue mystery. Each character was unique and interesting, well fleshed out to the minds eye. There were quite a lot of them to keep up with (over a dozen), but Christie does a good job of providing the reader with reminders about who each character was and how they were interconnected to the others on board. The ending was not what I was expecting, which is always fantastic in a mystery. Overall, it was a really great read, one that I am sad I hadn't read earlier!\nNow (of course) I need to tell you how the movie compared right? There were some minor differences (characters changed ethnicity and appearances weren't quite as I had imagined) which I felt there was really no need for, and a few major changes which I felt there was absolutely no need for. It was certainly frustrating to say the least. I will say, the casting for Poirot was spot on, he carried the movie effortlessly. Overall it was kind of a disappointment but hey, at least they had great popcorn!\nREAD MY OTHER BOOK REVIEWS HERE!\nIn Book Reviews Tags Murder on the Orient Express","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1578812"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5131412744522095,"wiki_prob":0.4868587255477905,"text":"Hank Roberts June 24, 2019\nWatson and the Labour Right are helping Johnson’s electoral chances\nSo now we have it. Tom Watson et al have not only stabbed our twice overwhelmingly elected leader Jeremy, in the back - actually now in the front - but are acting in a way that will ensure that Johnson has the best chance possible of winning the next election.\nThe Times has revealed the blatantly obvious - that Johnson is drawing up early election plans if he wins the leadership race. Two-thirds of Tory members would back an alliance with Farage and the Brexit party according to a YouGov poll. Tory donors are reported to have urged such a pact. Clearly there is a move to seek to get a single pro-Brexit candidate in all constituencies if an early election is called.\nIn the referendum, the Conservatives pledged to implement the referendum result. They have repeated this, as, for example, on 4th April 2019. “The Government stands by its commitment to uphold the result of the 2016 referendum and to deliver the UK’s withdrawal from the EU”. After the referendum result Labour said that it would honour the result. On the Labour website today their position is “Labour accepts the referendum result, and Britain is leaving the EU”.\nWatson wants Labour to go back on this promise. He has made it plain that he doesn’t want a Corbyn-led Labour victory, by campaigning for his removal. Further the fallacious basis of his basically right-wing thinking is clear from what he has said. “I love Europe (by which he means the EU not the continent) because I am a democratic socialist” – though not democratic enough to accept the result of the referendum everyone, including him, said would decide the issue. He continued, “Socialism is achieving common causes by the strength of collective endeavour. That is what Europe (EU) is.” I.e. the EU = socialism.\nI was unaware of this. I thought we wanted to elect a Labour Government to introduce some much needed socialism into our right wing neo-liberal basket case economy which has come about, by the way, whilst we were, as we still are, in the EU. If Labour is manoeuvred into a straightforward remain and second vote position this will give Johnson his best chance.\nJames Meek in his book Dreams of Leaving and Remaining talks about a discussion with a friend who voted remain. ‘\"I don't get it,\" he said. \"What about all these powerful backroom interests in the City that are supposed to have the government in their pocket? Why aren't they stepping in behind the scenes to stop this?\" I would never endorse corrupt, opaque methods of subverting democracy, he was saying, but somebody has to stop this Brexit nonsense. What had happened to this thoughtful and fair-minded citizen, not ready to ditch democracy himself, but reluctantly prepared to let somebody else ditch it for him? … Since the referendum I'd been troubled by similar dark impulses. … Although I had voted to remain in the EU, and would do so again, I had my inner Leaver too … I'm not sure I want to stay in an organisation that makes such a big deal about us leaving it.’\nEU Referendum Results 2016\n17.4m Leave | 16.1 m Remain\n406 Leave | 242 Remain\nConstituency By Party\nLab: 148 Leave | 84 Remain\nCon: 247 Leave| 80 Remain\n9 Leave | 3 Remain\nBy MP\nBrexit isn’t the problem. It’s our MPs who are the problem.\nThe will of the majority in the referendum and the unrepresentative nature of a majority of MPs, is well illustrated in this summary of the results.\nThose that say the result shouldn’t stand because the Brexit side told lies are disingenuous. Remainers claimed that an EU army was a figment of the Leave side’s imagination. However, The Guardian told us that ‘claims for the Leave side about moves to unify Europe’s armed forces were nothing more than fantasy. Lord Ashdown said the idea of an EU army was “Nonsense”.’ However, since the referendum, this has been proven to be false. In November 2018, the French and German leaders Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel joined politicians Jean-Claude Juncker and Guy Verhofstadt in seeking the establishment of an EU-wide army. Politicians lying in elections, surely not? This is beyond naivety. The truth is simply, I don't like the result, so I won't accept it.\nThe answer to this was well made in a letter to the Spectator, “We have referendums …. for a reason, which is that they are a peaceful means of resolving our differences. If the Brexit vote is overridden, then the resolution of our differences afterwards is less likely to be peaceful”.\nHank Roberts\nNEU activist in a personal capacity and Brent Central CLP member\nChernobyl: The dangers of nuclear power\nReviewsStuart King June 20, 2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line41851"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6625180840492249,"wiki_prob":0.33748191595077515,"text":"Canada Ontario Ottawa\nCanada ›\nOttawa Division ›\nTop Undergraduate Studies in Administration Studies in Ottawa Canada\nGraduates of the Bachelor in Administration will have strong skills in management, business decision making and communication. This is because the degree, which is similar to a BBA program, intends to provide a broad education in the functional areas of a company.\nCanadians place great importance on learning, and have developed a first-rate education system with high standards. Not only does Canada provide a safe, clean environment, but it has been consistently ranked as one of the world’s best places to live in terms of quality of life by the UN.\nOttawa is recognized as one of the best educated cities in Canada. Almost half the population has graduated from the various universities and colleges. The main higher learning institution-University of Ottawa and Carleton University has contributed to this both directly and indirectly.\nBest Bachelor Degree in Administration Studies in Ottawa in Canada\nRead more about studying in Canada\nPrograms Online Read more about studying in Canada\nOnline | Pathway Programs | Masters | PhDs\nBachelor › Administration Studies\n1 Results in Administration Studies, Ottawa\nBachelor of International Business (BIB)\nCarleton University Undergraduate\nThe Sprott School of Business offers a Bachelor of International Business which is recognized as a leading program in international business education. With a focus on in ... [+]\nThe Sprott School of Business offers a Bachelor of International Business which is recognized as a leading program in international business education. With a focus on international business, you will develop cross-cultural skills, become proficient in another language and study abroad for a year in a country where that language is spoken.\nThe Bachelor of International Business delivers a unique business education that is truly international.\nThe Sprott School of Business also offers a separate Bachelor of Commerce degree program.\nExperience firsthand what Sprott has to offer by shadowing a Sprott student for a day. Learn more and register now for Sprott Student for a Day!... [-]\nCanada , Ottawa","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line496363"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7410709261894226,"wiki_prob":0.2589290738105774,"text":"NorthMarq Arranges $26.8 Million in Financing for Burr Ridge Medical Center in Metro Chicago\nNorthMarq Capital has arranged $26.8 million in first mortgage bridge financing for Burr Ridge Medical Center, a 105,000 sq. ft. medical office building in the Chicago suburb of Burr Ridge, Ill. The major tenant at the site is Loyola University Health System, which was acquired by Novi, Mich.-based Trinity Health for $175 million earlier this summer.\nBank of America provided the loan. The borrower is an affiliate of Sterling Bay Cos., a Chicago-based real estate investor and developer. During the underwriting process, Trinity Health agreed to acquire the Loyola University Health System. The deal with Trinity closed about 30 days after the loan was funded.\nTrinity is the nation’s fourth-largest Catholic health care system in the country with 47 hospitals, 379 outpatient centers, 31 long-term care facilities and numerous home health offices and hospice programs in 10 states. Trinity generates $7 billion in annual revenue. Loyola operates two hospitals with 820 beds.\nThe owner was able to convert a lease for two-thirds of the building into a long-term lease for the entire facility. The owners are positioning the building for sale in 2012.\nHeadquartered in Minneapolis, NorthMarq provides mortgage banking and commercial loan servicing in 32 offices nationwide, with an average annual production of $7 billion. NorthMarq also services a loan portfolio of nearly $40 billion.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line213546"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.839474618434906,"wiki_prob":0.839474618434906,"text":"Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds pay tribute to Conway Savage\nMichael Bonner\nThe pianist dies has died aged 58\nPhoto by Noel Vasquez/Getty Images\nTAGS: Nick Cave\nConway Savage, pianist with The Bad Seeds, has died at the age of 58.\nThe musician, who first joined the band in 1990, was initially diagnosed with a brain tumour in 2017.\nThe band confirmed the news in a statement on Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds website.\n“Our beloved Conway passed away on Sunday evening. A member of Bad Seeds for nearly thirty years, Conway was the anarchic thread that ran through the band’s live performances. He was much loved by everyone, band members and fans alike. Irascible, funny, terrifying, sentimental, warm-hearted, gentle, acerbic, honest, genuine – he was all of these things and quite literally ‘had the gift of a golden voice,’ high and sweet and drenched in soul. On a drunken night, at four in the morning, in a hotel bar in Cologne, Conway sat at the piano and sang ‘Streets Of Laredo’ to us, in his sweet, melancholy style and stopped the world for a moment. There wasn’t a dry eye in the house. Goodbye Conway, there isn’t a dry eye in the house. Love, Nick and the Bad Seeds.”\nOrder the latest issue of Uncut online and have it sent to your home – with no delivery charge!\nHe first played on the band’s sixth album The Good Son and he went on to play on Murder Ballads, The Boatman’s Call, Abattoir Blues/The Lyre Of Orpheus and Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!\nConway’s career also saw him Happy Organs, The Feral Dinosaurs and Dust On The Bible.\nLike us on Facebook to keep up to date with the latest news from Uncut.\nThe October 2018 issue of Uncut is now on sale in the UK – with Jimi Hendrix on the cover. Elsewhere in the issue, you’ll find exclusive features on Spiritualized, Aretha Franklin, Richard Thompson, Soft Cell, Pink Floyd, Candi Staton, Garcia Peoples, Beach Boys, Mudhoney, Big Red Machine and many more. Our free CD showcases 15 tracks of this month’s best new music, including Beak>, Low, Christine And The Queens, Marissa Nadler and Eric Bachman.\nUncut: the past, present and future of great music.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line131980"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6575771570205688,"wiki_prob":0.34242284297943115,"text":"Visit beautiful South Walsham Broad by turning off the River Bure opposite St Benet’s Abbey and continuing along Fleet dyke for a mile. The broad is divided into two sections – an outer broad which is a mecca for boaters in summer and is flanked by waterside houses – and a private inner broad.\nSouth Walsham village is a mile away from the broad and, unusually, has two historic churches in the same churchyard. The village also has a children’s play area and is home to Fairhaven Woodland and Water Gardens. This has stunning woodland pathways around South Walsham’s inner broad, where you can take a guided boat trip. There is also a cafe and shop.\nAfter cruising around South Walsham Broad the best place to moor is Fleet Dyke. From here take the footpath to South Walsham Broad’s tiny village staithe which is only suitable for rowing boats but has a lovely little green surrounded by thatched cottages and a bench overlooking the broad.\nNext visit the red phone box next to the village staithe which has been turned into a rather novel information point!\nA twenty minute walk along a footpath from the phone box brings you to School Road where there is a recreation ground and children’s play area next to the village hall.\nThe award-winning Fairhaven Woodland and Water Garden is located close to the village hall. This has 130 acres of wildlife gardens and nearly four miles of footpaths to explore through ancient woodland on the edge of South Walsham inner broad, on which you can take a guided boat trip. The beautiful water gardens were created by the 2nd Lord Fairhaven who bought the South Walsham Estate in 1946. On his death he requested that the gardens be left in Trust for the public to enjoy. Fairhaven has a popular tea room and gift shop plus plant sales, which are open to non-garden visitors. 01603 270449.\nAnother ten minute walk past the attraction brings you to South Walsham village centre which is worth visiting for its two medieval churches which share the same churchyard. St Mary’s dates from the late 13th century and is still used for worship today. St Lawrence’s was built in the following century but in 1827 was badly damaged by fire. It has since been restored as a centre for training and the arts.Don’t miss the atmospheric Sacristans gardens in the ruins of St Lawrence’s former nave and tower.\nIf you fancy a walk there is a six mile circular route from South Walsham Broad to Upton. This passes along Fleet Dyke and the River Bure taking in Upton Broad and Marshes Nature Reserve (see Upton).\nFleet Dyke\nFree overnight moorings in two main sections along Fleet Dyke managed by the Environment Agency. A footpath along Fleet Dyke leads to South Walsham Broad Staithe.\nRecently reopened pub serving lunch and dinner. 01603 270 049.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1253360"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7213484644889832,"wiki_prob":0.7213484644889832,"text":"Title 42. THE PUBLIC HEALTH AND WELFARE\nChapter 7. SOCIAL SECURITY\nSubchapter XVIII. HEALTH INSURANCE FOR AGED AND DISABLED\nPart E. Miscellaneous Provisions\nSection 1395ii. Application of certain provisions of subchapter II\n42 U.S. Code § 1395ii. Application of certain provisions of subchapter II\nAuthorities (CFR)\nThe provisions of sections 406 and 416(j) of this title, and of subsections (a), (d), (e), (h), (i), (j), (k), and (l) of section 405 of this title, shall also apply with respect to this subchapter to the same extent as they are applicable with respect to subchapter II, except that, in applying such provisions with respect to this subchapter, any reference therein to the Commissioner of Social Security or the Social Security Administration shall be considered a reference to the Secretary or the Department of Health and Human Services, respectively.\n(Aug. 14, 1935, ch. 531, title XVIII, § 1872, as added Pub. L. 89–97, title I, § 102(a), July 30, 1965, 79 Stat. 332; amended Pub. L. 92–603, title II, § 242(a), Oct. 30, 1972, 86 Stat. 1419; Pub. L. 98–369, div. B, title III, § 2354(b)(36), July 18, 1984, 98 Stat. 1102; Pub. L. 103–296, title I, § 108(c)(4), Aug. 15, 1994, 108 Stat. 1485.)\n1994—Pub. L. 103–296 inserted before period at end “, except that, in applying such provisions with respect to this subchapter, any reference therein to the Commissioner of Social Security or the Social Security Administration shall be considered a reference to the Secretary or the Department of Health and Human Services, respectively”.\n1984—Pub. L. 98–369 struck out the comma after “406” and struck out reference to subsec. (f) of section 405 of this title.\n1972—Pub. L. 92–603 struck out reference to provisions of section 408 of this title.\nAmendment by Pub. L. 103–296 effective Mar. 31, 1995, see section 110(a) of Pub. L. 103–296, set out as a note under section 401 of this title.\nAmendment by Pub. L. 98–369 effective July 18, 1984, but not to be construed as changing or affecting any right, liability, status, or interpretation which existed (under the provisions of law involved) before that date, see section 2354(e)(1) of Pub. L. 98–369, set out as a note under section 1320a–1 of this title.\nAmendment by Pub. L. 92–603 not applicable to any acts, statements, or representations made or committed prior to Oct. 30, 1972, see section 242(d) of Pub. L. 92–603, set out as an Effective Date note under section 1320a–7b of this title.\nTitle 42: Public Health\n42 CFR Subpart R - Provider Reimbursement Determinations and Appeals","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line699935"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7892633080482483,"wiki_prob":0.7892633080482483,"text":"Visitors » TV Series » Family Affair\nGILES FRENCH IS THE QUINTESSENTIAL GENTLEMAN'S GENTLEMAN\nBack in the '60s, television was crowded with sitcoms about single parents. Divorce was still taboo, but death in the family, it seemed, served as the basis for a good comedy. Jed Clampet, Andy Griffith and John Forsythe were amongst the many men of the tube who tragically and unexplainably had lost the mothers of their children before they made it to the small screen. And then there was Bill Davis of \"Family Affair.\"\n\"Family Affair\" was a twist on the bachelor father trend. Swinging single Bill Davis has a bombshell dropped on him when his brother and sister-in-law are tragically killed in a car wreck. A second bombshell is dropped when each of their three children turn up at Bill's bachelor pad needing a place to live. Although reluctant at first, Uncle Bill acquiesces, and along with his \"gentleman's gentleman,\" Mr. French, agrees to keep the family together.\nThe show began in 1966 and ran through the summer of 1971, and aside from the twist of who was raising the kids, the show was sweet and tame, like most family oriented shows of the day. Most episodes revolve around the usual family type 30-minute crisis with an instant fix, although \"Family Affair\" had a tendency to remember that the kids, six-year-old twins Buffy and Jody and their sixteen-year-old sister Cissy, were indeed orphans from a troubled past and handled that with sensitivity.\nMuch of the show's comic relief came from fastidious Mr. French, who had inherited most of the responsibilities of raising the kids as Uncle Bill was often traveling on business as a consulting engineer. A little miffed at his responsibilities as a nanny, French often appeared exasperated with the role, although there was never any doubt he cared deeply for his young charges.\nOne unique quality of \"Family Affair\" was that it took place in New York City, where the family lived in a luxurious Fifth Avenue apartment. This was very unusual, as most television families seemed to live on Primrose Lane, with a white picket fence in front of their large, Tudor home. Most of the show took place in the apartment, although they made frequent visits to the local park for outdoor activity.\nAnother unique aspect to the show was Uncle Bill's social life. Having kids did not keep him at home, and he was often seen escorting a lovely new female suitor. Cissy, being a teenager, also dated, and there was never a dull moment with the situations that would arise from that. It was, after all, the '60s, which was an era that created conflicts of its own. Over all, they were a well adjusted bunch considering the turmoil and tragedy that brought them all together.\nGiles French is the quintessential \"gentleman's gentleman.\" He's a proper Englishman, and is quite happy in the service of his bachelor boss. Mr. French's life is turned upside down when the Davis children come to live in the Fifth Avenue apartment of his employer, and is a little unhappy to find himself somewhat of a \"Mary Poppins.\" It is not long before French is totally charmed by the children, and the stuffy butler quickly warms up to his new responsibilities. Mr. French also has ties to the Royal Family, as we find out not long after the children arrive, and he whisks off to London to take care of the Queen for nine weeks as his brother, Nigel French, fills in for him at the Davis residence.\nThe very English Sebastian Cabot got his start as an actor in British stage and films in the late 1930s. By the '50s, he had received many roles in the US including early episodes of \"Gunsmoke\" and \"Alfred Hitchcock Presents.\" Older viewers will remember him as the criminologist on the TV drama \"Checkmate,\" which ran from 1960 to 1962. Youngsters will know Cabot's voice as the narrator to all the Disney Whinnie the Pooh cartoons of the '60s and '70s. Of course, he forever will be Mr. French to millions of TV aficionados. Cabot died of a stroke in 1977 after a long and prolific career. During the show's first season, Cabot took ill and needed to take several weeks off to convalesce. For those nine weeks, actor John Williams played the part of Mr. Giles French's brother, Nigel.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1003915"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5765568614006042,"wiki_prob":0.5765568614006042,"text":"Study to address D.C.-area flooding\nWashington, D.C. — The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Baltimore District, signed an agreement July 18 with the Metropolitan Washington Council of Governments (COG) to begin an approximately $3 million, three-year study on possible ways to address coastal flooding and storm damage across more than 57 square miles in the District of Columbia and surrounding areas of suburban Maryland and northern Virginia.\nThe National Capital Planning Commission will serve as a study advisor and will help coordinate federal participation.\n“As part of this study, we will investigate flood risk and identify ways to help protect vulnerable assets upon which the region relies,” said Col. Ed Chamberlayne, Baltimore District commander. “We hope the results of this study will aid in the long‐term resilience and sustainability of these coastal communities, and reduce the economic costs and risks to both people and property associated with large‐scale flood and storm events.”\nCoastal areas in metropolitan Washington contain a convergence of critical infrastructure that the region’s local governments, businesses, institutions and communities depend upon. This infrastructure includes water, energy and communication utilities; transportation hubs; federal buildings and military installations; national security facilities; and significant national monuments and cultural treasures.\nThis particular study, known as the Middle Potomac – Washington, DC and Metropolitan Area Coastal Flooding Feasibility Study, is a spin-off of the two-year North Atlantic Coast Comprehensive Study (NACCS) completed in January 2015 that was commissioned by Congress as part of the Hurricane Sandy recovery effort. The purpose of NACCS was to help local communities better understand their changing flood risks due to climate change and provide them tools to be better prepared for the future. The District is one of nine high-risk areas that was identified in NACCS as needing further analysis.\n“We are eager to work with our partners to assess these particularly-vulnerable urbanized areas and identify ways to manage the coastal flood risk to communities and infrastructure,” said Dave Robbins, Baltimore District coastal program manager. “This state-of-the-art analysis will expand on past studies by assessing a range of possible future conditions to account for uncertainty and changing risk over time resulting from climate and sea level change.”\nThe study costs will be split 50 percent from the Corps and 50 percent from COG and its cost-sharing partners.\n“This study is a critical next step in helping local governments along the Potomac and Anacostia rivers mitigate the risks from future flooding in metropolitan Washington coastal areas,” said Chuck Bean, COG executive director. “The study will help ensure the protection of the region’s investments in critical infrastructure into the future.”\nThe study area includes portions of the District of Columbia; Prince George’s and Charles counties in Maryland; and Arlington, Fairfax, and Prince William counties, and the City of Alexandria in Virginia, all located along the Anacostia and Middle Potomac rivers. The northern boundary for the study area is Bladensburg along the Anacostia River, and Little Falls along the Potomac River in Maryland. The southern boundary is near Fort Washington along the Potomac River.\n“Currently, the region lacks the tools to locally assess climate impacts on precipitation and groundwater, or to comprehensively understand how our infrastructure is vulnerable to flooding, coastal storms and sea level rise,” said Steve Walz, COG Department of Environmental Programs director. “Many individual agencies and organizations have been studying and making their own plans on how to deal with such risks; however, they still rely upon shared utilities, facilities and services. Therefore, each entity is only as protected as the weakest link in our regional infrastructure system. This study will help us to address those critical issues.”\nThis effort will result in a set of recommendations, which the Corps and others could implement. Coastal flood risk management strategies outlined in the plan and the study’s resulting data sets are meant to be customizable to incorporate into local mitigation plans. The Corps and coastal communities could seek additional funding for recommended flood risk mitigation projects to help the region reduce its risk from coastal flood hazards.\nIf you have any information or datasets related to flooding or flood risk management that may be relevant to this study, including reports, photos or other digital data, as well as climate change impact analyses or studies, please share this information with the study team by sending an email to MetroDCCoastalStudy@usace.army.mil.\nMetropolitan Washington Council of Governments\nU.S. Army Corps of Engineers","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line475225"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7343888282775879,"wiki_prob":0.7343888282775879,"text":"How infrastructure can improve mass evacuations\nIn recent months, there have been what seems like a steady stream of natural disasters, devastating communities across the U.S. and leaving their residents with the daunting choice of rebuilding or moving elsewhere.\nHouston saw unprecedented flooding after Hurricane Harvey made landfall late last month. Two weeks later, the entire state of Florida was battered by winds, a storm surge and inland flooding courtesy of Hurricane Irma. According to CoStar Group, as much as 27% of Houston’s commercial real estate market &mdash $55 billion worth — was damaged by flooding, and homebuilders there say they have growing customer lists yielding a years-long backlog of people desperate to have their homes repaired.\nCoreLogic estimated the total loss in Florida due to Irma at up to $65 billion. Meanwhile, many of the state's flooded rivers keep rising, contributing to additional evacuations and property damage.\nFollowing close on Irma's tail, Hurricane Maria left Puerto Rico without electricity for the foreseeable future and has called into question the U.S. territory’s ability to fully recover. Just as in Florida, the island’s rivers are swollen and ready to burst, raising fears about the structural integrity of dams. A crack in the Guajataca dam in the northwest region of Puerto Rico has already forced the evacuation of 70,000 residents downstream.\nWhile disasters like tornados present themselves too quickly to give the public much advance notice, others, like a hurricane or the slow spread of a wildfire, often, though not always, eave enough time for a quick and orderly mass evacuation. That is made easier through infrastructure capable of supporting such an exodus and the help of technology.\nWorking with what you've got\nBuilding extra highway lanes or a new roadway for the sole purpose of evacuation is unrealistic, said Alfonso Pedraza-Martinez, assistant professor of operations and decision technologies at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business. Instead, successful evacuations are all about managing the infrastructure already in place.\n\"Infrastructure is planned for average use,\" he said. \"You don't plan infrastructure for extreme cases. It is super expensive and most of the time [would be] wasted.\"\nThat means municipalities need to keep existing secondary roads in good condition and ensure that the services along those routes — such as gas, lodging and food — are able to support a large-scale evacuation.\nDuring the pre-Irma exodus, Florida Gov. Rick Scott caught flak when he refused to open southbound lanes to northbound traffic to ease the bottleneck on Florida’s two main north–south highways, Interstate 95 and Interstate 75. That decision, a strategy called contraflow lane reversal, could have included some flexibility by reversing only one lane of southbound traffic to northbound vehicles. \"You can't cut off services altogether,\" Pedraza-Martinez said. \"Having [traffic move] exclusively one way might make things worse if emergency services cannot travel the other way.\"\nMass transit might seem like the panacea. However, while buses, trains and increased air service might get people out of immediate harm’s way, the question then becomes where those people should go and how to expedite their trip back home once the storm is over, Pedraza-Martinez said. What's more, residents would need to be educated on how to access emergency public transportation services, something state and local officials would need to do well in advance of an emergency — and likely with some degree of regularity for residents of regions continually subject to extreme weather events.\nThere's no such thing as too many options when it comes to a mass evacuation. \"The more alternative modes of transportation you have and the more available they are, the more effective the evacuation process is going to be,\" Pedraza-Martinez said.\nPlanning ahead for evacuations\nSean Qian, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, said the country's state transportation departments have been able to amass considerable information about driving patterns and the use of highways and main arterials during the last decade. That data could be useful in creating models that can inform officials' plans for high-capacity events like a mass evacuation. Closing lanes, reprogramming traffic signals and emergency traffic routing are some of the measures on the table when trying to get people from point A to point B safely and efficiently in such a situation, he said.\nEmergency information should be managed and dispensed from a centralized, informed state agency, he said, as current crowdsourced driving apps, like GasBuddy, have not proven reliable for such large-scale, coordinated use as a mass evacuation. That particular app relies on user updates to inform others about gas availability and pricing. In a fast-changing, emergency situation like a hurricane, the information posted online could lag real-time changes. \"What we really need from an agency perspective is for them to provide users a very specific supply map and [information about] congestion, and travel time in a much more accurate manner — the information people need to know as part of the evacuation process,” Qian said. \"These critical pieces of information should be updated and corrected in the real-time, along with information that proactively route evacuees.\"\nNew technology has a role to play as well. That can be as simple as LED lighting and as complex as flood simulation programs projecting water levels and making evacuation decisions more accurate and timely.\n\"Infrastructure is planned for average use. You don't plan infrastructure for extreme cases.\"\nAlfonso Pedraza-Martinez\nAssistant Professor, Indiana University\nKen Forbes, senior marketing representative for lighting and water at Johnson Controls, said LED roadway lighting could play a critical role in safer mass evacuations. State transportation departments like those in Washington and Michigan, are gradually adopting the technology to save money and create a better quality lighting experience for drivers.\n\"In an emergency, [officials] can highlight a problem area of the city by raising the light or changing the color of the light,\" he said. LEDs can also be programmed to illuminate an evacuation route, pinpoint areas of flooding — aided by an added layer of climate detection sensors — and improve visibility in heavy rain, fog or smoke.\nMost roads are already equipped with light poles, which is the basic infrastructure required for LED luminaires. That means installation would consist of swapping out the fixture head.\nTiming matters\nEvacuating as early as possible is critical. That's where simulation software comes in. Models can be created to project where, how much and for how long water will flow into a certain area during rain events. To be effective, they require accurate topography and an up-to-date layout of the structures that could change the flow of water, according to Eric Chappell, community evangelist for Autodesk’s InfraWorks 360.\n\"You model an event based on rainfall and topography,\" he said. \"Once you know what you're up against, you can change numbers and run a different model very quickly.\" The models can also include the impact of storm debris on water flow, as well as scenarios in which a dam bursts. InfraWorks modeled the Oroville dam spillway failure after the incident to give a clearer view of what happened as well as to forecast where the water might have ended up had the dam fully broken.\nIt takes a combination of practical and technology-driven measures to maximize public safety during an emergency and ensure a safe getaway for locals. State DOTs can lay the groundwork for future emergencies today by evaluating their evacuation procedures, promoting programs that keep infrastructure in working order and ensuring they have a viable plan to relay accurate information to the public before, during and after disaster happens.\nFiled Under: Technology Infrastructure","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1268970"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6231565475463867,"wiki_prob":0.3768434524536133,"text":"PSV 13/14 Nike Centenary Home Football Shirt\nDutch football club PSV Eindhoven will step onto the pitch next season in a bold new home kit that recalls some of the team's greatest achievements. PSV’s famous red-and-white stripes have been replaced by a solid red shirt that references the colours worn when they won the UEFA Cup in 1978.\nThe red jersey also recalls PSV’s successful 1987-88 campaign in which they won the Dutch league, the Dutch cup, and for the first and only time in their history, Europa Cup 1.\nCreative Football T-Shirts at Footytees.com - Featuring prints by a range of talented artists\nThe new shirt features a white collar and white cuffs with a gold trim on the sleeves.The club crest is adorned with the club’s founding year and encircled by a special golden laurel and the number \"100\" in honor of the club's centennial. The back of the shirt below the collar also features the club’s founding year of 1913 in a distinctive gold.\nInside the back of the neck on a bonded woven label is an outline of the famous arch from the main gates of Phillips stadium and the motto “Eendracht maakt macht” (\"Unity creates strength”). On either side of these gates are the years 1913 and 2013 to celebrate the club’s centenary.\nThe new home shorts are white with a thin red stripe along the side, while the socks are white with a red band at the top and a red block on the back.\nMike and Bert\nthat shoud be afc home kit next season\nMatthew Wilkinson\nNice, looks very similar to the 2000-02 kit\nProbably a bit too soon to return to this design, though it is cool\non really psv but I like it\nMatt Holman\nNot PSV's style, but for a centenary kit looks nice.\nThat is verry nice!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line531931"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6531841158866882,"wiki_prob":0.34681588411331177,"text":"Education Sciences\nSocial and Human Sciences\nSocial Communication – Journalism\nTourism and Hotel Business Administration (Hospitality)\nPublic Accounting\nCultural Heritage Studies\nFinance, Government and International Relations\nAdmissions – Undergraduate programs\nAdmission – Postgraduate programs\nStudents – Undergraduate\nEnglish Español Français EN\nThe Externado ascending continuism\nThe multiplier of the inheritance (1963-2012)\nThe Colonel who became a Teacher (1933-1963)\nStrength of character (1918-1933)\nThe young lawyer who revived freedom (1886-1895)\nRisk management and emergency plan\nPhysical spaces\nAir tour of the University\nAbout Bogotá\nBuildings H and I: Spaces for freedom\nWelcome, this is your home! With this traditional, affectionate, and endearing phrase, on Thursday, February 15, 2018, Rector Juan Carlos Henao will welcome Externadistas visiting the new H and I buildings the University inaugurates on its 132nd anniversary.\nWe have reasons to be happy. We are going to inaugurate two towers that virtually double the University’s capacity: 48 thousand new square meters. These buildings are a collective effort by the community – we have been building them for five years, we are excited to reach the end of the tunnel. This is a huge, beautiful, aesthetic, technological, intelligent, space so we can have more education for freedom, which is our main motto,” stated the Rector to frame such a special moment in the history of the Externado de Colombia.\nBrief history of a dream\nThe dream began to take shape soon after the completion of the last great work on the campus, building G, in February 2004. Motivated by the recurrent Externado phenomenon that whenever new spaces are opened, shortly thereafter they are outgrown due to the University’s growth, the then Rector, Fernando Hinestrosa, wondered why not take advantage of the terrain located between the two carriageways of the Circunvalar Avenue close to 12B Street, acquired in the 1970s that, for years, was used as a parking lot.\nWith this idea, the Rector began working with the firm García – Reyes Arquitectos; particularly with Enrique Garcia Reyes and his son Robert – who in the past had completed several flawless works at the Externado – with builders, and different University units.\nThus began the designs for this hillside, amoeba-shaped lot, with an unrivaled view: on the one hand, the eastern hills of Bogotá; and on the other, the city, its savanna, and on a clear day, the snowy peaks that crown the distant central mountain range.\nTo start, two “small’ drawbacks: the 35 thousand square meters lot was marked by a great X formed by high voltage power lines; plus, a main aqueduct pipe and a creek that flowed through the lot. The problem required costly and arduous work with the Bogotá Power Company to relocate the electrical lines to places where it would not affect the future construction.\nThen, the comings and goings of designs, initiatives, solutions, between Rector Hinestrosa and the designers to finally, in 2006, submit the results to the Capital District, where the initiative had to surmount tremendous challenges and obstacles. At long last, the approval of the project meeting all the requirements was obtained.\nThe land for the new construction encountered limitations; first by the transfer of the power lines, and then, due to planning regulations requiring work development in the surrounding area and land concessions. In the end, the available construction area was seven thousand square meters.\nShortly before his death, in early 2012, Rector Hinestrosa was able to view some excavations, machinery, and construction workers wearing helmets working on the site – a clear signal that his dream would become a reality.\nThe inside: A splendid reality\nThe companies involved, mainly García – Reyes Arquitectos and PAYC Construction Company, have aptly interpreted the philosophy of a university whose image is projected in aesthetic and comfortable spaces, but at the same time austere – there is no ostentation or splurge -, whose goal is to provide an ideal environment giving free rein to academic work, comprising research, imagination, creation, thinking, and discovering a better country and a better world.\nEven though for practical reasons, they are named H and I, they are not two buildings; in reality, it is a harmonic and integrated complex, where each unit is a mirror image of the other. Its stair-step design fits the slope, and an open space unites and separates the two buildings at the same time, allowing the flow of air, light, and view, between the hill and the city. The light brown marble of the facade – proposed by Rector Hinestrosa to break the brick tradition that characterized the Externado building complex, considering it more suitable to the environment – the stone, granite, fine woods, and latest technology synthetic materials are present, together with vertical gardens cascading from the upper floors to the basement.\nDifferent size and style classrooms occupy most of the space, contrasting with the static conception of the old classroom: furniture, equipped with wheels, adapts to different situations occurring in the teaching process – learning in a way to easily form small groups or a large round table. Noteworthy are two beautiful rooms for Law practices. Outside noise has been isolated, and the walls and ceilings have an overlay preventing resonance.\nDistributed throughout both buildings are 53 glass cubicles, sound-proofed, designed for study and small group discussion by students and professors. The perfect place to develop work, discuss, review, and even write on the wall, as there, it serves as a blackboard.\nLeisure areas for students and professors, with vending machines for snacks and drinks, and information screens. And, for those who prefer the outdoors, there are terraces with tables and umbrellas, surrounded by flower beds. Also, strategically located, are donuts and shakes concessions to satisfy cravings.\nA grand cafeteria, with concession restaurants, and a space equipped with microwave ovens for those who prefer to bring lunch from home; stationery, photocopiers, printers; restrooms, some mixed; and parking lots for cars, motorcycles, and bicycles.\nTower I has a large reconfigurable room for social events and art exhibits, connected to the modern kitchen facilities which, in turn, serve the Casa Externadista, which has been extended to the new complex.\nThe traditional Externadista Bookstore also has a space in the new complex; an enjoyable area to search for publications, get-togethers, and coffee tasting.\nPeople flow is guaranteed by elevators and escalators found at strategic and equidistant points. Individuals with disabilities can move around easily and have the services suitable for their needs – ramps, elevators, bathrooms – and in classrooms and auditoriums, places to comfortably park their wheelchairs.\nNot in vain these new buildings are considered “intelligent.” They are equipped with electronic systems enabling the automatic execution of an extensive set of functions providing users optimal connectivity.\nWi-Fi in all indoor and outdoor areas; electrical connections in all classrooms seats, students, and professors’ leisure rooms. Remote control for video beam, backdrop, sound, and room lighting; a centralized security system (door opening and closing) in lounges and auditoriums; simultaneous translation booths with state of the art technology in all auditoriums; programmable escalators in both directions; elevators that optimize trips based on passenger demand (destination floor is selected at the waiting room); LED lighting, among other elements and amenities.\nOther technological developments that stand out are the “floor overlays” of the terraces which can be lifted easily, without breaking, when performing additional work or making repairs. Also, the “sunshields” on the windows of the classrooms on which, at certain times of the year, the sun reflects directly, contributing to reduce the heat without affecting the amount of light; and a vertical power cable and data duct, allowing inspection without affecting the buildings’ structure. It is wonderful to see those perfectly combed skeins of cables.\nBuildings H and I breathe: the bio-climate system, consisting of permanent circulation of outside air in all spaces, allows the regulation of natural temperature, so the air-conditioning use is reduced to a minimum.\nA rainwater storage tank with a 210 cubic meters capacity, used for watering gardens and restrooms. An intensive tree-planting program seeking not only to replace some the ones that had to be cut down during the construction but also to increase the presence of new, mostly native species, are some of the features of the site, committed to the environment. A total of 1156 trees were planted.\nLand ceded to the Capital District\nAs expected, the project complies with all the Capital District urban specifications. The land corresponding to “type A” transfer was allocated at the northern end of the complex; an area of 3 thousand square meters with a “pocket park.” This land, to be delivered to the city of Bogotá as a public space, equipped with physical exercise equipment, gardens, and trails, also connects the city center with the forest reserve area located in the upper part of the Avenida Circunvalar. This contribution is of great significance for the communities surrounding the Externado, such as the Egypt area. Added to this conceded area is the “environmental control strip” – 10 meters wide – surrounding the lot, adding almost 7 thousand square meters.\nThe old path – refurbished – from the campus to the Circunvalar parking lot, passing through the Absent Maestros Garden is the main route for those going to the new buildings from the University. Two pedestrian traffic lights on the lower road will facilitate people flow. From this lower sector, the main entrance is through a wide stone staircase. Vehicle access is through the old parking entrance on the upper road, leading to three parking basements.\nThe main square\nThe main square unites and separates the two buildings. The decoration consists of a body of water where aquatic plants and a fountain will be placed.\nOn February 15, 2018, Externadistas will gather to corroborate that the new 48 thousand square meters construction, distributed in Buildings H and I, fulfill the initial objective of increasing, in geometric proportion, the quality of University life.\nTelephones: (571) 3537000, 3420288 and 3419900\nInstitutional documents and financial rights Política de tratamiento de los datos personales\nVisit the University\nAerial travel\nH & I Buildings\nMONITORED BY MINEDUCACIÓN\nLegal Registration: Resolution 92 of March 9, 1926, issued by the Ministry of Goverment","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1681132"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6833505630493164,"wiki_prob":0.3166494369506836,"text":"Bangladesh!\nBangladesh: Traditional houses. Go Now!\nThis low-lying country has historic ties to India and Pakistan, but today maintains a wholly unique culture. Explore Bangladesh!\nIndonesia!\nIndonesia: Lombok. Go Now!\nThis archipelago nation is culturally diverse from big cities to isolated islands. Begin Your Journey!\nJordan!\nJordan: Petra. Go Now!\nTucked away in this Middle Eastern country, the famed city of Petra (pictured) links the past to the present culture. Explore Jordan!\nMongolia!\nMongolia: Desert. Go Now!\nThis vast country has a culture that spans past and present... a nomadic life shifting to a modern & sedentary society. Begin Your Journey!\nKyrgyzstan!\nKyrgyzstan: Tian Shan Mountains. Go Now!\nThe mountains, including the Tian Shan Mountains (pictured), give Kyrgyzstan a unique culture, partially formed from this isolation from the mountains. Go Now!\nArrival, Victoria Peak, & the Outlaying Islands\nAfter landing late, it took about two and a half hours to get out of the airport and to my hotel on Hong Kong Island; I immediately went to bed.\nI woke up and joined a colleague for breakfast; he's from Hong Kong and was excited to get me trying the local cuisine; soon after starting, I was not so excited to be trying the local cuisine. The first dish was a revolting dumpling, and after consuming it I inquired on it's content: shark fin and pork; not a good combination. Next was the sticky rice and pork, plus a number of other seafood-based dishes. Since seafood is not my taste, I choked down as much as I could, then headed off to Victoria Peak with my colleague.\nThe views from the peak are quite impressive, especially considering I got in late last night and this was my first view of the city's skyline. As you look towards Victoria Harbour you can see the skyline and Kowloon, however in the other direction you see little more than mountains, trees, and a small fishing village in the distance... that is once you look past the shopping mall beneath you.\nMy colleague had some business to take care of so I was on my own for the afternoon, beginning with an island he recommended, Cheung Chau, which is about an hour from Hong Kong Island by ferry. The island is within sight of Hong Kong Island, but is a world away. There are no cars here and the place boasts little more than mountains, fishing villages, and a rather large harbor filled with fishing boats. The streets are filled with bikers and street cleaners, but only a couple motorized vehicles, such as mopeds and golf carts. The island is peaceful and dotted with temples and lonely sand beaches. It made a great place to relax for an afternoon, a world away from the chaos of Hong Kong Island's busy business district.\nFor dinner I went to my hotel restaurant, but after sitting down I was informed that there was no menu, they only served a buffet (although when you arrive there is a menu sitting there to greet you). I was tired and hungry so decided to stay, but it seemed like everything was either seafood or contained duck liver... even the custard desserts were topped with chopped duck liver. I found it difficult to eat, but stumbled upon a pork chop and salad... I knew the threat of salad washed in the local water, but I had few options and the dirty salad was the best among those options. As I was leaving dinner, I got on the elevator to my room only to see a giant poster advertising the hotel restaurant's nightly \"Duck Liver Seafood Buffet.\" I wished I had gotten on this elevator earlier so I knew to avoid the place. It will be a lesson for tomorrow's dinner I guess.\nKowloon & the Temple Street Night Market\nI again ventured down to the hotel restaurant for breakfast, but was more cautious this time. Fortunately, the food was a combination of Chinese and Western and I found many suitable options, particularly the fried noodles and fried rice, both of which were simple, but good.\nDue to a work mix-up, I again had the entire day free to do as I pleased. I began by wandering around the city aimlessly. The city is very diverse, especially on Hong Kong Island; there are people from every part of the world, in particular Chinese, Japanese, Indians, Middle Easterners, and Europeans and it was not uncommon to see any number of these people in any single city block. Perhaps due to this diversity there are a number of confusions among the people. While the cars drive on the left (due to being under British rule for so many years) the people don't know which side of the sidewalk to walk on. Some walk on the right, some on the left, and escalators are just as confusing, with some forcing you to move left and others forcing you to move right. Even in the convention center, the escalators on one floor force a person to go up on the left side and the next floor will force a person to go up on the right side. After trying to figure out the system, which I failed to do, I escaped the heat for a couple hours before heading off to Kowloon.\nIn the afternoon I went to Kowloon, where I again wandered aimlessly, finding a nice park, some British-influenced architecture, Nathan Street, and finally Temple Street Night Market. Temple Street Night Market is an odd combination of local necessities, sex shops, and tourist souvenirs. While the local necessities are mostly reserved for shops just off the Temple Street, the sex shops (for sex toys and prostitute houses) are slightly hidden away from sight, behind the main shops, but still quite obvious it you have a keen eye. My focus however was on the tourist souvenirs; while I typically hate shopping and rarely buy souvenirs, I found a painting I liked so kicked my bargaining skills into full gear. I got them down quite a bit until I purchased it for about $3 US. I also ran into my flight attendant here and we talked for a bit before I headed off to find some food that didn't smell like grease or seafood... a greater challenge than one would expect.\nI found a shopping mall (one of many) that had a food court with a wide selection of Asian food: Vietnamese, Korean, Japanese, Sichuan, Hainan, Taiwan, etc. I found a beef place with great fried rice. It was served on a ironcast bowl that came straight out of the oven; it was piping hot and the food was thrown on raw (other than the rice of course). I sauteed the raw beef, corn, and sauce in the pan until it was cooked through and mixed thoroughly; it was incredibly good, despite coming from a food court in what is considered one of the culinary capitals of the world.\nMeeting & Work\nMy meeting started today at the Convention Center. The opening ceremony consisted of two guys dressed in a dragon costume running around the room as another person pounded a drum. As the dragon came up to me I was told to pet it as they took my picture. The meeting was typical, during free time I went down to the first floor to see the pictures of the hand over of power from Britian to China (which took place in this building) and stepped outside to see the Golden Bauhinia, a gift from the Chinese government to Hong Kong.\nMore meetings today; not much to add to that.\nMy last day of meetings, again spent most of the day indoors, just getting excited about my trip to mainland China and trying to figure out these sandal boots many of the locals are wearing; they're incredibly hideous.\nDragon Boat Festival & Hong Kong Disneyland\nI'm done with meetings, so decided to spend the day at the Dragon Boat Festival on Lantau Island before catching an evening flight to Beijing. The Dragon Boat Festival I went to (there are many) was in Tai O, which I was told is one of the more traditional festivals and is more about the ceremonies than the actual races. Tai O is a small fishing village on the western side of Lantau Island and many of the houses are perched on sticks over the river. The village is small and seemingly peaceful, but not on this day. Today the streets were packed, flags flew over head and buses to the village were running every 5-10 minutes.\nThe festival in Tai O begins with each of the four fishing associations rowing to one of the four local temples to gather the deity statues, which they then take to the race sight in order to pacify the waters. As the dragon boats do this, there is a parade of boats behind them burning paper and throwing it into the water, dropping rice dumplings into the water, and photographing every event through telephoto lenses.\nThe festival is a celebration to Qu Yuan, a national hero who drowned himself in protest of the government over 2,000 years ago. As the locals attempted to save their hero, they threw rice dumplings into the water so the fish wouldn't eat Qu's body and they beat drums to scare away the fish. At the end, they failed to save Qu, but a festival was created in his honor and today (in Tai O at least) these traditions continue as the rowers row in rhythm to the drums.\nMore than the festival and the eventual race, the crowd provided a great site and entertainment as kids played in the streets and rowers prepared for the race, which gave the winning team little more than pride, but also bragging rights for the entire next year.\nAfter the dragon boat races I headed to Hong Kong Disneyland to get my brother a shirt, but still had plenty of time before my flight so stopped in the park for a couple hours. The park is similar to Disneyland, but smaller and more kid-focused. There were few rides catered to anyone over the age of about 10 and this proved to be the crowd as well; teenagers and young adults (without kids) were scarce. Fortunately, this also meant that Space Mountain was practically a walk-on all day.\nTo read more about my trip to Hong Kong Disneyland, visit From Screen to Theme's Thursday Treasures. After Disney, I headed out to catch my evening flight to Beijing.\nTiananmen Square, Mao's Mausoleum, Forbidden City, & Temple of Heaven\nI got in real late last night, well this morning actually; at about 1:00am and got to the hotel at about 2:30 after standing in the taxi line for a good 30-45 minutes. This morning I did little other than wake up and try to get my bearings straight, which I did with the help of the front desk staff.\nI caught a public bus about 2 stops to the subway station, where I headed into downtown Beijing. The subway is very easy to use and quite efficient, although even at about 10:00am the crowds are large. I got off at Tiananmen East for my first stop: Mao's Mausoleum. After dropping my camera off across the street in the lockers I got in line and slowly went through security checkpoint after security checkpoint to see the man who created Communist China. The rules here were strict and they were turning away anyone with water, shorts, and even sandals.\nThe scene inside was disturbing, but expected. The locals paying their respects acted in an almost religious manner, while the guards demanded complete silence and ushered each of us in and out rather quickly. We were fairly far from Mao himself, perhaps 10-15 feet away, but even from that distance he looked slightly waxy and fake. After leaving the building, most people still remained silent, but I felt little emotion, so collected my camera and continued my day of sightseeing.\nI returned to Tiananmen Square after getting my camera and moved from south to north, photographing the incredible gates, beginning with Front Gate and ending with the Gate of Heavenly Peace, in the process being filmed by literally thousands of cameras, which are mounted on every light post on Tiananmen Square.\nI passed under the Gate of Heavenly Peace into the first of a couple courtyards leading to the Forbidden City. I shooed away a couple dozen hawkers, bought my ticket to the Forbidden City (or the Palace Museum) and headed in. The city is a maze of elaborately decorated gates and buildings. As you enter, it's easy to follow all the tourists from one gate to the next in a process leading straight through the middle until reaching the Imperial Garden at the city's northern end. I also followed this path, since most of the highlights are on this north-south axis, but after reaching the garden I got off the beaten track and found some corners of the Forbidden City quite lonely and forgotten.\nThroughout the complex there are a number of small exhibits, however few are well kept; most are difficult to see through the poor glass and layers of dust on each article being viewed. None-the-less, these side alleys and hidden rooms give one the sense of the size and enormity of the complex. Despite this, the highlight was still the Imperial Garden and the incredible temple standing on the rock mountain in the garden. Unlike the rest of the city, the garden seemed much more natural and at peace, being one of the few places that offered any sort of green space within the city walls.\nMy final stop for the day was the Temple of Heaven, however getting there proved to be a challenge. It is very rare to find anyone in Beijing that speaks English and even at the subway station I couldn't find a single person despite asking the person at the help desk, which had a sign in English that read something to the sorts of \"Need Help, Ask Here.\" I took an educated guess, but had no map with subway stations on it so got off one stop too soon. I showed a local the name of the Temple of Heaven in Chinese and he directed me to the temple, which was only a few blocks away.\nThe Temple of Heaven is a Confucian temple that is perfectly round. It stands on a square base (the symbol of heaven is the circle and the symbol of earth is the square), does not contain a single nail, and is so perfectly shaped that it echoes if you speak along the walls or if you stand directly in the middle of the temple and whisper. It is an architectural wonder and the detail work is amazing, however also appealing was the park surrounding the temple itself. This park seems to be a magnet for locals and dozens of people were out playing cards and gambling anyplace they could find enough seats to gather. The scene was active and lively, however the day and the heat had taken all the liveliness out of me so after only an hour or two I headed back to the hotel for the night.\nBack at the hotel I met up with Cindy and we headed out to eat at a dumpling place, which offered a substantial improvement from the food in Hong Kong. We had almond and walnut chicken with a spicy twist, pork and green onion dumplings, and beef dumplings with tomatoes and cilantro; all of which was delicious.\nForbidden City & the Great Wall of China\nSince Cindy got in late yesterday (due to a flight delay of about 20 hours) we decided to take a tour today so she could see both the Forbidden City and the Great Wall of China.\nOur bus was running late in the morning, so we were informed that we should take a taxi to another hotel because the bus couldn't make it to our hotel due to traffic. We did only to find out that at the next hotel our bus was waiting on a few people who had decided to stop at Starbucks for their morning coffee. We paid for our trip, then waited on the bus in front of Starbucks. As we waited, our driver and the local guard in front of the Starbucks got in a fight and stood in the street blocking traffic as they yelled at each other at the top of their lungs. It was interesting and our English-speaking guide passed it off as a view into the life of locals in Beijing. Soon enough we got the rest of our party and were off to the Forbidden City.\nThe Forbidden City tour was typical and contained much of the same information I had read yesterday, but the tour seemed to brush over my favorites parts of the city and only breezed through the Imperial Garden as the focus was on history and naming Emperors that none of us had ever heard of. The most striking thing was that the skies were crystal clear since it had poured last night and that caused the smog to disappear (at least temporarily).\nAfter the Forbidden City, we headed to a Silk Factory, which only encouraged me to never buy silk, then off to a Jade shop for lunch and more sales being pushed at us. Lunch was very good though; we had a number of plates to chose from including vinegar pork, sweet and sour chicken, beef with onions and green peppers, something like buffalo chicken, roasted peanuts, and the standard rice. Everything I tried was very good and my chopstick skills are vastly improving.\nAs we were waiting for our bus to depart we watched the Turks in our tour group excessively buy all sorts of junk, including one girl who bought 4 pairs of knock-off glasses, but had no idea if she had gotten a good deal on them when asked.\nWe made it to the Great Wall of China and had about two hours there. Mao had climbed this same section of the Great Wall (Badaling) and stated that \"He who has not climbed the Great Wall is not a true man.\" Although he wasn't specific on which part of the Great Wall one must climb to be a man, he said it on this section of the Great Wall and it seems every Chinese tourist to the Great Wall must climb to the same exact tower from which he made this statement. Upon learning this, and the fact that 95% of the tourists to the Badaling Great Wall (also the most visited section of the Great Wall) go straight to the \"Mao watchtower\" (on the right side), we went left and had the wall nearly to ourselves; the views were spectacular and the crowds were minimal.\nBack in Beijing we headed off to dinner, got lost, then stumbled upon a place with great smelling beef and chicken kebabs. We found ourselves at a table with a local who spoke a bit of English and he helped us order fried rice and \"beef on a stick,\" an influence from the Mongols and Muslims in western China. The beef was very fatty and too spicy for us, however the fried rice was among the best I've ever had and for only 10 yuan ($1.60) it was well worth the money.\nUnfortunately, our time is limited so tomorrow morning we're off to Lhasa, Tibet.\nLhasa, Tibet\nArrival, Potala Palace, Jokhang Temple & Barkhor Street\nAfter a lot of confusion and a mess at the airport in Beijing we finally made it to Lhasa, Tibet; there seemed to be a hold up due to the fact that we were going to Tibet. Flights to Tibet have a different security line and we had to have our Tibet visa to get our airline tickets, then needed to show our visa again at security and again at the gate getting on the plane. It seems the Chinese government has little interest in letting foreigners into Tibet.\nOur flight stopped over in Chengdu before continuing on to Lhasa, which stands at about 13,000 feet, making life a little more difficult considering the lack of oxygen at that altitude.\nWe arrived with no problems, met our guide at the airport and headed into Lhasa, which is well over 30 miles away, taking about an hour to get to our hotel. Along the path into town we stopped at a stone carved Buddha and passed by about a dozen Chinese military compounds, which seemed to take up about as much of the city as the Tibetan part of Lhasa.\nAs we closed in on our hotel our Tibetan guide, Dorje, informed us that the Chinese government was no longer issuing visas to Tibet. June posed many problems for the Chinese government in Tibet, such as the fact that the month is a holy month for the Tibetans and it was the anniversary of the \"opening of Tibet\" or as much of the world calls it, \"the Chinese takeover of Tibet.\" In fear of protests, we were one of the last groups into Tibet and Dorje said he heard that no one would receive a visa for two months, if not longer, so we were very fortunately to even get this far.\nWhen we were left at our hotel, Dorje warned us to take it easy and do nothing for the night or we'd regret it tomorrow. We took the advice to heart and, after discovering that the hotel restaurant was closed, ate granola bars in our room, drank plenty of water, watched a propaganda movie about Mao (in Chinese), then went to bed early.\nOur tour today began with the most iconic monument in Tibet: Potala Palace, the Dalai Lama's Winter Palace. The building is incredible from every perspective and viewpoint, making it truly breathtaking, particularly given the altitude.\nWe took our time in the palace's gardens and exterior, taking plenty of pictures of the 13-story building standing on one of the city's largest hills. On our way up the many stairs we heard singing and stomping, which Dorje explained was the traditional way of making Tibetan buildings. The people worked in two teams, divided into men and women, each group taking a turn singing as they stomped to the beat. The roofs and walls of parts of this, along with many buildings in Tibet are made of clay and stones; the people stomp the stones into the clay, beginning with large stones, then continuing on to finer and finer stones until the surface is smooth and solid. At this point the surface is covered with yak butter and the sun bakes it to form a surface that lasts for nearly 100 years. This labor-intensive process is the reason, Dorje explained, that there is a strict one hour time limit in the Potala Palace. The building is not strong enough to withstand thousands of tourists each day spending hours in there, so each day the building is limited to only 2,500 guests and each may only spend 1 hour in the building itself, although staying in the gardens for the rest of the day is not a problem.\nAs we reached the top, near the entrance, the Chinese tourists (which were about 99% of all tourists here) decided that us exotic white people were worthy of their pictures and soon there was a line of Chinese tourists waiting to get their pictures taken with us... I hope that wasn't my 10 minutes of fame, I didn't even understand what they were saying.\nOnce in the Potala Palace itself the tour was a combination of history and culture. The white buildings in the palace were the Dalai Lama's personal residence and government buildings, while the red buildings were the religious buildings. As both religious and political leader of Tibet, the Dalai Lama ruled over both of these realms from the palace. Unfortunately, most of the white palace has been altered to destroy both the memories of the Dalai Lama as well as the independent political aspirations of Tibet. Due to this, most of the tour took place in the Red Palace, which contained numerous religious relics prized by the Tibetans, who are primarily \"yellow hat Buddhists.\" We made it out in just about an hour, took a few more pictures, then headed off to lunch.\nLunch consisted of yak momos and a pizza. Momos are much like Chinese dumplings, but these had yak meat inside along with a couple spices, including green onions. They were served with a sauce, much like an Indian curry and it was surprisingly good. The pizza, our fail-safe back-up option in case the momos were uneatable, was also good. The menu here truly symbolizes Tibet and its outside influences; there was a number of Indian, Nepalese, and Chinese dishes on the menu, as well as the tourist-focused western cuisine. Throughout our tour this morning Dorje has mentioned the close ties Tibet has to India and Nepal due to similar religious beliefs and clearly those similarities have influenced the food in Tibet.\nAfter lunch we headed to Jokhang Temple and Barkhor Street. The temple is the holiest in all of Tibet, however taking pictures of it prove difficult due to all the Chinese police officers and military posts in the area. It is illegal to take pictures of police, soldiers, or any military stand or post of any sort in Tibet; a big contrast to the Forbidden City where they had military parades seemingly just for the tourists' amusement. If a riot broke out in this area there were literally thousands of soldiers within a mile of the temple to shut it down immediately. To me it seems like overkill considering the peaceful nature of the Tibetans.\nAfter passing all these guard stands and having our guide detained briefly by police to explain who he was, who he worked for, who he was guiding, and proving that we were in Tibet legally, we made it to Jokhang Temple. The temple is impressive architecturally, but its true meaning comes in its significance to the religion. It contains the holiest statue in yellow hat Buddhism and is a pilgrimage spot for thousands of Tibetans, who travel miles to get here.\nAfter the temple, we circled Barkhor Street clockwise with many of the pilgrims. Despite the street's religious significance, it is almost entirely a shopping street with vendors lining both sides of the street. Having little interest in shopping, we quickly bypassed most of the shops, only ducking into a few to catch the air conditioning. Once our time here had come to an end, we met back up with Dorje, who took us to our hotel for the night.\nFor dinner, we headed across the street where we tried fried rice, noodles, and a beef dish. Again, the external influence on Tibet came into view in these dishes. The fried rice contained a hint of cumin and tumeric, two spices common in Indian curries, while the noodles had a Thai twist. Only the beef dish seemed unique to me, but it clearly had some Chinese influence, containing beef, tomatoes, and green onions in a sauce that had just a hint of spiciness. The lowlight of the meal was also the most culturally significant, yak butter tea. It's made of yak butter, tea leaves, water, and salt; one sip was enough for me.\nDrepung Monastery & Sera Monastery\nThere's a horrible syndrome occurring in many young Chinese males some foreigners call \"Little Emperor Syndrome.\" Due to the one child policy, many Chinese children are growing up completely, utterly spoiled and are taught that they are the most important thing in the world. I've seen this a number of times in a number of instances since arriving in China, most particularly in people doing as they please whether or not you are in their way. This morning on the way to breakfast however was the worst I've seen thus far. Waiting for the elevator (we had already pushed the down button), two Chinese men, about in their 30s, arrived to also go down. They budged in front of us so were inches from the elevator door, when it had opened they immediately got on and pressed the door closed button, forcing the door to close on us. There was no apology, just a scornful look they gave us since we had delayed their trip downstairs.\nThis \"Little Emperor Syndrome\" is rampant throughout China, but is magnified here in Tibet. Most of the Chinese people in Tibet either live here to drown out the local Tibetan population or are tourists and these tourists have money or influence. Although I can't account for every Chinese tourist in Tibet, my guess is that many of these people have money and were spoiled rotten growing up, learning that no one is more important than they are and today they truly believe this, treating others like nuances who exist only to cater to their needs. While we found people like this in Beijing as well, it was not as common or magnified as it is in Tibet and being here for only a couple days can easily make a person a complete racist, especially when you compare these little emperors' behavior to the local Tibetans'.\nEnough of that, after breakfast Dorje arrived at the hotel to begin our tour early today. We had a lot to see and not a lot of time so began at Drepung Monastery, which formerly housed between 7,000 and 10,000 monks before the cultural revolution. The monastery is huge, but primarily empty today. We got lucky in that today was a holy day so the monks do mid-day chanting; this is ordinarily only reserved for mornings and evenings. We also met a couple of Dorje's friends, which are many, including seemingly ever monk in both Potala Palace and here. This monastery was seemingly deserted compared to the sights we saw yesterday and Dorje said that it was because the Chinese tour groups don't generally go to Drepung Monastery.\nWhile at the monastery, Dorje explained death rituals in Tibet. People here have their bodies placed in a \"tombstupe,\" are buried/ cremated, placed in the river, or are fed to vultures. The most common death ritual, which Dorje said about 99% of Tibetans receive, is to have their bodies placed outside in sacred areas for the vultures to eat. At first the muscles are removed and the vultures eat the skin and organs, then once there is nothing left but bones, the meat is given to them (this is done because otherwise the vultures would only eat the meat and leave the skin and organs). Only lamas, like the Dalai Lama are placed in tombstupes, which are large ornate boxes, much like a coffin, but significantly more detailed. Infants who die are placed in the river, which is why Tibetans don't eat fish. Finally, those people who are sick, receive medicine, but never heal are buried or cremated. This is done so the vultures don't ingest the medicine the person took.\nOn that appetizing note, our next stop was lunch in Lhasa itself, but today's meal wasn't as good as the last two we had. We each had the yak sizzle on the recommendation of Dorje, and not having led us astray yet, we ordered it, but it wasn't quite everything I thought it would be. The two highlights from lunch were the dessert, chocolate cake, and watching the people outside. Many Tibetans make a pilgrimage around \"Old Lhasa City\" and this restaurant was on the path around the city, meaning pilgrims were constantly passing by our window seats. The people were dressed in all different manners, depending on where they were from in Tibet, some had long braided hair, some carried daggers, and many others appeared like cowboys, with classic hats, similar, but not identical to those found in the American west.\nAfter lunch we headed to the other perceived highlight, Sera Monastery, which was no disappointment. This monastery was also very impressive, but the highlight was clearly the monk debates in the courtyard. Monks of all levels would get into groups as small as two and as large as five or six to quiz each other. The monks are paired by knowledge level and switch positions every day or two. The teachers standing, the students sitting, some of the teachers were very animated and would ornately confirm a correct answer by clapping his hands, or symbolizing an incorrect answer by slapping the top of his hand into his other hand (both hands palm up). Although I didn't understand a word of what they said, the scene was energetic and lively.\nOur final tour stop of the day was Norbulingka, the Dalai Lama's former summer palace. This palace was nice, but is truly all about the grounds, which are large and were created for picnicking during the warm summer months, which the Tibetans love. In addition to the grounds however, the Dalai Lama's palace was fascinating because it was from here that the Dalai Lama fled to India and is even today decorated much as it was when he left.\nAfter being dropped off at our hotel and resting for a couple hours, we caught a taxi into town to grab a bite to eat near Jokhang Temple. We had yak fried rice and more cake, for me chocolate and for Cindy lemon. The cake was definitely the highlight.\nTibetan Family Visit & Departure\nWe awoke early to catch our flight to Xi'an, but on the way stopped at a Tibetan family's house in a village between Lhasa and the airport. This was fantastic because it gave us an opportunity to see daily life in Tibet from living circumstances to decorations.\nThis family was middle class on Tibetan standards, living near farms and raising a few chickens and cows in their courtyard to provide eggs and milk. Here there were four generations: a great grandmother and grandmother living with their daughter, son-in-law, and grandchildren. During the days the grandmothers took care of their grandkids as the two parents worked.\nWe were offered yak butter tea and when I asked our guide if it would be rude to turn it down I was instead offered barley beer, which I accepted and drank at the early hour of 9:00am. It was much better than the yak butter tea though, so I'm happy with my decision even though, neither drinking beer at 9am, nor drinking at altitude are good ideas.\nWe were given free reign of their house (other than their storage room) and moved around to see their living spaces, temple (which most families have in their homes), and bedrooms. The most ironic part of this house was the living room, in which there was a Minnie Mouse stuffed animal just feet away from a poster of Mao, who is often seen in Tibetan homes for a number of reasons.\nThe people here are torn on views towards the Chinese government, but for the most part they wish for independence. Dorje avoided political conversations and we didn't encourage him to discuss a subject that could not benefit him and his career in any way.\nMany Tibetans place pictures of Mao in their homes to avoid governmental aggression, however others truly believe in the changes that he and the Chinese government have introduced in Tibet. The Chinese government has introduced the railway, better roads, expanded education, better healthcare, and improved communication in Tibet. Unfortunately, these changes have been introduced at the expense of the destruction of Tibetan culture... and with this improved infrastructure comes more and more immigrating ethnic Chinese, drowning out the local population in Tibet. The Chinese see the improvements they've introduced (healthcare, infrastructure, and communication) as the most important aspects of life, whereas the Tibetans view their religion and culture as the most important factors in their lives and this is exactly what the Chinese government seeks to destroy.\nThe Tibetan people seem so different from the Chinese, although they'll be the first to tell you that the two have always been historic friends. In Tibet the contrast between these two groups is magnified more than elsewhere; the difference between the enormous and multiple military bases with the peaceful and religious Tibetans. It appears, to a visitor, to be a one-sided war, in which a peaceful people who failed to fight for religious reasons were destroyed and brutally suppressed by an aggressor; an aggressor who fears these peaceful people so much that they have to dedicate a huge percentage of their military resources to the region.\nThe situation here feels like a family (China) so concerned with an ant hill (Tibet) they found in their backyard that they spend much of their time stomping the ant hill and spraying it with pesticides as the ants continue living through the hardships, never complaining, only surviving and hoping one day the aggressor will let them live in peace. The ants, no true threat to the people, don't know why they are the victims of prosecution, but accept the beatings as they know they have no true chance in a fight, which is something they wouldn't partake in anyway since that's not a part of their mental, cultural, and religious make-up. Today the beatings continue, but the ants continue to thrive.\nGoodbye Tibet. Off to Xi'an.\nTeracotta Warriors & the Muslim Quarter\nWe got in from Lhasa today without any problems. After a bus into town and a short walk to our hotel, we went out to explore the city; beginning with dinner. This part of China is known as the noodles epicenter so we sought out a noodle place. After first discovering that the noodle place that we were looking for no longer existed, we found a small place that served noodles with broth, a few spices, bean sprouts, and hot sauce for about 5 yuan a bowl. I finally got to use my Chinese when I asked for \"no spicy\" and soon we had a pretty good and extremely filling meal for less than a dollar.\nAfter dinner, we headed to the Muslim Quarter for wandering. Although the streets only seem fit for pedestrians, cars and mopeds seemed too eager to drive through the area as the streets were filled with street vendors making and serving roasted nuts, dates, and most popularly, meat on a stick, particularly squid.\nThe area was loud and active as it attracted both locals and foreigners alike. The scene alone was worth the trip, but while we were there we bought some roasted almonds, which later proved to be fantastic and long-lasting.\nOur ride home was on a negotiated fare from a auto rickshaw. He wasn't what I would call a \"good driver,\" but he got us home and gave us a cultural experience consisting of swerves and oncoming traffic stopping within feet of our vehicle.\nWe got up early, skipped the 170 yuan breakfast at the hotel and took a taxi to the bus station to catch a bus to the Army of Terracotta Warriors. The trip was uneventful despite promises from our hotel that the public buses were not safe (they were selling tours to the site) and we arrived to the Terracotta Warriors about an hour after leaving downtown Xi'an.\nAs recommended by our guidebook, we started with Pit 3, the smallest of the three discovered. It was, well, unimpressive. Much of it had been excavated, but few of the Terracotta Warriors had actually be completed; most stood headless in the pit below our observation platform.\nNext came Pit 2, a little bigger with some great Terracotta Warriors in display cases at ground level. This pit was not as far along in the excavation process and there were piles of arms, legs, and torsos of the Terracotta Warriors in the pits as very few of the warriors had been completed. This felt and looked more like an archeological dig site in process instead of an actual museum or world wonder.\nWe finally made it to Pit 1 to see the enormous site, where most of the completed Terracotta Warriors are held. In a way, even this pit was somewhat disappointing; perhaps 80-90% of it has yet to be uncovered or excavated as the lined soldiers that have been completed stand in lines. More interesting was the back of the building, in which they were putting together the fragmented pieces of the warriors. Visually, this was a disappointment, however trying to comprehend the enormity of the complex, the skill of the craftsmen, and the time and dedication to create such a monument still makes this a world wonder and a monument worthy of international praise.\nOur final stop was at the museum; the tour groups rushed downstairs to view the history of China and the archeological history of China exhibits, but the much more interesting exhibit was on the upper floor, which went into more detail regarding the Terracotta Warriors themselves and again offered some warriors up close. This exhibit brought to life the Terracotta Warriors as you could see them face to face and were close enough to truly appreciate the details of each.\nAfter the Terracotta Warriors, we returned to Xi'an where we relaxed for a bit before heading out to the airport. Being so pre-occupied with the exhibit, transportation, and overpriced food at the museum we snacked on almonds all day and they seemed to serve us well.\nOff to the airport for Guilin.\nDragon's Backbone Rice Terraces\nAfter a late arrival last night to Guilin, we checked into our youth hostel and went straight to bed. Today we got up early to head to the Dragon's Backbone Rice Terraces, but found ourselves locked in our hostel. There was a note on the door that said if we needed to leave before 7:00am to call them, but we had no phone and there was no phone in the room; I found it rather disturbing that they lock everyone into the building each night, since this is a horrible fire hazard. Fortunately, there is an escape route, jumping the fence, which is exactly what we did.\nWe caught a taxi to the bus station and got a bus to Longsheng, a trip that encountered no problems after our bus driver stopped to get some noodles. Once in Longsheng, the girl who collects money from passengers proved what we had felt the evening before, that the people here are among the nicest in China. She not only directed us to our connecting bus, but actually walked us over there.\nOur bus to Dazhai, a small village among the rice terraces, left within minutes, but after only a few minutes our bus turned into some sort of vegetable market or day care as it filled up with about five children and three or four farmers selling their berries (in addition to multiple other farmers bringing their food to the market). Despite watching a child pee all over her mother and having a bag of dead chickens in front of me, the bus ride began well. Our driver proved to be the passengers' best customers as he bought food from a couple farmers. Plus, we had only waited a couple minutes after arriving in Longsheng before heading out.\nAfter picking up a couple more passengers along the route, including a Swiss guy, our troubles began. First we stopped to have the bus looked at, then we filled up the gas. We also got stopped and were asked to pay 90 yuan a person to enter the town, which is apparently in a national park protection area. Next, our bus shut down and after a couple minutes we had to turn around to get a new bus. The new bus proved useful for about five minutes until it failed to get into gear and we got stuck on a hill for about ten minutes. This gave us time to meet the Swiss guy and share stories, but with a cliff behind us and the bus failing to get into gear, there were also some tense moments. After the bus began working we were again off and soon after arrived in Dazhai to begin our trek.\nThe village of Dazhai is just beyond the park entrance and seems like a nice little village, but our intentions were to see the terraced rice fields of the Dragon's Backbone so we continued on. The people here are primarily ethnic minorities and they offered us places to stay, food, and to help carry our bags. Although their advances seemed friendly, two of the ladies trying to carry our bags followed us for about a half hour and no matter how stern we were, they didn't seem to give up on what seemed like potential money walking through their village.\nThe area was beautiful though and as we climbed higher and higher the views became more and more amazing. It was rice planting season and many of the farmers were in the fields planting so we often stopped to grab a snack and enjoy the views. After about an hour we turned around and headed back, taking our time and finishing our trek at about two hours, which happened to be perfect timing. As we exited the park a bus was about to leave straight to Guilin, saving us a stopover in Longsheng; we jumped on and were off to Guilin, before continuing on to Yangshuo.\nA Few Days to Relax\nWe arrived to Yangshuo late after spending the day north of Guilin at the Dragon's Backbone Rice Terraces. Having been in China for a couple weeks now we were craving some western food so stopped at a place that served both Chinese and western food. Although my main course was Chinese (sweet and sour chicken, which was excellent), Yangshuo is known for their banana and Oreo shakes and trying one of those was a nice addition. It is sort of a combination of a smoothie and a milk shake, starting with banana flavor, moving on to Oreo, then finished with the banana again; it was surprisingly good.\nWe then got a taxi to our hotel, which was in a village west of Yangshuo near the Yulong River. The rest of the night consisted of cleaning up and attempting to not smell from the heat and humidity we faced while hiking all day.\nYangshuo is known as a slow moving town, in which to relax, and that's exactly how our day started. We got up, walked around aimlessly without a map, then decided to spend our afternoon on a bamboo raft down the Yulong River. Before heading on our raft trip we grabbed a bite to eat at our hotel: noodles with beef and more chocolate cake, this time freshly baked and topped with chocolate syrup.\nThe company that organized the bamboo raft ride picked us up and gave us a ride to the river on a motorcycle taxi. It was a small motorcycle for three people, especially considering the many potholes on the half paved road. The bamboo raft was a highlight on the slow moving Yulong River. The scenery was beautiful and the small waterfalls we went over gave us just enough excitement to keep us awake.\nAfter the bamboo raft we ran into two rather disturbing things; a downpour and a man with monkeys dressed up and chained to a stick. First we encountered the monkeys; a man was trying to have us give him money, but I was too revolted to find out what his ploy was; he even had one of his monkeys wearing sunglasses. The downpour, which came a few minutes later, was the better of the two options, plus with the heat reaching well over 90º F the downpour actually felt good as it very quickly cooled us off.\nAfter our mile or two hike back to the hotel through the rain we cleaned up and grabbed dinner, which consisted of beef and peppers. We also met a drummer from California at dinner who has been on the road for nearly four months, beginning in India to learn some native drumming techniques. True to Yangshuo form, we did very little today other than relax, and I think we needed the break.\nToday we got up somewhat early (in relative terms for Yangshuo) in order to rent bikes and head up to something called Dragon Bridge, which was about a two-hour bike trip. The bike trip was beautiful and we were so focused on the natural beauty of the area that we got lost... numerous times. We eventually made our way to a main road and followed the signs until we got to the little village of Yulong, which we were looking for.\nIn Yulong we relaxed, took pictures, and tried to eat, but were continuously hawked by people trying to get us to take a bamboo raft ride. We stayed long enough to watch a man do some cormorant fishing, then continued on. Cormorant fishing is when fishermen tie a string around a cormorant bird's neck so it's tight enough that the bird can't swallow a big fish, but big enough so the bird can breathe and can swallow small fish. Fortunately for the fishermen, the birds haven't seemed to catch on yet and always go after the big fish, but when they can't swallow them they return to the fisherman's boat and he removes the fish to later sell in the market. The fisherman we watched had incredible birds and they were each catching a fish every minute or two; he was also very rewarding to his birds and made sure they got fed well for their work.\nAfter moving on we again got lost, stopped to eat our lunch at a small watering hole, and met four young Chinese, who were eager to bike with us. We accepted their invitation and soon enough we were all lost together. We swerved in and out of fields and along built up earthen walls asking farmer after farmer how to get to the main path, which we eventually found. After a couple villages we each went on our own way and soon enough we made our way back to the hotel for a little mid-day relaxation (as it again rained outside).\nFor dinner we headed into Yangshuo itself, where we avoided hectic traffic, numerous touts, and offers for more bamboo raft and boat rides. Dinner was at a place like seemingly every place in Yangshuo, half western food, half Chinese food, with free WiFi access. As we ate I came to the conclusion that this is as close as it comes to a backpacker resort town: the scenery is beautiful, the attitude is laid back, biking is the main form of transportation, and nearly every restaurant serves both western and local foods. Plus, despite all the tourists, the town is still relatively inexpensive, meaning most travelers here are backpackers, and many of those backpackers tend to stay for weeks or even months. Additionally, with a growing tourism industry, there is high demand for English teachers here so it's easy to find a job.\nBy the end of the meal I had determined that I have seen more white people here than I have throughout the rest of China. That includes sights like The Terracotta Warriors, The Great Wall of China, and The Forbidden City combined (excluding Hong Kong, although even if Hong Kong was included it would be competitive).\nAfter dinner, we headed back to our hotel, which was about 20 minutes away by bike in order to prepare for our early morning flight the next day to Hong Kong.\nA Day Overview Before Heading Home\nI got back to Hong Kong from Guilin via Shenzhen and now I can confirm that Hong Kong is in no way China (other than legally of course). Hong Kong is on a different currency, a different customs stamp, they have their own passports, they speak English, they drive on opposites sides of the road, and most importantly, their mentality and culture is completely different from mainland China. Although legally they are one and the same, they are two worlds apart.\nUpon arrival to my hotel I was again reminded of a horrible, horrible trait the hotel service staffs in Hong Kong have, something I call \"suffocatingly attentive service.\" The bell hops and hotel employees (both at this hotel and my last hotel in Hong Kong, but not elsewhere in China) are so overly attentive it's almost an invasion of one's privacy. As I got off the shuttle bus from the airport I had literally three people waiting to help me, with another line of employees behind them to help the others on the bus. They tried to physically take my backpack off my back to carry it for me and when I refused, one followed me in to ask if I needed anything, almost begging for me to ask for assistance until he walked me all the way to the reception desk.\nI experienced the same thing at my last hotel in Hong Kong and even if I didn't have anything for them to carry (although the one time I was carrying nothing but a folder they tried to carry it for me), they would run ahead of me and press the elevator button so I wouldn't have to wait for an elevator. Then as I would get in the elevator, the bellhop would press the \"door close\" button so I could save those precious fractions of a second. Being very independent, I found all this service brutal and overly imposing, however anyone who feels he should be treated like royalty would love every second of it.\nHaving seen everything that interested me already, I spent the day with Cindy (it was her first time in the city) re-visiting the highlights, including the park, Temple Street Night Market, the Star Ferry across the harbor, and the fried rice place. We then returned to the hotel for our flights home tomorrow morning.\n● Learn more about China ● Return to Justin's Travel Blog ●","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line766879"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9906342625617981,"wiki_prob":0.9906342625617981,"text":"Thomas Garrett & Eddie Bernice Johnson\nCompare the voting records of Thomas Garrett and Eddie Bernice Johnson in 2017-18.\nThomas Garrett\nHakeem Jeffries (D-N.Y.)\nRepublican ∙ View profile\nRepresented Virginia's 5th Congressional District. This is his 1st term in the House.\nEddie Bernice Johnson\nRepresented Texas's 30th Congressional District. This is her 13th term in the House.\nThomas Garrett and Eddie Bernice Johnson are from different parties and disagreed on 71 percent of votes in the 115th Congress (2017-18).\nDisagree: 71%\nBut they didn't always disagree. Out of 988 votes in the 115th Congress, they agreed on 290 votes, including 48 major votes.\nHere are the votes they agreed on\nOn Motion to Suspend the Rules and Concur in the Senate Amendment to House Amendment\nDec. 20, 2018 — First Step Act of 2018\nSept. 5, 2018 — Empowering Students Through Enhanced Financial Counseling Act\nJuly 19, 2018 — Making appropriations for the Department of the Interior, environment, and related agencies for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2019, and for other purposes\nJune 28, 2018 — Making appropriations for the Department of Defense for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2019, and for other purposes\nJune 27, 2018 — Border Security and Immigration Reform Act of 2018\nJune 21, 2018 — Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018\nPassed by a margin of 2 votes.\nJune 20, 2018 — Individuals in Medicaid Deserve Care that is Appropriate and Responsible in its Execution Act\nJune 15, 2018 — Stop the Importation and Trafficking of Synthetic Analogues Act\nJune 14, 2018 — THRIVE Act\nJune 6, 2018 — Water Resources Development Act of 2018\nMay 24, 2018 — National Defense Authorization Act FY 2019\nMay 22, 2018 — FIRST STEP Act\nMay 16, 2018 — Protect and Serve Act of 2018\nApril 27, 2018 — FAA Reauthorization Act\nApril 18, 2018 — Taxpayer First Act\nApril 18, 2018 — 21st Century IRS Act\nApril 17, 2018 — Protecting Children from Identity Theft Act\nMarch 15, 2018 — Financial Institutions Examination Fairness and Reform Act\nFeb. 27, 2018 — Allow States and Victims to Fight Online Sex Trafficking Act\nJan. 11, 2018 — Rapid DNA Act of 2017\nJan. 11, 2018 — Amash of Michigan Substitute Amendment No. 1\nDec. 19, 2017 — Systemic Risk Designation Improvement Act of 2017\nDec. 7, 2017 — Making further continuing appropriations for fiscal year 2018, and for other purposes\nDec. 7, 2017 — Small Business Mergers, Acquisitions, Sales, and Brokerage Simplification Act of 2017\nOct. 12, 2017 — Dr. Chris Kirkpatrick Whistleblower Protection Act of 2017\nJuly 28, 2017 — Department of Veterans Affairs Bonus Transparency Act\nJuly 28, 2017 — Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018\nJuly 25, 2017 — Countering America’s Adversaries Through Sanctions Act\nJuly 20, 2017 — King Cove Road Land Exchange Act\nJuly 12, 2017 — Gaining Responsibility on Water Act\nJune 28, 2017 — Protecting Access to Care Act\nMay 25, 2017 — Protecting Young Victims from Sexual Abuse Act of 2017\nMay 19, 2017 — Probation Officer Protection Act of 2017\nMay 4, 2017 — To amend the Public Health Service Act to eliminate the non-application of certain State waiver provisions to Members of Congress and congressional staff\nApril 27, 2017 — Fannie and Freddie Open Records Act of 2017\nApril 26, 2017 — Register of Copyrights Selection and Accountability Act\nApril 6, 2017 — Supporting America’s Innovators Act\nApril 5, 2017 — Self-Insurance Protection Act\nMarch 22, 2017 — Competitive Health Insurance Reform Act of 2017\nMarch 17, 2017 — To improve the authority of the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to hire and retain physicians and other employees of the Department of Veterans Affairs, and for other purposes\nMarch 8, 2017 — Making appropriations for the Department of Defense for the fiscal year ending September 30, 2017, and for other purposes\nFeb. 14, 2017 — Red River Gradient Boundary Survey Act\nDec. 21, 2018 — Civil Rights Cold Case Records Collection Act\nDec. 21, 2018 — Federal Personal Property Management Act\nDec. 21, 2018 — GAO-IG Act\nDec. 21, 2018 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 770 Ayrault Road in Fairport, New York, as the “Louise and Bob Slaughter Post Office”\nDec. 21, 2018 — Department of Transportation Reports Harmonization Act\nDec. 21, 2018 — To make technical corrections to provisions of law enacted by the Frank LoBiondo Coast Guard Authorization Act of 2018, and for other purposes\nDec. 21, 2018 — To amend the Federal Assets Sale and Transfer Act of 2016 to provide flexibility with respect to the leaseback of certain Federal real property, and for other purposes\nDec. 21, 2018 — To amend the Federal Assets Sale and Transfer Act of 2016 to ensure that the Public Buildings Reform Board has adequate time to carry out the responsibilities of the Board, and for other purposes\nOn Motion to Suspend the Rules and Agree\nDec. 21, 2018 — Designating room H-226 of the United States Capitol as the “Lincoln Room”\nOn Motion to Suspend the Rules and Concur in the Senate Amendments\nDec. 20, 2018 — Stigler Act Amendments\nDec. 20, 2018 — Forever GI Bill Housing Payment Fulfillment Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — Community-based outpatient clinic of the Department of Veterans Affairs as the “Douglas Fournet Department of Veterans Affairs Clinic”\nDec. 20, 2018 — VA Website Accessibility Act\nOn Motion to Suspend the Rules and Concur in the Senate Amendment\nDec. 20, 2018 — Stop, Observe, Ask, and Respond to Health and Wellness Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — National Integrated Drought Information System Reauthorization Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — NASA Enhanced Use Leasing Extension Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — Innovations in Mentoring, Training, and Apprenticeships\nDec. 20, 2018 — RBIC Advisers Relief Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — Stephen Michael Gleason Congressional Gold Medal Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — Vehicular Terrorism Prevention Act of 2018\nDec. 20, 2018 — Veterans Small Business Enhancement Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — Justice Against Corruption on K Street Act\nDec. 20, 2018 — Clean Up the Code Act of 2018\nDec. 20, 2018 — Ashanti Alert Act of 2018\nDec. 20, 2018 — Pandemic and All-Hazards Preparedness and Advancing Innovation Act of 2018\nDec. 19, 2018 — To direct the Secretary of the Interior to convey certain facilities, easements, and rights-of-way to the Kennewick Irrigation District, and for other purposes\nDec. 19, 2018 — SECURE Technology Act\nDec. 19, 2018 — Traumatic Brain Injury Program Reauthorization Act\nOn Motion to Suspend the Rules and Agree, as Amended\nDec. 13, 2018 — Calling on the Government of Burma to release Burmese journalists Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo sentenced to seven years imprisonment after investigating attacks against civilians by Burma’s military and security forces, and for other purposes\nDec. 12, 2018 — Providing for consideration of the conference report to accompany H.R. 2, the Agriculture and Nutrition Act of 2018, and for other purposes\nDec. 10, 2018 — George W. Bush Childhood Home Study Act\nDec. 10, 2018 — Urging the Secretary of the Interior to recognize the historical significance of Roberto Clemente’s place of death near Pinones in Loiza, Puerto Rico, by adding it to the National Register of Historic Places\nNov. 30, 2018 — Federal CIO Authorization Act of 2018\nNov. 16, 2018 — Strengthening Coastal Communities Act\nNov. 13, 2018 — Gulf Islands National Seashore Land Exchange Act\nNov. 13, 2018 — To rename the Oyster Bay National Wildlife Refuge as the Congressman Lester Wolff National Wildlife Refuge\nSept. 26, 2018 — FDR Historic Preservation Act\nSept. 25, 2018 — Expanding Contracting Opportunities for Small Business Act of 2018\nSept. 25, 2018 — Encouraging Small Business Innovators\nSept. 13, 2018 — Special Envoy to Monitor and Combat Anti-Semitism Act\nSept. 12, 2018 — To authorize early repayment of obligations to the Bureau of Reclamation within the Northport Irrigation District in the State of Nebraska\nSept. 12, 2018 — Every Kid Outdoors Act\nSept. 12, 2018 — Walnut Grove Land Exchange Act\nSept. 4, 2018 — Biometric Identification Transnational Migration Alert Program Authorization Act\nOn Agreeing to the Conference Report\nJuly 26, 2018 — National Defense Authorization Act FY 2019\nJuly 25, 2018 — VA Hospitals Establishing Leadership Performance Act\nJuly 23, 2018 — Precision Agriculture Connectivity Act\nJuly 23, 2018 — National Suicide Hotline Improvement Act\nJuly 18, 2018 — Pearce of New Mexico Amendment No. 60\nFailed by a margin of 3 votes.\nJuly 18, 2018 — To authorize the National Emergency Medical Services Memorial Foundation to establish a commemorative work in the District of Columbia and its environs, and for other purposes\nJuly 17, 2018 — Protecting Diplomats from Surveillance Through Consumer Devices Act\nJuly 17, 2018 — Elie Wiesel Genocide and Atrocities Prevention Act of 2018\nJuly 17, 2018 — JOBS and Investor Confidence Act of 2018\nJuly 16, 2018 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 511 East Walnut Street in Columbia, Missouri, as the “Spc. Sterling William Wyatt Post Office Building”.\nJuly 16, 2018 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 1075 North Tustin Street in Orange, California, as the “Specialist Trevor A. Win’E Post Office\nJuly 10, 2018 — Options Markets Stability Act\nOn Closing Portions of the Conference\nJune 27, 2018 — National Defense Authorization Act FY 2019\nJune 26, 2018 — Foreign Investment Risk Review Modernization Act\nJune 26, 2018 — Prevention of Private Information Dissemination Act of 2017\nJune 25, 2018 — Blue Water Navy Vietnam Veterans Act\nJune 19, 2018 — Stop Excessive Narcotics in our Retirement Communities Protection Act of 2018\nJune 13, 2018 — Improving the Federal Response to Families Impacted by Substance Use Disorder Act\nJune 13, 2018 — Assisting States’ Implementation of Plans of Safe Care Act\nJune 12, 2018 — Safe Disposal of Unused Medication Act\nOn Motion to Concur in the Senate Amendment\nJune 6, 2018 — Project Safe Neighborhoods Grant Program Authorization Act of 2018\nJune 5, 2018 — Camp Nelson Heritage National Monument Act\nJune 5, 2018 — To direct the Secretary of the Interior to conduct a special resource study to determine the suitability and feasibility of establishing the birthplace of James Weldon Johnson in Jacksonville, Florida, as a unit of the National Park System\nMay 23, 2018 — Engel of New York Amendment No. 43\nMay 23, 2018 — McGovern of Massachusetts Amendment No. 10\nMay 21, 2018 — Veterans Opioid Abuse Prevention Act\nMay 21, 2018 — Homeless Veterans’ Reintegration Programs Reauthorization Act of 2018\nMay 21, 2018 — Servicemembers Improved Transition through Reforms for Ensuring Progress Act\nMay 18, 2018 — Russell of Oklahoma Amendment No. 17\nMay 16, 2018 — Black Hills National Cemetery Boundary Expansion Act\nMay 10, 2018 — Titus of Nevada Amendment No. 3\nApril 26, 2018 — Iran Human Rights and Hostage-Taking Accountability Act\nApril 26, 2018 — Lipinski of Illinois Part A Amendment No. 78\nApril 25, 2018 — Music Modernization Act\nApril 18, 2018 — Justice for Victims of IRS Scams and Identity Theft Act of 2018\nApril 16, 2018 — To designate a National Memorial to Fallen Educators at the National Teachers Hall of Fame in Emporia, Kansas\nApril 16, 2018 — Eastern Band of Cherokee Historic Lands Reacquisition Act\nApril 10, 2018 — Combat Online Predators Act\nApril 10, 2018 — End Banking for Human Traffickers Act of 2018\nMarch 22, 2018 — Strengthening Local Transportation Security Capabilities Act of 2018\nMarch 22, 2018 — Strengthening Aviation Security Act of 2018\nMarch 22, 2018 — Surface Transportation Security Improvement Act 2018\nMarch 22, 2018 — Vehicular Terrorism Prevention Act of 2018\nMarch 22, 2018 — Providing for consideration of the Senate amendment to H.R. 1625, Consolidated Appropriations Act and the TARGET Act; and providing for proceedings during the period from March 23, 2018, through April 9, 2018\nMarch 19, 2018 — Kennedy--King National Commemorative Site Act\nMarch 19, 2018 — To update the map of, and modify the maximum acreage available for inclusion in, the Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument\nMarch 14, 2018 — Student, Teachers, and Officers Preventing School Violence Act of 2018\nMarch 13, 2018 — Endangered Fish Recovery Programs Extension Act of 2017\nFeb. 26, 2018 — Congenital Heart Futures Reauthorization Act of 2017\nFeb. 14, 2018 — Calling on the Department of Defense, other elements of the Federal Government, and foreign governments to intensify efforts to investigate, recover, and identify all missing and unaccounted-for personnel of the United States\nFeb. 14, 2018 — Hamas Human Shields Prevention Act\nFeb. 13, 2018 — To extend the Generalized System of Preferences and to make technical changes to the competitive need limitations provision of the program\nFeb. 13, 2018 — Lexington VA Health Care System\nFeb. 7, 2018 — Ukraine Cybersecurity Cooperation Act of 2017\nFeb. 7, 2018 — War Crimes Rewards Expansion Act\nFeb. 5, 2018 — Strengthening Protections for Social Security Beneficiaries Act of 2018\nJan. 18, 2018 — Global Health Innovation Act of 2017\nJan. 17, 2018 — Expanding Investment Opportunities Act\nJan. 17, 2018 — Connolly of Virginia Part A Amendment No. 2\nJan. 17, 2018 — Family Self-Sufficiency Act\nJan. 16, 2018 — Alex Diekmann Peak Designation Act of 2017\nJan. 16, 2018 — Miscellaneous Tariff Bill Act of 2018\nJan. 11, 2018 — Counter Terrorist Network Act\nJan. 10, 2018 — DHS Overseas Personnel Enhancement Act of 2017\nJan. 9, 2018 — Screening and Vetting Passenger Exchange Act\nJan. 9, 2018 — Post-Caliphate Threat Assessment Act of 2017\nJan. 9, 2018 — Supporting the rights of the people of Iran to free expression, condemning the Iranian regime for its crackdown on legitimate protests, and for other purposes\nDec. 21, 2017 — Jobs for Our Heroes Act\nDec. 20, 2017 — United States and Israel Space Cooperation Act\nDec. 19, 2017 — Combating Human Trafficking in Commercial Vehicles Act\nDec. 19, 2017 — Supporting Veterans in STEM Careers Act\nDec. 18, 2017 — Keep America’s Refuges Operational Act\nDec. 18, 2017 — STEM Research and Education Effectiveness and Transparency Act\nDec. 11, 2017 — Protecting Religiously Affiliated Institutions Act of 2017\nDec. 11, 2017 — Financial Institution Customer Protection Act of 2017\nDec. 7, 2017 — Venezuela Humanitarian Assistance and Defense of Democratic Governance Act\nDec. 7, 2017 — Expressing concern and condemnation over the political, economic, social, and humanitarian crisis in Venezuela\nDec. 6, 2017 — Condemning ethnic cleansing of the Rohingya and calling for an end to the attacks in and an immediate restoration of humanitarian access to the state of Rakhine in Burma\nDec. 6, 2017 — Enhancing Veteran Care Act\nDec. 5, 2017 — Stopping Abusive Female Exploitation Act of 2017\nDec. 5, 2017 — Secret Service Recruitment and Retention Act of 2017\nNov. 28, 2017 — Superior National Forest Land Exchange Act\nNov. 28, 2017 — Fowler and Boskoff Peaks Designation Act\nNov. 15, 2017 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 520 Carter Street in Fairview, Illinois, as the “Sgt. Douglas J. Riney Post Office”\nNov. 15, 2017 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 430 Main Street in Clermont, Georgia, as the “Zachary Addington Post Office”\nNov. 15, 2017 — Connected Government Act\nNov. 13, 2017 — Federal Acquisition Savings Act of 2017\nNov. 13, 2017 — Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives with respect to United States policy towards Yemen, and for other purposes\nNov. 1, 2017 — Encouraging Public Offerings Act\nOct. 31, 2017 — South Carolina Peanut Parity Act of 2017\nOct. 26, 2017 — Iran Ballistic Missiles and International Sanctions Enforcement Act\nOct. 24, 2017 — Otto Warmbier North Korea Nuclear Sanctions Act\nOct. 24, 2017 — International Narcotics Trafficking Emergency Response by Detecting Incoming Contraband with Technology Act\nOct. 23, 2017 — Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Business Travel Cards Act\nOct. 23, 2017 — C-TPAT Reauthorization Act\nOct. 12, 2017 — National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018\nOct. 11, 2017 — FITARA Enhancement Act of 2017\nOct. 11, 2017 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 324 West Saint Louis Street in Pacific, Missouri, as the “Specialist Jeffrey L. White, Jr. Post Office”\nOct. 10, 2017 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 25 New Chardon Street Lobby in Boston, Massachusetts, as the “John Fitzgerald Kennedy Post Office”\nOct. 10, 2017 — To designate the facility of the United States Postal Service located at 4514 Williamson Trail in Liberty, Pennsylvania, as the “Staff Sergeant Ryan Scott Ostrom Post Office”\nOct. 3, 2017 — To reauthorize the National Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force Program, and for other purposes\nSept. 25, 2017 — North Korean Human Rights Reauthorization Act\nJuly 24, 2017 — Harry W. Colmery Veterans Educational Assistance Act\nJuly 20, 2017 — Grijalva of Arizona Part C Amendment No. 3\nJuly 18, 2017 — To amend the Federal Power Act with respect to the criteria and process to qualify as a qualifying conduit hydropower facility\nJuly 17, 2017 — Granting the consent and approval of Congress for the Commonwealth of Virginia, the State of Maryland, and the District of Columbia to a enter into a compact relating to the establishment of the Washington Metrorail Satefy Commission\nJuly 17, 2017 — Granting the consent and approval of Congress for the Commonwealth of Virginia, the State of Maryland, and the District of Columbia to amend the Washington Area Transit Regulation Compact\nJuly 14, 2017 — McGovern of Massachusetts Amendment No. 43\nJuly 14, 2017 — Byrne of Alabama Amendment No. 17\nJuly 13, 2017 — Garamendi of California Amendment No. 1\nJuly 13, 2017 — Polis of Colorado Part B Amendment No. 4\nJuly 12, 2017 — Medical Controlled Substances Transportation Act\nJune 28, 2017 — Robert Emmet Park Act\nJune 28, 2017 — Barr of Kentucky Amendment No. 5\nJune 27, 2017 — To authorize the expansion of an existing hydroelectric project, and for other purposes\nJune 27, 2017 — Santa Ana River Wash Plan Land Exchange Act\nJune 27, 2017 — Solemnly reaffirming the commitment of the United States to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s principle of collective defense as enumerated in Article 5 of the North Atlantic Treaty\nJune 26, 2017 — Active Duty Voluntary Acquisition of Necessary Credentials for Employment (ADVANCE) Act\nJune 26, 2017 — Veterans Expanded Trucking Opportunities Act of 2017\nJune 20, 2017 — Improving Services for Older Youth in Foster Care Act\nJune 12, 2017 — J. Bennett Johnston Waterway Hydropower Extension Act\nJune 12, 2017 — To extend a project of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission involving the Cannonsville Dam\nJune 6, 2017 — Condemning in the strongest terms the terrorist attacks in Manchester, United Kingdom, on May 22, 2017, expressing heartfelt condolences, and reaffirming unwavering support for the special relationship between our peoples and nations in the wake of these attacks\nJune 6, 2017 — Condemning the violence against peaceful protesters outside the Turkish Ambassador’s residence on May 16, 2017, and calling for the perpetrators to be brought to justice and measures to be taken to prevent similar incidents in the future\nMay 24, 2017 — VA Scheduling Accountability Act\nMay 24, 2017 — PRIVATE Act\nMay 23, 2017 — Veterans Appeals Improvement and Modernization Act of 2017\nMay 22, 2017 — Global Child Protection Act of 2017\nMay 18, 2017 — Honoring Hometown Heroes Act\nMay 17, 2017 — Removing Outdated Restrictions to Allow for Job Growth Act\nMay 16, 2017 — Strengthening State and Local Cyber Crime Fighting Act of 2017\nMay 4, 2017 — Korean Interdiction and Modernization of Sanctions Act\nMay 3, 2017 — To amend the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance Act concerning the statute of limitations for actions to recover disaster or emergency assistance payments, and for other purposes\nMay 3, 2017 — Disaster Declaration Improvement Act\nMay 2, 2017 — FEMA Accountability, Modernization and Transparency Act of 2017\nMay 1, 2017 — Follow the Rules Act\nMay 1, 2017 — Small Business Capital Formation Enhancement Act\nMay 1, 2017 — Fair Access to Investment Research Act of 2017\nApril 27, 2017 — Johnson of Georgia Part B Amendment No. 2\nApril 27, 2017 — To repeal the rule issued by the Federal Highway Administration and the Federal Transit Administration entitled “Metropolitan Planning Organization Coordination and Planning Area Reform”\nApril 26, 2017 — Deutch of Florida Amendment No. 1\nApril 25, 2017 — Aviation Employee Screening and Security Enhancement Act of 2017\nApril 25, 2017 — Relating to efforts to respond to the famine in South Sudan\nApril 3, 2017 — North Korea State Sponsor of Terrorism Designation Act of 2017\nApril 3, 2017 — Condemning North Korea’s development of multiple intercontinental ballistic missiles, and for other purposes\nMarch 27, 2017 — To require the Administrator of the Federal Emergency Management Agency to submit a report regarding certain plans regarding assistance to applicants and grantees during the response to an emergency or disaster\nMarch 24, 2017 — Department of Homeland Security Acquisition Innovation Act\nMarch 21, 2017 — Quadrennial Homeland Security Review Technical Corrections Act of 2017\nMarch 21, 2017 — Transparency in Technological Acquisitions Act of 2017\nMarch 20, 2017 — DHS Acquisition Authorities Act of 2017\nMarch 20, 2017 — DHS Multiyear Acquisition Strategy Act of 2017\nMarch 20, 2017 — Reducing DHS Acquisition Cost Growth Act\nMarch 17, 2017 — Hanabusa of Hawaii Part B Amendment No. 11\nMarch 15, 2017 — To authorize the Secretary of the Interior to amend the Definite Plan Report for the Seedskadee Project to enable the use of the active capacity of the Fontenelle Reservoir\nMarch 15, 2017 — Arbuckle Project Maintenance Complex and District Office Conveyance Act of 2017\nMarch 7, 2017 — To name the Department of Veterans Affairs community-based outpatient clinic in Pago Pago, American Samoa, the Faleomavaega Eni Fa’aua’a Hunkin VA Clinic\nFeb. 27, 2017 — Mount Hood Cooper Spur Land Exchange Clarification Act\nFeb. 13, 2017 — BRAVE Act\nFeb. 13, 2017 — HIRE Vets Act\nFeb. 6, 2017 — Black Hills National Cemetery Boundary Expansion Act\nFeb. 6, 2017 — Bolts Ditch Access and Use Act\nJan. 30, 2017 — Ocmulgee Mounds National Historical Park Boundary Revision Act of 2017\nJan. 30, 2017 — To remove the sunset provision of section 203 of Public Law 105-384 and for other purposes\nJan. 23, 2017 — Kari’s Law Act\nJan. 23, 2017 — Anti-Spoofing Act\nJan. 9, 2017 — Protecting Patient Access to Emergency Medications Act of 2017\nJan. 9, 2017 — Improving Access to Maternity Care Act","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line537723"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6333143711090088,"wiki_prob":0.3666856288909912,"text":"History of Health Care in America – US 101\nPosted on July 14, 2019 July 14, 2019 By Kathryn AlvaTagged ACA, Affordable Care Act, ahca, america, american health care act, american healthcare act, american history, american medical association, Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, civil war, Democrats, donald trump, education, franklin d roosevelt, great depression, harry truman, Health Care, health care bill, healthcare, hillary clinton, history, Medicine, News, obamacare, politics, repeal, replace, Republicans, single payer, socialism, united states, Universal health care, us 101, us history\nI am NOT a historian but neither are you so how about we the people learn this stuff together welcome to u.s. 101 Oh health care the thing that many of my friends and at one time myself did not have it's also the thing that your parents have and maybe because of that you're entitled to it and the thing that millions of Americans continue to debate and once again health care is on the forefront of America's mind now that the House of Representatives recently voted to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act also known as Obamacare would the American Health Care Act and I'm happy to report that once the House voted to pass the American Health Care Act they they accepted the votes with the grace and dignity that we have come to expect from our federal government [Applause] now the AHCA is not official yet as the bill has to go through the Senate before it can be enacted but this vote through the House of Representatives already has advocates of Obamacare freaking out now I'm not saying that the Affordable Care Act was a perfect system far from it okay insurance premiums were high and there was a tax levied against people who didn't sign up for health care insurance but opponents of the AHCA have also pointed out its flaws saying that anyone that has a pre-existing condition could be denied coverage eight hundred billion dollars are going to be slashed for Medicaid and the wealthiest Americans will receive a tax cut because of this bill and amidst this rigmarole that is the health care debate many people ask time and again why doesn't America the strongest and largest nation on the planet have a universal health care system like the one that they have in Canada or in England or in Australia which usually results in conservatives grabbing the torches and pitchforks and angrily yelling stop talking Bernie Sanders what I want to focus on for today's episode is when did the topic of health care even become a discussion in the United States when did some Americans first decide that going to a hospital seeing a doctor receiving prescribed medicine should be a right and not a privilege for that we have to head back to 1854 and meet the activist Dorothea Dix Dix was one of the first to present a health care proposal to the government she wanted the government to raise asylums for the indigent insane as well as the blind the Deaf and the poor she came really really close the bill actually passed both houses of Congress but was ultimately vetoed by President Franklin Pierce who claimed that social welfare was a state responsibility not a federal one and then later in 1865 at the end of the Civil War the government established what became known as the Freedmen's Bureau which raised hospitals and employed doctors to treat sick and dying former slaves in the south and from 1865 to 1870 the Freedmen's Bureau treated over 1 million former slaves but unfortunately by 1870 hospitals in the south had to start closing due to rising violence from a small group of cowards you may have heard of known as the Ku Klux Klan and it would be another 70 years until the topic of health care became a major talking point in the government in 1933 following the Great Depression millions of Americans couldn't afford medical care so President Franklin D Roosevelt attempted to create publicly funded health care programs but was vehemently opposed by groups like the American Medical Association who claimed that programs like this would be considered compulsory and due to staunch opposition Roosevelt unfortunately had to drop these programs from his New Deal and then later in the 1940s Roosevelt's successor Harry Truman tried to pass the universal health care bill but was again opposed by the American Medical Association who is now using a term that to this day still strikes fear into the heart of many Americans socialized medicine and by invoking socialism the AMA started stirring up fears that America was going to leave behind its capitalist roots and start going the way of a communist regime which we damn well would not do because we sure as heck ain't no Russians we're America goddamn it in fact the excuse of socialized medicine was also the reason that lyndon b johnson couldn't pass a universal health care bill in the 1960 but despite opposition from the AMA and some conservative republicans johnson did manage to pass what became known as Medicare in 1965 and for those either don't know what Medicare is Medicare provides health care coverage to anyone that's over the age of 65 as well as to the blind death and disabled throughout the 70s there were multiple attempts to try to get a universal healthcare bill passed and one of the leading advocates of universal health care was Senator Ted Kennedy Kennedy proposed what was known as the health security act which was a single-payer system that would provide coverage to almost every single American but unfortunately the bill never made it out of Congress and then we jump to the 1990s when Bill and Hillary Clinton attempted a major health care reform by introducing the American Health Security Act in 1993 the plan proposed health care for all Americans via private insurers in a regulated market furthermore employers would be required to provide health care to their employees pay 80% of the premiums and health care plans were required to provide a minimum of benefits but in 1994 following disputes between supporters of the bill and its opponents who claimed that the Ahsa gave more power to the insurers and took away the rights of the patient to choose their own doctor the bill was killed and then most recently we have the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act which was signed into law by President Obama in March of 2010 Democrats praised the plan saying that with the passing of the Affordable Care Act more Americans than ever would finally get health care insurance meanwhile Republicans didn't like the plan so much because again the claim of socialized medicine and then something about death panels and a whole lot more oh and it also didn't help that Republican turtle senator Mitch McConnell told many Republicans not to go along with Obama's plan because quote it tended to convey to the public that this is okay they must have figured it out end quote are you kidding me so now that you've gotten your history lesson let me turn it over to you guys man do you think that health care should be a right for all Americans should Americans be guaranteed health care across the board and should the government provide it or are you someone that prefers having the type of health care that lets you decide what kind of health care you get by being able to select your insurance provider I know that this can be a deep and divisive topic among people so can we please keep the discourse in the comments section below civil guys please that is it for this episode of US 101 guys if you want to read more about this topic I've included some links down below in the description box and thanks to all of you that have subscribed to the channel that are sharing the videos that are liking the videos that are commenting on them I sincerely appreciate your guys's a support of the channel and if you're brand new to the channel welcome we talk about history here hopefully you hang out as always guys you can follow us on the Facebook on Twitter on Instagram all those links down below in the description box I want to send a special shout out to my subscriber Beth for supplying today's intro thank you so much bet there was an awesome job and you are the first one to do it well done to you you have set the precedent if you guys want to submit your own intros so that you'll be able to kick-off future episodes of US 101 you can email me your videos you can email them to us history 182 at gmail.com or you can send them to me through Twitter at USA history one oh one and on that note guys thank you so much for watching I will see you next week for another episode of u.s. 101 until then we are all done now before I go you're looking a little you're looking a little pale do me a favor just just turn your head and cough do it again do it again don't know why doctors ever did that just prove that I could call I can call that I can call\n19 thoughts on “History of Health Care in America – US 101”\nKCI investments says:\nemotional intelligence is essential for educators, what is wrong with these youtube tutors?\nJoanne Steele says:\nI would have loved to have used this video in my Hc100 class. It is well-done, but the language both stated and implied is more than I can tolerate.\nDustin Hill says:\nACCURATE TITLE: The history of CRONYISM and INTERVENTION of Health Care in America since 1854.\nAmpwich says:\nWhere can I go to find a non biased introduction to politics and what the heck is going on? I wanna get involved by Idk where to start, and I don't wanna be led toward one side or the other, no tampering! I just wanna know what's what and make up my own mind…..\nTheAutobotPower says:\nI say all USAmericans die off and then all the world will live in peace.\nJesus Our Savior says:\nAny god would want this. Keep that in mind my religious people.\njayson says:\nI'm here from the R!OB\nMr. Beat says:\nDorothea!\nAudrey Lukas says:\nNo one deserves to die because they are poor\nSteven Williams says:\nYour quality is always so damn good! Still don't understand how you're only at 2.2k. I will forever be known as being here before 1k. So glad I stumbled upon this channel.\nEmily Milligan says:\nMan have I missed Sami's wise-cracking humor. I'm glad to have subscribed\nKixanum says:\nHealth care pretty much works very sustainably here in germany. On the other hand our countries economy is pretty socialistic. Our system is even called \"social marketeconomy\".\nheavymetalalldaylong says:\nWe are guaranteed Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. It can be argued that the continuation of life is included in that guarantee\nB Mcgee says:\n\"We hold these truths to be sacred & undeniable; that all men are created equal & independent, that from that equal creation they derive rights inherent & inalienable, among which are the preservation of life, & liberty, & the pursuit of happiness; …\" seems to me like Thomas Jefferson felt that the right to live should be given to every American. It doesn't say \"we hold these truths to be self evident, except if you can't afford it\"\nPikiPiki says:\ni Sent one, its horrible X'D\nPhantom Rose says:\nHealthcare should be a right since we are the only developed country that does not have healthcare is a right and besides that Medicare is basically government run medicine socialized medicine for those who don't know. Ha!\nBryan Rothman says:\nIn answering your question, I do not believe that health care is a right because I only believe that negative rights (life, liberty, property, contract, etc…aka natural rights) are legitimate in a free and voluntary society. Positive rights like health care, education, housing, etc.. involve coercing a group of people to provide something for someone else. So morally speaking, I do not believe that the government has the right to coerce people into providing any services for anyone else. This does not mean I don't believe that everyone should have health care, but it should be done on a voluntary basis, with contract and/or charitable organizations. Historically, before the rise of governments getting involved in the health care business, there existed a vast array of voluntary organizations that made sure that their patients were taken care of, sometimes for free pro bono.\nEconomically speaking, the onerous rules and regulations that govern health care are the primary reason why costs are so high and why there is more dynamism in other sectors like luxury TVs than in so-called \"public goods.\" Governments cannot allocate goods as efficiently as the invisible hand. If we allowed for people to choose their own health care and let the market rationally allocate resources, we would be able to have more choices than we could ever dream of (Hayek's spontaneous order). Remarkably, even in our very hampered market, private health savings plans like Liberty HealthShare are providing cheaper market solutions than the inefficient government can provide. Neither the Republicans or Democrats want this as they both want corporations to gain oligarchic benefits at the expense of us. It's basically cronyism in the health care business rather than true free market capitalism. For evidence of everything I've just described, I'll include all my sources below.\nhttps://mises.org/blog/how-government-regulations-made-healthcare-so-expensive\nhttps://mises.org/library/100-years-governments-managed-health-care\nhttps://fee.org/articles/why-single-payer-health-care-delivers-poor-quality-at-high-cost/\nhttps://fee.org/articles/why-large-screen-tvs-are-affordable-and-health-care-is-not/\nhttps://fee.org/articles/health-insurance-is-illegal/\nhttps://fee.org/articles/why-pre-existing-conditions-should-be-left-to-the-market/\nhttps://mises.org/system/tdf/Compulsory%20Medical%20Care%20and%20the%20Welfare%20State_2.pdf?file=1&type=document\nKelsie Janney says:\nDid you know that preexisting conditions will be covered? No one just wants to mention it.\nJust an fyi.\nZalibeeth says:\nOH nO! That intro of mine is so bad… X'D Amazing work as always!!!!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1393171"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.710817813873291,"wiki_prob":0.289182186126709,"text":"The Campaign for Science and Engineering (Case) is calling for the boost to avoid “stagnation”.\nCase has published a new report outlining how the government can stimulate a rise in the UK’s science industries.\nDr Sarah Main, Case Director, said: “Government needs a compelling vision for a scientifically-enabled economy with a plan and a budget that attracts cross-government support and global attention.\n“It needs to invest in the UK’s exceptional science base, which is an attractor for global money and talent, by sustaining its unique breadth and by making R&D infrastructure and future skills an early priority.”\nThe government has made an initial pledge of an additional £7bn to UK R&D between 2016 and 2021.\nCase is calling for it to increase the scale of increments and invest an additional £20.2bn between 2020-21 and 2024-25 to meet its target.\nIt estimates that this £20bn investment would attract a calculated £28bn of leveraged research investment from private sources over 15 year.\nJuly journal-based learning exercises\nPlease select your choice of correct answers and complete the exercises online at: www.ibms.org/cpd/jbl","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1433310"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9653205275535583,"wiki_prob":0.9653205275535583,"text":"KN-C22137. President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, Speaks at Arrival Ceremony\nPresident of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, delivers remarks during arrival ceremonies in his honor. Standing on reviewing platform (L-R): U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk (in back, partially hidden); President John F. Kennedy; Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou (partially hidden); Archbishop Makarios III (at microphones); Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke; and Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides (in front, holding hat). Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr., stands left of platform; Military Aide to President Kennedy, General Chester V. Clifton, stands behind platform at right. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Ambassador of New Zealand, George Robert Laking; Ambassador of India, B. K. Nehru; Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir David Ormsby-Gore; Ambassador of Greece, Alexander A. Matsas; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Chief of Protocol of the Republic of Cyprus, George Pelaghias; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King; and U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd. The United States Army Band stands in background. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nKN-C22136. President John F. Kennedy Speaks at Arrival Ceremony for President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III\nPresident John F. Kennedy (at microphones) delivers remarks at arrival ceremonies in honor of President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III. Standing on reviewing platform (L-R): Archbishop Makarios III; U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou; President Kennedy; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke; and Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides (in front, holding hat). Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr., stands left of platform; Military Aide to President Kennedy, General Chester V. Clifton, stands behind platform at right. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Ambassador of New Zealand, George Robert Laking; Ambassador of India, B. K. Nehru; Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir David Ormsby-Gore; Ambassador of Greece, Alexander A. Matsas; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Chief of Protocol of the Republic of Cyprus, George Pelaghias; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King; and U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd. The United States Army Band stands in background. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nKN-C22130. Arrival of President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III\nPresident John F. Kennedy and President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III (both in center left), stand on the reviewing platform during arrival ceremonies in honor of Archbishop Makarios III. Also standing on platform (L-R): Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou (partially hidden); U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides (in front, left of microphones); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; and U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke (holding hat). Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr. (saluting), stands right of platform. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Ambassador of New Zealand, George Robert Laking; Ambassador of India, B. K. Nehru; Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir David Ormsby-Gore; Ambassador of Greece, Alexander A. Matsas; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Chief of Protocol of the Republic of Cyprus, George Pelaghias; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd; and U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King. The United States Army Band stands in background. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nKN-22125. President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, Speaks at Arrival Ceremony\nPresident of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, delivers remarks during arrival ceremonies in his honor. Standing on reviewing platform (L-R): U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; President John F. Kennedy; Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); Archbishop Makarios III (at microphones); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke; and Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides. Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr., stands left of platform; Military Aide to President Kennedy, General Chester V. Clifton (mostly hidden), stands behind platform at right. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Ambassador of New Zealand, George Robert Laking; Ambassador of India, B. K. Nehru; Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir David Ormsby-Gore; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Chief of Protocol of the Republic of Cyprus, George Pelaghias; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King; and U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd. The United States Army Band stands in background at left. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nPresident of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, delivers remarks during arrival ceremonies in his honor. Standing on reviewing platform (L-R): U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; President John F. Kennedy; Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); Archbishop Makarios III (at microphones); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke; and Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides. Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr., stands left of platform; Military Aide to President Kennedy, General Chester V. Clifton (mostly hidden in center right), stands behind platform. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King; and U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd. The United States Army Band stands in background at left. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nKN-22116. Arrival of President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III\nPresident John F. Kennedy (center right) shakes hands with President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III, during arrival ceremonies in honor Archbishop Makarios III. Standing on reviewing platform (L-R): the Archbishop; U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; President Kennedy; Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou (mostly hidden behind the President); Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke; and Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides (in front, holding hat). Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr., stands left of platform; Military Aide to President Kennedy, General Chester V. Clifton, stands behind platform at right. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Ambassador of New Zealand, George Robert Laking; Ambassador of India, B. K. Nehru; Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir David Ormsby-Gore; Ambassador of Greece, Alexander A. Matsas; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Chief of Protocol of the Republic of Cyprus, George Pelaghias; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King; and U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd. The United States Army Band stands in background. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nKN-22115. President John F. Kennedy Speaks at Arrival Ceremony for President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III\nPresident John F. Kennedy and President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III (both in center left), stand on the reviewing platform during arrival ceremonies in honor of Archbishop Makarios III. Also standing on platform (L-R): Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou (partially hidden); U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides (in front, left of microphones); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; and U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke (holding hat). Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr. (saluting), stands right of platform. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Chief of Protocol of the Republic of Cyprus, George Pelaghias; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd; and U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King. The United States Army Band stands in background. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nPresident John F. Kennedy and President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III (both in center left), stand on the reviewing platform during arrival ceremonies in honor of Archbishop Makarios III. Also standing on platform (L-R): Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou; U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides (in front, left of microphones); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; and U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke (holding hat). Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr. (saluting), stands right of platform. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, Bülend Uşaklıgil; Ambassador of Nigeria, Julius Momo Udochi; Ambassador of New Zealand, George Robert Laking; Ambassador of India, B. K. Nehru; Ambassador of Great Britain, Sir David Ormsby-Gore; Ambassador of Greece, Alexander A. Matsas; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Chief of Protocol of the Republic of Cyprus, George Pelaghias; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd; and U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King. The United States Army Band stands in background. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nPresident John F. Kennedy and President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III (both in center left), stand on the reviewing platform during arrival ceremonies in honor of Archbishop Makarios III. Also standing on platform (L-R): Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou (partially hidden); U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides (in front, left of microphones); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; and U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke (holding hat). Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr. (saluting), stands right of platform. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Robin Chandler Duke; Director of the Office of the President of the Republic of Cyprus, Patroclos Stavrou; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd; and U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King. The United States Army Band stands in background. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nPresident John F. Kennedy and President of the Republic of Cyprus, Archbishop Makarios III (both in center), stand on the reviewing platform during arrival ceremonies in honor of Archbishop Makarios III. Also standing on platform (L-R): U.S. Secretary of State, Dean Rusk (partially hidden); Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Cyprus, Spyros Kyprianou; Chief of Naval Operations, Admiral George W. Anderson, Jr. (U.S.N.); U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus, Fraser Wilkins; U.S. Chief of Protocol, Angier Biddle Duke; and Ambassador of the Republic of Cyprus, Zenon Rossides. Naval Aide to President Kennedy, Captain Tazewell T. Shepard, Jr., stands right of platform. Also pictured: Ambassador of Nicaragua and Dean of the Diplomatic Corps, Dr. Guillermo Sevilla-Sacasa; Ambassador of Ghana, William M. Q. Halm; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, Phillips Talbot; Director of the Office of Greek, Turkish, and Iranian Affairs, Robert G. Miner; Counselor of the Embassy of the Republic of Cyprus, Alaeddin Gulen; Director of the Public Information Office of the Republic of Cyprus, Pavlos Xioutas; Ambassador of Canada, Charles S. A. Ritchie; Chairman of the Citizens Committee of the District of Columbia, Edgar Morris; U.S. Assistant Chief of Protocol for Visits and Public Events, Samuel L. King; and U.S. State Department Protocol officer, Jay Rutherfurd. The United States Army Band stands in background at left. Military Air Transport Service (MATS) terminal, Washington National Airport, Washington D.C.\nHeads of state (16)\n(-)Gulen, Alaeddin, 1922?- (16)\n(-)Sevilla-Sacasa, Guillermo, 1908-1997 (16)\nAnderson, George W. (George Whelan), 1906-1992 (16)\nDuke, Angier Biddle, 1915-1995 (16)\nHalm, William M. Q. Halm (16)\nKing, Samuel L. (Samuel Larkin), 1917-2005 (16)\nKyprianou, Spyros, 1932-2002 (16)\nMakarios III, Archbishop of Cyprus, 1913-1977 (16)\nMiner, Robert G. (Robert Graham), 1911-1990 (16)\nMorris, Edgar, 1890-1967 (16)\nRitchie, Charles Stewart Almon, 1906-1995 (16)\nRossides, Zenon G. (Zenon George), 1892?-1990 (16)\nRusk, Dean (David Dean), 1909-1994 (16)\nRutherfurd, Jay, 1916-2005 (16)\nShepard, Tazewell (Tazewell Taylor), 1921-2013 (16)\nTalbot, Phillips, 1915-2010 (16)\nWilkins, Fraser, 1908-1989 (16)\nXioutas, Pavlos, 1908-ca. 1991 (16)\nDuke, Robin Chandler Lynn, 1923- (15)\nStavrou, Patroclos, 1933?-2014 (15)\nUdochi, Julius Momo, 1914- (14)\nUşaklıgil, Bülend (14)\nPelaghias, George, 1924?- (13)\nHarlech, William David Ormsby-Gore, Lord, 1918-1985 (12)\nLaking, George Robert, 1912-2008 (12)\nNehru, B.K. (Braj Kumar), 1909-2001 (12)\nMatsas, Alexandros, d. 1969 (11)\nClifton, Chester V. (Chester Victor), 1913-1991 (10)\nWashington (D.C.) (16)\nUnited States. Department of Defense. Department of the Air Force. Military Air Transport Service. (06/01/1948 - 01/01/1966) (16)\nWashington National Airport (16)\nKnudsen, Robert L. (Robert LeRoy), 1929-1989 (16)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1079828"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8235374689102173,"wiki_prob":0.8235374689102173,"text":"NBCU’s hayu Reality TV Streaming Service Now Live in Canada, Pricing at $5.99\nBack in the spring, it was reported NBCUniversal International would launch its reality TV streaming service called hayu in Canada, by the end of 2018.\nHayu has now launched in Canada as of today, priced at $5.99 per month (including taxes), offering an on-demand video library for Canadians. The service here joins other successful launches in the UK, Ireland, Australia, Norway, Sweden, Finland and Denmark.\nTop reality shows such as Keeping Up with the Kardashians, The Real Housewives and Million Dollar Listing franchises, Vanderpump Rules and Below Deck, plus others, are now available on hayu, which currently has over 6,000 episodes from over 200 reality shows available.\nHayu also offers offline viewing by allowing users to download video to watch on the go, without the need for an Internet connection.\n“We’re thrilled to now be delivering the innovative all-reality SVOD service – hayu – in Canada,” says Hendrik McDermott, SVP, Branded On-Demand, NBCUniversal International, in an issued statement to iPhone in Canada. “The proven healthy appetite for reality programming amongst Canadian viewers is reinforced by early enthusiasm for hayu, with thousands already bingeing on multiple favourite shows – and we are excited to build momentum with Canadian subscribers.”\nHayu Canada kicked off its launch last night at the Love Child Social House in Toronto, at an event with Dolores Catania from Real Housewives of New Jersey and Canada’s very own “Housewives Historian” and pop-culture guru, Shinan Govani, discussing TV reality life.\nApple users can watch hayu with the service’s iPhone and iPad app, along with the web, Apple TV, Amazon Fire TV and Roku.\nHayu says the first month is free and after it’s $5.99 per month, while most episodes are available the same day as TV. Will you be signing up for hayu (please don’t tell my wife about this service)?\nClick here to sign up for your free month of hayu Canada.\nAmazon Launches Fire TV Stick 4K with Alexa Voice Remote in Canada and Smart TVs","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1682590"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6180830001831055,"wiki_prob":0.38191699981689453,"text":"Research Journal of Health Sciences\nKnowledge and attitude towards onchocerciasis and community directed treatment with ivermectin in endemic communities in Edo State, Nigeria.\nAO Onowhakpor, OH Okojie, VA Wagbatsoma\nObjective: Community directed treatment with ivermectin (CDTI) was developed as a solution for the control and elimination of onchocerciasisis. It involves active and structural community participation. CDTI requires that ivermectin be administered continuously over a period of at least 14years before elimination can be achieved in hyper and meso-endemic communities. The study assessed the knowledge and attitude of community's members towards onchocerciasis and the CDTI strategy in endemic communities in Edo State, Nigeria.\nMethods: This was a descriptive cross-sectional study involving seven hundred and twenty community members' selected using multistage sampling technique. Data was collected using a pre-tested structured interviewers' administered questionnaire and was analysed using IBM SPSS version 21.0 software. Level of statistical significance was set at p < 0.05\nResults: The mean age (SD) of respondents was 45.9 (15.2) years. Six hundred and one (83.5%) and 591 (82.1%) of the respondents had good knowledge of onchocerciasis and CDTI strategy respectively. The significant predictors of good knowledge on onchocerciasis were age (p = 0.001), sex (p = 0.001) and level of education (p = 0.001) while that of CDTI strategy were sex (p = 0.001) and level of education (p = 0.001). Five hundred and ninety seven (82.9%) of the respondents had a good attitude towards the CDTI strategy and its significant predictor was level of education (p = 0.006)\nConclusion: Findings from this study revealed that there are still gaps in knowledge as regards onchocerciasis and the CDTI strategy among community members in the study area. Re-enforcement of health education messages on onchocerciasis and CDTI strategy in endemic areas is recommended so as to improve knowledge and consequent acceptance of the CDTI strategy.\nKeywords: Community Directed Treatment with Ivermectin, Onchocerciasis. Knowledge, Attitude, Nigeria.\nEMAIL FREE FULL TEXT\nhttp://dx.doi.org/10.4314/rejhs.v4i3.1","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1409293"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5535295009613037,"wiki_prob":0.4464704990386963,"text":"Antithesis appartments\nGuru nanak and meera bai\nThe impact of technological changes on the development of wireless technology\nHuman trafficking grammar\nSubsequently, ina meeting of the American Ministers for Foreign Affairs created the Inter-American Commission on Human Rightswhich has since undertaken important investigative activities in the region. The difficulties and the benefits associated with working abroad are many, especially in relation to family life.\nForeign Service can be exceptionally difficult. The country's first all-women university, named after Fatima Jinnahwas inaugurated on 6 August She was sentenced to fifteen lashes, five years imprisonment, and a fine of rupees.\nBy the first decade of the 21st century, however, only the first four of these regions had created enforcement mechanisms within the framework of a human rights charter. First, the American convention, reflecting the influence of the American Declaration, acknowledges the relationship between individual duties and individual rights.\nHad we not come through the fiery testing supplied by the devil and his corrupt world-system, we would never be able to appreciate God's marvelous provision for us and His deliverance of us from all our earthly trials 2Tim. So while these fellow creatures of God share with us the fact that the central issue in their existence is to choose for or against the Lord, the manner in which they have done so in the pre-human past is thus different from the manner in which we now do so in human history.\nThese and other facts speak to Human trafficking grammar immaterial aspect of their nature. Under this principle, states have a responsibility to protect their civilian populations against genocide and other mass human rights atrocities.\nLike us, they possess personality and individuality as evidenced, for example, by joy: If not, explain Human trafficking grammar students that after each round of questions, players have to decide who is the weakest link i.\nThe protocol has been favourably received in most of the countries of western Europe and in many countries in the Americas, though not in the United States. It is, in any event, fair to say that the African human rights system was still in its infancy at the beginning of the 21st century, given especially the turmoil and violence that beset northern and sub-Saharan Africa during this time.\nAlthough Pakistan is a very religious, orthodox country, the rate of prostitution is very high. This evolving International Law of State Responsibility for Injuries to Aliens, as these customs and conventions came to be called, represents the beginning of active concern—however much they served the interests of colonial expansion —for human rights on the international plane.\nIf governments fail to meet the minimum standards or fail to make strides to do so, the United States may cease financial assistance beyond humanitarian and trade-related aid. Yet we should point out that, by its very essence, the angelic nature is superior to our present earthly human nature in terms of appearance, intellect, power, mobility and authority 2Pet.\nAmbassadors at large are appointed by the President, with the advice and consent of the Senate. For it was [God's] good pleasure for the fulfillment [of His plan] to reside entirely in [Christ], and so through Him to reconcile everything to Himself having made peace through Him, through the blood of His cross — whether things on earth, or things in heaven.\nThe guy asks you where you are headed to and you give him the address; he starts the meter and starts driving. What would you do if it would happen to you?\nUnaware of this, Shahida, after her mandatory day period of waiting iddatremarried. God's ineffable wisdom shines through pellucidly in this distinction of choices presented to us on the one hand and to our angelic fellow creatures on the other.\nHaving established that angels are creatures too, and that they are not possessed of infinite power and ability, it is important to acknowledge that this power and ability of theirs is considerable, especially in comparison to mankind. The trafficking scheme Human traffickers often create transnational routes for transporting migrants who are driven by unfavourable living conditions to seek the services of a smuggler.\nMigrant trafficking is one of the fastest-growing criminal enterprises. In this sense as well as others, the Arab human rights system compares unfavourably with its European, Inter-American, and African counterparts. Modern-day slavery is worse today than it was historically.\nHuman rights in Asia Despite efforts by NGOs and the United Nations, Asian states were at best ambivalent—and at worst hostile—to human rights concerns over many years, thus precluding agreement on almost all regional human rights initiatives.\nThe most frequent kind of illegal abuse of an official position concerns Consular Officers. She also announced plans to set up women's police stationscourts and women's development banks. As ofthe trend of Vani is decreased very much, allowing more young girls to live their childhood freely.\nThus, its controversial Article 2 3 provides that all forms of racism, Zionism and foreign occupation and domination constitute an impediment to human dignity and a major barrier to the exercise of the fundamental rights of peoples; all such practices must be condemned and efforts must be deployed for their elimination.\nIn addition to espionage, there is also the danger of personnel that use their position illegally for financial gain.\nTraffickers may also use a variety of techniques to instill fear in victims and ensure that they remain under their control: Shahida's second marriage was ruled invalid.Human trafficking happens in almost every country around the world, including the United States. Traffickers represent every social, ethnic, and racial group.\nTraffickers are not only men; women are also perpetrators.1 Increasingly, traffickers are using fear tactics to lure children and youth into commercial sex acts and/or compelled labor. As one of Georgia's most innovative institutions in teaching and learning, Kennesaw State University offers undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degrees across two metro Atlanta campuses.\nKennesaw State is a member of the University System of Georgia and the third-largest university in Georgia. JSTOR is a digital library of academic journals, books, and primary sources.\n90% of the time, speakers of English use just 7, words in speech and writing. These words appear in red, and are graded with stars.\nOne-star words are frequent, two-star words are more frequent, and three-star words are the most frequent. Definition of human trafficking in US English - the action or practice of illegally transporting people from one country or area to another, typically for the purposes.\nTranslate Human. See 2 authoritative translations of Human in Spanish with example sentences, phrases and audio pronunciations.\nThe doing business report 2015\nEconomic analysis of the german economy\nCabs youth business plan template\nVisual aids in teaching english\nOffice 2013 business plan template\nAntigone essay questions answers\nA study of the life and works of william shakespeare\nTopics to write a fictional story about\nEtisalat business plans\nThe medias presentation of the muslim world in covering islam a book by edward said\nNarrative essay my worst nightmare\nChain of command army essay writing","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line689095"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5995655655860901,"wiki_prob":0.5995655655860901,"text":"Millennials are more willing to help out parents than you might think\nMillennials show a willingness to help out their parents as caregivers in more ways than one. Sometimes, the parents just have to communicate this. - photo by Sarah Anderson\nPosted: July 6, 2016, 3:11 a.m.\nAre millennials as unwilling to help their parents and relatives as they age as popular conception would have you think? Not exactly.\nAn opinion piece in Forbes discussed the recent results of the Fidelity Investments Family & Finance Study that interviewed 1,273 parents over the age of 55 and 221 of their adult children older than 25.\nIt was found, amongst other results, that it was the parents who were reluctant to become financially dependent on their children at 93 percent, while only 30 percent of adult children agreed, according to Forbes. However, 72 percent of parents said they expected their children to act as a long-term caregiver if needed, but 40 percent of those kids were unaware of that.\nThe articles conclusion was not that children were unwilling to do these things, but that these expectations and what was necessary to fulfill them werent being adequately communicated to the children.\nSimilarly, Time.com looked at the same survey and noted that most respondents said they did not have in-depth talks about monetary subjects such as long-term care, retirement expenses, wills and estate planning, or where important documents were kept.\nParents dont want to acknowledge these issues and children feel uncomfortable raising them, but you cant wait for the other person to bring the topic up, said John Sweeney, executive vice president of retirement and investing strategies at Fidelity, to Time.com.\nMillennials wanting to help parents isnt even a new train of thought, just now derailing the belief that millennials are indifferent to their older family members. An article from The Washington Post published last October talked about millennials who act as caregivers for family members.\nAbout a quarter of Americas adult caregivers fall between 18 and 34, The Post said, and millennial caregivers are as equally likely to be a man as a woman.\nThe makeup of the average millennial caregiver is someone who is 27, works a job 35 hours a week and with an average household income below the national median, according to The Post. Most live within 20 minutes of those they care for, if they dont live with them.\nAnd its not just medical assistance but lifestyle assistance millennials are giving, with a number reversing the accepted status quo and helping their parents find jobs, according to an article in The Atlantic.\nPossibly spurred on by a working market that prioritizes courting the younger generation over previous ones, millennials, such as 25-year-old Ashley Buchly, are helping their parents deal with being in-between jobs, as The Atlantic recounted.\nBuchlys father, a director of real estate at a university, left work when told it was either that or work at half his salary. He left, and sent out 500 resumes for another job, only for the rejections to start coming in, according to The Atlantic.\nHe even went to Wal-Mart and applied to be an overnight stocker, and they told him he was too qualified for the job, Buchly told The Atlantic.\nHe spent near three years unemployed until finding a job as a real estate agent, and even now Buchly helps him with networking both in everyday life and online as he looks for another job, as The Atlantic said.\nAnd aside from medical and lifestyle help, theres also the little things, like millennials Tweeting about helping their parents with technology.\nThe belief that millennials arent family oriented and there for older relatives may have some discrepancies to resolve.\nMillennials avoid credit cards and their accompanying debt\nWhy viewers choose video-streaming and how to make that decision yourself\nWhat still needs to be done for true workforce diversity and equality\nImmigration truths and myths during the election season","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line49510"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9197306036949158,"wiki_prob":0.9197306036949158,"text":"Anti-Semitic hate crimes spiked in 2017, according to B'Nai Brith\nPublished Tuesday, April 24, 2018 1:33PM EDT\nLast Updated Tuesday, April 24, 2018 6:12PM EDT\nInstances of anti-Semitic vandalism went up by a “whopping” 107 per cent in 2017, according to an audit by B’Nai Brith Canada – setting a record for anti-Semitism in Canada, they said.\nTheir “Annual Audit of Anti-Semitic Incidents” revealed that 2017 was the second consecutive year in which record numbers were reached. The audit showed 1,752 incidents throughout Canada last year – and they estimate only about 10 per cent get reported.\n“If the Hasidic community in Outremont reported every single incident, every single day of what happens to their community, we would have unbelievable numbers. But they don't because it's become so prevalent they kind of learn to live with it,” said Janna Minikovich, a B’Nai Brith first responder. “It makes me feel horrible because I am Jewish and so putting up with things like this, trying to decrease it and trying to eliminate it. It's not just anti-Semitism, it's hate in general.”\nAccording to their data, vandalism was especially prevalent. Homes, schools, parks and highways were reportedly defaced by Nazi graffiti and anti-Semitic epithets.\n“This problem will not solve itself,” Michael Mostyn, CEO of B’Nai Brith Canada, said in a statement Tuesday. “We need a concerted national effort to ensure that anti-Semitic outbreaks do not become a fact of life for Jews in this country, as in other developed countries such as France and Sweden.”\nOver 400 distinct incidents took place in Quebec – among them, B’Nai Brith pointed out “a rapper who promoted anti-Semitic violence” and “an imam who escaped criminal sanctions after twice calling for the genocide of Jews.”\nThe report states: \"While Canadians often stress their multiculturalism and tolerance as defining national traits, our record on anti-Semitism is just as problematic as that of our southern neighbours.\"\nThe organization said it saw a spike in incidents following white nationalist rallies in Charlottesville, Virginia, adding that more than ever, the hateful messages are transitioning from online to real life.\nB'nai Brith said Montreal police have taken a big first step by establishing the hate crimes unit, and is pushing other Canadian cities to follow suit.\nThe organization posited an eight-point plan to tackle anti-Semitism, including increased resources for police hate crime units, a no-tolerance approach to public funding of anti-Jewish events, and the development of a National Action Plan for anti-Semitism, among others.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line951898"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8527107238769531,"wiki_prob":0.8527107238769531,"text":"How the National Theatre protects its scripts and stars from cyber attacks\nThe arts venue uses Forcepoint Cloud Security to protect millions of customers and 1,200 staff members around the world\nTom Macaulay\nTom studied English Literature and History at Sussex University before gaining a Masters in Newspaper Journalism from City University. He's particularly interested in the public sector and the ethical implications of emerging technologies.\nTom Macaulay August 4, 2017\nThe National Theatre has turned to Forcepoint Cloud Security to keep its scripts, set designs and the personal information of its stars safe from hackers.\nForcepoint specialises in providing centrally-managed security, which provides protection wherever data is, regardless of where increasingly-mobile users are located.\nImage: Philip Vile\nThe performing arts venue on London's South Bank presents more than 3,000 live performances each year. It relies on extensive collaboration between people on highly sensitive information. In IT terms this means a variety of users sharing documents across a variety of devices and software platforms, all around the world.\n\"The reason we chose Forcepoint is because it's a platform-as-a-service and a cloud technology, so it's on all of our devices all of the time,\" George Tunnicliffe, the head of IT operations at the National Theatre told Computerworld UK.\n\"The combination of seeing where your data is going, assisting the users in using the internet, and keeping them safe without them having to really think about it is really crucial and useful for us. We didn't want anything to interfere with their work, and we don't want to set up lots of onerous policies.\"\nTunnicliffe is responsible for keeping up to 1,200 members of staff, the theatre's intellectual property (IP) including scripts and stage designs, and the private information and correspondence of actors, directors and designers safe from cyber attackers.\nThe recent hacking scandal at American TV network HBO showed that no production company is too big to be breached. Attackers stole an unreleased Game of Thrones screenplay and unaired episodes of hit shows such as Ballers and Room 104. According to the Hollywood Reporter, the 1.5 terabytes of data stolen was seven times that of the infamous 2014 Sony hack linked to The Interview, a comedy about North Korea.\nThe National Theatre wants to ensure that the plays it produces don't join the growing list of leaks. Its information is stored and shared across various services, such as Google Drive and with cloud-based document storage vendor Box. The theatre recently migrated from its on-premise Microsoft Exchange system to Office 365 to improve collaboration in the cloud.\nRead next: 13 must-watch TED Talks on cyber security\nThe workforce regularly changes across productions and is highly mobile. They may be working in the South Bank theatre, at home, or with a producer at an international location, which makes access controls and onboarding extremely important.\n\"There's a lot more collaboration in the theatre across different mediums that I've not seen at this level anywhere that I've worked before,\" says Tunnicliffe. \"A lot of adjustments of plans, things going back and forwards, and lots of people looking at one document.\"\nWhy Forcepoint?\nTunnicliffe opted for Forcepoint after deeming the legacy cybersecurity product he inherited as inadequate. It could only be deployed on-premise, which created a single point of failure on the network, and was complicated to maintain and update.\n\"Forcepoint [won] hands down because its platform-as-a-service offering really stood out to us,\" says Tunnicliffe.\nForcepoint is installed on the National Theatre servers and on every device, laptop, and work station it hands out. It gives every user the same level of security as they would get inside the office and allows Tunicliffe's IT team of 12 the ability to understand and track when and where staff are moving information on the internet.\nThe Forcepoint Web Security dashboard provides comprehensive information on security threats. Image credit: Forcepoint\n\"One of the crucial things is that it's invisible to them,\" he says. \"It's always on, so they don't need to worry about logging into a VPN and putting it on to make sure they're safe. They can just get on with their work and know that the information on their laptop is going to the right place.\"\nForcepoint automatically stops dangerous activities on compromised websites such as uploading information, and provides notification that it's happening, flagging any unusual activity or high-risk behaviour.\nRead next: Ransomware explained - What is ransomware and how can it be stopped?\nPreparing for GDPR\nThe impending GDPR deadline of May 2018 has provided the National Theatre with the opportunity to restructure their information usage and review their data practices.\nRead next: GDPR explained: How to prepare for the approaching General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)\nForcepoint prevents advanced threats that use sophisticated detection evasion techniques from stealing sensitive data. Information is tracked as it moves and early visibility of data incidents and advanced warnings of possible compromises are displayed on a screen in the office.\nThe IT team can then contact the individual and department involved to find out the implications on data protection and GDPR compliance.\n\"What Forcepoint allows us to do is understand where our information is flowing to and what kind of information is on there,\" says Tunnicliffe.\nHow to ensure GDPR compliance in the cloud How Salesforce has prepared for GDPR","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1632230"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9103681445121765,"wiki_prob":0.9103681445121765,"text":"The many tributaries of the Sandspruit that flowed through the farms Syferfontein and Klipfontein created a rich and fertile landscape, and though the farms are gone, many historic structures on the spruit remain. Explore a series of bridges built by the City Engineer’s department between 1926 and 1938 in unusual sympathy with their context. These structures, built from locally sourced granite, have weathered decades of neglect and look as beautiful today as when they were built. Our City’s rivers were not only important for agriculture, but also for doing the laundry! It may surprise some to hear that one of Joburg’s earliest laundries was founded on the banks of the Sandspruit by Tamil labourers in the vicinity of Melrose in the late 1890s, and that this community has endured to this day. Our walk takes us past their Shree Siva Subramaniar Temple. In this vicinity can also be found two of Joburg’s lesser known memorials, to the Katyn Forest Massacre of 1940 and to the fighter pilots of World War II. And our walk will also encompass some of our earliest residential architecture – a house in Oaklands dating back to 1896, and the oldest existing houses in Abbotsford, Norwood and The Gardens.\nHilson Bridge is the earliest suburban bridge built in Johannesburg, and dates back to 1926. It is constructed of locally sourced granite, and its low-slung and inconspicuous design is in unusual sympathy with its environment. The descendants of the Willow trees seen in this historic photo are still to be found here.\nHigh Road between Plantation and Nursery Roads was called Red Square by the Security Branch because of the number of residents involved in anti-apartheid activities. The Rochmans at 21 Nursery Road sheltered Nelson Mandela in the early 60s, Michael Harmel at 47 High was the chief theoretician of the communist party, and Eli Weinberg became the photographer of the Struggle.\nIn contrast to the modest Hilson Bridge, the Pretoria Street Bridge, constructed in 1938, asserts its importance with bulky, rough-hewn dark granite and imposing pediments. The construction of the bridge was necessitated by rapid suburban growth in Highlands North and neighbouring Oaklands and Abbotsford in the 1930s.\nThe Johannesburg Melrose Shree Siva Subramaniar Temple (Melrose Temple) was founded in 1897 by indentured Tamil labourers working in the Melrose Laundry on the Sandspruit. The Tamil community was granted rights to build a temple here by Kruger’s ZAR government, although restricted ownership laws meant that the land was owned by a white proxy. Sadly, the original buildings were demolished in the 1990s.\nThis odd looking structure is what remains of a memorial erected in 1976 to commemorate the Royal Air Force aircrews who died while undergoing training in SA. Sadly, the Harvard wings once attached to it were removed after being vandalised, and are now housed at the SAAF Museum at Zwartkops.\nIn 1927 it was decided to extend waterborne sewerage to the suburbs using the small natural drainage basins of Joburg’s streams. Gravity-fed plants were established and given Classical-sounding names that would not prejudice the neighbouring suburbs by association – Antea, Bruma, Cydna and Delta. These four schemes were constructed during the Depression of the 1930s and were capital projects and poverty relief endeavours using only ‘poor white’ labour. They were eventually superseded by the gigantic disposal works at Diepsloot/Dainfern.\nThe Cydna Bridge, constructed on Melrose Street in 1931, is the most modest, and perhaps the most charming of our neighbourhood’s three historic bridges. Sadly, this area has been tainted by association with Brett Kebble’s arranged murder-suicide just up the road on Melrose Street Bridge.\nThe Katyn Memorial was erected in 1981 to commemorate the Katyn Forest Massacre, in which 14,500 Polish officers, police officers and citizens were executed by the Stalin regime of the Soviet Union in 1940. It was the first memorial outside of Poland to this event. The monument has since been extended to commemorate the Warsaw Flights and Polish Home Army during World War II.\nThe oldest house in Abbotsford, built before 1913, is found next to the Park.\nThe Bram Fischer family house. After evading police for months in 1964, he was arrested just down the road from his home, at the corner of Beaumont and Stella.\n10, 11 and 12\nPretoria-born attorney MA Begemann arrived in Johannesburg in 1886, and in 1896 was living in a large house set in a block of 8 acres to which four magnificent oak avenues led – “Oaklands”. The house still stands, although the block has been carved up and many of the Oak trees are gone. A subsequent owner, RS Mennie, whose family still own the property, built the magnificent stables on Haswell Street, and the almost hidden water tower on the corner of African and Currie.\nBetween 1961 and 1974, Helen Suzman was the sole representative of the Progressive Party in Parliament, and used that position to bravely speak out against Apartheid. Using the privileges of that position, she visited political prisoners and campaigned against unjust laws that so many other activists were subjected to, including detention without trial. Suzman was elected by the Houghton electoral district, and her campaign office was situated at 38 Ivy Road, Norwood.\nThe suburbs of Norwood, Orchards and The Gardens were all founded in 1902, and are therefore amongst the oldest suburbs in Johannesburg. Norwood was immediately popular with the lower middle-class as it was served by the tram on Grant Avenue. Development in Orchards and The Gardens tracked the tram’s extension. Though gentrification from the 70s has almost obliterated its historic housing stock, Nellie Road contains the oldest remaining house (1911)at no 2, and a beautifully restored example of late 20s veranda architecture at no 52.\n17 and 18\nOrchards' oldest house, dating back to 1903, is found at 11 High Road. The historic St Luke's Church, designed in 1906 by Herbert Baker with later additions by Fleming, is situated across the road.\nThe Gardens was established in 1902, and its oldest remaining house was built soon after, for a Mr Cuthbertson on stand no 1 in 1905. Its late Victorian design is largely unaltered. Land to the east of The Gardens remained undeclared until the 1970s, and it was here that the thriving Portuguese Market Gardens were developed. Sadly increasing land prices resulted in a very attractive sale of the land to Sanlam and Pick n Pay in the 1970s, resulting in the disappearance of the irrigation dams and destruction of much of the wetland. NORA has bravely fought to restore the space in recent years.\nDo you have information on our neighbourhood's history that you would like to share? Contact us on noracommittee@gmail.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line701764"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7653325796127319,"wiki_prob":0.7653325796127319,"text":"Brandon Pollard\nBrandon Pollard - (Player) Inducted 2018\nBrandon played his youth soccer with the Richmond Strikers that became State Cup Champions and competed in Regionals in Niagara Falls. He later played with the Prince William Spartans. He was selected for VYSA ODP and Region I ODP in 1989, 1990, and 1991. In High School, Brandon was a four-time All Colonial District and All State Soccer player named Parade Magazine All-American as a senior. Brandon attended the University of Virginia. While at UVA, he was a member of the 1992, 1993, and 1994 NCAA Championship team. He was selected All-American in 1993, 1994 and 1995. During his collegiate career, he was also selected for various US Youth Soccer National Teams. In 1993, he was a member of the World University Games soccer teams. That same year he also started in all four games at the U20 World Cup. In 1995, Brandon was a member of the US team at the Pan American Games and in 1996, he was selected for the US Soccer U23 team participating in the Olympics. In 1996, Brandon was selected to the Dallas Burn. He continued to play with the Burn until he was injured in 2000. He retired from playing professionally in 2001 and found his next passion dedicating his time to helping bees make honey “Going inside a beehive is much like participating in and witnessing The Beautiful Game.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line987771"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9700261354446411,"wiki_prob":0.9700261354446411,"text":"Spurs boost as Son moves into Asian Games final four\nThe two medals from the compound teams have come as a welcome relief for the Indian archery contingent after the recurve archers drew a blank from the Games. They all want to make their countrymen proud, Guiao asserted. Hindi naman tayo naglalaro para sa sinasabi nilang multo (ghost) but for our country..\nCatalans Dragons stun Warrington Wolves in Challenge Cup final\nHe failed in the first objective, but later had a spell with Catalans' feeder club St Esteve and was then signed by the Perpignan-based side, making his debut in their Challenge Cup sixth round win over Whitehaven when he scored a brace of tries.\nSerena Williams downplays controversy over French Open 'catsuit' ban\nOn top of that, the catsuit serves a medical objective. In an Instagram post after that French Open first-round victory over Czech Kristyna Pliskova - her first match on clay since the 2016 French Open final - Williams wrote: \"Catsuit anyone?\" 'The president of the French Federation, he's been really wonderful.\nSpurs legend Ginobili announces retirement\nLeonard's departure meant Ginobili would have been the last player tied to the Spurs' title years. Taken in the second round of the 1999 NBA Draft, Ginobili made the jump to the NBA in 2002 following fours seasons in Italy where he was the back-to-back MVP in 2001 and 2002 for Virtus Bologna.\nZaha could play for Real Madrid - Souness\nTownsend then played James McArthur in in front of goal, but after the midfielder controlled possession to leave him with only Foster to beat he struck low and straight at the goalkeeper. Do you agree with Souness' opinion? \"Happy to be the record goalscorer for [Crystal] Palace in the Premier League and hope I can score many more for the club\", Zaha posted on Instagram.\nWhy Thibaut Courtois is not starting for Real Madrid\nReal Madrid Julen Lopetegui highlighted the importance of his \"collective\" team over individual talent in the post-Cristiano Ronaldo era after a 4-1 win at Girona on Sunday. Naturally in Ronaldo's absence, all eyes have been on Gareth Bale , and the Welshman has delivered. With the home side chasing the game, Real were a constant threat on the counter and Bale gave a glimpse of his searing pace when he latched onto an Isco through ball to score in his sixth consecutive league ...\nMourinho demands respect in presser after Man U loss\nIn his managerial career, Mourinho has won three Premier League titles at the helm of Chelsea FC, winning two (2004-05, 2005-06) during his first spell with the club, and another (2014-15) during his second tenure at Stamford Bridge. \"Three for me and two for them\", he said. Pogba, who cost United a then world record £89 million ($116 million) in 2016 claimed he would be fined for revealing his true feelings after the first game of the season as his agent Mino Raiola appears to be ...\nNASCAR Xfinity driver Conor Daly loses sponsorship\nWith three laps to go, second-place James Davison and third-place Justin Marks were jockeying for position, trying desperately to catch Allgaier, when their cars spun out around a tight left turn. The Roush Fenway Racing driver is behind the wheel of a relatively simple black and green vehicle in the NASCAR Xfinity Series race in rural Wisconsin.\nRumor: Odell Beckham Jr. deal with Giants ‘close, but not done’\nThe Odell Beckham Jr . contract-extension negotiations may soon be reaching their conclusion. Beckham is entering the final year of his rookie contract and is set to earn $8.5 million this season. The fan, who was decked out in a Sam Darnold USC jersey, was clearly ecstatic when Beckham concluded their game and said his farewells. He'll become a free agent after the 2018 season if he can't agree to a new deal with the Giants.\nMohammad Irfan sets world record in T20\nThe first 23 deliveries of his spell were all dot balls while the batsman denied him a fourth consecutive maiden over by scoring a run off his 24th and final delivery - which helped the quick register figures of 4-3-1-2. \"I liked bowling on the lively wicket, and I get an extra bounce because of my height, so yes, a satisfying performance\". Opting to field first, Patriots kept Tridents to 147 for 6 with Ben Cutting and Anton Devcich picking up two wickets apiece.\nGiants’ Landon Collins looking to ‘feast’ against Jets rookie QB Sam Darnold\nA stationary outlet for a pressured Eli Manning, Engram caught a pass between two defenders waiting to crush him. Aldrick Rosas kicked field goals of 48, 40, 27 and 21 yards to give the Giants a 19-13 lead into halftime. Jonathan Stewart fumble et Leonard Williams avec un énorme retour pour les Jets! Darnold then found Pryor, making his preseason debut for the Jets, for 12 yards and a touchdown to give the Jets the lead 56 seconds into the second quarter.\nManchester United Vs. Tottenham Live Stream\nAfter the match, Mourinho remained on the Old Trafford pitch to applaud the remaining United fans in the stand. Spurs , who didn't sign a single player in the summer, have so far bagged back-to-back wins over Newcastle and Fulham, and should they topple the Red Devils, they'll accumulate three top-flight wins out of three at the start of a campaign for the first time in nine years.\nVikings acquire center in trade with Giants\nHalapio appeared in 10 games with six starts at right guard for the Giants last season . Jones, who was a celebrated CFL lineman, was signed by the Giants as a free agent in 2016. Minnesota has already lost starting left guard Nick Easton for the entire 2018 season , center Pat Elflein is still on the PUP list, right guard Mike Remmers is dealing with an ankle injury , and right tackle Rashod Hill is also banged up.\nDeclan Rice: England switch possible for teen star - Martin O'Neill\nRice won't be part of the travelling panel. After revealing that England were in contact with the 19-year-old, there was an influx of opinions from several of the country's most influential figures. It's probably to do with the fact that he started the season with a new manager at club level, and he's trying to cement a place there. London-born Rice, 19, has earned three Republic caps after making his debut against Turkey in March but has not played in a competitive global.\nLiverpool hire specialist throw-in coach, who is somehow NOT Rory Delap\nGronnemark, 42, from Denmark, first worked with Liverpool players during a preseason training camp as Klopp hoped to strengthen his side's ability to retain possession after throw-ins. Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah celebrates a goal during a pre-season friendly against Manchester City on 25 July 2018. He was good as the six but brilliant as the eight.\nMarquise Lee Out For Season With Knee Surgery\nThe play in question involved Falcons safety Damontae Kazee going low to tackle Lee and the wide receiver's knee buckling in brutal fashion. Kazee was penalized on the play for lowering his helmet to initiate contact, and replays showed his helmet made contact with Lee's knee.\nFans react to Manu Ginobili's retirement announcement\nThe Spurs paid tribute to Manu Ginobili following his retirement announcement on Monday by tweeting a highlight reel video with the hashtag #GraciasManu. In a post on twitter, the 41-year-old wrote, \"It's been a fabulous journey\". His time in San Antonio earned him four championships and his place in \"The Big 3\" alongside Tim Duncan and Tony Parker.\nPatriots sign guard Shaq Mason to five-year, $50 million extension\nIf Isaiah Wynn can return at full strength and become the left tackle, the Patriots would suddenly have excellent continuity nearly completely across the offensive line. He did a real good job of learning new techniques. \"He can pull, run and hit\". Mason, 24, was drafted by the Patriots in the fourth round (131st overall) in the 2015 NFL Draft.\nReal Madrid boss explains Courtois exclusion for Girona match\nWhile former strike partner Benzema added: \"You can never forget Cristiano\". The Brazilian was hauled out and Nacho introduced when Madrid was leading 3-1 and accepted that he was surprised by the change made by Julen Lopetegui . The Belgian started on the bench behind Keylor Navas on Sunday. \"Girona have a good collective game, they started well got an early goal and could have had another\", said Lapotegui.\nMohamed Salah accuses Egyptian FA of ignoring complaints over image rights\nIn an angry rebuttal the football federation said Monday that it would not accept the requests, blasting some as \"illogical\" and insisting it would not \"favour one player over another\". Salah, who is due to be back in global action under new coach Javier Aguirre next month, could see himself sitting out the Pharaoh's fixture against Nigeria after he chose to call out the football association on social media.\nNike support Serena Williams in ongoing catsuit dispute\nThe six-time US Open champion made it clear that the catsuit won't make a return appearance in NY. \"I believe we have sometimes gone too far. Hi Queen Flo Jo\". Williams downplayed the controversy during a press conference leading up to the U.S. Open. When asked about her powerful look during the tennis tournament, she told reporters it made her feel \"like a warrior princess\" from the blockbuster Marvel Comics film \" Black Panther \".\nOakland Raiders Acquire Fifth-Round Selection, Trade Wide Receiver Ryan Switzer\nThe exact return for the Raiders remains unclear, although Adam Schefter of ESPN reports that draft picks are involved. Switzer, a fourth-round pick by the Cowboys in 2017 who has been traded twice in the past 121 days, finished his rookie year with six catches for 41 yards.\nOdell Beckham Jr., Giants Agree On Record 5-Year, $95M Contract\nWhile terms were not disclosed, the deal with the 25-year-old, 2014 first-rounder is worth about $95m (£73.5m) with £50m guaranteed. Beckham was previously set to play the 2018 season on the final year of his rookie contact, which would pay him $8,459,000 per Spotrac.\nAust's Dennis wins stage one of Vuelta\nThe Tasmanian is racing the Vuelta as a change of late-season plans after he crashed out of the Tour de France. It was also the first time I managed a top ten in a Grand Tour. With about 80km to go we began a loop which contained two 6km ascents of the Alto de Guadalhorce and the 5km long Alto de Ardales, both of which were third-category climbs.\nPatriots QB Tom Brady ends radio interview due to Alex Guerrero questions\nWhile this wouldn't have been Guerrero's first ever trip on the team's plane, it would have been his first team trip in quite some time. Last week, NFL Network's Michael Giardi reported that Guerrero flew with the Patriots for the preseason tilt versus the Carolina Panthers .\nEric Decker, New England Patriots WR, announces retirement from football\nThe 31-year-old Decker, signed by the Patriots on August 3, has struggled throughout the preseason, with issues with catching the ball and failing to develop any real chemistry with Patriots quarterback Tom Brady . Decker saw nearly no time on the field with Tom Brady in preseason, having dropped a number of his passes in training camp practices while also struggling with his route-running.\nHalep stunned by Kanepi in US Open first round\nOpen. It was the first match at the rebuilt Louis Armstrong Stadium. World No. 44 Kanepi was a quarter-finalist in Flushing Meadows past year, but her form has been unremarkable this season. Kanepi earned the first break when she launched a back-hand lob over Halep's head to jump out to a 2-1 lead. Halep made another slow start at a Grand Slam tournament by losing the first set in 28 minutes, before going down a double-break in the second.\nTiger Woods sidesteps questions about his personal relationship with Donald Trump\nAustralian Adam Scott, another late charger, was a stroke back of the leaders after a 64, with world number one Dustin Johnson (67) and Bryson DeChambeau (66) tied for fourth at eight-under 134. \"I didn't do it this week\". Lovemark, who has made 311 feet worth of putts through 36 holes, even reached 11 under before a bogey on the par-three sixth hole.\nFernando Alonso involved in a major crash at Spa\nAnalysing the crash for Sky F1, Davidson told viewers: \"We all have to say and admit in a way that the halo did its job today and we now have to appreciate the reason why it's on the vehicle\". \"It doesn't take much imagination to think that the tyre marks would have actually been on Charles' head\". \"It looks like it's had a fairly hefty whack.\nFederer lags behind big rivals in U.S. Open betting\nThe two are destined to meet at the final Grand Slam of the year if they both progress through their opening two matches. Should Halep remain number one for the rest of the year, a scenario that appears highly likely, only Wozniacki (71 weeks), Justine Henin (117) and Serena Williams (319) will have spent more weeks in the position since the latter first hit top spot in July 2002.\n« Back 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 392 393 394 395 396 397 398 399 400 401 402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 Forward »","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1093706"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9940226674079895,"wiki_prob":0.9940226674079895,"text":"Lifestyle / Entertainment / Film\nNetflix reveals partnership deal to make film about cave rescue of Thai boy footballers\nThe young Thai football team The Wild Boars who were rescued from Tham Luang cave in Thailand during the Opening Ceremony of The Youth Olympic Games, Buenos Aires, Argentina (Jonathan Nackstrand/IOC/PA)\nNetflix has announced it is joining with the production company for the movie Crazy Rich Asians to make a film about last July’s dramatic rescue of 12 village boys in northern Thailand who were trapped with their football coach in a flooded cave for more than two weeks.\nNetflix and SK Global Entertainment said in Bangkok they have acquired the rights to the story from 13 Thumluang Co Ltd, a company that Thailand’s government helped establish to represent the interests of the boys and their coach, who attended the news conference for the announcement.\nThailand’s culture ministry in March first unveiled the deal, announced as a miniseries.\nMembers of the Wild Boars give thanks in front of Thailand King Maha Vajiralongkorn’s image (Sakchai Lalit/AP)\nDeputy government spokesman Weerachon Sukoondhapatipakat was quoted then as saying that the families of the cave survivors would each be paid three million baht (£81,000).\nThe boys of the Wild Boars football team and their coach became a centre of world attention after they became trapped in the cave on June 23 last year, with doubts they were able to find shelter from rising flood waters that poured in after unexpected rain.\nThey were found by two British divers and brought out by an international crew of experienced cave divers who teamed up with Thai navy Seals in a dangerously complicated mission that was successfully concluded on July 10.\n“We are grateful for the opportunity to thank the people and organisations from Thailand and around the world who came together to perform a true miracle, by retelling our story,” said Ekapol “Ake” Chanthawong, the boy’s assistant coach who shared the ordeal with them.\n“We look forward to working with all involved parties to ensure our story is told accurately, so that the world can recognise, once again, the heroes that made the rescue operation a success.”\nTuesday’s announcement said 13 Thumluang “has committed to donating 15% of the revenues derived from bringing this story to global audiences to charity organisations that focus on disaster relief”.\nJon M. Chu, who helmed Crazy Rich Asians, and Nattawut “Baz” Poonpiriya, a Thai filmmaker, will be directors on the cave project.\nPrime Minister Theresa May (centre) with the Thai Ambassador Pisanu Suvanajata (centre right) in Downing Street, London with the divers and support team from the British Cave Rescue Council who joined the rescue (Jonathan Brady/PA)\n“We are immensely proud to be able to support the retelling of the incredible story of the Tham Luang cave rescue,” Erika North, director of International Originals at Netflix, said in a statement.\n“The story combines so many unique local and universal themes which connected people from all walks of life, from all around the world.\n“Thailand is a very important country for Netflix and we are looking forward to bringing this inspiring local but globally resonant story of overcoming seemingly insurmountable odds to life, once again, for global audiences.”\nThe rescue was a rare bit of feel-good news from Thailand, which has been mired in political conflict and heavy-handed military rule for more than a decade.\nThe cave rescue also allowed the government of prime minister Prayuth Chan-ocha, who had seized power in a 2014 military coup, to share in some glory.\nAn independent film about the adventure, The Cave, was shot soon after the rescue and is supposed to be released later this year.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1067864"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6914175152778625,"wiki_prob":0.6914175152778625,"text":"Home > About BIMM > About BIMM London\nAbout BIMM London\nConnected to a life in music\nBIMM London is part of the BIMM Group – Europe’s largest and leading contemporary music college. We offer a full range of Higher and Further Education music courses including degrees and diplomas in a number of different disciplines, such as\nWe offer a full range of Higher and Further Education music courses including degrees and diplomas in a number of different disciplines, such as guitar, bass, drums, vocals, songwriting, music production, music journalism and music business. The high quality of learning opportunities provided for our students has been commended by the Quality Assurance Agency (QAA) – the independent body entrusted with monitoring standards in Higher Education – in their Higher Education Review (HER).\nWe first opened our doors back in 1983 under the name ‘Tech Music School London’, and over the years have worked hard to deliver professional, real-world training in the heart of the world’s music capital.\nIn 2010, ‘Tech Music School London’ was acquired by the BIMM Group of music colleges, who already had modern music institutes in Brighton (2001) and Bristol (2008), and went on to open further centres in Dublin (2011), Manchester (2013), Berlin (2015), Birmingham (2017) and in 2018 Hamburg. In 2014, ‘Tech Music School London’ was officially renamed ‘BIMM London’.\nThe eight BIMM institutes collaborate in perfect harmony, but at the same time, each individual music college has its own unique, independent regional identity which we continue to nurture.\nOur students love BIMM London because it operates right at the centre of the global music scene, giving them direct access to the most happening music venues, the coolest record labels, the most groundbreaking festivals, and the most iconic music brands in the world.\nThe BIMM London campus is in Effie Road, Fulham, South West London, housed in a five-storey building with state-of-the-art facilities, including recording studios, mac labs, post-production suites, rehearsal studios, lecture rooms, mixing rooms, performance spaces and teaching rooms. Our high-tech equipment and software is provided by the world’s leading musical instrument manufacturers who actively support and endorse us. Find out more.\nOur BIMM London tutors are all very active in the London music scene, and between them have headlined festivals, contributed to Hollywood movie soundtracks, been coaches on TV talent shows, and performed in front of global dignitaries. Put simply, they’re really well connected and eager to pass their knowledge, experience and guidance onto you.\nSo, what are you waiting for? To make it in the music industry, connect with BIMM London today.\nBIMM London\nE: london@bimm.co.uk\nBarclay House, Effie Rd\nLondon, SW6 1EN\nCollege Principal:\nSimon Colam\nGrab a Prospectus\nOrder one now\nOr view online here if you’re in a rush","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1172084"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7556359171867371,"wiki_prob":0.7556359171867371,"text":"Category: Related News\nUniversal Coverage as Post-2015 Health Goal?\n23 October 2012 ( DevEx) - How should health goals be framed in a post-2015 development agenda? The World Health Organization chimes in on the debate with a proposal to address broadening health concerns under the umbrella of universal health coverage.\nWHO expounds on this proposal in a discussion paper where it identifies three issues that should be considered when discussing global health in the context of a new development agenda post-2015:\nHow to sustain health gains of the past years and protect existing and future investments in the sector.\nHow to address a changing global health agenda, which now includes “new” issues like noncommunicable diseases, while avoiding “promoting a long list of competing” goals.\nHow to position health in the context of sustainable development.\nPromoting universal health coverage is one way to address these issues and make sure health remains a key part of the post-2015 development agenda, WHO argues. It defines universal coverage as a “dynamic process” where everyone has access to needed health services as well as financial risk protection.\nWHO stresses that as a goal, universal health care “is not about a fixed minimum package” but about “making progress on several fronts: the range of services that are available to people; the proportion of the costs of those services that are covered; and the proportion of the population that are covered.”\nBut it’s not enough to identify universal health coverage as a goal, the agency notes. It also makes the case for the development of indicators and targets to monitor and measure results on both national and international levels. Among indicators WHO suggests is “health life expectancy,” which it says captures mortality, morbidity and disability.\nRead the original article on the DevEx website.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line532525"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6787564158439636,"wiki_prob":0.6787564158439636,"text":"Category: City Government\nProposals From the Bartholomew Master Plan For Dallas — 1940s\nBehold… (click for larger image)\nA few proposals from the Dallas master plan for post-war development and planning, commissioned by the city from the St. Louis firm of Harland Bartholomew and Associates (in association with Hare & Hare Landscape Architects). The scanned reports which made up this plan — submitted between 1943 and 1946 — can be found on the Portal to Texas History site, here, courtesy of the Dallas Municipal Archives. If you’re interested in urban planning and maps, these reports are fascinating.\nThe image above (from 1946, rendered by architect Erwin Earl Schmidt) shows a proposed municipal center on the familiar “South Akard Street Site.” The plan is below. (All images are larger when clicked.)\nThe previous year, the site for this proposed municipal center was north of Pacific:\nAnd Schmidt’s rendering for that compound is just as interesting:\nAlso discussed in the plan was what to do with Fair Park. Here’s a 1945 redevelopment proposal:\nAnd here’s the 1946 re-jiggering (the Cotton Bowl’s getting a lot of action):\nAnd, lastly, a 1946 plan for expansion of the “Hall Street Park for Negroes.” I’m not sure that any of this ever happened. The last mention I see of this park was in 1945 (the first mention I found of the park in the Dallas Morning News archives was 1922, and it had clearly been around for a while before that — perhaps it was absorbed into the existing Griggs Park? “Central Boulevard” would soon be built and renamed Central Expressway, the highway that sliced through the thriving black neighborhood centered around Hall Street.\nThe 1945 plates can be found in the original publication here; the 1946 plates here.\nAll illustrations are from the Bartholomew master plan proposal; these reports are from the collection of the Dallas Municipal Archives, accessible on UNT’s Portal to Texas History, here.\nAdditional images from the plan can be found in the Flashback Dallas post “‘Your Dallas of Tomorrow’ — 1943,'” here.\nAll images larger when clicked.\n“Your Dallas of Tomorrow” — 1943\nMain Street, 1943… (click for larger image)\nHarland Bartholomew, a St. Louis urban planner and civil engineer, was asked by the City of Dallas in 1943 to prepare a master plan for Dallas which would address the needs of the city’s post-war growth and livability. As then-mayor Woodall Rodgers said, “We need another Kessler Plan and have waited long enough to start. We want to be ready to put Dallas ahead when the war is over and we will have great opportunities to put a master plan in effect” (Dallas Morning News, April 1, 1943).\nRead Bartholomew’s incredibly thorough 51-page report titled “Your Dallas of Tomorrow” here. It has been scanned in its entirety and is presented (courtesy of the Dallas Municipal Archives) on UNT’s Portal to Texas History site. In addition to the report, there are drawings, graphs, maps, and the wonderful photo seen above showing an already-vibrant metropolis, with its newest addition to the skyline, the Mercantile Bank Building. Below are a few other things from Bartholomew’s master plan I found interesting. (All images are larger when clicked.)\nThis map showing the growth of the city, from 1855 to 1943, is really interesting. Check out the “disannexed” areas. (I think that area east of the Park Cities was disannexed because landowners — which included W. W. Caruth — argued that it was undeveloped farmland and shouldn’t be subjected to city taxation. …I think.)\nA somewhat recognizable skyline.\nLevee District.\nThe old Union Depot at the edge of Deep Ellum, demolished in 1935.\nThere is much more in this interesting report, including quite a bit of good historical information on the development and growth of Dallas.\nSource & Notes\nAll images from “Your Dallas of Tomorrow, A Master Plan for Dallas, Texas,” prepared by Harland Bartholomew and Associates of St. Louis, Missouri in September, 1943. Booklet from the Dallas Municipal Archives, accessible on the Portal to Texas History, here.\nThe report above was the first one issued — and it was the most glitzy. The ones that followed were more down-to-business. Some of the plans were implemented, some were not. See all of the reports of the master plan prepared by Bartholomew and Associates — issued between 1943 and 1946 — here. If you like maps, this link has your name all over it!\nHow Dallas Used to Get Election Returns\nA Dallas crowd waits for returns in 1928 (click for larger image)\nI think there’s some sort of political thing going on? Like most every other human being in the United States (…and beyond), I’m pretty sick of hearing about politics and politicians. Like nauseous sick. So why not write about elections! Below are some fun facts about how Dallasites used to get their election returns — share them with your fellow voters while standing in line at the polling station. They will think you are either very interesting or very annoying.\nForget the issues and the personalities, let’s look at election results: how were they passed along to the public in the days before radio and television? Other than newspapers (the primary source of all things informational), there was a time when results were “bulletined” by throwing images onto stretched canvases or even onto the sides of buildings by a powerful stereopticon or “magic lantern.” These results were continuously updated as manual counts in local races were tabulated; farther-flung races were updated via tallies received by telegraph or telephone. Crowds gathered in front of buildings — usually newspaper offices — to watch the returns. Some accounts have this form of information dissemination beginning in the 1860s (see an illustration from 1872 here), with the practice becoming more widespread by the 1880s and more technologically advanced by the 1890s.\nBelow, an illustration showing jubilant crowds watching congressional returns in Columbus, Ohio in 1884.\nColumbus, Ohio, 1884\nThings had been refined by 1896, as this illustration from the Atlanta Constitution shows. The caption: “Flashing out the returns in front of the Constitution office. Thousands of people gathered in front of the Constitution Building last night and watched the returns come in.” In the rain! That’s dedication.\nAtlanta, Georgia, 1896\nAlso in 1896 — things got crazy in New York, with a ridiculously large “screen” hung from a very tall building.\nfrom “Film and the American Presidency”\nThe first mention I found in The Dallas Morning News about projecting election results before a large crowd was in 1891. Not only did the newspaper have a large bulletin board (maybe like a large chalk board?), they also used the stereopticon. (The full article about the results of the 1891 election can be read here.) (All pictures and clippings are larger when clicked.)\nDallas Morning News, April 8, 1891\nThe magic lantern was called back into service the next year (read an entertaining DMN article about an 1892 election here in which the crowd huddled in front of the screen watching the returns despite rain and open saloons) — in fact, this “electric bulletin board” was so popular it was used for at least 40 more years.\nIn 1896, interest was really intense — an unbelievable 94% of Dallas’ registered voters had turned out to cast ballots. (It took four days to tally the votes!) A huge crowd gathered around the News building at Commerce and Lamar to watch the bulletins which were “flashed by means of a powerful stereopticon on a large canvas screen stretched across the street” (“Republicans Doubled Votes in ’96” by Sam Acheson, DMN, Jan. 1, 1968).\nBy 1900 this stereopticon thing was getting to be standard operating procedure.\nDMN, Nov. 6, 1900\nDMN, May 2, 1908\nBy 1911, “25,000 or 30,000 persons” were showing up to watch the returns.\nDMN, July 23, 1911\nI guess people used to just phone the papers after elections to ask about the results. The News would rather you didn’t, thanks.\n1918 was an interesting year for a few reasons: (1) WWI was underway, (2) the polls opened — for some reason — at 9:27 AM and closed at 8:27 PM (?), and … (3) it was the first election in Dallas in which women were allowed to vote. There was suddenly a huge number of registered voters to have to deal with. Newspaper reports showed registration of women outnumbering men in several precincts. The large number of new voters meant that votes began to be counted “one hour after the polls are opened and will continue until the work is concluded” (DMN, July 19, 1918). Which seems odd. Also, women were encouraged to vote early in the day so as to avoid long lines and men were instructed to watch their behavior if there were women present.\nIt’s surprising that the use of projectors to display election returns was used as late as 1930, well after the advent of radio. Apparently the Texas Election Bureau and Press Association had rules forbidding radio stations from announcing election results over the air until they had been printed in the newspaper — they were, however, allowed to give “relative standings” to their audiences at fifteen-minute intervals (DMN, July 27, 1930).\nSeems like the newspapers held all the power (probably not a huge problem for radio stations since most of them were owned by the newspapers, and, of course, no problem at all for the papers who printed oodles of “extra” editions). By 1930, though, crowds had gotten so large downtown that they were diverting people to Fair Park where they could sit and enjoy the cool breezes as they listened to see if their candidates had won or lost. (“Sitting” seems to be the operative word here.) But soon radio would wrest the “instant news bulletin” power away from the newspapers, and these quaint magic lantern watching-parties would be unnecessary. Eventually people wouldn’t know they’d ever even existed.\nFast-forward to today. I can’t even imagine trekking downtown to watch election results come in at a snail’s pace, magic lantern or not. It’s the 21st century, man, and I’ll be plopped in front of my TV, channel-hopping, stress-eating and stress-drinking, and wondering what friendly country I might consider “visiting” for a while.\nTop photo shows crowds of Dallasites watching election returns. This Frank Rogers photo — a Dallas Public Library photo reproduced in A. C. Greene’s book Dallas, The Deciding Years — shows a crowd (which seems to be devoid of women) watching the 1928 presidential election returns on Elm Street. Another Rogers photo from the DPL, undated, probably taken 5 or 6 years earlier:\nIt’s convenient that he was able to include his studio in the background! The photograph is undated, but Frank Rogers and the Adam Schaaf Piano Store shared a building — at 1303 Elm — between 1922 and 1923. The building to the right is the Dallas Times Herald Building, and it would make sense that the crowd was looking toward the other side of the street. In fact, this may have been the night that the KKK famously marched through downtown, past the large crowds gathered in front of both the Dallas Times Herald and Dallas Morning News offices, to celebrate that their candidates had won … and won big.\nDMN, Aug. 27, 1922\nThe illustration showing Ohio returns in Columbus being projected on the night of Oct. 14, 1884 is from Frank Leslie’s Weekly (this illustration was featured in the book Politicking and Emergent Media: U.S. Presidential Elections of the 1890s by Charles Musser).\nThe 1896 illustration is from the Atlanta Constitution, found on Twitter.\nThe 1896 photograph of the World Building in New York is from the trade journal The Electrical Engineer, Nov. 11, 1896. The paragraph below it is from the book Film and the American Presidency by Jeff Menne and Christian B. Long.\nFurther reading from the archives of The Dallas Morning News (regarding the July 26, 1930 election):\n“News and Journal To Give Two Election Count Parties” (DMN, July 25, 1930) — an announcement to voters where they could get the “flashed” returns of the next day’s voting (in front of the News building “as usual,” and at Fair Park “where results will also be thrown on a screen at the moving picture booth near the grand stand”\n“Fates of Favorites Watched on News and Journal Screens” (DMN, July 27, 1930) — two photos showing crowds at Commerce and Lamar and at Fair Park watching the returns\nClick pictures and clippings to see larger images.\nThe Fair Park Bond Issue — 1934\n“Forward 1936…” (DeGolyer Library, SMU)\nWith all the heated discussion currently going on about what the city is going to do with Fair Park, I thought this little pamphlet from 1934 seemed timely. Published by the “Centennial Fair Park Bond Committee” (comprised of all the Dallas movers and shakers one would expect), the get-out-the-vote brochure was issued to explain the $3,000,000 (about $54,000,000 in today’s money, adjusted for inflation) bond issue, the approval of which was essential in order to clinch the honor of hosting the Texas Centennial Exposition in 1936. The entire pamphlet — part of the George W. Cook Collection in the DeGolyer Library — may be read on SMU’s website, here.\nA couple of excerpts:\nThe issue passed, overwhelmingly, by a 5-1 margin. It’s interesting to note that the voting restrictions on this referendum were … pretty restrictive. Not only was payment of a poll tax required to vote (…one had to pay for the “privilege” of voting…), but one also had to be a property owner — and that property owner was not allowed to vote until a “rendition” was signed downtown in the tax assessor’s office. Many property owners who had signed the necessary paperwork were still unable to vote as they had not paid (or could not afford) the poll tax. It’s pretty obvious here that a substantial number of lower income residents (i.e. non-property owners or property owners unable to afford the poll tax) — including many who lived in the area immediately surrounding Fair Park — were legally prohibited from casting a vote.\n6,550 ballots were cast (5462-1088), which represented “little more than one-third of the 18,000 supposed qualified to decide this important issue” (Dallas Morning News, Nov. 1, 1934). It was declared to be “the largest majority ever cast for a bond issue in [the] history of Dallas” (DMN, Oct. 31, 1934).\nThe passage of the October, 1934 bond issue assured that Dallas would host the Texas Centennial Exposition, a statewide celebration which proved to be a huge success and was a tremendous economic boon to the city.\nThe pamphlet “Texas and Dallas … Forward 1936: Why We Should Vote For Centennial Fair Park Bonds, Tuesday, October 30, 1934” is part of the George W. Cook Dallas/Texas Image Collection, DeGolyer Library, Central University Libraries, Southern Methodist University; the entire pamphlet is contained in a PDF which may be read and/or downloaded here.\nMore on this vote can be found in these two Dallas Morning News articles:\n“OK on Bonds For Huge Fair Up to Voters” (DMN, Oct. 30, 1934) — published on voting day, this article includes the particulars of the voting restrictions\n“Five-to-One Majority Scored As City Favors Centennial Bonds to Assure Huge Fair” (DMN, Oct. 31, 1934) — the results\nPayment of a poll tax was still required to vote in Texas elections until 1966, when the U. S. Supreme Court ruled such taxes were unconstitutional. More about that from the Dallas Public Library, here.\nSo You’re Considering a Move To Dallas … What’s That Tax Situation Like? — 1943\nYou and your gardener will *love* Dallas! (click for larger image)\nIt’s 1943. You’re considering relocating your business and your family to Dallas. You’ll probably be owning a mansion like the one pictured above. Should you and your large bank account settle in Dallas? I mean, is it really the best place … tax-wise?\nBelow is a page from a pamphlet called So This Is Dallas, a publication which was intended to sway decisions such as this. It was issued for several years by a group called “The Welcome Wagon,” and this edition came out sometime during World War II. Here’s what Big D had to offer in those days. (Click to see much larger image.)\nDallas offers a favorable tax situation that can be found in but few communities. There is no State income tax in Texas and no general sales tax.\nCorporations operating in the State are subject to three forms of taxation. If they are foreign corporations, they must qualify legally in the State and pay a permit fee, an annual franchise tax and ad valorem taxes. If they are domestic corporations, they pay a fee to secure a Texas charter, an annual franchise tax and ad valoreum [sic?] taxes.\nTexas laws do not discriminate against foreign corporations. The permit fee for a foreign corporation and the charter fee of a Texas corporation are arrived at in the same way, the proportionate amount of capital used in Texas by the foreign corporation and the capital stock of the domestic corporation. Franchise taxes for both foreign and domestic corporations are also assessed on the same basis.\nAd Valorem Taxes\nAll corporations, whether domestic or foreign, and all others owning property within the State of Texas, must render their property as of January 1 each year for city, State and county taxes. The property is rendered at its inventory value. The basis of assessment varies in different counties.\nCurrent ad valorem taxes in Dallas are: City of Dallas, $2.45 per $100 valuation, basis of assessment 53 per cent of value; Dallas County, 74 cents per $100 valuation, basis of assessment 50 per cent of value; State, 69 cents per $100 valuation, basis of assessment 50 per cent of value.\nDallas has the lowest tax rate of any large city in the Southwest. Each city has a different basis of assessment. Reducing their rates to a basis of assessment on 100 per cent of value, net tax rates for the four leading cities in Texas are:\nDallas ….. $20.56 net per $1,000\nHouston ….. $22.03 net per $1,000\nSan Antonio ….. $26.89 net per $1,000\nFort Worth ….. $29.25 net per $1,000\nI don’t know what ANY of that means, but it looks like Dallas wins. Welcome to your new mansion!\nPage from So This Is Dallas, published around 1943 by The Welcome Wagon; courtesy of the Lone Star Library Annex Facebook page.\nIf you recognize any of these homes, let me know and I’ll add the info here. I’m seeing what looks like Lakewood and Swiss Avenue, and maybe Highland Park and Oak Cliff.\nClick pictures for larger images.\nCold Smut: Henry Miller’s “Tropic of Cancer” Banned in Dallas — 1961\nToday is my late father’s birthday. He was a Dallas bookseller, and when searching on his name in the Dallas Morning News archives, I found this pithy letter to the editor he had written in the summer of 1961 (click for larger image; transcribed below).\nIt is refreshing that there is such a dearth of crime that the Dallas police department has to amuse itself by resorting to comstockery. The cops have been busy poking through the girlie mags at downtown newsstands, which is pleasant work. Now they have taken to harassing bookstores. If they get away with their ban of poor old Henry Miller’s tedious classic, it will only whet their appetite for more meddling.\nI resent a group who seldom, if ever, has entered a bookstore or voluntarily read a book dictating what can or cannot be read. Literary criticism should be left to Lon Tinkle: he gives us freedom of choice. To have a bunch of policemen drooling over juicier passages and then whooping pietistic nonsense is frightening. Dallas is sophisticated and progressive?\nDick Bosse\nAfter I looked up the word “Comstockery,” I was spurred to find out what he was writing about.\nHenry Miller’s “tedious classic,” Tropic of Cancer, was originally published in Paris in 1934. It was considered too vulgar to be published in the United States. In fact, it was considered “obscene” by the U.S. Customs Department, and its very presence in one’s suitcase after returning home from a holiday in France was illegal. The only booksellers in the U.S. that sold the book did so at the risk of being jailed. That’s not to say there wasn’t a lot of piracy, bootlegging, and hush-hush selling of this much talked-about book going on, because there was — especially in New York.\nIn 1961, the book was finally published in the U.S. by Grove Press, and it was an immediate hit. (Grove priced it at an unbelievably steep $7.50, the equivalent today to about $60.00! The typical new hardcover fiction title in 1961 was around $3.95.) Unsurprisingly, the book was immediately banned in Boston, because Boston’s “thing” was banning stuff. But then … it was unexpectedly banned in Dallas, even though it was the #1 bestseller at the respected McMurray’s Bookshop downtown.\nDallas Police Department officials had decided the book violated a new Texas “anti-smut” law, and, on August 15th, policemen visited all the large bookstores in the city and informed them that if any copies of the book continued to be offered for sale, criminal charges would most likely be brought against the booksellers and the stores. (The state law called for fines up to $1,000 and one year in county jail for selling lewd and obscene material.) Dallas joined Boston as the only major American city banning the book. And then the whole thing became a cause célèbre — a “Dallas-Boston axis”!\nThe Long Beach (California) Independent, Aug. 18 1961\nThe move was roundly deplored by most of the Dallas public. The “Letters to the Editor” section of the historically very conservative Dallas Morning News contained many, many letters to the editor from outraged Dallasites, speaking out against the police department’s action. Sure, there were a few who were happy that objectionable material was being removed from Dallas bookstores, but they seemed to be in the minority. Even those who vehemently disliked the book were steadfastly opposed to its being banned, including the editors of The News.\nAs with many other non-issues like this that tend to cause near-obsession by the media, this story would not go away. The summer of ’61 was, for Dallas, the Summer of Smut. Best headline throughout all of this? One which appeared on a Morning News editorial: “COLD SMUT.”\nBooksellers pulled the book, but, as the editorial says above, there were almost certainly sales continuing to interested clientele. Also, it should be noted that only Dallas was banning the book at this point (by 1962 other cities around the country had become embroiled in threatened legal action, resulting in books being pulled from shelves). You couldn’t buy the book in Dallas, but you could buy it in Fort Worth.\nElston Brooks, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Aug. 22, 1961\nOne assumes bookstores in Cowtown were cashing in on Tropic of Cancer sales — Barber’s Book Store must have been doing land-office mail order business.\nFWST, Nov. 8, 1961\nI thought this was a silly flare-up that lasted only a few weeks, but letters to the editor continued to show, at least through the winter of 1963, that it was still impossible to find the book in a Dallas bookstore. It probably wasn’t until 1964, when the United States Supreme Court ruled that the book was not obscene, that Dallas booksellers were finally free to openly sell a book which was published in 1934. No one seemed to care much when the X-rated film version (starring Texan Rip Torn) played at the Granada in 1970.\nSept., 1970\nCartoon by Herc Ficklen, from Aug. 30, 1961.\nMore on Tropic of Cancer at Wikipedia, here. This article contains my favorite line of any I read from the people who really, REALLY hated the book. It came from a Pennsylvania judge:\n“[It is] not a book. It is a cesspool, an open sewer, a pit of putrefaction, a slimy gathering of all that is rotten in the debris of human depravity.”\nTons of articles on this appeared in The Dallas Morning News.in just ONE WEEK. Here are just a few (seriously, it’s the tip of the iceberg):\n“Sales Banned: Police Label Book Obscene” by James Ewell (DMN, Aug. 16, 1961)\n“Stores Stop Selling Book Called Obscene” by James Ewell (DMN, Aug. 17, 1961)\n“Censorship of ‘Tropic’ Looses Opinion Barrage” by Scott Buchanan (Aug. 17, 1961)\n“What Is Obscenity?” — editorial (DMN, Aug. 19, 1961)\n“Book Fight Takes On Circus Air” (DMN, Aug. 19, 1961)\n“Citizens Group Lauds Police Move On Book; Some Less Costly Smut Considered Main Problem” by Frank Hildebrand (Aug. 20, 1961)\n“Cold Smut” — editorial (DMN, Aug. 20, 1961)\n“Wade Orders Study On Smut Literature” by Carlos Conde (DMN, Aug. 21, 1961)\n“Police Lectured On Book Action” by Jimmy Thornton (DMN, Aug. 22, 1961)\n“Primer for Censors: A Few Basic Ideas” by Lon Tinkle, Book Critic of The News (DMN, Sept. 3, 1961)\nEvery time I came across the word “smut” mentioned in connection with this topic — and it was mentioned a LOT — I couldn’t help but think of Vera Carp and the other Smut Snatchers of the New Order from Greater Tuna.\nIf it looks too dang small to read, click it!\nHome Sweet Home at Commerce & Harwood\n“Main Street Garden?” (click for larger image)\nQuaint homes, mere steps from City Hall. Not sure of the exact date of this photo, but these homes and this service station were at the above location in 1920. Wonder when those homeowners finally decided to sell? Talk about your primo real estate!\nBelow is a similar photo, but this one shows more of Commerce looking east — I don’t come across a lot of photos of this era showing downtown past what was unofficially thought of as its eastern boundary.\nPhoto from Noah Jeppson’s Flickr page, here.\nSecond photo, titled “Dallas City Hall,” is from the George W. Cook Dallas/Texas Image Collection, DeGolyer Library, Central University Libraries, Southern Methodist University; more info on this photo can be found here.\nMore on the building of the City Hall/Municipal Building in the post “The Elegant Municipal Building — 1914,” here.\nClick picture for larger image.\n“A City Built On the Solid Rock of Service” — 1927\n“Opportunity!” (click for larger image)\nBelow, a 1927 Dallas Chamber of Commerce ad with some interesting statistics.\nThe CITY OF PROGRESS invites YOU to share in its PROSPERITY.\nDALLAS–in 1900 a town of forty-thousand; in 1927 a city of a quarter million; forty-second in population; third as an agricultural implement distributing point; fifth as a dry goods market; fifteenth as a general jobbing center–the first city of the Southwest, in the fastest growing section of the United States.\nManufacturers, distributors and retailers are invited to investigate Dallas–a city built on the solid rock of service.\nPretty impressive. And the illustration of a dynamic city on the other side of that viaduct is all but throbbing with energy\nThe illustration from a 1929 Chamber of Commerce ad is even less modest: it shows Dallas as the center of the universe, center stage on Planet Earth, lit up by the sun and the giant Klieg lights of space.\nI kind of think Dallas has pretty much always seen itself like this.\nAds from the 1927 and 1929 editions of The Texas Almanac and State Industrial Guide.\nTrinity Heights: The Tallent Furniture Studio and The Sunshine Home\nVermont & South Ewing… (click for larger image)\nThe postcard image above shows a bird’s eye view of a few blocks in the Trinity Heights neighborhood of Oak Cliff, from the late 1940s. As I looked at it, I wondered a) what does this intersection look like now, b) what is that unlabeled building that looks like a jail behind the furniture store, and c) what was Tallent’s Furniture Studio?\nTallent’s Furniture Studio, owned by Raymond E. Tallent, was located at 815 Vermont Avenue.\nNot only did it house a furniture store, but it also served as an office for Tallent’s real estate business. According to Tallent’s obituary, he came to Dallas in 1920 and started his real estate business five years later. Starting out, he’d’ve been happy to trade you property for diamonds. “What have you?”\nThe first mention I found for the furniture store is this Christmas ad from 1947.\nDec., 1947\nTallent died in January of 1950 at the age of 53. Both of his businesses continued after his death, and the furniture store was still going in the late 1960s.\nSo, nothing out of the ordinary — just a small business, like thousands of other small Dallas businesses. Probably the most interesting thing about Tallent was that he had the good taste to have that great promotional postcard made. That strange little building behind the store was a lot more interesting.\nWhat was that building? The first time it popped up on a Sanborn map was 1922: it was identified as a “County Detention Home” (click for larger image).\n1922 Sanborn map detail — see full page here\nDespite its name, the “detention home” was not a correctional facility for juvenile delinquents, but it was a home for dependent children who had been made wards of Dallas County because of neglect or abandonment or because parents had died or were simply unable to care for them. This detention home was built in 1917 at 1545 South Ewing (“south of Oak Cliff”). During its construction in 1917, its roof collapsed, killing one of the workers.\nDallas Morning News, Apr. 13, 1917\nThe home was almost immediately overcrowded, and its superintendents were constantly scrambling for an increase in funding. Children, ranging in age from toddlers to teenagers, lived there as long as they needed — some for a few months, some for several years. They attended nearby schools, and even though they were wards of the court and were living in an institution, the people who ran the place tried to make it as home-like as possible. In January, 1934, the name of the county facility was changed to the much more cheerful “Sunshine Home.”\nIn 1950, the Sunshine Home received $165,000 in bond money for improvements and expansion, adding modern structures to the large campus but still retaining the original two-story red brick building built in 1917.\nIn 1975, the Dallas County Sunshine Home and the Girls’ Day Center merged, and the former Sunshine Home was renamed Cliff House.\nIn 2014, the 28,000-square-foot property on just under five acres was put up for sale, and in early 2015 plans for a charter elementary school were approved.\nBelow, a Google Earth image of the same view as the postcard featuring Tallent’s Furniture Studio, captured before the old Sunshine Home buildings had been demolished (click for larger image).\nThe view is remarkably similar to the one taken more than 65 years earlier. A little bleaker these days, perhaps, but certainly still recognizable.\nTop postcard is from the Boston Public Library Tichnor Brothers Postcard Collection; it is viewable here.\nInformation on the plans for the KIPP Truth Academy submitted to the City of Dallas (with interesting illustrations/maps on pages 10 and 11) can be found in a PDF, here.\nA recent Google Street View of this block of Vermont Avenue can be seen here. The Tallent furniture store occupied the building to the left of the Vermont Grocery.\nThe heart-tugging article “For All Loving Care Bestowed, Sunshine Home, Space Small, Needs Much to Cheer Children” (DMN, July 24, 1941) — written by popular Dallas Morning News columnist Paul Crume — describes daily life in the Sunshine Home and can be found in the Dallas Morning News archives.\nA then-and-now comparison (click for larger image):\n“The Walls Are Rising” (1967): Watch It Online!\nDallasites love their cars…. (photo from “The Walls Are Rising”/AIA Dallas)\nLate last year I stumbled across mention of a 1967 film about Dallas called “The Walls Are Rising.” It was made by the American Institute of Architects, Dallas Chapter, and was sponsored by the Greater Dallas Planning Council as a sort of warning to the people of Dallas about the dangers of auto-centric sprawl and uncontrolled urban planning. I searched and searched for the whereabouts of the film, but it seemed to have disappeared without a trace. I contacted AIA Dallas, and after much searching, they found the film, still on an old reel. They digitized the film and screened it before a large and enthusiastic crowd in January, and after viewing the film and listening to a panel discussion, audience members launched into a lively and concerned discussion about the state of Dallas today. It turns out that most of the topics of grave concern in 1967 continue to be topics of grave concern today, almost 50 years later.\nAIA Dallas has uploaded the 27-minute film to Vimeo, and it is now available for all to watch online. Made to emphasize the dangers of out-of-control urban blight brought on by an over-reliance on automobiles, a lack of green spaces, and depressing expanses of visual clutter, the film is a sardonic look at a claustrophobically “modern” Dallas. It’s a hip documentary — absolutely a product of its era — made by a filmmaker with avant-garde tendencies; imagine what an industrial film would have been like had it been made by “with-it” ad men who were given free-rein to get their message across (and who may have indulged in illicit substances during the editing phase). Not as weird as the film itself (though still plenty weird) are some of the proposals from architects and planners on ways to improve the city’s “livability.”\nBest of all, though, are all the photos of the city. It’s great being able to hit “pause” and take a look at each and every 1967 photo of Dallas, from a jam-packed downtown, to a cluttered Oak Lawn, to a serene Turtle Creek.\nThanks again to AIA Dallas for finding the film and uploading this weird little slice of Dallas history!\nThe Walls are Rising from AIA Dallas on Vimeo.\nA few screengrabs (click for larger images):\nThe video can be found on Vimeo here.\nAll photos by Ronald Perryman, from his film “The Walls Are Rising” (1967), “produced by Greater Dallas Planning Council in collaboration with Dallas Chapter of American Institute of Architects.”\nThe AIA Dallas website is here.\nRobert Wilonsky’s Dallas Morning News blog post (May 21, 2015) on the uploading of this film is here.\nMy previous posts on “The Walls Are Rising” can be found here.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line482325"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8653126358985901,"wiki_prob":0.8653126358985901,"text":"(BB Gun Press)\n\"If we came out now, we wouldn’t have a chance in hell\": Shirley Manson looks back at 20 years of Garbage\nThe Garbage frontwoman looks back at the leap of faith that took her to the U.S. to play with guys she'd never met\nCheck out this article! https://www.salon.com/2015/10/08/if_we_came_out_now_we_wouldnt_have_a_chance_in_hell_shirley_manson_looks_back_at_20_years_of_garbage/\nAnnie Zaleski\nOctober 9, 2015 3:00AM (UTC)\nWhen Garbage’s “Vow” hit the airwaves in early 1995, the dizzying, electronic- and distortion-warped single sounded like nothing else out there at the time. Lyrically, its complexity was an especially refreshing change of pace: “Vow” explored the dichotomy between a burning desire to exact revenge on a spurned lover—while still trying to shake remnants of intense physical and emotional attraction.\nAs it turns out, unorthodoxy and complexity were also intrinsic to Garbage’s genesis. The Madison, Wisconsin-based group featured Butch Vig, who was then fresh off producing seminal albums by Nirvana, Smashing Pumpkins and Sonic Youth; Vig’s Smart Studios co-founder, Steve Marker; and Vig’s former bandmate, Duke Erikson. At the forefront was a fiery Scotswoman, Shirley Manson, who was most recently in the band Angelfish. Incredibly, Manson actually agreed to join Garbage before she had even collaborated with the other band members.\nThat leap of faith paid off in a big way, however. The group’s 1995 self-titled debut album—an aggressive, riotous amalgamation of hip-hop, electronic music, dance music and guitar-based rock & roll—catapulted Garbage into alt-rock’s upper echelons almost immediately. Not only did “Vow” become a hit, but so did the slinky “Queer,” a contradiction-celebrating “Only Happy When It Rains” and the glassy, dance-oriented “Stupid Girl.” A remastered version of the album, released October 2, only highlights how futuristic “Garbage,” sounded, especially in how tenaciously it tackled feminism, sexuality, self-perception and self-empowerment.\nManson checked in from Edinburgh, Scotland, just before midnight her time, a week before rehearsals kicked off for the band’s “20 Years Queer Tour,” which starts Tuesday in San Diego. She reminisced about her fateful decision to join Garbage and about recording the album, what made the unexpected band gel, and the impact the group’s had on her life and popular culture—both then and now.\nI saw in another interview that you guys were looking for archival material for this release, and were having trouble trying to find it.\nOh yeah, just our record labels over the years have basically lost all our content, and nobody really knows where anything is. We did full-camera shoots of gigs and radio performances and TV shows and so on and so forth. It’s just been all lost to the ages, for the most part, along with, artwork, raw materials—you name it. We were originally having a flip out because we couldn’t even find the analog tapes of the first record, and nobody really knew where they were either. [Laughs.] So, you know, welcome to the music industry: They demand that they own all your material and then they just shove it in a cupboard somewhere and forget all about it. It’s frustrating.\nYou finally did discover the tapes. Where did you end up finding them?\nWe did. We found them in a mixture of places. Some of them were in London; some of them were at Smart [Studios] in Madison; and some of them were in Los Angeles. Eventually, after a lot of work on our management’s part and my husband’s, our studio engineer, we tracked everything down. But it took months and months and months of detective work, and it was very frustrating and not for the faint of heart [Laughs.]\nI was going to say, that’s like the worst scavenger hunt ever.\nIt’s really maddening, though, you know, when you… I mean, I have enough problems with the way the music industry is run at the best times, but when you realize that a business is being run basically by [people] that squander all their investments, it’s bemusing, you know? It’s just ridiculous.\nConsidering that what you guys are making is art, basically, and it’s treated so carelessly, it’s a very odd juxtaposition.\nIt’s treated with contempt, yeah. So, you know, we all got over that that, but it does make me want to send a red alert to all bands, and say, “Be careful with your content.” But then my husband rushed to remind me that that’s not such an issue for people anymore, because it’s all digitally in a library now, whereas back then it was all physical content. So, you know, now everything’s on a computer database somewhere, but our stuff, our shit, is everywhere. [Laughs.]\nSo when you finally did get everything back, what were your takeaways hearing the songs again fresh 20 years later?\nI was really pleasantly surprised at how I think it still sounds pretty contemporary. You know, I think you could play it on modern radio, and it would still stand out, so I was really proud of that fact. I’m heartened by it. I’m proud of the record; I think it’s an interesting debut.\nBack then, the music sounded very futuristic to me. Listening to it now, it still feels like that—like it’s a far-off, light years away-type thing.\nI do think, looking back— and I cannot take any credit for this, because really this came from the band and specifically Butch—I feel like they had a grasp on [where music] was gonna go. They understood that to make a record that could stand up on its own legs, and compete with the kind of records that Butch had been making, they had to make a record that was very different from the records Butch was famous for producing. And in doing so, I think they created kind of a modern archetype almost for contemporary music.\nYou know, music changed then— like, all of a sudden it was fine to steal from all different types of genres and marriage them all together in a melting pot. I think that’s what you mean by futurism, you know. It was a very forward-thinking record. I think you could listen to it today and not necessarily think it sounds that edgy, because we’re all used to hearing records now that are a melting pot like that one was. But at the time, that had not really been done before, you know? I think people forget that. It’s like that was unacceptable. [Laughs.]\nI think people were very suspicious of us when we first came out with that record, because we were breaking rules that people just did not approve of; they didn’t approve of alt-rock taking elements of pop music and hip-hop and industrial and merging them all together. That was considered really uncool. But we felt that’s what made it unique and exciting, because it hadn’t been done before.\nPeople forget just how dominant guitars were in alternative rock in 1995. Like, keyboards were totally out of fashion. In the late ‘90s, there were people like The Chemical Brothers and, you know, even David Bowie—his stuff did get a lot more electronic and merged genres a lot more. But it wasn’t very common when Garbage started.\nNo, no, it wasn’t. And it was also frowned upon. You know, people were expected to stay inside their little boxes. People—particularly music journalists— were very keen on having labels, and God forbid that you break out of your box, you know. I think it made people quite uncomfortable. We definitely encountered a lot of cynicism and suspicions… A lot of people accused us of being fake and not real—not for real. It was interesting how we were treated at first, obviously by our detractors.\nWhen you first met everyone in the band, it wasn’t necessarily an instant creative connection. What made you keep plugging away and making things work? Was it kind of the sense that you guys were onto something different? What spurred you on?\nWe got a kick out of one another. We really liked one another, and we laughed a lot, and we had fun making music together. And I think that’s what made us keep coming back to try and make it work. In the process of doing that, we just, by default, became a band. You know, we started to think the same way we started to just find a rhythm together. We were very fortunate. We really did find a chemistry together. [And] for all our foibles and all our little arguments and squabbles, we still have this strange chemistry when we’re all together that really has endured and works for us. It’s special. I wouldn’t recommend anybody else to try and, you know, form a band across the Atlantic with people you’ve never met before, but in our case we really were fortunate.\nYeah, I mean, you think about that, that’s such a leap of faith. It’s weird! It’s like preposterous.\nIt is preposterous, that’s such a great word. It was an act of great stupidity, actually. [Laughs.]\nIt paid off! [Laughs.]\nYeah, it paid off but, you know, on paper it just looks— like you said— preposterous. You have all three older men living in the Midwest, in Wisconsin, and a girl, a strange creature, from Edinburgh, Scotland— we couldn’t have been more different. I mean, we still are very different human beings, but somehow we enjoy each other. It’s cool.\nWhat do you recall most now about making the record? You were in kind of the middle of nowhere, Wisconsin. I imagine it was a little bit of fish out of water.\nI was such a freak. I mean, I really was. I didn’t fit in at all. I couldn’t drive, which you being American will understand how difficult that is when you’re living in a Midwestern town that doesn’t have any real significant form of public transport. I had zero money— I mean, I really had zero money, so I couldn’t afford cabs, I had to walk everywhere, and it was either, you know, 100 degrees or it was -20 degrees. And so I really suffered making that record on a physical level. [Laughs.] I associate that first record with gross discomfort physically and, you know, mentally, because I felt very uncomfortable and I didn’t know the band. I mean, I got along with them, but I didn’t know them. I had no friends, no finances, no transport, and I was really very cut off from home because I couldn’t afford to call home, and I barely ate unless I was in the studio with the band. [Laughs.]\nI associate it with great discomfort but, you know, it was all part of the crazy ride of it. And I’m so happy that I suffered, because it makes it so much more rewarding when things start going right.\nTo me, I’ve always thought the album drew its power from espousing the idea that nonconformity was empowering. So when you say these things, it makes sense, then, why a lot of the themes evolved the way they did.\n[Laughs.] Yeah, yeah, I guess. [reflective pause] It was just the best we could do at the time, and now, looking back, it was enough. And when you’re an unproven artist, you don’t know if what you’re doing is going to have any value whatsoever. You can just follow your own muse, and hope that other people might be as interested in it as you are. [Laughs.]\nThat’s true. It seems like there might not be as much pressure then, too, because there was no real precedent as a band. I mean, obviously people knew Butch’s work as a producer, but as a band, it was an unproven quantity.\nYeah. I mean, I felt no pressure whatsoever that first record. That was all on Butch, you know? And I know for a fact he was stressed, like, beyond my wildest imaginings, you know, because he had a lot to lose. He had a reputation at stake, so I think he took that first record to heart and worked really hard on it and drove himself into the ground. He hardly ever slept; he was constantly at the studio. It was pretty intense.\nHow did kind of the making the album really stretch you as a musician and a person?\nWell, you know, I was writing for the first time in my life. When they invited me to join the band they said, “You know, we expect you to be a full quarter member of this band. You write, don’t you?” And I instinctively knew that somehow they needed and wanted me to write, so I said, “Yeah, I write! Of course I do!” [Laughs loudly.] And I had never written a word in my life or really ever had the confidence to contribute musically to any recordings I’ve ever been involved in. You know, at the time I could play piano, and I had been a singer in a band and I’d sung with choirs, and I’d played in orchestras, but I had never, ever contributed an idea in any sense whatsoever beyond some backing vocals. I was thrown into a creative melting pot, and I just had to fucking get it together. I just had to; I had no other choice. So I was lucky in that regard: I was just sort of forced into it without having to think about it too much.\nSometimes, though, that’s good, because if you overthink things — I mean, as a writer I know I have this problem. I’ll be staring at a blank document overthinking everything, and nothing will happen. You just let yourself go, and that’s when creativity can actually flow.\nYeah, I think you’re absolutely right. If things had turned out any other way, I probably would never, ever be a writer, never ever write a song in my life. By default I’ve been forced into the role, and as such, I was smart enough to understand that this is an incredible opportunity in my life, and I better get my shit together, and I tried, you know? I wanted to try. I was hungry, I wanted a future; I needed a job. I literally had no future when they approached me at all.\nWell, and then the record took off. I mean, I remember seeing the video for “Vow,” and it was one of those things that was just really aggressive, and it just really grabbed your attention right away. It seemed like that was the start of everything. So what was that like for you, then, I guess, the rocket ship of attention and everything right away?\nI mean, it was thrilling at first, and then it became incredibly intense and mind-blowing. But you’re right—I mean, “Vow” was the first track that blew up for us, and it created and garnered speed so fast it was shocking. I mean, even our record label was caught off guard. We hadn’t even finished the album by the time there was a little sort of storm about us in the U.K., and garnering force in Australia and in North America all at once. So it was crazy and exciting and exhilarating.\nHad you guys made this record as a new band in 2015, do you think that it would’ve been received as warmly or would you guys have been able to release it with so little interference?\nI mean, as a band, if we came out now, we wouldn’t have a chance in hell. We’d been saying this for the last, God, ten years. There’s no way we would’ve been able to enjoy that level of mainstream exposure for an alternative band. It hadn’t happened before—alternative music had never been in the mainstream up until that point of our first record, not really. I mean, there were other bands that enjoyed that explosion with us, but we were all part of a wave of alt-rock being the mainstream musical choice of radio, TV, media. And it hasn’t really been like that since. Yes, there’s successful alternative bands, but they’re not managing to just completely overtake mainstream media.\nThat is true. I mean, it seems like because perhaps there are so many bands, it’s hard to get to the same level of success, because there’s so many other people competing for that same level of success.\nYeah, where there’s so much noise and so much access and a different idea every day, and so to maintain any kind of momentum is really difficult for any band. And there’s this obsession by the public to be on top of the brightest, newest, shiniest penny—and, of course, there’s brand new shiny pennies every 30 seconds on the internet. So it’s very hard to garner a lot of following beyond your first record. I mean, there’s always that explosion of a new artist, and they’ll enjoy that crazy run, but then to try and follow that up with a second or a third record is practically unheard of at this point, particularly in alternative rock.\nAs a fan, it’s really fatiguing because it’s hard to keep up with bands you like and that there just is so much to follow. It’s physically difficult.\nIt is, it’s truly exhausting. I mean, I used to really know so much about contemporary music, because I was an avid reader of the music press and I really knew my shit. And now it’s too much. I’m just overwhelmed by it. I don’t even see a jumping in point without spending hours and hours and hours of my day trying to figure it all out and give everything a listen. It’s just impossible. I don’t have the time anymore, so it’s just overwhelming.\nI feel the same way. It’s kind of like it’s paralysis. I don’t even know where to begin. [Laughs.]\nI mean, obviously you ask people that you meet. I’m always asking everybody, “What are you listening to? What excites you?” It’s not that I don’t discover new music, but I certainly don’t have that feeling that I used to have of really knowing what is going on in general, you know. It’s just everything is so heavy with noise. Saturated, you know. Saturation point.\nAnd it’s more of a surface relationship to music, I guess at least personally. I feel like you used to have a lot more of a personal relationship to an artist or a band and their music. I find that’s harder to cultivate now, which is disappointing to me.\nWell, it’s interesting— yeah, I think you’re right. We all made deep connections. We were all looking for contact and connections in music, I think, and now it’s become a strange sort of way to define our lifestyles, and I’m not sure people even have the time to make a connection in the same way as we did.\nYou know, everything moves so fast right now. And I’m sure that will change and this is just how things are right now, but everybody’s moving so fast and ripping through information on their phones and watching movies on their telephones on their way to work and reading books and, you know, between working out and going to work and feeding the children or going on a date or, you know, blah blah blah. It’s just everyone’s doing so much all the time. It’s getting manic! [Laughs.]\nIt is. For me, I feel like someone’s grabbing my arms and legs and pulling in different directions, if that makes any sense.\nYeah, I mean it’s super intense, isn’t it? And well, I certainly was created pre-internet so, of course, it’s gonna be more peculiar, more intense for someone like myself, because that’s just— the speed at which everything moves now is still quite foreign to me. But I think it’s intense for— you know, I’ve watched some of my friends’ kids and they seem super stressed, too. [Laughs.] I don’t know why I laugh; it’s not funny.\nBut there’s also great things that come from it, too. I mean, I love the internet, too. There’s so many things I love about it, so… I think it’s just like anything. There’s great things that come from it, and there’s some horror as well, and that’s evolution. That’s how things change and move forward, and we all have to adapt or die.\nTo wrap up then: Twenty years out, where do you see Garbage’s legacy in popular culture, in music or really anywhere?\nYou know, I don’t really think too much in terms of legacy, per se. I mean, there’s so many other artists out there who are genius musicians and incredible singers. None of us in Garbage are particularly amazing at what we do, but we’ve managed to garner our forces to make interesting, eclectic-sounding records that are very unique. You know, you hear one of our records— we don’t sound like anybody else out there. And that, I think, is an achievement—to sound different from literally of millions of bands that the world has been exposed to, I think that’s kind of crazy and cool. [Laughs.]\nBut I do feel in some ways there is a legacy connected to our first record, this debut record, and I wish I could take credit for it, but I really can’t. I had a role in it, a small part in it, I definitely think it would’ve turned out very different had I not been involved, but what I think is our first record’s greatest achievement is it broke down a lot of barriers. And I think that has to be laid at Butch’s feet. He really did create an archetype for a contemporary record and showed the world that you can break down all the boxes, all the cliques and all the genres, and we can make interesting, fresh-sounding music by breaking down the walls.\nButch is a very modest man and he never really talks about himself in any grandiose terms. He’s very humble. But I do think he did something quite extraordinary, as it turns out. I’ve been lucky enough to be along on that ride with him and the rest of the band, too.\nAnnie Zaleski is a Cleveland-based journalist who writes regularly for The A.V. Club, and has also been published by Rolling Stone, Vulture, RBMA, Thrillist and Spin.\nMORE FROM Annie Zaleski\nAlternative Music Garbage Music Shirley Manson\nSet a path in audio production\nSave over 75% on these headphones\nEnjoy Spotify even without cell service\nPeter Buck is one busy Filthy Friend\nBest Sex Ever advice: Break or breakup?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line672277"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5044342279434204,"wiki_prob":0.5044342279434204,"text":"African Presidents wives to hold summit in Abuja on women’s development\nBy Amina Alhassan | Published Date Feb 21, 2018 15:14 PM Jul 18, 2018 16:19 PM\nAbuja will in April host wives of African Presidents, Vice Presidents and other female leaders across the African continent at the 2018 African Women Summit organized by the Coalition of Wives of Presidents and Vice Presidents in Africa (COWAP).\nAccording to a press statement issued by Belema Meshack-Hart, Team Lead, COWAP, the Summit which will be chaired by the former President of Malawi Joyce Banda will draw participation from all African countries live streamed to more than three million viewers across the globe.\nThe two-day Summit themed: ‘Using Innovative Technology to Solve Africa’s Development Challenges’ has been scheduled to hold between Saturday 21st to Sunday 22nd April 2018 in Abuja.\nThe coordinators of the event have said the summit will serve as a melting pot of ideas towards achieving peace and development in Africa, anchoring on the four (4) thematic points of COWAP – Peace; Girl Child Education; Ending Hunger and Ending Poverty.\nThe cordinators also say, “The Summit will allow participants to identify the greatest barriers to peace and development and formulate sustainable solutions to these challenges, empowering women across the continent to become solution providers to themselves, their communities and the world around them.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line442644"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6146762371063232,"wiki_prob":0.38532376289367676,"text":"Home Miss Universe Jenny Kim is Miss Universe Korea 2016\nJenny Kim is Miss Universe Korea 2016\nMiss World Korea 2015 first runner-up, Jenny Kim, was appointed as Miss Universe Korea 2016! She will be competing in the 65th edition of Miss Universe which will be held in the Philippines in January 2017.\nKim is currently double majoring in International Office Administration and English Language and Literature at Ewha Womans University. Kim moved to Indonesia when she was only one year old with her family, and has attended an international school in Jakarta. She can speak English and Indonesian language fluently.\nThe highest placement of Korea was during Miss Universe 1988 by Jang Yoon-jeong, who placedas 1st Runner-up.\nJenny Kim is Miss Universe Korea 2016 Reviewed by Pageanthology 101 on Wednesday, October 26, 2016 Rating: 5","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line164267"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6034874320030212,"wiki_prob":0.39651256799697876,"text":"Home → → Assessing the China-Philippines MOU on Cooperation on Oil and Gas Development\nBy Jianwei Li and Ramses Amer\nAssessing the China-Philippines MOU on Cooperation on Oil and Gas Development\nDec. 27, 2018 | | 0 comments\nOn November 20, 2018 during Chinese President Xi Jinping’s state visit to the Philippines, 29 cooperation documents were signed between relevant authorities from both countries in the presence of President Xi and President Duterte. The 2nd among the long list of cooperation projects is the Memorandum of Understanding on Cooperation on Oil and Gas Development between the Government of the Republic of the Philippines and the Government of the People’s Republic of China (hereafter the MOU). The MOU is a carefully-drafted political document and its signing is an important step for bilateral efforts towards the direction of expanding their cooperation to marine resources development. Its evolvement will also impact bilateral dispute management and peace and security in the South China Sea (SCS) region and beyond.\nNature of the MOU\nAs Article II of the MOU states, the MOU is in relation to oil and gas exploration and exploitation in relevant maritime areas. Based on the context of Article I by referring to the 2002 Declaration on the Conduct of Parties in the South China Sea (DOC) and that both governments “have made substantial progress and meaningful gains in exploring opportunities and means to cooperate with each other in maritime activities”, the MOU is about bilateral cooperation in the SCS.\nThe topic of bilateral marine resources development in particular oil and gas cooperation has attracted attention from the political opposition in the Philippines headed by the group of politicians and judges who are either in opposition to Duterte or were involved in the 2016 Arbitration Case invoked by the former Aquino III Administration against China. They have been accusing the Duterte administration of “selling sovereignty and sovereign rights to China” defined by the award from the Arbitral Tribunal. It is important to note that from the very beginning of the Case, China considered it as not in line with the basic principles of international law and refused to participate and accept the award. After the signing of the MOU, two Philippine officials, Secretary of Foreign Affairs Locsin and Secretary of Energy Cusi, clarified that the MOU was an “agreement to agree”, that is, both parties agreed, through the MOU, to arrive at an agreement within a certain time. Presidential Spokesperson Salvador Panelo refers to the MOU as a “framework” that is “not legally binding.”\nFollowing concerns that the MOU could compromise the country’s sovereignty or lead to a debt trap, the Philippines’ Senate President called for a legislative review of the MOU. After examination of the MOU, Justice Secretary Guevarra said that he did not find any violation of the laws. He further elaborated that the MOU did not concern sovereignty issues and it merely expresses “a mutual desire to agree on specific cooperation arrangements within 12 months”.\nAlthough details of cooperation will be discussed afterwards, the MOU clarified the positions of both countries, that is, “the MOU, and all discussions, negotiations and activities of the two governments or their authorized enterprises under or pursuant to this MOU, will be without prejudice to respective legal positions of both governments” (Article IV). This MOU does not create rights or obligations under international or domestic law. This is a pragmatic attitude towards their SCS disputes. Both recognized the existence of differences relating to their claims of sovereignty and sovereign rights in the SCS, but they agreed to shelve the differences and begin discussing cooperation, leaving the disputes to be resolved by later generations.\nImplications of the MOU\nThe MOU conveys several messages. A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson described the process at a press conference. It was, as he said, through in-depth exchanges of views for several times and after communication and negotiations that the two sides reached agreement on signing the inter-governmental MOU. During the whole process, the two sides demonstrated pragmatic attitudes and positive will to develop China-Philippines friendship and deepen bilateral cooperation. Therefore, the signing of the MOU is a testament to the mutual respect, equal-footed negotiation and mutual trust between China and the Philippines. Furthermore, based on the above working environment, marine resources development can work between the two countries.\nSecond, the signing of the MOU reflects strong political willingness from the top leaders of both countries to co-operate on oil and gas development in the SCS. The cooperation on oil and gas development is an important consensus reached by top leaders of both countries since Duterte took office in 2016. Back in October 2016 when President Duterte paid his first state visit to China, both countries signed a joint statement in which it was indicated that both sides agreed to explore (other) areas of co-operation in the SCS (Point 42 of 2016 Joint Statement).\nIn the 2017 joint statement signed during Chinese Premier Li Keqiang’s official visit to the Philippines, it was clearly emphasized that both sides “may explore means to cooperate with each other in other possible maritime activities including maritime oil and gas exploration and exploitation, in accordance with the respective national laws and regulations of the two countries and international law including the 1982 UNCLOS, and without prejudice to the respective positions of the two countries on sovereignty, sovereign rights, and jurisdiction” (Point 14 of 2017 Joint Statement).\nTaking into consideration of the existing bilateral disputes in the SCS, any choice of cooperation area in the overlapping-claimed area which is located within the Philippines’ EEZ of 200 nm from the coast will be sensitive, even though there is “without prejudice to respective legal positions”.\nThe recent 2018 joint statement relating to President Xi’s visit, both sides welcomed the signing of the MOU, and agreed to discuss maritime cooperation including maritime oil and gas exploration, sustainable use of mineral, energy and other marine resources, among other consensus on implementing relevant international maritime instruments to ensure the safety of life at sea, marine environmental protection, and human resources development (Point 27 of 2018 Joint Statement). Without the strong support from the top leaders, it would be difficult to start co-operation in the unchartered water.\nThird, the MOU also reflects the commitment from both government agencies to push ahead with cooperation on oil and gas development in relevant maritime areas. It was declared in the MOU that relevant agreements would be reached on oil and gas exploration and exploitation within 12 months. Such development is important for the Philippines. Currently the Philippines relies overwhelmingly on imports to fuel its fast-growing economy and needs to develop indigenous energy resources. In 2016 it imported 10,670kt of crude oil and domestic production was only 760kt. In the same year natural gas supply met the domestic demand, both 153,275tj. However, its main source of natural gas, the Malampaya field located closer to disputed waters, will be depleted within a decade. To reach agreement for oil and gas development will be good news for the Philippines economic development.\nFourth, China-Philippine oil and gas cooperation in the SCS is not an easy task. Both governments have taken a cautious and careful move. As discussed above, the MOU was reached after two years of negotiations and consultations. In the meantime, some key issues still need to be tackled in the near future.\nTwo Articles in the MOU, Article II and III, give guidance for both governments to work together to reach arrangements to facilitate oil and gas exploration and exploration in an accelerated manner. Article II specifies the principles to be followed. They include “mutual respect, fairness, and mutual benefit, flexibility and pragmatism and consensus”, “equal and friendly consultation” and “being consistent with applicable rules of international law”.\nArticle III, entitled “Working Mechanism”, specifies the mechanism under the MOU and their relevant responsibilities. Two kinds of organizations will be formed, an Inter-Governmental Joint Steering Committee and one or more Inter-Entrepreneurial Working Group(s). The Committee will be co-chaired by the Foreign Ministries and co-vice chaired by the Energy Ministries with equal number of members of relevant agencies from the two governments. The Committee will be responsible for negotiating and agreeing the cooperation arrangements and cooperation maritime areas.\nIt is also the responsibility of the committee to decide on the number of Working Group(s). Each Working Group will consist of representatives from enterprises authorized by the two governments. The Working Group(s) is(are) responsible for negotiating and agreeing on inter-entrepreneurial technical and commercial arrangements. China authorizes China National Offshore Oil Corporation as the enterprise for each Working Group. The Philippines will authorize, depending on the applicable working area, the enterprises(s) where a service contract exists, or otherwise the Philippine National Oil Company — Exploration Corporation.\nFurthermore, with Article VI “Other Matters”, the Committee or a Working Group can be consulted for any other matters rather than those in the MOU.\nFuture Challenges\nThe MOU has sent a positive signal to the SCS region and beyond that cooperation in the SCS can be expanded to marine resources development, oil and gas in particular. However, from the MOU to any concrete bilateral cooperation agreement in the SCS, two key issues need to be agreed upon, co-operation area (where) and business arrangements (how). Taking into consideration of the existing bilateral disputes in the SCS, any choice of cooperation area in the overlapping-claimed area which is located within the Philippines’ EEZ of 200 nm from the coast will be sensitive, even though there is “without prejudice to respective legal positions”. The options of working areas will be under close scrutiny of the political opposition in the Philippines. The previous pretext used to bring the 2005 China-Philippines-Vietnam Tripartite Agreement on Joint Marine Seismic Undertaking on a halt might be invoked again — being inconsistent with the Philippine constitution and selling the Philippine sovereignty.\nHow China and the Philippines could really shelve their maritime disputes and how the MOU will evolve into a cooperation agreement will have significant impact not only on the Philippine domestic politics but also on China-Philippine relations over the SCS. Political wisdom is very important. The China-Philippine experience might set a precedent for co-operation on oil and gas development in the SCS region.\nJianwei Li and Ramses Amer\nJianwei Li is Director and Research Fellow, National Institute for South China Sea Studies, China. Ramses Amer is Associate Professor in Peace and Conflict Research and Associated Fellow, Institute for Security & Development Policy, Sweden.\nChina and Japan’s Business Cooperation in Third Countries\nThe 2018 Bangladesh Elections\nThe South China Sea Ruling: Akin to Opening Pandora’s Box\nSouth China Sea Framework Expected to Conclude in 1st Half of 2017","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line289685"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7678284645080566,"wiki_prob":0.7678284645080566,"text":"About El Camino Health\nIftikhar Hussain\nIftikhar Hussain joined El Camino Hospital as the chief financial officer in the spring of 2014. He has more than 30 years of healthcare financial experience. Most recently, Iftikhar was chief financial officer of Mills-Peninsula Health Services in Burlingame, California. Other previous roles include director of finance at Alta Bates Summit Medical Center in Oakland, California, and director of accounting services at Mercy Healthcare/Catholic Healthcare West in Sacramento, California. He earned a bachelor’s degree in finance and accounting from the University of California, Berkeley. Iftikhar is a member of the Healthcare Financial Management Association.\nAutocomplete Results\nPaul’s Story: Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH)\nBreast Density May Be Leading Indicator of Cancer Risk\nMindy’s Story: Colon Cancer\nSpring Forward Gala Raises Funds for Addiction Services\nLearn About Campus Construction\nStay current and sign up for our campus updates newsletter.\nSign Up for HealthPerks\nIt's a free membership program with a monthly newsletter, event registrations, and more.\nUse our directory to find a doctor with an office near our Mountain View or Los Gatos campus.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line420061"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5420026779174805,"wiki_prob":0.5420026779174805,"text":"Jiulong Baguazhang\nHistory of Jiulong Baguazhang\nJiulong Baguazhang Cirriculum\nThe art of Jiulong Baguazhang (pronounced Jee-ohLung BaGwaJong) or Nine Dragon, Eight Trigram Palm (boxing art) comes to us by way of the Li family of Sichuan province, China. It is but one facet of the Li family’s martial and health exercise system called Daoqiquan (pronounced Dao Chee Chewen) – which can be interpreted as “Martial Way of Vitality”\nThe history of Daoqiquan weaves a story about a wandering Tibetan monk, Lama Zurdwang (1530 -1620) from Quamdo Tibet. Lama Zurdwang is said to have been a student of the 5 Excellencies: philosophy, poetry, painting, medicine, and martial arts sometime during the Ming Dynasty (1368 to 1644 AD).\nLegend has it that Lama Zurdwang left his native Tibet on a quest to learn more of Daoism, Buddhism, and Chinese martial arts. During his travels through China, Zurdwang is believed to have stopped at many Daoist and Buddhist monasteries, where he learned methods of healing, herbology, and various styles of Chinese martial arts.\nLama Zurdwang eventually came to take the Daoist name Dao, Long-Ren and eventually settled in the village of Daofu, in Sichuan province, where he became the tutor of a family named Li. He taught them the many skills he had learned over decades of travel and study. In this way, the arts of Dao, Long-Ren passed into the hands of the Li clan and over the years the family became known as highly reputable bodyguard/wagon masters, or Baobiao.\nEach patriarch of the clan learned the original methods of Lama Zurdwang’s martial arts and combined them with other styles and combat methods they came across that proved useful. Over numerous generations, the Li family developed their own interpretation of martial art styles such as Taijiquan (Tai Chi), Xingyiquan, and Baguazhang based on the martial principles they had learned from Dao, Longren. After many changes of name, their art came to be known as Daoqiquan.\nBaguazhang was incorporated into the Daoqiquan system by Master Li, Ching-yuen, who named it Jiulong, or Nine Dragon, Baguazhang, in the late 1800’s or early 1900’s, though it is not certain where he learned it. It is possible that the Li family system of Jiulong Baguazhang has the same roots as other systems of Baguazhang which developed from the lineage established in Beijing by the recognized founder of the art, Dong Hai-chuan. Whatever the case, Jiulong Baguazhang was initially taught only to Li family members and, as such, its connection to the lineage of Dong, Hai-chuan is uncertain. From the Li family it was passed on to the first Westerner, the current Shigong (grandfather teacher) of the art, Dr. John P. Painter, who has taught the method to thousands of students across the world.\nWhite Dragon Healing Arts\n950 Cty Hwy 10, Suite 117\nSpring Lake Park, MN 55432\nAll Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2018 White Dragon Martial Arts.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1713722"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7821321487426758,"wiki_prob":0.7821321487426758,"text":"Aston Martin Shows Off Electric Sedan Prototype Driving\nAston Martin is best known for its luxury sports cars but the company has been working on a fully electric sedan which it says has been engineered to “retain and enhance the feel, character and delivery of the V12-engined Rapide S.” The company’s CEO Andy Palmer tweeted a milestone moment for the upcoming vehicle recently. The video shows its Rapide E prototype driving under its own power for the very first time.\nThis also happens to be Aston Martin’s first fully electric car. It will be able to follow through on its promise of making customers feel they’re in a V12-engined Rapide S with an impressive 800V battery system that’s compatible with DC fast chargers. It will also have twin electric motors to deliver the equivalent of 602 horsepower and a top speed of 155 miles per hour.\nThe video tweeted out by the CEO shows the prototype slowly making its way across a parking lot. It’s not doing high speed runs or lighting up its rear tyres, but at least we know now that Aston Martin has reached the point in the development of this vehicle which ensures that it will be able to drive under its own power.\nFurther information about this electric sedan will be confirmed closer to its launch. Aston Martin is expected to launch it at some point in the fourth quarter of this year.\nA moment of @astonmartin history. First Validation Prototype Aston Martin RapideE moves under its own power for the very first time with its breakthrough 800v battery. Great work from the development team which includes Williams Engineering. pic.twitter.com/b2mRaeCsNP\n— Andy Palmer (@AndyatAston) January 21, 2019\nFiled in Transportation. Read more about Aston Martin and Electric Cars.\nApple Exploring The Idea Of Wirelessly Charging Electric Cars\nFirst Full-Electric Aston Martin Car Unveiled\nNext James Bond Aston Martin Could Be An Electric\nAston Martin Releasing Iconic DB5 With Working Gadgets\nAston Martin's Submarine Will Excite Your Inner James Bond\nAston Martin Expects To Have 100% Hybrid Cars By 2020","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line698489"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9263081550598145,"wiki_prob":0.9263081550598145,"text":"Roger Thomas Memorial Cup 2017\nOn Friday 24th March 2017 a staff select XI competed for the Roger Thomas Memorial Cup against a confident Year 13 XI ably supported by a number of hard working year 12 students.\nAs always, the match was to be played in memory of Mr Roger Thomas who was an exceptional man who did a vast amount for Sport at Westgate School during his time as Headmaster here. In his memory, this annual event has a charitable focus and we raised the sum of £165 which will be donated to Asthma UK.\nWe very much appreciate the supporters for their kind donations and continued enthusiasm throughout the match.\nThe game was a fantastic opportunity for the students to back up their confident pre-match chat and they became under immense pressure from the outset where it was clear that they were not going to have it all their own way against this strong, hard working staff side. Mr Innis scored the opening goal for the staff, followed shortly by a short tap in from Mr Watson to take a commanding 2-0 lead. It was then that the students had a glimmer of hope, with a mix up at the back, Sam Collins ably took control and neatly tucked away a confident finish into the bottom corner to keep the students in the game at 2-1.\nMr Watson was keen to make up for his slight error at the back and did so almost immediately with an outstanding diving header to put the staff side back in control with a 2 goal advantage going into half time.\nBoth sides came out into the second half with a new focus and determination and it was the staff side again who struck first with two goals coming in quick succession the first of which was delivered by Mr Mangat from a throw in and finally Mr Innis with a neat finish to get his second of the day. At 5-1 the staff side looked comfortable and the students struggled to get themselves back into the game. The staff continued to push but the game was called to an end with a confident 5-1 score line in favour of the staff who were very proud to be the 2017 holders after their loss on penalties in the 2016 tie.\nSpecial mention must go to Mr Clark for organising the match and the staff side and Maan Chana for organising the students side. The game was excellently officiated by Adam Mcloughlin who did an outstanding job, supported by Harvey Townsend and Mikolaj Pietluch from Year 11.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line517748"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6480575799942017,"wiki_prob":0.35194242000579834,"text":"Archive for the ‘Middlesex County’ Category\nPosted in New Jersey, Perth Amboy on June 17, 2009|\nNEWARK – Last week, a former advisor to state Assemblyman Joseph Vas pleaded guilty in federal court to charges of illegally funneling money into Vas’ 2006 congressional campaign.\nRay Geneske, a longtime friend of Vas, admitted accepting $30,0000 from a developer and giving most of it to “straw donors” who wrote checks to the campaign. The move circumvented campaign finance regulations that cap the maximum donation at $2,100 per individual.\nThe former Democratic committee chairman in Perth Amboy agreed to cooperate with the U.S. Attorney General’s Office. Geneske faces a maximum of two years in prison, but he may only receive probation when he is sentenced on Sept. 21.\nAn Evening Of Elegance\nPosted in Edison, Middlesex County, New Jersey on June 10, 2009|\nThe courtyard at The Wardlaw-Hartridge School in Edison was filled with seniors and juniors dressed in exquisite gowns and tuxedos having their pictures taken before boarding a bus to attend Prom at The Farrington Manor in East Brunswick on June 2. Pictured above, Roland Marionni of Scotch Plains, Upper School chemistry teacher, poses with juniors Ayna Agarwal of Colonia, Devi Mody of Edison, Katie Lee of Edison, Lotus Cannon of Edison and Garima Kapoor of Edison before boarding the bus. (Photo by Bill Jenkins)\nVas Campaign Leader Pleads Guilty To Corruption Charge\nPosted in Middlesex County, New Jersey, Perth Amboy on June 5, 2009|\nTRENTON – A man who served as a leader of the 2006 congressional campaign of state Assemblyman Joseph Vas pleaded guilty today to soliciting fraudulent campaign contributions, Attorney General Anne Milgram and Criminal Justice Director Deborah L. Gramiccioni announced.\nAccording to Gramiccioni, Raymond Geneske, 73, of Perth Amboy, pleaded guilty before Superior Court Judge Frederick P. DeVesa in Middlesex County to a third-degree charge of financial facilitation of criminal activity, commonly known as money laundering.\nIn pleading guilty, Geneske admitted that he solicited employees of the City of Perth Amboy and others to make fraudulent contributions to Vas’ 2006 campaign for the U.S. House of Representatives for the 13th Congressional District. At the time, Geneske was chairman of the Perth Amboy Democratic Committee and was a key advisor to the Vas campaign. Geneske admitted that he paid cash to the people he solicited to reimburse them for writing personal checks payable to “Vas for Congress.”\nRicigliano Wins Bitter Battle Against Choi\nPosted in Edison, Middlesex County, New Jersey on June 3, 2009|\nEDISON – Councilwoman Antonia Ricigliano is one step closer to becoming Edison’s first female mayor after defeating incumbent Jun Choi in Tuesday’s primary.\nThe two-term councilwoman had the backing of the township’s Democratic Committee as well as the local police union, but still trailed Choi by 18 points in a poll taken two weeks before election day.\n“Does it get any better?” Ricigliano asked at her campaign headquarters on Tuesday night. “I couldn’t believe it. When the phone call came in, I didn’t know who it was—it was Mayor Choi conceding. We didn’t even have all the numbers on our board yet.”\nH1N1 Flu Cases Confirmed In Middlesex County\nPosted in Middlesex County, New Jersey on June 3, 2009|\nMIDDLESEX COUNTY—Four cases of H1N1 flu have been confirmed in Middlesex County, according to the Middlesex County Public Health Department.\nThree of the cases, two from Highland Park and one from Edison, are from an influenza cluster in students from a private parochial school in Piscataway. A cluster is defined as two or more individuals with symptom onset within seven days of each other who have common exposure, i.e. school.\nThe private school was closed for a week, and reopened on Monday, June 1.\nCounty health officer David A. Papi said, “We have been working closely with the school, local physicians, parents, and all local health departments in the county, particularly Piscataway and Edison health departments.”\nAward-Winning Artist\nAthena Gerasoulis of Edison, a fourth grader at the Wardlaw-Hartridge School in Edison, captured first place in the nationwide 2009 Creative Student Art Contest for her “vivid color usage and imaginative interpretation of the theme, ‘Outside World.’” She received a $250 check and $250 art supply gift certificate. She is pictured with her plaque and artwork at right. Athena is the daughter of Dr. Apostolos Gerasoulis and Xiaolan Zhang. (Photo Courtesy of Xiaolan Zhang)\nPosted in Edison, Middlesex County, New Jersey on May 28, 2009|\nMIDDLESEX COUNTY—Three cases of H1N1 flu have been confirmed in Middlesex County, according to the Middlesex County Public Health Department.\nTwo of the cases, one from Highland Park and one from Edison, are from an influenza cluster in students from a private parochial school in Piscataway. A cluster is defined as two or more individuals with symptom onset within seven days of each other who have common exposure, i.e. school.\nThe private school has been closed since Friday, May 22, and will remain closed until Monday, June 1. County health officer David A. Papi said, “We have been working closely with the school, local physicians, parents, and all local health departments in the county, particularly Piscataway and Edison health departments.”\nA third confirmed case involves an adult male from North Brunswick and is not related to the cases from the Piscataway school, officials said.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1162945"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7089573740959167,"wiki_prob":0.7089573740959167,"text":"Posts tagged 2012 News\nMI ballot committees raised $154.3 million in Campaign 2012\nLANSING - Michigan ballot committees smashed all previous records for fundraising and spending in 2012. In aggregate, the 2012 ballot committees raised $154.3 million. All six proposals lost at the polls on November 6th. The spending in three of the ballot contests - Proposal 2, 3 and 6 - broke t... read more\nDark money and justice\nBy Rich Robinson This commentary first appeared in edited form in the Detroit Free Press under the title, \"Who paid for those Michigan Supreme Court ads?\" Michigan earned national election notoriety in 2012. Our Supreme Court campaign appears to have been the most expensive, least accountable ... read more\nOutside groups outspending candidates 2:1 in1st Congressional\nLANSING - Spending by outside groups is already nearly twice what the candidate committees have raised in Michigan's most hotly contested congressional race. Through the pre-general campaign finance reports, incumbent Republican Rep. Dan Benishek had total receipts of $1,889,740 and Democratic chall... read more\nMichigan House candidates raised $13M by pre-general reports\nLANSING - Fundraising by Michigan House candidates is running well ahead of the pace of the last two election cycles. Through pre-general reports, the general election candidates have raised $13.04 million. The comparable figures for 2010 and 2008 were $9.45 million and $11.7 million, respectively. ... read more\nAmerica's most expensive, most secretive judicial election\nLANSING - Michigan's Supreme Court election campaign appears to be headed for the notorious distinction of being the nation's most expensive and least transparent judicial election campaign in 2012. The candidates' pre-general election campaign finance reports filed Friday show that the major-par... read more\nBallot committees have raised $141 M\namended 4:00p, 10/29/2012 LANSING - Active ballot committees raised $141.4 million in Michigan this election cycle, as of Friday, October 26th. Three of the six proposals voters will decide on November 6th have already smashed the state's previous record for a ballot contest, the 2004 campaign t... read more\nTop 150 state PACs have raised $34.7M\nrevised, 5:30p, 10/26/2012 LANSING - Michigan's top 150 state political action committees have raised $34.7 million through the October campaign finance reports. That total is the lowest recorded since the 2004 election cycle for the state's top 150 PACs. Rankings were compiled by the nonparti... read more\nMichigan's U.S. House candidates have raised $26.1M\nLANSING - Michigan's general election candidates for the United States House of Representatives have raised $26.1 million in campaign cash through September 30th, according to reports filed with the Federal Election Commission. Michigan's most heavily contested U.S. House race is the 1st District... read more\nBallot committees' TV ad bill: $30M\nLANSING -Proponents and opponents of the proposed constitutional amendments that will be on Michigan's November ballot have spent approximately $30 million for television advertisements since August, according to figures compiled by the nonpartisan Michigan Campaign Finance Network. Sales totals ... read more\nSupreme Court race well-funded for final month\nLANSING - The Michigan Supreme Court campaign moves into its final four weeks with candidates who are well financed and political parties that are fully engaged. The six major-party nominees have collectively raised $2.26 million, so far. Incumbent Justice Brian Zahra, a Republican nominee wh... read more\nMichigan advertising one-sided for Senate, Presidential Races\nLANSING -- Television advertising records show one-sided advertising in Michigan's U.S. Senate race and the contest for the state's presidential electoral votes. However, data suggest a highly competitive campaign in Michigan's First Congressional District. Presidential In the presidential rac... read more\nLansing lobbyists' spending on record pace\namended 5:30p.m., 9/13/2012 LANSING - Lansing lobbyists have reported spending $20.7 million through the first seven months of 2012, according to reports filed with the Michigan Department of State and compiled by the Michigan Campaign Finance Network. That figure is up by 4.5 percent compared to... read more\nMichigan presidential air war: $10.9M - $0\nLANSING -- The presidential television ad war in Michigan continues to unfold unlike anywhere else in America. Through Labor Day, a group of superPACs and nonprofit \"social welfare\" corporations opposing President Barack Obama and supporting Republican nominee Mitt Romney has spent $10.9 million. Ne... read more\nIncumbent Supreme Court justices have pre-convention campaign finance advantage\nupdated 8/31/2012, 8:00 a.m. LANSING - Incumbent Michigan Supreme Court Justices Stephen Markman and Brian Zahra have significant campaign finance advantages over other candidates for this year's election, according to pre-convention reports filed with the Michigan Bureau of Elections. Justice... read more\nA campaign like no other\nLANSING - The nonstop barrage of television advertisements Michigan viewers have seen attacking the policies and administration of President Barack Obama are part of a campaign targeting nine states considered to be potential battlegrounds for the November presidential election: Colorado, Florida, I... read more\nMI candidates for U.S. House, Senate have raised $40M\nLANSING - Michigan candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate have raised more than $40 million so far this election cycle according to data compiled by the Michigan Campaign Finance Network from reports filed with the Federal Election Commission. The reports are complete th... read more\nState House candidates have raised $9.7M\nLANSING - Candidates for the Michigan House of Representatives raised $9,657,667 by July 22nd when they closed books on their pre-primary election reports. That total is up by 17.4 percent compared to the comparable point in the 2010 election cycle, and it is up by 14.6 percent compared to 2008. ... read more\nLANSING--Michigan's top 150 state political action committees have raised $27.3 million so far this election cycle according to reports filed this week with the Michigan Department of State. That total lags behind the corresponding total from 2010, when the Republican Governors Association had place... read more\nBallot committees have spent $20M\nLANSING -- Just twelve committees have raised $29.3 million - and already spent $20 million - in initial financial activity surrounding seven ballot questions that may be decided by the Michigan electorate in November. Records were compiled by the Michigan Campaign Finance Network from reports fi... read more\nIncumbents dominate Michigan congressional fundraising\nLANSING -Second quarter campaign finance reports filed with the Federal Election Commission by Michigan's 2012 congressional candidates show incumbents dominating fundraising with little financial competitiveness apparent for the August 7th primary election or the November general election. Incum... read more\nNonprofits blast Obama with $6M \"issue ad\" campaign\nLANSING - The presidential air war is playing out in Michigan without participation of the candidates' campaign committees. Neither Barack Obama nor Mitt Romney has paid for television advertising in Michigan since the presidential primary on February 28th. The television ad war has been a one-si... read more\nDIBC ad spending against bridge tops $3 million in 2012\nLANSING - A television advertising blitz by the Detroit International Bridge Company that ran from Memorial Day to the end of June has increased DIBC's ad spending in opposition to a new public/private bridge between Detroit and Windsor to $3.36 million so far in 2012. That figure is gross sales thr... read more\nMillions in Michigan political ads unreported\nLANSING – A five-party, multi-million-dollar Michigan television ad campaign orchestrated by Mentzer Media Services illustrates the major role of nonprofit advocacy corporations in contemporary presidential politics. Four nonprofits organized as 501(c)(4) corporations – Americans for Prosperi... read more\nTop PACs have raised $22.2M this cycle, up 12.2%\nComing on the heels of a record year of lobbyists' spending, there are more signs of recovery in the money-in-politics sector of Michigan's economy. Michigan’s top 150 political action committees have raised $22.2 million so far this election cycle. That figure is up by 12.2 percent compared to th... read more\nBipartisan task force calls for more transparency, less partisanship in Supreme Court selection process\nAfter a year-long study, the Michigan Judicial Selection Task Force yesterday released its report and recommendations for improving the state's process for selecting Supreme Court justices. Led by two veteran Michigan jurists, Supreme Court Justice Marilyn Kelly and Senior Judge James L. Ryan of ... read more\nCampaign reports suggest limits of congressional competition\nMichigan candidates for the U.S. House of Representatives have filed their campaign finance reports for the first quarter of 2012. Those reports suggest a limited number of competitive primaries and even fewer competitive races in the November general election. A synopsis of races that are likely to... read more\nPres TV 2012: Independents outspend candidates by 50%\nLANSING – First quarter television advertising in Michigan related to the 2012 presidential election stands at $7.6 million. SuperPACs and nonprofit “issue” advertisers have outspent the candidates’ campaign committees by 50 percent. Spending data were compiled by the nonprofit Michigan ... read more\nRecord spending by MI lobbyists in 2011\nLANSING – Reported Lansing lobbying expenditures totaled $35,348,800 in 2011, according to figures compiled by the Michigan Campaign Finance Network from reports filed with the Michigan Department of State. That amount is up by 11 percent compared to 2010 and it is a new state record for annual lo... read more\nMichiganders slow to feed SuperPACs\nLANSING – SuperPACs associated with individual presidential candidates raised $47 million in 2011 but Michigan donors were slow to join the fray. Only Restore Our Future, which Mitt Romney has referred to as, “my SuperPAC,” raised more than $1,000 from Michigan contributors. Michigan donors... read more\nCan Durant tap West Michigan donors?\nLANSING – Fund-raising for Michigan’s Republican senatorial primary campaign is competitive, as of year-end reports that cover the period through December 31, 2011. Pete Hoekstra had raised $2,001,832 and had $1,524,458 in cash on hand, while Clark Durant had raised $1,376,744 and had $1,183,885... read more\nCongressional fundraising reflects redistricting\nLANSING -- Fund-raising figures reported by Michigan’s active congressional candidates carry a strong suggestion of the effect of the 2011 redistricting process. There will be competitive Democratic primaries this year, as there were after the 2001 redistricting process, and less competition in No... read more\nMonetizing Democracy\nThis commentary first appeared in Dome Magazine By Rich Robinson This is campaign finance orthodoxy in early 2012: Corporations are people, money is speech and democracy is when my billionaire whups your billionaire. Comedians have lampooned the silliness of the first strained equivalence. ... read more\nOfficeholders raised $5.9M during reporting hiatus\nLANSING – Michigan’s legislators and elected constitutional executives filed their first campaign finance reports in more than a year on Tuesday, January 31st. In aggregate, they reported raising $5.9 million: $3.5 million by representatives, $1.6 million by senators and $832,000 by the Governor... read more\nEthics, lobbying and campaign finance reform\nIt was welcome news when Governor Snyder announced during his 2012 State of the State address that he believes Michigan needs campaign finance, lobbying and ethics reforms. It has been a long time since a Michigan governor has expressed serious interest in this important area of government accountab... read more","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line58405"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5226786732673645,"wiki_prob":0.4773213267326355,"text":"Volleyball – Quincy – Wednesday VA\nQuincy Park, 1021 N Quincy St Arlington, VA 22201Map\nWED 6:00-9:30PM Coed Social (D3) 8 to 13 6v6\nTeam Registration: $585\nIncluded Roster Spots: 9\nStatus: Sold Out\nWe are first and foremost a SOCIAL company. As we grow though we are starting to offer more and more variations and competitiveness levels for our leagues. For volleyball we have several different options:\n6v6 Social Coed – for the players looking to get out and be active. Leagues are 50% Games 50% Social. It’s a party! Level – B-BB\n6v6 Athletic Coed – for our more serious players who love the thrill of victory and loath the taste of defeat! Games are a little more intense and teams more organized. These leagues are designed for players that have significant experience with the sport. Level – BB-A (some AA)\n4v4 Athletic Coed – These leagues are designed for players that have significant experience with the sport. Level – BB-A (some AA)\n4v4 or 6v6 Women’s Athletic – Our all female league. These leagues are designed for players that have significant experience with the sport. Level – BB-A (some AA)\nVolleyball teams vary in size based on which type of league it is.\nFormat: 4v4 | Auto Promo Size: 6 | Full Team: 7\nThere may be gender requirements for certain leagues. Please check your rules sections.\nWe allow individuals, small groups and teams to all join our leagues. DC Fray reserves the right to add additional players to ANY team that is under the official roster size for the league. During registration captains can pick up free agents or mark their group as ready to merge via commish. After registration closes DC Fray goes through and finalizes rosters by placing free agents, merging groups and deleting unpaid players. Being a promoted team does not mean you may not receive additional players. Teams who want to “lock” their roster may prepay for a team at the official roster size. Example, 6v6 volleyball is 9 players officially but your team only wants 6 players. You can purchase a team spot for a roster of 9 and only fill your desired number but those additional spots are technically used and are not refundable.\nVolleyball Rules\nCo-Ed Volleyball is made up of two (2) teams of six (6) players each, with three (3) men and three (3) women on the court for each team\nException for Competitive nights where teams will have four (4) players on the court\nA best-of-3 format will be used for all matches. Generally, USVBA rules will be used.\n1. All players must be at least 21 years of age prior to participating in any Match and must be registered and in good standing with DC Fray Volleyball (herein: the “League”).\n2. Rosters must include no fewer than eight (8) players (minimum of 3 women)\nA. Competitive nights will be required to have six (6) players, consisting of a minimum of two (2) women, but may have as many players on the roster as a team chooses with no other restrictions.\nB. If a team of “free agent” registrations is assembled by the League, it will have no more than twelve (12) players.\n3. Each team may have six (6) players (exception for Athletic Leagues where is this 4 players) on the court at one time.\nA. For 6v6 If a team has two (2) women present, it may play with three (3) men and two (2) women on the court.\nB. For 4v4 games if a team has one (1) woman present it may play with two (2) men and one (1) woman on the court.\n4. As long as two (2) members of the team are present during the regular season, a team may use substitute players who are registered and in good standing with the league to field a full team.During the playoffs, teams may only use players on their roster.\nGame Personnel and Their Duties\n1. Teams and players are responsible for calling their own faults during play.\n2. Teams may be asked to provide one (1) referee for games before or after their own match to act as a referee (there will be a schedule). Referees will be the official timekeepers.\n3. Referees’ will be positioned, during game play, at the center line.\n4. Referees’ primary responsibilities are to serve as an arbitrator for difficult calls, start and maintain game flow, ensure the safety of all participants and spectators, and enforce the Sportsmanship Code. It is the PLAYERS’ responsibility to identify faults when they occur.\n5. League officials have the authority to eject anyone before, during and immediately after any match if they feel it is warranted.\nAll decisions made by referees are final.\nCode of Sportsmanship\n1. Volleyball is a self-regulated game that relies on the Honor System. If a fault occurs, you are expected to call it as such.\n2. Referees are there to rule on unclear plays, settle disputes, keep the game moving and ensure player safety. While they will at times call a fault, a lack of a call by a Referee does not remove your obligation to abide by the Honor System.\n3. Players must treat their fellow volleyball players, referees and spectators with respect and courtesy. Personal and malicious remarks directed at anybody in the volleyball community, obscene or otherwise, at any time, have no place in the League.\n4. Players must respect the authority of the referees to regulate the game and abide by their decisions. Referees’ decisions are final.\n5. Team captains must be the only players that address concerns to referees and league officials. They are expected to do so in a courteous and respectful manner, and to confine their discussions to interpretations of the rules and not challenge referees’ decisions regarding judgment.\n6. Players are expected to comply with the intent and spirit of the rules. Deliberately attempting to violate the rules is unacceptable.\n7. Teammates rely on players attending the games. If you fail to attend at least 3 games with no excuse, you may be replaced on the roster if both the captain and league management agree that it is best for your team.\nGame Procedures\nGame Start, Ending and Timing\n1. The Referee or league host will have a game of Rock,Paper,Scissors with the team Captains to determine the choice of serving first or choosing a side for the first game.\n2. Teams will switch sides for the second game and the team who did not serve to start the first game shall serve to start the second game.\n3. A 45-minute time limit will be placed on all games. If time expires in the middle of a game, the team with the most points will be declared the winner of that game. If less than a two (2) point difference exists between scores the referee or league host will set a cap and the teams will play to that point.\nForfeits\n1. Teams will forfeit one (1) game for every ten (10) minutes past the designated start time that they do not have the legal amount of players.\n2. If a team does not have the minimum number of players present 10 minutes after the designated start time, the entire match will be forfeited and the team that is present will be declared the winner.\n3. If you know in advance that your team is going to need to forfeit a game, we encourage you to contact us as soon as possible. We will do everything that we can to reschedule your game, but this does not mean that your team will not receive the loss as a forfeit if we cannot accommodate your needs.\n4. Playoff Eligibility: teams that notch more than two (2) forfeits in one (1) regular season will not be eligible for the playoffs.\n1. A game ball will be provided by DC Fray. Teams may use their own ball if both teams agree to use it.\n2. Players must wear athletic, closed-toe shoes (For Indoor Courts).\n3. Players must wear the t-shirts provided by DC Fray at all times during League play.\nMatch Format\nMatches will be played as a best-of-3 format.\n1. Rec Scoring: Games will be played to 21 points with a cap of 25 points. A team must win by 2 unless both teams are tied with 25 points. Rally Scoring will be used.\n2. the third game will be played to 15 points with a cap of 18 points. A team must win by 2 unless both teams are tied with 15 points. Rally Scoring will be used.\n3. Scores should be called out loudly before each serve.\nGender Rule\n1. There is no gender rule (subject to change if men/women are being intentionally excluded).\nSubstitutions/Rotations\n1. Teams are allowed an unlimited number of substitutions per match.\n2. Team members must rotate on the court and remain in that position until the serve has been contacted.\n3. The player in the back right-hand corner of the rotation will be designated to serve and continue to rotate clockwise.\n4. Any player may block or spike at the net, regardless of rotation.\n1. Overhand and underhand serves are allowed. Jump serves are not allowed.\n2. When serving the ball, the player has 5 seconds to make contact with the ball before a side-out is called.\n3. If the ball is served into the net, if it goes over, it is considered a legal serve.\n4. The serve can be returned with a pass or a set. The serve cannot be blocked or attacked at any time.\n5. The serve can be made from anywhere behind the end line and within the sideline.\n6. A server may not step over the end line until the ball has been contacted.\nPlaying Rules and Faults\n1. A maximum of three consecutive contacts per side after a serve or block attempt are allowed to return the ball.\n2. A block attempt is not considered a contact.\n3. No player may hit the ball twice in succession, except after a block.\n4. No part of the body may touch the net at any time unless a ball or person driven into the net causes the contact.\nA. Player contact with the net in a manner not directly relating to or affecting the course of play is not a violation.\nB. Contact with hair or part of the uniform will not be considered a fault.\n5. When executing a block or spike, a player may follow through over the net, as long as the individual does not interfere with players on the other side of the net.\n6. Out of bounds is the area outside the designated court line. The line is IN bounds.\nLiability Rules\n1. Alcohol is not permitted inside the volleyball facility, on the grounds, or any place where prohibited by area rules. Players caught with alcohol will be REMOVED FROM THE LEAGUE WITHOUT REFUND. Our permits are too valuable to risk!\n2. If League officials have reason to believe a player is too intoxicated to play, that player will be ejected.\n3. League Management reserves the right to suspend or expel any player from the league for any reason without refund.\nCategory: Volleyball Rules\n← Volleyball\nAll players must be at least 21 years of age prior to participating in any Match and must be registered and in good standing with DC Fray Volleyball (herein: the “League”).\nTeam rosters for 6v6 leagues must have a minimum of eight (8) registered players (minimum of 3 women). Team rosters for 4v4 leagues must have a minimum of six (6) registered players (minimum of 2 women. There is no cap on the number of players per roster in either league. The more, the merrier!\nIf a team of “free agent” registrations is assembled by the League, it will have no more than twelve (12) players.\nEach team may have six (6) players (exception for Athletic Leagues where is this 4 players) on the court at one time.\nFor 6v6 If a team has two (2) women present, it may play with three (3) men and two (2) women on the court.\nFor 4v4 games if a team has one (1) woman present it may play with two (2) men and one (1) woman on the court.\nAs long as two (2) members of the team are present during the regular season, a team may use substitute players who are registered and in good standing with the league to field a full team.During the playoffs, teams may only use players on their roster.\nTeams and players are responsible for calling their own faults during play.\nTeams may be asked to provide one (1) referee for games before or after their own match to act as a referee (there will be a schedule). Referees will be the official timekeepers.\nReferees’ will be positioned, during game play, at the center line.\nReferees’ primary responsibilities are to serve as an arbitrator for difficult calls, start and maintain game flow, ensure the safety of all participants and spectators, and enforce the Sportsmanship Code. It is the PLAYERS’ responsibility to identify faults when they occur.\nLeague officials have the authority to eject anyone before, during and immediately after any match if they feel it is warranted.\nVolleyball is a self-regulated game that relies on the Honor System. If a fault occurs, you are expected to call it as such.\nReferees are there to rule on unclear plays, settle disputes, keep the game moving and ensure player safety. While they will at times call a fault, a lack of a call by a Referee does not remove your obligation to abide by the Honor System.\nPlayers must treat their fellow volleyball players, referees and spectators with respect and courtesy. Personal and malicious remarks directed at anybody in the volleyball community, obscene or otherwise, at any time, have no place in the League.\nPlayers must respect the authority of the referees to regulate the game and abide by their decisions. Referees’ decisions are final.\nTeam captains must be the only players that address concerns to referees and league officials. They are expected to do so in a courteous and respectful manner, and to confine their discussions to interpretations of the rules and not challenge referees’ decisions regarding judgment.\nPlayers are expected to comply with the intent and spirit of the rules. Deliberately attempting to violate the rules is unacceptable.\nTeammates rely on players attending the games. If you fail to attend at least 3 games with no excuse, you may be replaced on the roster if both the captain and league management agree that it is best for your team.\nThe Referee or league host will have a game of Rock,Paper,Scissors with the team Captains. The winning Captain will choose to either pick a side or serve for the first set.\nTeams will switch sides for the second set and the team that did not serve to start the first set shall serve to start the second set.\nA 45-minute time limit will be placed on all games. If time expires in the middle of a game, the team with the most points will be declared the winner of that game. If less than a two (2) point difference exists between scores the referee or league host will set a cap and the teams will play to that point.\nCritical Mass & Gender Rules\nFor 6v6 leagues, teams must have three (3) registered players present to start a legal game.\nFor 4v4 leagues, teams must have two (2) registered players present to start a legal game.\nFor both leagues, only one more man than the number of women present on the court is allowed. For example, if a team only has one (1) woman present, it may play with two (2) men on the court.\nAdditional registered DC FRAY players who are in good standing with the league may be used as subs during regular season games. NO subs are allowed during the playoffs.\nTeams that do not have the minimum number of players present ten (10) minutes after the designated start time will forfeit the entire game and the other team will be declared the winner. Teams are welcome to use the court to scrimmage thereafter.\nIf you know in advance that your team is going to need to forfeit a game, we encourage you to contact us as soon as possible. We will do everything that we can to reschedule your game, but this does not mean that your team will not receive the loss as a forfeit if we cannot accommodate your needs.\nPlayoff Eligibility: teams that notch more than two (2) forfeits in one (1) regular season will not be eligible for the playoffs.\nA game ball will be provided by DC Fray. Teams may use their own ball if both teams agree to use it.\nPlayers must wear athletic, closed-toe shoes (For Indoor Courts).\nPlayers must wear the t-shirts provided by DC Fray at all times during League play.\nGame Format\nGames will be played as a best-of-3 format.\nScoring: Sets will be played to 21 points and a team must win by 2 points. A cap of 25 points is placed on the first two sets. Rally Scoring will be used.\nIf both teams win a set, the third set will be played to 15 points and a team must win by 2 points. A cap of 18 is placed on the third set. Rally Scoring will be used.\nScores should be called out loudly before each serve.\nThere is no gender rule as far as number of ball touches is concerned. For example, three men can touch the ball in a row before it is passed over the net. (subject to change if men/women are being intentionally excluded).\nTeams are allowed an unlimited number of substitutions per match.\nTeam members must rotate on the court and remain in that position until the serve has been contacted.\nThe player in the back right-hand corner of the rotation will be designated to serve and continue to rotate clockwise.\nAny player may block or spike at the net, regardless of rotation.\nOverhand and underhand serves are allowed. Jump serves are not allowed.\nWhen serving the ball, the player has 5 seconds to make contact with the ball before a side-out is called.\nIf the ball is served into the net, if it goes over, it is considered a legal serve.\nThe serve can be returned with a pass or a set. The serve cannot be blocked or attacked at any time.\nThe serve can be made from anywhere behind the end line and within the sideline.\nA server may not step over the end line until the ball has been contacted.\nA maximum of three consecutive contacts per side after a serve or block attempt are allowed to return the ball.\nA block attempt is not considered a contact.\nNo player may hit the ball twice in succession, except after a block.\nNo part of the body may touch the net at any time unless a ball or person driven into the net causes the contact.\nPlayer contact with the net in a manner not directly relating to or affecting the course of play is not a violation.\nContact with hair or part of the uniform will not be considered a fault.\nWhen executing a block or spike, a player may follow through over the net, as long as the individual does not interfere with players on the other side of the net.\nOut of bounds is the area outside the designated court line. The line is IN bounds.\nIf a player crosses under the net and interferes with a play, this is a violation (and it’s VERY unsafe).\nAlcohol is not permitted inside the volleyball facility, on the grounds, or any place where prohibited by area rules. Players caught with alcohol will be REMOVED FROM THE LEAGUE WITHOUT REFUND. Our permits are too valuable to risk!\nIf League officials have reason to believe a player is too intoxicated to play, that player will be ejected.\nLeague Management reserves the right to suspend or expel any player from the league for any reason without refund.\nHow much does it cost to join a DC Volley league?\nRegistration dues vary by location and night. DC Volley strives to keep dues low while still providing a quality experience for our members. Most leagues range in cost from $50 – $89. This fee covers insurance, court costs , equipment, player t-shirts, parties, prizes, recruiting, and the tons of other DC Fray events that we will be hosting throughout the year. You definitely get your money’s worth!\nEach league gets at least 6 organized nights of games, playoffs (if applicable), league shirts, and league-wide parties where you’ll get to meet literally hundreds and hundreds of other players. You’ll also have access to all our other non-volley related events, shindigs and parties throughout the year. Please note, DC Fray does not issue refunds.\nCategory: Volleyball\n← How much does it cost to join a DC Volley league?\nWe are first and foremost a SOCIAL company. We are starting to offer different competitive levels for volleyball. Each level from social, gender specific and athletic. Please read your season info page to see if the league is at a different level.\nWhat’s a DC Volley game night like?\nYou simply show up at the fields for your scheduled games, you and your teammates play your opponents for about 45 minutes and then everyone heads on over to the nearby sponsor bar for food, drinks, and partying! It’s a ridiculously easy formula that’s seriously fun! Game times vary by location but weekday leagues are run in the evening anywhere from 6pm to 10pm. Weekend leagues vary from morning to evening hours.\n← What’s a DC Volley game night like?\nFor 6v6 teams average 9 players. 4v4 – 7 players. There may be gender requirements for certain leagues\nFor 6s, there must be at least 3 of each gender on the roster. On the court, there must be at least 2 of each gender.\nFor 4s, there must be at least 1 of each gender to play but an official game is 2 males, 2 females.\n**Arlington DPR requires a minimum of 66% of participating players to be a resident of Arlington County. To meet this requirement teams/players must submit proof of residency. Please send a copy of this to [email protected] with the subject line \"Arlington Residency - (Insert Day/League)\".\nAt DC Fray we’re on a mission to make fun possible. To us that means bringing people together. All of our rules & policies are built to reflect this mission.\nVolleyball 411:\nAll good games have some rules and guidelines. Here’s some to keep you playing all season long:\nThis is a DC Fray Coed Social League. These leagues are for everyone! Never played before? Great! Former setter for the US Olympic Team? Awesome! Players of all skill levels are welcome in our Social leagues: the number one rule is to have a good time.\nGames begin Wednesday, June 26th and run weekly from 6:00-9:30PM.\nDates subject to change based on permits and availability and other league logistics. Number of teams to make the final tournament based on number of teams & league logistics.\nPlease keep in mind that this is a COED division when registering.\nWe welcome free agents and small groups and will do our absolute best to match players to teams. Please do not rely on Free Agents of one gender to be added to your team to fill it out.\nRebecca H.\nGrace H.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line908749"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.748848021030426,"wiki_prob":0.251151978969574,"text":"Chang Gung University\nhttp://www.cgu.edu.tw/bin/home.php?Lang=en\nOur school was established in April 1987 as the Chang Gung Medical College, and at that time had a mission of training outstanding medical personnel. To meet the needs of the country's economic development, we later added departments and graduate schools of engineering and management, enabling us to broaden our instructional resources and turn out talented workers in medicine, engineering, and management. Our engineering and management have accepted students since 1993, at which time the Ministry of Education permitted us to change our name to “Chang Gung College of Medicine and Technology.” After adding more departments in the subsequent years, the Ministry of Education formally approved our upgrading and name change to “Chang Gung University” in July 1997.\nThe University currently consists of the College of Medicine, College of Engineering, and College of Management; under which are the undergraduate programs that include Departments of Medicine, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Nursing, Medical Biotechnology and Laboratory Science, Medical Imaging and Radiological Science, Occupational Therapy, Physical Therapy, Respiratory Care, Biomedical Sciences, Electrical Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, Chemical and Materials Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Computer Science and Information Engineering, Health Care Management, Business Administration, Industrial Design and Information Management.\nThe graduate institutes include Nursing Sciences (Master), Biomedical Sciences (Master/Ph.D.), Clinical Medical Sciences (Master/Ph.D.), Traditional Chinese Medicine (Master), Medical Biotechnology (Master), Rehabilitation Science (Master), Clinical Behavioral Science (Master), Dental and Craniofacial Science (Master), Early Intervention (Master), Electrical Engineering (M.S., Ph.D.), Mechanical Engineering (Master/Ph.D.), Chemical and Materials Engineering (Master/Ph.D.), Electronic Engineering (Master/Ph.D.), Computer Science and Information Engineering (Master), Electro-Optical Engineering (Master), Biochemical and Biomedical Engineering (Master), Medical Mechatronics Science (Master), Health Care Management (Master), Information Management (Master), Business Administration (Master/Ph.D.), and Industrial Design (Master). The University currently has approximately 642 full-time and 633 part-time faculty members, and has more than 7,200 students enrolled.\nWe have been striving for excellence in both instruction and research area since the establishment of our institution. While we have been continuously hiring outstanding scholars and experts to join our faculty community, our faculty members have played active roles in national-level research projects sponsored by the National Science Council, National Institute of Health, and other organizations. And in order to educate and shape our students to be “diligent, perseverant, frugal, and trustworthy” and well-versed in both theory and practice, we have instituted an extracurricular practicum system and been working closely with Chang Gung Memorial Hospital, the Formosa Plastics Group, and other institutions to conduct work-study programs.\nThe developmental goal of our university is to turn from a teaching oriented university to research oriented. We will continue to improve the quality of the teaching staff, equipments, and instruction, as well as to let students to have more opportunities of engaging in humanity studies. In taking advantage of Formosa Plastics Group's abundant manufacturing and medical service resources, Chang Gung University aims to be a first-rate internationally renowned university that prepares high standard professional talents in the fields of medical science, high technology, and knowledge management.\nEstablish year : Established in April 1987\nType of institution : Privates University\nFeature area : Information and communication technologies, Health and social welfare, Natural sciences, mathematics and statistics, Engineering, manufacturing and construction, Business, administration and law\nContact : Center for International Academic Cooperation\nEmail | iac@mail.cgu.edu.tw\nTEL | +886-3-2118800*3345\nGraduate 1685 International Students 187\nCollege 3 Department 18 Grad. Inst.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line984018"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6204283237457275,"wiki_prob":0.37957167625427246,"text":"Way to miss the issue, Snow!\nTony Snow, whom I otherwise enjoy reading, has a column, published at Jewish World Review’s online site, that just irritates the heck out of me. I’m going to comment on it bit by bit.\nIllegal immigration seems to have spawned a dreary debate about the merits of Mexicans, when it should be drawing attention instead to a very different matter: how to build on the luster and wonder of the American dream.\nThe debate isn’t about “the merits of Mexicans.” The debate is about the merits of doing nothing about the trampling of our laws. Part of the “luster and wonder of the Amrican dream” is living in a nation of laws, a nation where our rights are protected by virtue of recognition that those rights exist apart from the consitution which acknowledges them. It is also the dream of living in a nation whose leaders have to obey the laws, just like everyone else. Everyone else except illegal immigrants, I guess. Snow’s position means that we can ignore a set of laws. Well, if we can set aside immigration laws, Tony, why not constitutional law?\nImmigration is not the pox neo-Know Nothings make it out to be\nWell let’s just drive a tank over the point. I don’t know who has said that immigration is the pox. This pox (read slowly, Tony) is (I’m…writing…very…slowly…for…you…Know…Somethings…out…there) il…le…gal im…mi…gra…tion. Seeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee?\nBegin with the astounding influx of illegal immigrants, the vast majority of whom hail from Mexico. While the population includes an eye-popping number of crooks, drug-dealers and would-be welfare sponges, it also provides a helpful prop for sustaining American economic growth and cultural dynamism.\nIn other words: It’s okay to ignore the law if, as a consequence of ignoring the law, we get “a helpful prop for sustaining American economic growth and cultural dynamism.” Oh, yeah. And all you would-be legal immigrants? Thank you for applying, but @#&* you! We’d rather have people who, though they don’t follow the law like you do, nonetheless help us prop up and sustain our economic growth and cultural dynamism. Because, after all, we’re Americans; and, as the world knows, our economic growth and cultural dynamism trumps all other considerations. Yes, even our own laws. So, again, @#&* you very much. Now go away; we already have 10 million immigrants; and they’ll do more work than you for a lot less money.\nPrinceton University sociologist Douglas S. Massey reports that 62 percent of illegal immigrants pay income taxes (via withholding) and 66 percent contribute to Social Security. Forbes magazine notes that Mexican illegals aren't clogging up the social-services system: only 5 percent receive food stamps or unemployment assistance; 10 percent send kids to public schools.\nHey kids! It’s okay to break a set of laws you find objectionable as long as you pay your income taxes, contribute to Social Security, and don’t clog up our social services system. So you just go on out there, pick a law or set of laws that you don’t like and live it up!!! You have Tony Snow’s kind permission . (Of course, Tony would like it very much if you didn’t break into his house and steal anything. Because if you were to do that, he would probably have you prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. And, of course, he’s free to do this because, like you, he pays taxes, contributes to social security, and doesn’t clog up our social services system.)\nOn the work front, Hispanic unemployment has tumbled to 5.5 percent, only slightly above the national average of 4.7 percent and considerably lower than the black unemployment rate of 9.3 percent. Economist Larry Kudlow praises Hispanic entrepreneurship: \"According to 2002 Census Bureau data, Hispanics are opening businesses at a rate three times faster than the national average. In addition, there were almost 1.6 million Hispanic-owned businesses generating $222 billion in revenue in 2002.\"\nThis would be very interesting if Hispanics—the merits of Mexicans—were the issue!!! They are not. This is an interesting statistic, but irrelevant.\nSkeptics counter that immigrants have clogged our hospitals, which is true — but primarily in places that offer lavish benefits to illegal immigrants.\nWe are, again, not concerned about immigrants, but (slowly again) il…le…gal im…mi…grants.\nAs for crime, the picture doesn't quite conform to conventional wisdom. Heather McDonald discovered that illegal immigrants in 2004 accounted for 95 percent of all outstanding homicide warrants in Los Angeles and two-thirds of unserved felony warrants. (Gangs, aided and abetted by laws that prevent local officials from handing illegal-immigrant criminals over to federal authorities, account for much of the mayhem.)\nOn the other hand, the most comprehensive survey to date of national crime data concludes, \"In the small number of studies providing empirical evidence, immigrants are generally less involved in crime than similarly situated groups, despite the wealth of prominent criminological theories that provide good reasons why this should not be the case.”\nOkay. It’s okay to break our laws, as long as you don’t…well…break our laws, that is, the laws that Tony Snow, and the other non-neo-Know-Nothings, do like and think people should obey. Besides, our problem is not—again—with “immigrants.” We have a problem with illegal immigrants; and we don’t care which of our many laws they graciously condescend to obey.\nAuthors Ramiro Martinez Jr. and Matthew T. Lee note, for instance, that the Latino homicide rate in Miami is three times that of El Paso, Texas, which has one of the nation's largest immigrant populations. That's not just an anomaly. Another major study, \"U.S. Impacts of Mexican Immigration,\" by professors Michael J. Greenwood and Marta Tienda reports that \"crime rates along the border are lower than those of comparable non-border cities.\"\nInteresting. But we are not concerned with Mexican immigration. We are concerned with illegal immigration, by anyone.\nThis doesn't mean immigrants from Mexico are saints — it just means that they may not be the marauding horde some make them out to be. As it turns out, crime rates in the highest immigration states have been trending significantly downward.\nTherefore, what? We should continue to do nothing about our immigration policy being trampled by those who see fit, for reasons that seem good to them? All you’re saying, Tony, is that it’s fine for people to break one set of laws (and you’ll decide which set, of course) as long as they don’t break another set of laws (and you’ll decide which set, of course).\nTotal crime and property crime in California are half what they were in 1980; violent crime has fallen more than a third. The state's Hispanic population during that time has increased 120 percent.\nIrrelevant. We’re are not talking about the behavior of Hispanics. I was raised by Hispanics. We’re talking about illegal immigration. And many Hispanics have a problem with illegal immigration. Here's an example of one of them (some may think that my own hispanic credentials are somewhat suspect, due to generations of interracial marriages).\nSimilar trends apply in other high-traffic states, with the exception of Colorado. While Arizona's population grew 41.8 percent between 1993 and 2003, for instance, the rates for every major category of crime fell.\nAll we find here is what we’ve already discovered. Tony thinks it fine for a group of people to break a set of laws that he doesn’t particularly care about, just so long as they don’t break sets of laws that he does care about. (In other contexts, we’ll no doubt be treated to a dose of his complaining about how we’re supposed to be a nation of laws, blah, blah, blah.)\nWhy, then, the fuss? In America today, unemployment remains low, employment is booming, wages have begun to grow in tandem with the economy, tax receipts are exploding at the federal and state levels, and the United States continues to run laps around its European and Asian economic rivals.\nWelcome to America, you law-breakers. Feel free to stay as long as you like as long as you don’t break any other laws that I, Tony Snow, care about, and unemployment remains low, employment continues to boom, wages keep growing in tandem with the economy, and tax receipts continue to explode at federal and state levels, and the United States continues to run laps around its European and Asian economic rivals. (But if all that comes crashing to a halt, Tony Snow may then be in favor of kicking your law-breaking butts out of here.)\nHey, Tony, try not paying your taxes and then tell the IRS what wonderful things you do for this country’s economy. See how kindly they treat you. I mean, hey, if we can excuse the breaking of one set of laws on the basis of some supposed good being done by the law-breakers, then quite possibly we can excuse the breaking of another set of laws on the basis of some good being done by the law-breakers in that case. Tony Snow, apparently, wants to have a “law buffet.”\nThe United States somehow has managed to absorb 10 million to 20 million illegal immigrants not only without turning into Animal Farm, but while cranking up the most impressive economic recovery in two decades and the most prolonged period of declining crime in a century — all in the teeth of the post-9/11 recession, wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the double-whammy hurricane season of 2005.\nYes, well whether we’ve actually absorbed them is debatable. It may turn out that we’ll have absorbed them like the Romans did the Goths. Besides, it not a matter of how well we absorb them, but of how well we assimilate them. But hey, who cares about all that as long as we keep “cranking up the most impressive economic recovery in two decades and the most prolonged period of declining crime in a century — all in the teeth of the post-9/11 recession, wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the double-whammy hurricane season of 2005.” Screw the laws! The money surf’s up! It’s time to party, dudes!\nRather than panicking, the political class might want to take a deep breath and attempt a little common sense. Virtually everyone agrees that we need to secure our borders, deport lawbreakers and slackers among the illegal-immigrant population, and revitalize the notion of citizenship by insisting that prospective citizens master the English language and the fundaments of American history and culture.\nIt is interesting to see him think he has something to say about deporting “lawbreakers…among the illegal-immigrant population” (italics added, by me). Is he kidding us?\nThe Statue of Liberty symbolizes America's affection for the world's tired and poor, the \"huddled masses yearning to breathe free.”\nYes, the Statue of Liberty does symbolize “America's affection for the world's tired and poor, the ‘huddled masses yearning to breathe free’ ”. But that affection is, like everything should be in a nation of laws, expressed by our immigration laws. It is our right and privilege, as a free nation, to decide and to prescribe by law, how—under what, if any, conditions— we will accept the world’s “huddled masses.” And we have done so.\nHey, Tony. Why don’t you take a drive down to Ciudad Juarez—just across the border from El Paso (the city you mentioned just above)—and take a walk around the city, draped in our flag. And just for kicks, while you’re walking around, yell at the top of your lungs, “América, América! Sí se puede!” See what happens. On second thought, don’t do any of that. I may disagree with you, but I wouldn’t want you to get yourself beaten to a jelly.\nBefore someone razes Lady Liberty and decides to erect a wall to \"protect\" America from the world, shouldn't we at least spend a little time trying to get our facts straight?\nYeah, Tony. Why don’t you go down to the border and do that; get your facts straight. Find one of those tunnels, that no one else has found, and be there to greet our illegal guests. Better yet, hang around with ranchers near the border, who have been warned by law enforcement authorities not to go out on their own land to check on their cattle. I myself wouldn’t want to see the welcome that they give to you. But you go ahead anyway. Get those facts straight.\nTags: Tony Snow, illegal immigration, illegal immigrants, Mexican immigrants\nStolen? By whom, precisely?\nIn my previous post, I linked to a photo album which contains this photo\nIf you will look in the upper right corner of the photo, you will notice a sign that says, “THIS IS STOLEN LAND”. That is an interesting proposition. To whom might the sign be referring? To the Spaniards, who stole it from the “natives”? To the Mexicans, who, after gaining independence from Spain, kept it? To the Russians, who stole Alaska—and a bit more—from the Eskimos? I mean, this sign couldn’t really be referring to the US, could it? After all, the US paid millions of (nineteenth century) dollars (to the Mexicans, the French, and the Russians) for the land that these people think we stole! (I know. I know. There are those who would like to think that we purchased this land by pointing our guns at the Mexicans. But, really, who points a gun at someone and says, “Here, let me give you some money that will help you pay a great many of your debts”?)\nBesides, I thought it was wrong for one group to force its morality on another. By telling us that we shouldn’t have stolen that land, aren’t these people sorting of forcing their morality on us? And aren’t they also doing so by, well, trying to steal it back after we bought it fair and square and telling us that we deserve it for stealing it in the first place?\nThere’s something else. I thought Mexico was so bad that this is why they are coming here. By flying the flag of Mexico (a country they are supposed fleeing from) flag here (in a country they are supposedly fleeing to) aren’t they saying “This land should be part of the hell-hole I just left”? To where would they then flee?\nAnyway, you can see more pictures of the new conquistadores at work here.\nTags: Aztlan, reconquista, illegal immigration.\n13 One Thousand Word Pictures\nHere is a photo abum of the aforementioned protest, courtesy of The LA Times, where you can see this photo.\nThere is nothing like loyalty to one's country. So noble.\nOne Thousand Word Picture\nTake a good look at this picture.\nIn my last post, I was concern to stress the importance of distinctions, relevant distinctions. The photograph above is technically correct: the US was, in fact built by immigrants. This would be a good point if anyone was talking about stopping all immigration. Maybe some are, but this protestor is not dealing with that particular issue. The protestor is addressing the issue of current proposed legislation that deals with illegal immigration.\nThis is an exercise in deliberately ignoring an issue. No one is talking about immigration per se; the current proposed legislation is not designed to stop immigration. The issue is illegal immigration. The question is whether the US were built by illegal immigrants. And even if someone wanted to claim that the US were built by illegal immigrants, previous abuse is no argument against proper use.\nMany people are trying to immigrate here legally. They are waiting upwards of 18 months for the paperwork to go through. They are following the laws. Those who immigrate illegally decide that the laws don’t apply to them.\nMany of those who are opposed to the proposed legislation are liberals, Democrats. It is interesting to watch them favor immigrants who migrate here illegally, while at the same time screaming about an illegal war in Iraq, and a President who, they claim, ignores the law in order to spy on Americans. I don’t want to make any unwarranted assumptions about the protestors, so it would be interesting to see the results of a poll which would ask respondents how they feel about the legality of the war in Iraq and about illegal immigration.\nYou know, one of the arguments in favor of illegal immigration, when whittled down to essentials is, “It’s good for us.” One of the arguments in favor of invading the sovereign nation of Iraq and deposing Saddam Hussein is a great deal similar to that one.\nSo, I guess one question that I have is why can we permit illegal immigration on the one hand, but not an illegal war? Another question is, “We’re a sovereign nation. Why isn’t it wrong for our neighbors to the south to invade us?” Shouldn’t a sovereign nation be able to define by law who gets in and why?\nI used the word invasion. At several of these rallies there have been many more Mexican flags than US flags and people chanting, “México! México! Sí se puede!” (“Mexico! Mexico! Yes we can.”) One would expect that if these rallies were about what is good for the US, by people who wanted to be Americans, there would be no Mexican flags and that the chants would be something like “Queremos ser norte americanos!” (“We want to be Americans!”) As it is they are telling us, “We’re here! We’re Mexicans! Get used to it!” (Recall the leftist reaction to the flying of the US flag on Iraqi soil and compare the disimilar reaction to the flying of the Mexican flag on US soil.)\nI live two doors down from an immigrant, a German immigrant. He flies the US flag, not the German flag. He has flown the US flag every day since 9-11-01; and he was the first one on my block to do so. That shamed me.\nSo let’s not pretend that these immigrants want to participate in our building project. In flying their nation’s flag on our soil and chanting as they did, they have made their loyalties quite clear.\nYou want to immigrate here? Fine by me, if you will do so legally. Want to fly your nation’s flag? Then go back to that nation you are so proud of and fly that flag on your own soil. For I have no doubt what would happen to me if I vacationed down south and flew my nation’s flag out my hotel window.\nLest anyone think that my motivation is racist: I am the proud descendant of both Viking and Spaniard explorers on my mother’s side. I am the adopted son of a Mexican-American. Viva los estados unidos!\nCertain Distinctions are Supremely Relevant\nThe title of Justice Ginsberg’s speech which I mentioned in my previous post is \"’A decent Respect to the Opinions of [Human]kind’: The Value of a Comparative perspective in Constitutional Adjudication.” This title is an allusion to the very first sentence of our Declaration of Independence: “When in the course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the laws of nature and of nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation (italics added).”\nJustice Ginsberg finds some precedent for her “comparative perspective” in the fact that the Declaration expresses a concern for attention to the good opinion of foreign nations. She would have us to believe that in paying attention to foreign law, and using such to interpret and apply our own, judges do no more than what the Declaration does. It occurs to me that she overlooks certain distinctions, distinctions which are important and are made by our very Constitution—the one she has sworn an oath to protect and defend. I am referring to the distinction between the legistlature and the judiciary, specifically what sort of acts they each may perform, and not perform.\nFirst, she overlooks the fact that the Declaration which evinces this concern for the opinions of other nations, was a legislative act, not a judicial one. The people, through their representatives in the Continental Congress, expressed this concern and acted upon it by the act of the national Congress. At the very top of the document one reads: “In Congress, July 4, 1776.”\nSecond, she seems not to take due note of the fact that the very Declaration which expresses this concern for the opinions of foreign nations, in cataloging the grievances against the King of England, includes among those grievances that, “He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our Constitution and unacknowledged by our laws, giving his assent to their acts of pretended legislation…. (italics added).” It is interesting (is it not?) that Justice Ginsberg takes a theme from our Declaration of Independence to justify her (and her fellow travelers’) desire to “subject us to…jurisdiction[s] foreign to our Constitution and unacknowledged by our laws.” (It is just this sort of selectivity that Justice Scalia criticizes: judges who apply foreign law apply only that body of foreign law which agrees with the position they have already taken! Here, Justice Ginsberg does it with one of our founding documents!)\nThird, she seems unaware of the fact that there is a difference between concern for the opinions of others, and applying the laws of others. In expressing a concern for “the opinions of mankind” the Declaration does not adjudicate any matter before any court. It does no more than to express the desire that anyone in the world who may care to know, should know that the reasons behind the revolution were given by the unlawful acts of the King of England. It is not as if any contrary opinion held by “mankind” would have constituted a veto. “Mankind” had no vote in the Second Continental Congess. And I see no reason to give “mankind” a virtual seat on any of our courts.\nFourth, she overlooks the distinction between giving instruction and receiving instruction. Justices Ginsberg, Breyer, Kennedy and o’Connor, speak of foreign law as instructive though not binding. But in publishing the facts of the case “to a candid world” the colonists in revolt against the Crown were not seeking instruction; if anything they were giving it. “These are the reasons,” they inform the world. They do not—notice!—turn round and ask the candid world, “What do you think?” Had that candid world stood up in mass and said in unison, “You really should not revolt!” does anyone suppose that any of the colonists would have said, “Wait fellas. The world has an opinion on this issue we’re struggling with and though it isn’t binding, we really need to pause and consider it”?\nPatrick Henry, I’m certain, would have said, “Screw the world. I still say, ‘Give me liberty or give me death’!” (Or words to that effect, I’m sure.)\nThe same Declaration which Justice Ginsberg applies in error, also claims that governments derive \"their just powers from the consent of the governed.\" We may, from time to time, want to look around the world to see how they address certain issues. But it isn’t for judges to decide that we, the people, want or need this instruction. For them to make that decision is to (let me see now, how would Jefferson put it?) “subject us to…jurisdiction[s] foreign to our Constitution” without our consent, as expressed through our representatives in Congress. Thus another distinction that Justice Ginsberg overlooks: that between representatives and judges, a distinction made very clear in that document which she is supposed (a) to be a master of and (b) to protect and defend; I mean the Constitution, of course.\nTags for this post: Justice Antonin Scalia, Justice Scalia, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, judges, judicial tyranny, tyrants, constitutional interpretation, originalism, living document, frozen-in-time interpretation, Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry.\nNow We Call Them Judges\nAnyone who listens to Laura Ingraham, has heard about the speech (i.e., \"’A decent Respect to the Opinions of [Human]kind’: The Value of a Comparative Perspective in Constitutional Adjudication”) the Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg delivered to the Constitutional Court of S. Africa on 7 February, an argument in favor of using foreign law to interpret and apply the US Constitution. In keeping with my role as the Jack Ryan of the blogosphere (thanks, Mom) I’ve been reading through it. (It’s my pleasure to read and analyze liberal crap so no one else has to.) This could take a few days, what with having to stop occasionally and work (just kidding, boss).\nWithout taking time here to give it the analysis which, in any fair world, it doesn’t deserve, let me display this gem, as good a sampling of this woman’s genuis as surely there ever could be in a work such as this speech. After taking several pot shots at originalism, framing it as “frozen-in-time interpretation” (and coming very close to likening opponents of her view to Justice Roger Taney, of Dred Scot infamy) she affirms a position taken in the Restatement (Third) of Foreign Relations, that \"[W]herever the United States acts 'it can only act in accordance with the limitations imposed by the Constitution'\" (para. 28 of her speech). Here’s what’s interesting about that affirmation: her brand of Constitutional interpretation tacitly asserts that there are no limitations imposed by the Constitution! How could there be? There can be no limitations imposed by a document which, in order to avoid frozen-in-time interpretations must be treated as if it were living and breathing. A limitation is a boundary. A living breathing document specifies no boundaries (whether absolute or relative), lest any insistence upon such boundaries be criticized as a “frozen-in-time interpretation.” What limitations can be imposed by a document whose meaning may shift at any time, for any reason?\nThink of it this way. You are involved in a boundary dispute with your neighbor to the west of you. He claims, for reasons you don’t fully comprehend, that he owns the property which you believe you own. After all, you foolishly think to yourself, I have a deed to the property; and it’s recorded in the county clerk’s office. Off you and your neighbor go, to court that is, where you are certain that you will win hands down, because, again, you have a deed, a legal document stipulating that you have a right to the property it describes and which is also described in the records at the county clerk’s office. During the trial you produce the documents which specify your and your neighbor’s respective boundaries, that is the limitations on your and your neighbor’s respective property rights imposed by some legal document(s). You are, needless to say, shocked to find that the documents which describe the pieces of property owned by you and your neighbor respectively are, according to the judge anyway, not subject to “frozen-in-time interpretations;” because they are living and breathing documents and actually have changed in meaning and, when viewed according to some law in another country, the documents which used to say that you owned your property, now say that your neighbor really owns all the property that you thought was owned by you (and actually was owned by you until the meanings of the relevant documents changed without your knowledge)!\nDon’t let the sublties involved in the illustration distract you from seeing that Justice Ginsberg has pulled a barely perceptible trick on you. She has, in fact contradicted herself: she has said both that a (legal) document with no “frozen-in-time interpretations” imposes limitations. Think of it! A document which ultimately specifies nothing, somehow imposes limitations! Yes. On everyone except those who will tell us what those limitations are. We used to call such people tyrants.\nTags for this post: Laura Ingraham, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg, Ruth Bader Ginsberg, judges, judicial tyranny, tyrants, constitutional interpretation, originalism, living document, frozen-in-time interpretation\nCensure without trial?\nSo, Senator Feingold wants to censure the President for “domestic spying” (see, Ed O’Keefe, “Feingold Calls for Bush’s Censure,” here).\nEven if it’s true—and I don’t claim to know or understand the applicable law, or even all of the relevant facts—consider that a censure is a punitive act. (Representative Hyde explained this during President Clinton’s impeachment.) You cannot have a punitive act in this country, without a trial of the facts. It is wrong for Senator Feingold to initiate a punitive measure without a trial. And there cannot be a trial, in this case, without an impeachment. Here’s why: you cannot censure someone except for some wrong-doing. And the wrong-doing must first be proved. At this point, the President has been accused of wrong-doing. And the President has admitted to eaves-dropping; but he has not admitted to any wrong-doing. Therefore, it must be proved before competent authority that wrong-doing has in fact taken place. You simply cannot, and ought not to be, punished for being accused of wrong-doing.\nSo far, all we have on all this amounts to: (1) the accusation of wrong-doing; (2) assertions that the evidence (including statements by the Administration) demonstrates wrong-doing; (3) assertions that this evidence is incontrovertible. All of this, is, at best the opening statement of the prosecution at trial. It sure as heck shouldn’t count as verdict!\nOh, one more thing. Typically, a censure is the act of a body of one of its members. The President, while not above the law, is not a member of the Senate.\nTags: Russ Feingold, domestic spying, censure Bush, impeach Bush\nGreat Moderates of our Times\nI am moved by a recent Michael Medved program to compile, impromptu, a short list of the greatest moderates of recent history. You see, several callers expressed dismay that there are no moderates in much of American politics. So, here it is, my short list of Great Moderates.\n1. Neville Chamberlain is the first person I normally think of when it comes to great moderates. And everyone knows who he is, right? Long after Churchill is forgotten, people will remember Chamberlain whose political legacy is defined by his dealings with and appeasment of Nazi Germany. He signed the Munich Agreement with Adolf Hitler in 1938 which effectively allowed Germany to annex the Sudetenland, leaving Czechoslovakia vulnerable to German attack, one of the steps on the road to World War II. Chamberlain remained in office during the Phoney War, from September 1939 to May 1940, but resigned the premiership immediately after Germany invaded the Netherlands, Belgium and France. Sure, he failed to act to avert war, a war which ultimately became a world-wide war; but—and this is important—he brought peace in his time. Of course, his time didn’t last very long. (Hmmmm. On the other hand, he wasn’t very moderate about avoiding war, at any cost, including not acting to enforce the terms of an international treaty violated by Adolph Hitler. Kind of like the UN.) Long after Churchill, Hitler, Stalin, and Roosevelt are fogotten, the world will remember Neville Chamberlain.\n2. Arlen Spectre. Who could be more moderate than a Republican who is pro-choice on the abortion issue? This guy is a Republican senator from a largely liberal state. He must work overtime trying not to piss off a sufficient number of both Democrats and Republicans in order to continue to be elected. Hmmmm. On the other hand, he isn’t moderate on the abortion issue. How could one be?\n3. How about Joe Leiberman?\nThis is a waste of time. Moderation for the sake of moderation is ridiculous. I think it was C. S. Lewis who said, “You can’t be a good egg all your life. Sooner or later you must hatch or rot.” Moderates are people who apparently stand for nothing except not standing for anything, or not pissing anyone off. In other words, they are people without commitments; or, if they have commitments, have not the courage of their convictions. More to the point: they are pussilanimous whimps.\nTags: Michael Medved, Neville Chamerlain, Arlen Specter, Joseph Leiberman, moderates, Munich Agreement, Sudentenland, Phoney War\nWas the President set up?\nA reader of this blog (thanks, for reading) writes:\n“Reading Philologous' latest on Dubai I thought I would mention an interesting tidbit I heard yesterday. Do you know that Democratic (former) Senator Daschle represents Dubai in some way? Pres Clinton was advising them for a $fee & there was another Democrat named but can't remember right now. You don't think the Bush Administration was \"set up\" by these guys do you? They might have guessed what the reaction of Republicans would be. The fact that Hillary says she didn't know Bill was involved, makes a person really skeptical as she isn't that stupid, or is she? Just some facts I heard & know that Philologous knows how to dig further into it.\nAlso there are two companies looking into buying the ports deal now but don't know if they have the capital to do it. But there is one that does that someone mentioned & that would be the former company of VP Cheney. Wouldn't that be a \"hoot\" if that came about? How could Congress veto that American company that came to the rescue?”\nI’ve done a bit of searching and what I have found is that, in fact, Daschle does not represent Dubai Ports World. The Daschle connection is this: he works for the Alston & Bird lobbying and law firm in Washington, D.C., which he joined in 2005 at Bob Dole's inviation. It is, in fact, Bob Dole, who represents DPW. (For more on this read this article, \"White House hastens to brief lawmakers on ports deal,\" by Keith Koffler.)\nI too have read and heard that President Clinton has received money from Dubai. However, what I have found is that this may have little or nothing to do with the ports deal. First, the money has come from the UAE’s leaders, not from the executives at Dubai Ports World. (Yes, DPW is a government-owned entity. But look, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is a government-owned entity; that doesn’t mean that President Bush, or even Karl Rove, approves the programming.) Second, the money was given as a function of a relationship which has existed between the former President and the UAE and which may have nothing to do with any ports anywhere in the world. It seems to have more to do with the American Universtity in Dubai. (For more on this, read this article.)\nSo, no, I don’t think that the Administration was set up. It is not as if any and every sale of any and every bit of property (and a port terminal is property) goes across the President’s desk and awaits his personal approval and, on at least this occasion, he got caught. What I do think happened is that opportunists of both Democratic and Republican stripe took advantage of an opportunity to prey upon people’s fears, and, when accused of this, to blame the President for creating those fears in the first place, as if he has always encouraged us to fear every Muslim nation, never asserting that there are actually peace-loving Muslims in the world. Hasn’t he been chided for his oft-repeated assertion that Islam is a religion of peace? Indeed, my friends, The Red Sky Brothers, are constant in mocking this assertion. I’m sure that we may color them sceptical of the President’s assertions. BUT…the fact that he has made these assertions goes, I think, a long way toward demonstrating that the President has not, in fact, been urging in us a fear of every Muslim nation.\nDon’t get me wrong: I wish there was a way to implicate the Clintons (and Daschle) in all this. But it just doesn’t seem to be true.\nFinally, I for one would not mind seeing a US company owning these port terminals, even if it’s Halliburton. Operating port terminals is not a business engaged in by everyone. Besides even Charles Shumer has indicated that he has no objections to the port terminals being owned by Halliburton. That’s generous of him, isn’t it, that he has no objection to a company owning something?\nTesting, one, two, three\nThis post is a test. If you came to read an actual post, just scroll down. Thank you. Alternatively, you could go here, since the post below links to it anyway.\nWhy the Alien Media Nation hates the President\nThe Dragon Master Gunner has another good post (on the putatively impending civil war in Iraq) in which he asks\nWhy do they honestly hate him so much? Because they misunderestimated his strategery during the 2000 and 2004 elections? Or because they think of themselves as so much smarter than the rest of us, you know, Red Staters. Do they really think we're ignorant country bumpkins for voting our moral conscience?\nI have long pondered this question. I was clued in to the answer during the 1996 Olympics, thanks to Bryant Gumbel’s brother (whose name I cannot recall presently). Those who watched the games may recall being incredulous that the media covering the events just could not bring themselves to root for the American team. When asked about this, Brant Gumbel’s brother explained that they didn’t want to lose their “objectivity”.\nWhy do the media hate the President? Because they are marxist in worldview. As such they despise capitalism and virtually everyone and everything associated with it, including the nation-state. No doubt, they share Jay Bennish’s view that capitalism is, among other things, opposed to human rights. The action in Iraq, however it may be characterized, is an action by a free nation-state. More than that, it is the action of a free capitalist nation-state. And this free nation-state’s leader is a capitalist; and not just any type of capitalist, but an uber-capitalist. After all what is more capitalist than (gulp and spit) big oil?\nThat’s why the media hate the President, and their country. It’s part of their hatred of capitalism. And this isn’t their country; the world is their country.\nnation-state, capitalism, main stream media, MSM, Marxism, Iraq, Red Staters, Red States, Bryant Gumbel, Jay Bennish\nComparisons are odorous\nI was listening to Bill Bennett’s\nradio show on the way in to work this morning. James L. Swanson (author of the book, Manhunt: The 12 Day Hunt For Lincoln's Killer) was his guest. Bennett asked Swanson to compare Presidents Bush and Lincoln. Swanson, in commenting on Bush supposed violation of civil rights and of the Constitution generally, said, essentially, that President Bush has done nothing when compared to President Lincoln.\nNow, I don’t believe that the President has violated any provision of the Consititution. (In fact, I doubt that it is any secret that I am a fan of the President.) But really, saying that one President has done nothing when compared to some other President is like saying that an accused murderer (including a cop killer here where I live) has done nothing when compared to, say, Charles Manson.\nThat doesn’t strike me as the best defense. Should the President actually be impeached, I’m glad that Swanson won’t be managing his defense. Should President Bush be impeached, the question at his trial before the Senate will be whether he violated the Constitution or some other provision of federal law, not whether he engaged in fewer violations than some other President.\nBesides, I’m not very impressed by President Lincoln anyway. The man took the first step in virtually destroying federalism in this union. (It is possible, you know, to believe in states’ rights without at the same time believing in slavery, racism, or segregation.) In fact, this isn’t much of a union; it’s a dominion. But that’s just me.\nTags: Bill Bennett, James L. Swanson, impeachment, civil rights, Bush, Lincoln, federalism, states’ rights\nAn object argument in favor of the line-item veto\nRecall that the President said he would veto any bill that would stop the Dubai ports deal (of which I have not been a particular fan). Recall also that the President is committed to financing the war on terror. The President is now in the position of having either (a) to veto a bill financing the war in order to veto a bill blocking the ports deal or (b) signing a bill blocking the ports deal in order to sign a bill providing funding for the war. Why? Because a bill which, among other things, will provide additional financing for the war has an amendment attached to it; and this amendment blocks the port deal. With a line item veto, the President could get the funding for the war and still have the ports deal go through.\nDid I mention that I’m not a big fan of the ports deal? What I dislike more than things like this ports deal are dirty tricks like this latest stunt!\nBy the way: not being a fan doesn’t mean I’m opposed. It just means I’m a sceptic. That’s all. Of course, now that Dubai is pulling out, it doesn't really matter.\nIntelligent Design and Plausibility Structures\nI wanted to follow up my two posts on Intelligient Design with one on plausiblity structures. But this one at evangelical outpost is already written and posted. Why re-evolve the wheel? While you’re there, this one on dropping use of the term supernatural is also worth the reading.\nTerrorist mindset\nYou’ve got to go to Red Sky Brothers, specifically, right here. They have a 16 minute interview with three former Islamofascist terrorists. It is truly MUST SEE TV.\nThe Left’s Problem with America\nWe hear the Left scream, yell, and rant about American Imperialism. For a change of pace (not to mention tone and volume), try reading this article, “The New Geopolitics of Empire,” by John Bellamy Foster, which at least makes a case without engaging in the sort of annoying whining that most leftists do. How good a case? In the end, Foster’s problem is that the world empire that the US is supposedly building is a capitalist one and not a socialist one. Here’s his conluding paragraph:\nWhat hope remains under these dire circumstances lies in the building of a new world peace movement that recognizes that what ultimately must be overcome is not a particular instance of imperialism and war, but an entire world economic system that feeds on militarism and imperialism. The goal of peace must be seen as involving the creation of a world of substantive equality in which global exploitation and the geopolitics of empire are no longer the principal objects. The age-old name for such a radical egalitarian order is “socialism.”\nHe simply prefers a pax marxiana to a pax americana. That's his right. But he doesn't really make an ethical case for why socialism is superior to capitalism, or why capitialism is evil. He just writes under the implicit assumption that this is the case. More than likely he would say that the superiority is in the goal of socialism to bring about an equal distribution of wealth. But of course this assumes that such a state of affairs is ethically superior to that state of affairs in which there is an unequal distribution of wealth. Because the marxist worldview is atheistic, I deny that it is in a position to talk ethics. But that's just me.\nAt any rate, Foster offers something better than typical leftist screed. And he may actually be correct that the powers that be are building an American empire. Well, so what if we are?\nUnlike his students, you have a choice…\n[Headnote: This was supposed to have been posted on Friday. I have no idea what happened. File it under Better-late-than-never, even if, now, a bit irrlevant.]\nIf you would like to hear capitalism-hating Jay Bennish’s geography class anti-Bush tirade Michelle Malkin has posted a link to it here, or you can just click here. (Scroll down on the page to where it says \"Listen to the taped remarks made by Overland High teacher Jay Bennish in a 10th grade World Geography class. They were recorded by student Sean Allen. \"\nIn addition to “incompetent” and “whining”…\n…New Orleans Mayor Ray “School Bus” Nagin can add “disgraceful” to the list of adjectives that fit him.\nWhen you look at something like the photo of the son of a [sorry, I was about to have a Patton moment] below, you must surely agree with the Master Blaster’s assessment.\nCan you believe the gall of this sack of [sorry, almost had another Patton moment]? There he is, looking for all the world like a third world dictator, while dressed up in a mock-up of a US military uniform.\nWho didn’t know about those darn levees?\nAs we all know from listening to the news yesterday, the big story is that Bush knew about the levees. The Alien Media Nation, as Bill Bennett likes to call them, are worse marksmen than VP Cheney. Those of us who remember, know that what we all knew about the levees was the possibility that they would be topped, not breached. And that is what the President knew.\nThe media spent most of yesterday talking as if topped and breached were synonymous terms; and they are not. Of course, it is not very easy to fault them for this error: being so cozy with gays they could easily get the idea that being topped and being breached are the same thing because they are…for gays. Ahem.\nBut see\nfor a bit more information regarding what the President knew and, more importantly, where he got some of his information.\nNow, I just happen to believe that the AMN (i.e., Alien Media Nation) do know the difference—when it comes to levees—between being topped and breached. What they are counting on is this: that the majority of us do not know the difference.\nAnd their purpose for this? Must be to continue to work on the portrait of the President as a not-Benevolent Dictator (when compared of course to their Benevolent Dictators life Roosevelt and Clinton). For whatever it’s worth, I don’t care whether the President care about me. I don’t want a President to care about me. In fact, I want a government that doesn’t care about me. For, as I said in a previous post, at some point we just have to take responsibility for saving our own asses.\nClash of what?\nInteresting exchange here about the nature of the conflict between Muslims and non-Muslims. A brief defense of Jews and Christians by an Arabic-speaking secular humanist.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1698729"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5639243125915527,"wiki_prob":0.43607568740844727,"text":"An Initial Reaction to the Commission on a Bill of Rights Final Report\nGuest Contributor - 23rd December 2012\nConstitutions Institutions and Nation Building\nDavid Feldman, Rouse Ball Professor of English Law at the University of Cambridge and former Legal Adviser to the Parliamentary Joint Select Committee on Human Rights pens his preliminary thoughts on the final report released by the Commission on a Bill of Rights.\nHaving skimmed superficially over the report of the Commission, I am encouraged to find that it says nothing, and does so at great length. This is the best for which we could have hoped. The separate papers published by several members show how much worse the outcome could have been. Perhaps the most remarkable aspect of the report is that it was possible to produce it at all; the advantage of having an experienced, senior civil servant at the helm is evident on every page. Only such a person could have overseen the drafting of a document which says, very clearly, “Yes, no, perhaps, unripe time, don’t like the terms of reference” and makes it sound authoritative. It will be fascinating to see what the Government makes of it. At least it cannot be said to have made the Government’s task easier.\nPingback: 2012 and 2013: retrospect and prospect | Law & Religion UK\nSouth African Supreme Court of Appeal Confirms Principle of ‘Constitutional Damages’ for Homeless People Whose Property is Destroyed by State\nBrazilian Supreme Court Inquiry into ‘Fake News’ Violates Freedom of Speech\nPrivacy International: Reaffirming the Rule of Law\nThe Impact of Brexit on Equality Rights\nSpecial Blog Series: Supreme Court of Kenya’s Historic Judgment Nullifying the 2017 Presidential Election","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1688290"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9406896233558655,"wiki_prob":0.9406896233558655,"text":"Newsline - October 4, 2002\nOctober 04, 2002 00:00 GMT\nPUTIN APPOINTS GOVERNOR IN KRASNOYARSK\nOne day after the Krasnoyarsk Krai Election Commission refused to certify the 22 September gubernatorial elections and instead insisted on 2 March 2003 as the date for new elections, President Vladimir Putin announced on 3 October that the acting governor of the krai, Nikolai Ashlapov, had resigned and that Putin is appointing Taimyr Autonomous Okrug Governor Aleksandr Khloponin to replace him. Khloponin was earlier declared the winner of the 22 September election, only to see his victory snatched away by the election commission (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 1, 2, and 3 October 2002). Khloponin accused the commission of acting at the behest of Russian Aluminum (Rusal) head Oleg Deripaska and Khloponin's opponent in the race, krai legislature Chairman Aleksandr Uss. Putin said the \"fact that Aleksandr Gennadievich Khloponin received the most votes is not disputed by anyone, including the territorial election commission. What the argument is about is the way the election was held, and I believe that this argument has to be concluded, in the manner prescribed by law, by the territorial or the Central Election Commission.\" JAC\n...AS RUSSIAN ALUMINUM BELIEVED TO HAVE OVERSTEPPED THE LINE\n\"Kommersant-Daily\" noted on 4 October that the intervention of the president in the Krasnoyarsk situation is itself \"sensational,\" because the battle in the krai was essentially between two large financial-industrial groups: Interros, which supported Khloponin, and Rusal, which supported Uss. And on 3 October, Putin demonstrated his support for Interros. However, unidentified sources told the daily that even those members of the presidential administration who supported Rusal were disturbed by the krai election commission's conduct, which would have left one of the largest regions in Russia without leadership until the spring. The daily predicted that \"serious unpleasantness\" might await Rusal and not just from the new Krasnoyarsk Krai governor. Meanwhile, leaders of the pro-presidential groups in the Duma praised Putin's nomination of Khloponin. Yabloko Deputy Sergei Ivanenko, however, said it would have been more correct to resolve the situation in Krasnoyarsk Krai through the Supreme Court, ntvru.com reported. JAC\nRUSSIA'S POSITION ON IRAQ RESOLUTIONS UNCLEAR\nRussia has drafted its own United Nations Security Council resolution on Iraq (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 3 October 2002) that envisages the immediate return of UN weapons inspectors and the gradual lifting of economic sanctions, Deputy Foreign Minister Aleksandr Saltanov told reporters in Moscow on 3 October, RIA-Novosti reported. Saltanov said that Russia will not submit the draft resolution until after UN Commission for Monitoring, Control, and Inspection head Hans Blix files a report on his talks with Baghdad. However, the head of the Russian UN mission, Sergei Lavrov, said in New York on 3 October that his delegation will be ready to consider a new resolution \"if our leadership learns that one is needed.\" He added that he sees no obstacles to resuming weapons inspections in Iraq or to fulfilling the existing UN resolutions, strana.ru reported on 3 October. VY\nPUTIN CANCELS YELTSIN DECREE ON RFE/RL MOSCOW BUREAU\nPresident Putin on 4 October canceled a 27 August 1991 decree by former President Boris Yeltsin that guaranteed the legal and operational status of the Moscow bureau of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Russian and Western news agencies reported. Under Yeltsin's edict, the Russian government provided conditions for RFE/RL's journalistic activities \"because of its role in the objective coverage of the march of democratic processes.\" Putin did not issue any statement in connection with the cancellation, but the Kremlin's information office said Yeltsin's decree was revoked because it had \"lost its original significance,\" RIA-Novosti reported. According to the unidentified spokesperson, Yeltsin's decree was originally intended to demonstrate Russia's commitment to freedom of the press and to enhance Russia's image abroad. However, because of the progress of economic and political reforms in Russia since then, the decree put RFE/RL in \"a privileged position compared to other foreign mass-media outlets working in Russia,\" the Kremlin statement was quoted as saying. Moreover, the statement continued, RFE/RL's editorial policies, \"despite the end of the Cold War,\" have in recent years become \"biased,\" especially those of its \"Chechen\" and Ukrainian services. Ever since Yeltsin's decree, nationalists, Communists, and other reactionary elements have regularly called for an end to RFE/RL's activities in Russia. The Kremlin conducted campaigns of pressure against RFE/RL in 2000 in connection with the case of RFE/RL correspondent Andrei Babitskii and his coverage of the Chechnya conflict (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 17 February 2000) and this year in connection with RFE/RL's decision to begin broadcasts in three North Caucasus languages (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 3 and 25 April 2002). The Foreign Ministry said that Putin's decree is purely a technical measure designed to give equal status to all foreign media outlets in Russia and does not constitute a reaction to RFE/RL's policies, RIA-Novosti reported on 4 October. VY\nDEFENSE MINISTRY SUES FORMER CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER\nDefense Minister Sergei Ivanov has ordered that a suit be filed against Colonel General Georgii Oleinik seeking the payment of $60 million in compensation for damages incurred to the ministry when Oleinik served as its chief financial officer, RIA-Novosti reported on 4 October. According to the suit, the losses resulted when Oleinik sold allegedly undervalued ministry bonds to a commercial bank. Oleinik was convicted in 2000 and sentenced to two years' imprisonment for embezzling $450 million in Defense Ministry funds (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 16 and 19 August 2002), but he was amnestied in August. VY\nPAVLOVSKII SUGGESTS BENEFICIARIES OF RUSSIA'S ECONOMIC GROWTH MAY WANT LARGER STAKE IN POLITICAL SYSTEM\nIn an interview with \"Moskovskii komsomolets\" on 3 October, Gleb Pavlovskii, head of the Foundation for Effective Politics, said there are currently \"hundreds of thousands\" of new groups of active voters in Russia's cities. These groups comprise members of the new middle class and the new intelligentsia, including the financial intelligentsia. Pavlovskii said some of these groups are not \"dressed in white clothing\" -- that is, they aren't saints -- but they already \"have a sense of themselves as a potential ruling class.\" In all, this new force could amount to as many as 20 million people. Pavlovskii claims the members of these new groups \"are closely linked to economic growth and are oriented toward [capitalist-style] success.\" They might run for office as early as 2003 with a \"clear understanding of what they want.\" Pavlovskii mentioned these new groups in response to a question about whether there will be any \"surprises\" during the next parliamentary elections. JAC\nST. PETERSBURG GOVERNOR'S PLANS FOR THIRD TERM INCUR CRITICISM...\nRosBalt reported on 3 October that only 7.8 percent of respondents in a survey designed to poll influential residents of St. Petersburg welcome the idea of St. Petersburg Governor Vladimir Yakovlev seeking a third term. According to ITAR-TASS, the Marko marketing and communications agency conducted the poll among 150 of the city's most influential residents, including members of Unified Russia, the Union of Rightist Forces, the Communist Party, Yabloko, and the Liberal Democratic Party of Russia. RosBalt's editor in chief is Natalya Chaplina, the wife of presidential envoy to the Northwest Federal District Viktor Cherkesov, whom many media sources have identified as a political opponent of Yakovlev's (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 28 June 2002). RosBalt also quoted Olga Zastrozhnaya, secretary of the Central Election Commission, as saying that Yakovlev demonstrated his disrespect for the law when he recently expressed his willingness to run again (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 2 October 2002). JAC\n...AS SOME KREMLIN SUPPORT MIGHT NOT BE ENOUGH\nMeanwhile, St. Petersburg Deputy Governor Anna Markova said the recent decision of the St. Petersburg Charter Court ruling Yakovlev ineligible to seek a third term (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 2 October 2002) violated the Russian Constitution, and she called for experts to review the decision with deputy head of the presidential administration Dmitrii Kozak, RFE/RL's St. Petersburg correspondent reported. However, Ruslan Linkov, head of the St. Petersburg branch of Democratic Russia, told RFE/RL that even if Yakovlev has the hypothetical support of some members of the Kremlin, this cannot make his legal problems simply go away. \"Neither Mr. Kozak nor anyone in the presidential administration will go so far as to directly violate the constitution,\" Linkov said. Political analyst Nikolai Petrov noted that the Kremlin \"is hardly monolithic or homogeneous\" and has interests of greater and lesser priority. Kozak was one of the few members of former St. Petersburg Mayor Anatolii Sobchak's team to work for Yakovlev during the latter's first term (see \"RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly,\" 19 March 2001). JAC\nSENATOR URGES REVISION OF LAW ON MASS MEDIA\nFederation Council Information Policy Committee Deputy Chairman Yevgenii Yeliseev said on 2 October that the current law on the mass media must be changed in order \"to increase compliance with the constitution and the Civil Code,\" RIA-Novosti reported on 3 October. He said an amended law must address issues such as the quality of information, and it must define different types of information, including drawing a distinction between commercial and noncommercial information. In the past, efforts to change the law have been counterproductive, because they treated information from the positions of the producer and distributor, not the user, Yeliseev said. VY\nGOVERNMENT TO TIGHTEN CONTROL OVER SCIENTIFIC-INFORMATION TRANSFERS\nAt its 3 October meeting devoted to intellectual-property rights (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 3 October 2002), the government approved measures for tightening state control over the transfer abroad of scientific and technical information, \"Kommersant-Daily\" and other Russian news agencies reported. The government ordered the Justice, Industry and Science, and Property Relations ministries and other state agencies to increase supervision over information generated by research and development conducted with federal funds and told them to submit plans for achieving this goal by 25 December. A State Audit Chamber probe in July found that federally funded intellectual projects brought the state just 5 percent of anticipated revenues. VY\nMEMORIAL TO STALIN'S VICTIMS VANDALIZED\nFor the second time in less than a week, unidentified vandals defaced the stone marking the site of a future monument to victims of political repression in St. Petersburg on 3 October by smearing black paint all over its inscriptions, Interfax-Northwest reported. The vandals also drew a Star of David on the stone. The stone was defaced just three days earlier with black paint. JAC\nCELL-PHONE USAGE CONTINUES TO CLIMB\nThe number of cellular-phone subscribers in Russia jumped 8 percent from 13.43 million at the end of August to 14.46 million at the end of September, Interfax reported on 3 October, citing ACM Consulting. According to the agency, three different cell-phone service providers have a combined 6 million customers in the Moscow licensing area. Two mobile-phone service providers based in Kazan have a total of more than 300,000 customers. JAC\nTATARSTAN ASKS CONSTITUTIONAL COURT TO RESOLVE BATTLE WITH PROSECUTORS\nTatarstan's legislature announced on 2 October that it has launched two appeals to the Russian Constitutional Court in response to a protest lodged by Deputy Prosecutor-General Aleksandr Zvyagintsev against the amended Tatar Constitution, RFE/RL's Kazan bureau reported (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 27 September 2002). In another appeal, the republican legislature is also asking the court to verify whether Article 27 of the federal law on the judicial system of the Russian Federation conforms to the Russian Constitution. The Tatar parliament is also asking the court to outline a full list of powers of the constitutional courts of federation subjects. According to \"Vremya novostei\" on 3 October, Tatarstan's legislators have concluded that the articles of the amended constitution that have proven so controversial for federal prosecutors can only be examined by the Constitutional Court. JAC\nTATAR NATIONALISTS ATTACK ORTHODOX CHURCH CONSTRUCTION\nMembers of the moderate nationalist Tatar Public Center (TIU), most of them elderly, attacked the chapel of the St. Tatyana Russian Orthodox Church being built near Victory Park in Chally on 2 October and damaged its foundation, RFE/RL's Kazan bureau reported, citing tatnews.ru. According to Interfax, it took 30 people 90 minutes to destroy a wall that was 7 meters long and 1 meter high. The head of the chapel, Father Oleg Bogdanov, said the damage totaled 40,000 rubles ($1,290). The center's activists have protested the building of the chapel for more than a year, suggesting instead that a Tatar puppet theater be built on the same location despite the fact that such a theater already exists in the city and that the chapel construction was authorized by the city administration. One of the TIU members involved in the attack, who did not identify herself, said that as a result of building a Russian Orthodox chapel in the vicinity, the park itself would \"become Orthodox,\" thus \"leaving no room for Muslims.\" JAC\nKARELIAN LEADER CALLS FOR ETHNIC QUOTAS\nIn a 2 October meeting with Helle Degn, commissioner for democratic development of the Council of Baltic Sea States, Karelian Congress head Anatolii Grigoriev said he believes it is necessary to introduce quotas for ethnic minorities in the Karelian Republic's legislature and to give the Karelian language the status of a state language in Karelia along with Russian, ITAR-TASS reported. Grigoriev said that indigenous Finno-Ugric people of the republic, the Karelians and Veps, are practically unrepresented in government bodies. JAC\nNEW NIZHNII MAYOR MULLS REVIVING OLD TRADITION...\nNizhnii Novgorod Mayor-elect Vadim Bulavinov reportedly told reporters that he might revive an old political tradition of urinating on portraits of one's predecessor, VolgaInform reported on 3 October, citing NTA Privolzhe. \"This tradition should be restored independently of who these people were,\" he said. \"We should respect our history. On the one hand, it is necessary to act correctly, but on the other hand, [we should not] make the same mistakes and for that it is necessary to have a reminder.\" Bulavinov was elected in a very close race on 27 September (see \"RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly,\" 3 October 2002). JAC\n...AND MAKES FIRST APPOINTMENTS\nBulavinov on 3 October announced the first appointments to his new administration, RosBalt reported. He named the deputy general director of LUKoil's local affiliate, Aleksandr Meleshkin, as first deputy mayor. His chief of staff will be Nina Sokolova, who formerly worked as a chief legal adviser in the administration of presidential envoy to the Volga Federal District Sergei Kirienko. Sergei Gladyshev, who formerly served as director of the Nizhnii Novgorod Oblast's Energy Department, was named deputy mayor for social questions. RosBalt reported that the appointments correspond to statements Bulavinov made regarding personnel during the election campaign. RC\nFor his 50th birthday on 7 October, President Putin will receive an exact copy of the Cap of Monomakh, the most potent symbol of Russian autocracy, RosBalt reported on 3 October. The copy was prepared by a group of jewelers from the Urals under the supervision of the Russian Jewelers' Academy and has been insured for $10 million. The original Cap of Monomakh, which is on display in the Kremlin Armory, was made in the 14th or 15th century and was used in the coronation ceremonies of virtually all the Russian tsars before Peter the Great. RC\nCHECHEN FOREIGN MINISTER DENIES HE HAS RESIGNED\nIn a statement posted on chechenpress.com on 4 October, Ilyas Akhmadov rejected as untrue Russian media reports that he had resigned as Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov's foreign minister. Russian media recently reported that Akhmadov is seeking political asylum in the United States. LF\nEBRD WITHDRAWS FROM ARMENIAN ENERGY PRIVATIZATION\nThe European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) announced on 3 October that it will not purchase a 19.9 percent stake in the Armenian energy-distribution network that is being privatized, according to RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau. The EBRD decision is the latest blow to the $37 million sale and overturns an earlier understanding between the EBRD and the Armenian government under which the EBRD would have assumed a 20 percent share in the privatization deal once a foreign investor was found to buy the energy network in an open and competitive tender. The privatization has already been questioned by some observers, including the World Bank, after the Armenian government awarded the 80.1 percent share to a little-known offshore group with no experience in the energy sector (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 26 and 29 August 2002). RG\nARMENIAN GROUPS CONCERNED OVER ARREST OF ARMENIAN COMMUNITY LEADER IN DJAVAKHETI\nSeveral Armenian nongovernmental organizations and some political parties have expressed concern over the recent arrest of Fedya Torosyan, a founding member of the ethnic Armenian Djavakhk movement in the southern Georgian Djavakheti region, according to \"Yerkir\" on 2 October. Torosyan, also a leading member of the Virk political party in Djavakheti, was arrested on vague charges of \"financial negligence\" during his tenure as head of the regional power-distribution company. The situation in the Armenian-populated Djavakheti region has been tense in recent years due to a serious socioeconomic crisis and mounting calls for autonomy for the Armenian region by the Javakhk and Virk groups. RG\nARMENIAN WTO MEMBERSHIP IMPERILED BY U.S. DECISION\nArmenian Finance and Economy Minister Vardan Khachatrian announced on 3 October that the Armenian bid for membership in the World Trade Organization (WTO) has been delayed by a U.S. decision to postpone Armenia's accession in order to allow for simultaneous Armenian and Azerbaijani entry into the trade body, RFE/RL's Yerevan bureau reported. The nearly six-year Armenian bid for WTO membership is also hindered by more serious obstacles related to shortcomings in Armenian laws. For nearly two years, Armenian officials have been saying the country will imminently enter the 144-member WTO (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 2 August 2002). RG\nCOUNCIL OF EUROPE OFFICIAL CALLS ON ARMENIA TO BAN CAPITAL PUNISHMENT\nCouncil of Europe Commissioner on Human Rights Alvaro Gil-Robles met with Armenian President Robert Kocharian and Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian in Yerevan on 3 October and urged the Armenian government to abolish the death penalty, according to Arminfo and Mediamax, as cited by Groong. Gil-Robles cited Armenia's progress in improving human rights protections but stressed Armenia's obligation as a Council of Europe member state to end capital punishment (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 27 September 2002). The Council of Europe official also discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and reviewed the recent tension between Russia and Georgia, which he sees as exercising a \"negative impact on regional security and stability.\" RG\nFORMER PRESIDENTIAL ADVISER CALLS ON AZERBAIJAN TO PREPARE FOR WAR\nA former adviser to Azerbaijani President Heidar Aliev, Vafa Guluzade, recommended on 2 October that Azerbaijan \"silently prepare for war\" as the only way to strengthen its position in the mediation talks over Nagorno-Karabakh, according to the Azerbaijani Lider television station. The former adviser cited mounting frustration over the mediation effort by the OSCE and warned that Azerbaijan might face new Armenian or Russian aggression in the event of a U.S. attack on Iraq. RG\nRUSSIA REDUCES MILITARY PRESENCE IN GEORGIA\nRussian Defense Ministry officials announced on 2 October that Russia will reduce the number of troops stationed at two military bases in Georgia, Interfax and Civil Georgia reported. Russian troops stationed at the Batumi base in Adjaria are to be reduced by 300, and another 700 servicemen are to be withdrawn from the Russian base at Akhalkalaki. According to the agreement reached at the 1999 OSCE Istanbul summit, however, Russia is obliged to withdraw completely from its bases in Georgia. RG\nGEORGIAN OFFICIAL ANNOUNCES PROGRESS IN HUNT FOR ABDUCTED BRITISH CITIZEN\nGeorgian National Security Council Secretary Tedo Djaparidze announced on 3 October that law-enforcement agencies have made \"great progress in the investigation\" of the kidnapping of British citizen Peter Shaw, Civil Georgia reported. The abduction in June of the consultant to the EU led to a warning by the European Union on 1 October that unless the Georgian authorities provide adequate security for foreign citizens, the EU will be forced to suspend nearly $40 million in EU-funded projects under way in Georgia (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 2 October 2002). Djaparidze stated there is evidence that Shaw is alive and is being held in the Pankisi Gorge and vowed that the next stage of the security operation targeting the gorge will result in his release. RG\nGEORGIAN FOREIGN MINISTER HOLDS TALKS AT NATO\nDuring talks in Brussels on 2 October, Irakli Menagharishvili and NATO Secretary-General Lord George Robertson discussed the situation in the Pankisi Gorge, Caucasus Press reported on 3 October. Menagharishvili also met with other senior NATO officials to discuss his country's participation in the Partnership for Peace program and NATO's help in rehabilitating territory formerly used as military bases. Menagharishvili and a NATO official signed an agreement under which NATO will fund the rehabilitation of former rocket bases near Tbilisi that will subsequently be used for agricultural purposes. LF\nHOUSTON INITIATIVE UNDER WAY IN KAZAKHSTAN\nAt a joint press conference on 3 October in Almaty, Kazakh Foreign Minister Kasymzhomart Tokaev and U.S. Ambassador Larry Napper announced the launch of a multimillion-dollar partnership aimed at boosting business relations between the two countries and building a strong entrepreneurial class in Kazakhstan, RFE/RL and Interfax reported. Dubbed the Houston initiative, the project was conceived during President Nursultan Nazarbaev's official visit to the United States in 1999. According to Tokaev, the partnership envisages \"massive support\" for small and medium-sized businesses in the form of credits and investment, with special encouragement given to housing construction through the establishment of mortgage facilities and savings banks. Napper said Washington has pledged about $10 million to fund the initiative during its first year. AA\nU.S. CASPIAN ENVOY WARNS THAT KAZAKHSTAN NEEDS STABLE BUSINESS ENVIRONMENT\nAddressing the Kazakhstan International Oil and Gas Exhibition in Almaty on 3 October, the U.S. special adviser on Caspian issues, Steven Mann, criticized the Kazakh government for its recent attempts to revise existing contracts with international oil companies, warning that such moves will drive investors away, Interfax-Kazakhstan reported. The government's attempts to force companies to replace foreign personnel and equipment with local equivalents are \"causing real concern,\" Mann said. He added that the country will lose investment unless it cuts red tape and eliminates corruption, and he emphasized the importance of transparent laws and an independent media. AA\nABLIYAZOV'S PRISON WOES\nGulam Mazanov, a defense attorney for former Kazakh Trade and Industry Minister Mukhtar Abliyazov, who was sentenced to six years' imprisonment in July, told journalists in Almaty on 3 October that his client is being subjected to daily humiliations and rights abuses in one of the worst labor camps in the country, RFE/RL's Kazakh Service reported. Abliyazov is being held near Kokshetau in central Aqmola Oblast in a prison with \"no sewage system,\" Mazanov said. He complained that prison authorities have prevented Abliyazov from communicating with his lawyers and have maliciously harassed him. He added that his client might soon be transferred to another labor camp in Oskemen in the east of the country. AA\nKYRGYZ DEPUTIES OVERRIDE PRESIDENTIAL VETOES\nOn 3 October, Kyrgyzstan's Legislative Assembly (the lower chamber of parliament) overrode two presidential vetoes, one on an amendment to the Criminal Procedure Code and the other on an amendment to the Criminal Code, akipress.org reported. The first amendment gives defendants the right to contest in court the actions of prosecutors or police during arrests, detentions, and searches. The second makes it a crime to obstruct lawyers from performing their duties. Kubatbek Baibolov, the chairman of the parliamentary committee on criminal, procedural, and administrative legislation, told Interfax on 3 October that President Askar Akaev should understand that the articles -- although he vetoed them -- are conducive to democracy and human rights. Meanwhile, deputies upheld other presidential vetoes concerning arrest procedures, economic associations, and the amnesty law. AA\nEU GROUP IN KYRGYZSTAN\nOn 3 October in Bishkek, President Akaev and Prime Minister Nikolai Tanaev received a European Parliament delegation to discuss human rights, media freedom, and the war on terrorism, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported. Delegation leader Antonio Di Pietro said that democratic reforms require financial support and, consequently, the EU has decided to double its aid to the country. The same day, the Kyrgyzstan-EU Parliamentary Cooperation Committee held its first meeting in Bishkek, Interfax reported. The committee is intended as a forum for exchanging views on the political and economic situation in Kyrgyzstan and on combating terrorism, organized crime, and drug trafficking. AA\nRENEWED APPEALS TO RELEASE FORMER KYRGYZ VICE PRESIDENT\nMembers of Kyrgyzstan's Constitutional Assembly, which wrapped up its work on 2 October (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 3 October 2002), sent a signed appeal to President Akaev the following day to release jailed former Vice President Feliks Kulov, RFE/RL's Bishkek bureau reported. Kulov is serving a 10-year sentence on embezzlement charges, which he recently reiterated were politically motivated (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 27 September 2002). Akaev said the issue is beyond his competence, and the appeal should be redirected to Supreme Court Chairwoman Nelly Beishenavlieva. Representatives for the political party Moya Strana duly submitted it to her. Meanwhile, on 3 October, about 600 protesters demanding Kulov's release picketed the Bishkek municipal court that has been considering Kulov's appeal against his sentence since August. AA\nIMF STUDIES TAJIK REFORMS\nAn IMF delegation led by Robert Christiansen arrived in Dushanbe on 3 October on a one-week mission, Tajik radio reported. The delegation will assess Tajikistan's progress in implementing the IMF staff-monitored reform program that the government agreed to in a Memorandum of Economic and Financial Policies in March. Fund representatives met with Finance Minister Safarali Najmuddinov and National Bank Chairman Murodali Alimardonov. The delegation will also discuss the government's new draft cooperation program on reducing poverty levels by 2005. AA\nTURKMENISTAN BUILDING UP CASPIAN COAST GUARD\nUkraine has supplied Turkmenistan with three more Kalkan-M patrol boats, bringing the number received since May to seven, turkmenistan.ru reported on 3 October. According to a gas-for-goods barter agreement signed in 2001, Ukrainian shipbuilders owe Turkmenistan a total of 10 Kalkan and 10 40-ton Grif patrol boats. Since last year, Turkmenistan has been steadily increasing its fleet patrolling its Caspian waters. AA\nUZBEKS CUT IMPORT DUTIES\nAs of 1 October, import taxes on foodstuffs brought into Uzbekistan by private individuals and \"shuttle traders\" have been reduced from 50 percent to 40 percent and those on other consumer goods from 90 to 70 percent, uzreport.com reported on 3 October. The duties are now payable in the local currency, rather than in hard currency as before. Tradesmen in Uzbek markets have staged protests in recent months against what they believe are exorbitant import taxes. AA\nBELARUSIAN VENDORS CONTINUE STRIKE...\nSome 120,000 small traders on 3 September continued their strike over what they say is the government's financial and administrative pressure to destroy small business in Belarus (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 2 October 2002), Belapan reported, quoting United Council of Entrepreneurs (ASP) Chairman Anatol Shumchanka. Shumchanka said his council is planning to hold a convention within a month and to invite President Alyaksandr Lukashenka so vendors can present their problems and demands directly. Shumchanka insists Lukashenka is being deliberately misinformed about the situation in the small-business sector by his ministers and local authorities. Meanwhile, outdoor-market traders from a strike committee headed by Valery Levaneuski are demanding Lukashenka's ouster, blaming him personally for the suppression of small business in the country. JM\n...WHILE LUKASHENKA VILIFIES THEM ON TV\nDuring a visit to the Khimvalakno chemical-fiber plant in Svetlahorsk (Homel Oblast) on 3 October, Lukashenka explained to workers that he is forced to increase financial pressure on small traders in order to protect domestic producers. \"Have you seen how these so-called 'poor entrepreneurs' are striking?\" Belarusian Television quoted Lukashenka as saying. \"Who is tormenting you? They go to Istanbul, to friendly China, or to some other place, buy goods there and bring them into Belarus without customs duties. They pay virtually no taxes here, that is, their goods are cheaper than those produced [in Belarus]. In this way, they ship out hard currency [abroad], feed foreign producers and importers, while [simultaneously] killing our production.\" JM\nBELARUS SLAMS LITHUANIA OVER ANNOUNCED END OF VISA-FREE TRAVEL\nDeputy Foreign Minister Alyaksandr Herasimenka told journalists on 3 October that Lithuania's intention to introduce full-scale visa requirements for all Belarusian citizens is an unfriendly step, Belapan reported. Last month, Vilnius announced that as of 1 January it will cancel the temporary agreement it concluded with Minsk in 1994 on visa-free entry into Lithuania for Belarusian pensioners, residents of border areas, and truckers (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 26 September 2002). \"[This measure] runs counter to the principles of good-neighborliness and contradicts the nature and provisions of fundamental OSCE agreements, in particular, the Helsinki Final Act of 1975...under which OSCE member states made commitments gradually to simplify and apply flexible border-crossing procedures and facilitate travel on their territory,\" Herasimenka noted. He added that Lithuania is being too hasty in introducing visa requirements for Belarusians, since accession to the European Union does not automatically imply accession to the Schengen Treaty. JM\nUKRAINIAN NEWS AGENCY SETTLES CONFLICT OVER ALLEGED CENSORSHIP\nUNIAN, Ukraine's second-largest news agency, published a statement on 3 October saying the agency's leadership and journalists had reached a compromise over the recent conflict in which journalists complained of being subjected to political censorship and pressure (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 2 October 2002). \"Both sides declare that political censorship in UNIAN is inadmissible. We are unanimous in the opinion that major changes in materials released by UNIAN may be made only by the journalists who wrote them,\" the statement reads. The dispute in UNIAN began on 1 October when journalists accused UNIAN's new executive director, Vasyl Yurychko, of censoring their work and of refusing to run reports that could be construed as portraying President Leonid Kuchma unfavorably, AP reported. JM\nUKRAINIAN NGO CLAIMS ITS LEADER KILLED FOR HIS POLITICAL ACTIVITY\nThe Public Control organization on 3 October claimed that its head, Ruslan Synyavskyy, was killed because of his public activity, AP reported. Police reported that an unidentified gunman shot and killed Synyavskyy, 44, late on 30 September near the entrance to his apartment building in downtown Kyiv. Interfax reported that the assailant shot several times in an attempt to rob Synyavskyy. \"It's very doubtful that an ordinary thief carries a gun. We [think] this [killing] was linked to his activity in the organization,\" Oleh Sadanets from Public Control told AP. Public Control helps citizens defend their rights if they believe state officials abused their power or violated laws. JM\nUKRAINIAN PRESIDENT IN INDIA\nPresident Kuchma is continuing a four-day official visit to India that began on 2 October. Kuchma's spokeswoman Olena Hromnytska told journalists on 3 October that the two countries signed four accords, including one on mutual legal assistance in criminal investigations and another on extradition, UNIAN reported. Kuchma reportedly said that Ukraine and India \"have no divergent opinions\" on any international issues. JM\nESTONIAN PREMIER SUGGESTS POSTS OF PRESIDENT AND PREMIER COULD BE COMBINED\nAt a forum of civil servants in Tartu on 3 October, Siim Kallas suggested that the position of prime minister could be eliminated in Estonia and the role handed over to the president, ETA reported. He added it appears likely that the constitution will be changed so that the president would be directly elected. Now the president is chosen by the parliament or by a special electoral body consisting of the parliament and representatives of local governments. Kallas said that if the next president is elected directly by the people, he or she would be able to play a greater role in governing the state. Combining the positions of president and prime minister would simplify foreign relations and make responsibilities and representative functions clearer, Kallas added. He also cautioned that his proposals were made simply for further discussion, with the aim of making the Estonian state more flexible. SG\nEC PLEDGES TO SOLVE LATVIA'S FARM-QUOTAS ISSUE\nEuropean Commission (EC) President Romano Prodi told visiting Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga in Brussels on 3 October that the EC will make every effort to resolve the question of Latvia's agriculture quotas, BNS reported. He said the EC has received new statistical data about Latvia's agricultural output, which are being assessed by experts. But he added that all countries should be treated equally. Earlier that day, EC Enlargement Commissioner Guenter Verheugen assured Vike-Freiberga that there should be no problems for Latvia to become a member of the EU. Later, Vike-Freiberga discussed European security and defense policy with European Council Secretary-General Javier Solana, who expressed the hope that the EU will form a rapid-reaction force by 2003. SG\nPUBLIC INITIATIVE TO CUT PERSONAL INCOME TAX IN LITHUANIA\nMembers of the right-of-center Liberal Union brought to the Chief Election Commission on 3 October a petition containing 60,891 signatures calling for the gradual reduction of the tax rate on personal income from 33 percent to 24 percent, ELTA reported. If the commission verifies that at least 50,000 of the signatures belong to Lithuanian citizens, parliament will have to consider a draft law on the tax cut. Liberal Union Chairman Eugenijus Gentvilas said his party took the initiative of gathering the signatures after parliament rejected its proposal for the tax reduction. He claimed the tax cut would boost the income of citizens by 950 million litas ($270 million) and lead to a revival of the economy and a decrease in unemployment. SG\nBASQUE PARTY SUPPORTS AUTONOMY FOR POLAND'S SILESIA\nSpain's Basque National Party is supporting the Silesian Autonomy Movement (RAS) in its bid to promote the idea of political and economic autonomy for Silesia (southern Poland) in the ongoing local election campaign in Poland, PAP reported. \"I came [to Poland] to back the RAS in their campaign, because I believe in autonomy, thanks to which authorities are closer to people,\" said Jose Mari Etxebarria, who is in charge of foreign contacts of the Basque National Party. The RAS has fielded some 200 candidates in Silesian and Opole provinces for the 27 October local election. According to the RAS website (http://www.raslaska.org/ras/index2e.htm), the movement's long-term political objective is the \"creation of Lower and Upper Silesian autonomous regions, within their historical borders.\" JM\nMORE THAN TWO-THIRDS OF POLES WANT RESTORATION OF DEATH PENALTY\nAccording to a poll conducted by OBOP in August among 1,017 Poles over the age of 15, 69 percent of respondents said they support the reintroduction of capital punishment, PAP reported on 3 October. Seventy-seven percent said they want to see harsher sentences for crimes, but only 31 percent declared their readiness to pay higher taxes to cover the cost of longer prison terms. JM\nCZECH FOREIGN MINISTER SAYS NO DECISION YET ON U.S. MISSILE-DEFENSE PROJECT\nForeign Minister Cyril Svoboda told journalists on 3 October that the Czech government is considering the possibility of joining the U.S. \"missile-shield\" defense program but stressed that no decision has been made, CTK reported. Svoboda added that the cabinet's attitude toward the prospect, which was first discussed with U.S. military experts by Defense Minister Jaroslav Tvrdik during a recent visit to Washington, is \"generally positive.\" Reports in the local media say the United States considers the Czech Republic's geographic location suitable for the deployment of missiles within the proposed system, which would be deployed to detect and destroy enemy missiles at high altitude. CTK reported that the view in Washington is that a single site in Europe is sufficient to provide defense against an enemy missile attack for the entire continent. Communist Party of Bohemia and Moravia Deputy Chairman Vlastimil Balin said on 3 October that his party will demand a referendum on the matter if the government decides in favor of such a plan. MS\nCZECH PREMIER MEETS AFGHAN PRESIDENT IN KABUL\nPrime Minister Vladimir Spidla met with Afghan Transitional Administration President Hamid Karzai in Kabul on 3 October and discussed Czech support for that country's postwar reconstruction effort and mutual trade, CTK and international news agencies reported. Spidla said after the meeting that the two had agreed to restore economic cooperation, which was effectively halted under the Taliban regime. Spidla and Defense Minister Tvrdik, who is accompanying him on the visit, also met with Czech soldiers staffing a field hospital as part of the Kabul-based International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). Spidla said he does not believe that ISAF involvement will be extended to the rest of Afghanistan. Spidla and Tvrdik also met on 3 October with Afghan Defense Minister Mohammad Qasim Fahim and with the ISAF commander, Turkish General Akin Zorul. MS\nFORMER CZECH PRIME MINISTER REPORTEDLY TO SEEK RE-ELECTION AS PARTY CHAIRMAN\nCivic Democratic Party (ODS) Chairman Vaclav Klaus will seek re-election to his current position at the ODS national conference scheduled for December, CTK reported on 3 October, citing the daily \"Vecernik Praha.\" After the ODS lost the June parliamentary elections, Klaus pledged to resign as chairman but refrained from saying whether he might run again for the post. Meanwhile, Moravia-Silesia Region Commissioner Evzen Tosenovsky last month announced his candidacy for the post. The daily says the Central Bohemian ODS regional council recently proposed that the ODS leadership in December be elected for one year only and that Klaus's mandate as re-elected chairman also be limited to that period. The proposal also calls for the creation of the post of first deputy chairman, to allow for a future successor to Klaus to gain experience, as well as the post of honorary chairman, which Klaus might occupy after 2003. MS\nFOURTH BSE CASE REPORTED IN CZECH REPUBLIC\nPreliminary tests detected what appears to be a fourth case of BSE (mad-cow disease) in the Czech Republic, AP reported on 3 October, citing a State Veterinary Authority spokesman. The spokesman said a 7-year-old bovine from a farm in Sestajovice, just outside Prague, tested positive for BSE. If the results of additional testing confirm the preliminary findings, 25 other bovines from the same farm are to be slaughtered as a precautionary measure, the spokesman said. The first BSE case in the country was detected last June, and the third case just last month (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 30 September and 3 October 2002). MS\nEMERGING SLOVAK COALITION AGREES ON GOVERNMENT PROGRAM\nFour Slovak center-right parties on 3 October reached agreement on the next government program and said they might sign the coalition pact early next week, Reuters reported, citing Prime Minister-designate Mikulas Dzurinda. Dzurinda declined to disclose the names of ministers in the proposed cabinet, saying that on personal issues \"nothing has yet been agreed 100 percent,\" according to CTK. The four parties -- the Slovak Democratic and Christian Union, the Hungarian Coalition Party (SMK), the Christian Democratic Movement (KDH), and the Alliance of New Citizens (ANO) -- agreed that the issue of the Benes Decrees, relating to the postwar expulsion of ethnic Germans and Hungarians, will not be raised by any of them, thus dismissing speculation that the SMK might do so. MS\nBUSH CONGRATULATES SLOVAK PREMIER ON ELECTION SUCCESS\nU.S. President George W. Bush on 3 October telephoned Dzurinda and congratulated him on his party's electoral performance, AP reported, citing White House spokesman Ari Fleischer. According to CTK, Bush also expressed U.S. support for Slovakia's quest to join Euro-Atlantic structures. Dzurinda told Bush that the election outcome demonstrates that Slovakia's citizens understand the need for democratic development and integration in NATO and the EU, as well as for the continuation of the reform process. Also on 3 October, NATO Secretary-General Lord George Robertson said in Brussels that the Slovak electorate made a very wise decision in the recent general elections. \"Today they are part of the main democratic stream in Europe, and they voted for being part of integration, leading to stability and prosperity,\" Robertson told TASR. MS\nNEW SLOVAK PARLIAMENT TO MEET ON 15 OCTOBER\nThe newly elected Slovak parliament will meet on 15 October in its first session, CTK and AP reported. According to the CTK report, the coalition is expected to appoint a parliamentary speaker and three deputy speakers, while one deputy speaker's post will go to the opposition. MS\nFORMER HUNGARIAN PREMIER CLARIFIES EU STANCE\nFormer Prime Minister Viktor Orban told reporters in Budapest that he advocates speedy European Union accession, but, as the EU has adopted a tough negotiating stance, Hungary should also resort to \"as tough a negotiating position as possible,\" \"Magyar Nemzet\" reported on 4 October. \"I never said that Hungary should not join the EU,\" Orban said, adding that he \"only wanted to point out that we must act to make sure that the competitiveness of the Hungarian economy improves by protecting farmers and small and medium-sized enterprises with low-interest credits and by defending farmland from the onslaught of foreign purchasers.\" He also remarked that he would like to see two referenda held next year, one on the sale of farmland and the other on media policy. MSZ\nHUNGARIAN SUPREME COURT RULES IN SMALLHOLDERS' LEADERSHIP DISPUTE\nThe Supreme Court has ruled that Jozsef Torgyan is no longer chairman of the Independent Smallholders' Party, \"Nepszabadsag\" reported on 4 October. The court ruled that the 4 May national council meeting at which Miklos Reti, head of the party's Pest County chapter, was elected party chairman was legitimate (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 6 May 2002). The Metropolitan Court previously declared the May meeting invalid. Torgyan was re-elected party chairman again at a 20 August meeting attended by a small group of people at the party headquarters. Torgyan told \"Nepszabadsag\" that he has not received the text of the ruling, but \"there is no way that Reti can be the party leader, as I am the chairman of the party.\" MSZ\nSURVEY HIGHLIGHTS YOUNG HUNGARIANS' PREJUDICES\nAccording to a survey conducted during the 2000-01 school year, strong prejudices against Roma prevail among 32 percent of the 1,500 high-school students interviewed, Budapest dailies reported on 4 October. Some 75 percent of those surveyed are prejudiced to some extent and \"would not have a Roma for a friend.\" Only 8 percent of 17-year-olds can be said not to harbor any prejudice against Roma, according to the poll. Another 2.1 percent of respondents are strongly prejudiced against disabled young people, while 42.3 percent are tolerant toward them. The survey was conducted by the Kurt Lewin Foundation at the request of the ombudsman for educational rights. MSZ\nBOSNIA PREPARES TO VOTE...\nVoters across Bosnia go to the polls on 5 October in general elections to select members of cantonal assemblies, the three-person joint Presidency, and the 42-strong House of Representatives, international and regional media reported on 4 October. Voters in the Muslim-Croat federation will elect their own House of Representatives as well. In the Republika Srpska, voters will select a president and vice president, as well as members of the People's Assembly. Members of the joint House of the Peoples are selected by the parliaments of the two entities: 10 from the federation and five from the Republika Srpska. Members of the joint House of Representatives are elected directly, with 28 coming from the federation and 14 from the Republika Srpska. About 2.3 million voters are registered, as are 57 parties, nine coalitions, and three independent candidates. Initial results are expected on 6 October. PM\n...WITH THE NATIONALISTS EXPECTED TO WIN\nPolls suggest the Bosnian general elections will be won by the three main nationalist parties: Alija Izetbegovic's Party of Democratic Action (SDA), Radovan Karadzic's Serbian Democratic Party (SDS), and the Croatian Democratic Community (HDZ), which is the Herzegovinian branch of the Croatian party founded by the late President Franjo Tudjman, international media reported on 4 October. Non-nationalist parties dominated the 11 November 2000 elections thanks in part to intervention by officials of the international community. But now, many Muslim voters are put off by mudslinging in the media between the Social Democrats (SDP) of Zlatko Lagumdzija and the Party for Bosnia and Herzegovina (SBiH) of Haris Silajdzic. Many Serbian voters feel that only the SDS can protect their interests. And the HDZ remains the favorite in Herzegovina despite the emergence of the New Croatian Initiative (NHI) and some other small, moderate parties oriented toward the Croats of Sarajevo, central Bosnia, and the northern Posavina region. AP stressed that many people are apathetic or cynical and unlikely to vote. PM\nKOSTUNICA WARNS OF 'ALBANIAN EXTREMISTS' IN PROMOTING SERBIAN PRESIDENTIAL VOTE\nYugoslav President Vojislav Kostunica said: \"One should participate in the [13 October presidential] elections so that Serbia does not definitively descend into chaos and anarchy, as well as so that the EU-mediated constitutional charter [replacing Yugoslavia with Serbia-Montenegro], admittance to the Council of Europe, and negotiations on a stabilization and association agreement with the EU are not delayed indefinitely. But there is one more reason: Instability in Serbia would lead to instability in the Balkans, I think above all by Albanian extremists in Kosovo, southern Serbia, and Macedonia,\" RFE/RL reported from Belgrade on 4 October (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 3 October 2002). Asked by RFE/RL to clarify what he meant by Albanian extremists taking advantage of the situation, Kostunica backed off and said: \"I was talking about Serbia, but this applies anywhere. Any instability can have an effect on [the situation of] others -- on Kosovo, Albania, or Macedonia and so on. That's clear, in the sense that any state -- not just Serbia -- should be firm, have institutions, a strong legal order and deal with organized crime.\" JN/PM\nDEL PONTE: CROATIAN GENERAL MUST GO TO THE HAGUE...\nMeeting in Brussels with EU security-policy chief Javier Solana on 3 October, Carla Del Ponte, who is the chief prosecutor of the war crimes tribunal in The Hague, said Croatia is obliged to extradite General Janko Bobetko to the Netherlands, RFE/RL's South Slavic and Albanian Languages Service reported. She added that if he is seriously ill, the tribunal could send him home, but he must first present himself in The Hague. Meanwhile, in Zagreb, Defense Minister Zeljka Antunovic said she takes NATO's recent warning in the Bobetko affair seriously (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 3 October 2002). PM\n...AND SERBIA MUST ARREST MLADIC\nDel Ponte said in Brussels on 3 October that the tribunal knows that indicted war criminal and former Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic is living in Serbia, apparently under the protection of the army, RFE/RL's South Slavic and Albanian Languages Service reported. She stressed that what is lacking is the political will to arrest him. Del Ponte added that the situation of wartime leader Radovan Karadzic, who is also one of the most-wanted indicted war criminals, is quite different. Karadzic is living in the Republika Srpska, where everyone regards him as a hero and protects him, including the authorities, army, police, politicians, and ordinary people. PM\nMORE BACKING FOR STEINER'S PLAN FOR KOSOVAR TOWN\nThe U.S. office in Prishtina said in a statement on 3 October that it strongly supports the plan of UN civilian administration (UNMIK) head Michael Steiner to reunite the divided city of Mitrovica (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 2 October 2002). Elsewhere, Steiner said after a meeting with Serbian Deputy Prime Minister Nebojsa Covic that Belgrade authorities support his program in part if not in its entirety (see \"RFE/RL Balkan Report,\" 23 August 2002), RFE/RL's South Slavic and Albanian Languages Service reported. Covic called for the signing of a formal agreement on the matter. Any direct involvement by Belgrade in the affairs of Kosova is firmly rejected by the ethnic Albanian majority and its elected representatives. PM\nKOSOVAR PRIME MINISTER REQUESTS FUNDS TO END TEACHERS' STRIKE\nPrime Minister Bajram Rexhepi has appealed to the IMF, World Bank, and UNMIK for funds to help end a strike by elementary and high-school teachers, RFE/RL's South Slavic and Albanian Languages Service reported from Prishtina on 4 October. The teachers began an open-ended strike on 1 October over pay, which is currently about $125 per month. The Kosovar parliament has expressed support for them. PM\nNEW MACEDONIAN PARLIAMENT HOLDS FIRST SESSION\nIn what was described as a \"tense atmosphere,\" the new legislature elected on 15 September held its first session on 3 October, Macedonian media reported. After the verification of 119 out of a total of 120 mandates, the parliament elected Nikola Popovski of the Social Democratic Union (SDSM) as new parliamentary speaker (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 3 October 2002). Three leading members of the Democratic Union for Integration (BDI) -- BDI Chairman Ali Ahmeti, former UCK commander Gezim Ostreni, and Fazli Veliu -- did not attend the first session because of \"other engagements.\" The two deputies of the ethnic Albanian Party for Democratic Prosperity (PPD) and the only deputy of the National Democratic Party (PDK) did not appear for unspecified reasons. The parliamentary group of the Democratic Party of the Albanians (PDSH) boycotted the first session. Dpa reported that, \"according to the sources within SDSM and BDI, the SDSM-led coalition will take 11 ministries, and three mandates will be given to the former rebels\" in the BDI. Meanwhile, the government of outgoing Prime Minister Ljubco Georgievski is continuing in office in a caretaker capacity until the new cabinet is formed. UB/PM\nEU NAMES NEW REPRESENTATIVE FOR MACEDONIA\nThe European Union named Belgian diplomat Alexis Bruns as its new special envoy to Macedonia, Deutsche Welle's \"Monitor\" reported on 2 October. Bruns will replace French Diplomat Alain Le Roy, whose mandate expires on 31 October. UB\nHUNGARIAN PRESIDENT ENDS OFFICIAL PART OF ROMANIAN VISIT\nVisiting Hungarian President Ferenc Madl met on 3 October with the two speakers of Romania's bicameral parliament and with Hungarian Democratic Federation of Romania (UDMR) Chairman Bela Marko, Romanian Radio reported. Madl and Marko discussed in particular the restitution of church property in Romania, with Marko complaining that the process is proceeding far too slowly. Madl praised the role played by the UDMR in Romanian politics and its contribution to mutual cooperation. Madl also lectured at Bucharest University. The official part of the Hungarian president's visit ended later that evening. On 4 October, he is visiting the famous monasteries of Bukovina and the Transylvanian town of Targu-Mures. MS\nSWITZERLAND EXPELS ROMANIAN ROMA\nSwiss authorities on 3 October deported a group of 40 Romanian Roma, who were then flown to Bucharest on a charter plane accompanied by 12 Swiss officers after their asylum applications were rejected, AP reported. Several hundred Roma asylum seekers are currently in Switzerland, having arrived there from France, where they also faced deportation. A Swiss-Romanian agreement will ensure their deportation in the coming weeks. MS\nFORMER ROMANIAN DICTATOR'S BROTHER MAKES HISTORY ONE LAST TIME\nIlie Ceausescu, a brother of the executed president, died on 3 October in Bucharest, AP reported. He was 76. Ilie Ceausescu served as deputy defense minister when Nicolae Ceausescu was overthrown by popular revolt in December 1989. Ilie Ceausescu claimed to be a historian by profession and for many years headed the Bucharest-based Institute of Military History, which promoted the nationalist line in Romanian historiography. MS\nMOLDOVAN PARLIAMENT RATIFIES AGREEMENT ON MILITARY COOPERATION WITH RUSSIA\nMoldovan lawmakers on 3 October ratified an agreement with Russia on military and technological cooperation, ITAR-TASS reported. The vote was 78 for and seven against, with the only votes against ratification cast by deputies representing the opposition Popular Party Christian Democratic. The agreement was signed in 1997, but previous parliaments refused to ratify it on the grounds that Moldova does not participate in Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) military-cooperation programs. Infotag reported that the agreement envisages joint design and production of military equipment. MS\nBULGARIAN PRIME MINISTER VISITS TURKEY\nPrime Minister Simeon Saxecoburggotski arrived in Ankara on 3 October for a four-day official visit at the invitation of his Turkish counterpart Bulent Ecevit, BTA reported. Saxecoburggotski's talks with Ecevit and President Ahmet Necdet focused on bilateral issues including easing visa regulations for Turkish citizens and the improvement of cross-border infrastructure projects such as highways and the Upper Arda hydroelectric complex. The two sides also discussed Bulgaria's bid for NATO accession, for which the Turkish representatives reiterated their support. Saxecoburggotski and Ecevit also discussed the Iraqi crisis. Ecevit expressed his hope that there will be no armed conflict with Iraq, saying this would threaten all countries in the region. UB\nCONSERVATIVE OPPOSITION IN BULGARIA THREATENS VOTE OF NO CONFIDENCE\nEkaterina Mihailova, the deputy chairwoman of the conservative opposition Union of Democratic Forces (SDS), announced on 3 October that her party will propose a vote of no confidence should the government fail to implement a parliamentary decision on shutdowns at the Kozloduy nuclear-power plant (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 25 September and 3 October 2002), mediapool.bg reported. She also demanded that Foreign Minister Solomon Pasi, Energy Minister Milko Kovachev, and European Affairs Minister Meglena Kuneva resign in connection with the government's position over Kozloduy. Government spokesman Dimitar Tsonev dismissed Mihailova's demands, saying there is no difference between the parliament's decision and the position adopted by the government. UB\nBULGARIAN PARLIAMENT DISMISSES HEAD OF STATE NEWS AGENCY, NAMES REPLACEMENT\nPowered by votes from the ruling coalition of National Movement Simeon II (NDSV) and the ethnic Turkish Movement for Rights and Freedoms (DPS), parliament dismissed Panayot Denev as director of state-owned news agency BTA on 4 October, mediapool.bg reported. In the same vote, parliament elected Stoyan Cheshmedzhiev as the agency's new director. Cheshmedzhiev previously headed the local Radio Varna. Politicians of the ruling coalition have repeatedly called for Denev's dismissal, alleging a lack of loyalty toward the government. DPS Deputy Chairwoman Emel Etem accused the conservative opposition United Democratic Forces (ODS) of having used BTA management to tarnish the country's international reputation. When Cheshmedzhiev was first mentioned as a possible successor to Denev, unconfirmed media reports linked him to a number of scandals (see \"RFE/RL Newsline,\" 10 and 11 April 2002). UB\nThere is no End Note today.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line649465"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7757021188735962,"wiki_prob":0.7757021188735962,"text":"Lamar Odom found unconscious, taken to Las Vegas hospital\nBy Kurt HelinOct 13, 2015, 9:51 PM EDT\nUPDATE 11:03 pm: This is the press release on the situation from the Nye County Sherriff Department, which responded to the call. It confirms the key details from the original report:\nAt approximately 3:15 pm on October 13, 2015, a call came into the Nye County Dispatch Center from Richard Hunter, Media Director for Dennis Hof’s Bunny Ranch, requesting an ambulance for an unresponsive male experiencing a medical emergency at the Love Ranch in Crystal, Nevada, approximately twenty miles north of Pahrump, Nevada in Nye County.\nAn ambulance from Pahrump Valley Fire and Rescue Service arrived at 3:34 pm and the patient, identified as Lamar Odom was stabilized and transported to Desert View Hospital arriving at 4:16 pm. Nye County Sheriff’s Office Detectives Cory Fowles and Michael Eisenloffel arrived and conducted an investigation on scene.\nAfter being treated by the physicians, arrangements were made to transport him by Mercy Air helicopter. However, Mr. Odom was unable to be transported by air due to his stature. He was immediately transported by Pahrump Valley Fire and Rescue Ambulance to Sunrise Hospital in Las Vegas, Nevada for further treatment.\n9: 51 pm: Let’s hope that this is not as bad as it sounds.\nLamar Odom, whose NBA career was cut short due to his challenges with drug use, has been taken to a Las Vegas-area hospital after being found unconscious at a brothel in a city not far outside the city, according to the report from TMZ.\nLamar Odom is fighting for his life after falling into unconsciousness at Dennis Hof’s Love Ranch South in Pahrump, Nevada … TMZ Sports has learned.\nSources at the Love Ranch tell us … 35-year-old Odom arrived at the Ranch Saturday and was partying with the girls for days. A source at the Ranch said Lamar was taking an herbal substitute for Viagra. We spoke with Hof … who tells us Tuesday afternoon, a woman went into Odom’s room in the VIP suites and found him unconscious.\nOdom spent 14 seasons in the NBA, starting his career with the Clippers and going on to be a key figure in the 2009 and 2010 Los Angeles Lakers title teams. He won Sixth Man of the Year in 2011.\nWhile famous in basketball circles — and incredibly well liked by players and media, he was one of the funniest guys in the league — he became a pop culture sensation when he married Khloe Kardashian. However, it was about that time that his drug use started to take a toll on everything in his life. It was not long before he was traded to Dallas, and things started to truly spiral out of control for him. He went for treatment after that, but never returned to the NBA.\nWe will have more as the story develops. Our thoughts are with Odom, and we hope he pulls out of this.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line570712"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6907802224159241,"wiki_prob":0.3092197775840759,"text":"Albanian (Αλβανικα)\nHome » 2014 » Αύγουστος\nMonthly Archives: Αύγουστος 2014\nΑυγ,\nAge should not be a barrier to surgery for Parkinson’s\nResearch News (General)\nNew research published in JAMA Neurology suggests that the risk of complications associated with deep brain stimulation (DBS) do not increase with age in people with Parkinson’s.\nThis research based at Duke University Durham, North Carolina was funded by the National Institutes of Health.\nDeep brain stimulation is a well-established therapy for people with Parkinson’s. It uses electrical signals from an implant in the brain to help reduce Parkinson’s symptoms. DBS does involve invasive surgery and as with all surgical procedures can lead to complications.\nThe researchers at the Duke University involved more than 1,750 Parkinson’s patients and analyzed their data. All the patients had undergone the device implantation between 2000 and 2009. Following analysis of the data, the researchers found that 7.5 percent of those patients developed at least one complication within 90 days of the surgery. The complications included bleeding, wound infections, pulmonary embolism and pneumonia.\nInterestingly, the research team found that the risk of complications during the 90 days after surgery was not greater in those over the age of 75 when compared to younger patients.\nThe study was published on August 25 in the journal JAMA Neurology.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Deep Brain Stimulation, Parkinson's on Αύγουστος 26, 2014 by jpnd.\nResults from 2014 JPND “Rapid Action” Call for Working Groups on Longitudinal Cohort studies\nJPND News, JPND Progress\nTen international working groups to be funded under JPND call\nThe EU Joint Programme Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND) has released the results of a “rapid action” call to support ten groups of leading scientists in finding ways to enhance the use of longitudinal cohort studies for neurodegenerative disease (ND) research.\nJPND launched this call on 23rd April 2014 as part of a series of new JPND initiatives, designed to amplify the impact of research by aligning and building upon existing national programmes and initiatives, and to bring a more wide-ranging and multidisciplinary approach to research on neurodegenerative diseases.\nThe awarded proposals are for top ND scientists to come together and recommend how to address the most pressing issues that prevent full use of longitudinal cohorts. This includes population studies and disease cohorts, both having considerable potential for ND research. Funding decisions were based upon scientific evaluation and recommendations to the ten sponsor countries by a JPND Peer Review Panel.\nAwards cover a wide ND landscape (Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, ALS, Lewy-body and vascular dementia) and different groups will address methodological challenges for studies in a number of areas, including cognition/functional assessment, biomarkers and biobanking, imaging, health and social outcomes and presymptomatic ND.\n“The plan is that each group will push forward the conceptualization of a key challenge and derive valuable guidelines and/or best practice frameworks for the wider research community” , commented Dr. Rob Buckle, Director of Science Programmes at the UK Medical Research Council, the organisation which facilitated the call process.\nAccording to Professor Philippe Amouyel, Chair of the JPND Management Board “this is an excellent outcome for JPND and a significant opportunity to advance the field. A rapid and flexible JPND process is now established to achieve JPND strategic goals, here to promote harmonisation of approaches and data sharing. These outputs will accelerate the progress of future studies by the global ND community”.\nEach Working Group is expected to run for a maximum of 6 months, reporting back to JPND by Q1 2015. Looking to the future, and drawing on advice emerging from the Working Groups. JPND is likely to launch a follow-up call for full scientific applications on longitudinal cohort studies, to be received next year.\nFor further information on the Working Groups awards, click on the link below:\nThis entry was posted in JPND News, JPND Progress and tagged JPND, Longitudinal Cohorts, Working Groups on Αύγουστος 26, 2014 by jpnd.\nDementia Friendly Communities\nThe Dementia Friendly Communities programme, run by the Alzheimer’s Society UK, focuses on improving inclusion and quality of life for people with dementia.\nThe programme’s five year strategy includes a key ambition to work with people affected by dementia and key partners to define and develop dementia friendly communities.\nIt has produced a number of films to highlight the programme’s work.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Community, Healthcare, Social Care, UK on Αύγουστος 25, 2014 by jpnd.\nMore evidence adult daycare eases stress on dementia caregivers\nThe stress of caring for a family member with dementia may take a toll on health over time, but a new study suggests that even one day off can shift caregivers’ stress levels back toward normal.\nBased on measurements of the stress hormone cortisol, researchers found that caregivers had healthier stress responses on days when the dementia patient went to adult daycare. Even anticipation of the day off had an effect on cortisol levels.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Care, Dementia, Stress on Αύγουστος 20, 2014 by jpnd.\nAlzheimer’s Brains Mottled with Epigenetic Changes\nEpigenetic modifications control gene expression, but scientists still don’t know if or how they contribute to disease. To address this knowledge gap, the National Institutes of Health launched the Roadmap Epigenomics Project in 2008 to compare epigenomes in healthy and diseased cells.\nIn the August 17 Nature Neuroscience, two papers from separate but collaborative research groups report on some of the fruits of that effort. Both groups surveyed DNA methylation in hundreds of human AD and control brains and identified several regions where changes in this epigenetic mark correlated with the amount of Alzheimer’s pathology. The results may help flag genes that are turned up or down in AD, and provide insight into pathogenesis, said Philip De Jager at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, the first author of one of the papers.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Alzheimer's, Brain, Disease, Epigenetics, Origins on Αύγουστος 18, 2014 by jpnd.\nAtlantic Philanthropies Makes Grants of €14.7m to Improve Care for Dementia Sufferers\nIn the lead up to the publication of the Irish Dementia Strategy (due in Autumn 2014), Atlantic Philanthropies have announced new grants totaling €14.7 million to improve the care and wellbeing of people suffering with dementia in the Republic of Ireland. These grants are the subject of ongoing discussions with the Government. The grants are being made to:\n– The Health Service Executive (€12m)\n– The Health Research Board (€2.7m)\nAs a result of this funding, The Health Research Board, and the Irish Department of Health are partnering with Atlantic Philanthropies to invest up to €4.7 million into research on dementia. The research will focus on improving prevention, intervention and care of people with dementia.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Dementia, Funding, Investment, Ireland on Αύγουστος 14, 2014 by jpnd.\nResearchers find infectious prion protein in urine of patients with variant C-JD\nThe mis-folded and infectious prion protein that is a marker for variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease – linked to the consumption of infected cattle meat – has been detected in the urine of patients with the disease by researchers at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston (UTHealth) Medical School.\nThe results of the international study, are published in the Aug. 7 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.\nThe international team of researchers analyzed urine samples from 68 patients with sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, 14 patients with variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, four patients with genetic prion diseases, 50 patients with other neurodegenerative diseases, 50 patients with nondegenerative neurologic diseases and 52 healthy persons.\nThe team used a protein misfolding cyclic amplification assay which mimics the prion replication process in vitro that occurs in prion disease. The misfolded prion proteins were detected in the urine of 13 of 14 patients with variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Alzheimer's Parkinson's, JPND, National Plan on Αύγουστος 10, 2014 by jpnd.\nPublication of the report “The role of Nutrition in Active and Healthy Aging”\nNutritional shortcomings are a key driver of age-related decline and disability whereas proper diet can increase years of healthy life. In support of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing, Joint Research Centre (JRC) scientists have reviewed the evidence on the role key nutrients and diet plays in promoting healthy ageing.\nJRC scientists collected evidence on the prevention and treatment of age-related diseases with a focus on under-nutrition in older people, a main cause as well as a consequence of functional decline. The resulting report «The role of Nutrition in Active and Healthy Ageing» provides an important contribution to the overall target of the Partnership which is to increase the average healthy lifespan by two years by 2020, to enable EU citizens to lead healthy, active and independent lives while ageing and to improve the sustainability and efficiency of social and health care.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Active, Aging, Cognition, Nutrition on Αύγουστος 9, 2014 by jpnd.\nLargest ever therapeutic trial for Huntington’s disease ends in disappointment\nThe 2CARE study of coenzyme Q for Huntington’s disease was halted early because an analysis of the results to date showed that it was very unlikely to show positive results. The study, called 2CARE, was designed to test whether a treatment called coenzyme Q10 could slow the progression of HD.\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Clinical Trial, Huntington's, Theraputics on Αύγουστος 8, 2014 by jpnd.\nParkinson’s Vaccine Safe in Phase I Trial\nThe Austrian biotech AFFiRiS AG announced positive results of its Phase I safety trial of a vaccine against alpha-synuclein.\nAlpha-synuclein is the sticky protein that clumps in the cells of people with Parkinson’s, and AFFiRiS hopes to stop disease by inducing antibodies against alpha-synuclein accumulation. The Michael J. Fox Foundation funded this work with close to $2M, first with a grant for a pre-clinical study and then $1.5M in 2011 for the Phase I trial. This is the first drug against alpha-synuclein to reach clinical testing.\n“A treatment that could slow or stop Parkinson’s progression would be a game changer for the five million worldwide living with this disease and the many more who will become at risk as our population ages,” said MJFF CEO Todd Sherer, PhD. “This trial is one of the most promising efforts toward that goal.”\nIn two different doses the drug, called PD01A, was safe and tolerable. Half of those vaccinated showed alpha-synuclein antibodies, which is a promising but very early sign. Further trials will test PDO1A’s benefit to patients. The next step is a boost study that will test the safety and effect of a boost vaccination (another dose). MJFF will support that trial, which will take place in Vienna, Austria and start recruiting in September.\nSource: PharmaBiz and Michael J Fox Foundation for Parkinson’s Research\nThis entry was posted in Research News (General) and tagged Clinical Trial, Parkinson's, Vaccine on Αύγουστος 4, 2014 by jpnd.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line151971"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.84344083070755,"wiki_prob":0.84344083070755,"text":"US Supreme Court Decisions On-Line> Volume 132 > YOUNG V. CLARENDON TOWNSHIP, 132 U. S. 340 (1889)\nYOUNG V. CLARENDON TOWNSHIP, 132 U. S. 340 (1889)\nYoung v. Clarendon Township, 132 U.S. 340 (1889)\nYoung v. Clarendon Township\nArgued October 23, 1889\nDecided December 9, 1889\nAPPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE UNITED\nSTATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN\nIt is settled law that a municipality has no power to issue its bonds in aid of a railroad, except by legislative permission.\nThe legislature, in granting permission to a municipality to issue its bonds in aid of a railroad, may impose such conditions as it may choose.\nWhere authority is granted to a municipality to aid a railroad and incur a debt in extending such aid, that power does not carry with it authority to execute negotiable bonds except subject to the restrictions and directions of the Enabling Act. chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nThe act of the Legislature of Michigan of March 22, 1869, \"to enable any township, city or village to pledge its aid by loan or donation to any railroad company, etc.,\" provided that the bonds when \"issued\" should be \"delivered by the person . . . having charge of the same to the treasurer of this state;\" that the treasurer should \"hold the same as a trustee for the municipality issuing the same and for the railroad company for which they were issued;\" that whenever the railroad company should\n\"present to said treasurer a certificate from the governor of this state that such railroad company has in all respects complied with the provisions of this act . . . , such of said bonds as said company shall be entitled to receive shall be delivered to said company;\"\nthat the treasurer should endorse upon each bond delivered the date of its delivery and to whom it was delivered, and that in case the bonds were not demanded in compliance with the terms of the act within three years from the date of delivery to the treasurer, \"the same shall be cancelled by said treasurer and returned to the proper officers of the township or city issuing the same.\" The township of Clarendon, in Michigan, having complied with the requirements of the act on its part, delivered to the state treasurer its bonds to the amount of $10,000, dated July, 1869, for the benefit of the Michigan Air Line Railroad Company. The company completed its railroad before February, 1871, and became entitled to the governor's certificate under the act, but on May 26, 1870, the supreme court of the state had declared the act to be unconstitutional, and the governor in consequence thereof refused to give the certificate. On the 28th May, 1872, before the expiration of three years from their delivery, the treasurer returned the bonds to the township. November 12, 1884, the appellant obtained judgment against the railroad company and an execution was issued, which was returned nulla bona. On the 24th February, 1880, he filed a bill in equity against the township and the company, claiming that the township was equitably indebted to the company to the amount of the bonds and coupons with interest, and that he was entitled to recover the amount of that indebtedness, and to apply it on his judgment debt.\n(1) That the municipal authorities had no power to deliver the bonds, after their execution except to the state treasurer, and that the word \"deliver,\" as used in the statute with reference to this act, was used in its ordinary and popular sense, and not in its technical sense.\n(2) That to the governor alone was given the power to determine whether the bonds should ever in fact issue, and if issued, when they should issue.\n(3) That the endorsement by the treasurer upon each bond of the date of its delivery and of the person to whom it was delivered was necessary to make it a completed bond, and that this could not be done until the governor's authorization was made.\n(4) That as the bonds were never endorsed and delivered by the treasurer, they never became operative.\n(6) That the rule in regard to escrows could be applied to these chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\ninstruments, because they were never executed in compliance with the peremptory requirements of the statute.\n(6) That if the railroad company had any cause of action against the township by reason of these facts, it was barred at law by the statute of limitations of the Michigan.\n(7) That by reason of laches in pursuing the remedy, the bar at law could be set up and maintained in equity.\nThe constitutionality of the Act of the Legislature of Michigan of March 22, 1869, which is considered in this case, was fully settled in the case of Taylor v. Ypsilanti, 105 U. S. 60, to which the Court adheres.\nOn the 21st of February, 1885, the appellant exhibited, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Michigan, his bill, in the nature of a creditor's bill, against the appellees.\nThe bill averred that on the 12th of November, 1884, the appellant obtained a judgment against the railroad company for the sum of $355,865.21; that an execution upon the judgment was issued, and was returned \"nulla bona;\" that the judgment was still unpaid, and that the railroad company was a corporation, organized on the 28th of August, 1868, by a consolidation of two companies -- one organized under the laws of Michigan and the other under those of Indiana, which consolidated company was itself, on October 8, 1880, again consolidated with the St. Joseph Valley Railroad Company, retaining, however, its name of the Michigan Air Line Railroad Company.\nThe bill also alleged that after the first consolidation as aforesaid, and on the 22d of March, 1869, the Legislature of Michigan passed\n\"An act to enable any township, city, or village to pledge its aid, by loan or donation, to any railroad company now chartered or organized or that may hereafter be organized under and by virtue of the laws of the Michigan in the construction of its road.\"\nSaid act authorized the issue of aid bonds. In its fifth and sixth sections it provided as follows:\n\"SEC. 5. Whenever any such bonds as provided by provisions of this act shall have been issued as therein specified, the same shall be delivered by the person, persons or officers having charge of the same to the treasurer of this state, who\nshall give a receipt therefor and hold the same as trustee for the municipality issuing the same and for the railroad company for which they were issued, and to be disposed of by said treasurer in discharge of his trust, as hereinafter provided.\"\n\"SEC. 6. . . . Such bonds shall be safely kept by such treasurer for the benefit of the parties interested, and be disposed of by him in the following manner -- that is to say, whenever any railroad company in aid of which any of such bonds may have issued shall present to said treasurer a certificate from the governor of this state that such railroad company has in all respects complied with the provisions of this act and is thereby entitled to any of such bonds, the same or such of said bonds as said company shall be entitled to receive shall be delivered to said company, the treasurer first cutting therefrom, cancelling and returning to the municipality the past-due coupons. The treasurer shall endorse upon each of said bonds the date of such delivery and to whom the same were delivered, and the same shall draw interest only from the time when so delivered, and the treasurer shall notify the clerk of the township or recorder or clerk of the city issuing the same of the date of the delivery of its bonds to such railroad company. . . . And in case any bonds so delivered to said treasurer by any such township or city shall not, within three years from the time when the same were received by him, be demanded in compliance with the terms of this act, the same shall be cancelled by said treasurer and returned to the proper officers of the township or city issuing the same.\"\nThe bill further averred that in conformity with the provisions of this act, the electors of the township, on the 21st day of June, 1869, voted to pledge the aid of the township by the loan of $10,000, to be paid by its 10 percent bonds at par, upon certain terms and conditions in said vote stated, among which were that the road should be located and constructed through said township; that the time of payment of each of those bonds was to be postponed a year in the event of the noncompletion of the roadbed and the ironing before the 1st of November, 1869, and that the company would pay yearly chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nto the township a sum equal pro rata to the dividends paid stockholders, and said sums were to be in extinguishment of the interest on the bonds, and the excess over 10 percent, if any, to be applied on the principal. The bonds thus voted were issued in pursuance of said act, and were delivered to the state treasurer, to be by him held as trustee for both the township and the company on the terms and conditions of the act as aforesaid.\nThe bill then averred that the railroad company, in consideration of the township's action and relying thereon, entered upon the construction of said railroad, and, previous to the 1st of February, 1871, had fully constructed and ironed said road through the township, and at the time of the delivery of the bonds to the state treasurer as aforesaid, had duly executed and delivered to the township the agreement specified in the terms on which the aid was voted and had performed every condition precedent to the earning of said bonds, and had become fully entitled to have the same delivered by the treasurer, except that it had not secured the certificate of the governor as required by said act. While the road, however, was in the process of construction, the Supreme Court of the Michigan, on the 26th of May, 1870, declared the act in question to be unconstitutional, but as the railroad company had already expended the sum of a million of dollars and upwards in construction, it could not stop, but went on and completed the road in full compliance with all the conditions of the vote. The company then applied to the governor for his certificate under the statute, exhibiting to him proofs of its title to receive the bonds; but he refused to give the same, giving as his sole reason for such refusal the judgment of the Supreme Court aforesaid.\nThe bill then averred that on May 28th, 1872, the township, knowing the premises, and without the knowledge or consent of the company and in violation of the law and of the trust aforesaid and in fraud of the company's rights, induced the state treasurer, who had full knowledge of the foregoing facts, to surrender to the township the said bonds and the coupons thereunto attached; that the township had since retained the chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nsame, and withheld them from the company; that said bonds and coupons, by reason of all the premises, became in justice and equity the property of said railroad company, and the township became bound thereon according to their tenor and effect; that the said township was therefore equitably indebted to said company, to the whole amount of said bonds and coupons, with the interest thereon to the present time, and that the appellant was entitled to the said amount toward the satisfaction of his judgment against the company.\nTo this end, an account was prayed to be stated between the company and the township, the appellee, and a final decree against the township for the sum shown to be due in favor of the appellant was asked.\nThe bill was dismissed by the Circuit Court on demurrer (26 F.8d 5), and the cause came here on appeal by the complainant.\nMR. JUSTICE LAMAR, after stating the facts in the foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.\nWe consider the decisive question in this case to be that of the laches in pursuit of the railroad company's right against the township. In this view, the controversy must be narrowed to a single issue. The township, which is the defendant below and which defends separately, claims that the cause of action accrued either 13 or 14 years before this bill was filed -- 13 years if the conversion of the bonds by the township and the treasurer be considered the gravamen, and 14 years if it be the governor's refusal to issue his official certificate; that since the statutes of limitation in Michigan touching these questions vary from 6 to 10 years, the cause of action is long since barred at law as to the railroad company; that it is therefore barred also in equity, and lost by laches in its chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nassertion, and that since the appellant by this bill is prosecuting a demand in the nature of a garnishment, and the railroad company's right is barred both at law and in equity, therefore that of the appellant is also barred. The appellant seeks to avoid the force of this position by claiming that the bonds had been so far perfected by the dealings between the parties that the railroad company was entitled to have them from the state treasurer; that, such being the case, the tort of the township and of the treasurer in converting them could not impair the rights of the company; that therefore the company was and is entitled to waive the tort and sue directly on the bonds, as in the case of lost or stolen bonds; that only a few of such bonds, if delivered, would have been barred at the time of the filing of the bill, since most of them were so drawn as to mature within 10 years of that time; and finally that as the company was thus still in possession of an enforceable demand, the appellant could avail himself of it by this bill.\nThe controlling question presented therefore is this: were the bonds in question so dealt with by the parties as at any time to vest in the railroad company a right to sue directly on the bonds themselves, as distinguished from a right to sue for their nondelivery or because of their cancellation? That question cannot be satisfactorily or properly answered without constant reference to the exceptional character of the circumstances by which these bonds were deprived of their value. It is not the case of a common negotiable instrument put forth by a natural person as obligor, but it is that of a railroad aid bond sought to be put forth by the municipality. In such case, the nature of the bonds, their force and effect, their value and character while in the hands of the state treasurer, the rightfulness and sufficiency of their issue, and all kindred questions must be referred to the statute authorizing them. In this case, the statute is the act of 1869. It is the touchstone. Whatever might be the rule in ordinary cases, so far as the act goes, it controls here, being the enabling act; outside of it there was no power whatever to issue these bonds. By an unbroken current of decisions by this Court and by all other courts too numerous to mention, it is settled law that a municipality has chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nno power to make a contract of this character, except by legislative permission. It is manifest that, such being the case, the legislature, in granting such permission, can impose such conditions as it may choose, and even where there is authority to aid a railroad, and incur a debt in extending such aid, it is also settled that such power does not carry with it any authority to execute negotiable bonds except subject to the restrictions and directions of the enabling act. Wells v. Supervisors, 102 U. S. 625; Claiborne County v. Brooks, 111 U. S. 400; Kelley v. Milan, 127 U. S. 139.\nThe analogy offered between the case at bar and a lost bond is misleading. There is in fact no analogy. There is no doubt about the right of the owner of a bond lost or stolen to sue on it, and in the absence of it to give secondary evidence of its contents, but the very statement of the principle assumes the existence of the instrument. A bond lost or a bond stolen is out of the personal possession and control of the owner, it is true; but it is also an instrument that has become executed -- to which those things have been done that were needed to give it legal existence as an actionable obligation.\nBut here the very question to be determined is whether there ever were any bonds. It is a question, in substance, of the very existence of the instruments themselves. As before remarked, the act of 1869 fixes the rights of parties in this case. All the questions concerning the execution of the bonds in controversy must be referred to that statute, tested by it, and decided in strict conformity with its terms. It is an enabling act, conferring a power not before existent, and any departure from its requirements cannot be allowed. Harshman v. Bates County, 92 U. S. 569.\nIn the case of @ 70 U. S. 96, this Court said:\n\"The commissioners or board of supervisors of a county, in the exercise of their general powers as such, have no authority to subscribe stock to railroads, and bind the people of the county to pay bonds issued for that purpose without special authority conferred upon them by the legislature. But when special authority is given to the people of a county to do these\nacts, and bind themselves by the issue of such bonds, the legislature may properly direct the mode in which it shall be effected. The persons specially appointed to act as agents for the people have a ministerial duty to perform in issuing the bonds, after the people at an election held for the purpose, have assented that they shall be bound.\"\nIn the case of Anthony v. County of Jasper, 101 U. S. 693, the Township of Marion had, by authority, subscribed in aid of the railroad. Afterwards the legislature passed an act requiring such bonds to be registered and certified by the auditor of the state. The Court said (pp 696-698):\n\"There can be no doubt that it is within the power of a state to prescribe the form in which municipal bonds shall be executed in order to bind the public for their payment. If not so executed, they create no legal liability. Other circumstances may exist which will give the holder of them an equitable right to recover from the municipality the money which they represent, but he cannot enforce the payment or put them on the market as commercial paper. The act now in question is, we think, of this character. It in effect provides that no bond issued by counties, cities, or incorporated towns shall be valid -- that is to say, completely executed -- until it has been countersigned or certified in a particular way by the state auditor. For this purpose, after being executed by the corporate authorities, it must be presented to that officer and he must inquire and determine whether all the requirements of the law authorizing its issue have been observed and whether all the conditions of the contract in consideration of which it was to be put out have been complied with. To enable him to do this, evidence must be submitted, which he is required to file and preserve. If he is satisfied, the registry is made and the requisite certificate endorsed on the bonds. This being done, the execution of the bond is complete, and, under the law, it may then be negotiated -- that is to say, put on the market as valid commercial paper. . . . When the bonds now in question were put out, the law required that to be valid, they must be certified to by the auditor of state. In other words, that officer was to certify them before their execution was complete, so as to bind\nthe public for their payment. We had occasion to consider in McGarrahan v. Mining Co., 96 U. S. 316, the effect of statutory requirements as to the form of the execution of patents to pass the title of lands out of the United States, and there say:\"\n\"Each and every one of the integral parts of the execution is essential to the validity of a patent. They are of equal importance under the law, and one cannot be dispensed with more than another. Neither is directory, but all are mandatory. The question is not what, in the absence of statutory regulations, would constitute a valid grant, but what the statute requires.\"\n\"The same rule applies here. The object to be accomplished is the complete execution of a valid instrument, such as the law authorizes public officers to put out and bind for the payment of money the public organization they represent. For this purpose, the law has provided that the instrument must not only be signed and sealed on behalf of the county court of the county, but it must be certified to or countersigned by the auditor of state. . . . In order to recover in this case, it became necessary for the plaintiff to prove that the bonds from which the coupons sued on were cut had been executed according to law. He did prove that they were signed by the presiding justice and clerk of the court, and were sealed with the seal of the court. This, before the Act of March 30, 1872, would have been enough, but after that, more was necessary. The public can act only through its authorized agents, and it is not bound until all who are to participate in what is to be done have performed their respective duties.\"\nThe bonds in that case were declared void. See also, to the same effect, Coler v. Cleburne, 131 U. S. 162.\nTurning now to the statute involved in the case at bar, we find its directions, among others, to be as follows:\n\"Such bonds shall bear interest at the rate of not exceeding ten percent per annum, and shall have attached thereto the necessary and usual interest coupons, corresponding in dates and numbers with the bonds to which they are attached, which shall be signed by written signatures by the same person or persons executing such bonds. Such bonds shall, if issued by a city, be executed by the mayor and clerk or recorder\nthereof, as the case may be, under the seal of said city, and if issued by a township they shall be executed by the supervisor and clerk thereof, and if any city or township issuing such bonds shall have a seal, the same shall be impressed upon each of such bonds. The bonds and coupons attached thereto shall be payable at the office of the treasurer of the county in which such township or city may be situate. Whenever any such bonds as provided by the provisions of this act shall have been issued as therein specified, the same shall be delivered by the person, persons, or officers having charge of the same to the treasurer of this state, who shall give a receipt therefor, and hold the same as trustee for the municipality issuing the same, and for the railroad company for which they were issued, and to be disposed of by said treasurer in discharge of his trust, as hereinafter provided. Upon receipt of any such bonds from any township or city in aid of any such railroad company, the treasurer of this states shall immediately register or record the same in a book or books to be kept by him for that purpose in his office, which record shall show the amount, date, and number of each bond, the rate of interest which it bears, by what township or city issued, to the benefit of what railroad company the same are issued, and the time when payable, which record shall be always open for the inspection of any citizen of this state or other interested person. Such bonds shall be safely kept by said treasurer for the benefit of the parties interested, and be disposed of by him in the following manner -- that is to say, whenever any railroad company, in aid of which any of such bonds may have issued, shall present to said treasurer a certificate from the governor of this state that such railroad company has in all respects complied with the provisions of this act, and is thereby entitled to any of such bonds, the same, or such of said bonds as said company shall be entitled to receive, shall be delivered to said company, the treasurer first cutting therefrom, cancelling, and returning to the municipality the past-due coupons. The treasurer shall endorse upon each of said bonds the date of such delivery, and to whom the same were delivered, and the same shall draw interest only from the time\nwhen so delivered, and the treasurer shall notify the clerk of the township or recorder or clerk of the city issuing the same of the date of the delivery of its bonds to such railroad company. . . . And in case any bond so delivered to said treasurer by any such township or city shall not, within three years from the time when the same were received by him, be demanded in compliance with the terms of this act, the same shall be cancelled by said treasurer, and returned to the proper officers of the township or city issuing the same.\"\nLaws Mich. 1869, p. 91.\nA critical analysis of this statute indicates this to have been the plan: in the preparation and perfecting of the plan persons described by certain official titles, and probably selected because of their titles, were to participate.\n(1) The bonds were to be \"executed\" -- that is to say, written or printed, signed and sealed by the supervisor and clerk of the township. Here, the powers of those persons ceased. They could not perfect the instruments by delivery. The word \"executed,\" used in the statute in connection with the acts mentioned, manifestly does not import the final delivery, for that is expressly directed to be done by the treasurer. Such delivery as they could make was clearly not the technical delivery needed to complete the bonds as negotiable instruments, because the power to hand over to the payee was not conceded to them in any event. The delivery which they were directed to make to the treasurer in his capacity of statutory trustee was only such as amounted to a \"giving up\" or the \"committing\" of them to the treasurer for his safekeeping. The word was used in its ordinary and popular sense, not in the technical one.\n(2) To the governor, and the governor alone, was given the power to determine whether the bonds should ever in fact issue, and, if issued, when they should issue. For to him was committed the decision of the important question whether the railroad had performed its part of the common undertaking. His certificate was to be the evidence of that fact, and the only admissible authentication of it to the trustee, the depositary. So far as the investigation and determination of that question were concerned, and the certifying of it, the governor was to chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\ndischarge that function in the process of issuing the bonds which was imposed on the auditor in the case of Anthony v. County of Jasper, supra, the difference being that in that case, the certificate was to be endorsed on the bonds themselves, but not so in this case.\nThe state treasurer was appointed to be a trustee for both the township and company, to receive the bonds, to register them, and to finish their clerical execution, using the word in its popular sense, by his endorsements on them of the date of delivery, and of the person to whom delivered. Such endorsements are clearly a part of the very form of the completed bond, as laid down in the Jasper County case, supra. He was also to cancel them and to return them so cancelled to the township authorities if not demanded in three years, and, finally, if demanded in compliance with the terms of the act within the three years, to complete their execution (using the word in its technical sense) by delivering them. Such, as we understand it, was the intention of the legislature. If it be said that such details are useless and technical, a sufficient answer is so the statute is written, and the courts cannot unmake or modify it. As already shown, the legislature in this class of cases has the right to provide the processes by which the contract is to be perfected. Moreover, we do not think these details are either useless or technical. When it is remembered that the whole policy of allowing contracts of this class has been deprecated by some of the oldest publicists and jurists, and that the negotiable form of such bonds has often led to the imposing of great burdens on municipalities for which there has been no return, we are not disposed to criticize the care of a legislature to establish a system of even rather severe checks as a condition to its concession of such extraordinary powers.\nThe appellant claims that the bonds were perfected instruments when delivered to the state treasurer; that the ministerial duties had been performed in full. The argument proceeds largely upon the idea that, as to this transaction, the township and its agents, the supervisor and clerk, were a complete and rounded organism, distinct from the state treasurer, chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nand capable of dealing with the treasurer as if he were a third party -- in making delivery to him, for instance. We do not so regard it. All the steps directed by the statute to be taken leading up to the final act of delivery to the railroad company constitute one progressive process. To adopt the language of the court in the McGarrahan case, supra, \"each and every one of the integral parts of the execution is essential to the validity of the bond.\"\nWe hold, therefore, that since the bonds were never endorsed and delivered by the treasurer, as required by the statute, they never became operative. The act of delivery is essential to the existence of any deed, bond, or note. Although drawn and signed, so long as it is undelivered, it is a nullity; not only does it take effect only by deliver, but also only on delivery. Bayley v. Taber, 5 Mass. 285; Marvin v. McCullum, 20 Johns. 288; Ward v. Churn, 18 Grattan 801; Lovejoy v. Whipple, 18 Vt. 379.\nThe appellant, however, contends that these bonds were, in effect, delivered; that\n\"by the delivery to the treasurer and by the performance of the conditions the title to the bonds vested in the company, the state treasurer holding them as trustee for the township and for the railroad company.\"\nWe cannot concur in this view. The law in reference to escrows seems to be involved in some uncertainty. What the effect is of a performance of the conditions by the grantee, the instrument remaining in the hands of the depositary -- whether, in such case, the second delivery by the depositary is or is not necessary to gave effect to the deed -- are questions about which the courts yet differ. But concede the appellant's position to be correct as a general rule, yet that general rule does not necessarily control this case. These are extraordinary instruments, and certain fundamental questions of power to contract and of details of execution underlie any action brought upon them, which render the usual rules in regard to escrows very unsafe guides. Too much stress cannot be laid on the necessity for consulting the statute. Even in the case of an ordinary escrow, nothing passes by the deed until the condition is performed. Calhoun County v. chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nAmerican Emigrant Co., 93 U. S. 124. Here, the condition prescribed by the statute as that upon which the delivery was to be made to the railroad company, and on which the bonds were to be perfected instruments in its hands, was never performed. On this point, the statute seems to be very simple and clear. Indeed, it would be difficult to make it more clear. By its very terms, the bonds received by him in their uncompleted condition were to be by the state treasurer \"safely kept,\" and for three years after their reception could only be parted with by him in one way -- that is, to the railroad company interested, on its production of the governor's certificate. On that condition could they be delivered, not on any other. The certificate was not a mere formal act on the part of the governor, but was a condition precedent to the power of the treasurer to deliver. The statute is not only emphatic on this point, but also repetitious in its emphasis. Section 5 says the bonds are \"to be disposed of by said treasurer in discharge of his trust, as hereinafter provided,\" and § 6 provides that\n\"such bonds shall be safely kept by said treasurer for the benefit of the parties interested, and be disposed of by him in the following manner -- that is to say, whenever any railroad company . . . shall present to said treasurer a certificate from the governor,\"\netc.; also that\n\"in case any bond so delivered to said treasurer . . . shall not within three years . . . be demanded in compliance with the terms of this act, the same shall be cancelled by said treasurer,\"\netc. The certificate was designed to be the treasurer's sole authority to deliver. The question whether the railroad company had \"in all respects complied with the provisions of this act\" was one that he could not inquire into except by consulting the governor's certificate. This was his only and conclusive evidence, by the very terms of the statute. The company's compliance with the provisions of the act gave it the right to receive the governor's certificate, but it did not confer the right to receive the bonds. That was given by the governor's certificate alone. Had the treasurer made delivery without the certificate, he would have acted without authority of law, and the bonds would have been voidable in the hands of the company. Anthony chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\nv. County of Jasper, supra. These requirements are not novel. They are matters of administrative detail fixed by the statute. We cannot declare them to be merely directory or annul them by construction. It does not matter, so far as the question of the statutory power of the treasurer is concerned, that the failure of the company to produce the certificate might not be because of any fault in the company. The failure might be due to the governor's mistaken view of the law, or to his misconception of the facts, or even to his willful refusal to discharge his official duty -- all is immaterial to this aspect of the statutory scheme. A miscarriage in this particular was one of the risks taken by the company. The company knew the statute, was held by the law to know and understand it. It contracted with the township through the statute, and could so contract with it in no other way. Availing itself of the statute, it must take it cum onere. If the governor failed to give the certificate when he should, and could not be reached by a mandamus, those were but features of the company's risk.\nThere is another provision of the statute in question which supports the foregoing views. It is the direction that when the treasurer should make the delivery to the company, he should cut the overdue coupons from the bonds and cancel them, and that he should at the same time endorse the bonds with the date of that delivery, from which date the bonds should bear interest. Had the legislature inserted in the statute a declaration, in set and formal phrase, that it should be the issue of the bonds on the governor's certificate, and not the completion by the railroad company of the portion of its contract, that should perfect the bonds and give them effect, such declaration would not in any degree be clearer than this provision. Lovejoy v. Whipple, supra. It is to be observed that no question arises in this case of a bona fide purchaser of bonds improperly issued. The appellant stands exactly in the shoes of the railroad company, and his rights are no greater. Smith v. Bourbon County, 127 U. S. 105.\nHolding these views, it is unnecessary to pursue this discussion further. Whether the railroad acquired a cause of action against the township by the failure to deliver the bonds, or by chanroblesvirtualawlibrary\ntheir cancellation prior to the lapse of the three years fixed by the statute, on the one hand, or the whole project was a mere fiasco, on the other, and if such cause of action arose, what was its precise nature and form, are matters rather of curious speculation than of practical consequence. If no real cause of action arose, that is the end of the matter. If it did arise, then its form and nature are immaterial, since all forms are barred alike, being actionable as of the then date. It is not even suggested that any other method exists by which to escape the bar save the one considered and herein before rejected. We consider the question of the constitutionality of the act of 1869, herein mooted again, to be fully settled by the case of Taylor v. Ypsilanti, 105 U. S. 60, but this case is decided on other grounds, and it is unnecessary to dwell on that question.\nIt is further claimed by the appellant that the bonds in question were invested by the statute with the character of trust property, and that therefore they can be followed into any hands to which they may be traceable, and that that right is not subject to the limitation prescribed for a conversion. To this view there are two answers: first, the fact that the bonds were never perfected instruments, as already decided, and, while the treasurer returned them cancelled a few weeks prior to the lapse of the three years fixed by the statute, that error became immaterial from this point of view so soon as the three years did expire; secondly, the laches of the railroad company in pressing what claim it may have had. New Albany v. Burke, 11 Wall. 96.\nWe apply the doctrine of laches to this case with the less reluctance because, after all, we see but little of substantial merit in the bill. The scheme contemplated was a loan, not a donation. A loan on rather indifferent security, perhaps, but a loan nevertheless. While, therefore, it is possible that a loan may be so proposed and accepted as to give to the intended borrower a cause of action for any failure to perform the agreement, and a right to recover damages at law, yet on a bill in the nature either of a bill for specific performance or for an equitable garnishment, the court may well inquire where is the substantial equity in the case.\nThe decree of the circuit court is","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1184952"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9835302233695984,"wiki_prob":0.9835302233695984,"text":"Premier League Video\nJose Mourinho: Former Manchester United and Chelsea manager outlines plan for next job and admits World Cup attraction\nJack Rathborn\nThe Independent June 19, 2019, 9:43 AM UTC\nJose Mourinho would like to manage at international level as hopes of finding a new club before the start of next season fade.\nThe Portuguese has been assessing his options, having previously outlined his intent to find a club by the end of June.\nBut he is now intrigued by the possibility of his next job taking him to a World Cup or European Championship.\n\"I want to compete in new competitions,\" the 56-year-old told Eleven Sports. \"I think about the World Cup and the European Championships.\n\"For a long time I have had the desire to try out such an adventure. Right now, I see myself more at a national team than with a new club. Is Portugal the right team for me? Not necessarily.\nMourinho has been working as a pundit for beIN SPORTS, and featured alongside Arsene Wenger for the Champions League final.\nThe 56-year-old appears to have shifted his philosophy somewhat to, outlining his ambition to be happy, rather than striving to just win, with a long-term project \"to create conditions to win\" also appealing to him.\nJose Mourinho has featured as a pundit since being sacked by United (beIN SPORTS )\n\"Winning a fifth championship in a different country or the Champions League with a third club are things I'd like to do,\" he added.\n\"I wouldn't do it just for that. I only go where a project convinces me.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1265270"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8198348879814148,"wiki_prob":0.8198348879814148,"text":"Little, Brown and Company to Publish Katie Couric’s Long-Awaited Memoir, UNEXPECTED\nNew York, NY—February 12, 2019\nReagan Arthur, publisher of Little, Brown and Company, announced today the acquisition of Unexpected, a memoir from Katie Couric, one of the most celebrated and beloved journalists of our time. Judy Clain, Editor-in-Chief at Little, Brown and Company, acquired North America rights from Suzanne Gluck of William Morris Endeavor; publication is slated for spring 2021.\nKatie Couric said, “I’ve been privileged to lead an extraordinary life, one that I never anticipated. I’ve experienced so much, both professionally and personally, but have never really had an opportunity to reveal what was going on behind the scenes. I’m excited to share what it was like being at the center of so many historic events and game-changing stories. I’m also ready to talk about the fascinating and sometimes challenging people with whom I’ve worked, the radical transformation of my industry, and the heartbreaking losses I’ve endured. It feels like now is the right time to look back, reflect, and consider what I’ve learned and how those lessons might help others.”\nJudy Clain said, “I am thrilled to have the opportunity to work with Katie Couric. What a perfect moment for a transparent memoir about a career in journalism from one of the most respected and recognized women in media today. Staying in the game is not a given, but Katie has evolved along with a changing media landscape and continued to contribute to the national conversation by consistently producing high-quality work that reflects her humanity and heart. She will write with her trademark humor and candor about her journey, which continues.”\nFor much of her 40-year career, Katie Couric has been the subject of endless fascination—her face on the cover of countless magazines, her career dissected in unauthorized biographies, her love life picked apart in supermarket tabloids. Now, with Unexpected, she’s ready to tell her own story, in her own words, her way.\nCouric will look back on her extraordinary career—a journey that led her to the very top of an intensely competitive, male-dominated industry. She will share the often hilarious, sometimes humiliating details of breaking into the business at ABC, where her principal duties included making coffee and fetching ham sandwiches for newsroom honchos like Frank Reynolds and Sam Donaldson, before moving on to CNN, where the then network president declared he “never wanted to see that girl on the air again.” She will reveal her proto-#MeToo brushes with workplace sexism, like the time a high-ranking executive commented on her breast size in front of the top brass during an editorial meeting; her scathing memo in response demonstrates the grit that would make Couric a singular force. She’ll recount the story of her dizzying rise to co-anchor of The Today Show at the age of 34—achieved while navigating a long-distance marriage and an unexpected pregnancy—as well as her early powerhouse partnership with 26-year-old boy wonder producer Jeff Zucker, today the president of CNN Worldwide. During her fifteen-year run, Couric helped catapult Today to number one and was a steady, trusted presence through some of the most turbulent moments in recent times, from the Gulf War to Columbine to 9/11 and beyond. Although her quick wit and girl-next-door charm would earn her the moniker “America’s Sweetheart,” at her core she was fiercely competitive—determined to transform morning television and set the agenda for the day.\nIn Unexpected, Couric won’t shy away from the enormous challenges she has faced: her battle with bulimia; the harrowing death of her husband, Jay Monahan, from colon cancer when he was just 42; losing her beloved and accomplished older sister, Emily, who many believed was on track to become the first female governor of Virginia, to pancreatic cancer four years later. She will also talk candidly about her occasionally crippling, lifelong feelings of insecurity, and the challenge so many women in power face: balancing being strong with the nagging need to be liked. In these pages she will spill the intriguing, little-known details of being wooed by Les Moonves to leave The Today Show and anchor CBS Evening News, and the less than warm welcome she received upon her arrival from some of her colleagues at the “Tiffany Network.” Couric will reveal the unapologetic Mad Men culture, ubiquitous in many news organizations, that led to revelations about some of the biggest names in the business, including her longtime co-anchor and friend Matt Lauer. And she’ll describe her failed efforts to follow in Oprah’s footsteps when she jumped into the treacherous waters of daytime syndication (Katie), and her misadventures as Yahoo global news anchor during CEO Marissa Mayer’s rocky tenure.\nThrough it all, Couric’s unparalleled skills as an interviewer never faltered, resulting in some of the most memorable moments in American journalism: grilling President George H. W. Bush about Iran-Contra when he unexpectedly showed up during Couric’s White House visit with his wife, Barbara; facilitating an unforgettable display of shared grief between two stricken relatives the morning after Columbine; infuriating President George W. Bush by asking his wife, Laura, her views on Roe v. Wade; ruffling the feathers of an unflappable Colin Powell by pressing him on WMDs; comforting Robert De Niro when he broke down in tears during a conversation about Silver Linings Playbook; and quite possibly changing the course of history when she interviewed vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin, exposing the Alaska governor’s ignorance of public policy. Booking such big interviews is a story unto itself, and Couric will recount the often ridiculous behind-the-scenes machinations that went into scoring the many big “gets” throughout her career.\nBehind the ambition and the countless successes, Couric is first and foremost a woman who did her best to weather personal hardship, and as a single mom raise two happy, grounded, independent young women against the disorienting backdrop of fame and privilege. She’ll also share how she finally—despite many false starts—found love after loss with her current husband, John Molner, as well as the health scare that made them wonder if their wedding would even happen. Now, notwithstanding the countless achievements, accolades and awards, Couric’s proudest accomplishments are her family and her tireless work on behalf of cancer patients everywhere. Sixty-two years in the making, Unexpected will be the inspiring, instructive, entertaining account of someone we all feel we know. And in some ways we do—but, as Unexpected will reveal, we don’t even know the half of it.\nAbout Little, Brown and Company:\nLittle, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. Founded in 1837, Little, Brown has long been recognized as a publisher committed to publishing fiction of the highest quality and nonfiction of lasting significance. Hachette Book Group is a leading trade publisher based in New York and a division of Hachette Livre, the third largest trade and educational publisher in the world. For more information, visit hachettebookgroup.com.\nlittlebrown.com\nFollow Little, Brown on Facebook: facebook.com/littlebrownandcompany\nAnd on Twitter: @littlebrown","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line99169"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5751645565032959,"wiki_prob":0.4248354434967041,"text":"Disney Vacation Club Member\nSpecials: Discounted DVC Points & Confirmed Reservations will save you hundreds or thousand of dollars over booking through Disney.\nAs part of your Disney Vacation Club Member benefits, be among the first to register for Star Wars Rival Run Weekend presented by OtterBox and the Star Wars.\nDiscover Disney Vacation Club, a vacation ownership program or timeshare that can be a more cost-effective way of taking Disney vacations. Members can enjoy access to Disney Vacation Club Resorts like Copper Creek Villas & Cabins at Disney’s Wilderness Lodge and Bay Lake Tower at Disney’s Contemporary Resort.\nIf you're interested in purchasing Disney Vacation Club membership, Fidelity offers a variety of useful services and programs including vacation club financing,\nDisney Vacation Club. Disney Vacation Club (DVC) is a timeshare program operated by Disney. The program currently operates 14 resorts: ten DVC resorts at Walt Disney World and one DVC resort at Disneyland in California, as well as one resort each in Oahu, Hawaii, Vero Beach, Florida and Hilton Head, South Carolina. This page is primarily focused on evaluating the Disney Vacation Club for.\nDeciding to join the Disney Vacation Club is a big decision. We all went through it, and we had a thousand questions in the process. One of our goals is to try and answer as many questions as possible. The DVC forum on DISboards is also a great source of information. What are the benefits of.\nAt our domestic operations, operating income was 6% below prior year due to lower results at Walt Disney World, which were adversely impacted by Hurricane Irma, partially offset by growth at Disney Cr.\nSee what employees say it's like to work at Disney Vacation Club. Salaries, reviews, and more. Type Company – Private. Industry Membership Organizations.\nJan 8, 2013. Get the scoop on Disney Vacation Club from a real member family – and enter for a chance to win your own membership!\nHe is currently a member of the agency’s board of directors. whose portfolio also includes Disney Cruise Line, Disney Vacation Club and Adventures by Disney. The consulting business had previously.\nhe worked at The Walt Disney Company where he served in roles that included vice president, business planning and development for The Disneyland Resort and chief financial officer for the Disney Vacat.\nBeyond the potential money saving benefit Disney Vacation Club offers, there are other member perks at Walt Disney World. DVC calls these its \"Membership.\nOct 8, 2018. Disney Vacation Club® Golf Membership Program*. *Available only to those that are already Disney Vacation Club® Members! Join our.\nNow, Disney Vacation Club has more than 220,000 member families from all 50 states and approximately 100 countries who have discovered the joys of.\nAlso, unlike traditional timeshares, your Disney Vacation Club membership, for most properties, ends on January 31, 2042. Membership at Saratoga Springs.\nBased in Orlando, Florida, Inside the Magic was created in 2005 by Ricky Brigante. What started as a tiny web site and short.\nSales Operations Coordinator (Part-time), Disney Vacation Club. Nov. 01, 2018, Disney Vacation Club, Lake Buena Vista, United States.\nThe employees worked for two Disney divisions — Disney Vacation Club Management Corp. and the Walt Disney Parks and Resorts U.S. A spokeswoman for Walt Disney World Resort said, “The Department of Lab.\nThe wages will be paid to 16,339 employees at the two units — Disney Vacation Club Management Corp and Walt Disney Parks. \"The Department of Labor has identified a group of cast members who may ha.\nRenting Disney Vacation Club points saves money and gets you Deluxe-quality hotel rooms at Walt Disney World for much cheaper prices. Since purchasing DVC is a significant financial investment, renting DVC points is also a great way to “test the waters” of Disney Vacation Club, so to speak, and determine whether buying into the club is right for you.\nAlready a DVC Member? Please share your experiences with others. Interested in learning more about DVC? Please ask any questions about what it is and how.\nThe Disney Vacation Club (DVC) is a vacation timeshare program owned and operated by Disney Vacation Development, Inc., a subsidiary of Disney Signature Experiences, a division of Walt Disney Parks, Experiences and Consumer Products, a segment of The Walt Disney Company.It allows buying real estate interest in a DVC resort.\nCamino Travel El Camino Travel curates small group tours for the individual. Authentic and immersive local tours of Cuba, Colombia, and Nicaragua complete with travel photographer. Santiago\nJul 30, 2018. Last week we had the wonderful opportunity to experience the Disney Vacation Club (DVC) Member Cruise on board the beautiful Disney.\nDisney Vacation Club Member Zip Hoodie for Women. $49.99. Special Offer! Disney Vacation Club Raglan Shirt for Adults · Disney Vacation Club Raglan Shirt.\nAbout Member Dining Discounts: Discount is off the regular price of food and non-alcoholic beverages, excluding tax and gratuity, and is valid for the Member and up to 3 Guests, unless otherwise noted.\nEXCHANGING FOR ANOTHER DISNEY VACATION CLUB PROPERTY. Outside Florida Club, reservations allowed 60 days to 12 months in advance; exchange fee of $89 through Interval International, plus $84 annual.\nWith that in mind, \"Good Morning America\" turned to the Disney Parks Moms Panel — which recently announced 11 new members — to get the inside scoop on Disney Cruise Line, Walt Disney World, Disneyland.\nHotel Green Plaza Joetsu Hotel Green Plaza Joetsu offers transfers from the train station. Please contact the property at the number on the booking confirmation with your arrival details\nMy top Disney Vacation Club resorts at Walt Disney World are based upon a variety of factors, including theming, dining, pools, seasonal decorations, and the inarticulable “x-factors.”\nThe idea for the book came to Amy when a friend suggested she turn her trip reports published on a popular Disney Vacation Club owners’ website into something much more. \"A Year of Disney started with.\nJul 15, 2017. Today, Disney Vacation Club has more than 220,000 member families, from all 50 states and approximately 100 countries, who have.\nDVCinfo.com is your independent source for unbiased information about the Disney Vacation Club. Our Community discussion forum lets members discuss.\nThe Disney Parks Moms Panel is an online resource for individuals thinking about planning a Disney vacation at Walt Disney World Resort, Disneyland Resort, Disney Cruise Line or with Disney Vacation C.\nThe official website for all things Disney: theme parks, resorts, movies, tv programs, characters, games, videos, music, shopping, and more!\nObviously, there are other timeshare operations within public companies such as Disney Vacation Club. as well as enrollment, annual membership and transaction fees associated with its internal exch.\nDisney Vacation Club will open its Member Lounge at Epcot on June 6. This is part of the 25 th anniversary celebration and will remain open throughout the anniversary year. The Lounge will be located on the second floor of the Imagination pavilion, with an entrance in the merchandise shop.\nDuring the first of two \"sea days\" on board the Magic, my wife Janet and I decided to attend a Disney Vacation Club presentation. things like \"How long have you been DVC members?\" and \"Where are yo.\nRent a Disney Vacation Club Villa and Save Thousands of Dollars Over Booking Direct! Now you can experience the 14 magical properties that makeup Disney Vacation Club (DVC) resorts while saving up to 65% over booking directly with Disney. You’ll save hundreds, even thousands of dollars and you don’t have to be a DVC member to do it.\nView Gallery View an image gallery of Disney’s Beach Club Villas – Opens a dialog Most weeknights from August 23, 2019 to September 19, 2019 at Disney’s Polynesian Villas & Bungalows Most weeknights from January 2, 2019 to February 13, 2019 at Disney’s Animal Kingdom Villas –.\nKathy was looking at her log of our trips since becoming members of the Disney Vacation Club. This is our 33rd trip to Disney World as club members. Our suite number is 3525. This is actually our 35th.\nDisney Vacation Club – The #1 DVC resales company in the World, the largest selection of Disney Vacation Club resales, selling your Disney time share or.\nMembers of D23: The Official Disney Fan Club can purchase. In addition, Walt Disney Parks and Resorts includes the world-class Disney Cruise Line; Disney Vacation Club; Aulani, A Disney Resort and.\nDVC is a points-based membership program tied to a deeded real estate interest in a specific Disney Vacation Club resort property (the owner's Home Resort).\nThis post was contributed by a community member. The Town of Oyster Bay held their sixth. The event, which Beckerle said was sponsored by Sloman’s Shield, Steel Equities, and the Disney Vacation Cl.\nDavid’s Vacation Club Rentals. Years ago we learned about a great way to save on deluxe accommodations at Walt Disney World (and other Disney destinations): renting Disney Vacation Club (DVC) points.DVC members own timeshare “points” that they can use for stays at Disney Vacation Club.\nInside every Disney theme park, you’ll find at least one booth—often more than one—stocked with information about Disney Vacation Club Resorts. there are more than 100,000 member families in the Va.\nThe resort is scheduled to open in 2011 with more than 800 units, including hotel rooms and villas for Disney’s timeshare business, Disney Vacation Club. destinations for the Vacation Club’s 350,00.\nAccording to Cicero, another excellent resource is David’s Vacation Club Rentals. Unused time share points are sold through the site, allowing visitors to maximize savings if their heart is set on boo.\nStay at a Disney Vacation Club Villa as a guest of a Disney Vacation Club member. You can rent DVC points for stays on property at Disney World in a Disney Vacation Club Resort.\nMar 7, 2008. Answer 1 of 16: I am toying with the idea of bankrupting myself with a DVC purchase. I know the prices must vary according to time of year and.\nThe Victoria Hotel Annandale\nHotel Green Plaza Joetsu","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line830027"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9508233666419983,"wiki_prob":0.9508233666419983,"text":"David Becker\n@DavidBe38674958\nInternational Sports Lawyer\nDavid Becker is an international sports lawyer and former General Counsel for the International Cricket Council. David has advised a range of leading businesses, governing bodies and athletes in his career, such as NIKE, Vodafone, the International Rugby Board, England & Wales Cricket Board, Paralympic World Cup, Clipper Round the World Yacht Race and Royal Thames Yacht Club. David has written chapters in the first edition of \"Sport: Law and Practice\" by Taylor and Lewis and recently published the first book dedicated to the legal aspects of event management, entitled \"The Essential Legal Guide to Events\".\nHe has advised on a number of high profile sponsorship deals, including Vodafone’s sponsorship of Ferrari and Michael Schumacher, Vodafone’s sponsorship of David Beckham, NIKE's multi-million pound sponsorship agreement with the RFU, (including the Rugby World Cup-winning England Rugby team) and Reliance’s US$102 million sponsorship of the International Cricket Council. Born and educated in Cape Town, David has also advised several leading South African sportsmen, including Ernie Els, Lucas Radebe, Charl Schwartzel, Louis Oosthuizen, Mark Fish, Shaun Bartlett, Benni McCarthy, Aaron Mokoena and Steven Pienaar. He has appeared on BBC News 24, BBC World, Radio Five Live and BBC Prime Time News on regular occasions advising on various high profile matters ranging from the Sven-Goran Erikkson affair to drug scandals involving Rio Ferdinand, Dwain Chambers, the Russian Football team, and Greg Rusedski.\nA keen sportsman, David represented Western Province at squash and has completed 27 marathons, including the 7-day Sahara Ultramarathon. He is a co-founder of the South African-based charity Starfish and is a trustee of the international charity Beyond Sport","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line56490"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7811276912689209,"wiki_prob":0.7811276912689209,"text":"Callers Claiming to be Prize Patrol on The Prowl in Plano\nBy Wayne Carter\nPublished May 19, 2017 at 9:56 PM | Updated at 10:48 PM CDT on May 19, 2017\n//www.nbcdfw.com/news/local/Callers-Claiming-to-be-Prize-Patrol-on-The-Prowl-in-Plano_Dallas-Fort-Worth-423268494.html\nThe Prize Patrol is apparently making it's way through Plano but it's not who you think. These guys are apparently pretending to be the Publishers Clearing House and their goal is to take money, not give it. (Published Friday, May 19, 2017)\nDonna Matthews knows the real prize patrol. She's a sweepstakes regular. She picks the magazines, and places the stamps.\nBut when someone called claiming she won, she wasn't buying it.\n\"First of all that's now how they're supposed to contact me,\" says Matthews.\nShe listened anyway, after all, she's been attaching those little stamps for years.\nDallas Artist Merging Old School Art With New Technology\nThey claimed there were processing fees that had to be applied before they could process the winning check.\nThey told her to go into WalMart and send them $155.\nShe didn't do that. But as luck would have it, the phone rang again, only this time it was her mother Billie Bost. They told her that she won $600,000 and sent her a check that needed to be deposited before her winnings would be released.\nNew MD School in Fort Worth Welcomes Inaugural Class\n\"He said well as soon as you deposit, you call me,\" said Bost.\nNBC 5 Responds was there as she called them back, but we took over the phone.\nThe man on the other end of the line hung up. So we called Donna's prize winner. We identified ourselves as NBC 5 Responds and that didn't go so well.\nHow Amazon Handles Prime Day Shipping Rush\nThe more we questioned, the more he upped the money she had to pay, all the way to $950. They said she even needed to take out an insurance policy with Geico on the prize winnings for even more money. Eventually, he hung up.\nTwo different men, two different numbers preying on this North Texas mother and daughter who are fans of the real Publishers Clearing House.\nWe should mention the real Publishers Clearing House posts right on it's website to watch out for these guys.\nMemorial Service Planned for H. Ross Perot Later This Week\nEven our prize winning experts admits these men were hard to ignore.\n\"This is what the public needs to be aware of... they know how to hit that core desire of what you dream about, of what you wish you did have...\" said Matthews.\nPolice couldn't help because no money was exchanged. Even after it is, it's next to impossible to get any back. Don't let them get into your head. Never pay, and never cash a check sent to you out of the blue.\nUPDATED: DPD Investigating Officer Involved Shooting","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line177344"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5566856265068054,"wiki_prob":0.5566856265068054,"text":"Toyota – World’s Greenest Brand\nBy Arman Barari on Jul 29, 2011 with Comments 0\nAlthough there are now diesels out there more economical than the Prius, but Toyota gets the credit as the company that started this whole green movement by mass producing hybrid. And according to a a new global survey from the international brand consultancy Interbrand, they’ve been named the world’s greenest brand.\nThe first Best Global Green Brands, published this week, takes into account environmental performance coupled with public perception of a brand’s environmental sustainability – its “green profile” – to produce a Green Performance Score.\nOf course it’s not just the Prius, as Toyota now makes a range of hybrid vehicles in each segment and is working on many EVs as well.\nToyota press release:\nBased on data collected from the world’s leading markets, including the UK, France, Germany, Italy, USA, Japan, Brazil and India, the report gives Toyota a top score of 64.19 points, ahead of 3M in second place.\nThe Interbrand report says that Toyota is “a leading example of making the environment a core management priority, while also engaging in a meaningful way with audiences around the world”.\nToyota’s market-leading development of full hybrid technology is a key contributor to Toyota’s strong green performance, according to the report, notably with Prius – now in its third generation. Since 1997, Toyota and Lexus have amassed more than 3.2 million hybrid vehicle sales worldwide*.\nToyota’s long-term, well-to-wheel approach towards sustainable operations is reflected in recent initiatives in the UK. The publishing of the report coincides with the official switch-on of a large-scale solar power system at the company’s car plant in Burnaston, Derbyshire, a facility that already enjoys special status as one of Toyota’s global “eco-plants”, leading the way in cleaner and more efficient manufacturing and operations.\nBurnaston is also a standard-bearer in Europe for hybrid vehicle production, as the manufacturing centre for the full hybrid Auris hatchback.\nElsewhere in Europe, Toyota has recently installed a solar wall at its factory in Valenciennes, France, and it plans to install wind turbines at its vehicle logistics centre in Zeebrugge, Belgium.\nThe “Best Global Green Brands” report’s measurement methodology was developed by Interbrand together with Deloitte, with the Green Performance Score designed to be applicable across differing industries. While compiling the report, Interbrand also interviewed some 10,000 consumers across 10 of the world’s largest markets to gauge consumer perceptions of a brand’s green performance. Performance data were sourced from publicly available information as well as data from Thomson Reuter’s ASSET4.\nToyota Hybrid Sales Top 4 Million\nToyota Prius Plug-In Hybrid Fuel Economy\nToyota Big Solar On Stream In UK\nPrius Plug-In For Prince Albert\nToyota Prius Plug-in Hybrid","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line906655"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8684942722320557,"wiki_prob":0.8684942722320557,"text":"The actor who played the September 11 terrorist 'Saeed Alghamdi' presumably died in Pennsylvania when Flight 93 crashed there. He was one of the first group of terrorists to be linked to bin Laden. He had an interesting life:\nThe original, and to my mind still the best, Saeed Alghamdi grew up in Saudi Arabia with his boyhood friends, brothers Wael and Waleed Alshehri, two boys who would also grow up to be terrorists. He went on to train as a pilot. He is still very much alive, and works for Tunis Air. Obviously, at some point his identity was stolen. It is very interesting to note, to quote the Telegraph article, that:\n\"The FBI had published his personal details but with a photograph of somebody else, presumably a hijacker who had 'stolen' his identity. CNN, however, showed a picture of the real Mr Al-Ghamdi.\"\nIt makes you really wonder how this type of confusion could have occurred, but the fact there are two photos clearly proves that identity theft had occurred. Alghamdi thinks that \"CNN had probably got the picture from the Flight Safety flying school he attended in Florida.\" He had studied in Florida from 1998 to 1999 and then returned home and worked for Saudi Arabian Airlines. In August 2000, he returned to the U.S. for further training. The striking thing, and something that is of the utmost importance in our understanding what is going on here, is that he grew up with two boys whose identities were also stolen, and at least one of them, Waleed Alshehri, also became a pilot and is also still alive. In other words, the intelligence agency who stole the identities knew enough to steal identities from people who grew up together in Saudi Arabia, and later went on to train as pilots, taking some training in the United States. This would be excellent evidence that the hijackers were the original Saeed and Waleed, except we know both of these people are still alive. I have to tip my hat to whoever created these identities, as they knew enough to pick exactly the right identities to steal, and had to have unbelievable Saudi intelligence sources to do this. These people are good at what they do.\nThe most intriguing Saeed Alghamdi may have been a student at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California. This is a U. S. government school used to train the military in languages. It used to be called the Monterey Language School, and it is possible but a matter of some debate that no less than Lee Harvey Oswald attended there (we can't be sure as Oswald's military records were 'lost'). My guess is that the actor who played Saeed Alghamdi went to this school as part of his usual military training. As foreign students of countries who were allies of the United States could be invited to go there, it may have even been intended to leave the option open to depict Alghamdi as working for some Middle Eastern country if they needed an excuse to blame some government there. The most telling thing about the school is that the fellow who recently made the headlines for daring to criticize Bush for 9-11 was vice chancellor for student affairs there. In other words, this isn't just some guy in the military with an opinion, this is a guy with special knowledge about people like Saeed Alghamdi. If he wondered publicly about Bush's role in 9-11, we have to take his words very seriously.\nSomeone called Saeed Alghamdi was living in Patterson, New Jersey in the apartment of Hani Hanjour.\nIn 1992 (probably too early for the real Alghamdi), someone named Saeed Alghamdi used the Social Security number of a Vermont woman who had been dead for almost 30 years.\nA Saeed Alghamdi lived in the Delray Beach, Florida area with Ahmed Alnami and Hamza Alghamdi (on one account from late 1992 on, although it is impossible or very unlikely that the real Saeed Alghamdi could have lived there that far back as he is too young). In an amazing coincidence, the wife of the editor of the Sun tabloid, where one employee died from anthrax, found the apartment for Saeed Alghamdi and Marwan Al-Shehhi ( but note that another report says the apartment was found for Marwan Al-Shehhi and Hamza Alghamdi).\nSaeed Alghamdi lived in December 1996 in Chino Hills in Orange County, California.\nSaeed Alghamdi may have trained at a school operated by Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University (this may very well be the real Saeed Alghamdi as we know he took training in the United States).\nSaeed Alghamdi lived in San Antonio, Texas, and, ever the linguist, may have graduated from the Defense Language Institute at Lackland Air Force Base.\nSaeed Alghamdi lived from 1988 to 1991 in Florham Park, New Jersey. At that time, he had a wife and children, and was working for a pharmaceutical company. When he left the apartment, he told his landlord he'd been transferred to the midwest. This could not be the real Saeed Alghamdi, who is just 26 or 27 years old and is an airline pilot.\nSaeed Alghamdi lived in Pensacola, Florida and listed his address as 10 Radford Blvd. on Pensacola NAS, a base road on which residences for foreign- military flight trainees are located. (The Pensacola News Journal article states that the Naval Education and Training Security Assistance Field Activity, which administers training of foreign aviation students for the Navy, is headquartered in Pensacola and that fifteen percent of aviation students on any given day are foreign nationals.) Saeed Alghamdi and fellow terrorist Ahmed Alghamdi are listed as living in housing for foreign military trainees at Pensacola Naval Air Station. Saeed Alghamdi, Ahmad Alnami and Ahmed Alghamdi all may have trained in Pensacola. While any one terrorist's name associated with an institution may be a coincidence and refer to another man, can three terrorist's names training at the same U. S. military training center be a coincidence?\nSaeed Alghamdi in fact may have lived at two addresses near Pensacola Regional Airport, one a few miles north of the airport and another a few hundred feet away.\nSaeed Alghamdi was associated with suspected terrorist Raed Hijazi, a former Boston cab driver convicted in Jordan for a plot to kill Americans and other tourists in Jordan on Jan. 1, 2000 (Hijazi may also have been in charge of training the terrorists responsible for the attack on the USS Cole). Saeed Alghamdi may have lived in the Boston area.\nSaeed Alghamdi lived in Vero Beach, Florida.\nSaeed Alghamdi worked at Tyndall Air Force Base near Tallahassee, Fla.\nSaeed Alghamdi may have travelled to the Philippines, presumably to meet with other terrorists there.\nAlthough it is somewhat amazing, it appears that the identities of Saeed Alghamdi and Waleed Alshehri were stolen because they grew up together in Saudi Arabia and both became pilots. The real Saeed Alghamdi claims that his photo must have been stolen when he was in the United States on flight training. However, someone was possibly using his identity well before he ever entered the United States. In any event, a whole troop of actors may be playing the role of 'Saeed Alghamdi', in various places and at various times. Some of these were probably just people with the same name, but we can be sure that many of them can be tied to the terrorist, especially where more than one terrorist name is associated with the same place. A composite identity seems to have been built on the original stolen identity, with the identity filled out by attending military language school, taking flight training in the United States, and hanging out with members of the known September 11 terrorist group. The actor also made contact with other suspected terrorists (Nabil al-Marabh and Raed Hijazi). The actor who played Saeed Alghamdi is particularly suspicious for three reasons:\nthe fact that his identity was stolen to work in tandem with the stolen identity of Waleed Alshehri;\nthe fact that he may have attended U. S. military language school, and the fact that the head of the school in Monterey got in trouble for criticizing Bush; and\nthe sheer number of places he lived in and people he made contact with.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1484342"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5731174349784851,"wiki_prob":0.4268825650215149,"text":"Improved results for the fifth year in a row\nSome of the top performing Lismore Comprehensive School GCSE pupils following the release of results last Thursday. Also included are staff from left, Rosemary Lavery, vice principal, Fiona Kane, principal, and Shauna Lennon, vice principal. INLM34-202.\nLismore Comprehensive is celebrating fantastic GCSE results as 83% of students have achieved five or more GCSE passes at Grades A*-C this year - the highest achieved in Lismore in recent memory.\nIndeed the all-ability, non-selective school has maintained an upward trend for the fifth year in a row.\nThe results have shown an increase of over 16% on last year in this important category of pupils achieving at least five GCSE grades A*-C.\nHard work pays off!\nMrs Fiona Kane, Principal, said: “At Lismore, we very much view ourselves as a community and an extension of our pupils own families and parish.\n“We are truly blessed with the high quality of our local primary school partners and the excellent education our pupils received before joining Lismore.\n“Those excellent foundations set down in primary school have enabled us to build on solid ground. So we feel these fantastic results at GCSE are as much to be celebrated by our partner primary schools and we thank them for their on-going support and contribution.\n“We also wish to thank our Year 12 parents who have supported us particularly well over the last year in challenging our pupils to aim high and commit to giving their best to their studies.\n“On behalf of the Board of Governors, I wish to acknowledge the hard work, dedication, commitment and drive of our teaching staff and our support staff.\n“As Principal, I could not ask for a better staff, who work tirelessly often above and beyond the commitments of the school day to support and assist our pupils to help them reach their potential.\n“The buzz in our school on results day where staff return early from their holidays to be present to celebrate with and support our students in their next important decisions is testament to their commitment and service to the pupils of Lismore. I wish to thank each and every one of them.\n“Exciting times now lie ahead for our students as they choose their Level 3 subjects and I look forward to welcoming them back into Sixth Form to begin the next important step in their educational journey.”\nTop performances include: Clare McCorry, 5A*, 4A, 2B; Tiago Realinho, 1A*, 5A, 4B, 1C; Leo Mulholland, 4A*, 4A, 2B; Ellen O’Hara, 2A*, 6A, 1B, 1C; Nevin Donnelly, 1A*, 6A, 3B; Miollan Lavery, 8A, 2B\nJakub Czerny, 2A, 7B, 2C; Ruairi Heaney, 1A*, 5A, 4B; Gavin McCann, 1A*, 4A, 5B; Ruairi McParland, 1A*, 5A, 3B, 1C; Odhran O’Neill, 7A, 2B, 1C; Oisin O’Dowd, 5A, 5B; Abbie McKey, 5A, 4B, 1C; Amy Carson, 3A, 7B; Adam Henderson, 3A, 7B; Nathan Massey, 3A, 7B.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line828309"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6162096858024597,"wiki_prob":0.3837903141975403,"text":"It's a happy morning on a happy campus!\nPlaying in the national championship game, as the Butler Bulldogs will be doing tonight, tends to make people happy. I put myself in that category. As a former college basketball player, I certainly never made it to the \"big game\" so \"getting there\" as a faculty member of a participating school ... well, let's just say it puts an extra spring in my step.\nSo, it's with much institutional pride that I say \"Go Butler.\"\nLet's stick with the theme, but return \"on topic.\"\nFrom time to time, the DOJ comments that some voluntary disclosure cases never lead to an actual enforcement action. Analyzing the extent to which this may or may not be true is difficult, particularly as to non-public companies.\nNevertheless, a recent \"no action\" disclosure caught my eye.\nIt involves Global Industries Ltd., a publicly-traded provider of \"offshore construction, engineering, project management and support services...\" (see here).\n\"In June 2007, the Company announced that it was conducting an internal investigation of its West Africa operations, focusing on the legality, under the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and local laws, of one of its subsidiary’s reimbursement of certain expenses incurred by a customs agent in connection with shipments of materials and the temporary importation of vessels into West African waters.\" (see here). As noted in this linked filing, the Global Industries investigation was not a pure voluntary disclosure in that the investigation was motivated, at least in part, on \"the settlement of the FCPA proceedings involving certain Vetco Gray entities\" and the fact that \"Company’s management and the Audit Committee were aware of press releases by three other companies disclosing that they are conducting internal investigations into the FCPA implications of certain actions by a customs agent in connection with the temporary importation of their vessels into Nigeria.\" As noted in the filing, against this backdrop, the \"Company’s management considered it prudent to review the Company’s operations since it uses customs agents and the Company’s vessels that have operated in Nigeria do so under temporary importation permits.\"\nFast forward to February 2010 when the company disclosed in this press release as follows:\n\"We are pleased to also announce that our and the Government’s investigation of our activities in West Africa have concluded without any fines or penalties being imposed upon the Company. Both the DOJ and SEC have concluded their investigations and are not recommending any enforcement actions against the Company.\"\nIn other words, a happy ending to an FCPA investigation and disclosure.\nMike Osajda April 5, 2010 at 10:09 AM\nCould this be a case that because the company had a compliance program in place that fit the Sentencing Guidelines, DOJ decided not to proceed? If so, it would be another reason for all entities doing business overseas to review their programs to detemine if they follow the Guidelines.\nMike Koehler April 5, 2010 at 7:53 PM\nThanks for your comment. While possible, my guess is that is not the case. As noted in the post, this was not a pure (or traditional) voluntary disclosure.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1302419"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5319831371307373,"wiki_prob":0.4680168628692627,"text":"Sponsor a child in India\nOur children's charity in India since 1963\nSOS Children's Villages has been present in India since 1964 and has continued to grow ever since. In times of emergency, our organisation has responded with emergency relief programmes. In many cases, these developed into permanent programmes which offered support to the local people. At present SOS Children's Villages supports children, young people and families throughout India.\nA country with much diversity\nSOS Children's Villages supports children so that they can look forward to a better future. (photo: C. Ashleigh)\nThe Republic of India is the seventh largest country in the world and the second most populous country; the population is over 1.2 billion (July 2011 est.), with the capital city of New Delhi being home to 21.7 million people. India is a vast and diverse country with many different languages, cultures and religions.\nA growing economy that still faces many challenges\nIn recent decades, India has emerged as an increasingly important economic power. Since economic liberalisation started in the 1990s, India's achievements have been astonishing - since 1997, the average growth in gross domestic product (GDP) has been over seven per cent. In 2010, GDP grew further - by over ten per cent. India has a mixed economy - more than half of the population works in agriculture, around 14 per cent in industry and 34 per cent in the service sector.\nDuring the past decade, India has managed to double its hourly wage rate and the number of people who now live above the nationally-defined poverty line has increased. However the benefits from this economic growth have not been shared by all: one in four people continue to live in poverty.\nPoverty is located in many areas of India, but it is mostly manifest in rural areas or in urban slums. Rural areas also suffer from poor infrastructure - for example, only 84 per cent of the population has access to clean drinking water and a mere 21 per cent to adequate sanitation facilities. Although around 70 per cent of the population lives in rural areas, the number of people forced to seek work in urban areas is increasing rapidly.\nIn addition to poverty, India continues to face many challenges, which include overpopulation, environmental problems and widespread corruption. The literacy rate continues to be low - around 73 per cent for men and about 48 per cent for women. The access to quality health care is also a concern. At present the life expectancy rate is relatively low at 65.7 years for men and 67.9 years for women. It is estimated that 2.4 million people live with HIV/AIDS (2009 est.).\nChildren are in need of better education and healthcare\nChildren can enjoy a safe and healthy life in the care of SOS Children's Villages (photo: Picture Alliance F.May)\nThere are over 447 million children under the age of 18 in India. In spite of improvements in recent decades, around half of the children of India continue to face many hardships.\nAlthough the health of children has improved of late, UNICEF reports that the lack of adequate health care results in high infant, child and maternal mortality rates. For example, around two million children die every year from preventable diseases, an estimated 400,000 of those under five die every year of diarrhoea. Around half of the deaths of Indian children are due to malnutrition, which is more common in India than in Sub-Saharan Africa.\nThe school attendance rate is low in India - only 72 per cent of children between the ages of six and ten attend primary school. Child labour is a conspicuous problem, with around 12 per cent of children between the ages of 5 and 14 involved in child labour. Many children are trafficked and forced to work as domestic workers, in factories or prostitution.\nAs the incidence of HIV/AIDS has risen, the number of children without parental care, or at risk of losing such care, is also increasing. The figure for children with HIV/AIDS is also growing. These children face social discrimination which hampers their efforts to improve their lives.\nGirls are in a particularly vulnerable situation as they are more likely to be poor, be homeless or end up as victims of violence. Particularly in rural areas girls do not have adequate access to basic health care, or education. In some states like Bihar, Mizoram, Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh, 60 per cent or more of girls drop out of primary education. Child marriages are also common: 47 per cent of children are married under the age of 18, with the number in rural areas nearly double that of urban ones.\nSOS Children's Villages in India\nThe economic plight, tense political situation and natural disasters that India has endured have led to a particularly intense involvement of SOS Children's Villages in the country. The programmes developed by SOS Children's Villages vary according to the needs of the local population and include: education at SOS Hermann Gmeiner Schools; guidance and accommodation for young people; vocational training and medical advice and assistance. Family-strengthening programmes are an important component of the work carried out: in cooperation with local agencies, SOS Children's Villages works directly with families and communities to empower them to effectively care for their children. When children can no longer stay with their families, they are cared for by their SOS mothers in one of the SOS families.\nWebsite of SOS Children's Villages India\n(available in English)\nLatest News WWH","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line656408"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.718326210975647,"wiki_prob":0.718326210975647,"text":"Windows 10 Technical Preview\nOn September 30th Microsoft announced that the forthcoming version of Windows, code named “Threshold,” would not be called “Windows 9,” but would skip a version and be called “Windows 10.” One speculation says that this is due to the significant changes from Windows 8. The Technical Preview edition became available for download to members of Microsoft’s “Insider Access” for testing and development on October 1. I downloaded the installation for testing purposes and installed it that same evening.\nThe first thing I noticed was the return of the Start Menu. You not only get access to your regular programs, as in previous versions of Windows, but you also see the new Windows Store apps. This means no more switching between the Desktop and Start Screen modes.\nWindows Store apps can now be resized like traditional programs. In addition, the “Snapping” feature has been upgraded with more useful options when running multiple programs. In Windows 8, Store apps could only be in full screen unless snapped with another app. This was often frustrating when using them on a desktop. In Windows 10, Store Apps will also scale automatically to fit the area you’ve snapped them to.\nWindows Search has been upgraded. Now when you search for an item, not only is your hard drive checked, but a web search is also initiated.\nWindows 10 will also customize itself to your platform. If you have a desktop you’ll get the Start Menu by default. With a tablet, the Start Screen will be enabled until you dock the tablet on a keyboard when the Start Menu will take over.\nThe other big new feature is the addition of virtual desktops. With virtual desktops you can group different programs together, then switch to another desktop and open more apps for a different set of tasks. For instance, you could run one desktop with your works apps and another with a game or recreational apps.\nSo far, I find Windows 10 to be a great improvement over Windows 8, in terms of ease of use. The new and updated multi-tasking features are a boon for productivity, while the return of the Start Menu and adaptability to different hardware forms will make it easier than ever to use. Only time will tell which of these features remain in the final version, but Microsoft seems to be heading in the right direction!\nSo when will Windows 10 be available? Probably mid to late 2015. Microsoft also hasn’t hinted at pricing yet, so no word on whether there will be a special upgrade incentive as with Windows 8, or if it will be strictly retail.\nIf you’re feeling adventurous and you’d like to try Windows 10 for yourself, head over to the Microsoft Website and click the “Get Started” Button. I recommend doing this only on a secondary computer, as Windows 10 is still being developed. However, it’s a good way to see what might be coming and take part in shaping it.\nDo you have a question or topic you’d like us to address? Email and let us know!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line257366"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6040434241294861,"wiki_prob":0.6040434241294861,"text":"Resources for Download\nBiographyDr. Marilyn Ray2018-03-31T14:21:30+00:00\nMarilyn Anne Ray, RN, BSN, MSN, MA, PhD, CTN-A, FSfAA, FAAN, FESPCH (hon) is Professor Emeritus at Florida Atlantic University, Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing, Boca Raton, Florida, USA. She holds a diploma in Nursing from St. Joseph Hospital, Hamilton, Canada; Bachelor and Master of Science degrees in Nursing from the University of Colorado, Denver, Colorado; Master of Arts, in Cultural Anthropology from McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada; a Doctor of Philosophy in Transcultural Nursing from the University of Utah College of Nursing, Salt Lake City, Utah; and an honorary degree from Nevada State College, Henderson, Nevada. Ray has held faculty positions at the University of San Francisco, University of California San Francisco, McMaster University, the University of Colorado, and the Eminent Scholar positions at Florida Atlantic University and Virginia Commonwealth University, and Professorial and Professor Emeritus positions at Florida Atlantic University. In addition, Ray attended Ethics Courses at Georgetown University in Washington, DC, and studied with the theoretical physicist, Dr. F. David Peat on Complexity Science at the Pari Center for New Learning in Pari, Italy. Ray is a Fellow of the Society for Applied Anthropology (FSfAA), and is a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing (FAAN). She is certified as an Advanced Transcultural Nurse (CTN-A), and was awarded the position of a Transcultural Nursing Scholar from the Transcultural Nursing Society. For 32 years, Ray served in the United States Air Force Nurse Corps (USAF) in the field of aerospace nursing– flight nursing (during the Vietnam war), administration, practice, education, and research at the School of Aerospace Medicine. She retired in 1999 as a Colonel and is a Veteran of military conflicts. She attended a program in space education at the Marshall Space Center in Huntsville, Alabama in preparation for the potential role of “nurses in space.” Ray is featured in Who’s Who in America and Who’s Who in the World. Ray has researched, presented and published nationally and internationally on the subjects of the philosophy of caring, caring science, holistic nursing, transcultural caring in nursing and health care, technological caring, economic caring, and caring ethics in complex organizations, primarily hospitals. In 1981, Ray discovered the Theory of Bureaucratic Caring (1981, 1984, 1989, 2004, 2007, 2010, 2014, 2015, 2017) via research in organizational cultures, and with Turkel, the Theory of Relational Caring Complexity (2000, 2001, 2012, 2014). She also advanced the model and Theory of Transcultural Caring Dynamics in Nursing and Health Care (2010, 2016) within her book of the same name. Her Theory of Bureaucratic Caring is being used widely nationally and internationally, and especially now as a framework in the USAF Medical Service under the leadership of Major General Dorothy Hogg and Colonel Marcia Potter for the development of an interdisciplinary, inter-professional practice model, and the Veterans’ Administration in Colorado and Wisconsin in nursing education under the leadership of Dr. Dana Lusk. Ray is a charter member and currently serves on the By-Laws Committee of the International Association for Human Caring (IAHC). Ray’s books include, The ethics of care and the ethics of cure: Synthesis in chronicity (with Jean Watson), A study of caring within an institutional culture: The discovery of the Theory of Bureaucratic Caring; Transcultural caring dynamics in nursing and health care [1st and 2nd editions]; and with her colleagues, Alice Davidson and Marian Turkel, Nursing, caring, and complexity science: For human-environment well-being (2011, American Journal of Nursing, Book of the Year Award for Professional Development and Trends). Ray also serves on the boards of the Global Qualitative Nursing Research (on line journal), Qualitative Health Research, and the Journal of Art and Aesthetics in Nursing and Health Sciences., She is a reviewer for the International Nursing Review, journal the International Council of Nurses, Journal of Transcultural Nursing, Nursing Outlook and Nursing Inquiry. She is a Board Member and Chair of the Faculty Development and Learning Partnerships Committee of the Anne Boykin Institute (ABI) for the Study of Caring Science in Nursing. As a FAAN, Ray serves on the Theory-Guided Practice Expert Panel of the American Academy of Nursing. She was elected to and awarded the prestigious, Honorary Distinguished Fellowship of the European Society for Person-Centered Healthcare (ESPCH) in London, United Kingdom, in 2016. Her Archives of Caring collection are housed at the Christine E. Lynn College of Nursing, Florida Atlantic University.\nCurriculum-Vitae-Dr.-Marilyn-Ray-September-2015, Download PDF Format\nCurriculum-Vitae-Dr.-Marilyn-Ray-September-2015, Download DOC Format\nACADEMIC:\nFellow, Inducted as a Fellow of the American Academy of Nursing (FAAN). Hyatt Grand Regency Hotel, Washington, DC, October 19, 2013.\nChair, Learning Partnerships: Faculty and Student Development and Mentorship of Caring Scholars, The Anne Boykin Institute on the Advancement of Caring in Nursing, 2012 and on-going.\nBoard Member, Anne Boykin Institute on the Advancement of Caring in Nursing, 2012 and on-going.\n2012-2015 Board Member, International Association for Human Caring, www.humancaring.org\n2011 Board Member, Qualitative Health Research Journal, University of Utah, College of Nursing, Salt Lake City, Utah (Dr. Janice Morse, Editor).\n2010 Finalist for the International Award for Excellence: Creating Caring Organizations and Cultures through Communitarian Ethics. Journal of the World Universities Forum, 3(5), 41-52.\n2008 Lifetime Achievement Award, Life Time Member, International Association for Human Caring, University of North Carolina, Raleigh/Durham, North Carolina, May 2008.\n2007 Distinguished Alumna Award, University of Utah, College of Nursing, Salt Lake City, Utah, May 3, 2007.\n2005, Honorary Degree, Nevada State College, Henderson, Nevada, May 2005 (First Honorary Degree awarded at Nevada State College).\nWho’s Who in the World. 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015. Marquis Who’s Who, New Providence, New Jersey.\nCambridge Who’s Who of Executive Women and Nursing and Health Care, Selected 2007. New York, New York.\nWho’s Who in American Nursing, 1990, 1991, 1996, 2007, 2008. Marquis Who’s Who, New Providence, New Jersey.\nWho’s Who in America, Selected for 2007, 2008, 2009, 2011, 2013, 2015. Marquis Who’s Who, New Providence, New Jersey.\nWho’s Who in American Education, 2006, 2007-2008. Marquis Who’s Who, New Providence, New Jersey.\nWho’s Who in Medicine and Healthcare, 2008-2009, 2009-2010. Marquis Who’s Who, New Providence, New Jersey.\n2005 Research Award for Excellence in Research at Florida Atlantic University from Dr. Lemanski, VP of Research, Department of Sponsored Research, Florida Atlantic University, 2005\n2005 Transcultural Nursing Scholar. The International Transcultural Nursing Society. Awarded at Baruch College, New York City, October 2005.\nFellow 2005 1989, Applied Anthropological Association of the American Anthropology Association, June 1989. Sustaining Fellow, 2005.\nResearch Consultant Recognition for Service Award: Holy Cross Hospital, Nursing Research Council, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida 2002-2004, Awarded December 2004.\nDistinguished Teacher of the Year, Academic Year 1999-2000, College of Nursing, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, awarded March 2000.\nSelected participant in the annual Martha E. Rogers Center for the Study of Nursing Science, DIALOGUE ’99. New York University, New York, participated June 1999.\nSelected participant in the annual Martha E. Rogers Center for the Study of Nursing Science, DIALOGUE ’97. New York University, New York, participated May 1997.\nGranted Sabbatical Leave, Florida Atlantic University, granted for the Academic Year 1997-98.\nSelected participant in the Professional Development Seminar in Israel sponsored by the College Consortium For International Studies, Israel/Jordan/Palestine, participated May 9 -18, 1996.\nSelected participant in the first Martha E. Rogers Center for the Study of Nursing Science, DIALOGUE ’95. New York University, New York, participated June 1995.\nNamed in the Registry of Phenomenologists, The Encyclopedia of Phenomenology. (p. 500) Kluwer Academic Publishers, The Netherlands, selected May 1995. (Published, 1997)\nResearch Award, Iota Xi Chapter, Sigma Theta Tau International, Honor Society of Nursing, Florida Atlantic University, Boca Raton, Florida, awarded April 1995.\nPoster Session Finalist, 33rd Biennial Convention, Sigma Theta Tau International, Honor Society of Nursing, Detroit, Michigan, November 1995.\nWho’s Who Among Human Services Professionals, 1992-93. The National Reference Institute, Wilmette, Illinois.\nCertificate of Recognition in Recognition of Outstanding Service and Dedication to the Profession of Nursing, Florida Nurses’ Association, National and Florida Nurses Week, presented May 1993.\nNominated and Inducted as Member, The Honor Society of Phi Kappa Phi, Florida Atlantic University, Chapter 128, Boca Raton, Florida, April 1992.\nLeininger Transcultural Nursing Award for Excellence in Transcultural Nursing, University of Limburg, Maastricht, The Netherlands, awarded August 1989.\nChancellor’s Teaching Recognition Award (Graduate School), University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado, awarded May 1987.\nBest Research Paper (Phenomenological Research), Dimensions of Critical Care Nursing, selected 1987.\n1986 Nightingale Award Nominee, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, School of Nursing, Denver, Colorado, May 1986.\nFaculty Teaching Award, Nominated by Faculty of University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, School of Nursing, January 1986.\nMILITARY/VETERANS AFFAIRS:\nDNP Student of Regis University, Denver, Colorado, Dana Lusk, used Ray’s Theory of Bureaucratic Caring as a guide to study Nursing Education for new employees of the Veterans’ Administration Hospital, Denver, Colorado, June 2015.\nDNP Graduate of Chamberlain University, Colonel Marcia Potter used Ray’s Theory of Bureaucratic Caring as a guide to study Nurse-Directed (BCT Nursing Theory) Primary Care in terms quality improvement in outcomes of health-healing, time, and economic resources for the United States Air Force, Joint-Base Andrews, Washington, DC, June 2015.\nWomen in Aviation: Celebrating 50 Years of Women in Space. International Women’s Air and Space Museum. Titusville, Florida (Space Coast, Florida). March 8 & 9, 2013.\nSpeaker: Contemplation of Peace-making and Peace-building. Memories of Hanoi, Vietnam, Hiroshima, Japan, Corregidor, The Philippines, Military Officers Association of the United States (MOAA), Holiday Inn, Highland Beach, Florida, March 2013.\nFederal Nursing Service Essay Award, Association of Military Surgeons of the United States (AMSUS), Las Vegas, Nevada, November 8, 2000.\nCertificate of Retirement as Colonel from the United States Air Force Reserve, Nurse Corps, Washington, D.C., issued February 6, 1999.\nGeneral’s Letter of Recognition for Outstanding Service and Contributions to the United States Air Force Nurse Corps, 1967-1999 awarded February 1999.\nUSAF Meritorious Service Medal (1st Oak Leaf Cluster) for Outstanding Research Activities at USAF School of Aerospace Medicine, Department of Aerospace Nursing, Brooks AFB, Texas, awarded 1997.\nRecognition for Outstanding Contribution to the United States Air Force School of Aerospace Medicine, Department of Aerospace Nursing, Qualitative Research Workshop, Brooks Air Force Base, Texas, presented July 1994.\nUSAF Meritorious Service Medal for Nursing Leadership at USAF Systems Command, Washington, D.C., Operation Desert Storm, Eglin AFB, Florida, awarded 1992.\nUSAF National Defense Service Medal (1st Bronze Star), Operation Desert Storm, Eglin AFB, Florida, authorized and awarded May 1991.\nUSAF Commendation Medal (1st Oak Leaf Cluster) for Nursing Education and Policy Development, HQARPC/SGPN, Denver, Colorado, HQAFSC/SG, Andrews AFB, D.C., awarded September 1989.\nUSAF Commendation Medal for the Development and Management of the USAF Reserve Continuing Education Program, and Personnel Administration, awarded 1984.\nMilitary Consultant to USAF Surgeon General, Headquarters, Bolling AFB, D.C. for Nursing Research and Administration, 1984.\nNational Defense Service Medal, United States Air Force, Sheppard AFB, Texas, awarded March 1968.\n© Copyright | Dr. Marilyn Ray | All Rights Reserved | Designed by Brand On Fire","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1085973"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5674844980239868,"wiki_prob":0.4325155019760132,"text":"Rhode Island's Trusted Personal Injury & Social Security Disability Law Firm\nThe Most Dangerous Roads\nDistracted Driver\nFailure to Obey Traffic Controls\nCommerical Vehicle\nFatigued Truck Drivers\nReview Our Attorneys\nJoseph Marasco\nDonna Nesselbush\nResultados De Casos\nNegligencia Medica\nAccidentes y Lesiones\nSeguro Social Por Incapacidad\nMarasco Nesselbush Sobre Nosotros\nContactenos Atraves De Cualquiera Oficina\nRhode Island Commercial Vehicle Accidents\nCommercial vehicles offer individuals, groups, organizations, and businesses convenient modes of transportation. These vehicles also present potential risks to their occupants, and to occupants of smaller passenger vehicles, motorcyclists, bicyclists, and pedestrians. Used by a business to transport goods or passengers, a commercial vehicle is required to be licensed by municipal or state agencies to operate on highways, roads, and streets. Drivers are required to have special commercial licenses. The most common types of commercial vehicles are large trucks, large vans and buses, school buses, and taxis.\nWhen someone is injured in a commercial vehicle collision, many questions arise about legal rights and liability. At Marasco & Nesselbush, Providence’s trusted personal injury law firm, our Providence accident lawyers have years of experience helping those injured by another driver’s negligence obtain the compensation they deserve for lost wages, pain and suffering, medical expenses, and other losses. We strive to provide each and every client with extraordinary case results and legal care.\nTypes of Commercial Vehicle Accidents\nLarge Truck Crashes\n15-Passenger Van Accidents\nVan Crashes\nBus Collisions\nTaxi Crashes\nBecause commercial vehicles are typically large, others on the road who are not occupants of the commercial vehicle often suffer the most serious injuries and fatalities. However, for commercial vehicles such as buses, seat belts are not typically required by law, therefore increasing the risk of passenger ejection and other circumstances that can lead to catastrophic injury or death.\nAccording to the Fatality Analysis Reporting System (FARS), which is maintained by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), a large truck is considered to be a truck with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of more than 10,000 pounds. Drivers of these vehicles are required to have a Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) as well as pass additional tests to obtain specific endorsements on their CDL, depending on the type of commercial vehicle. Some common endorsements for large trucks include those for hazardous materials, tank vehicle, double/triple trailers, and combination of tank vehicle and hazardous materials.\nCommercial truck drivers operating big rigs, semi-trucks, or tractor-trailers, are required to obey the rules and regulations implemented by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) with regard to Hours of Service (HOS), inspection, repair, maintenance, transportation of hazardous materials, proper and secured loads, as well as abiding by traffic laws.\n15-passenger vans are a popular choice among churches, schools, and other groups who need to transport more people than the average car, truck, or SUV will hold. However, most states, including Rhode Island, do not require a chauffeur’s license or CDL to operate a 15-passenger van. These vans have particular safety concerns, especially in relation to rollover accidents, that typical passenger vehicles don’t pose, particularly when the van is fully loaded with passengers or cargo.\nSimilar to 15-passenger vans, vans are particularly prone to rollover accidents, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA). A van’s rollover risk increases as it is loaded with people and cargo, especially if any part of the load extends to or over the back axle. As the weight in the van increases, the van’s center of gravity shifts upward and to the back. This makes it far more likely to roll over at lower speeds and with less side-to-side movement than would be required to roll an ordinary passenger vehicle. Also like 15-passenger vans, drivers of vans are not required to have a CDL.\nIn addition to being required to have a CDL, bus drivers must also obtain a “P” endorsement on their CDL for which they must pass “Knowledge and Skills Tests.”\nWhile bus accidents occur less frequently than crashes involving small passenger cars, the injuries they cause to occupants of the buses and to others on the road can be devastating. Based on data provided by the FMCSA, in 2009, there were 9,000 bus crashes, causing injuries to 20,000 people. There were 221 fatal bus crashes, in which 254 people were killed.\nIn addition to being required to have a CDL, school bus drivers must also retain an “S” endorsement on their CDL for which they must pass “Knowledge and Skills Tests.”\nThe most severe school bus accident injuries often occur due to a lack of seat belts. The Governors Highway Safety Association (GHSA) reports that five states (California, Florida, Louisiana, New Jersey and New York) require that school buses provide seat belts, and that Texas requires all school buses purchased after September 2010 to have seat belts.\nRhode Island state law requires that a person who wishes to drive and operate a taxi must acquire either a valid chauffeur’s license or a valid Commercial Driver’s License (CDL) issued by the Division of Motor Vehicles (DMV), or an equivalent license issued by another state and acknowledged by the Rhode Island DMV.\nIn many taxi accidents, passengers suffer serious injury coming into contact with taxi windows. Although taxis have seat belts, a false sense of security sometimes leads passengers to feel that they don’t need to use them. Nevertheless, taxi drivers are required to drive safely and not put passengers in harm’s way by causing an accident.\nCall our Commercial Vehicle Accident Lawyer\nBeing injured in a commercial vehicle accident is not only physically painful, but often presents several unique legal hurdles with regard to determining the identity of negligent parties and proving fault. In some instances, the commercial vehicle driver, the owner of the commercial vehicle, and the company that employs the commercial vehicle driver may all be responsible for causing an accident that results in injury and/or death. At Marasco & Nesselbush, we have the legal resources and experience to help accident victims hold negligent parties liable and obtain rightful compensation. For years, we have been conducting thorough investigations, gathering effective evidence, and building successful cases on behalf of our clients. To learn more about how we can help, please fill out a contact form or call us at one of our local offices.\nwith an Experienced Attorney\nPractice Area*\nHow can we help you?Social SecurityCar AccidentMedical MalpracticePersonal InjuryOther\nHard work, honesty, intelligence and integrity are the hallmarks of our law firm. At Marasco & Nesselbush, our unwavering commitment is to quality legal work, attention to detail and extraordinary results.\nRead More About Our Firm\nMarasco & Nesselbush\nRead Our Google+ Reviews\nRead Our Yelp Reviews\nBicycle Accident Attorneys\nBoat Accident Attorneys\nTruck Accident Attorneys\nMotorcycle Accident Attorneys\nSocial Security Disability Attorneys\nSerious Injury Attorneys\nWorkers Compensation Attorneys\nProduct Liability Attorneys\nPremises Liability Attorneys\nVisit Our Wakefield Office Visit Our Woonsocket Office Visit Our Warwick Office Visit Our Providence Office\n© 2018 Marasco & Nesselbush · All Rights Reserved.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1040364"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7237812280654907,"wiki_prob":0.7237812280654907,"text":"Oneohtrix Point Never shares “Black Snow” video from new album “Age Of”\n“Black Snow” is the first single taken from Oneohtrix Point Never‘s upcoming album “Age Of,” to be released on June 1 on WARP. Daniel Lopatin aka Oneohtrix Point Never re…\nLet Yllis brings you on his experimental “Parade”\nSergei Wicking 11 May 2016\nheck on the latest experience of Singaporean artist Yllis! “Parade” is an electro-pop kaleidoscope of a song and is as varied as it is random. It is a psychological and trippy experience a…\nAnohni – Drone Bomb Me (Video)\nMatias Calderon 9 March 2016\nfter declining to go the Oscars for her nomination, Anohni is coming back with music after the release of her track “4 Degrees“. Listen here to “Drone Bomb Me”, another collabo…\nAnohni (former Antony) – 4 Degrees\nMatias Calderon 1 December 2015\normerly known as Antony Hegarty, Anohni shared the first track of her upcoming new album “Hopelessness” due to be released during the spring of 2016. The first song revealed is called R…","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1366947"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6140486001968384,"wiki_prob":0.3859513998031616,"text":"Park Jun-young | pjy970108@uos.ac.kr\nMost people have probably seen American college life in TV dramas or movies. It looks like a dream. Campus has a free, bright atmosphere, a fresh lawn, and wonderful, classical buildings. People have probably dreamed of living that life at least once, but many people may not have even tried to go to a U.S. college for many reasons. However, students from the University of Seoul (UOS) can enjoy this life more easily through our exchange programs. Here is an American university that you might consider: The University of Iowa.\n▲ Homecoming Parade\nThe University of Iowa is located in Iowa City, Iowa, the United States. It is in the Midwest of the United States and close to Chicago, Illinois. It was founded in 1847 and is the oldest public university in Iowa. It is also the second largest university in the state. Among American universities, the University of Iowa was the first public university to open as coeducational, and it was the first university to officially recognize an LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender) student organization. In addition, it was the first university to use television in education, in 1932, and it has the largest library in the state, with four different specialized libraries. This university has few exchange students, but there are many Asians, especially Chinese. That is because there are many students studying abroad. However, about 90 percent of students are white.\n1. Application to the University of Iowa\nStudents can apply to enter the University of Iowa if they have higher than 80 points on the TOEFL Internet-based Test (TOEFL IBT) and higher than 17 points on a TOEFL Subscore. The cost is 5 million KRW per semester, including dormitory and meal tickets for five meals per week. If you only want to use the dormitory, but no meals, it is 4 million KRW per semester. Other costs amount to about 400,000 KRW a month.\n2. Introduction to scholarship\nThe UOS Times featured an article about the International Student Exchange Program (ISEP) in the last issue. In addition to the support provided by UOS for exchange students, there are other programs providing assistance for costs. One of these is the Mirae Asset Scholarship. This Scholarship aims to provide more opportunities for Korean students to participate in exchange programs, helping them to find wider academic and cultural experience. The conditions of applying for this scholarship include a grade point average (GPA) higher than 3.3, and less than eight income quintiles . There are about 300 students who receive scholarships every semester. There are no restrictions on universities, countries, or majors. The scholarship provides 7 million KRW for students going to the Americas, Europe and other regions, and 5 million KRW for students going to Asian regions.\n▲ On Iowa event for transfer student and fresh men\n3. School life\nStudents at the University of Iowa are generally individualistic. Unlike Korea, there are no club rooms, and there are no official after-parties. These cultural differences provide some benefits, but also some challenges, for Korean students. Seo Jae-won (Dept. of Mechanical and Information Engineering, ’14) majored in liberal arts. He provided some examples of these experiences. Recalling one experience, Seo said there was a team project in his major class, in which students designed cars given by a company.\n“I was able to accumulate practical experience while doing this team project,” Seo said. Seo later took an acting class, but his experience was more challenging. In one assignment, he had to watch two English plays and report on them, which he found quite difficult.\nAs for campus living, the dorms at the University of Iowa are isolated from the campus, and students can choose between single rooms that live without roommates and double rooms that live with roommates . Double rooms are cheaper than single because students share a living room and kitchen with roommates\n4. Life off Campus\nA college town surrounds the University of Iowa, and the area just beyond is an agricultural region, with many cornfields. There are restaurants, bars, grocery stores, and Korean stores in the campus town where students enjoy their free time. Farther afield, it takes four hours by bus from the university to Chicago, with many famous sites such as Willis Tower, Millennium Park, Navy Pier, and Cloud Gate. Students often go to Chicago for sightseeing on weekends.\n▲ Iowa river\nSeo recommended going to the University of Iowa in the fall semester. If you start in the fall semester, you can finish the semester before the cold winter starts. The state of Iowa has very cold weather that easily falls below minus 20 to 30 degrees Celsius in the winter, and it would be better to avoid it. He also said it is good for men to bring clothes from Korea because there are not many good places to buy men’s clothes, except training suits and hoodies. In addition, the Internet speed is rather slow, and Long-Term Evolution (LTE) does not work well in most buildings. He recommended the telecommunications company AT&T rather than T-Mobile.\nAlso, Seo strongly recommended joining OASIS, the club for foreign students. He said he had good opportunities to make friends in OASIS. For those who are religious, Seo recommends attending a local church. “Church people are very kind, so it is easy to make good friends,” he said. Finally, Seo said the most important thing is to take an active attitude toward meeting people. It is necessary to search for clubs or meetings for foreign students through the university homepage actively. When you make friends, you should do good things such as celebrating birthdays or giving consolation.\nThe UOS Times hopes that if you choose the University of Iowa for your exchange experience, this advice will help you to have a wonderful school life.\nPark Jun-young\npjy970108@uos.ac.kr\nChoi Hyun-jung\nguswjd5891@uos.ac.kr","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line273220"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.682252824306488,"wiki_prob":0.682252824306488,"text":"← Downtown Los Angeles, 1950: ‘The Underworld Story’ Part 2\nMovieland Mystery Photo (Updated + + + +) →\nMary Mallory / Hollywood Heights: There Is a Lake in Toluca Lake\nPosted on June 24, 2019\tby lmharnisch\nPhoto: Janet Blair sits on the little platform off the banks of the Lakeside Golf Club. Courtesy of Mary Mallory\nNote: This is an encore post from 2013.\nSurrounded by homes and the Lakeside Golf Club, Toluca Lake is all but obscured from view by the public. Like the movie stars that soon flocked to it, the attractive little lake helped sell the community that grew up around it.\nThis area of the San Fernando Valley originally fell under the auspices of the San Fernando Mission before being broken into segments and sold off in chunks to Southern California businessmen like Isaac Van Nuys and J. B.Lankershim, among others. Gen. Charles Forman bought up ranchland just north of the Cahuenga Pass, growing Bartlett pears, walnuts, citrus and other fruit. He suggested the name Toluca for the post office erected in 1893 across from the Chandler railroad depot in North Hollywood, also known as Lankershim.\nReal estate developers Heffron, McCray, and St. John purchased 151 acres of the former Forman ranch just north of the Los Angeles River in 1924 to open a real estate tract called Toluca Lake Park, so named because of the eight-acre lake constructed in the middle of the property as an attractive selling feature.\nEmploying the overexaggerated prose of the day, the development’s first Los Angeles Times ad on Feb. 3, 1924, claimed that “Toluca Lake Park offers irresistibly all the alluring charms of Nature. Great oak trees, full bearing fruit trees, shrubbery, a picturesque park, a sparkling lake, an unchallenged breadth of view of surrounding mountain grandeur and stretches beyond.…”\nThe chief attraction for the area was the manmade lake, supplied by fresh water from the 27 natural springs situated at its bottom, which residents employed for boating, fishing and other recreation.\nNearby studios flocked to the lake for filming boat scenes. Actress Virginia Valli filmed a scene tipping over a canoe here in May 1924 for the Universal film “K – The Unknown.” The July 6, 1924, Times reported on an unidentified film shooting smuggling scenes on the lake, “The scene, depicting a rum-running fleet twelve miles out at sea, shows miniature oceangoing liners anchored on the center of the lake while small speed boats dash back and forth with their party of passengers.”\nResidents who bought lots adjoining the lake would gain exclusive right to use of the lake up to 155 feet from the shore. The real estate promoters claimed that they would construct a park for residents on the west end of the lake where huge eucalyptus would provide an inviting canopy for picnicking or other pursuits. A nearby walnut grove would provide peaceful vistas. Eventually the trees would be cut down to make room for more homes.\nA consortium of Hollywood businessmen, including comedy filmmaker Charles Christie, spent $400,000 buying 125 acres south of the lake on April 12, 1924, to construct the Lakeside Golf Club in 1925. The swanky club, a constant celebrity draw for decades, consisted of a modern Spanish hacienda with handmade tile and terraces offering attractive views of the lake, along with 18 holes of golf hugging the lakeside.\nToluca Lake Park immediately attracted film stars, thanks to its location only blocks from both Warner Bros. and Universal Studios, and just a short drive over the Cahuenga Pass to Hollywood studios. Matinee idols like Billie Dove, Mary Astor, Lupino Lane, and Charles Farrell built homes. Farrell constructed an elegant Norman estate along the lake in 1928. He introduced swans to the water and began canoeing along the banks. Richard Arlen and Jobyna Ralston soon built at 10025 Toluca Lake Ave. According to an interview in the newspaper, Arlen and Ralston bought and paid for their lot, before getting married and building their $8,000 Spanish house. The cinema colony also included Walter Huston, W. C. Fields, Frank McHugh, Dick Powell, Jack Oakie, Lyle Talbot, Belle Bennett, Herman Mankiewicz, and George Brent.\nActress Eva Tanguay built a home at 9936 Toluca Lake Ave., before auctioning off the home and furnishings in February 1930 after discovering that the man she married in 1927, Allen Parado, her accompanist at the time, was in fact only his alias. His real name was Chandos Ksiazkiewcisz. In 1933, Boris Karloff bought the residence.\nIn 1937, director Norman McLeod constructed a $25,000 home at 10010 Toluca Lake Ave. African American architect Paul Williams designed a home costing $40,000 for director Irving Bacon on the opposite side of Toluca Lake Avenue that same year, which actors Jennie Garth and Peter Facinelli owned before selling earlier this year.\nAviatrix Amelia Earhart and her husband, George Putnam, constructed a home on Valley Spring Lane in 1935 to be near the Burbank Lockheed facility. After her disappearance, Putnam remained here for a time.\nToluca Lake continued growing beyond the boundaries of the small development toward both North Hollywood and Burbank, soon reaching Riverside Drive by the late 1920s. Within decades, however, the little lake disappeared from public view, save for occasional glimpses through the Golf Club gates or beyond private fences.\nThis entry was posted in Architecture, Hollywood, Hollywood Heights, Mary Mallory, San Fernando Valley and tagged #valley, film, hollywood, Mary Mallory, movies, Toluca Lake. Bookmark the permalink.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1474664"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6944687366485596,"wiki_prob":0.30553126335144043,"text":"Grey's Anatomy Season 13 Episode 12\nNone of Your Business\nGrey's Anatomy Season 13 Episode 12 (None of Your Business) - You can watch Grey's Anatomy Season 13 Episode 12 online here at putlocker-hd.is. Tv Show Grey's Anatomy s13e12 (None of Your Business). Grey's Anatomy episodes can be found on our website including the new Grey's Anatomy episodes. Grey's Anatomy 13x12 (None of Your Business) online streaming. Watch Grey's Anatomy Online. You'll be able to watch and stream tv Grey's Anatomy with us here at putlocker-hd.is anytime without any restrictions or limitations. Just remember Grey's Anatomy videos are available at our site putlocker-hd.is.\nMaggie gets a surprise visit from her mother at the hospital. Bailey has to make a difficult decision when one of the attendings refuses to work with Eliza, and Stephanie gets caught up in Owen and Amelia’s personal drama.\nRing of Fire May. 18, 2017\nTrue Colors May. 11, 2017\nLeave It Inside May. 04, 2017\nDon't Stop Me Now Apr. 27, 2017\nIn the Air Tonight Apr. 13, 2017\nWhat's Inside Apr. 06, 2017\nBe Still, My Soul Mar. 30, 2017\nTill I Hear It From You Mar. 23, 2017\nWho Is He (And What Is He To You)? Mar. 16, 2017\nCivil War Mar. 09, 2017\nBack Where You Belong Feb. 23, 2017\nIt Only Gets Much Worse Feb. 16, 2017\nNone of Your Business Feb. 09, 2017\nJukebox Hero Feb. 02, 2017\nYou Can Look (But You'd Better Not Touch) Jan. 26, 2017\nYou Haven't Done Nothin' Nov. 17, 2016\nThe Room Where It Happens Nov. 10, 2016\nWhy Try to Change Me Now Nov. 03, 2016\nRoar Oct. 27, 2016\nBoth Sides Now Oct. 20, 2016\nFalling Slowly Oct. 13, 2016\nI Ain't No Miracle Worker Oct. 06, 2016\nCatastrophe and the Cure Sep. 29, 2016\nUndo Sep. 22, 2016","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line930148"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5981423258781433,"wiki_prob":0.5981423258781433,"text":"The talking – about the gas-fired power station at Deli-mara and the storage of gas required to feed it – is far from over. It will probably never be over. Those who oppose the siting of the project will continue to do so for years, though now they say they welcome the fact that it will lead to cheaper tariffs. But note has to be taken that Mepa on Monday issued the basic approval required for the project to get going.\nThe hardest part is yet to come. Presumably the commercial operators are in advanced discussions with the banks that, together with them, will be financing the project. Such negotiations would have been dependent on the Mepa permit being issued.\nThat has now happened. Presumably the road is clear for the necessary physical works to be taken in hand soon. That will have to be done in the context of the Prime Minister’s commitment to see the project ready within 18 months of the start of the works.\nIt will be a race against time. It is not important that the race will be won within the established timeline because that is a challenge by the Prime Minister. He did not lay down the challenge as a matter of vain glory. It is important that the new gas-fired power station comes on stream because that is how the necessary cost savings to sustain lower domestic tariffs will come about.\nFollowing that, in a year’s time, tariffs should also come down for industrial users. Again, that is not important because it is a government promise. It is essential because it will help to increase competitiveness. That is a process that has to continue unbroken. Producers have to take their own steps to achieve it, together with their workforce and deploying production techniques which incorporate the latest technological innovation, to raise productivity also by lowering costs.\nReduced energy tariffs would be an important input towards that objective. It is not improbable that producers are already incorporating the proposed tariff cut into their cost projections from 2015/2016 onwards. They have expressed agreement that the reduction will be a welcome necessary boost at the margin.\nThe Opposition ... staked a lot on making the government change its power development plan by locating storage outiside Marsaxlokk Harbour, thus making the project cost much more than forecast and delaying it\nIn a broader context it is now important that nothing is done to delay progress on the project. That may prove to be too tall an order for the Opposition. It has staked a lot on making the government change its power development plan by locating storage outside Marsaxlokk Harbour, thus making the project cost much more than forecast and delaying it. It is unlikely that the Opposition will now admit defeat. Unfortunately, its history suggests that, along with genuine concern regarding safety factors, it will remain all out to delay, even break up, the project.\nAir Malta is grim evidence of that. When another Labour government proposed to set up a national airline the Nationalist Opposition of the time let all hell loose. Its scaremongering and the crude language used to try to frighten potential passengers remains disgusting to this day.\nYet, because the government had the courage to forge ahead while taking all possible safety measures, Air Malta has been a success story. Despite continuing criticism of it, it established itself and was profitable for a long time. Thanks for that goes mostly to Albert Mizzi, Joe Tabone and Louis Grech.\nThe Nationalists never apologised for the base way they had reacted towards the airline in its early years. There are other examples. Unfortunately the Opposition of the day always opposes. Nationalist Oppositions have a habit of doing so more and more fiercely.\nThat has already been seen in the first year of the life of the current Labour government. Criticism addressed at everything that moves in government camp has been so vicious that some government members are tacitly shying away from it. Leading Nationalists, like former minister Michael Falzon who is now retired from politics and wields a pen all the more mighty because it is free and unencumbered (though he surely retains his original political beliefs) came out with a blitzkrieg on Sunday.\nWhatever the Opposition does, the project managers have to forge ahead. They have to take into account that so much scaremongering could affect individuals who do not know better, pushing them towards some sabotage attempt. The keenest security measures are essential.\nMeanwhile, the story of the gas-fired power station project will unfold day by day.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line788351"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6165752410888672,"wiki_prob":0.6165752410888672,"text":"Memory of Centreville boy Jacob Stern lives on through toy drive in support of Salvation Army\nPublished: Nov 20, 2018 at 3:15 p.m.\nJacob Stern’s sister, Maddie Stern, and his mom, Melissa Benjamin, with a shopping cart loaded with toys donated last year as part of a toy drive held in Jacob’s memory. - File photo\nNEW MINAS, NS - The memory of a Centreville boy who touched the hearts of countless people through his brave battle against cancer is being honoured again this year with a toy drive named after him.\nFour-year-old Jacob Stern passed away in October 2016 after a courageous fight against a rare form of muscle cancer, rhabdomyosarcoma. He was only 15 months old when he was diagnosed.\nJudy Benjamin, Jacob’s grandmother, said he was a “real trooper” considering everything that he went through. The family now holds an annual toy drive to give back to the community that helped them so much during his ordeal. They want to help ensure that children from less fortunate families have smiles on their faces on Christmas morning.\nThis year’s toy drive takes place at Walmart in New Minas on Dec. 1 from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Drop off locations include 415 Stead St., Kentville; RE/MAX Advantage, 17 Webster Ct., Kentville, and Forbes Kia, 5488 Prospect Rd., New Minas.\nJacob Stern’s mom Melissa Benjamin, centre, with volunteers helping out with a toy drive held last year in his memory. The volunteers included several members of the Valley Chapter of Pirate Off-Road Nation.\nTOYS DONATED IN JACOB’S MEMORY TO PUT SMILES ON FACES OF VALLEY CHILDREN IN NEED\nCENTREVILLE BOY BATTLING RARE CANCER MADE HONORARY FIREFIGHTER, GIVEN PARADE\nGIFT OF TIME NEEDED TO MAKE KENTVILLE SALVATION ARMY CHRISTMAS KETTLE CAMPAIGN A SUCCESS\nBenjamin said Jacob would have loved the toy drive and he would have loved knowing that, because of him, there will be many more boys and girls with gifts under the tree to unwrap. After all, he loved Christmas and the various toys and gifts that he received from so many different people.\n“I think he would have been ecstatic,” Benjamin said. “I’m positive that he’s going to be with us that day.”\nAll proceeds go toward supporting the Salvation Army in its effort to provide toys to kids in need at Christmas time. The Salvation Army and other area churches work together toward this goal, last year providing gifts to 621 children.\nBenjamin said the toy drive is a way for them to pay forward the support the Salvation Army provided to Melissa Benjamin, Jacob’s mom, while Jacob was battling cancer.\nBenjamin said people can support the toy drive by purchasing toys and dropping them off or by making cash donations. She said they’ve already raised about $780 through the sale of prize calendars and they’ll be selling 50-50 tickets on the day of the toy drive with the draw being held at the end.\nThe annual Jacob Stern Memorial Toy Drive is coming up at Walmart in New Minas on Dec. 1.\nMore Community stories\n‘Paddle your own journey’\nPublished Jul 03, 2019 at 3:43 p.m.\nApple Capital Drive delights at Berwick’s Grand View Manor\nPublished Jul 11, 2019 at 12:53 p.m.\nHot time in Middleton - Heart of the Valley Festival July 19-20 promises to be great community get-together\n‘It’s been my dream to help the environment’\n91-year-old shares childhood memories of living in Bug Lighthouse at entrance to Yarmouth Harbour\nKentville to host first KingCon games event","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1393776"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.549837052822113,"wiki_prob":0.549837052822113,"text":"„In fairy tales, the princesses kiss the frogs, and the frogs become princes. In real life, the pricesses kiss princes, and the princes turn into frogs.“\nPaulo Coelho389\n„An amphibophile is the sort of girl who goes around kissing princes in the hope that one of them will turn into a frog.“\n— Michael Kurland American writer 1938\nChapter 10 (p. 137)\n„Not a frog, I hope?” he asked…She shook her head. “No. And if it was I wouldn’t kiss it, I promise you. I might kiss a prince if I could be sure he’d turn into a frog, but not the other way around.“\n— Eva Ibbotson, A Song for Summer\n„You don't always have to kiss a lot of frogs to recognize a prince when you find one\n-Henrietta Barett“\n— Julia Quinn, Minx\n„no more pep talks about believing in toads,\" Liza said.\n\"Don't they turn into princeses when you kiss them?\" Bonnie said.\n\"Thats frogs,\" Liza Said. \"Entirely different species.“\n— Jennifer Crusie, Bet Me\n„(on Ashley Tisdale) \"You don't need a prince to be a princess.\"“\n— Zayn Malik British singer 1993\n„(on \"Someday My Prince Will Come\" the Ashley Tisdale pop song) \"Just because your prince hasn't come doesn't mean you're not a princess.\"“\n„We have tried occasionally to buy toads at bargain prices with results that have been chronicled in past reports. Clearly our kisses fell flat. We have done well with a couple of princes — but they were princes when purchased. At least our kisses didn’t turn them into toads. And, finally, we have occasionally been quite successful in purchasing fractional interests in easily-identifiable princes at toad-like prices.“\n— Warren Buffett American business magnate, investor, and philanthropist 1930\n1981 Chairman's Letter http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/1981.html\n„Don't you know that I'm not joking?\nAah, you think you won't, I think you will.\nDon't you know that this tongue can kill?\nC'mon, c'mon, c'mon, c'mon, c'mon, c'mon.\nLady kiss that frog.“\n— Peter Gabriel English singer-songwriter, record producer and humanitarian 1950\nKiss That Frog\n„Prince or commoner, tenor or bass,\nPainter or plumber or never-do-well,\nDo me a favor and shut your face -\nPoets alone should kiss and tell.“\n— Dorothy Parker, The Collected Dorothy Parker\n„One day you may kiss a man you can’t breathe without, and find breath is of little consequence.”\n“Right, and one day my prince might come.”\n“I doubt he’ll be a prince, Ms. Lane. Men rarely are.“\n— Karen Marie Moning, Bloodfever\n„Three days later the little princess was buried, and Prince Andrei went up the steps to where the coffin stood, to give her the farewell kiss. And there in the coffin was the same face, though with closed eyes. \"Ah, what have you done to me?\" it still seemed to say, and Prince Andrei felt that something gave way in his soul and that he was guilty of a sin he could neither remedy nor forget.“\n— Leo Tolstoy Russian writer 1828 - 1910\nBk. IV, ch. 9\n„Life invented it first, Zoe thought, like so many other things. Like eyes: Turning photon impacts into neurochemical events with such subtlety that a frog can target a fly and a man can admire a rose.“\n— Robert Charles Wilson author 1953\n„Life isn’t a fairy tale; the knight who kills the dragon doesn’t necessarily get the princess. So what? Who’d want to live in a cosmos less rich and various than the real one?“\n— Poul Anderson American science fiction and fantasy writer 1926 - 2001\nSection 3 “Admiralty”, Chapter X (p. 207)\n„Like all fairy tales, the story of Sleeping Beauty begins with \"Once upon a time,\" and continues with a foolish young princess who makes a witch very angry, and then takes a nap until her boyfriend wakes her up with a kiss and insists on getting married, at which point the story ends with the phrase \"happily ever after.\"“\n— Daniel Handler American novelist, children's writer, creator of Lemony Snicket 1970\nLemony Snicket\n„He had risked his life and now it was walking away from him, hand-in-hand with a Ruffian prince.“\n— William Goldman, The Princess Bride\n„It's not about winning, Haven. I'm not a prize to be won. I'm not the princess that needs rescuing from the dragon. I'm the prince and I kill my own monsters. You need to be ok with that. -Anita Blake“\n— Laurell K. Hamilton, Bullet","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line2353"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5198875069618225,"wiki_prob":0.4801124930381775,"text":"What’s the Matter with the Kansas Supreme Court? (Part 1)\nOn Friday, in Hodes & Nauser v. Schmidt, a 6-1 majority of the Kansas Supreme Court struck down S.B. 95, a law that prohibits the use of dilation and evacuation (D & E) abortions except where necessary to preserve the mother’s life or to prevent a “substantial and irreversible physical impairment of a major bodily function of the pregnant woman.”\nD & E abortions entail dismemberment of a fetus. They are a common form of abortion during the second trimester and later. Partial-birth abortion is a variation on this procedure, and the federal prohibition on it was upheld by the Supreme Court in Gonzales v. Carhart (2007), in a decision written by Justice Anthony Kennedy.\nIn this case, the court grounded its decision in the Kansas Constitution rather than the U.S. Constitution, so no ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court reaching a different conclusion under the Fourteenth Amendment would limit the new abortion regime in Kansas.\nDoes the Kansas Constitution have any more to say about abortion than the U.S. Constitution? The Hodes & Nauser majority notes that Section 1 of the Kansas Bill of Rights’ declaration that “All men are possessed of equal and inalienable natural rights” contains a phrase not found in the U.S. Constitution: “inalienable natural rights.” In other words, no.\nBut that was enough to convince the court it was on to something. Its 118-page per curiam (unsigned) judicial opinion meandered from the historical and “philosophical underpinnings of natural rights” to an exploration of bodily integrity to how “liberty and the pursuit of happiness” must include “decisions about parenting and procreation” to how natural rights extend to women in general and pregnant women in particular, before straining to downplay the one aspect of Kansas legal history that actually addresses abortion: Kansas’ longstanding statutes, dating back to the earliest years of statehood, that prohibited the practice.\nThe reality is that during the 19th century, abortion had been substantially proscribed under the common law, and at the time the Kansas Bill of Rights was adopted in 1859, the growing trend in that and other states was to strengthen criminal statutory abortion prohibitions. Those laws went much farther in restricting abortion than S.B. 95. The question presented to the court is not what policy should be, but what the law actually says. There can be no doubt as to what the drafters of Kansas’ constitution would have thought of extending their broad language about natural rights to include a right to conduct dismemberment abortions.\nYet the majority lacked enough self-awareness to invoke authorities from Locke to Lincoln as if they somehow supported their conclusion while dismissing the explicit historical evidence against them as “tethered to prejudices from two centuries ago.” “In this imagined world,” retorted Justice Caleb Stegall, the court’s lone dissenter, “the Liberty Bell rings every time a baby in utero loses her arm.\nThe outcome-seeking nature of the court’s flimsy analysis is transparent, and its attempt to invoke history is an embarrassment. One member of the majority even penned a concurrence that distanced himself from what he called the “historical back-and-forth” between the majority and the dissent, preferring the supposed clarity of admitted living constitutionalism. (Well, he sort of admitted it, preferring to use the euphemism “contemporary context.”) That only one justice on that seven-member tribunal had the good sense to dissent from this jurisprudential travesty should be a red flag for any observer of American courts.\nWhat’s the matter with the Kansas Supreme Court? The answer is to be found beyond the content of the court’s opinion. To understand the problem requires understanding the system of judicial selection that prevails in that and regrettably many other states. More on that in part 2.\nClick HERE to View Online\nFiled Under: In The News, JCN Bench Memo Tagged With: abortion, Carrie, Carrie Severino, JCN, Judicial Crisis Network, religious liberty","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1511078"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6547499299049377,"wiki_prob":0.34525007009506226,"text":"The 12th Man: How on earth has it come down to this?\nDarron Gibson in action against Hull\nLatics fans\nWhere do we go from here? It depends on your point of view and general leaning in life I suppose.\nBut if you’re looking to me for words of wisdom then look elsewhere (nothing new there!) as I simply don’t know. I have continued to put my weight behind Paul Cook when others have faltered, but maybe all the BMWing from elsewhere (bitching, moaning and whining) has been justified. Maybe some of the great visionaries among our fans have seen this coming, their direct criticisms of Mr Cook have been absolutely spot on, and now the League One chickens are coming home to roost. In terms of outcomes, there now looks likely to only be two. Firstly, we continue to match or better Rotherham’s results, or collect a few more points than say QPR or Millwall and finish above someone else – unlikely given our points run rate. Essentially, we ‘do enough’ to stay up and the naysayers can move on to their stock argument of ‘well, it was only because there were three teams worse than us’ (generally this supposedly incisive analysis is factually true about any relegation-based scenario). Those of us daft, remaining happy-clappers can say ‘well, the aim in August was to stop up and we’ve achieved it’. Again, technically true, but there can’t be another club in the country with worse away form than us. The more the weeks go by, the more it seems barely staying up maybe the most likely outcome and, although I’m sure we would celebrate if that happened. Well, effectively, we’re celebrating nine months of pure dismal mediocrity interjected with the odd great performance. Of course, the other outcome is we drop into the bottom three we have avoided all season and stay there. It could even be we only spend one day in the bottom three and that day is May 5 – the only day which matters. The culmination of all those continual gripes at the manager will be justified by those people who have expended considerable effort criticising Cook, whereas those who have (mostly) stuck by him, like myself, end up looking like a right wally. Well, anyway, it wouldn’t be the first time and I’m not changing horses now. Furthermore, perhaps implying we could avoid the bottom three before the last day is hopelessly optimistic given the opposition in our next two or three games, which is why so many have been fretting over our inability to pick up more points again Hull, Bristol City and Brentford. In both home and away games, we have been quite consistent in a way. At home, we usually seem to match our opponents without necessarily putting them to the sword, the awful Bolton excepted. Whereas away, well I’d go further than just say we have an away-day phobia. It seems to be we aren’t necessarily afraid of scoring and (attempting to try) to win away from home. The panic actually seems to take over, once we have taken the lead – as if they know collectively what’s coming. It is a managerial problem we cannot figure out the art of holding onto a lead, but it now seems to have reached fever-pitch psychological levels, and I don’t know the answer apart from perhaps (here comes the brickbats again) re-grouping in League One and learning how to win away again. In this respect, if League One is our destiny, well to quote that awful Catherine Tate character – ‘Am I bothered?’ Yes and no. Or rather no and yes. No, because a football club is about so much more than which division you are in. I have been so tied up organising the Joseph’s Goal ‘Walk to Leeds’ next week and trying to get a fanzine off to the printers that I have barely had time to sit there ruminating over the lacklustre performances of Wigan Athletic. However, indirectly, Wigan Athletic is still consuming nearly every minute of my spare time, but in a more productive way than the stuff I can’t control, like the results on the pitch. I mean we’ll all still be here next season right? Regardless of which division we are in, so why get so upset about it? I think it will now come down to the last three games and, if the players and manager can approach them like the FA Cup ties of last year, maybe all the indifference that has gone before will be forgotten. If we fail to stay up, I fully expect Paul Cook to walk. But as I said in my last robust defence of him a while back, maybe that was the plan all along, seeing as our form and approach to games turned dramatically downwards soon after the new owners came in. All we are left with is speculation as to what has gone wrong and how we fix it but, as I say, whatever the outcome, we’ll still have a club to support next season, and that’s the bit that matters, right?\nMARTIN TARBUCK\nWhen Paul Cook did his coaching badges, he clearly missed the ‘how to see out a game’ day. The number of points Latics have thrown away from winning positions this season is just incredible. The defence has been suspect all season, so why not bring back a goalkeeper who has looked like a shadow of the player he was last year? If teams were much better than us all over the pitch, I’d accept we’re not good enough and move on – but I don’t think they are. We hand goals to them like it’s part of the game-plan. If we had a game-plan, that is, which we almost certainly don’t. The game at Hull certainly wasn’t helped by losing Nick Powell at half-time. But then Cook settled into his usual tactic of talking off any attacking threat we might have, and handing control over to the opposing team. Hull’s winning goal came because they, like every other team, know we offer nothing going forward once Leon Clarke is wandering about up front. This time Clarke went one better, and was wandering about in his own box when Jordy de Wijs came strolling past him to win the header and score. Cook is blaming individual errors for costing us games, and he is right, but only up to a point. Eventually, he – or someone – is going to have to look at his own errors. Errors in team selection which left us in this position in the first place once we reached September, and errors in having no way to control a game for longer than 50 minutes. We could be four up at half-time, and we’d all still be expecting to walk away with no more than a point. That’s how bad we are. Ẁe have a defence that is too slow and lacks any kind of organiser and leader. We have a midfield that collectively think going forward is for other people, and we have a centre forward on loan who must be laughing every time he’s told to go on. A point at Hull might well have seen us safe. It would have left Rotherham needing to win two more games than us, due to their inferior goal difference. As it is, our persistent failure to play for 90 minutes leaves them just one win from going above us. This situation can’t go on. In fact I’ll say it, we were better under Owen Coyle than under Paul Cook. Not under Warren Joyce, but the end result might well be the same. Cook seems to have no idea how to fix things, and seems utterly unable to look at himself and where he’s going wrong. Roll on May 6 , whichever league we end up in, and let’s just get this nightmare over.\nPAUL MIDDLETON\nIt isn’t losing against Hull that’s the problem, it’s the manner of it. Latics have given away a startling number of points from winning positions away from home this season, 19 at the last count. The fact we haven’t won away from home since August tells its own story. Both mentally and physically, we’re shattered. It isn’t we can’t score away from home, or indeed get a lead it’s that we can’t hold on to it. As the clock ticked down on Wednesday night at Hull, it looked like another decent point for Latics against a side battling for a play-off place. To concede as we did – like we did against Reading, Derby, Villa and countless other sides – was unacceptable. Our game management is absolutely non-existent, and that sees us in this position. Individual errors have been present all season but, over the last few weeks, they’ve increased tenfold. Paul Cook looked like a broken man at Hull. There’ll be inquests galore post-season as to the manager’s future but, with five matches left, this must be the toughest test of his career. Can he live up to that and, in return, can his players? Injuries have once again reared their head, and it’s going to be a patched-up Latics side trying to get over the finishing line. Injuries have haunted us all season, but we’ve still had plenty of opportunities to get out of this mess – and for one reason or another have failed to take them. With five matches left to go, and only two points separating ourselves and the relegation zone, thoughts turn to just what we need to escape this mess. Two wins? Two wins and a draw? That may just be enough to see us over the line – but where exactly do those results come from? If we match or better Rotherham’s results over the coming weeks, we’ll stay up. It’s as simple as that. The worrying thing is Rotherham have shown a lot more heart and fight than we have this season. They may have lost in midweek like we did, but they have momentum. Sunday has become a huge match, one that no-one will expect us to win. The only two positives I can think of are Norwich may well be showing a bit of nerves as they edge to the finish line.\nEqually our home record has been fantastic, in stark contrast to that horrific away form. Time is running out, but amazingly it is still in our hands. There needs to be some honest words and some fresh thinking on the training ground this week. Something needs to change, so let’s start it Sunday with a performance like we had against Bolton. Paul Cook is a fighter, and I want to see that fight in his side. Starting on Sunday. Come on Latics. It isn’t over till it’s over.\nSEAN LIVESEY\nAs I sit here on my sofa watching the closing stages of Manchester United-Barcelona, a couple of things spring to mind. One is that even the best players can have off days, and the other is that when we see the world’s top players playing week in and week out, we often expect all footballers should be able to do the same sort of things that they do. I hear this latter sentiment at the DW Stadium, when fans question why players did that with the ball, rather than something more effective. It never seems to enter their minds that it may well just have been a poor pass rather than a conscious decision. Or they were just doing what they are capable of doing rather than attempting what Lionel Messi is capable of. On the former point, it is certainly true that when we Latics players have an off day, we are in trouble! Yet when it comes to Latics away games it doesn’t seem to matter how we play. We just cannot win. Saturday apparently was a very good performance. Yet having been in the a winning position, we ended up losing, until a late goal salvaged a point at Bristol City. During the week, again having been in a winning position, we managed to lose the game against a pretty poor Hull side. This was doubly disappointing as the three points would have put us five points above the relegation zone with just five games to play. As it is we have a two-point advantage, though with our goal difference that is effectively three points. And we only have ourselves to blame for dropping some of these points. We have thrown away so many points from winning positions. Obviously some teams just play well and come back and beat you but, more often than not with Latics, it seems to be us shooting ourselves in the foot. Clearly there is must be a psychological problem. An away run like this, dropping so many points in such a manner, cannot be a coincidence. There must be a root cause and it must be be in the mind. The belief we cannot win away is turning itself into a realty. And that is a real problem because it is not easy to solve. After such a bad run, even one win might not be enough to change the mindset and break the pattern. We might need a run of results to prove to ourselves we can do it. That can take time and we are rapidly running out of that. We have not been in the drop zone at all this season, but we could be if Rotherham beat Stoke on Saturday. That would heap further pressure on the team going into Sunday’s game, which we seriously do not need in what already looks like like the a mammoth task against Norwich.\nSTUART GLOVER\n'You have to show patience,' admits Wigan Athletic boss","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line415335"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6223490238189697,"wiki_prob":0.3776509761810303,"text":"Celebrate the five year anniversary of The 9/12 Project\nOn Thursday, Glenn will present an evening of programming to commemorate the 5-year anniversary of the 9/12 Project. At 5pm ET, Glenn will sit down with an audience of 9/12 members to discuss the evolution the movement has undergone these last 5 years. Then at 8PM ET, Glenn will narrate a special presentation of Meet John Doe starring the legendary Gary Cooper. On radio Wednesday, Glenn spoke about the plans for the evening and the importance of the 9/12 Project.\n\"Five years ago we were all afraid. Five years ago we could feel our country being lost. And we didn't know what to do about it,\" Glenn explained.\nOn March 13, 2009, Glenn asked people to tune in for a special episode of his FOX News show where he laid out the 9 principles and 12 values that showed the real power to change America laid with the people.\n\"We had no idea if anyone would watch. We had no idea if anyone would listen. We had no idea if people would actually gather together. And they gathered together unlike Americans had ever gathered together before,\" Glenn explained.\nSo where are we now five years later? How has not only the country changed, but all of the individuals involved? That's what Glenn wants to find out on Thursday's show.\nAnd then with Meet John Doe, Glenn hopes to show people the parallels between the fictional John Doe Clubs and the 9/12 Project, and how politicians and the media tried to co-opt both movements and use them to propel partisan agendas, when they were really all about principles and values.\n\"The ending is critical, because what happens in the end (of the film) needs to happen to us. There's a lot of people that got frustrated with politics and everything else. The point was never about politics. And the point was never about one individual. Watch it tomorrow night only on TheBlaze. Watch it with your family and join me all the way through it as I kind of take you through this movie and tell you exactly what it means.\" Glenn said.\nThe Beginning of the 9/12 Project\nWhen the 9/12 Project was first announced, Glenn called for people to return to the people they were on 9/12/2001 and wrote on GlennBeck.com:\nDo you watch the direction that America is being taken in and feel powerless to stop it?\nDo you believe that your voice isn’t loud enough to be heard above the noise anymore?\nDo you read the headlines everyday and feel an empty pit in your stomach…as if you’re completely alone?\nIf so, then you’ve fallen for the Wizard of Oz lie. While the voices you hear in the distance may sound intimidating, as if they surround us from all sides—the reality is very different. Once you pull the curtain away you realize that there are only a few people pressing the buttons, and their voices are weak. The truth is that they don’t surround us at all.\nWe surround them.\nWhat were the 9 Principles and 12 Values Glenn asked people to untie around?\nThe Nine Principles\n1. America is good.\n2. I believe in God and He is the Center of my Life.\n3. I must always try to be a more honest person than I was yesterday.\n4. The family is sacred. My spouse and I are the ultimate authority, not the government.\n5. If you break the law you pay the penalty. Justice is blind and no one is above it.\n6. I have a right to life, liberty and pursuit of happiness, but there is no guarantee of equal results.\n7. I work hard for what I have and I will share it with who I want to. Government cannot force me to be charitable.\n8. It is not un-American for me to disagree with authority or to share my personal opinion.\n9. The government works for me. I do not answer to them, they answer to me.\n12 Values\nAfter announcing the 9.12 Project on FOX News, Glenn went into detail on the origins the next day on radio (including the crying in the earlier video):\nThe following is from the transcripts of the 3/17/2009 radio show:\nGLENN: 9/10 we were burying our heads in the sand or we were playing politics. It was about Republicans or Democrats. On 9/11 we were freaking out and no one knew who attacked us, where did this come from, what is this. On 9/12 no one in the government had to tell us what to do. We just did it. We went and we found a place to give blood. We went and we gave money. We gathered together. We gathered our family around. We prayed. We were the people that our grandparents were and nobody had to tell us. But then again the parties got involved and George Bush told us to do our patriotic duty and go shopping. That’s offensive. That’s not our patriotic duty. That’s part of the reason we’re here now today because our patriotic duty was to go shopping. That’s not it. And I remember saying on the air, \"Please, Mr. President, give us something to do. Let us be involved in the solution.\" It’s not just, oh, we’re going to go and bomb them. We’ve got to fundamentally change. We’ve got to be involved. Give us something to do. And they didn’t — well, no, I take that back. The two parties, what they did is they gave us something to do, argue with each other and hate each other. And I was part of it. I didn’t see it. I didn’t see. Well, now I do. And I started seeing it, what, 2006, 2004 and said, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, guys, we’re on the wrong track here; wait a minute; see what’s going on? And others have woken up. And it’s both the Republicans and the Democrats. It’s both of them. And we just need to be those 9/12 people.\nLet me tell you this: Those values I had been working on for a long time, the values and the principles. And I had been reading and we really did a lot of research and et cetera, et cetera, but I just scribbled them down, the 9 and the 12. I just scribbled them down right before I went on the air. I hadn’t even counted the number of them. And I went on the air and I gave them to you and then I got into a break and I said to Stu, I said, gee, I wish I — how many do I even have here? One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine. I wish I could have come up with another one but I ran out of time. And then I came up with the other ones and there were twelve. And I said, what a wild coincidence: 9/12.\nYou know, in Iran if you’re looking for the twelfth Imam, they call you a Twelver. The Twelvers over in Iran are evil. They are so bad that the Ayatollah Khomeini back after the Islamic revolution banned them, wanted them all killed. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is a Twelver. But you know what? I’m not looking for the twelfth Imam, but I’m a Twelver, too. I’m a 9/12er. And that’s what I announced on Friday. Commit yourself to live the principles that you knew were true and the values that you knew were true on 9/12. Become a 9/12er and don’t be afraid of it. Don’t be ashamed. Try to understand all of what’s going on in your world through those values and those principles and don’t — you know what, I notice that the website is — has been — I mean, it’s remarkable what’s happening. It’sthe912project.com, the912project.com. And it’s a meeting place to look at the different news and then try to find solution and what principles are we violating. It’s a place where you can find some of the quotes from the founding fathers that might help you solve. There’s going to be so much more on this. But really hope this is a meeting place where you can find solutions and you can present solutions and you can meet together and you can say, look, we’re going to do this project, we’re going to do a march on Washington and it’s going to be on this day, and you can try to put it all together as long as it’s all framed with those principles and values, then I’d be with you. I’d be for you. The minute it gets out of — the minute it becomes a movement for power and a movement for political clout or a movement for anything else other than those principles and those values, I’m in. The minute it — or I’m out the minute it becomes about that. I’m in as long as it becomes about those.\nYou know, everybody says we don’t have a special interest group for us, we don’t have a lot. You are going to be the special interest group, but it is important that — and I’m going to let this happen organically. I’m not going to steer it. Whatever it is you decide to put together. Now look, this is a very libertarian idea and, you know, libertarian is like trying to round up a bunch of cats. It’s almost impossible. You are going to disagree with people. You are going to have a hard time getting through, but forget about arguing about the parties. Forget about arguing, \"Oh, well, you guys did this and you guys did that.\" Forget about it. It is a waste of time, and I really believe time is running out. So focus on what you are, who you believe, what you think we need to do as a country and stop tearing the other side apart because we — at least I do. I know who the Republicans are. They sold their soul to the devil, for power and money.\nNow, that’s not all of them, but the ones, the ones who have been in control, they are that. And a lot of them have decided they would become progressive Republicans. The Democrats who’s running the party right now is the same thing except they are an extreme to the left. There are good people in both parties, but they’re alone. And here’s what I believe can happen. It may not but it will be up to you. What can happen. If you decide to keep this as a grassroots, if you use the meetup.com, you use the912project.com and you heard these cats together and you put together some real principles and you live by those principles, I’m telling you that I can bring my camera from state to state, I can bring my television and radio show from state to state and there will be politicians that will beg you for your support. They will beg you because they will fear you because you will be in such great number. But that will only happen if you don’t make it about politics, if you only make it about principles and values. Once it becomes about politics, it’s done. You must stand for principles, and the number one principle you just stand for is to reestablish the Constitution. It has been so perverted by man, this country has been so perverted, it needs to be reestablished. And if you will stand on the founding principles and you know what you’re talking about, that’s why I said in the show — and people I know blow this off but, gang, unless you know what you’re supposed to know, unless you know who our founders are, you won’t be able to do this. They will win. They will win. You must know who the founders are.\nYou know, I read a great quote. I’m reading a book about Harry Truman right now and I was reading a part of his childhood and he was a mousey little kid. He had glasses. So he couldn’t go out and play and, you know, et cetera, et cetera. But all of the kids when they would be playing, you know, cowboys and Indians, they would ask him, \"No, no, no, wait a minute, what happened with Marshal Dillon, what happened?\" And he would explain it because he knew history. And he said all readers are not leaders but every leader must be a reader. You must know history. You must know ours. And it hasn’t been taught. Develop and we’ll help you on this on the 9/12 project. We’ll help you develop book clubs. We’ll help you with developing things where you can grab your neighbors together. I had notes stuffed in my mailbox in my neighborhood. I thought I was alone in my neighborhood. I had notes stuffed into my mailbox: Please, Glenn, will you join us at our table, will you join us in our… yes, I will, because you’re my neighbor and this is going to happen in the neighborhoods. It’s going to happen in your house. That’s the only way it will work, if it’s done on a small scale and yet everybody is doing it across the country. This is true grassroots.\nSTU: I still don’t see how any of this explains the crying.\nGLENN: I was going to explain that, wasn’t I?\nSTU: That was the thought at one point.\nGLENN: I’m a chick.\nSTU: That explains the crying.\nGLENN: I just believe in my country. I just believe in my country.\nSTU: A lot of people believe in their country without crying on national television every three minutes.\nGLENN: I believe that it has been so perverted and on Friday I had so much hope that it could be saved because there are so many people that feel the way I do, and it was amazing to see them and to feel them and to know that they were all across the country.\nSTU: There was a lot of people there, most of them not crying. Just pointing out.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line837097"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6576237678527832,"wiki_prob":0.3423762321472168,"text":"Community Foundation hires two new employees\nREADING, PA (April 26, 2019) – Berks County Community Foundation has hired two local residents as new employees.\nBrian Martin has been named to the newly-created position of Director of Accounting and Technology. He will assist the Senior Vice President for Finance and Operations in managing the financial and technology functions of the Community Foundation.\nBrian worked in the insurance business for a number of years before moving on to a wholesale company. There, he served as Vice President of Accounting and Administration.\nA lifelong Berks County resident and a graduate of Antietam High School, Brian received a scholarship from the Antietam Foundation Scholarship Fund of Berks County Community Foundation in 2000.\nThis marks the first time that a recipient of a Community Foundation scholarship has been hired by the Foundation.\nBrian earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Finance with a minor in Legal Environment of Business from The Pennsylvania State University.\nJosie Munroe has taken on the visible role of receptionist at the entrance to the Community Foundation’s busy Community Conference Center at its headquarters at Third and Court streets. Nonprofits can hold meetings, workshops and events in the Conference Center at no charge.\nJosie Munroe\nAs the Community Foundation’s bilingual receptionist, Josie helps oversee the Conference Center and lobby, greets and directs all callers and visitors, and handles clerical duties.\nImmediately prior to coming to the Community Foundation, Josie worked on QVC’s live TV programming, operating behind the scenes to drive sales and increase profit margins through fashion styling, merchandising, and carrying out the vision of fashion designers and producers.\nA New York City native, Josie moved to West Reading in 2014. In New York, she worked for major TV studios, such as MTV, Paramount and Warner Bros., where she managed wardrobe and prop departments and executed the vision of art directors and television producers.\nJosie replaces Eunis Domenech as receptionist. As previously announced, Eunis was promoted to Finance and Operations Administrator to oversee the Foundation’s accounts payable and other finance-related functions.\nBerks County Community Foundation is a nonprofit corporation that serves as a civic leader for our region by developing, managing and distributing charitable funds aimed at improving the quality of life in Berks County. More information is available at www.bccf.org.\njasonb@bccf.org2019-04-26T11:49:38-04:00News|","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line135999"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9424963593482971,"wiki_prob":0.9424963593482971,"text":"One of the last remaining Confederate monuments in California is vandalized\nBy Colleen Shalby\nPalm trees surround the graves and headstones in Santa Ana Cemetery, seen here in 1996. (Christine Cotter / Los Angeles Times)\nOne of the last remaining Confederate monuments in California was vandalized days after the Fourth of July.\nThe Sons of Confederate Veterans monument was erected in the Santa Ana Cemetery in 2004. On Sunday, it was discovered covered in red paint with the word “racists” written vertically down one side.\nThe 7-ton granite monument is dedicated to those who fought for the Confederacy in the Civil War. It includes the names of 33 people with ties to the Confederacy, including Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee and Stonewall Jackson.\nIn the past two years, as monuments and statues dedicated to Confederate soldiers have been taken down throughout the country amid an outcry over the glorification of a history tied to slavery and racism, the Orange County Cemetery District Board grappled with a decision regarding the monument’s future.\nThe confederate monument at the Santa Ana cemetery was vandalized with paint https://t.co/aX3oMxlrOW #orangecounty\n— Orange County reddit (@OCReddit) July 8, 2019\nOrange County Cemetery District general manager Tim Deutsch said the board initially agreed that the monument could stay put with some modifications, which included limiting the names inscribed on the memorial to soldiers who died in Orange County after the war. More than 300 Civil War soldiers are buried in Santa Ana.\nBut more recently, the district couldn’t find details on the original board action regarding the monument’s approval. When the Sons of Confederate Veterans failed to respond to the board’s letters about modifications and permit violations, members approved its removal on July 2. Until it is removed, Deutsch said the monument remains concealed from public view under a tarp after efforts to remove the graffiti failed.\nCalifornia confronts its Confederate past as monuments are abruptly removed\nBy Esmeralda Bermudez, Corina Knoll and Anh Do\nDebate over the place of Confederate symbols in American history escalated in 2015 after a self-proclaimed white supremacist massacred worshipers at a Charleston, S.C., church. Following the mass shooting, President Obama called for the removal of the Confederate flag from places of honor, saying it was a “reminder of systemic oppression and racial subjugation.” Soon after, South Carolina lawmakers voted to take the flag down from the Statehouse.\nThe debate has continued, and escalated to a new level in 2017. A Unite the Right rally turned violent when a group protesting the removal of a Robert E. Lee statue in Charlottesville, Va., clashed with demonstrators on the opposite side. The chaos ended with a white supremacist plowing his car into a crowd of demonstrators, leaving one woman dead.\nGordon Bricken, an amateur historian and former mayor of Santa Ana who helped establish the monument, uncovered much of Santa Ana’s Civil War connections before his death in 2013. With the help of a group of Civil War buffs, he was able to locate the graves of more than 800 Civil War veterans in Orange County.\nHis daughter, Patricia Bricken, told the Orange County Register that the monument was never meant to glorify the negative history often attached to the Confederacy.\n“That’s part of our freedom, is that we should be able to erect monuments to whoever we want, especially on private land,” she said. “We didn’t force it down anybody’s throat at all.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line628616"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.918344259262085,"wiki_prob":0.918344259262085,"text":"Report: Hawaii wasn't ready to handle missile threat alert\nAssociated PressMore from Associated Press\nUpdated: February 20, 2018 5:25 PM EDT\nAmazon rivals ride on Prime Day marketing as protests unfold\nGoogle exec claims search engine not biased against conservatives\nThis Jan. 13, 2018 file smartphone screen capture shows a false incoming ballistic missile emergency alert sent from the Hawaii Emergency Management Agency system.Caleb Jones / AP Photo\nHONOLULU — Hawaii’s nuclear missile scare showed that the state began testing alerts before fully developing a plan to address the ballistic missile threat and that a public outreach campaign months earlier wasn’t effective, said a report released Tuesday.\nThe state Department of Defence, the agency that oversees Hawaii’s emergency management, released the internal review after an alert was sent to cellphones, televisions and radio stations across the state last month.\nThe notification, which read “BALLISTIC MISSILE THREAT INBOUND TO HAWAII. SEEK IMMEDIATE SHELTER. THIS IS NOT A DRILL,” triggered widespread panic as more than a million residents and visitors feared they were about to face a ballistic missile strike.\nGov. David Ige assigned Brig. Gen. Kenneth Hara, the second in command at the Department of Defence, to conduct a comprehensive review of the agency’s operations.\n“The response and recovery sections of the plan were minimally developed,” Hara’s report said. “The plan lacked clear details for sheltering, county co-ordination and protocols for decision to send out all clear or false missile alert messages, e.g., interception, missile impact without effect to Hawaii, etc.”\nThe public didn’t get adequate directions about what to do, the report said.\nAn agency employee mistakenly sent the alert to cellphones and broadcast stations across the state during a shift-change drill at the agency on Jan. 13.\nOfficials later disclosed the employee didn’t think he and his colleagues were participating in a drill and instead believed a real attack was imminent. The state has since fired him.\nState officials said the worker, who had been employed at the agency for 11 years, had mistakenly believed two prior drills — for tsunami and fire warnings — were actual events. His supervisors counselled him but kept him for a decade in a position that had to be renewed each year.\nIn this Jan. 13, 2018, file photo provided by Civil Beat, cars drive past a highway sign that says “MISSILE ALERT ERROR THERE IS NO THREAT” on the H-1 Freeway in Honolulu. (Cory Lum/AP Photo) Cory Lum / Civil Beat via AP\nThe ex-worker disputed that, saying he wasn’t aware of any performance problems. The employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared for his safety after receiving death threats, told reporters that he was devastated about causing panic but was “100 per cent sure” at the time that the attack was real.\nSome managers didn’t follow proper procedures to deal with unsatisfactory performance, which contributed to the false alert, the report said.\nHara’s report recommends employee development training for supervisors and managers.\nThe agency’s administrator, Vern Miyagi, resigned on Jan. 30. The agency’s executive officer, Toby Clairmont, resigned down shortly after the incident because it was clear action would be taken against agency leaders, he said.\nA fourth employee was suspended without pay.\nIt took the agency 38 minutes to send a follow-up message to broadcast stations and cellphones notifying people the alert was a mistake, in part because the agency had no prepared message it could send out in the event of a false alarm.\nWithin hours of the alert, the agency changed protocols to start requiring that two people send an alert. It also made it easier to cancel alerts by preparing a pre-programmed false alarm message.\nThe report’s recommendations include suspending all activities related to the Ballistic Missile Preparedness Campaign, with the exception of the monthly ballistic missile alert tone siren testing, until a plan is published and the majority of Hawaii’s public know “what to do, where to go, and when to do it.”\nIt also recommends reviewing the feasibility of reinstituting “fallout shelters.” Hawaii stopped maintaining such shelters after the Cold War ended and funding ran out.\nAlthough spurred by the missile scare, the report provides recommendations about all the hazards the islands face. Because Hawaii relies on nearly all of its goods to be imported, the report recommends improving ports and expanding distribution infrastructure, but notes doing so will be expensive and time-consuming.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line801561"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5274434089660645,"wiki_prob":0.47255659103393555,"text":"Charity Corner: Book Aid International\nWelcome back to Charity Corner. This is my new series where I will be using my blog as a platform to lend a voice to different charities and organisations of all sizes, backgrounds and causes. Today’s Charity Corner, I speak to Jenny Hayes, the Communications Executive at Book Aid International, a charity which provides books to underprivileged places in the world.\nWhat is the mission of Book Aid International?\nBook Aid International is the UK’s leading international book provision and library development charity. We believe that books and reading give people the opportunity to change their lives for the better. Our mission is therefore to get brand new books to the places around the world where books are scarce but where, if people had access to books, they could make a huge difference. To do this, we work in partnership with libraries, providing brand new books, resources and training to support environments in which reading for pleasure, study and lifelong learning can flourish.\nWhat’s the story behind the creation of your charity?\nBook Aid International was founded in 1954 by Hermione, Countess of Ranfurly. Two years prior to that, Lady Ranfurly had moved with her husband to the Bahamas where he was Governor General. As she toured the islands, she was shocked at the lack of reading materials. She set about collecting books which she packed up and sent to schools, libraries and institutions on the islands. Thus the Ranfurly Library Service was born. On her return to the UK in 1956 Lady Ranfurly decided to expand her ‘book scheme’ to the British Commonwealth. The Ranfurly Library Service took up residence in London and sent books to countries all over the world. In 1994 the charity changed its name to Book Aid International.\nWhat outcomes has Book Aid seen through its work?\nThe charity has been going for over sixty years and in that time we have sent more than 33 million books to libraries around the world. There are more brilliant outcomes than we can count! The books we send are helping students at Mzuzu University in Malawi continue with their studies after their library was destroyed by a fire. In the Kakuma and Dadaab refugee camps in Kenya, they allow people forced from their homes to continue their education. Prisoners in Uganda use them to study for law degrees while they await trial. In Sierra Leone, the books are helping pupils who missed a whole year of school during the Ebola crisis get back to learning; and that’s just to name a few! Take a look at these individuals’ stories of the positive difference books have made in their lives on our website.\nIn what way do donations to your charity benefit you?\nWhen it costs just £2 to send a book, donations achieve so much! We work with our partners to get books to the places and people where they can make the most difference, supporting libraries which might otherwise have empty shelves. This includes libraries in schools, hospitals, prisons, refugee camps, cities, slums and remote and rural communities. Thanks to the generosity of our supporters, each year we send our library partners around one million brand new books to fill over 2,600 libraries and provide hundreds of thousands of readers with the resources they need to develop their skills, make the most of their educations and discover a passion for reading . We also work with our partners to develop programmes to help readers get the most out of the books we send. In 2016 we launched our Inspiring Readers programme to create libraries in schools where it is common for children to share one book between many. Through this programme, we aim to improve the reading opportunities of a quarter of a million primary school children in Africa. As part of this, teachers are trained in bringing books to life in the classroom and they are linked up with a local library to access bigger book collections and to visit with their classes for further reading activities. In 2016, the programme launched in Kenya and Uganda and this year it will expand into schools in Malawi and Uganda.\nHow can people help Book Aid International besides just giving money?\nThere are many, many ways people can support us besides donating money, from packing books in our warehouse to running marathons to baking! There really is something for everyone. If you are able to join us at our warehouse in Camberwell, London, we always welcome regular help with stamping and packing books ready to ship to our partners. In 2016, we sent our library partners 1,032,610 books and we couldn’t have done this without the dedication and hard work of our fantastic warehouse volunteers! Many of our supporters choose to fundraise for us in a variety of ways, from holding cake sales at work to running marathons. We also have a team of dedicated Community Ambassadors who raise awareness about our work in their communities by speaking about our work at schools and festivals and holding events to fundraise for us.\nBook Aid International is one of World Book Day’s official partner charities and every year hundreds of school children fundraise for us by donating £1 to dress up as part of their schools’ celebrations. Last year, their efforts raised over £121,000 – that’s enough to send 60,500 books to our partners! People also hold cake sales, readathons and quizzes to support our work on World Book Day both in schools and workplaces. This year World Book Day will be on 2 nd March and taking part by dressing up or fundraising is easier than ever before. Visit our website to get started. We also welcome support on social media. Retweets and post-sharing are a great way our supporters can help spread the word about our work. We really couldn’t do the work we do without our supporters. You can find out more here.\nWhere can people find more information on your charity?\nFor further information about Book Aid International, from more details on where we work and what we do, to the stories of the people we support, visit our website.\nDo you have a charity that you’d like me to discuss in this series? Please email me for more info. Click here for more Charity Corner features.\nLet’s be friends, add me on Bloglovin\nFiled Under: Charity Corner\nTags: Books, Charity Corner, International Book Aid, Lady Ranfurly, World Book Day\nCharity Corner: ASH Wales\nCharity Corner: Battersea Dogs & Cats Home","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1477437"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6605281829833984,"wiki_prob":0.33947181701660156,"text":"When Vala Afshar Tweets, People Listen\nToday@UMass Lowell\nTell Us About It\nElectrical Engineering Alum a Leading Influencer as Salesforce’s Chief Digital Evangelist\nPhoto by Ed Brennen\nElectrical engineering alum Vala Afshar, chief digital evangelist at Salesforce, talks to students about digital business disruption at Alumni Hall.\nBy Ed Brennen\nAs “Chief Digital Evangelist” at Salesforce, a global leader in customer relationship management technology, Vala Afshar’s job is to understand the forces behind the digital business revolution – and to share his insights with the world.\nAfshar’s tallest soapbox is Twitter, where the UMass Lowell alum has more than 216,000 followers and he receives about 2 million mentions per day. He also has a popular HuffPost blog, a weekly web series and a book, “The Pursuit of Social Business Excellence.”\nForbes has named Afshar the top social media influencer of chief marketing officers (CMOs) for two years running. Not bad for someone who couldn’t even speak English when he emigrated to the United States from Iran at age 10. After resettling with his family in the Boston area, Afshar earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees in electrical engineering from the Francis College of Engineering and began his career in 1996 as a software developer.\nAfshar returned to campus recently to help the Manning School of Business launch its participation in the Trailhead for Students Program, a Salesforce initiative that lets students (of all majors) learn more about its technology and better prepare for internships, co-ops and jobs after graduation. Afshar spoke with students and faculty about digital business disruption and the role of technology. He also took time to answer a few questions about his own career (as well as one about President Trump’s Twitter use).\nVala Afshar poses for a photo with student Yomar Salazar Reyes after speaking at Alumni Hall.\nQ. How does an electrical engineering grad become chief digital evangelist at a $60 billion company that’s been ranked “Most Innovative” by Forbes for seven straight years?\nA. As a student, I learned that I could contribute most to project-based assignments. I enjoyed the beauty of a presentation, building a strong narrative, connecting technology to business outcomes. That’s when I knew there was a little marketing-sales guy in me. But it took me 15 years to pursue that marketing piece. The teachers I have fond memories of are great storytellers. They could explain not just the “what” and the “how,” but the “why.” And when you understand the thing that you’re building, how it can advance society, whether in health care, education, whatever industry you end up serving, that’s important.\nBut I didn’t go to UMass Lowell thinking I’m going to be a storyteller for one of the fastest growing, most successful companies in the world right now. What I did discover five years ago (as CMO at Enterasys Networks) is that if you take that small step of sharing things that you find interesting on social media, over time people will find you interesting. So now, when I read an article or watch a TED Talk or I’m at a conference and someone is doing something that inspires me, I share that. Social changed my career.\nQ. Why is it important for students to be active on social media?\nA. This year, for the first time, social surpassed SEO (search engine optimization) as the No. 1 way of finding digital content. There’s 1 million Facebook logins per minute and half a million tweets per minute. If you are a student and don’t have a digital footprint, you are losing big-time. I applied for my job at Salesforce on a direct message on Twitter. I didn’t even have a résumé, and they didn’t care. Digital-native companies – the ones born in the cloud, mobile, social – they don’t follow traditional rules. Students should work hard in class, get good grades and build awesome CVs, but trust me, employers are looking at your digital footprint and your digital exhaust – those unintended consequences of things you leave behind.\nTwenty years ago, I won a graduate research award here and I didn’t have the opportunity to share my achievement. Today I think about all those research papers and presentations that might be good to share with others outside the Lowell ecosystem. The reason I have 200,000-plus followers on Twitter is because when I find something interesting, I share. That’s how you increase your likelihood of being employable. And it doesn’t have to be Twitter. I don’t even know if Twitter is cool among UMass Lowell students. Maybe it’s Snapchat or WhatsApp. But my point is, your digital footprint and exhaust will define your career moving forward.\nQ. What skills should students be building to succeed in the digital economy?\nA. The most important skill in a digital economy is your ability to stay teachable. Your thirst and hunger for staying interested is so important. If you’re not teachable, you will not reach your full potential in your career. You need to be taking a personal inventory proactively. What did I learn this week? This month? Did I share it with anyone? If you’re not learning cool stuff every month, not becoming a better student, you’re falling behind.\nThe importance of emotional intelligence, of being mindful, is critically important. That’s why I believe liberal arts degrees are the most important in the digital economy. Liberal arts students can teach businesses. When you talk about artificial intelligence and the fact that we’re entering an algorithmic economy, how do you prevent biases from being baked into those algorithms? If we are worried about over-automating and taking the humanity out of business, it’s important to have a rich, diverse background.\nIf I could build a time machine and go back to school, I’d spend rigorous time fine-tuning my writing skills. I’m a first-generation immigrant who moved to the U.S. (from Iran) when I was 10 years old. I couldn’t speak the language, but I was really good at math, hence the engineering track. But boy, I should have spent more time reading and writing.\nStay teachable, always be interested and share what you learn were key points of advice Vala Afshar shared with students.\nQ. What does being named the top CMO influencer mean to you, and does the distinction bring any added pressure when you tweet?\nA. I’m humbled and surprised. As a former CMO, I appreciated when people would educate me on what investments I should make in marketing, or what tech would help grow a business and delight customers. So all I’m doing is giving back.\nThere is pressure, but it’s good pressure. There’s accountability, transparency – all these things that motivate you. There’s a sense of responsibility when you’re named someone who influences businesses and business leaders. It motivates me to curate and create quality content, because it’s a privilege to become a trusted adviser. I get to be in the room with influential CMOs who share content, and suddenly you realize your voice is being scaled based on the quality of connections and networks you’ve made.\nIf your North Star, your guiding principles, are such that you’re motivated by educating, inspiring and igniting positive action, then finding your name on these lists simply allows you to continue to appreciate your network. It’s a great feeling, and I don’t take it for granted.\nQ. As a social media expert, what do you think of President Trump’s use of Twitter?\nA. I believe one of the key factors in him being elected was his use of social. It’s the next generation of building a ground base. The way he used it, regardless if you agree or disagree with him politically, there’s no question that it was him. And therefore, if you appreciate authenticity, consistency and staying true to who you are, then I think it was brilliant use of social media.\nRegardless of your political affiliations, being able to connect at a level where no one’s questioning that it’s your words, your sentiment, your viewpoints, I think was very instructive. And lesson learned for future politicians or business leaders: It’s your face that’s on the avatar, it’s your bio and it’s your words, so stay true to who you are.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line457101"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6174330115318298,"wiki_prob":0.6174330115318298,"text":"Advanced detachment: The revolutionary Party of the African working class\nOmali Yeshitela, Chairman of the African People's Socialist Party\nFeature: Chairman Omali Yeshitela\nDual and contending power: The history and struggle for economic development in the African People's Socialist Party\nDavey D interviews Chairman Omali Yeshitela\nWatch: AZANIA! The People, the Land and the Revolution\nFortress America besieged: war penetrates imperialist sanctuary\nMessage to the people and government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela from the African Socialist International\nMessage to the people and government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela from the African Socialist International (French)\nChristopher Dorner and the revolutionary struggle for Black Power\nDjango Unchained, or, \"Killing whitey while protecting white power\": A critical analysis\nA Call to Arms!\nEditor’s Note: This article is excerpted from an article that first appeared in the pages of The Burning Spear 28 years ago under the title, “The History and Role of the Proletarian Party of the Black Working Class.”\nAt the time, evidence of the crisis of imperialism that defines today’s reality was coming into sharp focus. The U.S. presidency of Ronald Wilson Reagan was the white ruling class’s war-mongering repressive response to that crisis.\nThe response of the African People’s Socialist Party was to help the African working class recognize its historical mission as the primary agent of revolutionary transformation and to help the class achieve its full capacity to carry out its mission.\nToday we are faced with the same task. It more important now than ever to mobilize the African working class in its own selfish interests and to equip the class to lead the international struggle for the liberation and unification of Africa and African people under its leadership as the new ruling class.\nThe U.S. presidency of Barack Hussein Obama and the success of the white ruling class in removing most evidence of the Black Revolution of the Sixties make it incumbent upon our Party to help African people and especially the working class, to become engaged in independent, self-serving political life.\nWe are printing this excerpt as one of the steps we will be taking to win African people and workers to independent revolutionary organization that is guided by advanced revolutionary theory.\nAn error in this piece is the reference of our philosophy as Pan Africanism developed to its higher stage. As the referenced quote in this piece clearly shows, we have never been Pan Africanists. The reader should be aware that it was the lingering ideological influence of the African petty bourgeoisie that made that error possible.\nPolitical parties are organizations of the most advanced representatives of a particular class. The tasks of political parties are directly tied to the material interests of the classes they represent.\nSometimes elements of a particular class are not aware of their own class interests. There are people from the white ruling class, for example, who are drunks or drug addicts, or even insane. Sometimes elements of the ruling class are wife beaters, bed wetters, or lazy ignoramuses who are unconcerned and disdainful of the overall interests of the capitalist-colonialist ruling class.\nNevertheless, some members and representatives of the white ruling class take it upon themselves to organize into political parties, which represent and look out for the interests of the entire class, including the drunks, wife beaters, etc. We call these people the advanced or activist elements of their class.\nWhat are the interests of the U.S. capitalist-colonialist class? The most fundamental interest of the capitalist-colonialist ruling class is the perpetuation of the capitalist system and itself as the ruling class. This fundamental interest gives rise to other interests:\nEconomically, there is the interest to eliminate all economic competition, both domestically and internationally. The interest of the capitalist-colonialist ruling class is in dominating the natural resources and markets of the entire world.\nPolitically, there is the interest in restricting the political liberties of the peoples of the entire world. This is an interest in crushing any political liberties that do not facilitate the economic domination of the U.S. capitalists. It is an interest in restricting the development of any independent political expression that would challenge the hegemony of U.S. capitalism.\nIdeologically, the interests of the white ruling class are served by idealism and obscurantism, which covers over reality. This keeps the oppressed and exploited peoples, especially the African working class, separated from an understanding of their own material interests. It keeps oppressed and exploited peoples ignorant of science and a scientific approach to an examination of the nature of class exploitation and national oppression. Ideologically, the interests of the white ruling class give rise to ideological imperialism, the imperialist imposition of its worldview, aims and ideology onto oppressed peoples. Imperialist domination of ideology is consistent with the economic domination of the capitalist system.\nDuring the sixties, black political parties began to emerge from within the colonized African population in the U.S. as a result of the internal pressures of class contradictions. As these contradictions began to crystallize, they revealed a colonial society that was much more complex than before.\nBefore the movement won our legal democratic rights, it was all of “us” (blacks) against “them” (whites). The U.S. government was not generally recognized as an agent of a particular class and social system. Our movement, under the leadership of the black petty bourgeoisie, courted the various U.S. presidents assiduously, hoping to find a “good” president who was sympathetic to the general democratic aims and demands of the movement.\nBy 1965, after a decade of most intense struggle, our movement won the vote and our legal democratic rights. In the process, the black petty bourgeoisie was growing as a result of the effectiveness of the movement and the intervention of the liberal white bourgeoisie. With the vote and legal rights, the basic aspirations of the black middle class were, in effect, realized. For them the movement had reached its goal.\nFor the new generation of fully mobilized African workers that was thrust onto the scene as the main social factor in the U.S. political life, its aspirations were far from being met by gaining legal democratic rights. The attempts by the petty bourgeoisie to moderate the Black Liberation Movement, to decelerate it and direct it toward liberal bourgeois democratic sops, were met with the cries of “Burn, baby burn,” in Los Angeles and “Black Power” in Mississippi.\nAt this point the independent aspirations of the African working class became clear. This new clarity fueled efforts to build independent political parties by and for the colonially oppressed African population. Nevertheless, our inexperience frustrated our efforts at party-building. More often than not, we were unable to build parties that clearly identified the class interests they served. Generally we were not able to show that the African working class had an interest in overthrowing the colonial oppression of our whole people.\nThe party-building movement was successful, however, in creating party formations that raised principles of unity going beyond the limitations of the liberal black petty bourgeoisie. Those who could unite with militant anti-colonial principles that clearly distinguished African workers from the black petty bourgeoisie joined the party and were able to characterize themselves ambiguously as revolutionaries and black nationalists. Such parties began to characterize sectors of the movement that were trapped inside the limitations of reform as Uncle Toms and sometimes as the black bourgeoisie.\nNone of these parties was capable of raising up the interests of the black working class as the hegemonic interests of the party. Although it was the pressure of the black working class resistance and struggle that pushed this party-building process forward, it was essentially petty bourgeois nationalists—often revolutionary—who were leading this effort. The black working class was yet to seize leadership of its own revolutionary movement, even as history was pushing events in that direction with growing urgency.\nBlack Panthers, first black worker’s party\nThe Black Panther Party, which emerged in 1966–67, came closest to being the party of the African working class. 6 For the first time in the history of our movement, an independent black political party had identified itself as a socialist or communist organization, with socialist or communist revolutionary objectives. 7\nInherent in this identification was the assumption of a worldview with the interests of the African working class at its center. Certainly the vast bulk of the membership of the Black Panther Party was working class, and its Ten Point Program and Platform raised fundamentally working class demands.\nThe Black Panther Party (BPP) gave the colonially oppressed African working class more experience in leading its own struggle than any organization before it. Nevertheless, it muddled its own effectiveness with an ideology that mystified the character of the black working class under colonialism. Instead of elevating its membership to the highest stance of the African working class, the Black Panther Party idealized the traits of the lumpen proletariat, a non-working class element of unstable and unemployable people, as the leadership of the Revolution. In this process, the BPP mistakenly identified colonized unemployed black workers, who sometimes have lumpen tendencies, as the lumpen proletariat. 8\nNevertheless, the Black Panther Party provided the closest thing to a revolutionary center that our movement had ever experienced. Although incorrect on some essentials, the BPP introduced the question of class struggle to our movement, a question that was briefly taken up within a large sector of the African working class itself.\nBourgeois democracy and the parties of the white ruling class\nThe parties of the white ruling class inside the U.S. are the Democratic and Republican parties. The objective of the Democratic and Republican parties is the perpetuation of the capitalist social system, which rests on the foundation of African oppression. Although both of these parties are capable of prattle about democracy, the democracy they talk about is only a description of the form of the U.S. State, which exercises capitalist rule with its organs of coercion such as the police, army, the courts, etc. Besides being “democratic,” the capitalist State can take the form of dictatorship or monarchy, among others.\nNeither the Democratic or Republican party is capable of talking about overthrowing the capitalist social system. Neither party will ever be able to bring about democratic self-determination for the broad mass of African people. This is because the capitalist social system within the boundaries of the U.S., perhaps more than any place else, rests on the foundation of African oppression going back to the days of what is called slavery.\nThe Democratic and Republican parties have been excellent tools of the white ruling class precisely because they appear to give African workers, oppressed peoples and even the general white population a choice in the U.S. They give the illusion of providing alternatives and freedom of democratic participation in American political life.\nThe Republican and Democratic parties make it possible for the white ruling class to monopolize political, economic and ideological power while obscuring the class interests that they represent. Since oppressed peoples, like sectors of the bourgeoisie, are often ignorant of their class interests, African workers generally attempt to pursue their class interests within the parties of the white ruling class, especially the Democratic party in this period.\nWithin the U.S. and most capitalist countries there is generally, but not always, more than one capitalist party. This allows the bourgeoisie to wear two hats, a kind of “good cop, bad cop” routine. In this way, the bourgeois social system protects itself by passing political power to one bourgeois party when the other has come into disrepute with the people.\nThe fact that the people can vote for one or the other bourgeois party gives the impression of political free will by the masses and acts as a social pressure release valve, blunting the development of class struggle. This is what is called bourgeois democracy.\nActually the people have not exercised free will, which presupposes information and science. Freedom is the recognition of necessity, which is prerequisite to exercising free will. Within the U.S. and other places where more than one capitalist party dominates political life, elections are means of nonviolent struggle by different sectors of the ruling class for control of the State.\nThe various social forces are not organized into their own independent class parties and engaged in conscious class struggle, one against the other. Instead, the American two-party system mobilizes African and other oppressed workers into the service of a sector of the white ruling class as it engages in intra-class struggle with another sector. The two-party system obscures the class interests of the exploited workers and oppressed peoples, reducing them to reserve forces for one sector of the bourgeoisie or another.\nThe question of class struggle within the U.S. has always been difficult enough even without the two-party duplicity of the bourgeoisie. This has to do with the parasitic nature of the capitalist system. Within the U.S., this parasitism stems from a social system built on stolen land, the massacre of hundreds of thousands of Native people and the enslavement of African people.\nThe entire white population—workers and bourgeoisie alike—and all social forces and classes that benefit from the development of the “New World,” find their happiness and freedom from political oppression and material want at the expense of the life, liberty and development of Indigenous and African peoples.\nHence, there is a material, economic basis for the political unity that exists between the North American bourgeoisie and the general white population. This political unity is directed against the African, Indigenous and other colonized peoples here and around the world, in defense of the capitalist social system.\nThe parasitic nature of the capitalist system is the basis for the political and ideological leadership of the modern U.S.-based African proletariat. The African working class is the only social force that has the exact combination of qualities which makes it an absolute, volatile opponent of the capitalist social system.\nAlong with the Indigenous people, the oppression of the African people represents the foundation upon which the capitalist social system rests. The nineteenth century philosopher Karl Marx termed this economic relationship “primitive accumulation…an accumulation not the result of the capitalist mode of production but its starting point.” The African population exists as a domestic colony upon which the U.S. capitalist system was founded.\nThe African population is a colonial population within the belly of the U.S., a factor with explosive social connotations in and of itself. In addition, the African population is essentially made up of workers, with estimates ranging from eighty-eight to ninety-four percent of U.S.-based African people falling into the working class.\nRacism or white nationalism, the ideological foundation of U.S. and world capitalism, has as its basis “primitive accumulation,” the material foundation of the U.S. and world capitalist social system that was born and maintained at the expense of African, Indigenous and other oppressed peoples.\nInside the U.S., the class struggle against the capitalist-colonialist social system is centered in the colonized African population, which constitutes the true proletariat. Through the Black Revolution of the Sixties, the African working class came to understand that the bourgeois parties are opposed to our genuine interests.\nWhen the black working class was organized into its own party in the sixties with the Black Panther Party as its legitimate representative, the African working class became a formidable opponent to the U.S. capitalist system. The threat of organized African workers was so great that the chief of the U.S. secret political police declared the Black Panther Party the greatest threat to the internal security of the U.S. since the Civil War.\nThe war against the Black Revolution\nWhen the black working class was organized into its own party, with its class and national interests summed up in the form of a political program opposed to colonial rule, the Democratic and Republican parties had to call into force the repressive arms of the State. These parties of the bourgeoisie were incapable of engaging in successful ideological and nonviolent political struggle with the black working class. It took an all out urban war against the black working class in the sixties for a return to imperialist class peace and the reinstatement of the facade of a two-party system supposedly representing the class interests of all the people.\nThis war saw African workers stand up alone not only against armed police organizations, but even armed military forces usually reserved for foreign U.S. intervention. In Detroit this included the Eighty-second Airborne Division. In urban areas throughout the U.S., military tanks and an assortment of other sophisticated armaments were deployed against the unarmed black working class communities.\nThe military offensive, directed by the Democratic and Republican parties, was faced with the immediate task of putting down a massive movement with insurrectionary characteristics similar to that presently occurring in Occupied Azania (South Africa). This military offensive, or counterinsurgency, was designed to destroy the will of the entire African working class to struggle by crushing their independent organizations, particularly the Black Panther Party.\nThe U.S. ruling class used its military power, its state power, to defeat the independent, revolutionary capacity of the African working class, the only internal social force that made it necessary to defend the capitalist social system. The African working class was the only social force inside the U.S. that was capable of challenging the bourgeoisie for power, the fundamental question for any revolution.\nFor all these years subsequent to the military defeat of the Black Revolution of the Sixties the bourgeoisie has expended a tremendous amount of energy and resources in keeping the African working class politically disoriented, disorganized and unable to come together organizationally in its own class interests.\nThe methods for this have ranged from open white ruling class bribery of nonproletarian social forces, to naked terror against the African working class itself. Evidence of the African working class in the popular culture has nearly disappeared. Michael Jackson, Jesse Jackson, Prince, and Lionel Ritchie have become the stereotypes of the acceptable African within the U.S. On the occasions when black working class elements are allowed to emerge as acceptable, it is as followers of Jesse Jackson into the Democratic party. Or it is as fictionalized pathetic, poor black working class children who manage to escape colonial poverty through being adopted by well-to-do white petty bourgeois families, as seen on television sit-coms.\nA significant sector of the liberal black petty bourgeoisie accepted neocolonial roles in the bourgeois Democratic party. This is payoff in material resources and prestige for administrating the African working class in areas where white direct colonial rule would be unacceptable. The Jesse Jackson presidential campaign was a manifestation of this, along with the bombing of an African working class community in Philadelphia by a black mayor and a black city manager. 9\nIn the years since the sixties, the white women's and homosexual movements have become virtual scabs on the Black Revolution. These movements are incapable of raising up and supporting the Black Liberation Movement which is the quintessence of the class struggle within the U.S.\nThe black petty bourgeois neocolonialist puppets and the women's and homosexual movements are conscious opportunist movements. They offer up the battered carcass of the collective African working class to the altar of capitalism as offerings of class peace in exchange for privileges for themselves. They all attempt to mute and obscure class struggle and call on the people to join the Democratic party to achieve their aims.\nWith the defeat of the Black Revolution of the Sixties, our independent working class organizations were destroyed and the mass of black workers were disorganized and dispersed. A variety of petty bourgeois social forces, mostly tied to the Democratic party, united with the white ruling class in assuring class peace. Such unity means the muting of any class struggle that has the interests of the African working class at its center.\nThis is the context of the significance of the existence and struggle of the African People's Socialist Party.\nStrategy for revolutionary African working class party\nOrganized in 1972 from surviving black working class organizations of the sixties, the African People's Socialist Party pulled together the best elements of the class subsequent to the defeat of our movement. While we are a revolutionary party, we understand that our task for this period is not to make the Revolution, but to build the capacity of the only consistently revolutionary social force within U.S. borders, the African working class. This means that our primary task is to build the African People's Socialist Party.\nWe must address our strategy for building a truly revolutionary African working class party. This is necessary because at least one petty bourgeois, U.S.-based African organization claims party-building as its main task. This party does not distinguish its main task from its general aim, hence the “task” of party-building has for all practical purposes, become its general aim. This party uses the slogan of party-building to obscure class struggle, to maintain the class peace which is necessary for successful bourgeois colonialist rule.\nFor the African People's Socialist Party, fundamental to the task of party-building is the need to smash the class peace. Otherwise, sectors of the black working class might remain ensconced within the Democratic party. Additionally, the millions of African workers who have rejected the false choice of the two white ruling class parties will be unable to see that we must do more than just turn our backs on this pitfall. We must join and support our own independent parties in order to achieve our own separate class interests.\nFor the African People's Socialist Party, the task of party-building is always a process deeply rooted in solving the concrete, practical problems of the Revolution for the period. A key, fundamental problem today is the reorganization of the black working class into its own independent revolutionary party. We are not, however, talking about party-building for its own sake. For us the task of party-building is for the purpose of solving the most fundamental problems of the Revolution. We are informed of the practical problems of the Revolution by our ability to sum up the period in which we live and assume the task of party-building.\nOur summation of this period informs us that objective conditions for revolution are ripe. The U.S. capitalist-colonialist class is engaged in several undeclared wars, a fact which currently divides the ruling class.\nThe conditions of existence for the black working class are reaching new and greater levels of desperation, and the use of overt police terror against the colonially oppressed African workers is becoming more blatant every day.\nThese conditions are evidence of the general crisis of imperialism. Although the election of Ronald Wilson Reagan as U.S. president was designed to confront this crisis, it continues unabated, nationally and internationally. Clearly, the objective conditions for the African Revolution are very strong.\nHowever, currently there are key weaknesses that we face in the subjective factors for revolution. These include the general state of disorganization of the African working class. This disorganization is facilitated by opportunism on every level. For example, there are the so-called revolutionary black parties that are fearful of class struggle and black working class hegemony over our own movement.\nThere are the silver-tongued, bourgeois-sponsored, neocolonialist black petty bourgeois stooges, whose prestige, appearance of power and material resources are dependent upon their ability to speak for the masses of unorganized black workers. There are the “communists,” “socialists” and “leftists” of all stripes, who can wear such appellations only so long as the African working class is voiceless and unable to impress our own version of class truth on the political life of the U.S. There are the women's and homosexual movements and every other social force that faithfully serves the U.S. bourgeoisie, and who remember with fear and trepidation the undiluted power of the Black Revolution of the Sixties.\nIn practical terms party-building today means, first and foremost, concrete work designed to activate the best of the class into political motion around concrete programs. Our immediate aim is to achieve absolute political hegemony over our movement and class in the process. Party-building means providing leadership for the class even when the party is small and has not yet fully achieved its desired capacity.\nFor example, although small, the African People's Socialist Party has been able to ignite a social movement in Oakland, California. The Party has successfully mobilized elements of the African working class. With the Party at its center, this movement has been able to mobilize social forces of various nationalities into the service of the African working class and away from absolute unity with the bourgeois colonialists.\nAlthough most of the African workers in Oakland are not Party members, the leadership of the Party in the city has made it possible for African workers as a whole to experience an organized fighting capacity around real, concrete, social needs. The Party-led Uhuru Movement in Oakland has led a campaign to successfully challenge the basic assumptions of bourgeois property relations. For the first time since the sixties, the Party has put the bourgeoisie on the political defensive in a struggle with African workers.\nIn 1984, the African People's Socialist Party put an initiative on the electoral ballot in Oakland calling for community control of housing. Known as Measure O, the initiative called for residential rents to be set no higher than twenty-five percent of the average income of a neighborhood. Measure O also called for abandoned houses to be turned over to homeless people. Essentially a land reform measure, the initiative won twenty-five thousand votes, a quarter of the votes cast, despite a half million dollars spent to defeat it by Oakland landlords and realtors. 10\nThus, our small Party, in the process of party-building, was able to provide leadership for African and other working class elements in a fashion greatly disproportionate to our physical size. More than this, the voters who were won to a working class stand in that election stood against the leadership of the bourgeois parties with whom they are registered.\nThe party-building process must awaken the black working class to practical participation in its own political life. This is why party-building is not an abstract process. Real political struggle must be coupled with real, practical leadership of the class when building the party. The party must be capable of mobilizing and leading the African working class and various social forces of various nationalities if it is to be worthy of the name “party.”\nToday we are confronted with a period when the last significant political lesson to be summed up by the black working class is military defeat. Still reeling from the U.S. military assault against our movement of the sixties, the masses of African workers today are restless. They have not yet, however, again concluded that their own interests are summed up in the African working class party, or that joining the party is worth the risk to life and liberty that may be suggested by party membership. Nevertheless, African workers must still have the leadership of the party available to them and be able to claim the party as their own.\nFor the African People's Socialist Party, the party-building process is an open one. We believe the African working class and our allies should have some idea of what parties are and what their functions are. We think our supporters should have a better grip on what it is they support and whether their support is what it needs to be.\nThe African People’s Socialist Party is a revolutionary African working class party, the only such party in the U.S. We are organized around a common General Program and policies that were ratified during our First Party Congress, the highest body of the Party, comprised of representatives of the entire membership.\nOur General Program and our policies are the practical, concrete manifestations of our revolutionary theory of African Internationalism. African Internationalism is Pan-Africanism developed to its highest stage, Pan-Africanism during the age of imperialism.11 African Internationalism unites the African people of the world in a revolutionary process to liberate Africa under the leadership of African workers and poor peasants.\nThe theory of African Internationalism is ever-developing with the new experiences of the international working class, African and otherwise. It is based on a scientific method of investigating and analyzing social life. It recognizes that the current oppressive circumstances of African people have their base in the slave trade, the fundamental feature in the development of world capitalism.\nThe scientific method of investigating social life employed by the African People's Socialist Party is called dialectical and historical materialism.\nBy dialectical we mean that our approach to the investigation of all phenomena is all-sided, taking into consideration the past and present. Dialectical means that we take into account the relationship of a phenomenon in motion to all other phenomena, even as phenomena come into being and die away.\nBy materialism we mean that our analysis of phenomena is based on an investigation of a phenomenon itself, not requiring an explanation of phenomena outside of it.\nBy historical materialism we mean the application of the principles of dialectical materialism to the investigation and interpretation of society and social life.\nThe opposition of the African People's Socialist Party to the U.S. government and the capitalist social system, which rests on our colonial oppression, is total and absolute. There are no circumstances under which we would ever find the foreign domination of our people or the economic exploitation of our class acceptable. We are convinced that capitalism, the social system, was built off the slave trade and the theft of life, liberty, and resources of African people and the non-European peoples of the world. We understand that the world's stolen resources are concentrated in Europe and the U.S., and are owned and controlled by a tiny minority of the people on the planet. Moreover, we are convinced that this capitalist system is on its deathbed.\nWe believe that the future belongs to the dispossessed colonized workers of the world. When armed with a revolutionary theory and led by a revolutionary party, African and other oppressed workers represent the conscious, subjective forces of history necessary for the overthrow of capitalism. This is the only way to bring about the advent of a new social system organized under the leadership of the working masses, the real producers of all material wealth.\nThis new social system will end production for profit and rule by a nonworking minority who maintain private ownership of our resources and control of the means of production.\nWe believe that the new social system that will follow capitalism is communism, a just social system based on labor according to ability and guaranteeing to each person the material resources of life and its reproduction according to need. Communism is the system that the white ruling class and all its hangers-on are attempting to suppress with the oppression of the African working class\nThus we recognize that the African People's Socialist Party, the advanced, conscious detachment of the African working class, is, like the class itself, locked in a life-and-death battle with the U.S. capitalist system. Hence, the members of our Party represent the advanced sector of the African working class. They must constantly strive for a self-motivated discipline that is steeled by conviction.\nAs the advanced detachment of the African working class, the African People's Socialist Party assumes the responsibility for advancing the cause of the whole class, which at any given time may be battered by ignorance, drug addiction, alcoholism, demoralization or other contradictions. The members of the African People's Socialist Party must become professional revolutionaries, individuals whose real profession is revolution with the Party as their vehicle.\nThe African People's Socialist Party recognizes that the colonially oppressed African workers are the most consistently revolutionary social force within the U.S. The African working class will not achieve revolutionary consciousness on its own, however. It is the task of the African People's Socialist Party, even as it is being built to full capacity, to intervene in the day-to-day struggles of the African working class, to forge deep lines in struggle and to lead the class to an ever higher, ever more precise understanding of African Internationalism, the science of black workers' revolution.\nThe African People's Socialist Party, a revolutionary African Internationalist Party based on a revolutionary African working class theory, is a party of professional revolutionaries. All distinctions between workers and intellectuals, laborers and “professionals,” lose their significance. We are welded into one by the common cause of a proletarian future that is being advanced by the party of the colonially oppressed African working class.\nOn one side stand the bourgeoisie and all the institutions which serve to preserve its rule. On the other side stands the oppressed African working class, represented by the African People's Socialist Party.\nTogether, these two social forces represent the great contest of our time. Separately, they represent the past and the future. The conscious representatives of these two great social forces are choosing sides. Every day makes the choice by the African working class and our allies more critical.\nFor us the question is clear. The future will prevail. It is urgent for all those who are taking a neutral seat as spectators in this contest, to take up the call. Take the Great Leap Forward and grab the future in your hands to help shape and mold it in our lifetime, for this generation.\nThose who can, must join the African People's Socialist Party; those who cannot, must support us.\nBuild the revolutionary Party of the African working class!\nBuild the African People's Socialist Party!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1435798"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5062969326972961,"wiki_prob":0.5062969326972961,"text":"Permanent Mission of Costa Rica to the United Nations\nMission Activities\nRevitalization of the GA\nJuan Carlos Mendoza García, Permanent Representative\nCo-chairs,\nThank you very much for convening this informal meeting of the Ad Hoc Working Group on the\nRevitalization of the work of the General Assembly. This is a great opportunity to exchange views on the\nproposal to appoint the next Secretary-General for a single non-renewable term.\nIn my national capacity my delegation would like to make some additional specific comments on the\nelection of the first female Secretary General, the presentation of more than one candidate and the\nsingle non-renewable term of seven years.\nWe firmly believe that it is high time for a female Secretary General. Costa Rica is convinced that after\neight Secretaries-General males and in the light of the commemoration of the seventieth anniversary of\nthe United Nations, it is time for a woman to occupy that high office. We are convinced that about half\nof the world population there is not one but many women with higher capacities and skills to occupy\nsuch a high post. Costa Rica calls upon Member States to present and support female candidates for the\nappointment of Secretary General.\nCosta Rica wants to see the democratization of the selection process of the Secretary General. Security\nCouncil providing plural number of candidates to the General Assembly for the post increases inclusivity,\ntransparency and most importantly legitimizes the process through voting. United Nations has\nchampioned the cause of democracy, and it is indeed ironical why the principle has not adopted in the\nselection process of the most important position in the organization.\nIt is clear that the length of term on the appointment of the Secretary General is open to revision and\nneeds to be debated. The UN Charter does not need any amendment in order to set the single term\nWe need to reflect on the next selection of the Secretary General having in mind that from now on we\nwill create a new precedent and a new culture on the topic, it is urgent to set a new practice in which\nthe General Assembly has an import role to play, in accordance with the UN Charter, the resolution\n69/321 and other relevant decisions, as well as drafting the final resolution for the appointment of\nSecretary General specifying that the next Secretary General is being appointed for a single non-\nrenewable term of seven years.\nThe single term provides the Secretary General with a political space to get his/her commitments and\ngoals without any distraction of getting reappointed. The world challenges, including the\nimplementation of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, require a Secretary General without\ncampaigning for a reappointment following interests of individual Member States neither.\nThe current arrangement which provides for a five year term with the possibility of getting re-elected for\na second term prevents the Secretary General from focusing entirely on the agenda at hand. The\npossibility of holding the office for a second term diverts the attention to campaigning, re-election and\nthe complications that comes along.\nA single terms guarantees the Secretary General independence, strengthen her stance, help in giving the\nperson in office a stronger voice and it could aid the Secretary General in ensuring that the\nappointments made at other levels are strong, thus raising the overall quality.\nWe believe that the single term contributes to the accountability of the Secretary General and that\naccountability should be on a regular basis between the Secretary General, the Security Council and the\nIndependence in the exercise of a position like Secretary General does not means lack of care and\nattention for the relative weight and power different countries exercise in global politics. In a\nmultipolar world is clear that balances are to be made in different tense situations. Nevertheless,\nfidelity is not to be expected from any country from a Secretary General that should be faithful to the\nCharter and its principles only.\nMy delegation appreciates the commitment and important role played by the President of the General\nAssembly in implementing the resolution 69/321 and in this regard the letter dated February 25th, 2016\nregarding informal dialogues with the six candidates for the position of Secretary General to be held\nApril 12-14th, 2016.\nIt is time to act in favor of transparency and democracy.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line814591"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.540197491645813,"wiki_prob":0.459802508354187,"text":"by Susan Gubar\nWas it curiosity, fear, hope, illusion or some other unplanned mixture of expectations that drew me to Susan Gubar’s LATE-LIFE LOVE?\nI’m still not sure, but now that I’ve traveled its 337 pages, one of the few certainties I have about this oddly mesmerizing and endearing book is that being unsure is all right in Gubar’s world. In fact, it can even be empowering.\nA cancer survivor who was supposed to meet her expiry date a decade ago, Gubar had the good fortune to receive a successful experimental drug that extended her remission. So what has she done with that extraordinary gift of quality time? As a cancer survivor myself, I want as little to do with this horrible disease as possible, for as long as possible, but not Gubar.\nShe delved even deeper into that scary world to write MEMOIR OF A DEBULKED WOMAN (2012), about her battle with ovarian cancer --- the one that took my own mother far before her time---and READING AND WRITING CANCER (2016), whose gestation and birth slightly overlapped that of LATE-LIFE LOVE.\nThis latest work from Gubar, a retired university English professor best known for her brilliant and heartfelt New York Times essays on the challenges of aging, is a welcome addition to that rare list of books that truly straddles two genres --- that of memoir and literary criticism.\n\"[O]ne of the few certainties I have about this oddly mesmerizing and endearing book is that being unsure is all right in Gubar’s world. In fact, it can even be empowering.\"\nGubar easily could have filled LATE-LIFE LOVE with anecdotes and reflections on the hopes and realities of conjugal life begun at an age when many seniors have lost their spouses, are single again and often terminally lonely. She could have examined how life unfolds for couples whose age differences span a decade or more, as in her own marriage…and mine.\nOr she could have focused on how youthfully entered long marriages change and adapt over many decades to face the inevitable and often painful losses that come with advancing age. Any of these themes would have produced a memorable book, because that’s the only kind Gubar writes.\nBut LATE-LIFE LOVE is about all of them, and more, which makes it not only uniquely personal but universal, in the best consciousness-raising sense of the word. In the midst of coping with her own health issues and simultaneously supporting her much older husband through a difficult and prolonged recovery from major knee surgery, Gubar called upon her vast literary experience to explore how other writers and their characters over the centuries have dealt with love in the so-called twilight years.\nWhat she comes up with is a surprisingly mixed bag that includes dreamy nostalgia, passive acceptance of failing minds and bodies, defiant zeal for every last drop of ecstasy, fear of decay and death, faith in the unquantifiable strength of mutual devotion, dry humor about the dry years, practical insights for 21st-century relationships, and a renewed appreciation for mature compassion.\nAnd that’s where Gubar’s keen and unflinching critical powers are at their best. Far from escaping blindly into literature while waiting for medical appointments, or riding out bad days (of which she and her husband had more than their fair share), Gubar meticulously probed the intent, integrity and authenticity of an astonishing gallery of authors, from the familiar to the almost unknown.\nA partial list of contributors to LATE-LIFE LOVE includes Ovid, Shakespeare, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Donald Hall, Samuel Beckett, Gabriel García Márquez, Toni Morrison, Marilynne Robinson, Philip Roth, John Updike, John Donne and Colette. Each of them, in some way --- not always transparent or easily detectable --- contributes to a mosaic of understanding that our society has generally ignored or denied.\nThroughout the book, Gubar and her husband Don are repeatedly grateful for their large and willing network of supportive friends and relatives who prove indispensable in overcoming some of the critical logistics of aging, such as downsizing and transportation. The unspoken but clear teaching here is to build and care for your supporters before you need them!\nAnother issue that affects Americans more than we “spoiled” Canadians, with our more accessible national health care system, is that of getting the right medical help when you need it, and being able to afford it. High costs, red tape, long delays and even surgical incompetence all eroded this couple’s life more than they should have.\nLATE-LIFE LOVE is not for the faint-hearted, but neither is it a gloomy or fatalistic anthology of decline. Far from it! In fact, I would highly recommend it to couples decades younger who should know that there is not only “life” in one’s senior years, but beauty and pleasure as well. Like Susan Gubar, you just have to know where to find it.\nReviewed by Pauline Finch on January 4, 2019\nPublication Date: November 13, 2018\nPublisher: W. W. Norton & Company","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1245225"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8713630437850952,"wiki_prob":0.8713630437850952,"text":"Full NASCAR TV schedule for Chicago\nNASCAR Chase for the Sprint Cup starts this weekend\nLAT PHOTOGRAPHIC\nCheck out the TV schedule for this weekend's NASCAR action.\nThe NASCAR Chase for the Sprint Cup will start this weekend at Chicagoland Speedway. The 16 drivers competing for the championship will begin the 10-race quest for the title on Sunday. Check of out the TV schedule below. Friday, Sept. 16 -12:30-1:25 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity practice, NBCSN-1:30-2:55 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup practice, NBC Sports App-3-4:25 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity practice, NBC Sports App-4:45 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series qualifying, FS1-6:45 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup qualifying, NBCSN-8:30 p.m.: NASCAR Camping World Truck Series race, FS1 Saturday, Sept. 17 -10:30-11:25 a.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup practice, CNBC-11:45 a.m.: NASCAR Xfinity qualifying, NBCSN-1:30-2:20 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup practice, NBCSN-3 p.m.: NASCAR Xfinity race, NBC Sunday, Sept. 18 -2:30 p.m.: NASCAR Sprint Cup race, NBCSN","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1339339"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5985545516014099,"wiki_prob":0.4014454483985901,"text":"The Crash of Philip J. Imbrogno\nBy Kevin Randle\nIt has happened again in the world of the UFO. Another researcher, who talked of advanced degrees and of military service in the Special Forces has been found to have invented his background. Philip J. Imbrogno, who claimed a Ph. D. and service with the Army’s Green Berets had neither degree nor Special Forces training.\nLance Moody, who has appeared here in the past, wrote that he recently became interested in Imbrogno’s background and began a somewhat routine search to verify his credentials. Lance, on his web site penned the following exposé:\nSaucers, Lies and Audio Tape\nhe writes,\n“Recently, I became interested in the claims of ‘respected’ UFO and paranormal author, Philip J. Imbrogno. Imbrogno has written many paranormal books. Perhaps his best known was the account of the Hudson Valley UFO sightings he co-authored with J. Allen Hynek.”\nThe information provided by Imbrogo on his web site claimed, “\"Imbrogno holds undergraduate and graduate degrees in physics, astronomy and chemistry from the University of Texas and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 2010 he was awarded a Ph.D. in theoretical chemistry from MIT. He is a staff member of the McCarthy Observatory in New Milford, Connecticut, and is a founder and former director of the Astronomical Society Of Greenwich, and former director of the Bowman Observatory.\"\nAs Moody noted, this suggested the Imbrogno, unlike so many others in the field, had a fine education and was a “real” scientist working in the paranormal arena. Radio show hosts often recited the information without bothering to check the validity of it (though I don’t really blame those hosts... they take the information supplied by the guest and because there are so many guests that it would be nearly impossible to check everything... besides, who would lie about something so easy to verify?).\nMoody wrote, “A telephone conversation with the [MIT] office further determined that there has never been a student with the last name ‘Imbrogno’ attending classes at MIT. Wow. Can it really be that easy?”\nThe answer was, “Yes, it can be that easy.”\nBut Moody also received a written reply, which he published on his web site. No one by the name of Imbrogno had attended classes there. The registrar even checked on various spellings. Nothing.\nMoody contacted Don Ecker of “Dark Matters” radio fame. Ecker said that he’d had Imbrogno on his radio show several times and when he and his wife, Vicki Ecker had been leading UFO, they’d published articles written by Imbrogno.\nEcker was somewhat skeptical of what Moody had found and cautioned that Moody had better be sure of his facts. I suggested the same thing. Be sure you’re right because you could cause yourself some real trouble.\nBut Moody had the goods. It made Ecker suspicious of Imbrogno. He wrote, “Then something else hit me. On the last two shows with Imbrogno he made a point of mentioning his ‘Viet Nam military service’ while a member of the U.S. Army’s elite Special Forces.”\nThis sent Ecker off in another direction. He began to investigate Imbrogno’s military claims. As with those from the academic world, Ecker was unable to verify that Imbrogno had ever served with the Army’s Special Forces.\nEcker sent a note to Imbrogno and a posted reply that sounded like Imbrogno that said, “One last thing Don, you are a great guy if you want my military record DD214. It will show I was a medic in the USAF and did a tour in indochina It might show I was attached to the army for a while I don't know when and where it was all pretty disorganized. I was part of a specialy trained group of medics (the first in line of what today is called a PA in medicine) Much more that a coreman [sic], more than a nurse, but less than a doctor. I was primarily stationed in Thailand, but was attached to a number of army units over the tour. I believe I was in every country in that area The hope was to increase the survival rate of the wounded getting aerovacted out. Get my DD214 it will show 90250 training... # I got punished and article 15 and had to run the VD clinic for a week.”\nThis answer is pretty disorganized and I’m not sure what to make of it. He is now suggesting he was a Air Force medic and was attached to the Army. While the Marines always use Navy “Corpsmen” (and wouldn’t he know how to spell it if he was a corpsman?) for their medics, the Army has had it’s own medics. It has no need to “borrow” them from the Air Force. And note that he has covered that by suggesting this service attached to the Army might not be reflected on his DD 214.\nI’m not sure why Imbrogno doesn’t know what is on his DD 214. He should have received a copy when he left the service, and he would have been told that it was an important document. It is needed to apply for veteran’s benefits, some states use it to determine property tax reductions for veterans, and it is proof of military service.\nHere’s where we are today. Imbrogno has dropped out of paranormal research, at least for the moment. One of his co-authors has severed her relation with him. He does not hold the academic honors he claimed and his military service was not with the Army’s Special Forces. He may or may not have served in Vietnam as a medic with the Air Force.\nDon Ecker wrote, “As I was in the process of completing this report, no verification of Imbrogno serving in the U. S. Army’s Special Forces, much less MACV-SOG was found by the SF Association. Imbrogno offered no copies of his DD-214. (Military Separation documents.) Since this scandal broke he has with-drawn from paranormal research, changed his telephone number and gotten a new and covert email address. His former working partner, Ms. Rosemary E. Guiley has broken her working relationship from Imbrogno. The paranormal field has once again been given a huge black eye from another person that felt the need to lie … for whatever reason. Okay, this has happened in the past and will undoubtedly happen in the future. But there is more here than meets the eye if you stop to think about it.”\nAs Ecker suggested, this is just another black eye for the field. We have had a large number of these problems in the last few years and I suspect we’ll have more in the future. What we need to do is be sure that the people who have come forward to tell their tales and those who investigate them are who they claim to be. In today’s world it is very easy to verify claims and we should be doing so. It won’t stop this endless parade of fakers and phonies but it will limit the damage they cause. It will also mean that we can stop wasting our time and get on with the work that needs to be done.\n. . . More\nPiracy: A Silent Plague on Ufology\nUFO NEWS | Long Time Criminal & Conman, Bill Knell To Cut Deal On Felony Charges with Boone County Prosecutor\nUFO NEWS | Criminal Actions of Bill Knell (AGAIN)\n↑Grab this Headline Animator\nLabels: By Kevin Randle , Embellishment , Fraud , Lance Moody , Philip J. Imbrogno\nMichael Morain 4:37 AM\nAs usual things are not all ways what they appear to be.Little wonder why the real truth is so hard to find. This is the reason why I am so reluctant to come forward with my evidence. The current belief about extraterrestrials is so far from the truth it is laughable. Hilarious ridiculous assuming!!! They're our creators our saviors our friends. Villainy squared bull shot to the nth degree.The truth will set you free and I have it.\nSad, if true about Imbrogno. Veracity is everthing when adderssing ET or related exotic tech, UFO history and lore. That said, THERE ARE some other, so-called \"respected\" speakers out there that demand proper vetting, and one other colorful personality is David Adair. I checked him out 1996-7, and I definitely found his background and authenticity more than lacking. He may pull some interestng facts out during his talks, but they are dressing on a wholly manufactured profile base. Go to his roots, to his high school in Centerville, OH. You'll find during his tenure thete his \"rocket\" was only a science fair novelty. No fusion power going on there. And the snowball grows from there. Many other items of hyperbole flow. Again, I feel bad having to say this, but then he could damage the legitimacy of others who deserve to be recognized, and PAID for speaking.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line377139"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6340333223342896,"wiki_prob":0.36596667766571045,"text":"Securing and Managing Your Cloud Data\nBusiness I.D. Theft\nTheft Methods\nPrevention Practices\nIdentity Theft Business I.D. Theft\nIs the cloud secure?\nNipitpon Singad / EyeEm/Getty Images\nBy Robert Siciliano\nDo you have data in a cloud? No, not a white, fluffy pillow, but on a technological cloud. This term, \"cloud,\" refers to servers that are operated remotely and owned by corporations or individuals. Though clouds can be quite convenient, many ask ourselves, \"Is the cloud secure?\"\nFor years now, there have been billions of dollars invested by major corporations to store and back up their data in a cloud, and it’s proven to be worth it.\nWhen storing data on a computer, it is all kept ‘together in one place. Data on a cloud, however, is spread out across the world, often redundantly. So, what is more secure? A PC that's on your desk or a random cloud server in Miami?\nThe truth is, all data on both a cloud and a PC is vulnerable to theft and damage if not protected. Data based on the cloud is also vulnerable based on where is it stored and through the transmission of the data.\nMost service providers that provide clouds do not give a lot of information about how they protect their data, as this could inform hackers about how to get into their networks.\nSome providers offer a two-factor authentication, which is a good way to protect the data and makes it difficult for hackers to access. With two-factor authentication, there are two different things required to prove identity. For instance, if you have online banking then you must enter your account number, then a password, and upon entering the password you may receive a text message to enter in another one-time password (OTP) to get account access. With your mobile phone in hand, that second factor OTP gets you in.\nHow Clouds Are Changing Technology\nYou may have realized that over the past 10 years or so, computers have grown more powerful and faster than ever before. They have larger hard drives, more RAM, and better processors. All of this has been made possible by cheaper and better technology and as a response to developers of software, who are making programs more complex and demanding.\nThe cloud, when it came along, allowed programs of all kinds, as well as data storage, to go virtual, and people understood that they don't necessarily require a local computer with speed or space. This allows a slower PC to find a new life and devices such as mobile phones, tablets, and e-readers do not require as much space, as data can be stored in a cloud.\nOne of the biggest impacts of the cloud has been with multi-streaming media such as music and movies. Since video and songs have become digitized, there have been dramatic changes in the hardware and devices used for the consumption of content, as well as how it is distributed.\nFurthermore, the cloud encourages the development of ID technology that is designed to authenticate people online and through mobile and card technologies. The advantages to this will eventually lead to more security and ease in our digital lives.\nThe Public Cloud\nThe public cloud is a term that describes the traditional way of using cloud computing, where resources are given to the general public on a self-service basis. It is available through the Internet, web services and applications or from third-party, off-site providers.\nThe Community Cloud\nA community cloud is one that shares its infrastructure between several organizations from a specific community. These communities have a common concern, such as compliance or security, and may be managed or hosted internally or externally, or through a third party. With this cloud, the costs are spread over fewer users, so only some of the benefits of using a cloud are available.\nThe Hybrid Cloud\nA hybrid cloud is one that has two or more clouds, either community, private or public, that remain unique parts, yet are bound, which offers the benefits of multiple models.\nThe Private Cloud\nA private cloud is a cloud that is used by only one person or organization. This cloud is either managed by a third-party or internally, and it may be hosted either externally or internally.\nThese clouds have attracted some criticism since users still have to build, buy and manage them, and there are no benefits such as low up-front costs.\nIs it Safe to Store Passwords in the Cloud?\nHow to Create a Secure Password\nLearn How a VPN Protects Your Computer, Identity, and Privacy\nHow Safe Is the Personal Information You Store in the Cloud?\nBest Security Practices for Mobile Banking\nThe 8 Best Cloud Backup Services of 2019\nHere Are Tips on Keeping Your Mobile Devices Safe From Cyber Threats\nProtect Your Company's Data With These Cybersecurity Best Practices\nPublic Wi-Fi Is Handy, But Is It Too Risky for Online Banking?\nATM Skimming: It’s About To Get Worse\nHow to Protect Your Privacy When Your ISP Sells Your Data\nHow to Protect Your Data From Identity Theft Rings\nWho Is Stealing Identities and How?\nWhich Tax Software Is Best: Online or Installed on Your Computer?\nHow to Prevent Your Mobile Number From Being Ported\nPetya Malware Exposes Vulnerabilities in Computer Software","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line476232"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8415359258651733,"wiki_prob":0.8415359258651733,"text":"Outdoor Sportsman Group Networks Pack Adventure in Top Shows, Movies and Talent in Q1 Programming Schedule\nMail Tweet\nOutdoor Channel Acquires Syndicated Cable Air Rights to Duck Dynasty\nDENVER (December 21, 2015) – Outdoor Sportsman Group Networks are responding to the diverse interests of today’s sportsmen and women by packing their first quarter (Q1) programming lineups for all three networks – Outdoor Channel, Sportsman Channel and World Fishing Network – with adventure, exceptional lifestyle experts and top talent, such as Ivan Carter, Steven Rinella, Lee and Tiffany Lakosky, Louie Tuminaro and Ted Nugent, to name a few; proven shows -syndicated cable airs of Duck Dynasty; and iconic movies with Joe Kidd and more. With original premieres and more than 1,300 new episodes from returning series across all three networks, viewers can expect the most original outdoor programming focused on their passions beginning on Monday, December 28.\n“The new quarter and beginning of 2016 promises to be the start of a programming bonanza for the three networks of the Outdoor Sportsman Group,” said Outdoor Sportsman Group Networks CEO and President Jim Liberatore. “We have been committed and have successfully increased ratings, brought new viewers to the network over the past two years and will continue building on that trend with the premiere of original series Carter’s W.A.R., as well as the newly acquired cable air rights to the first six seasons of Duck Dynasty. Other shows on Sportsman Channel and World Fishing Network continue to solidify our position as the world’s largest aggregator and content provider of outdoor lifestyle programming.”\nOutdoor Channel – with programming focused on outdoor adventure featuring rugged, dangerous and exciting shows – is unveiling a new compelling original series, Carter’s W.A.R. and has acquired exclusive syndicated cable air rights to the popular Duck Dynasty. These programs join a roster of several returning TV series, including: The Gunfather presented by Brownells, Flying Wild Alaska and Wardens presented by Streamlight as tentpole programming for Q1.\nCarter’s W.A.R. (Wildlife Animal Response) presented by Nosler (Mondays at 9 p.m. ET/PT): This Outdoor Channel original series tells the untold story of wildlife detective, conservationist and professional hunting guide Ivan Carter, and his quest to save his homeland – Africa. From heavily armed poachers butchering elephants for their tusks to the slaughter of rhinos for their horns, Africa’s most precious resource is in peril. Can one man expose the truth and make a difference?\nDuck Dynasty (Mondays at 7 p.m. ET/PT): Duck Dynasty follows the Robertsons, a Louisiana bayou family living the American dream as they operate a thriving business – Duck Commander – while staying true to their core values and outdoor lifestyle. They may look like your typical family – except for the beards – but with the antics of patriarch Phil, business-savvy Willie and the rest of the Duck Commander crew, including Willie’s wife, Korie, his brother Jase and Uncle Si, a Vietnam vet, the group is certainly anything but ordinary. Outdoor Channel will air the first six seasons of the series beginning January 18.\nThe Gunfather presented by Brownells (Mondays at 8 p.m. ET/PT): The Tuminaro family is back for Season Two. The Gunfather revolves around the life of Louie Tuminaro, a tough-talking New Yorker who moved his family from the Big Apple to the small town of Hamilton, Montana in pursuit of his lifelong dream: opening the greatest gun shop in the West. That dream is now a reality called the Custom Shop, a firearms sales and restoration business.\nFlying Wild Alaska (Saturdays at 10 p.m. ET): Also back for a second season on Outdoor Channel is Flying Wild Alaska. The show follows the unconventional Tweto family, who rule Alaska’s most dangerous skies through the operation of their family-run airline, Era Alaska. Watch as they battle unforgiving Alaska weather and terrain to transport life’s necessities – champion snow dogs and medicine for sick children – to the isolated rural inhabitants of the Bering Sea coastline.\nWardens presented by Streamlight (Mondays at 11:30 p.m. ET): When your job is protecting our most precious natural resources in some of the nation’s most remote areas, there is rarely a dull moment. The sixth season of Wardens chronicles the lives of Conservation Officers in Montana and highlights the men and women who protect\npublic lands.\nSportsman Channel’s lineup – highlighting programming that appeals to the hardcore hunter and angler – features outdoor lifestyle, adventure, travel, food and survival. With fishing returning to the minds of outdoorsmen, Sportsman Channel is responding with new fishing adventure television series, Wild Billz and Lake Commandos, among numerous other fishing shows already on the docket. Plus, the New Year means the highly-anticipated return of MeatEater and the new adventures of Steven Rinella and crew. Plus, don’t miss the new series Made for the Outdoors to get the inside scoop on how the most popular outdoor brands are made.\nWild Billz (Saturdays at 11 a.m. ET): What kind of person does it take to battle rough oceans, elite competitors, the fastest fish in the ocean and achieve success on the world’s largest stage in billfishing? Wildbillz follows three teams – 4 Aces, Liquid and Vitamin Sea Too – as they compete in the “Quest for the Crest,” a high stakes sailfish series off the Florida coast. Pride, ego and a cash purse in excess of $2 million will drive these teams to unimaginable limits.\nMeatEater (Thursdays at 8 p.m. ET/PT): Host Steven Rinella continues to explore, hunt, and cook in some of North America’s most pristine landscapes. He shares his experience and insight about living off the land as he continues two life-long journeys – the pursuit of a huge public land mule deer and the hunt for his first and only grizzly bear. Other highlights include an impassioned defense of the American pronghorn, a deep dive into a traditional Virginia dove hunt and a return to the big woods of Wisconsin for deer camp on\nopening day.\nLake Commandos (Saturdays at 8:30 a.m. ET): Each week on Lake Commandos, host Steve Pennaz and an expert guest break down new water while trying to out-fish one another.\nMade for the Outdoors (Sundays at 7 p.m. ET): Made for the Outdoors throws open the factory doors to show how the most popular brands of outdoor gear are made. Americans are passionate about their outdoor gear – each year spending billions of dollars on the products they use most. Hosts Bill Sherck and Lindsey Hayes dig into the production process, starting with the raw materials and ending with a finished product at work in the field.\nWhether saltwater or freshwater, a local honey hole or abroad, World Fishing Network has what fishermen and women want with all new episodes of fresh fishing content, including Major League Fishing All Angles and World Fishing Journal.\nMajor League Fishing All Angles (Saturdays at 4 p.m. ET): This new series tells the story of Major League Fishing from a whole new perspective. Viewers have seen the game from the boat – now they’ll see all the intensity and winning techniques. It’s an exclusive look at the game that can only be told by the MLF family.\nWorld Fishing Journal (Sundays at 11:30 a.m. ET) World Fishing Journal chronicles current stories in the fishing world. This month we follow the California Water Crisis. California’s water drought threatened to dry up the state’s rivers. With the impending El Nino set to strike, higher than normal water levels and possible flooding would lead to a crisis of epic proportions. Tune in to find out if El Nino will affect fisheries on the West Coast.\nOther Q1 Highlights include:\nA number of movies will air throughout the quarter on Fridays at 9 p.m. ET, including: Winchester ’73 starring James Stewart and Shelly Winters; Joe Kidd featuring Clint Eastwood and Robert Duvall; and The Edge with Alec Baldwin and Anthony Hopkins.\nAdditional notable series returning with new episodes are: Jim Shockey’s Hunting Adventures (Sundays at 8 p.m. ET), starring Jim and Eva Shockey; Dream Season: The Journey (Sundays at 7 p.m. ET), featuring Mark and Terry Drury; Michael Waddell’s Bone Collector (Sundays at 10:30 p.m. ET) with Michael Waddell, Nick Mundt and Travis “T-Bone” Turner; Crush with Lee & Tiffany (Sundays at 7:30 p.m. ET), starring Lee and Tiffany Lakosky; Ted Nugent Spirit of the Wild (Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m. ET) with Ted Nugent; Go Wild Camo’s Gridiron Outdoors with Mike Pawlawski (Sundays at 6 p.m. ET), starring former NFL quarterback Mike Pawlawski; and RMEF Team Elk with Brandon and Kristy Titus (Thursdays\nat 10:30 p.m. ET).\nFollow master hunter, guide and host Steve West through the untamed wilds of North America in The Adventure Series (Saturdays at 9 p.m. ET).\nMake a note of Outdoor Channel’s refreshed fishing programming, including new episodes of Major League Fishing GEICO Selects (Saturdays at 2 p.m. ET) and, beginning on February 8, new episodes of Jack Link’s Major League Fishing (Saturdays at 2 p.m. ET). Additional angling-focused series making a return are Buccaneers & Bones (Saturdays at 5 p.m. ET) with Yvon Chouinard, Tom Brokaw, Huey Lewis and Lefty Kreh; The Bass Pros (Sundays at 3:30 p.m. ET); and Modern Fishing with Jared Jeffries (Sundays at 3 p.m. ET), featuring former NBA player Jared Jeffries.\nExplore the passion of archery through the eyes of PRIME Pros presented by PRIME bows (Saturdays at 7 p.m. ET).\nProduced by the creators of Pigman: The Series, Just Junie can harvest it, drag it, skin it, gut it and cook it up all with a heavy dose of country-girl attitude (Sundays at Noon ET).\nSeveral series are moving over to Sportsman from Outdoor Channel including: Jay Gregory’s PSE’s Wild Outdoors (Fridays at 9:30 p.m. ET), Chris Bracket’s Arrow Affliction (Fridays at 10:30 p.m. ET), King of the Spring (Fridays at 7 p.m. ET), Steve West’s Hunting Adventures (Wednesdays at 10:30 p.m. ET), Larry Dahlberg’s The Hunt for Big Fish (Saturdays at 11:30 a.m. ET) and Jackie Bushman’s Classics (Thursdays at 8:30 p.m. ET).\nWorld Fishing Network will highlight several shows including: Timmy Horton Outdoors (premieres Monday, January 4 at 8 p.m. ET); Robson Green Extreme Fisherman (premieres Saturday, January 9 at Noon ET) and South Bend’s Lunkerville (premieres Monday, January 11 at 9 p.m. ET).\nAbout Outdoor Sportsman Group: Outdoor Sportsman Group is comprised of the world’s foremost media and entertainment brands for outdoor adventure enthusiasts. It includes three leading multichannel networks: Outdoor Channel, Sportsman Channel and World Fishing Network. The Group also consists of a number of established integrated media assets: 15 outdoor magazines, such as Guns & Ammo, Petersen’s Bowhunting and Florida Sportsman, and 17 top websites, including BassFan.com. Additionally, Outdoor Sportsman Group includes television production operations, Winnercomm, as well as aerial camera businesses, SkyCam and CableCam.\nAbout Outdoor Sportsman Group – Integrated Media: As a premier destination for the most avid outdoors enthusiasts, Outdoor Sportsman Group’s Integrated Media division is widely recognized for its strong special-interest multichannel brands, including Petersen’s Hunting, Guns & Ammo, In-Fisherman, North American Whitetail, Game & Fish and 10 other leading magazines that reach more than 26 million readers. Its network of 17 websites, including BassFan.com, attract more than 38 million annual unique visitors, and hundreds of TV episodes of original branded hunting, sport shooting and fishing programming that airs on Outdoor Sportsman Group’s broadcast entities. Visit http://outdoorsg.com for more information.\nTom Caraccioli | Outdoor Sportsman Group | 212.852.6646 | tcaraccioli@thesportsmanchannel.com\nShareese Thompson | Outdoor Sportsman Group | 212.852.6639 | sthompson@thesportsmanchannel.com\nSkylar Isdale | Outdoor Sportsman Group | 303.615.8838| sisdale@thesportsmanchannel.com\nSportsman Channel’s Mike Schoby Retraces Epic Lewis and Clark Expedition in Annual Petersen’s “Border to Border” Mini Series\nWorld Fishing Network’s “World Fishing Journal” Features Sisters on the Fly and Heated Debates in Nova Scotia on Sunday, January 3 at 11:30 a.m. ET","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line953243"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7365413904190063,"wiki_prob":0.26345860958099365,"text":"CUProdigy hires and promotes executives\nLAYTON, UT (February 12, 2019) — CUProdigy has announced three new hires and three internal promotions. Two of the three new hires are filling new positions at the technology CUSO, which is led by CEO Bret Weekes who took over in November 2018.\nAmber Harsin was promoted to Executive Vice President of Market Engagement, a newly created position. She has 16 years of experience in the credit union industry and has worked at Prodigy for five years. In her new role, Amber will oversee engagement with new and existing clients, network partners, and peer group technology firms to identify market needs and trends. She will also serve as an ambassador for the cooperative business model and an expert in credit union core software technology and practices. She has a BS degree in Technical Sales from Western Governors University and is a Certified Scrum Master and SCRUM Product Owner from the Scrum Alliance.\nTom Kealamakia has filled the Vice President of Research Development position, a new position at CUProdigy. In this role, he will lead Prodigy’s engineers and project managers in the development of core processing and supporting software systems. Tom joins Prodigy having most recently worked at Overstock.com, where he held leadership positions in the retailer’s software engineering division and gained extensive experience in strategic team leadership, application development, software platforms, APIs and system architecture. He has a BS degree in Informational Systems & Technologies from Weber State University.\nGary McMullin has taken the position of Vice President of Client Development at CUProdigy, a new position leading the Client Development division responsible for customer success, conversion services and quality control. Gary comes to CUProdigy from the $700 million Deseret First FCU, where he was VP of Technology for nearly 20 years. He was responsible for defining and executing the credit union’s strategic direction during that time. He has a BS in Accounting from Arizona State University.\nA new Controller, Bryant Solomon, comes to Prodigy from Tesla, where he managed a team of accountants responsible for overseeing the financial reporting of the tech firm’s energy investments and partnerships. Bryant previously worked at Goldman Sachs. He has a Masters in Finance from the University of Utah.\nAmanda Garabedian was promoted to another new position, Assistant Vice President of Conversion Services. She has 10 years of credit union experience and for the last four years, has led Prodigy’s conversions and other technology projects for new and existing client credit unions. She has a BA degree in Finance and a Masters in Business Administration from Grand Valley State University.\nDerrick Pope was promoted to Assistant Vice President of Software Development, a new position. He will work with Kealamakia to assist in the design and development of CUProdigy’s core processing product and manage the development team’s quality standards. He has worked at CUProdigy for five years and has 25 years experience in credit union core software technology. He has a AS in Computer Science and a BS in Informational Systems & Technologies from Weber State University.\n“These new hires and promotions position Prodigy to provide superior execution of our core and cloud-based technology to the credit union community,” said President/CEO Bret Weekes. “This is a great leadership team, who share a passion for credit unions, and value the cooperative business model and all that it means for the member owner. I am very pleased to have each of them as part of our team at Prodigy.”\nAmanda Garabedian\nAmber Harsin\nBryant Solomon\nDerrick Pope\nGary McMullin\nAbout CUProdigy\nBased in Layton, Utah, CUProdigy is a technology-focused credit union service organization created to make its member credit unions more efficient and cost-effective through superior, cloud-based solutions. The CUSO offers its own modern, cloud-based core processing platform, as well as coreagnostic cloud-based IT infrastructure services that include a very robust virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI) solution. Additional information is available at www.cuprodigy.com.\nEVP Market Engagement\nJohn San Filippo\nOmniChannel Communications, Inc.\n(619) 467-0431 (o)\n(619) 274-1131 (m)\njohn@omnichannelcommunications.com","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line926376"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5812885761260986,"wiki_prob":0.41871142387390137,"text":"Asia's Sellout Season\nLast weekend your editor attended an Italian opera at the National Theater here in Taiwan. The actors were all petite locals, but that didn’t stop them from belting out arias in a sonorous enough fashion to make the fattest Italian leading lady blush. The audience consisted of well-to-do academic types and business people. Men came in dapper suits and the women wore silks and fine coral jewelry. It was a far cry from what you might expect from a society that, only a few generations ago, was largely agrarian-based.\nAs the orchestra’s notes filled the plush, cavernous hall, we wondered, “Could this be the new Asia? The Asia of the future?” Those who dream of a great global economic recovery certainly hope so. Now that the American consumer is all but tapped out, they look to Asian producers to fill the demand gap. But one opening night does not make a season, as those in the industry might say.\nTaiwan is not all Lucia di Lammermoor’s and lorgnettes, of course. Far from it. Indeed, few places we’ve visited in Asia more abundantly furnish the senses with the rich/poor, old/new dichotomies so prevalent around this region. Just outside the concert hall, for instance, looms a giant bronze statue of Chiang Kai-shek, a stark and foreboding reminder of the not-so-distant past when the tiny South China Sea island was plunged into chaos and routine class purges.\nEver since Kuomintang (KMT) Chairman Chiang, the one-time friend and later arch nemesis of Chairman Mao Tse-Tung, fled to Taiwan (or Formosa, the Portuguese name meaning “beautiful [island]”) in 1949, the place has been a hotbed of political friction. Naturally, not all locals welcomed Chiang’s heavy-handed, authoritarian rule. There was plenty of bloodshed in the streets under Chiang’s “White Terror” and masses of dispossessed citizens rebelled against his iron fist. But Chiang did have a few things going for him. When the KMT party arrived in Taiwan, they brought with them a huge portion of the mainland’s gold and foreign currency reserves. Much of the intellectual and business elite also followed in order to avoid the communist crush of Mao’s “Reds” back home. And, vitally and with the help of aid from the US, the KMT also instituted an import-substitution policy, whereby the country began to manufacture previously imported goods domestically. This policy was to prove an invaluable part of the small island’s economic growth in subsequent years.\nAfter Chiang, the increasingly capitalistic, export-driven Taiwan grew its foreign reserves exponentially. Today it has the fourth largest stash in the world, behind only China, Japan and Russia. (As a point of interest, the US comes in 21st on the rankings, right between Poland and Libya.)\nIt’s not difficult to imagine a place like Taiwan, one of Asia’s four “Tiger Economies” (alongside Singapore, Hong Kong and South Korea), leading some kind of regional renaissance. But the plot here is just as much tragedy as it is comedy.\nFor one thing, a not-insignificant portion of the island’s 23 million people still lives hand to mouth. Your editor buys his fresh fruit and vegetables from a local night market right next to his building, where vendors shuttle their produce in from farms in the surrounding mountains on the back of smoke-spluttering mopeds. These people work long, hard hours and are by no means equipped to pick up the conspicuously lagging consumption duties abandoned by their cash-strapped American cousins. The lines on their smiling faces run deep with the stresses and pains of the recent past and of a life spent laboring for little in return.\nNot two stops away on the world’s most advanced underground metro system, Taiwan’s tallest building, Taipei 101 (the world’s highest until the Burj Dubai opened earlier this month), towers as the centerpiece of the high-end retail area surrounding the City Hall. Streets there are lined with luxury items form Paris, Milan and Seoul. Vacationing shoppers gorge themselves on Hermès handbags and Prada pumps, the price tags of which would have been unimaginable here a few years ago.\nTo be sure, the island has come a long, long way over the past five or six decades. Where agriculture once made up more than one third of the GDP here, it now contributes less than 2%. The lion’s share of economic activity today belongs to the booming information technology and biotech industries. Semiconductors sales are a source of national university pride and cutting edge companies like Acer (TSE: 2353), Asus (TSE: 2357) and HTC Corporation (TSE: 2498) churn out $300 laptops and smartphones by the ton, which they then pump into hungry foreign markets.\nBut it is important to remember, especially when considering export driven/reliant economies, that not all demand is created equal. There is the kind forged in the crucible of the free market, rooted in sound money and underpinned by the desires of real people. Then there is the phantom, government-sponsored kind, masquerading behind a cloak of public stimulus boondoggles and debased currencies. Administrations from DC to Beijing and beyond are guilty of exactly this act of economic sleight of hand.\nIt is impossible to know exactly how much of the world’s current demand is real and how much is simply manufactured by make-work governments looking to pad their GDP figures with public works programs and easy money handouts. We’ve written in this space before about how liquidity inflows from the West, coupled with loose monetary policies locally, have pushed property prices and stock markets in China to bubble-like valuations.\nDan Denning, our mate who heads up the Aussie chapter of The Daily Reckoning, spent the week there warning his readers of China’s overly ambitious capital outlays.\n“Now it would be presumptuous to say that all Chinese capital spending was somehow derivative of American consumer demand,” observes Dan. “China has other trading partners and markets, although without America things might not be so flash. But it is without doubt true that Chinese capital spending is a direct consequence of the global credit bubble.”\nThe faux demand plot is yet to fully reveal itself on the world economic stage, but it would be foolish to assume export dependent economies have not grown somewhat accustomed to bloated order books. Taiwan’s generational gains are hard fought and the people here are among the most intelligent, driven individuals we’ve ever met. It is hard to ignore, however, that on both sides of the Pacific an over-consuming, publicly-funded “Chi-merican” fat lady may already be singing her swansong.\nGDP: The New “Slow” Normal\nEconomic growth requires dramatic increases productivity… The economy would be how much richer without the financial sector?…","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1233432"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8993450999259949,"wiki_prob":0.8993450999259949,"text":"Welsh state trumpeter promises world-class fanfare at royal wedding\nCredit: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire/PA Images\nA senior state trumpeter, from Wales, taking part in the royal wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle has promised his team will perform like they are the best in the world.\nThe gold-jacketed brass players from the Band of the Household Cavalry are regulars at major state occasions where the Queen is present, as well as at national events and anniversaries.\nTrumpet Major Matthew Screen told the Press Association he will be playing along with five others in the organ loft during the ceremony at St George's Chapel in Windsor on May 19.\nThe 44-year-old, from Blackwood, near Newport, South Wales has completed a tour of Afghanistan and been deployed to Bosnia.\nUnable to reveal what the melodic blasts played at the wedding will be, Trumpet Major Screen, who has been in the military for 27 years, said all he can say is that they will be fanfares.\nThis will include the Royal Salute for the entrance of the Queen and another for the arrival of the bride, Ms Markle.\nFor me it is all about instilling enough confidence in the guys, and training and preparing that well that we are prepared until we can't get it wrong.\nWe have already got it right, we are a very, very experienced team, we have played at all sorts of major occasions for many years.\nThis (the wedding) is massive, isn't it? Eighty billion people might be watching live on television - it is a lot of pressure. But at the end of the day when it comes to being in that chapel, we are the best in the world at what we do - and we will perform like we are.\n– Trumpet Major Matthew Screen\nTrumpet Major Screen said over his time with the state trumpeters since joining them in 1995, he has played for prominent individuals on state visits, as well as Tina Turner and Nelson Mandela.\nHe has also played at events including Euro 1996, the London 2012 Olympics, the Eurovision Song Contest and appeared on Britain's Got Talent.\nSince he was a child Trumpet Major Screen said he can remember seeing the state trumpeters on television and deciding then that he wanted to join their ranks\nLast updated Thu 10 May 2018\nGeraint Thomas moves to second place in Tour de France","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line90628"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5808200240135193,"wiki_prob":0.4191799759864807,"text":"To Africanize, Decolonize Or Both?\nBrenda Wambui\n6 December ,2016\nThis conversation on what it means to be African has been happening since the days of the independence struggles in many African countries, and has been a major part of African post-colonial discourse. The conversation has mostly focused on knowledge, since knowledge is the beginning of identity formation, with some commentators saying that we need to Africanize, others saying that we need to decolonize, and many saying that we need to do both.\nIn the words of Tebello Letsekha:\n[Africanization] is a learning process and a way of life for Africans. It involves incorporating, adapting and integrating other cultures into and through African visions to provide the dynamism, evolution and flexibility so essential in the global village. Africanization is the process of defining or interpreting African identity and culture. It is formed by the experiences of the African Diaspora and has endured and matured over time from the narrow nationalistic intolerance to an accommodating, realistic and global form.\nThe Sankofa Youth Movement says:\nBy “Africanization”, we mean the embracing of our African heritage, and developing a sense of loyalty towards the Motherland – Africa. This involves adopting and promoting African culture, putting it on the pedestal currently occupied by the west.’ These reflections seem to suggest conflict between the idea of being African and the need to adopt aspects of Western culture. It is a situation that might impact negatively on the development of appropriate African curricula in education in general, and in higher education in particular. In fact, Le Grange (2007, 581) warns educators to be aware of this interaction between cultures, because it could complicate the learning process: ‘For non-Western learners, interaction between two worldviews characterizes much of their school experience, complicating the learning process and potentially resulting in cognitive conflict.’\nAfricanization, then, is an exercise in offering context. In learning our history. In changing our lenses. Much of the history of our continent is written by white men from Europe and North America, and this no doubt affects how the world sees us, but more importantly, how we see ourselves. For our children, it has meant a very narrow view of our continent. In many school books, the history of our continent is written in three broad categories: pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial. In doing so, we single out colonization as the single most important thing that has happened to Africa, and centre it.\nHowever, there is great, uncharted territory when it comes to re-writing our history from our own perspective. To begin with, our experience as Africans should form the foundation of this revisionist history. It should capture both the unique histories of our countries/peoples, and the common history we share by virtue of coming from the same continent, being othered by the rest of the world, and experiencing many other similar challenges. We have great stories of our peoples that do not begin and end with colonization, we must capture those.\nWe have been taught that we have no knowledge. That we do not like to read. This is not only false, but extremely damaging, and is as a result of seeing Africa through a Western lens. Our histories must be revised and expanded, and taught to our children. They must also be inclusive.\nChimamanda Adichie says this in her talk, The Danger of a Single Story:\nThe single story creates stereotypes, and the problem with stereotypes is not that they are untrue, but that they are incomplete. They make one story become the only story.\nIf the African story has traditionally been told through the white, male lens, then the revisionist history must be inclusive. I am reminded of the constant retort I receive whenever I speak of feminism, or the LGBTQI community. I am told that they “are unAfrican.” Which then begs the question, what qualifies as “African”? Who sets the standard? Because I would argue what many consider “African” is in fact 1800s Victorian England’s intolerance, prudishness and small mindedness.\nOur revisionist history must include the voices of women, of the queer community, of all other minorities on the continent. Africanization is a process in memory, both past and present. Thus even as we live our lives in the present, we are creating our history, and it is important that we tell our stories. From our perspective, and that these stories be inclusive, capturing the beauties and vagaries of every day African life, and resisting the two simplistic, prevailing narratives of our continent. Africa is not Schroedinger’s cat, that it could only ever be dead or alive; that we must endlessly speculate and bloviate on whether it is “the dark continent” or “rising.” Africa is many things to many people. It always has been, and will continue to be so.\nIf Africanization is a process in memory, decolonization is the removal of shackles – mental, economic, social and political. Decolonization was narrowly viewed by the West as the process in which African countries attained independence from their colonial rule, but the exit of the colonialists did not mean that the African had been fully decolonized.\nIn the words of Frantz Fanon:\nDecolonization, which sets out to change the order of the world, is, obviously, a program of complete disorder. But it cannot come as a result of magical practices, nor of a natural shock, nor of a friendly understanding. Decolonization, as we know, is a historical process: that is to say that it cannot be understood, it cannot become intelligible nor clear to itself except in the exact measure that we can discern the movements which give it historical form and content. Decolonization is the meeting of two forces, opposed to each other by their very nature, which in fact owe their originality to that sort of substantification which results from and is nourished by the situation in the colonies.\nTheir first encounter was marked by violence and their existence together–that is to say the exploitation of the native by the settler–was carried on by dint of a great array of bayonets and cannons. The settler and the native are old acquaintances. In fact, the settler is right when he speaks of knowing “them” well. For it is the settler who has brought the native into existence and who perpetuates his existence. The settler owes the fact of his very existence, that is to say, his property, to the colonial system.\nDecolonization never takes place unnoticed, for it influences individuals and modifies them fundamentally. It transforms spectators crushed with their inessentiality into privileged actors, with the grandiose glare of history’s floodlights upon them. It brings a natural rhythm into existence, introduced by new men, and with it a new language and a new humanity. Decolonization is the veritable creation of new men. But this creation owes nothing of its legitimacy to any supernatural power; the “thing” which has been colonized becomes man during the same process by which it frees itself.\nIf decolonization is the removal of shackles, what does that mean for the trauma of colonization? I believe that this is the first point at which the paths of decolonization and Africanization cross. The memory of colonization should remain alive, just not centred as the main memory. We should think about the trauma, and everything that can possibly be done to alleviate it should be done.\nIt is important that reparations be made by colonial powers to the people they harmed. These amends should be direct, except when doing so would lead to more harm. The most vivid example I can think of in Kenya is when some members of the Mau Mau won a settlement of 20 million pounds against the British government for their crimes during colonialism. If we are to truly have justice, all the colonial powers must atone in a similar way to the peoples they colonized, because many of these countries remain shackled years later, relegated to the “third world” due to the pillaging of their economies and the presence of extractive, oppressive institutions that have their roots in colonial times.\nIt is also important that we address our new colonizers, the elites in African countries that continue the oppression that stemmed from colonialism. Many African countries merely switched colonizers. One only needs to read the 2013 Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission report to see the violence that our very own have occasioned on us. They too must pay reparations, and be held accountable for their crimes if we are to truly decolonize.\nDecolonization involves the removal of power structures and symbols that serve to keep us subjugated, disempowered, and forever at a disadvantage. Much of this includes denial of access to the public of what should be theirs.\nAccess to education, for example. The mere fact that only about 1% of the children in Kenya who start primary school go on to complete university is evidence of colonization. Especially because we place high importance on university education. We are denied access to public spaces, which we have already paid for using our tax money. The Nairobi Arboretum, for example, now charges KES 50 for access. We are denied access to land, which many of the rich and politicians grab from the public and privatize, when it does not belong to them in the first place.\nIt becomes apparent that it is necessary for us to both Africanize and decolonize. It is important that we remove others from the centre and place ourselves there instead. That we assert that blackness is not a backdrop against which white lives play out. We are living in an age when identity politics have gained new importance, and it is important that we claim our identity and our narratives. In this endeavor, we must prioritize freedom, and human dignity. We must accord everyone their rights, and avoid creating new strata which will only serve to oppress us. If all oppression is connected, then our freedom is intersectional, and it begins at the crossroads of Africanization and decolonization.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line870804"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5751226544380188,"wiki_prob":0.5751226544380188,"text":"Dayton Director, Professor of Liberal Arts\niberry@skidmore.edu\nThe Dayton Director is responsible for the overall direction of the museum. This includes the curatorial, publishing, and educational programming. As the primary spokesperson for the museum, the Dayton Director represents the museum on campus, across the country, and around the world.\nIan Berry is Dayton Director of The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College. Berry has organized over ninety museum exhibitions including interdisciplinary collaborations on subjects from the Hudson River to Shaker furniture, and monographic exhibitions with artists such as Terry Adkins, Nicole Eisenman, Nancy Grossman, Jim Hodges, Nina Katchadourian, Corita Kent, Nicholas Krushenick, Shahzia Sikander, Amy Sillman, Fred Tomaselli, and Kara Walker.\nBerry received his MA from the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College in 1998 and served as Assistant Curator at the Williams College Museum of Art before coming to Skidmore in 2000. In his role as Professor of Liberal Arts at Skidmore he teaches the Art History seminar Inside the Museum and is a frequent guest speaker for a wide variety of academic departments. Berry is also the author and editor of many volumes devoted to contemporary art practice.\nFrom 2006-2012 Berry served as Consulting Director of the Emerson Gallery at Hamilton College and in 2009-10 was the Roy Acuff Chair of Excellence in the Creative Arts at Austin Peay University. He serves on the Saratoga Springs Arts Commission, has chaired the Visual Arts Panel of the New York State Council on the Arts and serves on several advisory committees for regional and national arts organizations.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line381751"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7151199579238892,"wiki_prob":0.7151199579238892,"text":"http://fna.ir/dapsz2\nThu Jun 27, 2019 2:34\n1st Debate: Democrats Criticize Trump for Withdrawing US from Iran's Deal as Root Cause of Crisis in ME\nTEHRAN (FNA)- Almost all democratic candidates in the scheduled debates on Wednesday blamed President Donald Trump for withdrawing Washington from the nuclear deal with Tehran, stating that the move has led to escalating tensions between the United States and the Islamic Republic.\nSen. Elizabeth Warren (Mass.), New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D), Sen. Cory Booker (D-N.J.), former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julián Castro (D), former Rep. John Delaney (D-Md.), Rep. Tulsi Gabbard (D-Hawaii), Washington Gov. Jay Inslee (D), Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.), former Rep. Beto O'Rourke (D-Texas) and Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) kicked off their widely anticipated first debate of the 2020 campaign season on Wednesday evening as a crowded field of White House hopefuls compete to take on Trump.\nWhen the debate was drawn to Iran, all candidates criticized Trump for withdrawing the United States from the Barack Obama-era nuclear agreement between Tehran and the six major world powers (five member states of the United Nations Security Council - Russia, the United States, France, the United Kingdom and China - and Germany).\nWhile others raised their hand to say they would rejoin the pact, Booker declined to commit to rejoin the nuclear deal which Trump withdrew the US from last year.\n“We need to renegotiate and get back into a deal, but I’m not going to have a primary platform to say unilaterally I’m going to rejoin that deal, because when I’m president of the United States I’m going to do the best I can to secure this country and that region and make sure that if I have the opportunity to leverage a better deal, I’m going to do it,” he said.\nBooker slammed Trump for withdrawing from the deal, saying it has led to a recent spike in tensions between Washington and Tehran.\nKlobuchar, in response to a question about heightened tensions with Iran, said Trump is “10 minutes” and “one tweet” away from getting the United States involved in a war, adding, “I don’t think we should be conducting foreign policy in our bathrobe at 5 in the morning.”\nKlobuchar stated that she would renegotiate the 2015 agreement if she were elected president, describing the nuclear deal, formally known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), as a good but “imperfect” agreement.\nKlobuchar asserted that Trump “has made us less safe than we were when he became president”, referencing recent comments by Iranian officials that Tehran will soon surpass the caps on uranium put in place under the agreement.\nIraq War veteran Gabbard stated that Trump’s “chickenhawk Cabinet” has led the United States “to the brink of war with Iran”, urging an end to escalating tensions and a return to the agreement.\n“Donald Trump and his cabinet, [Secretary of State] Mike Pompeo, [National Security Adviser] John Bolton and others are creating a situation that just a spark would light off a war with Iran which is incredibly dangerous,” she said, adding that “the American people need to understand that this war with Iran would be far more devastating, far more costly than anything that we ever saw in Iraq\".\n“It would take many more lives, it would exacerbate the refugee crisis, and it wouldn’t be just contained in Iran, this would turn into regional war,” Gabbard stressed, noting that the nuclear deal was “an imperfect agreement”, but can be negotiated “to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear weapon and preventing us from going to war”.\nAsked about her red line, Gabbard answered that if there was an attack against American troops “then there would have to be a response”.\nTensions around Iran have been rising since Trump torpedoed the landmark 2015 nuclear deal and re-imposed sweeping sanctions targeting large swathes of Iran’s economy. Recently, Washington raised the stakes in the standoff, sending additional military assets – including a carrier strike group, a bomber task force, and Patriot missiles – to countries bordering Iran. The latest conflict between the US and Iran started after an intruding American spy drone was shot down in Iranian sky last Thursday.\nTen other Democrats will take the stage on Thursday night, including former Vice President Joe Biden (D) and Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.).\nDeaths, Displacement as Heavy Rain, Floods Hit Northeastern India\nTEHRAN (FNA)- More than a million people have been displaced in Northeastern India after days of torrential rain. Flash floods in the region have killed 10 people while farmlands and residential areas have been submerged after rivers burst their banks. [VIDEO]","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line181050"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6247065663337708,"wiki_prob":0.37529343366622925,"text":"children's literature\t9 months ago\ncivil rights\t22 months ago\nMartin Luther King\t33 months ago\nMLK\t103 months ago\nracial segregation\t14 months ago\nsegregation\t26 months ago\nRevisiting the Civil Rights movement through multicultural children’s books\nTina Lin | January 26, 2011\nTopics: Books\nWith Martin Luther King Jr. Day recently past, I thought it was quite fitting that I came upon two picture books, Freedom on the Menu: the Greensboro Sit-Ins by Carole Boston Weatherford (Call no. PZ7.W3535 Fr 2005) and Freedom Summer by Deborah Wiles (Call no. PZ7.W6474 Fr 2001, both of which are beautifully illustrated by Jerome Lagarrigue. Freedom on the Menu, set in 1960, shares the experience of segregation and the onset of gradual change as everyday people “st[and] up [against racial injustice] by sitting down” from the perspective of Connie, a girl who has always wanted to but has never had a banana split at the counter because the counter only serves white people. Four of her brother’s college friends sitting at counters in protest of racial segregation laws mark the beginning of a wave of protests that spreads, and finally change is slowly ushered in. Blacks begin to be served at the counter and Connie finally gets to enjoy the long-awaited banana split there. But in the process she has come to realize that more than getting the actual food item, it is the equality behind being able to sit freely at a counter that is ultimately the most desirable.\nFreedom Summer tells the story of two boys’ deepening understanding of racism and the need to take courage to counter it the summer after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. While John Henry’s mom works for Joe’s mom, the two are best friends and do everything together except swim in the town pool and go into stores to buy ice pops, since John Henry “isn’t allowed.” So instead, they swim in the creek and John Henry waits outside while Joe gets ice pops for the both of them. Told through Joe’s voice, the two of them excitedly race to the pool after the the Civil Rights Acts gets passed – only to find that county dump trucks have filled up the pool with asphalt. This slap of disappointment marks the first time the two boys talk about racism explicitly as they realize the depth of racial injustice that exists and the long road that must still be undertaken to bridge the disjunction between law and reality. John Henry says, “White folks don’t want colored folks in their pools” and Joe knows he’s right. And as the two of them go to get ice pops, this time they make a point of going in together and John Henry insists that he buys his own.\nWhile these two stories are told from the viewpoint of children and may seem a little simplistic at times, they are good starting points for discussions about racism and social justice with children. Because of how the stories are built around small everyday experiences of children, e.g. longing for dessert or wanting to go swimming with a friend, children may find it easier to relate to characters in the books. At the same time, my concern is that the stories, especially Freedom on the Menu, make the struggle for equality seem much simpler and smoother than it really was, since they do not delve very deeply into acts of discrimination, injustice, and atrocity that took place but provide a rather sanitized version of reality. I suppose that comes down to what one’s idea of what/how much children should or should not be exposed to is though. As it is, the books can serve as a launching point into exploring racism, segregation, and the Civil Rights movement, and it is up to one’s discretion to supplement the books with other sources (newspaper clippings, photos, primary documents, other books, etc.) and discussions that will appropriately build up one’s particular group of children’s awareness of and concern for issues of racial inequality and the power of taking a stand.\nBrian Hughes says:\nIt’s great to think about using these books in classrooms. Thanks for your thoughtful write-up.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line918398"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8827695846557617,"wiki_prob":0.8827695846557617,"text":"DIAMOND V-The Shade of J. Ballantine Hannay.\nBy Emily Hahn\nThe New Yorker, May 26, 1956 P. 102\nREPORTER AT LARGE about industrial diamonds, which account for 80% of the diamond trade in terms of bulk and 25% in terms of profit. In Feb., 1955, General Electric Research Laboratory, in Schenectady, announced that they had succeeded in producing man-made diamonds for industrial use. This is of interest to De Beers Consolidated Mines, Ltd., who control practically the entire world trade in uncut diamonds. At the moment, though, it is no threat to them since it costs about twice as much to produce man-made diamonds as to mine them, and bulk production has not yet been achieved. De Beers markets their industrial stones thru Industrial Distributors, a subsidiary company, and 9 yrs. ago, they set up the Diamond Research Laboratory to conduct research into the properties & uses of diamonds. Industrials are small, drab stones. Being nature's hardest substance they are used in all sorts of cutting, grinding and boring tools. They are almost indispensable to some industries. The U.S. has been stockpiling them for the last ten years. Writer describes a visit to the Diamond Research Laboratory, where she talked with Dr. J.F.H. Custers, and learned a little about their research. Also tells about other attempts to produce man-made diamonds, including one hoax.\nWhat HBO’s “Chernobyl” Got Right, and What It Got Terribly Wrong\nBy Masha Gessen\nThe show’s creators imagine confrontation where it was unthinkable—and, in doing so, they cross the line from conjuring a fiction to creating a lie.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line686137"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7357935905456543,"wiki_prob":0.7357935905456543,"text":"Fun for Free: Children’s Museum celebrates 35th anniversary\nSeptember 19, 2018 September 19, 2018 Seacoast Roaming Reporter\nThirty-five years ago one of the first children’s museums in the country opened its doors in Portsmouth. In 2008 the museum was relocated to Dover to a facility that more than quadrupled the size of the original. The museum, formerly known as the Children’s Museum of Portsmouth, was renamed the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire in an effort to better serve children and families throughout the Granite State, according to Jane Bard, the president of the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire.\n“We were able to add not only more exhibit experiences but also classroom spaces. We also expanded our efforts to reach out to communities that were not able to visit us by taking the museum on the road through outreach programs to libraries and schools,” she said.\nIn celebration of the changes and evolutions of the museum throughout its 35-year history, the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire will host a free family fun day Saturday, Sept. 22.\n“We will be bringing back some of our favorite activities,” said Bard. “We have a miniature version of that. We will be bringing back some of our favorite hands-on activities in the STEAM lab, and we will be bringing Books Alive character Curious George to the museum for meet-and-greet times throughout the day.”\nThe event will serve as the maiden voyage for a new exhibit, “One World,” which brings three popular immigrant cultures from around New Hampshire to the forefront of hands-on education.\n“It will focus on the cultures from Indonesia, India and Mexico. Children will be able to shop for food in the market and bring it to the cafe to prepare and serve. They’ll be able to choose musical instruments, masks, clothing, and bring it to a festival in celebration of those three areas of the world. It’s really an immersive sensory experience,” said Bard.\nThe free celebration, Bard said, is one way of giving back to a community that has supported the museum’s efforts over the past 35 years.\n“Thirty percent of our visitors do come for free or reduced admission, but we have never hosted an outright free day for everyone in the community,” she said. “We feel that it is really important to open our doors to welcome and celebrate the past 35 years and highlight all of the exciting changes that we have and will continue to make to the museum over the coming years.”\nBard hopes that the event will attract families who have never had the opportunity to spend a day at the museum, as well as families who have explored the different exhibits.\n“As children grow and change, the way that they experience the museum and exhibits grows and changes as well,” she said.\nFREE FAMILY FUN DAY SCHEDULE\nOn Saturday, Sept. 22, bring the whole family to the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire in Dover for a day full of free fun. Here’s a look at the day’s schedule. Visit childrens-museum.org or call 603-742-2002 for more information.\n10 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.: Floating Boats outside the museum in upper Henry Law Park\nMake aluminum foil boats and test them out in our kiddie pool with representatives from SEED (Seacoast Education Endowment of Dover).\n10 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Special visit from York Center for Wildlife & their Animal Ambassadors\nOutside the museum in upper Henry Law Park\n10:30 a.m.: Mini Wee Ones Class inside the Museum’s Deep Sea Classroom\nJoin CMNH Education Director Xanthi Gray for a mini version of our popular Wee Ones Wednesdays class, complete with storytime, crafts, music and games.\nNoon and 3:30 p.m.: Meet-and-greet with Curious George at the upper Henry Law Park Rotary Pavilion Stage. Say hello to the museum’s most popular Books Alive costumed character, Curious George. He will pose for pictures and offer high fives and hugs. Curious George will also be roaming around the museum and park from 1:30 to 2 p.m.\n11 a.m.: Magic Fred Show at the upper Henry Law Park Rotary Pavilion Stage. Join Magic Fred for an interactive high-quality magic show full of illusions and music.\n11 a.m. to 2 p.m.: Guacamole, Chips & Salsa with Tendercrop Farm outside the museum in upper Henry Law Park. To help celebrate the opening of the museum’s “One World” exhibits, Tendercrop Farms will be handing out fresh samples of guacamole, chips and salsa!\n1 p.m.: Dover Ducky Derby. Watch the ducks launch behind the museum, along the river fence.\nThe Dover Ducky Derby is a joint fundraiser between the Museum and SEED (Seacoast Education Endowment of Dover). Adopted rubber ducks will launch from Washington Street bridge. Prizes will be awarded to the first five ducks that finish the race. Ducks can be adopted for the race at the museum or online at www.childrens-museum.org: $5 for one duck, $50 for a gaggle of 12 ducks, or $100 for a flock of 50 ducks.\n2 p.m.: Lindsay and Her Puppet Pals at the upper Henry Law Park Rotary Pavilion Stage.\nJoin Lindsay Aucella and her menagerie of puppet friends for a high-energy, silly and interactive performance full of thoughtful storytelling that will inspire young audience members to explore creative play, self-confidence and empathy. Lindsay was mentored by Martha Dana, frequent performer and longtime friend of the Children’s Museum of New Hampshire, back when the museum was in Portsmouth. Martha gifted Lindsay her beloved puppet family when she retired, so you may recognize some old friends during Lindsay’s performance!\n2 to 4 p.m.: Catapults & Rollercoaster Making inside the Museum’s STEAM Innovation Lab and classroom. Join museum educators inside the museum to create catapults and rollercoasters.\n2 to 4 p.m.: Straws & Connectors inside the Museum’s Colorful Classroom\nPlay, construct and build with the museum’s popular set of straws and connectors.\n2:30 p.m.: Birthday cake cutting at the upper Henry Law Park Rotary Pavilion Stage\nNo birthday is complete without a cake! Join us for a special treat, while cake lasts. Thanks to Duston’s Bakery for their birthday cake donation.\n3 p.m.: Anyone Can Grow Food in the museum’s garden located in the Dover Adventure Playground. Visit the museum’s gardens in the Dover Adventure Playground and learn all about the plants growing there. Visitors may even get to try some vegetables fresh from the garden.\nOngoing throughout the day (10 a.m. to 5 p.m.)\nShake Your Sillies Out\nCMNH Anniversary temporary tattoo station\nStory Walk with “Do Like a Duck Does”\nCollaborative Art Activity\n*Featured photo: Lindsay Aucella and her Puppet Pals will be just one of the many special guests and activities offered at the Children’s Museum of NH’s Free Family Fun Day on Saturday, Sept. 22. Courtesy photo.\nMore than a Beach Town: Hampton Shows off its artistic side\n4 Shore Things: September 27-October 3","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1305864"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5443191528320312,"wiki_prob":0.45568084716796875,"text":"TAU research cause of Alzheimer’s disease\nThe study has just been published in the journal Nature Neuroscience and received a 2 million euro grant.\nDr. Ina Slutsky 370. (photo credit: courtesy)\nA new research study at Tel Aviv University hypothesizes that interference with brain activity at high frequency is liable to be the main cause of Alzheimer’s disease.\nThe study has just been published in the journal Nature Neuroscience and received a 2 million euro grant from the European Research Council.\nThere is as yet no cure for Alzheimer’s, which affects an estimated 100,000 Israelis. For over a decade, all attempts to develop drugs for preventing the decline of memory loss have failed, said Dr. Ina Slutsky, head of the research group on synaptic plasticity at TAU’s Sackler Faculty of Medicine and Sagol School of Neuroscience.\n“The field is surely ripe for new research directions, and I believe that the answers will be found in basic processes that occur in the brain,” she said.\nSlutsky’s lab deals with basic science, meaning research that is far from being implemented into practical use. Three years ago, she discovered the physiological function of the amyloidbeta protein, which is the main component in the plaques found in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients. More recently, the group exposed the physiological processes that regulate the composition of the protein. The researchers believe these new findings will make it possible to identify – many years before the symptoms appear – what initially goes wrong in the brains of people who will develop this type of dementia.\nThe research, supervised by Slutsky, was led by post-doctoral student Yiftah Dolev and research student Hila Fogel.\nUntil now, Alzheimer’s researchers around the world focused on a rare genetic condition that occurs already in patients’ 40s rather than in their older years.\nThey managed to discover 150 genetic mutations that cause the disease, most of which involve two proteins – amyloid precursor protein (APP), from which amyloid-beta is made, and presenilin, which is involved in the final “cut” of the APP before amyloid-beta is produced.\nThe search for a medication dealt mainly with ways to minimize toxic forms of amyloid, but it did not succeed.\nUnlike the early-onset, familial Alzheimer’s that most researchers studied, the common form is sporadic Alzheimer’s, which appears in the last decades of life and causes dementia in 99 percent of sufferers in the world.\nSlutsky, aiming at finding the cause of the sporadic type, decided to study the connection between the activity of nerve networks in the brain and the components of amyloid-beta created in brain cells.\nThe amyloid-beta molecules that form in the brain come in a number of sizes, from 39 to 43 amino acids, Slutsky said. The shorter ones are more common than the longer ones, which produce the plaques. About 100 mutations connected to familial Alzheimer’s disrupt the balance between the two types of amyloid and cause the longer type to be the majority. This is the beginning of the disease. The question was what causes the disruption in the sporadic form of the disease in which people don’t carry familial mutations.\nThe researchers studied the question by giving electric stimulation to the hippocampus, the part of the brain involved in forming memories, in healthy rats and found that high-frequency “bursts” caused the production of shorter molecules.\nThey managed to show that a non-genetic factor affects the structure of the presenilin and the formation of amyloid-beta.\nThis was significant, Slutsky explained, as it is a major step in identifying factors that cause the sporadic type that affects million of people around the world.\nThe research, she said, is likely in the future to lead to a breakthrough in practical research aimed at finding ways to diagnose, prevent and cure the disease.\nWeizmann scientists bring nature back to artificially selected lab mice\nHealth Scan: The ‘memory’ of starvation is in the genes\nLooking young in old age\nMedical Corps training, improved technologies saved lives in Gaza\nGerman ‘reneges’ on optional fluoridation of drinking water","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1135757"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8878936171531677,"wiki_prob":0.8878936171531677,"text":"Diplomats Aim for Successful Finish\nFinal (13)\nFranklin & Marshall (16-20-1, 7-10-1) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 9 2\nSwarthmore (22-17-1, 6-11-1) 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 9 2\nHaverford (22-12, 11-5) 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 8 1\nFranklin & Marshall (15-20, 6-10) 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 12 1\nFranklin & Marshall (16-20, 7-10) 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 5 15 3\nSwarthmore (22-17, 6-11) 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 4 6 3\n2B: Roy Walker; Jaron Shrock\n2B: Ben Verducci; Spencer Sohmer; Nick Ott; Sam Partee\n2B: Matt Mezansky; David Iacobucci\n3B: Jimmy Whelan\n2B: Roy Walker\nF&M vs. Haverford | Caplan Field | 3:30 PM\nF&M at Swarthmore | Swarthmore | 12:30/3:30 PM\nSeries History: F&M closes out its regular season this week with a trio of games including its final home tilt against Haverford on Friday. The Fords earned a 6-4 win against the Diplomats on Monday afternoon but F&M owns the all-time series at 51-32-1 dating back to 1916.\nA doubleheader on the road against Swarthmore follows on Saturday, a team the Diplomats swept last season. F&M has won three straight against the Garnet and lead the all-time series at 53-42-2.\nLast Week: The conference schedule was particularly unkind to the Diplomats last week as F&M went 1-3 with a heartbreaking 7-6 loss (10 innings) against Washington on Tuesday, a 13-2 defeat from the Shoremen at Clipper Magazine Stadium on Thursday and a series split with Dickinson on Saturday (14-8 win in game one, 6-4 loss in game two).\nOn Tuesday against the Shoremen, F&M carried a 5-1 lead into the sixth inning before Washington began mounting a comeback. Clinging to the narrow advantage in the eighth, the Diplomats allowed a two-out, bases loaded single through the right side that evened the score.\nThe Shoremen led off the bottom of the 10th with a single to right field, before a sacrifice bunt put a runner at second with one out. Washington followed by scoring the tying run on an error at second base before Bryan Baquer's triple reached the right field fence for the game-winner.\nTo read the full recap, click here.\nThe series continued on Friday at Clipper Magazine Stadium, home of the Lancaster Barnstormers. David Iacobucci led off with a solo homer to right field in the bottom of the third to cut the deficit to four. However, that was all the closer the Diplomats would get as Washington followed with a run in the fourth, three in fifth and three in the seventh to close out the contest\nTo read the full recap, click here and to view photos from the game, click here.\nGame one on Saturday saw F&M surrender three runs in the bottom of the first before exploding for six runs on seven hits in the second inning that included five consecutive singles to open the frame. The Diplomats tacked on with a five-run frame in the top of the third after receiving RBI singles from Christopher Vincent, Tyler Daley, and Luke Seib, followed by a two-RBI double from Iacobucci to put F&M in front at 11-3. Another three Diplomat runs in the fifth firmly put the game out of reach for good.\nSeib had a career day going 3-for-6 with three runs scored and five RBIs. Iacobucci also tallied a 3-for-6 line to go along with one run scored and a pair drove in while Vincent went 3-for-5 with two RBIs and Brett Poniros tallied a 3-for-4 line with three runs scored as the designated hitter. The Diplomats registered five extra-base hits and 19 total in the game.\nIn game two, the Diplomats battled back from being down three in the fifth with three runs to knot the contest at 4-4, taking advantage of a pair of Dickinson errors in the frame. However, the lead only held until the seventh when the Red Devils tallied a pair, including a two-out RBI single to left field to go ahead for good.\nTo read the full recap from Saturday, click here.\nPlayoff Picture: With Monday's narrow 6-4 loss against Haverford, F&M is officially eliminated from CC Playoff contention.\nMezansky Milestone Watch: With just three games remaining in senior third baseman Matt Mezansky's career, several program records, and statistical milestones remain within his grasp. His 168 career hits are good for third all-time and are just five short of tying the program record held by Gary Kruger '06 and J.T. Triantos '12. He is also just one run shy of 100, and along with the 101 RBIs he has accumulated in his career, Mezansky is closing in on joining Will Benenson ' 14 as the second player in history to reach the plateau in both categories.\nMezansky is also second in games played at 153, just two short of Corey Carthers' record on 155. His 15 games started is also second only to Caruthers '06, who holds the record with 155. Mezansky has tallied 35 doubles in his career, a mark that is just three shy of second place.\nOther Milestones to Watch: With six saves on the season, closer Andrew Mascis continues to solidify himself atop the program's leaderboard with 15 in his career. Dan Tischler '08 holds the previous mark with 10.\nIacobucci cracked the top 10 for home runs and now stands in a three-way tie for sixth with eight in his career. Scott Haft '05 holds the program record with 14.\nGareth Fancher continues his ascent up the career appearances chart as the senior reliever is tied for fourth with 48. Chris Mathewson '15 holds the record with 64.\nIn the season-record book, Daley's .508 on-base percentage is the eighth highest all-time. Dennis Dowd '82 leads the program at .581.\nTop of the CC Class: As of Tuesday, Daley's .364 batting average on the season is the 12th-best in the CC. Iacobucci is close behind in 14th with a .363 clip. Mezansky is seventh in doubles with 12 and 12th in RBIs with 28.\nOn the mound, Mike Androconis' four wins are good for ninth while Mascis leads the conference with six saves.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1390210"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7882079482078552,"wiki_prob":0.7882079482078552,"text":"Latvia100\nSociety & Lifestyle\nHistory & Landmarks\nJog Latvia!\nContacts & Press\nPatriots Week\nNovember is one of the darkest and gloomiest months of the year. However, for Latvia and its people, it is the time of remembrance and cheerful celebration. Riga and Latvia shines along with its people and the thousands of candles lit by them, for it is the time of our Patriots Week.\nThe Patriot Ribbon\nLāčplēsis Day or how the Latvian heroes were born\nIdentity as the source of strength\nNovember 18 quotes from Latvian presidents\nPreparing for Latvia’s Centennial\nThis will be the tenth year since Latvians have been celebrating their Patriot Week, starting with Lāčplēsis Day on November 11, and culminating in a magnificent celebration of the state’s anniversary on November 18. To pay their respect to Latvia’s freedom fighters and express their love for the country, hundreds of thousands of Latvians wear a small carmine-white-carmine ribbon, in the colours of the flag of Latvia, pinned to the coat close to one’s heart. This symbol bears the message: „Latvia is in my heart no matter where I go!”\nThe tradition of Patriot Week with carmine-white-carmine ribbons was started in 2007 by the Independent Television of Latvia (LNT) to foster patriotism and knowledge of the history of Latvia among the youth. One example of misconception among younger citizens is the Lāčplēsis Day, which, as it turns out, is not a birthday celebration of the mythical hero Lāčplēsis (or Bear-slayer). It is the anniversary of the final victory of heroic Latvian soldiers over Bermondt’s army on November 11, 1919.\nToday, the idea of Patriot Week has become an important national tradition after being recognised and taken over by the Latvian Ministry of Defence and the National Armed Forces, providing miles of carmine-white-carmine ribbon for the pins each year. Events of collective ribbon folding are held all across Latvia and joined by more and more people – from children to seniors and from museum staff members to business people. Since the beginning of this tradition, more than 50 kilometres of ribbon have been folded into pins – more than 40 thousand ribbon pins being distributed to people in Riga each year.\nPeople often ask about the ‘correct’ way to fold and wear the carmine-white-carmine ribbon. It is worn with loose ends heading upwards, forming the shape of the letter “V” – an international symbol for “Victory”. An alternate way of folding the ribbon is in the shape of the number 11 to represent the date of the most important victory for Latvia.\nThe ribbons are worn until the Independence Day, the 18th of November, but most people acquire them a week before, making sure they have some spare ribbons for their families, friends or any fellow compatriots met along the festivities. It is a great way to honour the state of Latvia and its people, no matter where in the world one finds oneself this special time, and an opportunity to remember and share the story of our beautiful land, its history, culture and heroes.\nWe welcome you to get your own carmine-white-carmine Patriot Ribbon and join the celebration!\nPrinting material in PDF.\nThe Patriot Week in Latvia begins with commemoration events of Lāčplēsis Day and culminates with a cheerful celebration of state anniversary. First we pay tribute to the soldiers who gave their lives for the freedom of Latvia, and then it is time to celebrate the foundation of our country. The historical events that took place almost a century ago happened in a reverse order, perhaps to remind us that we must stay vigilant and protect our country’s independence every day.\nProclamation of the Republic of Latvia on November 18, 1918, took place at the current National Theatre of Latvia in an elated and festive atmosphere. The ceremony commenced with a collective singing of the national anthem “God, Bless Latvia“ (Dievs, svētī Latviju), followed by speeches from statesmen Gustavs Zemgals and Kārlis Ulmanis who talked about the bright future of the independent state of Latvia and its people.\nThough highly optimistic and idealistic, the well-educated leaders of Latvia knew that hard battles are still ahead of the newly formed state to secure its independence. And, indeed, there were. The freedom fights of Latvia lasted for almost two years, starting with proclamation of the state on November 18, 1918, and ending by signing of the peace treaty with Russia on August 11, 1920.\nDuring Latvia’s fight for freedom, there was one battle that gained eternal glory, and the Latvian soldiers who took part in that battle will always be praised as the first heroes of the independent Latvia. It happened on November 11, 1919, when the newly formed Latvian Army, with 15-year-old boys fighting alongside experienced men, defeated the Russian-German troops led by Pavel Bermondt-Avalov, an army three times the size of the Latvian forces.\nTo honour this historical victory, November 11 was immediately declared a national day of remembrance and named after Lāčplēsis, the strongest heroic character of Latvian folklore. The Lāčplēsis War Medal, awarded to freedom fighters for their extraordinary bravery, became the highest military award of the first state of Latvia. Between 1920 and 1940, the medal was awarded to 2146 national heroes.\nEvery year on Lāčplēsis Day we honour our heroes by placing lit candles in the windows of our homes or at the November 11 Embankment in Riga, named after the historic victory over the Bermondt army. Other traditional Lāčplēsis Day activities involve a Torchlight Procession though Old Riga, the honorary change of guard at the Freedom Monument, oecumenical services in the churches throughout Latvia as well as reconstructions of freedom battles across the country.\nLāčplēsis Day serves as a reminder to every citizen that one is not born as a hero, one becomes a hero, and courage is a conscious decision. Thus November 11 provides a good opportunity for everyone to look into one’s own heart and ask oneself – what can I do for my family, my people and our country.\nAwaken the hero within you!\nInfographic: What is Lāčplēša Day?\n“Identity is the basis for creativity and productivity. There is not a single person without a spark of creativity.” These were the words of the ex-president of Latvia, Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, who spent more than 50 years of her life in six different countries on three different continents.\nHow do we answer the question of who we are? What is this special characteristic, which makes us, individuals, and Latvians as a nation, different from billions of others living in this world? Profound understanding of our own identity makes us special and interesting to others.\nIn the age of globalisation many young people consider themselves citizens of the world, thus the nationality as a part of own identity plays a diminishing role. However, the national identity – connection to a place of birth or where the roots of our parents are – goes beyond speaking a particular language or carrying a passport. Our system of values, way of thinking and models of behaviour, as well as sense of humour, is rooted in our belonging to a particular culture and traditions. For example, in which other country in Europe the knowledge on edible mushrooms or characteristics of medicinal herbs is retained, where else the daily life goes in accordance with the Moon calendar and know-how of ancestors are applied? The ancient Latvian respect and love of nature has transformed into innovative ideas in design, architecture, business and science.\nIdentity is like a human DNA, which we cannot change as easily as a name in the passport. Maybe we fully understand it only when we experience other cultures and countries, gaining understanding of how different, or similar we are. Latvian people not only possess their unique taste, favourite smells and flavours, but also a special regard for one’s family and loyalty to friends. Even gardening chores are planned according to ancestors’ know-how rather than contemporary Roman calendar.\nWe can try to become British, French or Scandinavian, or we can also choose a different path – remain being Latvian, carrying our belonging to this country with pride wherever our fate may bring us. As is with trees, strong roots allow us to grow strong and respected by others. Let us be proud of ourselves, of the achievements of our compatriots and our country, Latvia, wherever and whenever possible!\nSince the foundation of the country in 1918, Latvia has had nine presidents, whose official celebratory addresses on November 18 have become an indispensable part of the festive tradition. On Latvia’s 98th birthday let us remember their words which paint the history and challenges of our country for almost a century.\nPresident Raimonds Vējonis\nIn 1919, the first President of Latvia, Jānis Čakste said: “This day is the birthday of Latvia. We have a reason to celebrate now, a reason to cheer and reason to express our happiness in all forms outward. [..] This day will remain such until Latvia remains, but today we withhold from loud celebrations.”\nGustavs Zemgals in 1931, during the cornerstone celebration of the Monument of Freedom: “To state to our next generations about how important freedom is to this nation, how costly it was bought by the lives of heroes and how highly held and regarded it should be by the next generations, which will inherit this holy gift to be never let out of their hands.”\nAlberts Kviesis, on November 18, 1935, during the unveiling ceremony of the Monument of Freedom: “People have not only material cares and worries, but the monument attests to our ability to care for spiritual values, and the peak of this monument, it tends towards the sun, stars and skies – let it remind us of the need of our people to always remember about needs of our soul, the spiritual food, which is needed both for an individual and the people.”\nKārlis Ulmanis, November 18 celebration ceremony: “Let us take home a firm belief to provide, as much as each of us is able, that after 20 years we would gather here again as we stand here today, and for those who we have raised to be as passionate patriots of Latvia as we are today.”\nGuntis Ulmanis, November 18, 1997: “And if Latvia is a pearl on the coast of the Baltic Sea, as was said by Pope John Paul II, this pearl must shine brightly amidst the community of European countries of the future.”\nVaira Vīķe-Freiberga, November 18, 1999, the Dome Square in Riga: “I believe in future Latvia. I believe in the people of Latvia. In particular, I believe in you who is listening to this and hearing my voice. It is you whom Latvia needs. Latvia awaits you.”\nValdis Zatlers in 2010: “National celebrations are the time when we feel particularly patriotic. Once I asked a Latvian soldier: “What gives you strength during the hard and dangerous moments during the missions?” He said: “If you are a patriot of your own country everything is easy because you clearly see the meaning of your work and life.”\nAndris Bērziņš in 2011: “Let us not seek enemies! Let us seek kindred spirits! Let us support one another! Help those who are yet unable or no more able to help themselves! Our fate and fate of Latvia is only in our own hands.”\nRaimonds Vējonis in 2015: “You are the heroes, who make our country stronger and safer every day – you are Latvia! We are Latvia! Let us thank each other and say it loud in our hearts. Let us celebrate this day with gratefulness, happiness and love for each other and our homeland!”\nWhat shall we wish ourselves, our people and our country this year?\nThis year, we celebrate Latvia’s 98th birthday, already thinking of its upcoming centennial on November 18, 2018. While preparing for the grand celebration, it is time to define new goals for ourselves and agree on those values we wish to take with us for the upcoming hundred years.\nOn November 18, 1918, during the ceremony of proclamation of Latvia 38 members of People’s Council understood it was only a beginning and the future would bring difficult tasks. Just like at school when each year of studies is more complex than the previous one. However, the happiness for one’s own country was greater than the fear of future difficulties.\nAnd indeed, until 1940 Latvia blossomed, and the national self-esteem of the Latvian people become stronger. But the period of independence was followed by Soviet occupation, during which the nation lost its brightest and most talented minds, the economy built during the independence was destroyed, and the Soviet power attempted to crush the self-esteem and the free will of the people.\nBut the idea of a free and independent Latvia was not to be crushed. In 1980s, the individual creative protest manifestations of brave young artists, writers, poets and other activists gradually turned into a national movement of protest. On August 23, 1989, during the Baltic Way manifestation, two million people in all three Baltic countries joined hands to testify their wish to be free again. This 600 km long human chain which started in Tallinn, Estonia and led through Latvia all the way to Vilnius, Lithuania, was the grandest flash-mob in the modern history that inspired people all across the world. With the signing of the Declaration of Independence on May 4, 1990, the country of Latvia, in which we currently live, was reborn.\nVaira Vīķe-Freiberga, President of Latvia, said in her public address on July 29, 2001: “We are a rich nation because we have inherited a lot. We are a beautiful nation because our heritage has been sifted and tested through centuries. We only have what was recognized as good. [..] We have been given our history so that we could choose how to handle it, how to accept it and make it ours.”\nThe human history has seen the rise and fall of many nations and countries. Today, 7 billion people live in 200 countries, and 0.029% of them live in Latvia. Our country is so small that its existence is a miracle, to be protected and cherished. The world is open, and information technologies allow us to be a part of the Latvian information space regardless of our physical location. But the Latvian state cannot exist without our physical participation – or the name “Latvia” might become nothing more than just a domain in the virtual space, and its land turn into an anonymous point of destination in the global movement of goods. Only our willingness to be a part of this land and people, readiness to act together, will provide a meaning to Latvia, to exist and develop for the next hundred years.\nThousands of years ago Aristotle defined that the supreme meaning for founding a state: “A state is founded not for us to survive in it, but mostly – for us to live happily in it.” The state of Latvia was born in difficult times, and during its first hundred years, its existence has been a story of survival and self-preservation. So let us unite our common efforts and positive thinking to live a happy and prosperous life from now on.\n© The Latvian Institute 2016; Photos: Kaspars Stūrītis; NBS; Ilmārs Znotiņš; Valsts Kanceleja; Latvijas Valsts prezidenta kanceleja; Edijs Pālens/LETA; Aivars Liepiņš\nUp next in \"Home\" section\nBack to Discover page\nDiscover more about Latvia\nLatvian folk dress\nTheatre in Latvia\nLatvian Folksongs\nSong Celebration\nLatvian Livs\nLithuanians and Estonians\nLatvian Belarusians and Ukrainians\nLatvian Russians\nWomen Power\nCurrency in Latvia\nBest Exporting Brands from Latvia\nEconomy & Finance Facts\nIT and communications facts\nStartup facts\nHistory of Latvia 1918-1940\nBrief History of Riga\nHistory of Latvia: a Timeline\nMay 4, 1990 – Independence Restoration\nThe Story of the Last Latvian Ships in 1940\nCities in Latvia\nRiga Live Broadcast\nLatvia.eu\n© 2015 Latvian Institute,\nPils iela 21, Riga,\nLV-1050, Latvia\ninfo@li.lv\nTypeface crafted and sponsored by Tilde\nPhotography by Andris Rubīns, Artūrs Pavlovs/Ghetto Games, Aleksandrs Kendenkovs, Imants Urtāns, Edijs Pālens/LETA, Kārlis Ustups, Reinis Vilnis Baltiņš.\nDesigned by Asketic","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line50561"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5066944360733032,"wiki_prob":0.5066944360733032,"text":"How LinkedIn Impacts The Attention Economy\nTheo Miller Contributor\nCovering product marketing and design\nLinkedIn hurts their user experience by notifying users of nonevents. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)\nA tiny red badge can make you feel great. It can mean something wonderful has happened. It can also mean something horrible has happened. The one rule when it comes to notifications is something has to have happened.\nLike the boy who cried wolf, LinkedIn has betrayed my trust one too many times. From random work anniversaries to irrelevant birthdays, I've learned to ignore their pings.\nNotifications must be essential, or people stop paying attention. It's the same reason why no one puts lawn furniture on a fire escape — it's critical to keep some pathways clear.\nAn interview request is a great example of a true event on LinkedIn. It's something you want to know about. That needs to be the baseline standard for what qualifies as a notification.\nOtherwise it’s like talking to a friend that brags about something that never happened. It creates distance in the relationship. You can't put your guard down because you have to second-guess everything they say.\nThere's a popular concept called the Attention Economy. Everyone knows there's been an uptick in the amount of information there is to consume. Due to this increase, attention is in high demand. Every app on every device is after your eyeballs and the result is a competitive marketplace.\nIf you accept this premise, it's as though LinkedIn is selling subprime mortgages. One notification can't wreck the Attention Economy, but a surge of them could do some damage.\nThat's why it's important for tech giants to be careful with notifications. It's their responsibility to set an example for all the other apps out there.\nAt least Twitter and Facebook have pages where you can set granular preferences. LinkedIn has a settings page for communications, but there isn't one for notifications.\nThat's too obvious of an oversight to be a mistake. Their product team made a strategic decision. You can filter their notifications out one by one, but that’s not the same thing.\nIn defense of LinkedIn, they are still one of the biggest social networks around. Along with Facebook and Twitter, they are a pillar of the modern social media landscape. Within that elite group, LinkedIn stands alone as the professional network.\nIt doesn't provide fun photos from parties, or breaking news about politics. Even amongst new apps like Instagram or Snapchat, LinkedIn is the professional one.\nSo it makes sense that their notifications are boring. That's why LinkedIn has to work so hard to manufacture excitement around nonevents. Next to nothing is worth a notification on LinkedIn.\nSame with Quora — the educated elite’s response to Yahoo Answers. Quora notifies me every time someone answers a question that’s tagged as an interest. Never mind that I selected that \"interest\" to speed up my onboarding back in 2009. I swear, every 9 months when I log onto Quora, there’s a backlog of notifications about Barack Obama.\nThere's a reason why LinkedIn abuses their notification system. It makes their product sticky. A sticky product is one that compels users to log in everyday. This strategy informs product roadmaps throughout the tech industry.\nThis is because the leading business model in Silicon Valley is Software as a Service. SaaS only works if subscribers log in and engage often. It’s unlikely users would pay a recurring fee for a service they don't use on a regular basis.\nWhen subscriptions plummet, venture capital ceases to flow. That's why it's so important for pre-revenue (yes, pre-revenue) startups to be sticky. It's impossible to monetize a product if it doesn't attract a large number of daily active users.\nEven a company like LinkedIn cares about how many daily active users it has. It's an expression of their popularity. It represents the vitality of their platform.\nThere are great notification systems out there. Apple does a fantastic job with iOS. They list every installed app and provide notification preferences for each. It's an essential part of any modern operating system.\nAlthough it's shady how every mobile developer assumes you want their app to be central to your life. As soon as you sign up, you have to adjust your notifications to make sure they won't wake you up in the middle of the night.\nAs wearables become mainstream, it's important to recognize how consequential notifications can be. They might crowd our contact lenses in the crosswalk or overheat our glasses on the train. For everyone's safety, let's hope app developers don't abuse notifications in the future.\nTheo Miller\nTheo Miller is a storyteller and former product person. He joined Carta prelaunch as a designer and marketer in 2013. After leaving in 2018, Carta commissioned Theo to m...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line783490"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6492589712142944,"wiki_prob":0.6492589712142944,"text":"Our Blog Site\nHow the moral lessons of To Kill a Mockingbird endure today\nHow the moral lessons of To Kill a Mockingbird endure today.\nAug 17 2018 - Anne Maxwell\nMercatorNet\nHarper Lee’s To Kill A Mockingbird is one of the classics of American literature. Never out of print, the novel has sold over 40 million copies since it was first published in 1960. It has been a staple of high school syllabuses, including in Australia, for several decades, and is often deemed the archetypal race and coming-of-age novel. For many of us, it is a formative read of our youth.\nThe story is set in the sleepy Alabama town of Maycomb in 1936 - 40 years after the Supreme Court’s notorious declaration of the races as being “separate but equal”, and 28 years before the enactment of the Civil Rights Act. Our narrator is nine-year-old tomboy, Scout Finch, who relays her observations of her family’s struggle to deal with the class and racial prejudice shown towards the local African American community.\nAt the centre of the family and the novel stands the highly principled lawyer Atticus Finch. A widower, he teaches Scout, her older brother Jem, and their imaginative friend Dill, how to live and behave honourably. In this he is aided by the family’s hardworking and sensible black housekeeper Calpurnia, and their kind and generous neighbour, Miss Maudie.\nIt is Miss Maudie, for example, who explains to Scout why it is a sin to kill a mockingbird: “Mockingbirds don’t do one thing but make music for us to enjoy. They don’t eat up people’s gardens, don’t nest in corncribs, they don’t do one thing but sing their hearts out for us.”\nThroughout the novel, the children grow more aware of the community’s attitudes. When the book begins they are preoccupied with catching sight of the mysterious and much feared Boo Radley, who in his youth stabbed his father with a pair of scissors and who has never come out of the family house since. And when Atticus agrees to defend Tom Robinson, a black man who is falsely accused of raping a white woman, they too become the target of hatred.\nA morality tale for modern America\nClick here to read the article online (be sure that you do): MercatorNet\nBack to the future… or the end of the road?\nNeo-Marxist ideology has Christianity in its sights.\nAug 17 2017 - Michael Kirke\nHow bad can it get? The Mad-Hatter's Tea Party\nA British Conservative government minister, Justine Greening, says that gender is virtually meaningless by proposing to let adults come in off the street and change it at will. “Pronoun Committees” on campus warn, “If you fail to respect someone else’s gender identity, it is not only disrespectful and hurtful, but also oppressive.” Does anyone hear an echo, “Committee of Public Safety”?\nFrom there it was but a short step to the guillotine. Mozzilla’s CEO was removed from the company he founded because he privately supported traditional marriage – and that was also disrespectful, hurtful and oppressive. It certainly was for him – but that didn’t matter. A Google engineer is the latest casualty of the thought police because he expressed an opinion of doubtful orthodoxy.\nThis is just a very small sample from a long catalogue of seemingly mad events which are taking place around us. But they are not mad. They are the result of a cold, calculated dogma that has pervaded our culture.\nWe are, in truth, not a million miles, not even a few hundred miles from the nightmare of Stalinist Russia, where to write an opera (Prokofiev), compose a symphony (Shostakovich) or pen a novel (Pasternak) which was out of synch with the ideology of the State would reduce your career to ashes and even endanger your very life.\nIs there anyone out there prepared to defend mankind from this self-destructive ideology? Yes there is, perhaps too timidly yet, but the principles are sound and if this onslaught of injustice persists then surely the perennial voice of reason will be heard loud and clear.\nFor seventy-plus years Marxism was a political force in the Soviet Union, backed up by a lethal totalitarian state. In that time the one enemy which it constantly singled out for annihilation was the Christian religion. Wherever Christians were found the grotesque regime’s apparatus first sought to corrupt them. Failing that it sought to crush them.\nAfter soviet Russia led the way a handful of Eastern European followed under its tutelage – or its tanks. China and some Asian countries then joined the monstrous regiment and in the fifties and sixties of the last century the ideology made a largely unsuccessful attempt to subvert Latin America.\nEventually, bearing within itself the seeds of its own destruction, the states which embraced it began to crumble and fall. But to the very end Christianity remained its perpetual enemy and number one target for persecution and extermination. Even in the last decade of its hegemony it sought to assassinate – and almost succeeded – the Vicar of Christ on Earth.\nWhy was this so? Why should the followers of a peace-loving prophet from 2000 years ago be such a threat to what at first sight might be described as just one more attempt to solve the problems mankind faces in organising this world to meet the daily needs of its inhabitants?\nIt was so because the vision of humanity held by the followers of Jesus Christ, based on the belief and understanding that this God-man in fact created the world and all that is in it, is radically at odds with that of Karl Marx, his antecedents and his disciples. The essential contradictions inherent in the Marxist vision of man, its utterly flawed anthropology, eventually killed it – but not before it left tens of millions dead in its wake.\nMichael Kirke writes from Dublin. He blogs at Garvan Hill, where this article first appeared. Republished with permission.\nClick here to read the article online, be sure that you do: MercatorNet\nA visit to a baby market in Brussels\nA donor-conceived Belgian woman visits a fair for same-sex couples who want to be dads\nOct. 4, 2016 - Stephanie Raeymaekers\nBRUSSELS -- For the second time around a surrogacy fair organised by the American company Men Having Babies landed on Belgian soil. This time it took place in a slightly more upscale venue. The ground floor at The Brussels Hilton became a stage where 220 potential customers from 12 European countries were welcomed.\nLike last year, I was present. Me: the first in our generation to provide adults with a semi-biological child. It was the start of a lucrative business when fertility doctors discovered that the techniques used on a pig farm could also be useful for infertile heterosexual couples.\nFrom the 1950s Belgian wombs were being filled with the sperm of unknown men. Fertility techniques improved and not much later they tapped into new target groups: single women and lesbian couples.\nBranding unwanted childlessness as discrimination and injustice, several branches of the LGBT community are lobbying for gay men and transgender women to have biological children of their own.\nLast Sunday almost everything was on offer: interpreters, gadgets, price lists, different formulas, the dos and the don’ts… But most of all, straight-to-your-heart-and-into-our-wallet sales pitches from companies which are able to connect anyone directly with eggs, surrogacy agencies and lawyers to make “a dream come true”. Lawyers handed out the metaphorical road map with instructions on how to by-pass laws to get your purchased child(ren) “legally” in your own country.\nTowards an ethical framework...\nTransgender madness is sweeping our schools\nParents, protect your children\nThere are many pressing issues that have come to the forefront over the last two decades as the new post-Christian consensus crowds into spaces once dominated by those who took Judeo-Christian values for granted. “The illusion of a Christian majority is now gone,” Russell Moore of the Southern Baptist Convention noted, “and churches are going to have to articulate things they used to assume.”\nThis is going to be more difficult than it sounds. The first and most important challenge is for parents, who must devise ways of ensuring that they pass their beliefs and values on to their children. Gone are the days when the culture’s residual reliance on Judeo-Christian assumptions could reinforce what was heard in church and at home. Gone, in fact, are thousands of the churches. Instead, parents are faced with the task of teaching their children beliefs and values that run counter to virtually every cultural influence faced by children today: Hollywood films, the music industry, television shows, the state school system, and in many cases, even the government promote values that run directly contrary to the Christian worldview.\nWhat is more dangerous still is the fact that the state is making an active attempt to stand between parents and children, utilizing the public school system not simply to teach, but to pass on a new set of values, values rooted not in Christian tradition but in the Sexual Revolution. That is why battles over sex education in Ontario, much to the confusion of the enlightened cosmopolitans in the chattering classes, provoked such a heated confrontation between the government and communities of traditionalists of all faiths: because each side was claiming the right to pass on values to the children. The state is insisting that their educational arm should teach children about sexuality, from their own perspective, with no right to “opt out.” Parents recognize that they are fighting for the religious and cultural identity of their children, and are insisting that the state stay out.\nThe state has no intention of doing so, of course. One particularly stark example is a letter published by Alberta’s Education Minister on August 16, titled “An open letter to Alberta’s students,” which was then posted to Facebook:\nClick here for entire article: LifeSiteNews\n'Angels' Block Protestors at Orlando Funeral\nDenison Forum on Truth and Culture - Dr. Jim Denison\nChristopher Andrew Leinonen was one of the victims of the Orlando massacre. As thousands gathered for his funeral last Saturday, a handful of protesters from Westboro Baptist Church arrived. The tiny church has made itself famous over the years by picketing the funerals of military personnel and anyone else with whom it disagrees.\nBut this time the protesters were met by a group of men and women dressed as angels. Their large wings formed a wall that shielded mourners from the picketers. The tactic worked: one attendee said, \"We couldn't even hear WBC. All you could hear was peace and love.\"\nAs a theologian who is convinced that the Bible forbids same-sex activity, I am saddened by the success of LGBT advocates in promoting their unbiblical agenda in our culture. But as a Christian who is convinced that God loves us all, no matter our sexual orientation or lifestyle, I am also saddened by the response of some Christians to the Orlando tragedy. A pastor in Sacramento said in a sermon, \"The tragedy is that more of them didn't die.\" A pastor in Arizona said of the massacre, \"I'm not sad about it; I'm not going to cry about it.\"\nGod disagrees.\nRead the entire article here: Denison Forum on Truth and Culture\n‘To kill or not to kill, that is the question’\nA new film about Jerome Lejeune shows the drama of his life after identifying the cause of Down syndrome.\n(\tMercatornet) - Mary Le Rumeur\nIt is August 1969 in San Francisco and Professor Jerome Lejeune is addressing the annual meeting of the American Society of Human Genetics.\nTen years earlier he had discovered the genetic cause of Down Syndrome, when he saw under his microscope in a Paris laboratory the third little mark on the 21st chromosome. In 1962 he received the Kennedy Award from the hands of President John F Kennedy for his work with handicapped children.\nBut the drama of his life was that his discovery of trisomy 21 would lead to a medical holocaust, national health systems giving huge funds to track down and eliminate these children before they could be born.\nInvited to America to receive the highest distinction in genetics for his work, the William Allen Memorial Award, Lejeune decided to use this occasion to speak out in defence of \"his patients\" -- the children and their parents who already came from all over the world to seek his advice and help in Paris.\nClick here for entire article: (Mercatornet)\nThe video has been ordered and will be available for showing, contact Ross Whitelaw\nMedical experts rip Alberta’s ‘reckless’ and ‘dangerous’ transgender m\nFriday, 29 April 2016 (LifeSiteNews) - Steve Weatherby\nThe Alberta government’s new guidelines promoting transgenderism in the province’s schools have not only sparked a parental revolt, they have triggered a stinging rebuke from two medical professors at the University of Alberta, who call the them “incredibly misguided,” “reckless,” and “dangerous” to the youth involved.\nThe two U of A professors are Dr. Blaine Achen, MD, FRCPS, FASE, associate clinical professor in Department of Anaesthesia and Pain Medicine, and Dr. Theodore K. Fenske, MD, FRCPC, FCCP, FACC, clinical professor of medicine, as well as staff cardiologist at the C.K. Hui Heart Centre.\nIn a paper published on the Alberta Parents for Choice in Education website, they dissect and eviscerate the New Democratic government’s recently released “Guidelines for Best Practices: Creating Learning Environments that respect Diverse Sexual Orientations, Gender Identities and Gender Expressions” with surgical precision.\nDonna Trimble, Parents for Choice in Education’s executive director, says the paper “expresses the views of many doctors, but these are the only two so far with enough courage to speak the truth and contradict political correctness.”\nThe guidelines in question ape ideologically-inspired policies enshrined in law in Ontario and California and other states and provinces. They not only unquestioningly endorse but enforce the gender-identity assertions of youth by allowing them to use the washrooms and school teams of their chosen “gender,” by affirming gender dysphoria in the curriculum and by keeping their cross-gender identification from their parents.\nIn their analysis, the two medical experts state, “This document is flawed both in the most basic assumptions it rests upon, and the conclusions thereby reached.” They implore Education Minister David Eggen “to reverse such an incredibly misguided and illogical statement and policy.” Apart from the governing NDP, the guidelines have been endorsed by the Liberals and Progressive Conservatives but not by the Wildrose Party.\nThe first premise the experts demolish is the assumption that a child’s so-called “self-identification” cannot be questioned but is the “sole measure of an individual’s sexual orientation, gender identity or gender expression.”\nOn the contrary, explain the professors, gender is a social construct based on “subjective perceptions, relationships, and adverse experiences from infancy onward,” and as such is the rightful subject of psychotherapy and family therapy when it differs from biological reality.\nClick here for entire article: (LifeSiteNews)\n- See more at: http://www.smokylakebaptist.ca/index.php#sthash.0K9lmo8L.dpuf\nThe children of divorce: anything but resilient\nWEDNESDAY, 24 FEBRUARY 2016 (\tMercatorNet) -\nThe News Story - Coping with a new home life\nIn Part I of a series called “Children of Divorce,” provided by New York-Presbyterian Hospital, the Lohud Journal News outlines some “strategies to help your child cope” with a parental divorce.\nAmong these strategies are “validate your child’s feelings,” “respect your partner’s rules,” and “make decisions based on what’s best for the child.” “Concerned parents,” according to the story, “have more power than they think when it comes to promoting their child’s resilience and facilitating the transition.”\nBut research suggests that, in spite of such parental palliatives, children’s “resilience” can only go so far, and a true decision “based on what’s best for the child” would be to stay married.\nThe New Research - The children of divorce: anything but resilient\nWhen pressed to admit that the divorce revolution they led has hurt children, progressives invoke the myth of children’s resilience. Yes, they say, parental divorce does hurt children, but—not to worry—children are resilient: they bounce back in a year or two. The latest empirical insult to this myth comes from a study recently completed at Vanderbilt University, a study showing that more than four decades after parental divorce, the children affected still manifest the malign effects of that divorce upon their health.\nThis damning new evidence comes out of a sophisticated analysis of how “adverse social environments . . . become biologically embedded during the first years of life with potentially far-reaching implications for health across the life course.” As these researchers press their analysis of the linkages between social disadvantage in childhood and chronic health problems in adulthood, family disintegration emerges as a particularly important component of that social disadvantage—more important, in fact, than even low household income.\nTo analyze the relationship between social disadvantage in childhood and chronic health problems in adulthood, the researchers carefully examine data for 566 men and women born between 1959 and 1966, individuals for whom they have the social data necessary to formulate “an index that combine[s] information on adverse socioeconomic and family stability factors experienced between birth and age 7 years.” Drawing from data collected in 2005-2007 from these same individuals as adults, the researchers look for correlations between their index of childhood social disadvantage and adult health problems as measured in two ways: first, in cardiometabolic risk (CMR), determined by combining data from eight CMR biomarkers (including waist circumference, blood pressure, and triglyceride levels); second, in a composite index derived by assessing eight chronic diseases (including diabetes, heart disease, and arthritis). - See more at: http://www.mercatornet.com/family_edge/view/the-ch...\nRead the entire article and it's conclusion on MercatorNet\nAdditional suggested reading:\nThe Unexpected Legacy of Divorce: A 25 Year Landmark Study by Judith S. Wallerstein\nDear Christians: It’s no longer enough to work hard, raise a family, and hope to be left alone\nJan. 4, 2015 (LifeSiteNews) - It’s a common complaint in pro-life circles: Why is it often so hard to get the churches involved in social causes? We know that Christians have abortions, too—so it is impacting us personally. We know that Christians are, for the most part, very anti-abortion—so it’s not as if they disagree with the pro-life movement. So what is holding so many people back from getting involved?\nApathy is part of it. Lack of awareness is part of it. But by and large, the real reason is an attitude that runs much deeper. The answer is simple: Church-going people are often traditional, conservative people. And here I don’t mean those terms in the way that political analysts might use them, to describe specific policy positions. I mean simply that they are people who want to work hard, raise their children, and be left alone.\n“Have you ever met a parent of nine kids who was a Democratic activist?” Dennis Praeger once asked wryly. Everyone laughed. Perhaps not everyone even knew why it was so funny—it was just an absurd thought. Such a parent, everyone presumes, would have better things to do. People like my grandparents, who immigrated virtually penniless to Canada from the Netherlands in 1953, began working the land, and raised eleven children on a farm they built through blood, sweat, toil, and tears. They were too busy raising children and putting food on the table to trouble themselves with the screechings of Canadian feminists and other such activists.\nHerein lies the problem the pro-life and pro-family movement has in recruiting conservative people to engage the culture to combat the social ills infecting our society: There is something fundamentally foreign about “activism.” Indeed, the term “conservative activist” itself seems to be something of a contradiction in terms. Small-c conservatives and traditionalists do not want to change the world. They want to live in it and not be bothered.\nIt’s in the very root of the word—“conserve.” It is markedly different in temperament from “liberal,” which denotes “liberalizing”—action. Thus, many suspicious church people even find that the word “activism” carries with it a whiff of liberalism. Ambrose Bierce brilliantly encapsulated the contrast between these two temperaments when he defined a conservative as, “A statesman who is enamored of existing evils, as distinguished from the liberal who wishes to replace them with others.”\nWhich brings us to our present unpleasant realization that from a cultural perspective, the traditionalists and conservatives have been thoroughly beaten in the war for the culture. For the most part, we never even showed up. We raised families, built farms and businesses, and attended church functions while secular revolutionaries took over the entertainment industry, the media, academia—and finally, the public education system that now dutifully serves as a conduit for secular “values.” Prayer is out, queer theory is in, and many a middle-aged conservative has found occasion recently to splutter his coffee and gape at his newspaper: “How did things change so fast?”\nRead the entire article and it's conclusion on LifeStieNews\nCecil The Lion Stirs More Outrage Than Abortion Mogul Cecile The Lyin’\nBy Ryan Scott Bomberger\nWedensday, July 29, 2015\nThe Radiance Foundation\nRead the entire article -\tclick here.\nSociety has a funny way of deciding when to express outrage.\nMillions of innocent humans (aka pregnancy tissue) are slaughtered and their fully intact body parts are sold. Crickets.\nA single lion, which most have never heard of, gets hunted for sport. International drama.\nI despise the thought of big game hunting, but it never ceases to amaze me how rhetorically violent animal rights activists become when these creatures are harmed or killed.\nPETA (People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals) has called for the hunter involved, Dr. Walter Palmer, to be hanged. The puppy-killing, celebrity-studded, publicity-stunt-centered organization epitomizes the insanely hypocritical, progressive approach. The death threats through Yelp and Twitter are repugnant, but unsurprising given their disdain for human life.\nCelebrities have tweeted their utter disgust for the wealthy dentist. Debra Messing (Will & Grace, Mysteries of Laura) says: “I want them to take his citizenship away.” Sharon Osbourne hopes that “#WalterPalmer loses his home, his practice & his money. He has already lost his soul…#WalterPalmer is Satan.” Piers Morgan, proving that being a news journalist was never his forte, tweets: “I’d love to go hunting for killer dentist Dr. Walter Palmer, so I can stuff and mount him for MY office wall.”\nJimmy Kimmel even nearly melted down talking about it on his show, having to pull himself together to make it through the segment.\nOh, and look…the Obama administration is now offering its help into the investigation of Palmer’s hunting escapade. According to The Hill: “The Service is deeply concerned about the recent killing of Cecil the Lion.” Wow. That was quick.\nPlanned Parenthood’s baby-parts-trafficking elicits nothing but support from the Obama administration. But kill a lion halfway across the world, in a nation riddled with grotesque human rights abuses, and the administration is on it! (Well, on the abuses to lions, not to Zimbabweans). Cecil the Lion’s death warrants outrage from the political left, but their darling abortion mogul–Cecile The Lyin’–can do no act heinous enough (like selling “unwanted” babies’ wanted organs), no Medicaid fraud egregious enough, no teen sex education misleading enough to stir a moment of discomfort for liberals.\nWhat's Happening This Week\nThe sermon from July 07, 2019 is posted. This and previous sermons can be played back from the Website. .\nToday – Sunday School classes for ages 3-5, 6-8 and 9-12. Today all the classes will meet downstairs. The Nursery is available for children aged two and under.\nToday – All the ladies are asked to remain in the sanctuary after Worship Service for an important planning meeting.\nMidweek Summer Schedule – In July and August the church will be open each Wednesday for prayer. Fasting that day is also encouraged. Those who wish to host a Cottage Meeting on a Wednesday night are asked to contact Pastor Keith.\nPlease Also Note\nThank you for silencing your cell phone during Worship.\nOffering envelopes are available at the back of the sanctuary.\nThank you to everyone who donated toward the portable storage cabinets. They have been ordered!\nIf you are interested in participating in a short-term mission to northern Canada with the ministry On Eagle’s Wings, see Dwight or Val.\nThe grass-cutting schedule beside the front door is available for your signature.\nPioneer Bible Camp at Hanmore Lake Celebrating 60 Years of Ministry\nJunior Week Ages 10-12 July 14-19$275\nKids’ Camp Ages 7-9 July 21-25$250\nYoung Adult Ages 18+ July 26-28$50\nRegister online @ www.pioneerbiblecamp.ca\nVolunteers are needed to share the church custodian duties during the month of August. Find a friend to help you and let Sharon know which week you are available. Men and women are equally welcome!\nDo you have photos related to the history of our church, such as buildings, activities, special occasions, missions? If so, please submit them to Ross and Val Whitelaw with your name and details of the photo (date, place, people). You may also email them. Hard copies will be returned\nFinancial Report April-June 2019\nIncome $47,744\nLess restricted funds* -2,088\nNet for operating 45,656\nExpenses -45,578\nSurplus for April-June 2019 78\n*Restricted Funds are offerings that are given for a specific ministry, such as the Building Fund, Eat to Heat, Missions. These funds cannot be used for operating expenses.\nChurch Services:\nWednesday Evenings - 7:00PM - Suspended during July and August\nSunday Mornings - 11:00AM\nChildren's Ministry - for ages 2-11 during service time. All children welcome to attend. The Nursery is available for children under two.\nSaturday, July 27 – Men’s Breakfast, hosted by Lac La Biche Victory Church. Please notify Dwight if you plan to attend.\nSunday, August 4 – Our church will celebrate its 75th Anniversary and the 20th Anniversary of Pastor Keith and Helen’s ministry here. A special service and a meal are being planned.\nRegularly Scheduled Worship Times:\nWednesday Evenings at 7:00 PM -\nSunday Morning at 11:00 AM, including Sunday School for the children\n© 2012 - 2015 First Baptist Church in Smoky Lake.\nE-Mail: Church Office\nDeveloped by: MRW Computer Systems, Inc.\nWelcome Quick Answers Services Find Us Our Vision Considering Marriage Contact Us Form Donate Online Now\nAlpha Course Muffin Ministry Women's Ministry Fellowship Men's Ministry Youth Ministry Children's Ministry Community Outreach Missions Sunrise Community Cemetery Building Project Donate Online Now\nSermons Worship Services Sunday Service Sunday School Wednesday Service How to Find Us\nAbout Us Core Beliefs Our Vision Our Values Our History Our Leaders How to Find Us Alberta Baptist Assoc. NA Baptist Conference\nMedia Sermons Photo Gallery Short Videos\nEvents, now and upcoming News Contact Us Form\nBaptist Organizations Other Christian Sites\nHow Can I Give Principles on Giving Why Should I Give Donate Online Now\nContact Us Form Donate Online","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line222692"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5428822040557861,"wiki_prob":0.5428822040557861,"text":"Op-ed makes Trump even more paranoid and that's bad for all of us\nWhat the writer of the piece in the Times describes and what the people in Bob Woodward's new book describe is, in fact, reality.\nOp-ed makes Trump even more paranoid and that's bad for all of us What the writer of the piece in the Times describes and what the people in Bob Woodward's new book describe is, in fact, reality. Check out this story on clarionledger.com: https://www.clarionledger.com/story/opinion/columnists/2018/09/07/op-ed-makes-donald-trump-even-more-paranoid-and-thats-bad-all-us/1221819002/\nErick Erickson, Columnist Published 9:23 a.m. CT Sept. 7, 2018\nAt a rally in Montana, President Trump said that the anonymous New York Times op-ed criticizing him is \"treason.\" Later, he went on to discuss Nike's ad campaign with former NFL player Colin Kaepernick and Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh. (Sept. 6) AP\nErick Erickson(Photo: Submitted photo)\nOn Wednesday, The New York Times released a piece by a \"senior official\" in the Trump White House. Do not let \"senior\" fool you. This could be a deputy-level staffer, an undersecretary or someone else at a lower level than chief of staff, vice president and Cabinet secretary. Many junior staffers have \"senior\" in their titles. This may be someone we have never heard of. It could be the chief of staff. None of us knows, though I suspect that this person will soon be revealed. In fact, the piece reads like the swan song of a burned-out politico ready to reveal and rehabilitate himself.\nWhat this piece does not suggest is a constitutional crisis. The phrase is being thrown about a great deal, but this is not a constitutional crisis. Every president has people who steer him — albeit this president has to be steered more than most. Every president has the occasional bad impulse. This president just seems to have more than every other one combined.\nThe constitutional crisis would be if the Cabinet invoked the 25th Amendment and did not have two-thirds of Congress to go along with it. Then the president would see mass forced resignations from his Cabinet members and have a vice president he could not trust. There is your constitutional crisis. On top of that, to do this to a president who was elected according to the laws and conventions of the United States and its Constitution would be not just an affront to American democracy but, again, a constitutional crisis. The people who are screaming \"constitutional crisis!\" the loudest are the ones hellbent on causing a constitutional crisis.\nThe president's advisers all swore to uphold, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States of America. Throwing out the lawfully elected president would violate that oath. Working tirelessly to make sure the president does not stray from his own oath is keeping their oath.\nThere is, however, a point that must be made that may be unpleasant for some, and they will struggle mightily. What the writer of the piece in the Times describes and what the people in Bob Woodward's new book describe is, in fact, reality. You can pretend otherwise, but these stories have been consistent since before the president set foot in the White House. You can call these people disloyal or traitors, but the reality is the American people elected a walking temper tantrum in response to their outrage over a political class that had ignored them. This is the logical outcome of the voters' temper tantrum.\nBefore we stop there, let's also point out that neither the Republican nor the Democratic establishment could stop Donald Trump and the voter temper tantrum. Perhaps politicians should be a bit more introspective about why voters threw a temper tantrum in the first place. Screaming \"they're racist\" is baloney and does not even begin to address what really happened in 2016.\nThe Trump voter reaction to this is to think it is not true, wave it all away, decide they don't care or conclude there really is a deep-state coup against the president. I really do wonder whether the president's base would have treated this with a bit more credibility if the media had not been 100 percent hostile to the president from day one and so focused on scandal from day one. Many of the pundits and reporters screaming about a constitutional crisis have been screaming about a constitutional crisis since before the inauguration when they were trying to get the Electoral College to reject the will of the people. They have cried wolf so much that it is hard to get anyone to believe them now.\nMore: President Trump coming to Mississippi\nMore: Ideological narratives trump truth\nThere is a great deal unknown about this piece that sent Washington into a frenzy this past week, but there is one thing we can know. The president now has confirmation in multiple media outlets that there are those within his White House working to stop him. He is bound to grow more paranoid over this, and we will all be worse off because of it.\nErick Erickson is a nationally syndicated columnist and conservative commentator.\nRead or Share this story: https://www.clarionledger.com/story/opinion/columnists/2018/09/07/op-ed-makes-donald-trump-even-more-paranoid-and-thats-bad-all-us/1221819002/\nFoster's mindset at heart of sexual harassment\nWe should welcome the Enviva pellet plant\nNeshoba County Fair 2019 will bring the heat\nToyota is committed to Mississippi\nElectric vehicles are not as good as current cars\nColumn: Nice and friendly vs. arrogant","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line4662"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9411782622337341,"wiki_prob":0.9411782622337341,"text":"US wins 4th World Cup title, 2nd in a row, beats Dutch 2-0\nPosted: Jul 7, 2019 / 03:28 PM CDT / Updated: Jul 7, 2019 / 03:30 PM CDT\nLYON, France (AP) — The United States women’s soccer team was as good as American players promised — maybe even better.\nEspecially Megan Rapinoe, the pink-haired captain who emerged with the Golden Ball as top player, the Golden Boot as top scorer and a world-wide stature as a champion for gender equity.\nThe U.S. won its record fourth Women’s World Cup title and second in a row, beating the Netherlands 2-0 Sunday night when Rapinoe converted a tiebreaking penalty kick in the second half and Rose Lavelle added a goal.\nRapinoe scored in the 61st minute after a video review determined Stefanie van der Gragt had fouled Alex Morgan with a kick to the shoulder in the penalty area.\nTwo days past her 34th birthday, Rapinoe slotted the ball past goalkeeper Sari van Veenendaal for her sixth goal of the tournament. The oldest player to score in a Women’s World Cup final, she struck a familiar victorious pose with arms outstretched.\n“It’s surreal. I don’t know how to feel like now. It’s ridiculous,” Rapinoe said. “We’re crazy and that’s what makes us so special. We just have no quit in us. We’re so tight, and we’ll do anything to win.”\nLavelle, at 24 the team’s up-and-coming star, added her third goal of the tournament on an 18-yard left-footed shot in the 69th after a solo run from the center circle.\n“She’s superstar, not even in the making, she’s straight up superstar at this point,” Rapinoe said.\nFans, many dressed in red, white and blue, chanted “Equal Pay!” at the final whistle , a reminder players sued the U.S. Soccer Federation in March claiming gender discrimination.\nRapinoe drew the ire of U.S. President Donald Trump during the tournament by saying she and teammates would refuse to visit the White House, part of the team’s wider push for gender equity. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio needed just a few seconds after the final whistle to invite the team to a ticker-tape parade up the Canyon on Heroes in Manhattan on Wednesday.\nThe Americans never trailed in the tournament and set records with 26 goals and a 12-game World Cup winning streak dating to 2015. U.S. coach Jill Ellis became the first coach to lead a team to two Women’s World Cup titles, and the U.S. joined Germany in 2003 and 2007 as the only repeat champions.\n“It’s just chemistry. They put their hearts and soul into this journey,” Ellis said. “They made history.”\nFIFA president Gianni Infantino handed over the trophy, a stark contrast to four years ago in Canada, when then-president Sepp Blatter was a no-show as U.S. prosecutors investigated corruption in soccer’s governing body. While the U.S. added fourth star to its jersey, Germany is the only nation that has even two.\nWith confidence and brashness that some called even arrogant — triggering a backlash that the angry response was sexist — this American team established a standard of excellence that exceeded the U.S. champions of 1991, 1999 and 2015, becoming a goal for all others to match. Former American players joined the current generation on the field for the postgame celebration.\nAlyssa Naeher, the 31-year-old who succeeded Hope Solo in goal, faced repeated questions entering the tournament but allowed just three goals in the tournament and finished with her fourth shutout.\nThe U.S. had scored within the first 12 minutes of its previous six matches in the tournament but the European champions sat back to keep their defensive shape and kept the score 0-0 through the first half.\nVideo review, adopted by FIFA for the men’s World Cup last year, showed its impact when Stephanie Frappart, the first woman to referee a men’s Ligue 1 match, went to the screen at the side of the field and then signaled toward the spot.\nRapinoe, who missed Tuesday’s semifinal win over England with a hamstring injury, became the first woman to score on a penalty kick during a Women’s World Cup final, her 50th goal in 158 international appearances. She matched Morgan and England’s Ellen White for most goals in the tournament and won the Golden Ball based on fewer minutes.\nRapinoe was given a standing ovation by the crowd when she subbed out in the 79th minute. The crowd of 57,900 at Stade de Lyon for Le Grand Finale included French President Emmanuel Macron.\nThe Americans opened the tournament with a record 13-0 rout of lowly Thailand, triggering debate over whether the celebrations after each goal were excessive. Carli Lloyd responded the next match by following a goal with a polite golf clap. The Morgan stirred it up again when she scored against England with a tea sip, pinkie outstretched.\nPINE BLUFF, Ark. (AP) — Authorities are investigating whether possibly the most prolific serial killer in U.S. history is behind the death of an Arkansas woman in 1994.\nPolice in Pine Bluff are reviewing the case of Jolanda Jones's death after Samuel Little confessed to her killing, which had been determined to be drug-related.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line63094"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7495340704917908,"wiki_prob":0.25046592950820923,"text":"What is precocious puberty?\nPuberty that happens early is called precocious puberty. This means a child's physical signs of sexual maturity develop too soon. This includes breast growth, pubic hair, and voice changes. These are known as secondary sexual characteristics. Precocious puberty happens before age 8 in girls, and before age 9 in boys. Most children with the disorder grow fast at first. But they also stop growing before reaching their full genetic height potential.\nWhat causes precocious puberty?\nIt may be caused by tumors or growths on the ovaries, adrenal glands, pituitary gland, or brain. Other causes may include central nervous system problems, family history of the disease, or certain rare genetic syndromes. In many cases, no cause can be found for the disorder. There are two types of precocious puberty:\nGonadotropin-dependent. This is also known as central precocious puberty. This is the most common type of precocious puberty. Most girls and half of boys with precocious puberty have this type. The puberty is started by early secretion of hormones called gonadotropins. Gonadotropins include luteinizing hormone (LH) and follicle stimulation hormone (FSH). In girls, precocious puberty may be caused by the early maturity of the hypothalamus, pituitary glands, and ovaries. But in most cases, no cause can be found.\nGonadotropin-independent. This is a form of precocious puberty that is not started by the early release of gonadotropins. Instead it’s caused by early secretion of high levels of sex hormones. These include the male androgens and female estrogens.\nWho is at risk for precocious puberty?\nA child is at risk for precocious puberty if he or she has any of these:\nTumors or growths on the ovaries, testes, adrenal glands, pituitary gland, or brain\nCentral nervous system problems\nFamily history of the disease\nA rare genetic syndrome\nWhat are the symptoms of precocious puberty?\nThe signs are secondary sexual characteristics that happen early.\nCommon signs in girls can include:\nBreast growth\nPubic and underarm hair\nCommon signs in boys can include:\nEnlarging penis and testicles\nSpontaneous erections\nProduction of sperm\nDeepening of the voice\nOther signs of the disorder include:\nIncreased aggression\nGrowing taller earlier than other classmates\nThe signs of precocious puberty can be like other health conditions. Make sure your child sees his or her healthcare provider for a diagnosis.\nHow is precocious puberty diagnosed?\nThe healthcare provider will ask about your child’s symptoms and health history. He or she may also ask about your family’s health history. He or she will give your child a physical exam.\nYour child may have blood tests to measure levels of hormones such as:\nLuteinizing hormone (LH)\nFollicle stimulation hormone (FSH)\nA form of estrogen called estradiol\nGonadotropin-stimulating hormone (GnRH) is made by the hypothalamus in the brain. It causes the pituitary gland to release gonadotropins. These then cause sex hormones to be made by the ovaries in girls, or the testes in boys. The GnRH blood test may show the type of precocious puberty.\nYour child may also have tests such as:\nX-ray. This test uses a small amount of radiation to make images of tissues inside the body. An X-ray may be done of the left hand and wrist. This can estimate your child's bone age. With precocious puberty, bone age is often older than calendar age.\nUltrasound (sonography). This test uses sound waves and a computer to create images of blood vessels, tissues, and organs. This may be done to look at the adrenal glands and ovaries or testes.\nMRI. This test uses large magnets and a computer to make detailed images of tissues in the body.\nHow is precocious puberty treated?\nThe goal of treatment for is to stop the onset of early puberty signs. In some cases, the signs can be reversed. Treatment will depend on the type of precocious puberty and the cause.\nTreatment may be done with synthetic gonadotropin-releasing hormone. This can stop the sexual maturity process. It does this by stopping the pituitary gland from releasing the gonadotropin hormones.\nWhat are possible complications of precocious puberty?\nEarly puberty will cause a child's body and moods to change much sooner than his or her friends and classmates. This may make a child feel self-conscious and embarrassed, or be teased by other children.\nHow to manage precocious puberty\nYou can help your child by treating your child like normal, boosting your child's self-esteem, and seeking a child counselor if more help is needed.\nCall your child’s healthcare provider if you see signs of sexual development in a girl before age 8 or in a boy before age 9.\nKey points about precocious puberty\nPuberty that happens early is called precocious puberty. This means a child's physical signs of sexual maturity develop too soon. Precocious puberty happens before age 8 in girls, and before age 9 in boys.\nSigns can include breast growth, pubic hair, and voice changes.\nIt may be caused by tumors or growths on the ovaries, adrenal glands, pituitary gland, or brain. In many cases, no cause can be found for the disorder.\nTreatment may be done with synthetic gonadotropin-releasing hormone. This can stop the sexual maturity process.\nEarly puberty may make a child feel self-conscious and embarrassed, or be teased by other children.\nOnline Medical Reviewer: Hurd, Robert, MD\nLeuprolide depot injection\nLeuprolide injection\nNafarelin nasal spray","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1708723"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5745108127593994,"wiki_prob":0.5745108127593994,"text":"Latest Wyoming Whiskey Honors Iconic Wyomingite\nWhiskey Review: Four Roses Small Batch Select\n/ Booker’s Roundtable: What Exactly It Is\nBooker’s Roundtable: What Exactly It Is\nBy Maggie Kimberl /\tMay 26, 2016\nWhen Booker Noe first came up with the idea of Booker’s Bourbon, a barrel-strength non chill-filtered whiskey that harkened back to the days of taking your jug down to the tavern to fill up, he would select each batch with a group of friends around his kitchen table. Nowadays, the Booker’s Roundtable panel consists of many different whiskey experts who all take turns on a rotating basis selecting your next bottle of Booker’s.\nThe Whiskey Wash recently caught up with noted bourbon author Chuck Cowdery, who is regularly a member of this panel, to learn more about his experiences on it over the years:\nBooker Noe and his Booker’s Bourbon (image via Beam-Suntory)\nBooker’s was the first bourbon to be marketed as “small batch.” This term means different things to different people. What does it mean to Booker’s?\n“Small Batch Bourbons Collection” was a name coined by Beam to describe Booker’s, Baker’s, Knob Creek, and Basil Hayden, although Booker’s had already been on the market for a year or two. Beam never really defined ‘small batch’ unless you asked. Then they said it meant a small (relative to Jim Beam white) selection of barrels dumped for a bottling run. The term became popular and other producers started to use it, along with their own definitions. Today a Booker’s ‘batch’ consists of 350 – 375 barrels and they do six batches per year.\nYou wrote back in 2014 the roundtables were being done over the phone. Are they still largely done this way? Have you ever done one in person?\nI haven’t participated in all of them, but I have participated in two in-person, including [one recently]. The original plan was to do them over Skype but that technology failed. We’ve done several on conference call and that works pretty well, although it’s more fun in person.\nHow many samples do you typically go through and what are you looking for in each one?\nIt is always three samples. We’re looking for the one that tastes the most like Booker’s, i.e., the usual Booker’s flavor profile. It’s not unusual for one of us to say, “I like A better but B tastes more like Booker’s.”\nWhat are some of the subtle or not-so-subtle differences in the samples?\nMore or less char, more or less vanilla, more or less sweetness. The amazing thing is that although they are all Booker’s, there are real differences.\nSometimes things in the whiskey business look more fun from the outside than they really are, but I can imagine the Booker’s Round Table is actually a lot of fun. Is it more laid back or is it all business?\nIt’s fun because it’s a fun group of people. That’s what makes it. There are always new people. And it’s pretty easy work.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line134781"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.555131196975708,"wiki_prob":0.444868803024292,"text":"Arab Spring, Winter for Christians?\nby Gary Jason | Posted April 05, 2012\nIn a recent piece, I suggested that the fall of a number of Middle Eastern dictators — most notably Hosni Mubarak of Egypt — actively pushed by the Obama administration, and collectively dubbed “the Arab Spring,” has shown a remarkably ugly side.\nOne of the ugly features I noted was the removal, in the case of Egypt, of a regime that had been actively fighting the practice of female genital mutilation (the removal of most or all of the clitoris from adolescent girls). Some of our readers were offended by my piece, either thinking, somehow, that I advocated going to war with Egypt, or else shocked that I would dare to criticize the practice at all.\nOf course, I was merely commenting on a dubious Obama foreign policy initiative — replacing a disreputable US ally by an unknown force, and hoping for the best.\nWell, the situation has developed a more ominous aspect. The Arab Spring is turning out to be not only a winter for women, but also a winter for Christians. Several recent stories bring this to light.\nLet’s begin by reviewing the results of the first round of elections for Egypt’s parliament. In a turn eerily reminiscent of what happened in Iran decades ago — when Jimmy Carter, a president as feckless as Obama, withdrew support from the Shah so that “democratic forces” could take over — the resulting elections were victories for hardcore Islamist parties. Once the Islamists consolidated their power, they created a state far more repressive and authoritarian than the Shah could ever have imagined. The consequence was the mass murder of political dissidents, people deemed “deviant,” and worshipers of religions other than Islam (Baha’is, Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians). It also created a state quite supportive of terrorism abroad.\nOnce the Islamists consolidated their power, they created a state far more repressive and authoritarian than the Shah could ever have imagined.\nIn the recent Egyptian elections, Islamists won two-thirds of the seats. And by “Islamist” I am not exaggerating. The Muslim Brotherhood, an extreme organization, from which sprang Al Qaeda, won about 39% of the seats. But the even more extreme Salafists won an astounding 29%. Together, the two liberal parties (the Wafd Party and the Egyptian Bloc) won a pathetic 17% total of the vote.\nSo much for the idea that waves of freedom and modernization are sweeping over the largest Arab country.\nThis should have come as no surprise, since earlier elections in Tunisia and Morocco saw Islamist parties win by large majorities. The results for Christians are ominous. The largest group of Christians in the Arab world — the Coptic Orthodox Church — resides in Egypt, where it constitutes 10% of the population. Mubarak, dictatorial bastard that he was, provided protection for them. He is now gone, and the Copts are at the mercy of the Islamists. Mercy, indeed!\nAlready reports have come in of the killing of Copts, such as the slaughter of 25 or more during a protest they staged in downtown Cairo recently.\nThe Copts are now deeply demoralized. If they do as the Muslim Brotherhood does — load supporters on buses and drive them to the polls to vote en masse (Chicago-style voting — maybe that’s why Obama supports the Brotherhood!) — they risk civil war. But if they do nothing, the Islamists will target them and slowly turn up the heat. As an American-based Coptic Christian put it, “They [the Copts] are a cowed population in terms of politics. They are afraid and marginalized.”\nThis is such a familiar pattern. The Islamists kill off or expel the Jews (if any are left by the time the Islamists take over); then they target other religious minorities (Bahai’s, Zoroastrians, pagans, or whatever). The pressure then mounts on Christians.\nThis is no less than religious ethnic cleansing.\nThe Egyptian government has recently taken the necessary first step in setting up the apparatus to carry out religious cleansing. It has raided 17 nongovernmental agencies, including three American agencies that are supposed to monitor the “progress” of “democracy” in Egypt — specifically, Freedom House, the International Republican Institute, and the National Democratic Institute. One witness to the raid on the Future House for Legal Studies said that a policeman taking part in it held up an Arabic-Hebrew dictionary he found and said it proved the organization was engaged in sabotage against Egypt.\nOne predictable result of the Egyptian war against minorities is happening already: an exodus of Copts to America. One story reports that thousands of Copts have come to America since Obama’s chosen “democracy” swept Egypt. The emigrants report growing levels of overt persecution and violence. One recent émigré, Kirola Andraws, fled to America on a tourist visa and applied for asylum. He was an engineer, but now works as a cook and a deliveryman in Queens. His story, unfortunately, is likely to prove typical.\nThe report also notes that already this year a number of Coptic churches have been burned down. Islamist-spawned mobs have rampaged against Coptic homes, stores, and church schools. Think of it as the Muslim Brotherhood’s take on Kristallnacht. Yet the US Commission on International Religious Freedom was recently rebuffed by the Obama administration’s State Department when it asked State to put Egypt on its list of countries that violate religious freedom.\nThis is only the beginning. Right now, the Muslim Brotherhood only controls the legislature, and it is still held in check by the military. But a very recent article reports that the Brotherhood is planning to run some of its chosen “leaders” for the presidency — something it had earlier promised to do. Should the Islamists take over the executive branch, the military’s influence will rapidly wane, and Egypt will likely go the way of Iran.\nThe report observes that the military and the Muslim Brotherhood have been in a struggle for 60 years, with the military coming out on top, until now. The military controls about a third of the manufacturing industry in Egypt, for example, so is not likely to surrender power easily. The Egyptian liberals, now seen to be a small minority, seem to be rethinking whether the military is at this point the main threat to them.\nThink of it as the Muslim Brotherhood’s take on Kristallnacht.\nWhether the military will back down and let the Brotherhood take control is unclear. If the military reacts by dismissing the legislature, Egypt could be in for a protracted and internecine civil war. In either case, however, Christians can expect to be demonized and targeted by the Islamists.\nChristians are also being targeted by Islamists in other countries besides Egypt. Nigeria — to cite one such place — recently experienced a wave of terror attacks against Christians, with at least 39 killed. Most of them died when Muslim radicals blew up St. Theresa Catholic Church last Christmas. Shortly thereafter a Protestant church was bombed as well.\nChristians in Iraq and Syria have been fleeing, as violence directed at them increases. Since the US toppled Saddam in 2003, 54 Christian churches have been bombed in Iraq, and over 8,900 Christians have been murdered. The number of Christians remaining has of course dwindled, down to 500,000 from 800,000 to perhaps 1.4 million in 2003. With American troops now gone, one suspects that this trend will dramatically increase. In an interesting twist, Christians are fleeing other areas of Iraq and moving to the Kurdish-controlled region, because the Kurds have offered them protection. Yet there are Islamists even among the generally pro-Western Kurds, and Christians have faced some attacks in their territory.\nThere is in the end the law of unintended consequences, in foreign policy no less than in domestic policy. Progressive liberals — and even conservatives — should start paying attention to it. It is all well and good to desire an “outbreak of freedom,” but one ought to be careful about what one desires, as he might just get it. Many on the Left and the Right welcomed the “Arab Spring,” but it may not turn out to be an explosion of tolerant democracy, as it first seemed to them.\nLest any reader mistake this story for some kind of call to arms, let me make my view explicit: I do not advocate going to war against anyone. But should the Muslim Brotherhood complete its takeover of Egypt and continue its vicious religious persecution of the Copts, our high level of foreign aid to Egypt — $1.3 billion in military aid alone — should certainly be stopped. And this should be made clear to the Egyptians in advance.\nGary Jason is a lecturer in Philosophy and a senior editor at Liberty. His books can be found on Amazon.com.\nMr. Jason writes \"because of repeated attacks by Islamists on American soil...\"\nHow many is that? 6 or 7 over the last 20 years? Only 2 or 3 serious attempts. I guarantee you I can come up with 6 or 7 attempts by Christians to kill Muslims in that same time frame.\nMr. Jason is the one who is over-estimating the animosity of Muslims towards Christians. In a very irresponsible way, I might add. I wonder if he ever bothers to question why those few attacks were made on the US, and not say, Switzerland. A much more Christian country? Could it possibly have nothing to do with religion at all?\nVan Brunt\nJust what \"freedoms\" have Egyptians gained by overthrowing Mubarak? It appears that Muslim apologists seldom criticize the religious repression in the Muslim world. The fact is that while there is hatred and prejudice in the United States, we do not tolerate it, and we rigorously prosecute those who harm the innocent. It's not enough to have a revolution to overthrow the bad guy if what follows is just as bad or worse. The author of this article is free -- in the US -- to write a criticism of Egypt. I hope there are numerous newspapers in Egypt doing the same but I sincerely doubt that is the case.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1233204"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8250163197517395,"wiki_prob":0.8250163197517395,"text":"IIHS Homepage\nUrban Lens 2018\nAbout IIHS\nSqueeze Lime in Your Eye\nAvijit Mukul Kishore\nKausik Mukhopadhyay’s art objects lie on the peculiar intersection of toy, machine and organism. Made out of discarded household gadgets, they have distinct personalities and quirks. They are noisy, humorous and sometimes break down. They invite the viewer to engage and complete the narratives embedded within them. These narratives contain signifiers of political, personal and art history. There is much beauty and poignancy in Mukhopadhyay’s fragile art works. This film takes an intimate look at Mukhopadhyay’s journey as an artist and teacher.\nDirector’s Bio\nAvijit Mukul Kishore is a film-maker and cinematographer. He studied cinematography at the Film and Television Institute of India, Pune and has a bachelors degree in history from Hindu College, Delhi. He works in different genres of film making with special interest in the documentary and inter-disciplinary moving-image practice. He is actively involved in cinema pedagogy and works as a curator of film programmes. His films as director include Nostalgia for the Future, Electric Shadows, Vertical City, Certified Universal and Snapshots from a Family Album.\nRun Time 57 mins\nLanguage Hindi | English\nCopyright © 2018 - Indian Institute for Human Settlements. All rights reserved | Terms of Use\nAnica Mann-Kapur\nAnica Mann-Kapur is a consultant with Tata Trusts and the India Country Team Lead for Global Xplorer. She was a 2017 YES Global Institute Fellow, and as a cultural practitioner who engages in antiquities through art history, she was also an Art Advisor for Delhi Art Gallery in 2016. In addition to writing extensively about arts and culture, she was a research associate at Jindal School of Liberal Arts and Humanities as well as a researcher at Kyoto University.\nParmesh Shahani\nParmesh Shahani is the head of the award winning Godrej India Culture Lab, and the author of the book Gay Bombay: Globalization, Love and (Be)Longing in Contemporary India (Sage Publications, 2008). He is a TED Senior Fellow, a Yale World Fellow, and a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader.\nJasmine Lovely George\nJasmine Lovely George is a Tedx speaker, lawyer, and a sexual and reproductive health advocate from India. She has founded Hidden Pockets, a community interest startup working on access to sexual and reproductive health in cities. She is passionate about changing technology spaces and making them more inclusive for people of all genders. She is also the member of RESURJ – a transnational feminist collective.\nAromar Revi\nAromar Revi is the founding Director of the Indian Institute for Human Settlements, a global expert on Sustainable Development; and Co-Chair of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, from where he helped lead a successful campaign for an urban Sustainable Development Goal (SDG 11) as part of the UN’s 2030 development agenda. He is also member of the Managing Board of Cities Alliance the global partnership for sustainable cities and urban poverty reduction and UNISDR’ Global Assessment of Risk. Aromar is one of the world’s leading experts on global environmental change, especially climate change. He is a Coordinating Lead Author of the 2018 IPCC Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C that assesses the feasibility of mitigation and adaptation options and defines potential implementation pathways and investment needs to implement the Paris Climate Agreement.\nSudharak Olwe\nSudharak Olwe has been a Mumbai based photojournalist since 1988 and has worked as a press photographer with some of the leading newspapers in India. His photography captures resilience, courage and change in both rural and urban communities across the country. His work has been exhibited in Mumbai, Delhi, Malmo (Sweden), Lisbon, Amsterdam, Los Angeles, Washington and Dhaka. Apart from photographs, Olwe has also received the Padma Shri in 2016 for his documentaries on maternal and child mortality. Currently, he is the Photo Editor for the country’s most widely read Marathi newspaper, Lokmat. (http://www.sudharakolwe.com/)\nRajula Shah\nRajula Shah is a Visual artist, Poet and Filmmaker. After dropping out from the Fine Arts faculty Baroda, and completing a Masters in English Literature, she studied filmmaking at FTII, Pune specializing in Film Direction. Her work is located in the interstice of Poetry, Cinema and Anthropology. A keen interest in the indigenous knowledge systems, its practitioners and the changing practices thereof form the core of her study; her practice emerges through a close collaboration with people, their histories and environments.\nShe has been producing/ directing / writing/ editing & photographing films for well over a decade and continues to explore boundaries of fiction/non-fiction, photography, video essay, digital art and multi media installation. With her recent work, Pilgrimage in Nomad’s land she explores the emergent domain of Interactive Trans-media. It can be watched online @ www.nomadsfilmschool.com\nSameera Jain\nSameera Jain is a filmmaker and editor, and has worked for over 30 years in the arena of film and video. Sameera has edited several award-winning documentaries and some fiction feature films. Her directorial ventures “Portraits of Belonging”, “Born at Home” and “Mera Apna Sheher (My Own City)” have been acknowledged for cinematic excellence at national and international festivals. Sameera has been on film juries and participated in curriculum formulation at various institutions. She has been mentoring film students and filmmakers at diverse platforms and has been invited to teach filmmaking at many places, including her alma mater FTII. She has conceptualized, and is Course Director of the Creative Documentary course at SACAC (Sri Aurobindo Centre for Arts and Communication) in New Delhi.\nRanjani Mazumdar\nRanjani Mazumdar is Professor of Cinema Studies at the School of Arts & Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University. Her publications focus on urban cultures, popular cinema, gender and the cinematic city. She is the author of Bombay Cinema: An Archive of the City (2007) and co-editor with Neepa Majumdar of the forthcoming Wiley Blackwell Companion to Indian Cinema. She has also worked as a documentary filmmaker and her productions include Delhi Diary 2001 and The Power of the Image (Co-Directed). Her current research focuses on globalisation and film culture, and the intersection of technology, travel, design and colour in 1960s Bombay Cinema.\nRitesh Uttamchandani\nRitesh began his journey as a photographer watching his elder sister take photos of his family but sadly, he didn’t register it back then and began his journey as a professional in 2004 as an intern at the Indian Express. Inspired by the work of Reza Deghati, David Alan Harvey and of course, the usual suspects, Henri Cartier Bresson, Eugene Smith etc, he moved over to the Hindustan times and finally the OPEN Magazine where he worked for seven years before stepping into the fascinating and often scary world of freelance.\nIn his decade-long experience as a photojournalist, he has reported and documented some of the major events of national and international importance in the Indian subcontinent and has recently self-published his first photo book, The Red Cat and Other Stories, which looks at the city of Bombay through the lens of a fable his mother used to narrate to him when he was a child. The book, equal parts travelogue and journalism, is a tribute to the beauty in the mundane.\nRatheesh Radhakrishnan\nRatheesh Radhakrishnan teaches at the Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT Bombay, Mumbai. He completed his PhD from the Centre for the Study of Culture and Society (Bangalore), and was a Post-Doctoral Fellow with the Chao Centre for Asian Studies, Rice University (Houston, USA). While at Rice University, he founded and curated TITLES: A Festival of Experimental Films from India (2011- 2014). He is currently part of the India programming team of MAMI – Mumbai Film Festival. His research on Malayalam cinema has appeared in a variety of journals and other publications, both in English and in Malayalam.\nJabeen Merchant\nJabeen Merchant is a film practitioner with a wide and varied experience within the independent filmmaking community as well as the mainstream film industry. She is well known for her work editing and co-scripting a number of internationally celebrated documentaries in collaboration with some of India’s best filmmakers. Side by side, she has edited a range of fiction feature films, including the critically acclaimed ‘Anaarkali of Aarah’; commercially successful thrillers like ‘NH10’ and ‘Manorama Six Feet Under’; the off-beat comedy ‘The President Is Coming’; art-house films such as ‘Kadvi Hawa’ and the soon to be released ‘The Sweet Requiem’. Apart from editing films, she teaches, consults on scripts and occasionally writes on cinema.\nSwati Dandekar\nSwati Dandekar is a film practitioner with a special interest in creating visual narratives of the living history around her; of people, places, ideas, traditions and practices. Her most recent work is “Neeli Raag”, a feature length documentary on the natural dye indigo, and the few remaining craftsmen who still work with it.\nHer earlier work includes a series of essay films that look at urban India, in particular at the changes taking place in small towns and cities, and explore the relationship between land, people, resources and the institutions that govern them. She was also closely involved in documenting best practices in elementary education, as well as designing and making radio and video programmes for rural school children. As part of Vikalp, Swati has been involved in screening documentary films in the city for over 10 years.\nSwati teaches film at the Srishti Institute of Art, Design and Technology, Bangalore.\nAmit Mahanti\nAmit Mahanti is a filmmaker, cameraperson and editor, who has worked on films and video installations that explore questions of ecological transformation, culture and politics. His films include ML 05 B 6055 (2008), Malegaon Times (2012), Every Time You Tell A Story (2015) and Scratches on Stone (2017).\nHe has also been selected for art/film residency programs at Khoj Studios, New Delhi; Parco Arte Vivente Experimental Centre of Contemporary Art, Turin; Kran Film, Brussels and Centre for Contemporary Art, Ujazdowski, Warsaw. He was also a recipient of the Charles Wallace India Trust Short-term Fellowship, 2016.\nSushma Veerappa\nAfter a Post-graduate diploma in Social Communications Media from Sophia Polytechnic, Mumbai, Sushma joined the CIEDS Collective Here, she conceived and executed a film education programme for school children. Post this experience, she worked as Assistant Director and Scriptwriter with filmmaker M.S.Sathyu for 4 years. She began making documentaries in 1998.\nAs Producer / Director, her focus has been on documenting the work of grass root organizations working in Karnataka’s remote villages. Her films have been used as communication tools by these organizations to further engage with the people they work with. Her work encompasses a wide spectrum – about people’s co-operatives, leadership imaging as participatory research tool, training modules for blue collar workers, issues relating to water, women and violence.\nHer concerns with the city in transition led her to produce and direct her first independent documentary WHEN SHANKAR NAG COMES ASKING. Her last short film SHEELA GOWDA AT BATTARAHALLI CORNER was screened at the 13th IAWRT (International Association of Women in Film and Television) Festival. Along with 4 other filmmakers, Sushma is part of Vikalp Bengaluru, a group which has been screening documentaries in the city since 2005.\nSabari Pandian\nSabari Pandian works as an assistant director in documentary films. Some of the films that he has assisted on are ‘Nostalgia for the future’ and ‘Electric Shadows: Journeys In Image-making’. Based in Bombay he also loves to travel and take photographs. He is currently pursuing his Bachelor of Science in Information Technology from Mumbai University. An avid film buff, Sabari loves being part of film festivals and has provided technical support for film festivals such as Urban Lens Film Festival (2016) and the IAWRT Asian Women’s Film Festival (2017).\nKunal Deshpande\nKunal Deshpande is an alumnus of the Srishti School of Art Design and Technology, Bangalore. His diploma film, Daryache Raje (Kings of the Sea) was selected and screened at the 6th Kirloskar Vasundhara Environmental Film Festival.\nHe has since worked as a cinematographer, director and editor on projects ranging from documentaries on the water resources and climate adaptation practices in the north-east, to lifestyle exploration films in Kutch, and people-oriented films. He has worked on feature films like Ferrari Ki Sawaari, on television shows and various other projects.\nKunal also worked at the IIHS where he was part of the Media Lab, creating a variety of audio visual outputs for teams and projects. He worked on videos on the process of campus development, on climate change adaptation, and on festivals such as the Urban Lens film festival and Cityscripts. He is now engaged with IIHS in the capacity of an External Consultant.\nHe is currently producing and directing SupperClub India, a food and travel web series, as well as producing videos for several corporate clients and brands.\nTejInder Singh\nTejInder, is an independent photographer and researcher. He is also senior urban fellow at Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore. He has had a range of work experiences from that of a trainee architect to managing electoral campaigns, participating in Model UN conferences, and documenting and archiving contemporary issues. He has photo documented Gaurav Gagoi’s campaign for Assam assembly elections, Occupy UGC movement, Swaraj Abhiyaan’s Jai Kisan Andolon, City Scripts – The IIHS Urban Writing Festival, 2017 IAWRT Asian Women’s Film Festival, Jio MAMI Mumbai Film Festival Word to Screen Bootcamp and many more conferences and events across India. His work on Ennore Creek Power Plant has been published by Scroll.in and Urbanisation – a SAGE journal.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line61780"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5943100452423096,"wiki_prob":0.5943100452423096,"text":"JulyJul 9, 1986\nJulyJul 9, 1986 (age 33)\nFirst Name Antoine#31\nCornerback who made his NFL debut in 2008 for the San Diego Chargers, after being selected in the first round of that year's draft.\nHe played college football at the University of Arizona, where he was an All-American in both football and track and field.\nAfter five years with the Chargers, he joined the Arizona Cardinals for 2013, and the Carolina Panthers for 2014.\nHis father, Wendell Cason, also played in the NFL.\nHis first NFL interception came against quarterback Jay Cutler.\nAntoine Cason Popularity\nAntoine Cason Is A Member Of\nFirst Name Antoine\nBorn in California\nAntoine Cason Fans Also Viewed\nFootball Player Trivia Games\nMore July 9 Birthdays\nJenn McAllister\nJuly 9 Birthdays\nMore Cancers","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line265647"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6041542291641235,"wiki_prob":0.39584577083587646,"text":"Tag Archive: Oversight Committee\nTestifying Before Full House Oversight Committee on Federal Spending Transparency\nby Ellen Miller Jun 13, 2011 1:28 pm\nTomorrow morning I will be testifying before the full House Oversight and Government Reform Committee about the Sunlight Foundation’s work... View Article\nThe Fresh Prince of Capitol Hill?\nby Nicko Margolies May 24, 2011 12:11 pm\nSunlight's eagle-eyed developer, Luigi Montanez, took the above screenshot of the official video feed from the House Oversight Committee. It raises the question, who is watching the watchers watching Fresh Prince?\nTestifying Before House Committee on Clearspending\nby Ellen Miller Mar 11, 2011 11:28 am\nThis morning I testified before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform’s Subcommittee on Technology and Information Policy about... View Article\nOrganizations Responding to Oversight Chairman Include Major Lobbies, Big Contributors\nby Paul Blumenthal Feb 3, 2011 2:59 pm\nIn December Oversight Committee chairman Darrell Issa sent letters to 142 organizations soliciting suggestions for regulations that were cumbersome and... View Article\nGet Offline Tonight\nby Ellen Miller Feb 1, 2008 11:24 am\nInstead of spending another Friday night surfing the Web for your news, here's some television you should watch tonight. Bill Moyers Journal will give you the best arguments you'll ever need to explain why it's so important for our government to do its work in the open. They have prepared an extensive report on government waste and abuse of power.\nSpecifically Moyers is going to look at some of the unsolved mysteries under investigation by Congress's Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, chaired by Rep. Henry Waxman. The program profiles the Committee's work, including its investigations of the mercenary army of Blackwater; Lurita Doan, who remains head of the GSA despite allegations of questionable no-bid contracts; and Condoleezza Rice's State Department, which is plagued by fraud and abuse. Waxman's Committee's Web site is a treasure trove of information and documents on these issues. (In fact, Sunlight regards it as a model site itself when it comes to revealing the details of the work of a committee of Congress.)\nAnd we're pleased that their Web page will highlight many of Sunlight's insanely useful Web sites for people are seeking more information.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line848665"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7283919453620911,"wiki_prob":0.7283919453620911,"text":"Phi Beta Kappa Member and UNH Trustee Donates $8 Million to UNH\nJudith “Jude” Blake ’77 has pledged $8 million of her estate to UNH to support students in the business college as well as to enable more students to participate in the university’s Northeast Passage program and the Shoals Marine Laboratory.\nMost of the bequest will provide scholarships for students in the Peter T. Paul College of Business and Economics and address needs that directly benefit business students.\n“Jude is one of the university’s most passionate supporters and her commitment to our students is inspiring,” said UNH President Mark Huddleston. “Jude’s generosity will ensure future generations of students have access to a world-class education as well as unique opportunities with Northeast Passage and the Shoals Marine Lab. We are grateful for her support and incredible generosity.” Huddleston also noted that Blake’s gift made it possible for the university to feel confident in setting its record-breaking $275 million campaign goal.\nBlake, a retired marketing executive and resident of Portsmouth, said she was pleased to learn her gift could advance the university’s fundraising goals.\n“I believe that in a state like New Hampshire one person really can make a difference and that if you have the capability to give back you should,” Blake said. “There are so many ways to give back -- time, talent and treasure – and they are all important.”\nBlake does it all at UNH. She has served or is serving on the University System of New Hampshire board of trustees, the UNH Foundation board of directors, the UNH Alumni Association board of directors and the Paul College advisory board. She mentors students and teaches beverage management classes. Her bequest builds on the endowed scholarship she created for business students more than a decade ago.\n“Higher education is so very important,” she added. “It’s the path to success in life, and making an outstanding UNH education more accessible and affordable for students is what drives me. It was important for me to make this gift now to recognize what Mark Huddleston has accomplished at UNH. It is because of his leadership that we are in the incredibly strong position we are in now.”\nIn 2016 UNH launched the largest fundraising campaign in its history to provide critical support for students, faculty, infrastructure and programs. Learn more about CELEBRATE 150: The Campaign for UNH and how you can help reach the $275 million goal.\nJune 11, 2018 | College of Liberal Arts\nPhi Beta Kappan Sasa Tang Back in Wildcat Country\nMay 22, 2018 | College of Liberal Arts\nPBK Chapter Initiates 61 Students\nFebruary 28, 2018 | College of Liberal Arts\nJustin Poisson '18: What PBK Means to Me","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line11887"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7128471732139587,"wiki_prob":0.28715282678604126,"text":"Don Bolognese\nCITY OF BIRTH\nSTATE/PROVIDENCE OF BIRTH\nNew York / Landgrove, VT\nCURRENT STATE/PROVIDENCE\nA graduate of New York City's prestigious Cooper Union Art School, accomplished artist and calligrapher Don Bolognese went on to teach art there and at New York University, the Pratt Institute, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art's medieval museum, the Cloisters. He has illustrated more than 90 books for children, many of which he wrote himself; on many others, he has collaborated with his wife, the author and illustrator Elaine Raphael.\nOne way in which Bolognese has been able to connect teaching and illustration is through his many “how-to” books for children, which range from relatively simple exercises in drawing skills to more complex lessons in art techniques. Bolognese himself has illustrated a wide variety of fiction and nonfiction works, and his attention to detail and vivid presentation have earned him critical acclaim and numerous awards. A native of New York City, Bolognese now lives in New York and Vermont.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line56475"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.681580126285553,"wiki_prob":0.681580126285553,"text":"'They've almost thrown tradition out of the window'\nLast updated : 06 October 2012 By Michael Morris\nIpswich manager Paul Jewell.\n“We’ve just got to make sure we’re brave and we play to the best of our ability. If Cardiff come and play well and we play well and they beat us, there’s not much we can do.\n“We know that they’ll come full of confidence. I know our record against Cardiff before someone tells me, and I’d say that we had a bad record against Watford.\n“We’ve played them three times since I’ve been here and we’ve beaten them twice and we’ve drawn with them once.\n“It’s always a hard game, they’ve got some quality players, they’ve spent a lot of money on trying to get in the Premier League, they’ve even changed the kit. I’m not sure what our fans would do if played in yellow!\n“They’ve almost thrown tradition out of the window and gone down the road of trying to get promotion through the owners from Malaysia.”\nMalky Mackay\n\"I see it as a tough, tough game. They have brought in a couple of loan players in the last day or so.\n\"I've never had an easy game at Ipswich since I've been in England.\n\"Any away game in this country is difficult.\n\"So we go there making sure we have got to give everything we can otherwise it's going to be a tough game.\n\"It's a strange league and it's a tough league and it's very uncompromising. Teams are confident in their home environment.\"\n\"Results breed confidence obviously, but performances breed confidence,\" he continued.\n\"To go and play against two tough teams [Blackpool and Birmingham City] and come away with six points in a real tough week is impressive.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1023807"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6964697241783142,"wiki_prob":0.6964697241783142,"text":"Category: Legal News\nAre Magic Mushrooms Next On The List Of Legalized Drugs?\nCiting the benefits of widespread marijuana reform throughout the United States, a handful of activists are now mounting a campaign to push for the legalization of psychedelic mushrooms.\nAs reported by The Guardian:\nKevin Saunders, a mayoral candidate for the city of Marina, just south of the San Francisco Bay, has filed a proposal that would exempt adults over the age of 21 from any penalties over possessing, growing, selling or transporting psychedelic psilocybin mushrooms.\nIf he can get 365,880 voter signatures by the end of April 2018, the California Psilocybin Legalization Initiative will be placed on the statewide ballot.\nA profound magic mushroom experience helped Saunders get over a “debilitating five-year heroin addiction” in 2003 when he was 32. “I got to the root of why I made a conscious decision to become a heroin addict; I’ve been clean almost 15 years.”\nThe study has since been verified by sufferers all over the country who tell their stories on Web forums. The Atlantic reports that one contributor wrote that he has been taking a preventative dose every 60 days for more than four years now, and he’s spent “the vast majority of the last four years completely pain-free.”\nRead more at PersonalLiberty\nIllegal Opium Trade Thrives Across Arunachal Pradesh\nGuwahati: The flourishing illegal opium cultivation in eastern Arunachal Pradesh has become a major area of concern for security agencies, with the state government miserably failing to tackle this menace. The drug mafia, with some help from Naga rebels, continues to call the shots in the frontier state, where people are reluctant to give up the practice of poppy farming in absence of any alternative for their economic survival.\nIt is significant than that Arunachal Pradesh tops the list of states with illegal poppy cultivation.\nThe Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB) in its last report of 2015 claims to have destroyed poppy fields spread over 399 acres in eastern Arunachal Pradesh.\nBut as per NGOs, the state still has around 10,000 hectares of opium fields and the annual yield of opium is around 100 tonnes, an average of 10 kg a hectare.\nFor NCB, opium cultivation in eastern Arunachal Pradesh has become an eyesore. Despite the regular destruction of poppy fields by the authorities, a large section of people is still not ready to give up the practice. This is a huge challenge in the fight against drug smuggling.\nAccording to the bureau officials, apart from Lohit and Anjaw districts, which share borders with Myanmar and China, there are reports of poppy cultivation from Changlang, Longding, Upper Siang and Tirap districts too.\nRead more at The Asian Age\nUse of CBD Oil Has Doubled in the UK in One Year\nA trade organization in the United Kingdom that oversees the rapidly expanding cannabidiol (CBD) and hemp market, has published a study that shows the use of CBD oil in the U.K. has doubled in a single year.\nThe Cannabis Trades Association U.K.’s (CTAUK) figures reveal 250,000 people are now using CBD oil to treat their health conditions. CTAUK added that the number of users is up from 125,000 last year, with approximately 1,000 new users each month.\nIn October 2016, the U.K. government recognized the medicinal value of CBD, stating the cannabinoid has “restoring, correcting, or modifying” properties. This admission has allowed suppliers to sell CBD by obtaining a medicinal license, which is a lengthy and strict process. Many retailers have been able to circumvent the process by selling CBD products as food supplements.\nMost recently, the public debate around medical cannabis in the U.K. has seen a lot of attention, with a bill to legalize going through its first parliamentary reading Oct. 10 unopposed. That same day, a protest incited by a member of parliament and cannabis activist Paul Flynn took place in front of the Parliament building in London.\nMore of this news at Marijuana.com\nFirst Big Ayahuasca Study Shows Promising Early Results\nAyahuasca is a potent psychedelic that’s recently come into vogue among hipsters backpacking around South America.\nThe Nature journal Scientific Reports has just published a new piece of research on ayahuasca, making it the largest and most authoritative scientific study on the matter to date. The findings suggest this Amazonian “Shaman’s Brew” might be linked to improved everyday well-being, and potentially offer a treatment for alcoholism and depression.\nResearchers from University College London (UCL) and the University of Exeter in the UK sifted through the Global Drug Survey data of over 96,000 people worldwide and found 527 ayahuasca users. This group reported higher general well-being, along with less problematic alcohol and drug use, over the previous 12 months than other respondents in the survey.\n“Recent research has demonstrated ayahuasca’s potential as a psychiatric medicine, and our current study provides further evidence that it may be a safe and promising treatment.”\nRead more at IFL Science\nPolice: Zombie Drug’ Flakka May Have Hit Winnipeg Streets\nA spokesperson for the Winnipeg Police Service says officers are “very aware” of the drug and have made what could be their first seizure of the synthetic stimulant. Testing is pending.\nFlakka, which resembles finely ground glass, is chemically similar to “bath salts,” a term used to describe a number of recreational designer drugs (the name derives from instances in which the drugs were sold disguised as true bath salts).\nIt is most commonly snorted or injected, according to Dr. Marc Myer, medical director of the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation in Minnesota.\n“It gives an effect that includes euphoria and stimulation that usually lasts for one to two hours,” Myer said. “It can also cause undue side effects like psychosis, homicidal behavior, suicidal behavior, and that makes it difficult to treat these patients.”\nFlakka emerged in the southern United States in 2013 and has been making its way into more mainstream drug use, Myer says. Florida has seen a significant surge in the drug’s popularity in recent years.\nRead more on CBC News\nPosted on October 31, 2017 November 2, 2017\nIs Marijuana In Candy A Real Concern This Halloween?\nBefore you send your kids out for Halloween, warn them about the dangers they could encounter. Wear reflective clothing, carry a flashlight, look both ways before crossing the street and it is never a good idea to go into someone’s house.\nThe other concern this year is to be on the lookout for people slipping kids marijuana-laced candy. It is always a good idea to remind your kids to have an adult inspect all candy before eating it.\n“You probably can’t tell the difference between medicated gummy bears and the regular ones if you put them side by side,” said Encanto Greens owner Bill Brothers.\nAll the edibles sold at his store are manufactured someone else and sold locally. The packaging does list marijuana on it but it is often small and the box or wrapping looks like a candy wrapper.\n“I think there is an opportunity to improve the labeling of medical marijuana, especially in edibles,” said Brothers.\nBut is there a significant physical danger if your child were to ingest marijuana found in cookies or gummy bears?\nExperts warn parents and kids to never accept treats that don’t come in the original wrapping and always wait to get home and inspect the candy or sweets before eating it.\nFull article at 10 News\nHow Coca Leaf Became Colombia’s New Superfood\nNo other plant in human history has been as demonized as coca.\nIn 1961, it was placed on the Schedule I list at the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, which stated that “The Parties shall so far as possible enforce the uprooting of all coca bushes which grow wild. They shall destroy the coca bushes if illegally cultivated.” The plant has been public enemy number one in the worldwide War on Drugs for decades.\nBut when the World Health Organization announced last year that the Monsanto-made pesticide, glyphosate, was actually highly carcinogenic, Colombia’s days of kissing America’s ass came to a screeching halt. In an abrupt turnaround, Colombia’s president Juan Manuel Santos is now challenging the War on Drugs in its entirety; this a reflection of the national psyche of a country that has borne the brunt of failed policies for far too long and is ready for real change.\n“We are trying to promote the proper use of this plant, as it has been perverted for centuries, and show how it is actually used as indigenous tradition,” says Ximena Robayo, who runs the restaurant/café/health food store in the heart of the city’s bohemian La Candelaria district.\nBesides chewing the leaves of coca, or brewing them into a tea, a wide variety of cooked and baked goods and dishes can be made with coca by grinding the leaves into a flour, called harina. This harina can also be stirred into juices, blended in smoothies, and used to make green drinks of all types.\nRead the full article at Q Costa Rica\nMaine Lawmakers To Debate Sale Of Marijuana\nAUGUSTA (WGME) – Maine voters approved recreational marijuana nearly a year ago, but there is still no market set up in the state.\nThe marijuana debate has yet to happen in the house or senate, but what we do know is Governor LePage and House Republicans seem to be ready to delay the sale of recreational marijuana in Maine.\nPortland Senator Mark Dion says the marijuana legalization implementation committee he serves on worked for eight months on a bill that allows for the safe, regulated, taxed and legal sale of marijuana in Maine, which Maine voters approved.\nBut House Republican Leader Ken Fredette says the bill passed out of committee is far from ready. That’s why he is presenting a governor’s bill to delay the regulated sale of marijuana in Maine.\n“There needs to be rulemaking done as part of passing this bill,” Fredette said. “And that rulemaking, in my opinion, is not going to be done anywhere near Feb. 1, 2018.”\nThe Republican chair of the Marijuana Legalization Committee says there is no need for a delay.\nRead more at WGME\nWarn Experts: E-Cigarettes Being Adapted To Smoke Illegal Drugs!\nElectronic cigarettes are being used to vape illegal substances like cannabis, crack cocaine, ecstasy, and heroin as part of a disturbing new drugs culture.\nA study by public health experts has revealed alarming numbers of e-cigarette users are modifying their vaping devices so they can inhale vapor from banned drugs.\nThe research found 39 percent of people with electronic vaping devices admit to using them to take illegal drugs or former ‘legal highs’ such as mephedrone.\nThe researchers who led the study warned too little is known about the risks of taking drugs in this way and that it could easily lead to overdoses among other problems.\nRead the full article in Daily Mail UK\nLos Angeles County Issues Its First Cannabis License\nYvonne Delarosa Green was awarded the first cannabis business license for Los Angeles County for her dispensary 99 High Tide Collective in Malibu. The city and county of Los Angeles are expected to become the capital of cannabis once the state of California’s regulated adult-use market is up and running.\nThere is a great deal of confusion over the cannabis licenses in the city versus the county. Los Angeles, the city, hasn’t issued any licenses, and it is rumored that existing dispensaries will have to close until they receive the new 2018 license under the new regulations.\nKeith Knox, chief deputy treasurer and tax collector for the county, confirmed that Los Angeles County administers some functions like business permits for three cities and Malibu is one of those three. However, Los Angeles County is banning marijuana for now, which makes the licensing in Malibu even more unique.\nThe mayor’s office in Malibu said in a statement:\n“The City of Malibu’s Municipal Code allows for two medical marijuana dispensaries to operate within City limits. Two medical marijuana dispensaries have been in operation in the City for several years. Los Angeles County issues business licenses on behalf of the City of Malibu, and approved a business license for one of the two existing medical marijuana dispensaries today.”\nRead the full article at Forbes\nHome Brewed Death Tea\nPoppy seed tea has potentially lethal consequences according to a new paper published in the Journal of Forensic Sciences. Researchers at Sam Houston State University decided to look into home-brewed poppy seed tea and its lethality.\nDeaths attributable to opioids have quadrupled since 1999 and account for the six out of every ten overdose deaths. Whereas heroin and opiate-containing medications have been the primary source of addictions and deaths, it seems that brewing tea from unwashed poppy seeds can also kill.\nThe opium poppy plant (Papaver somniferum) has been cultivated for centuries as a source of opium. Poppy seeds produced from the poppy plant produce a milky sap containing opiates. Poppy seed tea is made by washing or soaking the seeds in water. Opium is contained within the seed capsule and also contains a variable mixture of alkaloids, including roughly ten percent morphine, 6 percent noscapine, one percent papaverine, 0.5 percent codeine and 0.2 percent thebaine.\nHow lethal ingestion of opiates can depend on individual tolerance which develops rapidly with long-term use. As the authors of the study point out, “The level of information that is shared online contributes to the facilitation of drug abuse practices such as extracting opium alkaloids by brewing poppy seed tea,” and they add, “However, this practice can have fatal consequences.”\nProfessor Madeleine Swortwood, an Assistant Professor in the Department of Forensic Science at Sam Houston State University, was contacted by the parent of a young man who died after drinking home-brewed PST.\nRead more at American Council on Science and Health\nOpium Tincture Market Plan, Supply and Revenue to 2020\nA tincture is an alcoholic extract of plant or animal material or solution of such low volatility substance. Tincture of opium which is also known as laudanum is an alcoholic herbal preparation containing approximately 10% powdered opium by weight.\nOpium is a highly narcotic drug acquired as dried latex that contains approximately 12% of the analgesic alkaloid morphine. Opium is processed chemically to produce heroin and other synthetic opioids for medicinal use and other uses. Opium tincture is reddish brown in color and bitter in taste.\nOpium tincture contains morphine and codeine and it is primarily used as an analgesic and cough suppressant. Opium tincture enhances the tone in the long segments of the longitudinal muscle and inhibits propulsive contraction of circular and longitudinal muscles.\nOpium tincture remains in the British Pharmacoepia, where it is referred to as Tincture of Opium, B.P., Laudanum, Thebaic Tincture, or Tinctura Thebaica.\nMajor methods of preparation of opium include processing it into regular opium tincture (tinctura opii).\nRead the full article at Miltech\nWhy Is Weed Getting More Potent?\nThe feds began monitoring the potency of the nation’s pot supply in the ‘70s by drawing samples from stashes seized by law enforcement, and boy was it schwag. The percentage of THC—the main psychoactive component in cannabis—averaged from less than 1% in 1975 to just under 3% a decade later, according to the data.\nThese notoriously low levels reflected the times, as the weed subculture in America was just starting to take root and could help explain why some of the most memorable old school brands have names like Acapulco Gold, Panama Red, Afghani, Thai stick, and Jamaican sensi; they were all originally cultivated outside of the country.\nNow, as some critics have pointed out, it’s impossible to empirically confirm how strong domestically grown pot was back in the day due to inferior testing and sampling methods, however, there does seem to be enough prevailing research, firsthand testimony, and common sense to show that the illicit reefer from decades ago wasn’t nearly as powerful as today’s.\nA recent federal study found that “the potency of illicit cannabis plant material has consistently risen over time since 1995 from approximately 4% in 1995 to approximately 12% in 2014.” This marked increase represents a shift when smokers began to pivot from dirt to mid-grade and hydro. In one standout bust from 2009, the DEA nabbed some sticky-icky that scored an impressive 33.12%, the highest concentration of THC the agency has ever seen in a domestic sample of weed.\nContinue Reading at Gizmodo\nCDC Launches Campaign To Fight Opioid Crisis In US\nThe Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has launched a national campaign to help fight the prescription opioid crisis in this country.\nThe campaign will use online advertising, billboards, newspapers and radio/TV ads to increase awareness about the risks of opioids.\n“The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is committed to using evidence-based methods to communicate targeted messages about the opioid crisis and prevent addiction and misuse in every way we can,” said HHS Secretary Tom Price, M.D.\nHe added, “Prevention is a key piece of the five-point strategy HHS unveiled under the Trump Administration for combating this crisis, which has left no corner of America untouched.”\nWSB Radio\nWING Officials Report Increase In Heroin Usage\nGERING — Scotts Bluff County Sheriff Mark Overman refers to Colorado as the area’s “canary in the coal mine” because law enforcement and drug problems experienced in northern Colorado soon spread to the Nebraska Panhandle.\nUse of the powerful painkillers, both prescription and non-prescription, has been rapidly increasing in both the U.S. and Canada since about 2010. By 2015, overdose deaths from opioids surpassed deaths from both car accidents and guns.\nAccording to the Drug Enforcement Administration, overdose deaths, especially from prescription opioids and heroin, have reached epidemic levels.\nNebraska State Patrol Sgt. Brian Eads serves as the WING Drug Task Force commander. He said the area has been dealing with opioids, particularly prescription drugs, for some time. But now heroin is starting to make more of an appearance in even smaller towns in the Panhandle.\nMuch of the heroin they’re seeing is cut with fentanyl, a synthetic opioid painkiller that has a rapid onset and short duration of action. It’s 50 to 100 times more potent than morphine.\nEads said DEA statistics show a large majority of seized heroin has been cut with fentanyl, which is considerably stronger than the heroin itself.\nRead more at Starherald\nPosted on September 17, 2017 October 11, 2017\nOpioid Addiction: Humanizing A Crisis\nSerious, chronic health conditions such as diabetes, heart disease, and cancer, represent just a few of the staple diagnoses in developed countries, but few are as stigmatized as addiction. The opioid epidemic is at the forefront of public health issues capturing national attention in the United States, affecting communities from Hollywood to small town USA.\nThe term opiate is a classification for a drug that contains the highly addictive drug opium, a narcotic derived from the Papaver somniferum poppy plant. Opioids are appealing because the user feels a great sense of euphoria, followed by both decreased pain and increased drowsiness.\nAdding to the complexity of this epidemic is the availability of similar, and often illicit, drugs that produce the same euphoric feelings of prescription pain medications. The abuse of, and addiction to, illicit versions of opiates, such as heroin, is growing as regulations and costs make it more difficult to obtain legally prescribed opiates.\nIt makes sense, then, that the United States consumes 80% of the global opioid supply. Individuals hit hardest by this epidemic are between the ages of 25 to 54, with higher overdose rates seen in non-Hispanic whites and Native Americans or Alaskan Natives. Men die from overdoses at higher rates than women, but that gap is said to be closing.\nContinue Reading at Crixeo\nBig Weed Will Capitalize On Cannabis At Any Cost To Society\nCigarettes are good for your health. There’s no such thing as global warming, so keep on burning coal. Benzodiazepines like Valium are a godsend — “mother’s little helper.” “Anything’s possible when you learn to handle Smirnoff.” These are some of the vintage ads and canards that we look back upon today with wonder.\nWhat’s stupid is our collective amnesia about what happens in a democracy when a forbidden fruit hits the market: namely, capitalism at its worst. The response of capitalism to legalized cannabis will be to capitalize, as is its nature. To imagine that there will be no Big Weed akin to Big Tobacco is stupid. Consolidation is assured, and Big Weed will be run by executives from the other Big Bad Wolves.\nThe health benefits of “medical marijuana” will one day be equated with the disservice done by a generation of doctors who overprescribed opiates and benzos, the previous generation of doctors being suckered into smoking and recommending Camel cigarettes as good for you.\nRead more at The Star\nPosted on September 11, 2017 December 14, 2017\nScientists Want to Synthesize Salvia’s Hallucinogenic Molecule\nYou’re probably familiar with Salvia divinorum, the hallucinogenic plant used for religious purposes in some indigenous cultures, and for watching celebrities giggle in some decaying cultures.\nA team of scientists is now reporting that they’ve found an easier way create a slightly-altered version of the chemical responsible for salvia’s hallucinogenic effects, Salvinorin A. They’re not doing it so that you can continue having wild trips with your high school friends, though. Instead, these researchers are looking for a painkiller with opiate-like effects, but with a lower potential to abuse.\n“Drug overdose has become the leading cause of death for Americans under 50, driven largely by abuse of opioids,” the authors report in their paper published recently on the new preprint server, ChemRxiv. “To counter this epidemic, replacement of abused opioids with alternate pain therapeutics has emerged as an increasingly sensible goal.”\nThe authors write that Salvinorin A is unstable, making it difficult to alter. Others have been able to produce the chemical in the lab and change its structure somewhat, but some complexities have limited the options available to alter the molecule and change the effects it might have on the nervous system.\nThe final molecule, called 20-nor-Salvinorin A, differs just slightly from Salvinorin A. One single piece of the large molecule, a dangling carbon atom with three hydrogen atoms attached, is replaced by a hydrogen atom.\nWhy Michigan’s Marijuana Regulators Want to Shut the Pot Industry Down\nMichigan’s medical marijuana industry has had a licensing authority—in this case, the Michigan Medical Marijuana Licensing Board—for less than three months. It took two meetings before the licensing board, in charge of overseeing and regulating the state’s cannabis landscape, suggested shutting it all down.\nMedical marijuana has been legal in Michigan since 2008. Under state law, a caregiver is allowed to cultivate up to 72 marijuana plants—no more than 12 plants for no more than six patients.\nRetail outlets offering cannabis in Michigan are technically illegal—and will be until the state starts issuing licenses, a development expected to come as soon as later this year—yet dispensaries have been operating with varying levels of transparency in select cities for years.\nIn Detroit, there are more than 70 dispensaries offering marijuana for sale that has completed or at least started the city licensing process, according to the Detroit Free Press.\n“Every dispensary out there is open in violation of the Michigan Medical Marijuana Act,” Bailey said during a recent board meeting, according to the Detroit Free Press. “It’s a felony for every sale that occurs from a dispensary.”\nContinue Reading at High Times\nPosted on August 29, 2017 September 7, 2017\nCalifornians Might Vote on ‘Magic Mushroom’ Legalization in 2018\nCalifornians might vote on whether to decriminalize the use of hallucinogenic mushrooms as early as 2018, under a newly proposed ballot measure.\nThe measure — which was filed on Friday (Aug. 25) with the state Attorney General’s office — would exempt people ages 21 and over from criminal penalties for using, possessing, selling, transporting or cultivating psilocybin, a hallucinogenic compound found in certain mushroom species.\nThe measure is not currently on the ballot — supporters need to get at least 365,880 signatures to qualify for the 2018 ballot, according to the Sacramento Bee, a newspaper in Northern California.\nContinue reading at LiveScience\nPrevious page Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 … Page 7 Next page","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1073518"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5762993097305298,"wiki_prob":0.5762993097305298,"text":"By Josie Morss in Opinion July 11, 2019\nEvery year the LGBTQ+ community awaits the month of June: Pride month. Today, Pride go-ers are guaranteed celebrations accessorized with rainbow flags, celebrity appearances, and parade floats. However, fifty years ago, Pride was without the fame, floats, and flags. Instead the event was solemn, quiet, and conformed to a sexist society. Over the years, Pride has frequently been interjected by trial and error which ultimately created the current, and the most familiar, Pride Parade.\nThe 1970’s became the ultimate time to utilize activism and drive change especially to promote LGBTQ+ rights and universal awareness. Annual Reminder, the first LGBTQ+ rights rally, was the first step towards today’s Pride Parade.\n(Image: CNN)\nThe Annual Reminder acted as a silent rally where lesbians and gays picketed Liberty Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Compared to today’s Pride, this rally was anything but the ‘Come as you are’ mantra. Instead, men and women were expected to wear gender normative clothes. Women wore dresses and men wore suits and ties. Nowadays, Pride encourages decorated drag ensembles, “Gay Pride” shirts, and personally comfortable clothing.\nAlthough Annual Reminder stood for LGBTQ+ rights, it was quiet, and the men and women involved were unable to be their authentic selves in the public eye. Ultimately, it wasn’t enough. People were tired of waiting for a big, bold, brazen gay pride event and partners Craig Rodwell and Fred Sargeant were tired of waiting for someone to step up. No one took charge and people were waiting, so they finally took matters into their own hands.\nAfter months of planning alongside LGBTQ+ activist groups, Pride debuted with five thousand people within the New York streets, five times more than expected. After Pride tore up the town in New York City, San Francisco, Chicago, and Los Angeles soon adopted their own Pride Parades.\nPolitics and pride: two unique worlds that constantly clash and converge have instead created a foundation of the original purpose of Pride. During the first Pride, one year after the Stonewall riots, where the LGBTQ+ community fought violently against police raiders who frequently visited in order to shaken morale, harass, and even arrest gays. People chanted, “Say it clear, say it loud. Gay is good, gay is proud.” The chant acted as a beacon of hope for the LGBTQ+ community of receiving decent human rights.\n(Image: World Pride NYC)\nA powerful chant proved to be necessary after spending years being discriminated against in all realms of life: relationships, career, and unique family dynamics with same sex couples, adopted children, or IVF babies. The chant lifted people’s spirits into believing that the LGBTQ+ commuity is powerful, and that it’s okay to be gay.\nThe chant, although meaningful, was somber. It was a political stance to create waves in the media. Today, Pride is famous for housing an atmosphere of chaotic liveliness. Even though most LGBTQ+ members are engaged in politics, protest, and vote for the most inclusive candidates, chants are no longer necessary to be politically aware.\nPride fifty years ago compared to Pride 2019 is nearly unrecognizable. However, the week long events have stayed consistent since the beginning. “The Mother of Pride,” Brenda Howard organized a whole week to feature dance and drag competitions, which still run to this day. Even the day of the parade has stayed the same since the 70’s. Every parade falls on the last Sunday of June to commemorate not only the Stonewall Riots but recent community advancements and a renewed sense of self acceptance and most importantly the acceptance of others.\nSince the late 60’s the LGBTQ+ community have consistently fought for rights in various aspects of life. Even though every decade’s cause changes, there’s always a new issue to fight for. In the 80’s it was the HIV/AIDS crisis and in the 90’s it was deep rooted homophobia within the workforce. Most recently, marriage and family laws have been at risk. These generational dilemmas share an unspoken bond with the first Pride Parade in 1970. Even though it’s a different time with different issues, it’s the same community celebrating and advocating at the same place: Pride.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line297581"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9777161478996277,"wiki_prob":0.9777161478996277,"text":"Aladdin Will Fly the Magic Carpet Across the U.S. in 2017 National Tour\nJanuary 26th, 2016 | By Ryan Gilbert\nWith new horizons to pursue, the hit Disney musical Aladdin will launch a national tour in April 2017, beginning at Chicago's Cadillac Palace Theatre. Casting for the touring production, as well as future engagements, will be announced at a later date.\n“We have had the great privilege of entertaining more than one million people in New York City with Casey Nicholaw’s glorious production,” said Thomas Schumacher, President of Disney Theatrical Productions, in a statement. “I am delighted that audiences in Chicago and throughout North America will soon have the opportunity to experience Aladdin in their own backyards.”\nAdapted from the 1992 Disney animated film, Aladdin is the story of a street urchin who uses the help of a magic Genie to win the heart of Princess Jasmine. Directed and choreographed by Casey Nicholaw, the production features a book by Chad Beguelin, music by Alan Menken and lyrics by Tim Rice, Beguelin and the late Howard Ashman.\nAladdin is currently running on Broadway at the New Amsterdam Theatre. The production officially opened on March 20, 2014, starring Adam Jacobs as Aladdin, Courtney Reed as Jasmine, Tony winner James Monroe Iglehart as the Genie and Jonathan Freeman as Jafar.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line747981"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9330027103424072,"wiki_prob":0.9330027103424072,"text":"Lionel Richie, Luke Bryan Confirmed as New ‘American Idol’ Judges\nRick Diamond, Getty Images\nKaty Perry's American Idol judging panel just got bigger.\nABC confirmed Friday (September 29) that Lionel Richie and Luke Bryan will join the \"Swish Swish\" singer as judges on the network's reboot of American Idol, Entertainment Weekly reports. The duo had been linked to the show for weeks.\nThe series is set to premiere in January.\n“I am very excited to be joining Katy, Luke, and Ryan on American Idol,” Richie said in a statement. “As a singer, songwriter, and producer, I feel I can bring a great deal of experience to the table. It’s going to be so much fun!”\nBryan echoed the sentiment: “I’m excited at the chance to help some deserving artists reach their dreams,\" he said. \"To be in a position in my career to help facilitate this along with the other judges is just a complete honor. It’s gonna be a blast!”\nRichie and Bryan wasted no time spreading the news.\nPerry, Bryan and Richie will all appear together for the first time on Good Morning America on Monday (October 4). Original host Ryan Seacrest will also return to the series.\nSay Goodbye to American Idol With These Rare Season 1 Photos:\nNext: 5 DRASTIC CHANGES WE HOPE TO SEE ON THE NEW ‘AMERICAN IDOL’\nSource: Lionel Richie, Luke Bryan Confirmed as New ‘American Idol’ Judges","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1377777"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5082322955131531,"wiki_prob":0.4917677044868469,"text":"Donald Hank\nJust invert the compass, Part II\nBy Donald Hank\nThe goal of worldly \"leaders\" is not to engage the opponent but to annihilate him by any means possible. Fairness is not an issue. The mob rules.\nIn Philadelphia, eleven Christians were arrested and charged with the \"hate crime\" of peacefully reaching a group of homosexuals with the gospel.\nPastor Ake Green of Sweden was arrested and charged for a \"hate crime\" for preaching from a part of the Bible now banned from public discourse.\nThe Bible is officially a dangerous book in Sweden, but child pornographers sell their wares virtually unhindered there, while Imams freely preach wife abuse, based on Koran passages.\nLikewise, an arrest warrant has recently been issued against a Brazilian youth leader who had the cheek to minister to homosexuals desirous of leaving their dangerous, spiritually empty lifestyle. Such Christian outreach ministries are now banned in Brazil and parts of Europe, where homosexuals are regarded as a \"victim\" group and are \"protected\" by legislators, presidents and other chief executives, courts and a willing propaganda machine — the perverse media — all of whom have converged against humble defenseless Bible-believing Christians, as if these meek followers of Christ were armed foreign invaders and not the last remnant of faithful spiritual descendants of the god fearing stalwarts who dominated these regions since the founding of these civilizations, bringing prosperity and stability.\nAs a result, pastors have been arrested (as mentioned above), and Christian homeschoolers have been arrested, fined, sometimes jailed, and often deprived of the custody of their children (Germany and Sweden), who have been ruthlessly ripped from the comfort, love, and security of homes with natural parents and subjected to the cruelest imaginable mental and spiritual torture — forced to live in foster homes together with juvenile delinquents, drug addicts, sex addicts and the like. Children typically with IQs far beyond their chronological age (having been taught by caring parents unfettered by leftist ideology and biased textbooks, and with that powerful secret ingredient of faith) are traumatized by \"legal\" kidnapping, snatched without warning by police or social workers, and then slowly brainwashed and taught to hate what they loved and love what they hated — socialized to believe that faith in Christ is morally equivalent to faith in Mohammed and morally inferior to Marx.\nConsidering the tiny percentage of true believers in Christ and their modest resources vs the almost limitless resources of the adversary — governments that can marshal trillions of dollars for their cause — it is like using an industrial press to swat a fly!\nTwo questions beg an answer:\n1 — How can a people growing up in a \"democracy,\" who are taught to empathize with the poor and downtrodden, to care for the environment, and to do what is best for the collective, allow such cruelty to defenseless people of faith to occur under such an absurd and flimsy pretext as \"protecting\" homosexuals, particularly when such \"protection\" usually implies denying them vital information about the hazards of their lifestyle?\n2 — What is it about this gentle man Jesus Christ, who gave his life for humanity, that makes them hate Him so much?\nThe answer is out of reach for the human mind, but crystal clear to the spiritually discerning.\nIn fact, there can be only one answer to both questions, and therein lies not only the key to understanding our world but also a note of greatest encouragement to those suffering under the ubiquitous assault on faith in our Western world.\nAs absurd as it may seem to the spiritually dead, the answer is that Jesus really is who He said he was, the Christ and Savior, and Satan is His adversary.\nIn a world that were indifferent to Christ, one might suppose that the Bible is a book of myths.\nI once thought it was, having made the decision to be an atheist, giving up my Christian beliefs under the influence of a \"humanities\" education.\nBut then an odd thing happened: as a language student, I took a study tour to the USSR in the early 70s.\nOn the way in across the Finnish border, a Russian border guard boarded our vehicle and started asking each passenger to open their carry-on luggage. I turned around and asked one of our chaperones — a Russian émigré who taught at the University of Michigan — \"what is he looking for?\"\n\"Bibles,\" she replied with a wry smile.\n\"Wait a minute,\" I thought. \"The Soviet system banned religion over 50 years ago. People here must all know that the Bible is a book of myths. How could there be a real threat from the Bible now that Christianity is expunged, unless the authorities themselves don't really believe that the Bible is just a book of myths?\"\nThe question contained its own answer.\nSince then I have learned, in every encounter with the Left, that these people have no fear of myths. They fear only one thing: the truth.\nPhilosopher Olavo de Carvalho wrote an article on the Left titled \"The Stucture of the Revolutionary Mind,\" in which he shows that the revolutionary mind inverts everything — truth inverts to the lie and vice-versa.\nYou know how they say if you want to know what a corrupt politician is up to, follow the money trail?\nWell, in the case of the Left, pay attention to what they say and then invert that. The result will normally be very close to the unvarnished truth.\nWhat I am saying is very good news, my Friend.\nIt means that, while Biblical truth is often hard to prove, and doubts assail the Christian walk daily, we can sometimes be more sure of the truth simply by listening to the enemies of Christ and inverting their code than, say, by looking for clues in the physical world that affirm the veracity of the scriptures. If they say A, you can be sure the truth is somewhere around B, and vice-versa.\nI know that I am failing to express this as well as I would like. What I have experienced in the 40 odd years since my stay in the USSR — experience piled upon experience, upon experience — is almost impossible to analyze here. Words are at best a clumsy vehicle for spiritual truth. I beg your forgiveness for my own clumsiness on top of this fact.\nBut I would ask you to pray for spiritual discernment.\nI have heard pastors say that Christ's truth is so simple most people miss it. They are exactly right. The world is full of rocket scientists, who have seized control of every facet of our lives, asserting without evidence that the truth is so complex and nebulous that ordinary people need them to sort things out for us — for a fee.\nPaul said that the preaching of Christians in his day sounded like the ranting of madmen to the listeners.\nTo someone brought up in our inverted world (inverted by the Left in schools, the media, academe, professions, the DNC and GOP (they're the same, you know)), the truth cannot but sound like ranting. Good cannot help but sound like evil and vice-versa in a world where murder of the unborn is a \"right,\" where politicians can \"legally\" steal trillions and give them to their rich banker friends, and where children imbibe Marxist impulses with their mothers' milk.\nYet as Paul also points out, the heathen (lost) have a built-in detector for good vs evil. Something inside us tells us there is a God, there is right and wrong. Our compass points to Christ. It is only through a very major constant effort and highly structured organization (cf. \"community organization\") that the adversary can keep the hand of the compass pointing south.\nRemember my analogy of the anti-sun propaganda? More than anything, the constant drone of voices declaring there is no God suggests very strongly that He must be real.\nSo go ahead and listen to Richard Dawkins ranting against God. But don't forget to remind yourself that Richard doth protest too much — way too much.\nListen with spiritually enlightened ears, and you will hear the inversion of his words. The West has a broken compass that points consistently south, but you can find your way with a little trick:\nJust read the compass backwards.\n© Donald Hank\nUntil July of 2009, Don Hank was operating a technical translation agency out of his home in Wrightsville, PA. He is now retired and residing in Panama with his wife and daughter.\nA former language teacher, he holds an undergraduate degree in French and German from Millersville State University (PA), a Master's degree in Russian language and literature from Kutztown State College (also in PA), has studied Chinese for 3 years in Taiwan at the Mandarin Training Center, and is self-taught in other languages, having logged a total of 8 years abroad in total immersion situations.\nHe is also the founder of Lancaster-York Non-Custodial Parents, a volunteer organization that provides Christian counseling for non-custodial parents.\nReceive future articles by Donald Hank: Click here\nThe latest fake story from US intel\nThere's only one way Europe can be saved\nMerkel down for the count\nSecurity conscious Americans entrust the most vital security task of all to amateurs\nHammond standoff in Oregon: Feds MAY NOT own that land\nCruz or Trump: Who supports the Founders?\nHow the oligarchy will die\nThe only solution to Washington tyranny: Restore state sovereignty\nRMB up, dollar down\nNo, Obama is NOT a Muslim","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line870665"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5877315998077393,"wiki_prob":0.41226840019226074,"text":"Global Trade Expertise\nWho We Are Attorneys Consultants\nWhat We Do Practice Areas Services Education and Training\nAsk the Experts Ask an Expert Pose Your Own Question\nAsk the Experts/\nPose Your Own Question\nCustomized Solutions for International Trade\nUSTR Requests Comments on Annual GSP Product Review\nJune 20, 2019 / Jennie Kessinger\nThe Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) will be accepting petitions regarding the 2019 GSP (Generalized System of Preferences) Annual Product Review until June 26, 2019.\nJune 26, 2019 at midnight EDT is also the deadline for submission of comments, pre-hearing briefs, and requests to appear at the GSP Subcommittee Public Hearing on the 2019 GSP Annual Product Review.\nOn July 2, 2019 at 1:30 p.m. EDT, the GSP subcommittee will hold a public hearing on all petitioned product additions, product removals, and competitive needs limitation waiver petitions that it accepted for the 2019 GSP Annual Product Review. The hearing will be held in Rooms 1 and 2, 1724 F Street NW, Washington, DC 20508.\nAugust 15, 2019 is the deadline for submitting any comments or briefs following the July 2 hearing. On September 7, 2019, the U.S. International Trade Commission (USITC) is expected to deliver a report to USTR providing advice concerning probably economic impacts of adding products to GSP eligibility, of removing products from eligibility, and of granting CNL waiver petitions during the GSP Annual Product Review.\nComments can be posted on the USITC report at www.regulations.gov using Docket Number USTR-2019-0001. Electronic comments are preferred. For alternatives to on-line submissions, please contact Yvonne Jamison at (202) 395-3475. Additional information can be obtained by contacting: Erland Herfindahl, Deputy Assistant USTR for GSP, 1724 F Street NW, Washington, DC 20508. The telephone number is (202) 395-2974 and the email address is gsp@ustr.eop.gov.\nSuzanne DeCuir, Global Trade Expertise\nJune 20, 2019 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nJennie Kessinger\nTreasury’s OFAC Adjusts Civil Monetary Penalties\nEffective June 14, 2019, The Department of the Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets\nControl (OFAC) is adjusting civil monetary penalties for inflation pursuant to the\nFederal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990, as amended by the Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 and the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act Improvements Act of 2015.\nAccording to the Office of Management and Budget, the adjustment multiplier for the year 2019 is 1.0255. In order to complete the 2019 annual adjustment, each current CMP (Civil Monetary Penalty) is multiplied by the 2019 adjustment multiplier.\nOFAC currently is authorized to impose CMPs pursuant to five statutes: The Trading With the Enemy Act (50 U.S.C. 4301–4341, at 4315) (TWEA); the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701–1706, at 1705) (IEEPA); the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104–132, 110 Stat. 1212–1319, at 1250; 18 U.S.C. 2339B) (AEDPA); the Foreign Narcotics Kingpin Designation Act (Pub. L. 106–120, 113 Stat. 1626– 1636, at 1632; 21 U.S.C. 1901–1908, at 1906) (FNKDA); and the Clean Diamond Trade Act (Pub. L. 108–19, 117 Stat. 631–637, at 634; 19 U.S.C. 3901–3913, at 3907) (CDTA).\nHere are the existing and new maximum CMP amounts:\nTWEA: Previous Max. $86,976; New Max. $89,170\nIEEPA: Previous Max. $295,141; New Max. $302,584\nAEDPA: Previous Max. $77,909; New Max. $79,874\nFNKDA: Previous Max. $1,466,485; New Max. $1,503,470\nCDTA: Previous Max. $13,333; New Max. $13,669\nComplete information regarding the adjustment of all CMPs can be found at this link to the Federal Register.\nOFAC\nQualcomm Prevails in One Patent Battle, but Loses AnotherQualcomm Prevails in One Patent Battle, but Loses Another\nMarch 27, 2019 / Jennie Kessinger\nQualcomm Inc. has worked for several years to succeed in proving patent infringement and securing an import ban on the Apple iPhone. In separate cases, one attempt succeeded and one failed.\nOn March 26th, 2019, the US International Trade Commission found Qualcomm’s patent for a battery-saving feature invalid. However, earlier the same day, a different judge ruled that Apple had infringed on another Qualcomm patent; this judge recommended that certain older iPhone models be banned. A final decision is expected on that case this July.\nThere have been some 80 cases filed worldwide between these two companies. Qualcomm’s technology is an integral part of modern communication products. The company is earning money from all of its chips in mobile devices as well as collecting fees for the use of its inventions in chips made by other companies.\nQualcomm argues that it is being shorted out of billions of dollars in royalties on the iPhone as the two tech companies debate the value of Qualcomm’s patents. At the crux of the argument is Qualcomm’s claim that the Intel chips Apple uses are inferior and that Apple has been incorporating unlicensed Qualcomm inventions into the Intel chips to upgrade their quality.\nIn the second case, Qualcomm believes that the iPhones which contain Intel Corp. chips infringed two patents concerning methods for improving the quality and speed of data downloads as well as one for power-saving features. Qualcomm is requesting an order to ban imports of the iPhone and iPhone 7 Plus. Even if the ban is limited to these models, the impact could run to billions of dollars per year. It is anticipated that Apple would probably discontinue these models in the next two years.\nRegarding this case, ITC Judge MaryJoan McNamara said she would be recommending a band pertaining to a broad wider range of iPhones, including the iPhone 7, iPhone 8, and iPhone X; only those with Intel chips are affected. iPhones with Qualcomm chips are not part of this legal battle. Until this matter is settled, Apple has directed its contractors to stop paying Qualcomm and is purchasing all its modem chips for new models from Intel.\nThe Federal Trade Commission has leveled an accusation at Qualcomm for using its patents on industry standards to weaken competition and gain market share and high licensing fees. To date, Qualcomm has won sales bans on iPhones in China and Germany, although the ban in China has not been enforced and Apple is working on measures to resume sales in Germany.\nMarch 27, 2019 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\npatents, Apple\nU.S. Customs Ruling Concerning Country of Origin for Section 301 Purposes\nOctober 25, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger\nOn September 13, 2018, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced a new ruling that will be pertinent to any company seeking to shift production from China to Mexico (or Canada) in hopes of mitigating the effect of Section 301 duties. The most important take-away is that although the NAFTA Marking Rules (19 C.F.R. Part 102) are used to determine the country of origin of articles imported into the U.S. from Mexico for marking purposes, the traditional substantial transformation test is used to determine the country of origin of articles for Section 301 duty purposes.\nCBP illustrated the application of the ruling using the example of parts of a motor imported into Mexico for assembly. The assembly operation in Mexico was sufficient to satisfy the applicable NAFTA Marking Rule and thus for marking purposes, the finished article was deemed to be a \"product of Mexico.\" However, CBP went on to say that the traditional substantial transformation test is used for purposes of \"antidumping, countervailing, or other safeguard measures[.]\" CBP then applied the traditional substantial transformation test to the facts and reached the conclusion that the Mexican assembly operations were not sufficient to confer origin and, therefore, the finished motor imported into the United States was a \"product of China\" for Section 301 purposes. So, in short, the product had to be marked to indicate that it was of Mexican origin, but the importer had to pay the Section 301 duty applicable to Chinese-origin articles.\nImporters should be aware of what CBP’s analysis indicates: while the traditional substantial transformation test and the NAFTA Marking Rules are intended to rest on the same origin principles, they do not always produce the same result due to the nature of the tests. This is largely because the NAFTA Marking Rules are objective and the substantial transformation test is more subjective. Further, where Section 301 is concerned, the traditional substantial transformation test must be used even if the goods are imported from an FTA-partner country such as Mexico, Canada, Singapore, etc. Thus the NAFTA Marking Rules may be useful to that analysis, but cannot be considered determinative. In some cases, then, a company might find that an article marked as a product of Mexico could still be subject to duties applicable to products of China.\nOctober 25, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nRulings, cbp\nTrump Tariffs Impact on Sourcing\nSeptember 04, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger\nThe recent set of tariff revisions to section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974 are the latest in an expanding and extensive set of the Trump Administration’s controversial tariffs. Effective July 6th, 2018 this revision added duties of 25% to select Chinese goods with the USTR announcing in the current edition of The Federal Register that additional increases (on over $200 billion worth of Chinese goods) are under proposal and awaiting comment. Moreover, while the dollar amounts of the U.S. tariffs and the Chinese counter-response are known for specific goods, the final effect of the tariffs and the overall outcome of what China calls “the largest trade war in history” is still uncertain and disputed.\nOf chief concern to many is the effect that these tariffs may have on corporate profits and sourcing. Many companies have come out against the tariffs for this reason; in fact, Walmart and other top retailers who together generate over $1.5 trillion in GDP jointly sent out a letter to President Trump this past March. The concern has only grown with the implementation of the tariffs and a report that Walmart has recently asked its beauty suppliers if they would be able to change the sourcing of their products to a country other than China. While the effect has, so far, been relatively small, according to their latest earnings reports companies such as Walmart have already taken hits to their current and predicted bottom lines as a result of the tariffs. However, while some large companies such as Hasbro and Puma have announced a move away from China to other South-Asian countries, most large corporations seem to be only contemplating the possibility of changing production while they try to gauge how long these tariffs may last or if they can garner tariff exemptions for their products. Additionally, small businesses seem to have the most to fear regarding the additional section 301 tariffs and potential shifts in sourcing as 46% of small business owners have indicated that they anticipate the tariffs will have a negative impact on their businesses.\nAside from China, this set of tariff revisions, designed to hurt China's economy due to an \"unbalanced trade deficit\" and \"intellectual property issues,\" has not been without consequence to the U.S. economy. Companies such as BMW and Moog Music have announced that they may need to shift production from the U.S. to China as a result of retaliatory tariffs. This result should not occur as a surprise. After all, after the Trump administration levied tariffs on the European Union, iconic American manufacturers such as Harley-Davidson were forced to move production to Europe from the U.S., costing certain states billions in exports and jobs.\nA recent study by the National Retail Federation indicated that American consumers stand to lose $6 billion this year as a result of the currently proposed tariffs on Chinese \"furniture, travel goods, and handbags\" alone. Even if American companies can successfully re-source their products to countries other than China, American consumers will likely still be worse off due to increased prices and competition in these other countries. No figures on whose economy will be most affected are available, but initial reports seem to indicate that U.S. economic growth remains relatively stable, while China's has weakened just slightly. Either way, what is clear is that the economic effect of the tariffs on both countries will only grow over time and companies are necessarily considering long-term strategies to minimize the hit to their bottom lines.\nSeptember 04, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nPresident, Imports\nConsequences of Non-Compliance – Lacey Act Enforcement\nJuly 19, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger\nOne particular area where U.S. companies have failed to comply with stringent import laws, knowingly or unknowingly, involves wildlife and natural products. The Lacey Act, 16 USC 3371, is one of the primary federal statutes employed to combat the illicit trafficking of products within these categories. Initially enacted to protect animal species, the Act was amended in 2008 to more broadly include plant species. Specifically, the Act now prohibits the U.S. importation of illegally-harvested timber, meaning it is unlawful to trade in any plant that is taken, possessed, transported or sold in violation of the laws of any U.S. state, Indian Tribe, or any foreign law that protects plants. The Lacey Act does not impose U.S. law on other countries. “Illegally sourced” is defined by the content of a sovereign nation’s own laws. In addition, it is unlawful to falsify or submit falsified documents, accounts or records of any plant covered by the Lacey Act.\nViolations of the Lacey Act carry serious penalties for companies and individuals. In addition to civil fines and forfeiture of goods, criminal penalties may also attach to the companies and individuals found to have knowingly violated the Act. A misdemeanor violation of the Lacey Act is punishable by up to one year in prison and a fine of $200,000.00 for companies and $100,000.00 for an individual. Felony culpability is punishable by up to five years in prison and a $500,000.00 fine per violation for a company and $250,000.00 for an individual.\nTwo Lacey Act enforcement agreements that demonstrate the severity of violations and highlight the importance of companies having compliance infrastructure that properly functions to avoid such violations are the Gibson Guitar Corporation Settlement and the Lumber Liquidators Settlement.\nGibson Guitar Corporation (“Gibson”) came under federal scrutiny not once but twice, first in 2009 and again in 2011 for violations of the Lacey Act. Gibson is headquartered in Nashville, Tennessee and manufactures a variety of musical instruments, most notably guitars. The violations involved parts of the guitar called fretboards. The imports at issue were orders of Madagascar ebony fingerboards (used to make fretboards) from a supplier called T.N. GMBH (“TN”), located in Hamburg, Germany. Gibson failed to verify that TN was sourcing its wood legally from Madagascar, and it turned out that it was illegally sourced. In addition, Gibson knowingly ignored red flags that the wood TN was providing was illegally obtained. For example, TN’s failed to provide documentation to Gibson evidencing that the ebony sourced from Madagascar was harvested lawfully. Madagascar law states that all ebony harvested after a specific date was illegal unless it was considered “finished wood” or had received “exceptional authority” from the government.\nIn addition, prior to purchasing the wood, Gibson had sent a specialist to Madagascar to assess the potential for supporting sustainable forestry. During his investigation, the specialist obtained the Madagascar Order regarding the particularities about finished and unfinished wood and in his report highlighted that this would be an issue for Gibson. Despite this knowledge, Gibson continued to purchase wood from TN.\nThese violations resulted in the finding of a Lacey Act misdemeanor violation with a fine of $300,000.00 plus a $50,000.00 community service payment to the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation. In addition to the monetary fines, Gibson also was required to strengthen its compliance program.\nGibson established a new compliance program that clearly stated the objectives of maintaining compliance with relevant laws and in particular the Lacey Act. The new program provided the history and applicable penalties for the Lacey Act, listed the due care standard that it would apply to its processes to assure compliance with applicable law, and then listed the internal checks and balances that would be implemented to demonstrate the satisfaction of this duty. The compliance program also stressed Gibson’s commitment to developing policies and procedures for the procurement of wood and for verifying that all necessary foreign licenses and/or certifications are obtained prior to approval of a purchase. The compliance program listed resources to obtain current applicable law and stated a commitment to an annual audit of its wood purchasing processes, a commitment to training its employees, and plans for retaining adequate records.\nThe compliance program created by Gibson emphasizes the necessary steps required under the Lacey Act to specifically detail the unique company processes and procedures created to effectuate compliance and satisfy reasonable care in conducting imports.\nThe second settlement involved Lumber Liquidators (“LL”). LL is a Virginia-based flooring retailer that was sentenced to pay a total of $13.15 million for five counts of Lacey Act violations. The fines included 7.8 million in criminal fines, $969,175.00 in criminal forfeitures, $1.23 million in community service payments, and 3.15 million in civil forfeitures. They were also sentenced to a five-year probationary term during which they were to create an Environmental Compliance Plan and engage an outside accounting and environmental consulting firm. The $13.5 million dollar penalty constitutes the largest financial penalty ever for illegal trafficking in timber under the Lacey Act.\nThe retailer pleaded guilty to one felony count of importing goods through false statements and four misdemeanor violations of the Lacey Act. The charges stated that Lumber Liquidators was using timber that was illegally logged in Far East Russia and had submitted false Lacey Act declarations that obfuscated the true species and the source of the timber. Although, LL had a compliance program in place that identified this activity, it ignored the red flags and continued to purchase the timber.\nLL imports wood flooring from China and distributes it throughout the U.S. However, the timber used to manufacture the flooring in China was harvested from different countries, two of which were Far East Russia and Myanmar. LL had a compliance program at the time of the violations and, in fact, employees were aware that some of the wood was harvested from Far East Russia and posed a significant compliance risk. In addition, LL had also been conducting employee training discussing the compliance risk of Far East Russia. But despite this information, LL continued to import wood coming from Far East Russia and Myanmar. Thus, although the compliance program was in place, LL failed to uphold the policies in its manual. In addition, LL also submitted inaccurate information on Lacey Act documentation required upon importation.\nWhat these examples illustrate is that the enforcement of U.S. Customs laws, and in particular the Lacey Act, has significant monetary and functional consequences. There is a strict duty to comply imposed on the party conducting the international trade and the responsibility to develop processes to comply with U.S. Customs laws is imposed on both the business and individual level. The penalties go far beyond mere monetary fines, and include forfeitures, corporate governance and operational restrictions.\nFurthermore, having a compliance program alone does not protect against violations or mitigate penalties. Compliance programs will be judged on their actual application to relevant internal processes, the effectiveness of their implementation, and their actual capacity to successfully identify and remedy trade violations. Ultimately, the law imposes a corporate responsibility to educate employees and management who oversee trade functions and instruct them on how to effectively remedy identified violations.\nWhat does this mean for the US business? Investing resources into developing a compliance program and implementation is an upfront cost that is absolutely necessary and indirectly required to avoid the significant consequences of violating US Customs laws.\nAmber M. Johns\nJuly 19, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nenforcement, Lacey Act\nLimitations of 4th Amendment Border Exceptions: United States v. Kolsuz\nThe Federal Government has consistently maintained, and been upheld in, the assertion that the border search exception allows it to conduct searches and seizures at international borders without a wrrant or probable cause. While this assertion is generally accepted, the government's stance that electronic devices, such as computers and smartphones, also fall within this exception has been a point of contention. However, a recent 4th Circuit Court of Appeals case, United States v. Kolsuz, is being hailed as a significant victory by civil rights organizations such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the American Civil Liberties Union.\nUnited States v. Kolsuz, deals with the case of Hamza Kolsuz, a Turkish national charged with three counts of violating the Arms Export Control Act. According to court filings, Kolsuz had attempted to smuggle prohibited firearms parts from the U.S. to Turkey on three separate occasions. On the third and most recent attempt, Customs officials were prepared and intercepted Kolsuz at Washington Dulles International Airport. Importantly, after his arrest, Customs agents conducted an immediate manual search of his smartphone and an additional month-long, off-site forensic analysis of the phone. Kolsuz's appeal concerns the suppression of this forensic analysis, which he maintains does not fall under the border search exception.\nIn many ways, this was a case that many likely saw coming. Case law concerning the 4th Amendment and electronic devices has been frequent and in the public eye. The notion that electronic devices may not fall under the border exception first came to the forefront in 2013. United States v. Cotterman, a 9th Circuit decision, held that manual searches of computers at the border fell under the exception, but forensic searches required reasonable suspicion. Prior to this, the governing decision was United States v. Ickes which held that computers were ordinary searches. Then, in 2014, the Supreme Court ruled in Riley v. California. Riley held that a warrant is required to search a cell phone following an arrest. The Supreme Court essentially established differential treatment between digital and physical items due to the sheer amount and sensitivity of personal information that can be stored on cell phones.\nThese two cases, among others, caused many to question if Riley might influence Cotterman and also apply to the border. More recently, the Fifth and Eleventh Circuits heard cases on forensic searches but failed to reach a substantive conclusion due to the scope of their cases.\nThe Kolsuz decision, citing Riley, affirms that at least reasonable suspicion is required for forensic searches of cell phones seized at the border. Taking Riley into account, the 4th Circuit, using language similar to United States v. Flores-Montano, found that forensic searches of phones are clearly non-routine border searches, but did not challenge Ickes due to the scope of the appeal. Moreover, the court left open the possibility that a standard even higher than reasonable suspicion could be required, but that which standard made no difference to the Kolsuz case. In response to Kolsuz, the Department of Homeland Security now internally requires reasonable suspicion for forensic searches of electronic devices.\nWhile the outcome of Kolsuz may not have been positive for Kolsuz himself, who was convicted of his export violations, it is being hailed by many as a win. Moreover, it is likely just one of many upcoming cases concerning the Fourth Amendment's application to digital searches as the ACLU and EFF, among other organizations, push ahead with their own cases.\nCustoms, Enforcement\ncaselaw\nProtests in the New ACE Single Window System\nMay 26, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger\nIn an effort to streamline and automate the process of documenting the importing and exporting of goods, Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) has stated its aim of shifting fully to using the Automated Commercial Environment (“ACE”) by the end of 2016. Under this process, ACE with become the “single window” through which the trade community will be able to report imports and exports and receive information regarding admissibility from the government. The entire process will eventually eliminate paper processing, allowing the trade community to comply with US laws more efficiently. Core ACE trade processing capabilities should be completed and deployed by December 2016.\nOne processing capability under development is the ACE module for filing protests. CBP recently hosted a webinar to review the current design of the ACE protest module, though it’s not yet finalized. CBP intends that ACE will provide an electronic mechanism for the submission of protests, thus reducing the need for the submission of paper, and this will allow for seamless processing by the agency. In order to submit a protest electronically through ACE, those wishing to file protests will be able to do so by creating an account. If already in possession of an ACE account, then ‘protest filer’ may be added to the list of business partners. Those without an ACE account will be able to obtain a ‘protest filer’ account (this is not yet available). In addition, attorneys will be able to have filer accounts, as well as corporate representatives.\nWithin the protest module, the data fields found on the traditional CBP Form 19 will be able to be populated. The lead entry number for the protest, once input, will auto-populate the importer identification number (“IIN”), port and team number for the protest based on that entry number. However, the assigned review team will be able to be overridden if it is known that a CEE or specific team should be assigned the protest. In other cases, CBP assigns the reviewing party based on the lead entry number. It will be possible for filers to see the protest history for an importer, but the history will only relate to protests submitted by that particular filer. For instance, a broker would be able to see protests that it filed but it wouldn’t be able to access the history of protests filed independently by an importer client. CBP is still developing certain processes within the module, such as the handling of samples, the submission of protests relating to situations without entry numbers, and the uploading of supplemental information. The protest module is currently designed to allow for additional arguments or amendments to be uploaded (“see attachment” can be noted in the reason field).\nA few details still need to be worked out, since paper documents have not yet entirely been eliminated. For requests for accelerated disposition of the protest, the regulations specify that requests must be made by certified or registered mail. To handle this, CBP is asking that the filer input the protest in the module, and subsequently go into the protest record and request an “action” that specifies accelerated disposition. The filer will then still need to upload the proof that the request was mailed, the date, etc. As long as the regulations specify that accelerated disposition requests must be submitted by mail, extra steps will be required to designate accelerated disposition in ACE.\nSince all the details on the ACE protest module have yet to be completely finalized and it has not yet been deployed, it is helpful to follow postings on its progress at CBP’s website.\nSuzanne DeCuir\nMay 26, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nDeadlines for Objecting to Proposed Tariffs\nApril 08, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger\nAccording to the United States Trade Representative (USTR), U.S. companies and individuals will have until May 22nd to voice objections to President Trumps’ proposed 25% tariffs on some 1,300 foreign goods. In general, products subject to this retaliation against China fall within the sectors of aerospace, information and communication technology, robotics and machinery. (Left off the list are retail mainstays such a mobile phones and clothing, items that might provoke a U.S. consumer backlash.)\nImportant dates are as follows:\nApril 23 - due date for filing all requests to appear and to submit a summary of testimony to be presented at the public hearing; it is also the date for filing pre-hearing submissions\nMay 11 - due date for submission of written comments\nMay 15 - date of the 10 a.m. public hearing to be held at US International Trade Commission, 500 E. Street SW, Washington, D.C., 20436.\nMay 22 - due date for rebuttal comments following the May 15 hearing\nNote: USTR strongly prefers electronic submissions made through the Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. Instructions for submitting comments in sections F and G can be found at this link. The docket number is USTR-2018-0005.\nOn April 3, 2018, the United States Trade Representative published a proposed tariff retaliation list. This follows just a few weeks after the USTR’s March 22nd release of its Section 301 Report detailing findings regarding Chinese acts, policies, and practices related to technology transfer, innovation and intellectual property. The 301 Fact Sheet states that “the United States is committed to rebalancing the U.S.-China trade relationship to achieve more fair and reciprocal trade. After years of U.S.-China dialogues that produced minimal results and commitments that China did not honor, the United States is taking action to confront China over its state-led, market-distorting forced technology transfers, intellectual property practices, and cyber intrusions of U.S. commercial networks.”\nThe complete list of products that could be subject to a 25% tariff is included in the annex to the 301 Report.\nSince the April 3 USTR tariff list was published, China responded by publishing its own list of products it may subject to increased tariffs if President Trump moves forward. These items include agricultural commodities such as soybeans as well as exports such as autos, aircraft, and chemicals. In response, Trump has threatened to slap additional tariffs on more goods, stating that he might consider whether an additional “100 billion in tariffs might be appropriate.”\nApril 08, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nTrade, Customs\nRegulations, president, tariffs\nThe GDPR: A Broad-Reaching Game Changer\nPassed by the European Union on April 26, 2016, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is set to take effect on May 25, 2018. Replacing the 1995 Data Protection Directive, the GDPR contains key changes that affect businesses throughout the world, including U.S. companies. Understanding these new regulations is essential to maintaining compliance and avoiding harsh penalties.\nThe GDPR is an EU regulation concerning data privacy. In the United States, data privacy laws tend to be segmented to specific fields (FERPA, HIPPA, etc.). However, the European Union considers data privacy to be a fundamental human right and thus applies data privacy laws consistently across the board. The main purpose of this regulation is to protect “personal data” in European Union member countries or countries where “personal data” originating in the EU is stored, processed or retained. This is important as it greatly expands who is regulated in comparison to its predecessor directive.\nIn this context, personal data is defined as “any information relating to an individual, whether it relates to his or her private, professional or public life. It can be anything from a name, a home address, a photo, an email address, bank details, posts on social networking websites, medical information, or a computer’s IP address”. Note that the inclusion of information as simple as email addresses, login-information, or computer IP addresses means that the GDPR can apply to many U.S. corporations simply through the course of normal business activities.\nCompanies are specifically required to comply with the GDPR if they fit any of three specific criteria. The GDPR applies to any company that maintains an “establishment” in an EU member nation, whether or not data collection or processing occurs there. Establishment generally means “any real and effective activity – even a minimal one” through “stable arrangements” in the EU. Secondly, the GDPR applies “where the processing activities are related to offering goods or services to data subjects in the Union.” This provision even includes goods and services that are free. Moreover, the bar to “offering goods” is low and can be as simple as the specific language, shipping options, or currencies being that of an EU member. Lastly, the GDPR applies to a company “if it processes the personal data of data subjects in the EU and that processing is related to the ‘monitoring’ in the EU of the ‘behavior’ of data subjects as their behavior takes place within the EU”. In this context, “monitoring” includes the use of cookies and other information frequently used by advertisers to track and recommend products to consumers.\nThe GDPR can alternatively come into force against U.S. corporations who do not collect data but instead import/export data from the EU. Under the GDPR, in language mostly unchanged from the 1995 directive, data can only be exported to countries that are deemed to have equivalent or stronger data protection laws than the EU. However, the U.S. is not considered one of these countries and U.S. corporations must be able provide adequate assurances that data will be handled in accordance with the GDPR. An exception to this is U.S. companies under the authority of the Federal Trade Commission or Department of Transportation that have signed on to the 2016 EU-U.S. Privacy Shield framework. The Privacy Shield, the successor of the Safe Harbor Program struck down in 2015 after the Edward Snowden leaks, allows companies that self-certify compliance to receive EU personal data as if they were in a country approved by the commission. Companies that are unable or do not wish to join the Privacy Shield program have alternatives. The European Commission allows companies to use pre-approved standard contractual clauses, binding corporate rules, or codes of conduct that have been approved by the European Commission or independent state supervisory authorities. Importantly, companies are not only responsible for their own exports and compliance but also for any “onward transfers” and the compliance of any company down the chain.While companies can share data protected by the GDPR, they must ensure that said company or their contract meets the criteria above.\nKnowing these broad categories for which a U.S. company can be subject to the GDPR, examining what must be met for compliance is essential. Penalties for the GDPR are extreme, failure to comply can result in fines of up to 4% of global revenue or 20,000,000 euros, whichever is greater, and direct liability to anyone impacted by mishandled data.\nThe GDPR has two different sets of requirements depending on a company’s classification as either a data “controller” or data “processor”. A data controller “acting alone or together with others, determines the purposes and means of the processing of personal data.” A data processor “processes personal data on behalf of the controller”. While not all encompassing, important requirements for data controllers include: establishing when privacy notices are required, including insufficiency of pre-checked boxes which are common practice in the U.S; placing restrictions on choosing data processor; establishing data breach notification timelines and individual rights; recordkeeping; and appointing a data protection officer. This differs slightly for data processors who have regulations on issues such as data breach notification, data security, recordkeeping, and subprocessing, but not many of the restrictions concerning privacy and the actual notices themselves.\nThe GDPR updates EU data protection laws to provide a far-reaching jurisdictional range. The data protected includes many data types commonly used by US businesses. Act now, before May 25th, and review the specific controller or data processor regulatory requirements if you believe that your business falls under the GDPR’s authority.\nMax Krauskopf\nEuropean Union, Regulations, privacy\nA Hard Lesson Learned: What Capella v. United States Teaches Us\nFebruary 25, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger\nOn January 4th, 2018, the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reaffirmed the decision of the United States Court of International Trade in regard to Capella Sales & Services LTD v. United States, Aluminum Extrusions Fair Trade Committee. In its affirmation, the court decision highlighted the importance of importers staying current with countervailing duty (CVD) legislation and Timken notices.\nBackground: The United States Department of Commerce is empowered to impose CVD’s on imported goods when they find a country is directly or indirectly subsidizing a given good. Under this authority, a 2010 investigation by the Department of Commerce found the People’s Republic of China (PRC) guilty of said subsidies for aluminum extrusions and assessed an all-others rate CVD of 374.15%. Numerous aluminum importers challenged this CVD in the Court of International Trade (“CIT”) in MacLean-Fogg Co. v. United States. The CIT ruled in favor of the importers, which resulted in a new all-others rate of 7.37% for imports of aluminum extrusions from the PRC. However, Capella was not a party to this legislation.\nFollowing the CIT’s decision, the Department of Commerce issued a Timken notice notifying the public that the court’s decision differed from its original final determination. As a result of this notice, some importers requested and received an administrative review of 2011 and 2012 entries subject to Commerce’s original determination. However, Capella never requested administrative review for its entries.\nConsidering that Capella’s entries were not enjoined by the court due to legislation and they did not request an administrative view within the appropriate period, Capella was charged the original CVD of 374.15%. This case was the final failure in their attempt to avoid payment.\nThe Court of Appeals reaffirmation of the Capella decision upholds the status quo in regard to CVD’s. Importers must stay up to date on current legislation. If they do not join legislation, they must file for an administrative review within the proper time period. Simply attempting to benefit retroactively without said actions will not fly, as Capella roughly discovered. Importers have plenty of time to join legislation and request administrative reviews. They should be considered with the utmost priority as they can often result in significant savings.\nFebruary 25, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nCIT, CAFC\nFrance To Sidestep Sanctions by Setting up New Trade Financing Vehicles\nEver since France, the U.S., and other world powers agreed in 2015 to lift certain economic sanctions in exchange for controls on Iran’s nuclear program, European countries have been searching for a way to step up trade with Iran. France plans to structure financing in such a way as to increase trade with Iran while avoiding the long reach of U.S. sanctions. By offering euro-denominated credits to buyers in Iran, the French will be able to increase sales of its goods.\nAccording to Nicolas Dufoursq, the head of France’s state-owned investment bank, Bpifrance, a lot of preparation has gone into this plan to provide new loans. “This is a completely separate flow (of money),” he explained. “There is no (U.S) dollar in this scheme.” He added that there is as much as 1.5 billion euros in potential contracts from French exporters alone.\nThe French have maintained trade ties with Iran for decades and still have large factories there, including a Renault plant. Other European countries such as Belgium, Italy, Germany, and Austria are working on their own financial mechanisms to enable them to bolster trade while not running afoul of U.S. sanctions.\nAs recently as October of 2017, Trump criticized such efforts to sidestep nuclear agreements, but has since told French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel they could \"keep making money\" in Iran.\nFebruary TFTEA Implementation\nThe U.S. Department of Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is preparing for the implementation of new changes to duty drawback specified in the Trade Facilitation and Trade Enforcement Act of 2015 (TFTEA). Passed in 2015, the law gave CBP a two-year implementation period which expires on February 24, 2018.\nImportant changes of note concern ACE (Automated Commercial Environment) and how drawback, the refund of duties, taxes, and other fees, are handled. Starting on February 24th, drawback, as defined under current statue, will begin to be filed through ACE. Furthermore, TFTEA greatly changed many aspects of drawback law. These new TFTEA claims will also become effective starting on February 24th. This distinction is important because core drawback claims, under the current legislation, will continue to be accepted via ACE until February 24th, 2019, as specified under TFTEA. During this transition, claimants will be able to choose whether they would prefer to submit under the current legislation or under TFTEA.\nOther important changes under TFTEA include:\nRedefining the concept of “substitution” of exported goods for imports. This change\nuses the Eight-digit Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States (HTSUS)\nclassification or Export Schedule B numbers instead of part number-based criteria.\nThe timeline for filing a drawback claim related to a given import has been expanded\nfrom three years to five years from the date of importation.\nCertificates of delivery are no longer required. Claimants must only be able to produce\n“normal business records.”\nFinal touches are still being put on the exact specifics for how ACE and TFTEA will function. No new or revised regulations relating to TFTEA have been issued. However, regulations are currently being reviewed by the Treasury and must still be reviewed by other agencies as well. CBP is planning to release a guidance document for policies that will be applied to TFTEA claims while these regulations are still being reviewed. Keep your eye out for these finalized documents, as understanding the regulations and differences between regulations will be especially important for this transition year.\nDHS/CBP Amends Customs Regulations to Include Civil Monetary Penalty Adjustments\nJanuary 11, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger\nOn December 8, 2017, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) amended its regulations to adjust for inflation the amounts that CBP can assess as civil monetary penalties for the following three violations:\nThe penalty for transporting passengers between coastwise points in the United States by a non-coastwise qualified vessel has been increased from $750 to $762.\nThe penalty for towing a vessel between coastwise points in the United States by a non-coastwise qualified vessel has been increased from $875-$2,750 plus $150 per ton to a new amount of $889-$2,795 plus $152 per ton.\nThe penalty for dealing in or using an empty stamped imported liquor container after it has already been used once has been increased from $500 to $508.\nThese changes are being made in accordance with the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act Improvements Act of 2015 which was enacted on November 2, 2015. In addition, a number of other CBP civil penalty amounts were adjusted pursuant to this 2015 Act in previously published documents published in the Federal Register on July 1, 2016, and January 27, 2017; however, the adjustments for these three civil penalties were omitted from those documents inadvertently and so are being published now. The rule went into effect on December 8, 2017. The adjusted penalty amounts will be applicable for penalties assessed after December 8, 2017 if the associated violations occurred after November 2, 2015.\nJanuary 11, 2018 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nCBP, Enforcement\ncbp, Penalties\nDOC Announces New Civil Monetary Penalties Adjusted for Inflation\nThe Department of Commerce has announced new civil monetary penalty amounts adjusted for inflation that may be assessed for the following regulatory violations after January 15, 2017, including in instances when the associated violation took place before that date.\nfailure to file export reports or information required by 13 USC 304 within prescribed period – maximum for each day’s delinquency has been increased from $1,333 to $1,360, maximum per violation has been increased from $13,333 to $13,605\nother unlawful export information activities under 13 USC 305 – the maximum has been increased from $13,333 to $13,605\nfailure to provide the information required under 22 USC Chapter 46 (international investment and trade in services survey) – minimum increased from $4,527 to $4,619, maximum increased from $45,268 to $46,192\nforeign-trade zone violations (19 USC 81s) – maximum increased from $2,795 to $2,852; false or fraudulent claims under the Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act (31 USC 3802(a)(1) and (2)) – maximum increased from $10,957 to $11,181\nprohibited acts relating to inspections or recordkeeping violations under the Chemical Weapons Convention Implementation Act (22 USC 6761(a)(1)(A) and (B)) – maximum increased from $36,849 to $37,601\nviolations of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (50 USC 1705(b)) – maximum increased from $289,238 to $295,141\nSeveral other adjustments were also made pertaining to the use of false records to pay or transmit money or property to the federal government (31 USC 3729(a)(1)(G)) and to Fastener Quality Act violations (15 USC 5408(b)(1)). To see the full list of adjustments, see the Federal Register.\nPenalties, commerce\nAirbus Faces Probe into Compliance Irregularities\nNovember 09, 2017 / Jennie Kessinger\nIt has been reported that Airbus of Toulouse, France, faces legal difficulties regarding its failure to notify U.S. authorities about the use of outside sales agents to broker defense equipment and services deals; this presents a compliance lapse and could lead to financial penalties and perhaps a criminal investigation.\nAccording to The Guardian of London, the problems stem from the use of so-called “commercial agents” who act as intermediaries in “difficult” territories where they sometimes assist large companies in securing contracts. In some cases these intermediaries act as legitimate consultants on technical matters, while in other cases they are really nothing more than individuals who know whom to bribe for a government contract. This kind of action is contrary to Part 130 of U.S. International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) concerning political contributions, fees, and commissions involved in the export of military equipment.\nAirbus’ Chief Financial Officer Harald Wilhelm briefed reporters on October 31 regarding these legal issues. He would not speculate on the company’s potential financial or criminal exposure. Both the U.S. State Department and the Justice Department are looking into the matter.\nFailure to comply with regulations can lead to large penalties. Airbus engine manufacturer, Rolls-Royce Holdings PLC , recently agreed to settle allegations of corruption to the tune of an $800 million dollar penalty. Because Rolls-Royce agreed to the settlement, the company avoided prosecution.\nThe compliance lapses at Airbus came to light during an internal review and were first reported at the end of 2016. After discovering irregularities in certain foreign transactions, Airbus came forward to report the problems it had found. The company’s hope is that by self-reporting, the penalties might be less punitive.\nNovember 09, 2017 / Jennie Kessinger/ Comment\nEnforcement, ITAR\nITAR\nU.S. Based Paper Company Settles with OFAC on Sanctions Violations\nWhite Birch Investment, LLC, a paper company headquartered in Greenwich, CT, recently reached an agreement settling a case brought by the Office of Foreign Asset Control (OFAC). White Birch’s Canadian subsidiary was facing possible civil liability for three alleged violations of the Sudanese Sanctions Regulations, 31 C.F.R. part 538 (SSR). White Birch USA was accused of facilitating the sale and shipment of 543 metric tons of paper of Canadian origin valued at approximately $354,000. According to OFAC, White Birch USA and its Canadian subsidiary were “actively involved in discussing, arranging, and executing the export transactions to Sudan.” OFAC concluded that White Birch USA did not voluntarily self-disclose these apparent violations; however, it was determined that these violations constituted a non-egregious case. These transactions date back to between April and December of 2013.\nThis settlement underscores how critical it is that U.S. companies put processes in place to effectively wall off their U.S. operations and staff interactions to prevent violation of OFAC’s regulations. This is especially important for U.S. companies with overseas affiliates who may be transacting business involving sanctioned territories; such territories currently include Iran, North Korea, Cuba, Syrian and the Crimea area of Ukraine.\nSuzanne DeCuir, Global Trade Expertise, October 23, 2017\nUpdate: H.R. 3551: C-TPAT Reauthorization Bill\nOn September 25, 2017, the House Homeland Security Committee favorably reported a bill concerning C-TPAT to the House of Representatives. This bill, H.R. 3551, would reauthorize the Customs Trade Partnership Against Terrorism program (C -TPAT) which has not been reauthorized in its 11-year history. The bill was introduced by Rep. Martha McSally of Arizona. If passed, a number of changes will be put in place reflecting current global security concerns and trade conditions.\nSome of the changes that the bill calls for are as follows:\n1. Each C-TPAT participant must designate a company employee (not a contractor or third-party) to hold the participant accountable for managing participation in the program.\n2. The bill would require CBP (in consultation with industry) to review the C-TPAT minimum security criteria at least every two years, making updates as needed.\n3. CBP would be required to put in place additional security procedures for certain categories of participants, individual participants, and specific entities in order to focus closely on security vulnerabilities.\n4. The bill would extend eligibility to participate in C-TPAT to exporters, importers, freight forwarders, customs brokers, air carriers, ocean carriers, land carriers, and contract logistics providers.\n5. The bill establishes C-TPAT as the authorized economic operator program to grant CBP the latitude and flexibility to improve and expand its trusted trader program as needed.\nCTPAT\nTransition to New ACE System Begins July 8, 2017\nU.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) announced that July 8, 2017 is the effective date for the transition to the new electronic CBP authorized system for entry filings. This transition had been delay repeatedly, but it is finally ready for implementation, and all electronic drawback, duty deferral entries and entry summary filings will need to be processed using this system. ACE will be used for all flagging of entries as well. The old system, ACS, will no longer be a CBP-authorized EDI (Electronic Data Interchange) system after the transition.\nAdditional information about the Automated Commercial Environment (ACE) is available on the CBP website and includes the types of entries that will be supported by ACE, along with details related to filing protests, drawbacks, duty deferrals, reconciliations, liquidations, and other filings.\nIn December of 2016, CBP described in detail that changes that will affect reconciliation; these can be found on the first CBP site listed under sources, below. Two important changes pertain to flagging of entries and the filing of reconciliation entries. Under the new system, blanket flagging will be eliminated. Where filing of reconciliation entries is concerned, importers and their brokers will no long be able to submit entries using CD/ROMs or paper. The type 09 reconciliation entry using ACE is to be used even though the entries being reconciled were not initially filed using ACE. “Entry by entry” or “aggregate” reconciliation entries will still be accepted.\nCBP, Imports\nNAFTA Renegotiation\nOn May 18, 2017, Robert Lighthizer, the recently confirmed United States Trade Representative (USTR), notified Congress of the Administration’s intentions to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). This notification, required by section 105(a)(1)(A) of the Bipartisan Congressional Trade Priorities and Accountability Act of 2015, started the 90-day period in which the Administration must wait before beginning the renegotiation. This period ends on August 16, 2017, after which the Administration may begin negotiations. During this period, the USTR shall conduct both Congressional and public hearings in order to better clarify the intentions of the renegotiation. Notification from the public to testify and written testimony must be submitted by June 12, 2017.\nNo changes shall take effect until after the 90-day period, so importers and exporters should continue with business as usual. However, they should also note that significant changes might occur after that time period. The Office Of The United States Trade Representative has released a preliminary list of objectives about which they are seeking public comments. These objectives are presented with the goal of modernizing the NAFTA to better reflect a modern U.S. economy. These objectives include, among others, a reexamination of remaining tariffs and non- tariff barriers, changes in the treatment of digital goods, and changes to rules of origin procedures. A full list of objectives can be found here.\nGTE will continue to monitor the specific objectives and changes of the renegotiation. If you have any questions or desire a consultation as to how these changes may affect your organization please contact us.\nNAFTA, Trade\ncustoms, nafta\nA law and consulting firm specializing in international trade matters such as Customs, export control, OFAC embargoes and sanctions, and other import/export matters.\n©Global Trade Expertise Attorney Advertising Legal Disclaimer Privacy Policy IP Policy Terms of Use","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1037569"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7279707193374634,"wiki_prob":0.7279707193374634,"text":"UCCI Board Announces New President\nMr. Anthony Ritch, Chair of the Board of Governors of the University College of the Cayman Islands (UCCI), is pleased to announce that the Board has appointed Dr. Stacy R. McAfee as the next President of the institution to take office on the 1st of January 2019.\n“On behalf of the Board of Governors, I am delighted to welcome Dr. Stacy McAfee as the next President of UCCI,” said Chairman Ritch. “Dr. McAfee was selected following a most rigorous recruitment process that started in January of this year.”\nChairman Ritch explained that the months-long presidential search process included approximately 200 applications, 11 interviews and four candidates visiting the UCCI campus to meet faculty and staff. Dr. McAfee demonstrated the strongest expertise, motivational fit, and vision to carry out the duties of the institution’s chief executive officer in accordance with the new President position description and UCCI’s mission.\n“We look forward to working with Dr. McAfee as we embrace our new Strategic Plan and seek to build on the many improvements, positive initiatives and landmark successes achieved under President Roy Bodden’s visionary and astute leadership. We also look forward to introducing Dr. McAfee to Cayman and to our many stakeholders in the public and private sector and across numerous NGOs who continue to provide significant and impactful support to the University College,” he said.\nThe Chairman also expressed appreciation for President Bodden who is retiring at the end of the year, saying, “We thank President Bodden for his nine years of extraordinary dedication to UCCI and for his immeasurable contribution to education across the Cayman Islands. He is leaving us with an enduring legacy and the Board is committed to ensuring that we continue to set exacting standards for excellence and educational achievement that build on the great work he has done.”\nSimilar sentiments were echoed by the Hon. Juliana O’Connor-Connolly, Minister for Education, Youth, Sports, Agriculture, and Lands.\n“As Minister for Education, I am pleased to welcome Dr. Stacy McAfee to the Cayman Islands and the UCCI family. Under the exceptional leadership of outgoing President Roy Bodden, UCCI has experienced a rebirth; there is a newfound vitality, stability, enthusiasm, and sense of purpose that permeates both the campus and the classroom,” she said. “He has surely laid a solid foundation upon which Dr. McAfee can build. I look forward to working with President McAfee and the UCCI Board as we continue to provide students with educational programmes that meet internationally recognised standards of learning in the core and developing industries relevant to the socio-economic wellbeing of the Cayman Islands and its citizens.”\nDr. Stacy R. McAfee served as the Associate Vice President for External Relations, Strategic Partnerships and Presidential Initiatives for University of the Pacific, a selective nationally-ranked (#110) university in California. Dr. McAfee led business, government and community relations advancing corporate, foundation, educational, alumni and government relations across Northern California. The strategic partnerships she established bolstered experiential learning, philanthropy, new program development, career placement, and faculty research. As a member of the president’s cabinet, she led presidential initiatives including the clarification of institutional core values in 2017.\nPrior to joining University of the Pacific, Dr. McAfee led University of Phoenix’s Bay Area campus that served over 4,000 students in the San Francisco Bay Area online and at various campus sites. She directed admissions, academic affairs, student services, operations, alumni relations, and financial services. Under her direction, the campus received national recognition for multi-faceted performance excellence. Prior to her Bay Area campus leadership position, she directed academic affairs for University of Phoenix’s West Region leading regulatory, legal, and academic quality assurance for 11 campuses.\nDr. McAfee has more than 30 years of leadership experience with a variety of public and private organisations across various industries. She served on the executive board of the Sacramento Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and the Capitol Public Radio board and Joint Venture Silicon Valley and as an executive with the Silicon Valley Leadership Group. She has served on the faculty of institutions of higher education including DePaul University, Elmhurst College, University of Phoenix, St. Charles Community College, and College of DuPage. Dr. McAfee serves as a speaker, subject matter expert, and regular contributor for panels, events, and interviews.\n“I am honoured to have the rare privilege of serving as the President and CEO of UCCI. Together, we will build upon the successes of the past while fulfilling a new vision for locally relevant and internationally recognized tertiary education for the Cayman Islands,” Dr. McAfee said.\nDr. McAfee holds a Doctorate in Educational Leadership and Management from Drexel University, an MBA from DePaul University, a Bachelor in Business Administration from Iowa State University, and an Associate of Arts from Highland Community College. She is a member of American Leadership Forum Mountain Valley Chapter and Leadership Sacramento.\nShe is passionate about improving educational and career outcomes for traditional students and working adults. Dr. McAfee believes that access to quality education enables both personal and professional development and is essential to sustained economic growth, civic leadership, and innovation. In addition to enjoying mentoring and developing others, she is actively engaged in her community supporting various non-profits and her church. She and her husband Terry have been married for 32 years and have two adult sons and a daughter-in-law.\nUCCI Hosts International Business Practicum in Roatan\nDr. McAfee's Remarks at Chamber of Commerce Economic Forum 2019","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line548817"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6924353241920471,"wiki_prob":0.3075646758079529,"text":"Baris Ekincier\nBaris Ekincier (Azerbaijani: Barış Əkinçiər; born 24 March 1999) is a German-born Azerbaijani footballer who plays as a midfielder for VfL Bochum.[1]\n(1999-03-24) 24 March 1999 (age 20)\nHemer, Germany\nPlaying position\nYouth career\nFC Iserlohn\nRot-Weiss Essen\nSenior career*\nTeam Apps (Gls)\nVfL Bochum 1 (0)\nNational team‡\nAzerbaijan U17 2 (0)\n* Senior club appearances and goals counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 18:31, 5 April 2019 (UTC)\n‡ National team caps and goals correct as of 18:31, 5 April 2019 (UTC)\nClub careerEdit\nEkincier began his football career with the youth teams of FC Iserlohn and Rot-Weiss Essen, before joining the VfL Bochum youth academy in 2017. In August 2017, he played for the first team in a friendly match against Bayer Leverkusen.[2]\nIn June 2018, Ekincier signed his first professional contract with VfL Bochum, lasting two years until 30 June 2020.[3] On 19 August 2018, he appeared for Bochum in the first round of the 2018–19 DFB-Pokal, coming on as a substitute in the 62nd minute for Tom Weilandt in the 0–1 away loss against Regionalliga Nord side Weiche Flensburg.[4] Ekincier made his 2. Bundesliga debut for Bochum on 5 April 2019, coming on as a substitute in the 74th minute for Miloš Pantović in the 1–2 away loss against Jahn Regensburg.[5]\nInternational careerEdit\nEkincier was included in hosts Azerbaijan's squad for the 2016 UEFA European Under-17 Championship in May 2016. He appeared in Azerbaijan's first two matches, with the team being eliminated in the group stage of the tournament.[1]\nEkincier was born in the German city of Hemer, North Rhine-Westphalia and is of Turkish descent.[1]\n^ a b c \"Baris Ekincier\". worldfootball.net. HEIM:SPIEL. Retrieved 5 April 2019.\n^ \"Spielpraxis für Kießling und Lars Bender\" (in German). Kicker. 31 August 2017. Retrieved 6 April 2019.\n^ \"Baris Ekincier erhält Profivertrag\" (in German). VfL Bochum. 6 June 2018.\n^ \"Gelungenes Debüt: Weiche Flensburg kegelt Bochum raus\" (in German). Kicker. 19 August 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2019.\n^ \"Zuerst Assist, dann eigenes Tor – Grüttner Matchwinner für den Jahn\" [First an assist, then a goal – Grüttner match winner for Jahn Regensburg]. kicker.de (in German). kicker-sportmagazin. 5 April 2019. Retrieved 6 April 2019.\nBaris Ekincier – UEFA competition record\nProfile at DFB.de\nProfile at kicker.de\nBaris Ekincier at Soccerway\nThis biographical article relating to Azerbaijani association football is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.\nRetrieved from \"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Baris_Ekincier&oldid=898572921\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line870927"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5593792796134949,"wiki_prob":0.5593792796134949,"text":"Home > NEWS > / / Stars / Buzz\nSM Entertainment Explains Why Sulli Was Not Included in f(x)'s Baskin Robbins CF\nSulli's non-appearance once again unearthed rumors and speculations about her leaving f(x). Baskin Robbins recently released a CF featuring its brand endorser f(x).\nTAGㆍf(x)ㆍ sulli\nBaskin Robbins recently released a CF featuring its brand endorser f(x). However, the CF stirred a buzz as f(x) member Sulli was noticeably absent from the said commercial. Sulli's non-appearance once again unearthed rumors and speculations about her leaving f(x) which first came out when she suddenly went on hiatus from group activities last year. Baskin Robbins and SM Entertainment have released individual statements to explain why Sulli is not in the CF.\n\"Sulli is not included in f(x)'s contract [with Baskin Robbins],\" the brand rep explained, \"When the contract was drafted and signed, Sulli was caught up in a dating scandal with Choiza. Thus, after discussing matters with SM Entertainment, we decided to sign the contract without Sulli's involvement.\"\nSM Entertainment responded to speculations that Sulli's absence from the CF marks her looming departure from f(x). The agency denied rumors about Sulli's disbandment from the group. \"Sulli's absence from f(x)'s [Baskin Robbins] CF was due to her hiatus at the time the contract [with Baskin Robbins] was signed. There are no other reasons behind her non-appearance.\"\nIn recall, Sulli officially went on hiatus starting July 25, 2014. She's only re-appeared in the limelight later that year to attend promotions for her movie \"Fashion King\".\nMeanwhile, f(x)'s Victoria, Luna, Amber, and Krystal will appear in Baskin Robbin's summer special \"bingsu\" or shaved ice dessert CF in which they will lunch the \"Shaved Ice Song\" this month.\nAlso, f(x) is scheduled to make a comeback, as confirmed from an official statement from SM Entertainment's rep.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line392994"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8628455400466919,"wiki_prob":0.8628455400466919,"text":"Mark Guiliana is an acclaimed drummer, composer, educator, producer and founder of the independent record label Beat Music Productions. His forward-thinking, conceptual approach to the instrument is also featured in Mehliana, the electric duo featuring Brad Mehldau on keyboards and synthesizers. The group’s highly anticipated debut album, Taming the Dragon (Nonesuch), was released in early 2014.\nOver the past decade, Guiliana´s extensive touring has taken him across six continents with artists including Meshell Ndegeocello, Gretchen Parlato, Avishai Cohen, Matisyahu, Lionel Loueke, Now vs. Now, Dhafer Youssef, and his own groups, Beat Music and Heernt. He has also appeared on over 30 recordings to date.\nStill in his early thirties, Guiliana, recognized by The New York Times as “a drummer around whom a cult of admiration has formed,” has earned international acclaim for his innovative and creative style. Time Out London sums him up perfectly: “What happens when you add hard bop drum masters Elvin Jones and Art Blakey to a 1980s Roland 808 drum machine, divide the result by J Dilla and then multiply to the power of Squarepusher? Answer: Mark Guiliana.”\nLesson Packs Featuring Mark Guiliana\nPhrasing Fills in 16ths\nPhrasing Fills in Triplets","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line755257"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9016527533531189,"wiki_prob":0.9016527533531189,"text":"Rare Colorado fish pulled back from extinction\nLocal | October 4, 2018\nDan Elliot\nIn this Tuesday, Oct. 2, 2018 photo, a Colorado River razorback sucker fish is shown swimming in a tank at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service office in Lakewood, Colo. Officials say that the rare Colorado River fish has been pulled back from the brink of extinction, the second comeback this year for a species unique to the Southwestern United States. (AP Photo/Dan Elliott)\nAP | AP\nDENVER — Another rare Colorado River fish has been pulled back from the brink of extinction, wildlife officials said Thursday, the second comeback this year for a species unique to the Southwestern U.S.\nThe U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recommended reclassifying the ancient and odd-looking razorback sucker from endangered to threatened, meaning it is still at risk of extinction, but the danger is no longer immediate.\nThe Associated Press was briefed on the plans before the official announcement.\nHundreds of thousands of razorbacks once thrived in the Colorado River and its tributaries, which flow across seven states and Mexico.\nBy the 1980s they had dwindled to about 100. Researchers blame non-native predator fish that attacked and ate the razorbacks and dams that disrupted their habitat.\nTheir numbers have bounced back to between 54,000 and 59,000 today, thanks to a multimillion-dollar effort that enlisted the help of hatcheries, dam operators, landowners, native American tribes and state and federal agencies.\n“It’s a work in progress,” said Tom Chart, director of the Upper Colorado River Endangered Fish Recovery Program. “We get more fish out in the system, they’re showing up in more places, they’re spawning in more locations.”\nChart’s program oversees the campaign to restore the razorback sucker and three other fish, all of them found only in the Colorado River system.\nIn March, the Fish and Wildlife Service recommended changing the humpback chub from endangered to threatened. It takes 18 to 24 months to complete the process, including a public comment period.\nThe razorback sucker’s name comes from a sharp-edge, keel-like ridge along its back behind its head. Chart thinks the ridge may have evolved to help the fish stay stable in the turbulent waters of the Colorado.\nIt can grow up to 3 feet (1 meter) long and live up to 40 years.\nRazorbacks have been around for between 3 million and 5 million years, but trouble arrived as the population expanded in the Southwest. State and federal agencies began introducing game fish into the Colorado without realizing they would devour the native fish, Chart said. A spurt of dam-building was a boon to cities and farms but interrupted the natural springtime surge of melting snow, which in turn shrank the floodplains that provided a safe nursery for young razorbacks.\nDams also made parts of the rivers too cold for razorbacks, because they release water from the chilly depths of reservoirs. And they blocked the natural migration of the fish.\nBy the late 1980s, most of the wild razorbacks were old, an ominous sign they were no longer reproducing, Chart said. The Fish and Wildlife Service began capturing the remaining wild razorbacks and moving them to hatcheries to begin rebuilding the population.\nThe agency designated razorbacks an endangered species in 1991, although Utah and Colorado enacted state protections earlier.\nBiologists began restocking rivers with hatchery-raised razorbacks in 1995. Now, about 55,000 are released into the Colorado and its tributaries annually.\nThe Fish and Wildlife Service began working with dam operators to time water releases to help razorbacks spawn and restore flood plains for them to mature. Some dams were modified to help razorbacks to get by.\nWildlife officials began reining in non-native predator fish with nets and screens to keep them from escaping reservoirs, or removing them by electrofishing — stunning them with electricity and euthanizing them with an overdose of anesthetic.\nChanging the fish from endangered to threatened will allow more flexibility in the way it is protected, said Kevin McAbee, deputy director of the recovery program.\nUnder endangered status, individual fish have to be protected, but threatened status means biologists can take steps to improve the overall population even if some fish might be hurt, McAbee said.\nRazorbacks still face challenges. The first-year survival rate of hatchery fish, each roughly 14 inches (36 centimeters) long, is about 20 percent or less in the wild, Chart said. It climbs to 80 percent after that.\nDrought, climate change and increasing human demand are straining the rivers, which makes it harder for fish to survive.\nMcAbee said the Fish and Wildlife Service took the river’s uncertain future into account before recommending the change for the razorbacks. Their long lifespan helps them endure low-water years when few young fish survive, he said.\nCooperation among water users in 2018, a year of devastating drought in much of the Southwest, shows the razorbacks’ needs can be accommodated, McAbee said.\n“Things could have been catastrophic,” he said.\nTaylor McKinnon of the Center for Biological Diversity is doubtful about how healthy the razorbacks really are.\nThe government’s reliance on hatcheries to boost the population shows they are not self-sustaining, he said, and he worries about their future in the overtaxed Colorado River.\n“I think the elephant in the room right now with regard to recovery is climate change and river flows and regional aridification,” he said.\n“We’re skeptical of the merits of this,” McKinnon said.\nGlenwood prosecutor wins award for welfare fraud trial\nGlenwood’s Midland Bridge to be closed July 19-20 for re-decking\nSunday profile: Glenwood resident Annie Zancanella known as ‘Tanzanian Tooth Fairy’ after 5 months in African nation\nUPDATE: CDOT partially re-opens one lane of Highway 325 to all travelers\n¡Postindependent.com ahora disponible en español!","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line206656"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7124171257019043,"wiki_prob":0.2875828742980957,"text":"Alice's Garage\nUntil recently, little was known about LGBTI Australian’s experiences of dementia. There was a myth that LGBT people who had dementia ‘became straight’ or ‘reverted’ to gender assigned at birth. On this page we share research and narratives about LGBTI people’s experiences of dementia.\nA series of narrative based resources and a guide in LGBTI inclusive services for people living with dementia has been developed:\nStill gay… Narrative resource (here)\nStill gay … Guide to inclusive services (here)\nEdie, a day in the life of a lesbian living with younger onset dementia (link)\nUnderstanding the experiences and needs of LGBT people living with dementia. Article (link)\nWe are still gay … Article (link)\nPulse of My Heart\nPulse of my Heart, or ‘A chuisle mo chroi’, is an Irish Gaelic expression meaning ‘my darling, my love’. It involves an annual film documenting the importance of love in the life of Edie Mayhew and her partner Anne Tudor. Edie was diagnosed with younger onset dementia in 2015. Header photo (c) Lisa White, The Social Photographer.\n2017: The Circle of Love\nOur 2017 film has been made and is very, very beautiful. The film was shot at the Circle of Love celebration of Edie and Anne’s 33 years together – which happened during the Marriage Equality postal vote in Australia.\n2016: Our Hearts Are Bigger\nThis second film was our first with professional film maker Andy Ferguson. Between this and the previous film Edie has needed more support from Anne – and so we decided to include both Edie and Anne in the film. In preparation for the film Edie and Anne were invited to write each other a letter about love every day for a week – and then to open and read them on film. The letter writing approach provided structure and opened up the possibilities. This film led to an international campaign called: Letters of Love and Dementia.\nhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0eUQNDGFlcM\n2015: A Day in the Life of Edie\nThis first film is a series of photographs and a sound track produced by Catherine Barrett as part of a project documenting the experiences of LGBTI people living with dementia.\nhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LGFUQhCkT6U\nWebsite by Dvize","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line245702"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5896924138069153,"wiki_prob":0.5896924138069153,"text":"The Promise of Electric Buses for Low Carbon Mass Transit\nA new generation of fully electric buses is on the way making low carbon transport a reality. If we are to keep temperatures from rising more than 2C above preindustrial times we must find efficient, emissions-free solutions to mass transportation. The new generation of electric buses are a critical piece of the zero emissions puzzle. Electric buses will also reduce the air pollution that is plaguing urban environments.\nElectric buses are not new, the Chinese automaker BYD introduced an electric bus in 2010. It is called the K9 and it is powered with an Iron-phosphate battery, that has a range of 155 miles or 250 kilometers on one single charge. Newer e-buses have quadrupled that range.\nHowever a new generation of electric buses have much better ranges and are capable of traveling an entire day without recharging. In 2015 an Australian all-electric bus broke a record by driving 1,018km on a single charge. The bus was built by Brighsun in Melbourne and employs a high performance lithium ion battery with proprietary eMotor, battery management and a regenerative braking system.\nAs reported by One Step Off the Grid, Brighsun communications director, Gladys Liu, said:\n\"We believe it will bring a whole new concept of public transport with no pollution to Australia and to the world.\"\nThe company is planning on opening manufacturing facilities across Australia.\nAnother electric bus called the EV350 is GreenPower’s flagship product. This bus has the latest electric drive, battery technologies, and battery management system combined with a lightweight chassis and low floor body. The EV350 has a range of 185 miles or 300 kilometers. Another GreenPower product the 550 has an even better range of 240 miles or 385 kilometers.\nThe Proterra is an electric bus that has recently been analyzed by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). It received high marks and as reviewed in EV Obsession, a recent analysis of the Proterra e-bus, \"possess an average fuel economy roughly 4 times higher than that of baseline CNG [compressed natural gas] buses.\"\nAccording to the NREL analysis, the Proterra is also highly reliable. This Proterra is touted as being \"exceptional for an advanced technology bus in the early stage of commercialization.\"\nHowever, the Green Car Congress reports that the average runtime per day is 13.2 hours with an average of 13 charges per day. Each charge averages 20 kWh energy delivered.\nHere is an excerpt from the analysis:\n\"One major challenge is addressing demand charges and time of use charges that affect electricity cost. This will be a major challenge for any fleet looking to deploy electric buses that charge during peak times.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line509421"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6340909004211426,"wiki_prob":0.3659090995788574,"text":"THE CHEMIST by Stephenie Meyer is a riveting page-turner that solidifies her debut as a Thriller author\nNovember 30, 2016 November 30, 2016 / Amie's Book Reviews\t/ Leave a comment\nTitle: THE CHEMIST\nAuthor: STEPHENIE MEYER\nGenre: FICTION, THRILLER\nPrice: $36.50 CDN (HARDCOVER)\nRating: 4.5 OUT OF 5 STARS 🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟\nStephenie Meyer became famous as the author of the TWILIGHT SERIES of Young Adult books wherein a regular teenage girl meets a guy and falls in love. She learns that the love of her life is actually a vampire, but that’s okay because he is a “good” vampire. Anyone who has not read the Twilight books or who has not at least seen the movies made based on the books must have been living under a rock for the past decade.\nAfter writing that series, she then penned the Young Adult science fiction novel – THE HOST which also became a movie. So, potential readers of THE CHEMIST can be forgiven if, at first, they expect this latest book to be another work of Young Adult Fiction.\nHowever, after reading the first few pages of THE CHEMIST, it became readily apparent that this book was written for an adult audience.\nAlex (not her real name) is on the run from her former employer – a shadowy, secret arm of the U.S. government – and has been running for the past three years. She doesn’t know what led to them trying to kill her, but somehow she went from prized asset to liability.\nHer existence now consists of little more than trying to find a way to keep breathing for one more day.\nShe had been known as “The Chemist” and her skills at creating concoctions to help speed along interrogations of terrorist subjects was unsurpassed. But, actual field missions and the art of subterfuge were never part of her job.\nSo, when she receives an email from her former handler telling her that she is needed and that if she completes one last job for him, they will stop hunting her, she is cautiously optimistic. She knows it is likely a trap, but she is so tired of running that she agrees.\nWhat she had thought would be a routine interrogation quickly becomes anything but.\nThe information she learns makes her an even bigger threat than she was previously,\nComplicating matters even further she starts to fall for a man shè shouldn’t. She knows that the only chance of her ever having anything resembling a normal life will require her to go even deeper down the rabbit hole and to do things she had never believed herself capable of.\nThis book is so fast paced that readers become so swept up in the story that the everyday world falls away.\nStephenie has created characters so believable and so compelling that readers will be outraged with the treatment they receive from the very country they love.\nThis book has no sickeningly sweet (and therefore wholeheartedly unbelievable)love scenes that were so common in the TWILIGHT series. That series was written by a much younger Stephenie Meyer. With THE CHEMIST she proves that she has grown up. Stephenie dominated the Young Adult literary world for years. THE CHEMIST proves that she is ready to do the same with Adult Fiction.\nThoroughly researched and exceptionally well plotted, THE CHEMIST takes readers on a heart-pounding roller coaster ride that has so many twists and turns that 518 pages literally fly by. #TheChemist\nI heartily endorse this book and give it a rating of 5 out of 5 stars.🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟\nThe only negative I can see is that readers who had hoped that Stephenie Meyer had stayed stagnant, who hoped that she would remain a YA author forever may find themselves disappointed to discover that #StephenieMeyer has grown up and so has her writing.\nBest known for her Twilight series, Stephenie Meyer’s four-book collection has sold over 100 million copies globally in over 50 countries, with translations in 37 different languages. Meyer was the highest-selling author of 2008 and 2009 in the United States, having sold over 29 million books in 2008, and 26.5 million books in 2009. In 2008, Meyer also released The Host, which debuted at #1 on The New York Times and Wall Street Journalbestseller lists. Additionally, USA Todaydeclared Meyer “Author of the Year,” citing that she had done something that no one else had in the 15 years of the USA Todaybestselling book list– she swept the top four slots in 2008. Meyer also accomplished this feat in 2009, when The Twilight Saga once again dominated the top of the bestseller list. All together, her books have spent over 303 weeks on the New York Times Bestseller List.\nStephenie Meyer graduated from Brigham Young University with a degree in English Literature. She lives in Arizona with her husband and sons.\nTo learn more about Stephenie Meyer visit any or all of the following links:","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line930825"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5904662013053894,"wiki_prob":0.4095337986946106,"text":"On 7 December 2015 the government announced, as part of its National Innovation and Science agenda, that the current ‘same business test’ for company losses will be relaxed to allow businesses to access past year losses when they have entered into new transactions or business activities.\nTo give effect to this, a new ‘similar business test’ will be introduced. Under this test, companies will be able to access losses where their business, while not the same, is similar having regard to:\nthe extent to which the company generates assessable income from the same assets and sources, and\nwhether any changes to the business are changes that would reasonably be expected to have been made to a similarly placed business.\nThis measure is expected to take effect from 1 July 2015. At the time of publishing, these changes had not become law.\nA head company of a consolidated group or multiple entry consolidated (MEC) group must complete the schedule and lodge it with the Company tax return 2016 (NAT 0656), if any of the following apply:\nThe total of the group's tax losses and net capital losses carried forward to later income years is greater than $100,000.\nThe total of its tax losses and net capital losses transferred from joining entities is greater than $100,000.\nThe total of its tax losses deducted and net capital losses applied is greater than $100,000.\nIt has an interest in a controlled foreign company (CFC) that has current year losses greater than $100,000.\nIt has an interest in a CFC that has deducted or carried forward a loss to later income years greater than $100,000.\nIt is a life insurance company, or is treated as a life insurance company under Subdivision 713-L of the ITAA 1997, and has a total of complying superannuation class tax losses and net capital losses carried forward to later income years greater than $100,000 (complete part D of the schedule).\nThe examples provided in these instructions are for illustration purposes only and may use lower figures, for simplicity.\nA head company may need to complete the schedule for certain aspects of its net capital losses. While some of the information requested in the schedule is also requested in the Capital gains tax (CGT) schedule 2016 (NAT 3423) (CGT schedule), a head company that completes a consolidated groups losses schedule may also need to complete a CGT schedule.\nIf the head company completes the schedule for any aspect of its losses, it must complete all relevant parts of the schedule. For example, if a head company completes the schedule as a result of having tax losses and net capital losses carried forward to later income years greater than $100,000, it must also provide details of controlled foreign company (CFC) losses, even if the total of these losses is less than $100,000.\nThese instructions are based on provisions relating to consolidated groups. Some of those provisions are modified in Division 719 of the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997 (ITAA 1997) in relation to MEC groups.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1735710"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6164149641990662,"wiki_prob":0.6164149641990662,"text":"Some banking businesses are structured so that shares in the licensed bank are held by a holding company. Members of the public invest in the bank by acquiring publicly listed shares in the holding company.\nTo allow for this, the exemption for certain shares in a publicly listed foreign bank is extended to an interest that an Australian resident holds in a holding company with a wholly owned subsidiary that is a foreign bank. [section 504]\nA company will qualify for the exemption from the FIF measures as a holding company of a bank if the following requirements are satisfied:\nYou hold shares in the holding company of a class listed on any stock market of a stock exchange approved in regulation 152I, Schedule 12 of the Regulations. See Appendix 1: Approved stock exchanges for more information.\nDesignated a bank\nThe holding company is included in a class of companies designated as a bank or engaged in banking on either:\nan approved international sectoral classification system.\nSee Appendix 3: Approved international sectoral classification systems for more information.\nThe class of shares you have in the holding company must be widely held and actively traded on a regular basis on a stock market of an approved stock exchange during the period in which the exemption applies.\nSubsidiaries principally engaged in banking business\nIf the holding company has only one wholly owned subsidiary, that subsidiary must be authorised under the law of its place of residence to carry on banking business and have been principally engaged in the active carrying on of a banking business.\nIf the holding company has more than one wholly owned subsidiary, the principal activities of the wholly owned subsidiaries in the group, considered together, must be the active carrying on of a banking business. At least one of the wholly owned subsidiaries must be authorised under the law of its place of residence to carry on banking business.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1656664"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5548303723335266,"wiki_prob":0.4451696276664734,"text":"How much of the day has passed\nTime plays very important role in life of any person . Time and clock are very closed relation of each other in modern age\nTime, a central theme in modern life, has for most of human history been thought of in very imprecise terms.\nThe day and the week are easily recognized and recorded – though an accurate calendar for the year is hard to achieve. The forenoon is easily distinguishable from the afternoon, provided the sun is shining, and the position of the sun in the landscape can reveal roughly how much of the day has passed. By contrast the smaller parcels of time – hours, minutes and seconds – have until recent centuries been both unmeasurable and unneeded.\nSundial and water clock: from the 2nd millennium BC\nThe movement of the sun through the sky makes possible a simple estimate of time, from the length and position of a shadow cast by a vertical stick. (It also makes possible more elaborate calculations, as in the attempt of Erathosthenes to measure the world – see Erathosthenes and the camels). If marks are made where the sun’s shadow falls, the time of day can be recorded in a consistent manner.\nThe result is the sundial. An Egyptian example survives from about 800 BC, but the principle is certainly familiar to astronomers very much earlier. However it is difficult to measure time precisely on a sundial, because the sun’s path throug the sky changes with the seasons. Early attempts at precision in time-keeping rely on a different principle.\nThe water clock, known from a Greek word as the clepsydra, attempts to measure time by the amount of water which drips from a tank. This would be a reliable form of clock if the flow of water could be perfectly controlled. In practice it cannot. The clepsydra has an honourable history from perhaps 1400 BC in Egypt, through Greece and Rome and the Arab civlizations and China, and even up to the 16th century in Europe. But it is more of a toy than a timepiece.\nThe hourglass, using sand on the same principle, has an even longer career. It is a standard feature on 18th-century pulpits in Britain, ensuring a sermon of sufficient length. In a reduced form it can still be found timing an egg.\nA tower clock in China: 1094\nAfter six years’ work, a Buddhist monk by the name of Su Song completes a great tower, some thirty feet high, which is designed to reveal the movement of the stars and the hours of the day. Figures pop out of doors and strike bells to signify the hours.\nThe power comes from a water wheel occupying the lower part of the tower. Su Song has designed a device which stops the water wheel except for a brief spell, once every quarter of an hour, when the weight of the water (accumulated in vessels on the rim) is sufficient to trip a mechanism. The wheel, lurching forward, drives the machinery of the tower to the next stationary point in a continuing cycle.\nSource : www.historyworld.net\nDisaster's countdown\nPatriotic Energy Booster ...Vande Mataram\nFountain of Wealth...\nProteins from 80-million-year-old dinosaur bones.\nResearchers recently confirmed it is possible to extract proteins from 80-milliodinosaur n-year-old dinosaur bones. The discovery sparks hopes for new insights…\nSmartphone and 5 minuets charging\nSmartphones with batteries that fully charge in five minutes could be available to consumers next year. The technology was first…\nD o n ' t Depress ......Read this ........\nDon't Depress ......Read this ........ “Life is 10% what happens to us and 90% how we react to it.”– Dennis…","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1460685"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6027964949607849,"wiki_prob":0.3972035050392151,"text":"Early Christian/Byzantine Art (1)\nAncient Greece and Hellenistic States (2)\n10000–1000 BCE (1)\n1000–300 BCE (2)\nCE 500–1000 (1)\n1000–300 BCE x\nFashion, Jewellery, and Body Art x\nArtist, Architect, or Designer x\nDexamenos of Chios\nDimitris Plantzos\n(fl 5th century bc).\nGreek gem-engraver, presumably born on the island of Chios. His signature survives on four of the gems he engraved, all fine specimens of 5th-century Classical Greek art. Two of these works come from sites in southern Russia, in the region to the north of the Black Sea, widely populated by Greek colonists since the 6th century bc. It is thus suggested that Dexamenos was active in the Black Sea colonies, catering for the Greeks residing there or for clientele drawn among the native populations, who widely interacted with the Greeks in most matters, as well as art.\nBetween 480 and 450 bc, gem-cutting in mainland Greece and the islands had undergone significant changes, gradually abandoning Late Archaic forms and motifs. The shape of choice was the scaraboid, a plain-backed, often highly domed oval stone, carrying a device engraved on its flat side. These stones were perforated lengthways, in order to be fitted in a metal swivel hoop or a plain piece of string. Chalcedony is the commonest material, in its white and blue varieties, though there are many examples cut in cornelian, rock crystal, agate and jasper. Dexamenos’ four signed works show a remarkable variety of subject-matter, as well as being some of the finest examples of Greek art of the time (...\nEleutherna\n[Satra]\nGreek city situated on the island of Crete, by the north-west foothills of mount Psiloritis (anc. Ida), 30 km south-east of the present-day city of Rethymnon. It was a centre for Aegean and Greek culture from the Prehistoric to the Byzantine periods (4th millennium bc–7th century bc).\nAncient Eleutherna is a typical example of a Cretan polis (city) inhabited continuously from at least from the 9th century bc (the so-called ‘Dark Age’ of Greek history) to the late Roman and Byzantine period (6th–7th century bc). Even before that, archaeological finds suggest the existence of a continuous presence on the site from the late Neolithic (4th millennium bc) through to a flourishing Minoan site of the 3rd to 2nd millennia bc. Although later construction all but eliminated traces of prehistoric architecture, there is still significant evidence to confirm unbroken habitation. In historical times (9th century...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1115596"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6681641340255737,"wiki_prob":0.6681641340255737,"text":"String of Burger King burglaries reported on North, South Sides\nCHICAGO (WLS) -- Businesses are being warned after a string of reported burglaries targeting Burger King restaurants on the city's North and South Sides.\nInvestigators say each time, the two suspects allegedly damaged security systems and cut wires to outside lighting. Once inside, the suspects broke into the restaurant's safe, police said.\nIncidents were reported at the following locations:\n5211 S. Cicero Ave. on Jan. 7 around 1:30 a.m.\n2701 N. Western Ave. on Jan. 27 around 2:05 a.m.\n3728 S. Archer Ave. on Jan. 29 around 1:45 a.m.\n2840 W. North Ave. on Feb. 2 around 2 a.m.\nAnyone with information on these incidents is encouraged to contact Chicago police at 312-744-8263.\narcher heightslincoln parkburglary","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line818714"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.571384847164154,"wiki_prob":0.42861515283584595,"text":"CHIN344 Writing China: Texts, Ideas and History\nA cultural-historical approach to examining the transformations of the Chinese culture of writing in the modern world. The course is taught in English. No previous knowledge of Chinese is required.\nWhy did language activists propose to abolish Chinese characters and replace them with the Latin alphabet at the beginning of the 20th century? How do Chinese characters enjoy a reversal of fate in the 21st century by tapping into new media technology? This paper examines the history of modern China and the transformations of today's China in terms of the changing mediums and practices of the Chinese language.\nWriting China: Texts, Ideas and History\nCHIN344\n18 200-level CHIN or HIST points\nCHIN 244\nSuitable for students specialising in any discipline.\nlanguages@otago.ac.nz\nConvenor: Dr Lorraine Wong\nThe paper examines the relation between Chinese \"language\" and \"culture\" by analysing the cultural implications of different modern mediums of the Chinese language appearing in China from the late 19th century to the present. The primary materials of this paper include not only Chinese literary texts and intellectual essays on the themes of linguistic modernisation and nationalisation, but also songs, films, art works and digitalised representations.\nQuestions to be explored include: the interface between Pinyin, Chinese characters and the Latin alphabet in relation to global media culture; Mao Zedong as a poet and a calligrapher; the allegorical articulations of the Cultural Revolution (1966-76) in the fake Chinese characters created by Chinese avant-garde artists; as well as the ways Chinese artists respond to and resist globalisation by re-imaging the Chinese script in terms of digital culture.\nNOTE: This paper is also offered as CHIN 344 - the content of the paper is the same for both CHIN 244 and CHIN 344, but assessment is differentiated between the two levels.\nAll required readings are available on Blackboard.\nGlobal perspective, Interdisciplinary perspective, Communication, Critical thinking, Cultural understanding, Research.\nBy participating in lectures, tutorials and screenings, students will gain:\nAn understanding of the complex, evolving and non-homogenous nature of the Chinese language (both as a medium and as a practice).\nAn understanding of the main themes of Chinese intellectual debates and their influences on Chinese society.\nA critical awareness of the tensions between old traditions and modern situations facing Chinese thinkers, writers and artists.\nBy reading and completing the assigned readings/tasks, student will develop:\nAn ability to articulate the connections between modern Chinese history and media culture in the global contexts.\nA historically-informed, up-to-date and critical knowledge about the transformations of Chinese literary culture.\nAn ability to independently investigate a particular topic focusing on aspects of past or contemporary Chinese society by refining their research and argumentation skills through essay-writing, tutorial discussion and in-class presentation.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line933534"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.591729998588562,"wiki_prob":0.591729998588562,"text":"SumUp becomes first mobile payment company to hit profitability\nEurope’s leading mPOS provider doubled its revenue in six months\nLONDON – SEPTEMBER 6TH, 2016 – SumUp, the leading mobile point-of-sale (mPOS) company, today announced that it has reached profitability. The company has doubled its revenues in the last six months and is approaching $100 million in annual revenue. Launched four years ago, SumUp has disrupted the payment industry by offering card acceptance at a fraction of the cost of traditional solutions. Today, the company enables small merchants in 15 countries to accept card payments in a simple, secure and cost-effective way with a team of more than 300 people. By focusing on small businesses, SumUp targets the so-called long tail of the market, a space with tight margins where no other payment company has ever been able to make a profit.\n“We are the world’s first company to prove that empowering small merchants with card acceptance can be a profitable business, despite tight margins in the long tail”, said Daniel Klein, CEO of SumUp. “By building our own hardware, payment gateway and merchant service business we have reduced the cost of owning a card acceptance terminal to a tenth in just four years. Nothing can stop us now and we will keep making card acceptance more and more affordable around the globe.”\nAbout SumUp SumUp is a leading financial technology company that is set to become the first ever global card acceptance brand. The company enables businesses to accept card payments at the Point-of-Sale or on the go in a simple, secure and cost-effective way. SumUp is the only company to offer an end-to-end EMV card acceptance solution built on proprietary hardware and mobile apps. This unique offering enabled SumUp to rapidly expand into 15 markets, including the U.S., Brazil and Germany, making it the mPOS company with the largest global footprint. The company has gone on to develop a full suite of SDKs and APIs for third parties to integrate card payments into their mobile apps. SumUp has been backed by renowned investors, including Groupon, BBVA Ventures, Holtzbrinck Ventures and American Express. In April 2016 SumUp has merged with the mPOS company payleven to create the global leader in mobile payment.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line225289"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.985291063785553,"wiki_prob":0.985291063785553,"text":"Mid-Days with Jen AustinMid-Days with Jen Austin\n35 Years Ago: Pink Floyd’s Richard Wright Goes Pop With Zee\nHarvest/EMI\nThe only album released by Richard Wright’s band Zee will be remastered 35 years after its arrival. Sadly, the late Pink Floyd keyboardist isn't here to see if this synth-pop detour receives a better welcome than it did in 1984.\nZee was a short-lived collaboration between Wright and Dave Harris, frontman of the New Romantic band Fashion, and Identity was their only release. Based heavily on the Fairlight CMI, then a cutting-edge synthesizer and audio workstation, its electronic sound failed to inspire fans of either parent band, and it sank without trace. Later, even Wright called it an “experimental mistake.”\nThe partnership was formed after Harris left Fashion in 1982, and was told by saxophonist Raff Ravenscroft that Wright was in a similar position. “Raff mentioned that Rick had been fired by the band, and Rick was looking to set up a new band,” Harris told A Fleeting Glimpse in 2018. “When we got back to London, I met up with Rick, Raff and some other musicians who had been selected. From here we had two or three rehearsals. The other musicians were mainly session guys and had a heavy workload. Therefore the number of players started to change every time due to their work constraints. … I suggested we did the album as a two-piece, and worried about the players when we came to gig. Rick agreed and the plan was set.”\nHarris moved into Wright’s home to be closer to the studio where the Fairlight could be used. “We spent hours and hours just experimenting with it at first,” Wright said soon after the record’s release. “The great thing about the Fairlight is that every time you go back to it, you learn something else. We had to get control over it though, because it would have been very easy just to have ended up making funny noises.”\n“Rick wanted to take a more modern approach to this new album,” Harris added, noting that the keyboardist was going through “an insecure period in his life.” Ultimately, that meant Wright abandoned plans to sing lead vocals. “I came up with the name Zee after the album was recorded,\" Harris said. \"I just liked the sound of it and the look; Identity was a good name because of the two different characters involved.\"\nWhatever he came to think of it, the album offered Wright a rare moment to work outside the confines of his legacy with Pink Floyd. \"For me it is exciting working with Dave because there were things that he was doing that I had not done before and vice versa,\" he once mused. \"I think that Zee has given us musical opportunities that quite frankly neither of us were able to explore in our previous groups.\"\nListen to Zee Perform 'Confusion'\nHarris told A Fleeting Glimpse that he'd been unaware of the LP’s poor reception on release, only discovering it as social media expanded. At the same time, however, he said easier global communication meant Harris heard from others who actually loved Identity. “Rick wanted to do a follow up album straight away,” Harris said. “I had been offered a co-production of an album for another artist [and] I took the production job. Obviously, I wasn’t as financially well off as Rick, and couldn’t afford to take another year off writing a new album.”\nWright didn't issue another solo album for 12 years, and by then he'd already served a stint with David Gilmour and Nick Mason with a reunited Pink Floyd. In keeping, Broken China focused on more typical prog sounds, rather than the synthy experiments of Identity. \"We made the whole record on the Fairlight, which was an amazing machine at the time,\" Wright told M. Blake in 1996, \"but which now seems rather dated.\"\nIdentity remains, Harris admits, a product of its era. “The main thing I wish is that the Fairlight wasn’t so strong in the compositions,\" he told A Fleeting Glimpse. \"Having said that, it was the keyboard and the new sound and sequencer of the time, so that’s that. I wish Rick had been up to singing some lead vocals, and writing some lyrics.”\nThe remastered, extended version of Identity – which Burning Shed describes as “one of the most intriguing pop music partnerships of the 1980s” – will be released on May 24. Harris is thrilled with the results: “The digitalization and subsequent EQing has brought out a lot of frequencies,\" he said in a news release, \"especially bottom end which have become available because of the new amazing software plugins that are available.\"\nPink Floyd Solo Albums Ranked\nYou Think You Know Pink Floyd?\nNext: Top 10 Richard Wright Pink Floyd Songs\nSource: 35 Years Ago: Pink Floyd’s Richard Wright Goes Pop With Zee\nFiled Under: Pink Floyd, Richard Wright\nTemple Mayor’s Fitness Council Issues 2019 Corporate Challenge","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line67653"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6766785979270935,"wiki_prob":0.3233214020729065,"text":"Daily Content Archive as of Tuesday, July 3, 2018\n(as of Tuesday, July 3, 2018)\nsoul-searching\nDefinition: (noun) A penetrating examination of one's motives, convictions, and attitudes.\nSynonyms: self-analysis\nUsage: Mary's therapist told her she was going to have to be introspective and do much soul-searching if she hoped to learn what was at the root of her depression.\nThe past simple tense (also called the simple past tense, or simply the past simple) is used to express completed actions. The past simple is often used with what other part of speech?\tMore...\nIn Hinduism, Maya is recognized as a powerful force that creates the cosmic illusion that the phenomenal world is real. Seeing through the illusion is seen as a path to liberating the soul. Originally, the word was used to refer to the wizardry with which a god can make humans believe in an illusion. Maya is also the name of the Hindu goddess of illusion, and because of this association, it is a common girl's name in India. What other religion regards the physical world as illusory and unreal?\tMore...\nQuebec City Founded by Samuel de Champlain (1608)\nFrenchman Samuel de Champlain founded Quebec City as a trading post at the confluence of the St. Lawrence and St. Charles rivers. From this and subsequent settlements Catholic missionaries, explorers, and fur traders pushed across N America. Begun with just 32 colonists, the city is now home to about 500,000. Most residents are of French descent, despite the fact that the area was ceded to the British in 1763. Because many continental explorations began in the region, Quebec is known as what?\tMore...\nAlfred Habdank Skarbek Korzybski (1879)\nKorzybski was a Polish-American linguist who developed a school of thought known as general semantics. He aimed to distinguish between words and the objects they describe, as well as between individual objects all described by the same word. He stressed the arbitrary nature of language and other symbols and the problems that result from misunderstanding their nature. Why did Korzybski once trick his students into eating dog biscuits during a lecture?\tMore...\nExamine your words well, and you will find that even when you have no motive to be false, it is a very hard thing to say the exact truth, even about your own immediate feelings.\nGeorge Eliot (1819-1880)\ncool customer\n— Someone who remains even-tempered, especially in stressful situations. More...\nZambia Unity Day (2018)\nBecause Zambia is composed of several different tribal groups, the founders of the country promoted the idea of national unity as a means to keep the young nation from falling apart. Zambia Unity Day was created to help foster solidarity between the diverse groups that make up the country. The slogan \"One Zambia, One Nation\" is used to signify the goal of the holiday. Remembrance speeches on Unity Day stress that people of varying backgrounds and political beliefs had come together to work for Zambian independence. More...\nToday's topic: sending\ngranulated sugar - So called because the last step in processing white table sugar is sending it through a granulator, where it is dried and formed into tiny grains. More...\nmission - First denoted sending the Holy Spirit into the world, from Latin mittere, \"send.\" More...\nperennial - First meant \"remaining leafy throughout the year\"; plants living three or more years—dying aboveground and sending up fresh growth every year—are perennials. More...\nradio - An abbreviation of radiotelegraphy, the sending of messages by electromagnetic rays. More...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1083486"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6568926572799683,"wiki_prob":0.6568926572799683,"text":"June 25, 2019 / mascara / 0 Comments\nJungle Without Water and Other Stories\nby Sreedhevi Iyer\nGazebo Books\nReviewed by MATTHEW da SILVA\nThe good things in this collection of short stories, Jungle Without Water, are very good indeed. But before talking about some of them in detail I want to briefly touch on the major theme of this book, which is the migrant experience in many of its different phases. In each of the stories mentioned in this review the main subject of the work is the way that people fit into society when they, or their antecedents, come from somewhere else. In some of the stories the main characters are people from India living in Malaysia but the title story, for example, takes as its subject an Indian student living in Brisbane, in Australia.\nWhile it’s easy to thus find a unifying theme for the book, the narratives Iyer creates are not totally dominated by it. The clash of identity and custom that in one of her stories troubles an Indian-Malay living in Kuala Lumpur might be equally relevant for an Anglo businessman living in a house in the eastern suburbs of Sydney. In fact, where Iyer stumbles it is where the standard postcolonial narrative gains unnecessary prominence and politics overshadows art. The best stories here focus on the seeming-random details of lived experience.\nThe second story in the collection, which is titled ‘The Lovely Village’, is written as a fairytale and it takes as its subject the treatment of migrants who want to come into a village where there is equality for all. This story stood out for me in that it seemed not to be as deeply rooted in lived experience as the other stories in the book, and I found it to be rather weak in conception and lacking in the kind of impact that characterises many of the other stories.\nAfter finishing several of the stories I felt a physical thrill on the skin of my neck, which is always a sign to me that the work I have just completed was particularly successful. I more often get this kind of sensation when reading a good short story or a good poem, as such methods of storytelling tend to conclude on a strong tonic note that reverberates once the final word has been consumed. Novels do not usually finish in this way and their impact tends to be spread out over longer stretches of text, with less sudden impact.\nThe first story in the collection, which I have already mentioned, is its title story. It deals with a young man named Jogi who is living in the Queensland capital with the aim of studying at university. His links with his family back in India remain strong, and one day after he has arrived in Australia his mother, who has stayed behind in his homeland, asks him to say a prayer for her husband who has to undertake a transfer for work. She is worried about how the transfer will affect Jogi’s father and family tradition maintains that prayers Jogi says are particularly effective.\nJogi relies on his friend Sandeep, who has lived in Brisbane for three weeks longer than Jogi, to help him carry out his assigned task. They visit a holy man in a place of worship in multicultural Brisbane but when Jogi sits down to pray nothing comes out of his mouth. They visit another holy place, this time one run by Westerners who follow Krishna, and they tell him that the particular prayer he wants to say is not permitted. Once again Jogi leaves a place where he should have been able to perform his familial duty, without being able to do so. He eventually fulfils his obligation but it happens, almost by accident, with the aid of a teenage girl who does nothing more than talk to Jogi one day on the street.\nI won’t say anything more, as I feel as though I have already given away more than I should, but I felt that this story served to say important things about multiculturalism and about the migrant experience, things that other types of document would struggle to say. The words of the title, “a jungle without water”, pop up at two places in the story and they function to bring together disparate parts of the narrative, making the interstices between things so narrow that what happens seems like fate. This is an elegant story that functions to convey truths about immigration in a way that everybody can understand.\nThe context of that story is local for an Australian and so the way into the narrative was easier for me than it was in some of the other stories in the collection, for example ‘The Man With Two Wives’. This story is focalised entirely through the consciousness of a Indian-Malay who runs shops in Malaysia retailing food and it is written using the kind of language that the man, who is not badly educated but who uses Malay, Indian, and English words in his daily conversations, would normally employ. It is a small tour-de-force that says much about the culture that underpins the story. You feel as though you know this man well and when you hear his story of starting a course of study in accountancy, and there meeting a young woman named Lata, you get to experience his feelings in a way that vividly brings his world to life.\nThe protagonist is never named and neither is his wife. His daughter is Malathi and she ends up gaining prominence at the end of the story. His relationship with Lata, which causes so many tongues in his town to wag, is one of great importance to the protagonist and it is clear that while he married for the sole purpose of satisfying his mother’s wishes, with Lata things are different. His wife is only interested in buying gold jewellery and sarees, but Lata listens to what he has to say and her attention serves to justify an interior existence that the man’s daily business and family life does little to fulfil.\nOne day, the protagonist attends a job interview that Lata has encouraged him to go to. He enters a tall building by the sea and sits down in a room in front of a group of men, one of whom is a Westerner. The way his wife and the way Lata behave once the interview is over, however, tell him things about his world that he didn’t understand before. This is an effective, thoughtful, and powerful work of fiction that efficiently performs the tasks the author has set for it.\nI will take a quick look at one other story in the collection, and it is also one that appears in the first half of the book. This is ‘Green Grass’, and it deals with a man named Mohan and his wife, who is a Westerner named Rachel, who come back to India to visit family. The event is an important one for the whole village where Mohan grew up. The way people living in the village treat Rachel, because of where she comes from and because of her relationship with her husband, contains the dramatic material the story relies on to communicate its messages about globalisation. It is focalised entirely through the consciousness of one of the villagers.\nEach of these stories is different from the others in so many ways: in the way the narrative evolves, in the kinds of characters portrayed, and in the plot devices that each relies on to fulfil its purpose. There is a wry and knowing candour in many of Iyer’s stories. It not only helps to give the reader confidence in the author’s sincerity and intelligence but it also, paradoxically, allows Iyer to set herself apart from the drama and to view the events that unfold with a dispassionate eye. Even as you sense she cares very much about her creations, she also situates herself at a certain distance from them as they go about their business in her narratives. And despite their differences, each story mentioned here is excellent because it communicates a large amount of information in a small space.\nI found other stories in Jungle Without Water to be less powerful than these and there are others too that I have not mentioned that I also thought good. There is plenty in this collection, which was first published two years ago, for any reader, and especially for an Australian one. After all, we are living in an Asian nation.\nI want to finish with a note about the cover illustration used for the book. The watercolour employed is by Julian Meagher and his gallerist is Edwina Corlette, who has her shop, appropriately for the collection, in Brisbane.\nWith my mother I lived up north for five-and-a-half years. On one occasion I drove her when she was elderly down to the capital to see Corlette’s shop. Corlette’s parents had lived in the same suburb in Sydney where I grew up and she remembered mum because of our family’s gift shop. In fact everybody living there knew about Miss Phyllis Caldecott’s Home Accessories – the name used for the shop was my paternal grandmother’s – and we did a roaring trade at Christmastime, when people give presents to family members and to friends. Among the items mum and granny sold in large numbers were Indian cotton print dresses; this was the 60s and these kinds of garments were all the rage.\nThe use of Meagher’s painting for this collection seemed to me to be something, therefore, like fate, like what happens in its title story. A small sign of a kind you sometimes come across telling you that there are things in the world that cannot be understood entirely through reason.\nMATTHEW da SILVA is a journalist and writer who lives in Sydney.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1300714"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.994059681892395,"wiki_prob":0.994059681892395,"text":"Bill O’Reilly Covered Falklands War From “Expense Account Zone” Says Fellow CBS News Correspondent Eric Engberg\nBy Lisa de Moraes\nLisa de Moraes\nTV Columnist\nMore Stories By Lisa\nThird Democratic Debates Set For Houston, But Format Details TBA – Update\n‘CBS This Morning’ Makes More Headlines With Bill Barr Exclusive\nJeff Glor Sticks With CBS News As Co-Host Of Morning Show’s Saturday Edition\n“It was not a war zone or even close. It was an ‘expense account zone’,” former CBS News correspondent Eric Jon Engberg says of Bill O’Reilly’s time in Buenos Aires covering the Falklands War. Engberg jumped into the fracas between the Fox News Channel star and Mother Jones, which this week published an article, “Bill O’Reilly Has His Own Brian Williams Problem.” NBC News has suspended Williams for six months while it continues to investigate the degree to which Williams misrepresented his experiences covering various breaking news stories for NBC including the Iraq War, Hurricane Katrina and other situations, including gifts he said, in talk show appearances, he received from members of the military. In the article, Mother Jones questions O’Reilly’s descriptions of some of his experiences as a CBS News correspondent covering the 1982 Falklands War between Great Britain and Argentina.\nCBS News has now been dragged into the controversy – Fox News says it’s contacted the news division and asked them to release the footage in question.\nMeanwhile, Fox News said this afternoon in a statement O’Reilly will address Engberg’s claims on Fox News Channel’s Mediabuzz program tomorrow. FNC also said The O’Reilly Factor asked Engberg to appear on his Monday show but he declined.\nHere is Engberg’s Facebook post about being in Buenos Aires with O’Reilly covering the Falklands War for CBS News:","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1351752"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6315333843231201,"wiki_prob":0.3684666156768799,"text":"Guidance for Resilience Planning\nThis diagram outlines the key steps in Second Nature’s framework for resilience planning. See the Commitments Implementation Handbook for an example timeline for completing these steps for the Climate or Resilience Commitment.\nSecond Nature’s framework encourages schools to not only assess and reduce vulnerability, but also to assess and enhance overall resilience and adaptive capacity. Campuses should go beyond managing extreme and potentially catastrophic events; they should proactively plan for preferable futures.\nThese key steps appear to be separate and linear components of resilience assessment and planning. In reality this is an iterative process, and campuses may be working on several steps at once.\nCampus Community Task Force\nIt is not possible to be a resilient campus without being part of a resilient community. All campuses interact with some form of external community and share resources across campus-community boundaries. A requirement of the Climate and Resilience Commitments is to coordinate resilience planning and implementation with the community.\nMany cities, towns, and neighborhoods already have resilience-focused efforts in place. Some may already have existing Resilience Plans. Campuses are not required to write a resilience plan for their town or city, however it is important to be aware of efforts happening in the community and understand how they may align with campus goals and progress.\nIn some cases campuses may comprise the majority of a town’s population and resources. If they have the capacity to do so, colleges or universities can choose to create a joint campus-community resilience plan that includes shared goals and indicators.\nIt is up to each campus to set the boundaries of what they consider their “community,” and to determine the best way to coordinate around climate resilience.\nThis document provides guidance on how to develop a Campus-Community Structure:\nWorking with the Community on Resilience: Campus-Community Structure\nResilience Assessment\nThe resilience assessment is meant to provide a baseline of current resilience activities on campus and in the community, develop initial indicators of resilience through a multi-stakeholder process, and identify current vulnerabilities related to climate change.\nKey steps in a resilience assessment include:\nUnderstand strengths and assets on campus, in the community, and across both.\nUnderstand weaknesses and vulnerabilities on campus, in the community, and across both. This includes climate change hazards, impacts, and existing conditions that may be exacerbated by climate change or affect a school and community’s capacity to cope and adapt.\nDevelop initial indicators of resilience that help benchmark current status as well as identify where a campus and/or community hopes to improve capacity in the future.\nIdentify key overlaps and gaps between the campus and community assets and vulnerabilities.\nThere are many approaches to completing an initial campus-community resilience assessment. Schools should tailor the comprehensiveness of their assessment to the capacity of the staff or committees doing the work. For the purposes of fulfilling the Climate or Resilience Commitments, the assessment could be part of a short workshop, a series of longer workshops, interviews and surveys across the campus and community, or part of a different process the campus develops.\nWhether campuses are organizing a workshop, conducting surveys, or developing a different process to complete the Resilience Assessment, it is important to incorporate the views of a wide range of stakeholders. Capturing input from many stakeholders will help campuses understand all the dimensions of resilience, ensure no major vulnerabilities are left out of the assessment, and identify a broader range of opportunities.\nThis document includes examples of campus and community stakeholders to consider as part of the Resilience Assessment:\nIdentifying Stakeholders\nWorkshop Exercise Idea:\nAs part of a workshop, ask people to write down their ideas of strengths, assets, and vulnerabilities on sticky notes and place them on a large poster. After the initial ideas are there, participants can use colored dots to vote on which ones they agree with. This is a great way to engage a diversity of participants and get very different ideas of what people consider to be assets or vulnerabilities.\nThis document provides guidance on completing an initial campus-community resilience assessment and filling out the Resilience Assessment report in the Reporting Platform. It includes examples of completed assessments and additional ideas for indicators and metrics:\nHow to Conduct a Campus-Community Resilience Assessment\nStrengths and Assets\nSecond Nature recommends that campuses begin the resilience assessment process by identifying current strengths, capacities, and existing resilience activities. This process may also include envisioning ideal future scenarios, so that campuses and communities have an idea of what a preferable future might look like.\nWhy lead with strengths?\nMany planning efforts for resilience begin with a vulnerability assessment. If campuses already have a vulnerability assessment, great! It is perfectly fine to begin with this. However, Second Nature advocates beginning with existing strengths, assets, and capacities for a couple reasons:\nStarting with vulnerabilities means decisions tend to focus on reducing negatives. This can limit the opportunity to create more rounded, long-term, multi-faceted and ongoing resilience efforts across the campus and community.\nWhen campuses address vulnerability before considering where the campus and community want to be in the future, they tend to assess future vulnerability based on current systems and infrastructure. For example, planning for the level of heat waves expected in 20 years should be in the context of the civic and campus systems expected in 20 years.\nIn other words, focusing on building a resilient system can be more beneficial than reducing individual vulnerabilities.\nStrengths and assets include features, capacities, characteristics, and resources that will help a campus and its community cope with climate change. The strengths and assets that the campus and community identify during the assessment are likely characteristics that should be continually reinforce and improved going forward (e.g. wage equality, recreational space that also protects against flooding, a healthy community). These strengths and assets will help the campus and community adapt and thrive in the face of climate impacts.\nIdeal Future Scenarios\nCampuses may choose to incorporate scenario planning exercises as part of the initial Resilience Assessment as a method to envision ideal future scenarios. This can help create a shared understanding of the type of future that is desirable for the campus and/or community. Scenario planning enables a campus and community to explore a range of futures and weigh the associated opportunities, benefits, challenges, and expected vulnerabilities. It can help bring to light common values, and identify a positive vision for the future. However, this is not required to implement the Climate or Resilience Commitment.\nMany communities have already been through scenario planning exercises. In this case campuses can use the information to inform resilience planning. If the scenario process did not involve the college or university campus, schools may want to organizing their own campus version to assess the role of the institution in the future of the community.\nIf a community has not already been through a scenario-driven process, it is recommended to spend some time considering what an ideal future may look like. This could be a brief “visioning exercise” as part of a resilience workshop, or it may be a more in-depth process itself. There is no single way to complete future scenario planning. Below are some steps that can be included.\nTip: Clearly articulate the end goal for the process and be clear about the geographic boundaries.\nExample: we want to focus on scenarios for 2030, create several scenarios and compare futures while keeping options open. This will be for the campus and city.\nExample: we want to create several scenarios and converge on one main scenario. This is just for the campus.\nInstead of starting with the whole community or campus, it’s possible to start with being a ’water resilient city’ or a ‘transportation resilient city’. While Second Nature encourages systems thinking, beginning with one theme will still touch on many of the areas of resilience capacity. This may be a more manageable process for those who are new to this effort.\nSuggested steps for Ideal Future Scenario Planning\nIdentify the stakeholders and ensure there is a communication plan to reach them.\nWhile the process should be inclusive with underrepresented groups present, there is also appropriate balance between inclusivity and too large a group to be productive. Some schools organize a series of stakeholder meetings, and some do just one or two workshops. Schools should decide based on staff, budget and the amount of joint effort possible with the city or community.\nSet a timeline for the scenario process.\nCreate a ‘business-as-usual’ scenario.\nBefore the workshop, create a scenario that includes a future campus and/or community that reflects development continuing as expected, demographics shifting as expected, and climate changing as expected.\nHold the scenario workshop(s).\nThere are many ways to do this, but consider starting by understanding what the participants think are strongly-held community values. This can include asking some either/or questions to gauge priorities. The answers may start to yield insights about whether there is more focus on economic development, natural resource conservation, social enhancement, etc.\nCreate the scenarios.\nUse the information gathered during the workshop(s) to generate one or more future scenarios. This may be an opportunity to utilize experts at the college or university. What are the high priorities of the future scenarios? What policies would support these priorities? What are some of the implications for the campus and community?\nAt this point, campuses should share the ideal scenario(s) back with the community. Now that there is a vision for the future, campuses can assess specific threats to achieving that vision. This likely includes climate changes and associated vulnerabilities that may impact the feasibility of the ideal scenario.\nArizona State University included a future visioning exercise as part of the Resilience Assessment. This blog post briefly describes how a shared vision was created and incorporated into the Resilience Assessment process.\nCampuses also need to identify weaknesses, and current and future vulnerabilities to climate change. This includes vulnerabilities both on campus, in the community, and across both. The weaknesses or vulnerabilities identified will be things to reduce or eliminate going forward (e.g. residents in floodplains, lack of weatherization of community housing, obesity, poor air quality days). Vulnerabilities may include direct hazards from the changing climate (such as drought, heat waves, and severe storms), and impacts from climate change or related events (such as infrastructure failure and disease outbreak). They may also include existing factors that are exacerbated by the effects of climate change, or that reduce a campus and community’s ability to cope and respond positively.\nAssessing Vulnerability\nFor the initial resilience assessment, some campuses may choose to focus on a high level understanding of vulnerabilities from the experience of various stakeholders, while some may complete a more in-depth vulnerability analysis. Both of these strategies are important. Campus and community stakeholders will understand vulnerabilities from their own perspectives and experiences, which helps ensure the needs of all community members are included. At the same time it may be necessary to complement this with a data-driven approach to further capture vulnerabilities. The exact extent of the vulnerability assessment will depend on campus capacity. A campus may also do an initial review of vulnerability towards the beginning of the resilience planning process, and complete a more detailed vulnerability assessment later as it incorporate resilience into a Climate Action Plan.\nSchools can look at past weather and climate events along with other stressors the community has experienced and do a preliminary analysis of impacts. Most communities will have events in the last couple decades to draw on – from snow emergencies to flooding, storms, and heat waves. Non-climate events such as widespread power outages or transportation failures can also be instructive.\nCampuses likely have faculty who study local events and their impacts and who can assist in providing data and information. This analysis is also a great opportunity for student projects and engagement. Schools should enlist as much help as possible from across the campus and community, drawing on existing data sets and input from experts.\nExample questions to assess impact:\nIf there have been heatwaves – are there particularly affected neighborhoods? what was the additional death rate? is that changing over time between different events? what was the lost income (not just damage cost)? Was there associated loss of power or public transportation? Was there damage to roads or transmission lines? Was there habitat impact? Are there policy changes as a result?\nAnticipating Climate Changes\nThere are many resources that project climate changes in the United States. Federal and state-level resources are a good place to start. Second Nature provides projected climate changes by region from the U.S. National Climate Assessment (NCA). This includes climate information from observed (recent) trends, near-term projections, and future projections out to 2100. It also provides information for several different emissions scenarios.\nThe information in the NCA and other government sources is unlikely to be as granular as the city scale. Schools may feel that this data is not detailed enough and seek out projections that are higher resolution and include a specific number instead of a range. A word of caution on this: High resolution future climate projections are not always supported by the science. Specific future values imply accuracy in prediction, which the scientific community does not currently have. Campus vulnerability assessments will need to incorporate some degree of uncertainty in projections. Framing the process as building overall resilience capacity (instead of responding to a specific expected climate change) can help reduce vulnerability to a range of possible impacts.\nInitial Indicators of Resilience\nA resilience assessment should help institutions understand where the campus and community currently stand, and lay the groundwork to develop a Climate Action Plan that incorporates resilience. Indicators and metrics are an important part of this process. In this guidance Second Nature considers indicators to be features or characteristics of the campus and/or community that the school wishes to assess. Metrics are specific values or data points that can describe the indicator, and can be measured to show progress over time. There may be many metrics that can measure and illustrate the status of any given indicator.\nBecause resilience relates to all aspects of a campus and community, Second Nature asks schools to consider each of these five dimensions of resilience:\nSocial Equity & Governance\nSocial Equity and Governance refers to the systems of governance on campus and in the community, levels of engagement among campus and community members, and the capacity of different groups to adapt and respond to climate change. This includes leadership, transparency and accountability, and communication across stakeholders both on campus and in the community. Campuses should consider the social fabric of the campus-community, education levels and opportunities, active networks among different groups in the campus-community, and social justice dynamics.\nHealth and Wellness refers to the ability of different groups on campus and in the community to fulfill their basic needs. This includes access to healthcare, food, water, housing, and sanitation. Campuses should consider the availability and affordability of healthcare, including emergency medical care capacity, food and potable water, and secure housing. Campuses should consider indicators for health & wellness both on an ongoing basis and in the case of emergencies or severe climate-related impacts.\nEcosystem Services refers to the environmental systems and services present in the campus-community. This may include the natural and geographic features of the region, city or town, and neighborhood. Campuses should consider natural assets such as tree canopy, undeveloped floodplains, air quality, and biodiversity. Campuses should also consider systems in place to govern or protect these assets, such as conservation easements, recreation parks, and rainwater management systems.\nInfrastructure refers to the physical structures built, owned, managed, and/or used by the campus-community. It also includes systems such as communication and public transportation. Infrastructure is often the most intuitive dimension of resilience, and many resilience assessments and plans tend to focus on physical infrastructure. Campuses should consider transportation systems, buildings, communication technology, and key features in the area such as bridges and dams.\nEconomic refers to the financial ability of the campus and community to proactively adapt to changing climate conditions and to respond positively to climate change events. This may include high-level trends such as GDP and unemployment rates, and more campus-specific indicators such as the existence of a climate adaptation fund. Campuses should consider the diversity of the campus-community’s local economy, availability of tax or other financial incentives to increase resilience, and levels of financial planning for emergencies.\nReporting on Indicators for the Resilience Assessment\nSecond Nature asks institutions to report on at least one indicator per dimension for the initial campus-community resilience assessment. The goal is to consider the entire social, environmental, and economic system that the campus is part of. The indicators for the Resilience Assessment are initial. Some of them may be strengths or capacities that were identified during the assessment process, and some may be vulnerabilities that need to be addressed. Institutions may also identify indicators that they wish to understand better but do not currently have all of the data on. In this case, they may report on the metrics that they plan to measure in the future.\nExample Indicators and Potential Metrics of Resilience\nIncorporating Resilience into the Climate Action Plan\nAfter completing the initial campus-community resilience assessment, schools need to develop a Climate Action Plan (CAP) that includes goals for increasing resilience. While schools may create a separate resilience plan, Second Nature recommends folding resilience objectives into the overall sustainability approach. The end result should be an integrated CAP that includes emissions mitigation along with adaptation and resilience.\nMany principles of planning for resilience are the same as planning for carbon neutrality, however campuses with existing CAPS should revisit their plans to ensure objectives are aligned and up to date. Consider whether or not the goals outlined for emissions reductions fit with increasing resilience. This may require amending some of the existing goals. The intent with this planning work is that it allows the campus (and community) systems to become more integrated and to reduce emissions while also enhancing the adaptability of the system.\nAs with the Resilience Assessment, there is no single correct process for incorporating resilience into a CAP. Campuses should use the outcomes from the Resilience Assessment process to select and prioritize actions, set measurable goals and targets, and identify strategies for implementation. For campuses that developed a shared future vision, consider what action steps need to be taken to achieve the desired future while moderating climate risks.\nThis document outlines how to incorporate resilience goals into CAPs, and how to complete the resilience portion of the Climate Action Plan report.\nHow to Report on Resilience Goals in a Climate Action Plan\nPrioritizing Action Steps\nResilience can be a broad topic that touches on every aspect of the campus and community; schools will likely need to narrow down actions from a long list of potential focus areas. The scope of resilience in a campus’ CAP should reflect the capabilities of the school. This means that campuses will need to prioritize actions and initiatives that address the most pressing vulnerabilities.\nThere are many strategies institutions can use to organize and prioritize action steps for inclusion in the CAP. The Resilience Prioritization Quadrant is one framework to help schools evaluate potential resilience action steps or initiatives.\nVisit the Resilience Prioritization Quadrant page for details.\nClimate Action Guidance\nInternal Carbon Pricing in Higher Education Toolkit\nMore Tools and Resources","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1578240"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6390582323074341,"wiki_prob":0.6390582323074341,"text":"The Middle East’s meeting place for crime\nWhy the United Arab Emirates needs a test to tackle shady characters\nJohn Coyne\nPHOTO: Chris Combe on Flickr\nLaw, National security | The World\nThe UAE has an enviously low crime rate, but has become a preferred destination for international criminals. A character test for those wanting visas to the country could help, John Coyne writes.\nThe United Arab Emirate’s low crime rates for offences ranging from pickpocketing to murder are the envy of most western countries. And the government’s continued investment in law enforcement ensures that it has the police to prevent this from changing anytime soon.\nBut over the last decade, despite these investments, a dark criminal cloud has descended on Dubai and Abu Dhabi.\nFor a long time, international criminals and terrorists have abused the UAE’s economic freedoms to launder their proceeds of crime. Over the last two decades, Dubai and Abu Dhabi gained reputations in international law enforcement circles as global money laundering hot spots.\nWith the introduction of new laws and legislation in 2014, the UAE government began a shock and awe campaign against financial crime in earnest. Since then, there’s been plenty of action, and plenty of arrests.\nLast year, Abu Dhabi’s Attorney General Ali Mohammad Abdullah Al Beloushi referred 54 men to the courts for their involvement in a single money laundering conspiracy. The regulators have also been busy. In June of this year, the Central Bank downgraded the licenses of seven exchange houses for anti-money laundering violations.\nPublicly, the government is sending a clear message to those committing financial crime: ‘we’re coming for you’.\nWhile this is all good news, a previously unrecognised crime problem is now emerging in the Emirates. Some of the globe’s most notorious international criminals are using it to lay low after committing crime, while other criminals are using it as a meeting place from which to plan and direct their next moves.\nMore on this: Does the world need an international anti-corruption court?\nLast year, a joint Dutch, Australian, and Dubai police operation revealed how notorious Australian criminals had travelled to the UAE to meet with criminal associates. This group had been involved in the smuggling of 1.9 tonnes of narcotics into Australia. While on this occasion the group were arrested, plenty of other similar meetings continue to occur in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.\nEarlier this year Australian authorities prevented another alleged organised crime figure from fleeing to Abu Dhabi. The man in question had been implicated in the attempted murder of a second Australian underworld figure.\nIn one case, a senior figure from an Australian motorcycle gang permanently resides in Dubai – and is allegedly still involved in criminal activities. Dubai authorities are unable to do anything about this man, as he has committed no criminal offence in the UAE and has no prior convictions.\nFar too many senior organised crime figures from western countries, like Australia, believe that the UAE offers them a degree of anonymity and safety. And for the moment this belief is well founded.\nThis year the problem was exacerbated by the UAE Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Relations suspension of the requirement for visa applicants to obtain good conduct certificates.\nIf the UAE’s police are going to be able to do anything about these criminals, then legislative change is needed. One possible avenue for addressing this problem is the re-introduction of a ‘character test’ for non-citizens and visa applicants seeking to enter and stay in the UAE. This character test should include obtaining records of the criminal histories of those wanting to enter and reside in the UAE.\nWhile there are plenty of dimensions to a character test, the issue of membership or association with criminals and crime groups should be covered. The bottom line should be that if you are, or have been, a member of a group or organisation, or had or have an association with a person, group or organisation that is suspected of being involved in criminal conduct, then you’re not welcome in the UAE.\nIf the UAE wants to shake off its international reputation as a meeting place for organised crime groups, then it’s going to have to ensure that its non-citizen visitors are not only law-abiding, but of good character.\nJohn Coyne is Head of Border Security at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute.\nThe unspoken threat that’s hurting Australians John Coyne\nA national determination to tackle hate crime John Coyne\nThe US, the new Myanmar and the dragon in the background MONISH TOURANGBAM\nNorth Korea is the litmus test for a nuclear weapons ban JOHN CARLSON\nHow to stop North Korea’s bomb JOE CIRINCIONE\nPolicy Forum’s top ten posts of 2018 TERRY WAITE\nThe sword of Damocles still hangs over the South China Sea YUN SUN\nTackling the region’s policy challenges MARTYN PEARCE","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line463869"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.583526074886322,"wiki_prob":0.583526074886322,"text":"Traditional, Folk and Indigenous Musics (2)\nChordophones (Stringed Instruments) (1)\nBowed Chordophones (1)\nIdiophones (Instrument Body Percussion) (1)\nXylophone (1)\nSouthwestern and South Central Europe (1)\nMusic Educator (10)\nMusic Educator x\nAfrica x\nAbdel-Rahim, Gamal\nSamha El-Kholy\n(b Cairo, Nov 25, 1924; d Königstein, Nov 23, 1988). Egyptian composer. His father performed classical Arab music with his own ensemble. After learning the piano and developing an interest in Western music, Gamal studied history at Cairo University (BA 1945), at the same time continuing his musical studies with Hans Hickmann and others. A government bursary enabled him to study musicology in Heidelberg with Georgiadis (...\nDoozie, Christopher\nLaurence Libin\n(b Jirapa, Ghana, June 22, 1958). Ghanaian xylophone maker, player, and teacher. Born into a family of gyilli makers and players in northwest Ghana, Doozie began playing at six years of age. When he was 12 his father taught him to make his first ...\nEssiet (Okon) Essiet\nLara Pellegrinelli\n(b Omaha, NE, Sept 1, 1956). Bass player of Nigerian descent. He learned classical violin for two years and began playing double bass and electric bass guitar while at high school in Portland, Oregon; he continued his education at Mount Hood Community College, where he studied privately with faculty members. After graduation he performed in Portland for three years and spent a brief period in Los Angeles. Essiet then moved to Europe and toured there with Don Moye’s quartet in ...\nForsyth, Malcolm\nWesley Berg\n(b Pietermaritzburg, Dec 8, 1936; d Edmonton, Alberta, July 5, 2011). Canadian composer and trombonist of South African origin. He earned undergraduate and postgraduate degrees from the University of Cape Town. After playing the trombone with the Cape Town SO (1961–7), he emigrated to Canada in ...\nGulli, Franco\nAnya Laurence\n(b Trieste, Italy, Sept 1, 1926; d Bloomington, IN, Nov 20, 2001). Violinist and teacher of Italian birth. Gulli began violin studies with his father, who had been a pupil of Ševčík and Marak at the Prague Conservatory, and graduated from the Conservatory of Trieste in ...\nKeïta, Mamady\nVera H. Flaig\n(b Balandugu, Guinea, West Africa, 1950). Drummer, director, and teacher of Guinean birth. Mamady Keïta began his official apprenticeship with the village djembéfola at the age of eight. By his late teens, he was lead drummer of Ballet D’Joliba. By 22 he became the company’s first drummer to act as artistic director. Upon his retirement from the ballet in ...\nMuyinda, Evaristo\nUlrich Wegner\n(b Nabbale, Kyaggwe, Buganda, June 2, 1916; d Oct 11, 1993). Ugandan instrumentalist and teacher . At the age of nine, Muyinda learnt to play the amadinda and akadinda log xylophones. In 1939, when Muteesa II became Kabaka of Buganda, Muyinda was appointed court musician in the ...\nPapas [Papadopoulos], Sophocles\nThomas F. Heck and Peter Danner\n(b Sopiki, Greece, Dec 18, 1893; d Alexandria, VA, Feb 26, 1986). American guitar teacher and publisher, born in Greece. At the age of 14 he moved from Greece to Cairo, Egypt, where he learned to play the mandolin. He returned to Greece in ...\nSeiber, Mátyás\nHugh Wood and Mervyn Cooke\n(b Budapest, May 4, 1905; d Kruger National Park, South Africa, Sept 24, 1960). British composer and teacher. Born into a musical family, he started to learn the cello at the age of ten, and from 1919 to 1924 studied at the Budapest Academy of Music with Adolf Shiffer (cello) and Kodály (composition). In ...\nZervos, Giorgos\nGeorge Leotsakos and Katerina Levidou\n(b Cairo, Dec 17, 1947). Greek composer and musicologist. Born to Greek parents in Egypt, he settled in Athens in 1961, where he studied theory and piano at the Hellenic Conservatory (1975–7), and composition with Yannis Ioannidis (1977–81) as well as physics at the University of Athens. He then went to Paris, where he studied musicology and the aesthetics of music at the Sorbonne, Panthéon Paris 1, with Michel Guiomar and Daniel Charles, as well as ‘musique formelle’ with Xenakis. He also attended Boulez’s seminars at the Collège de France (...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1290040"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8464863896369934,"wiki_prob":0.8464863896369934,"text":"Catholic schools in the united states\nTitle: Catholic schools in the united states\nSt. Thomas High School, a Catholic high school, in Houston\nCatholic schools in the United States are accredited by independent and/or state agencies, and teachers are generally certified. Catholic schools are supported through tuition payments and fund raising.\n2 Operation\n3 Entrance requirements\n4 Enrollment\n5 Public funding debate\nBy the middle of the 19th century, the Catholics in larger cities started building their own parochial school system.[1] The main impetus was fear that exposure to Protestant teachers in the public schools, and Protestant fellow students, would lead to a loss of faith. Protestants reacted by strong opposition to any public funding of parochial schools.[2] The Catholics nevertheless built their elementary schools, parish by parish, using very low paid and sisters without college educations as teachers.[3] This was not unlike the public school system, where college-educated teachers became the norm only in the 20th century.\nIn the classrooms, the highest priorities were piety, orthodoxy, and strict discipline. Knowledge of the subject matter was a minor concern, and in the late 19th century few of the teachers in parochial schools had gone beyond the 8th grade themselves. The sisters came from a wide number of religious orders, and there was no effort to provide joint teachers training programs. The bishops were indifferent. Finally around 1911, led by the Catholic University in Washington, Catholic colleges began summer institutes to train the sisters in pedagogical techniques. Long past World War II, the Catholic schools were noted for inferior conditions compared to the public schools, and less well-trained teachers.[4][5]\nMost Catholic elementary schools are operated by a local parish community, while secondary schools are usually operated by a diocese or archdiocese, or a religious institute, and often those in major cities are also attached to a Catholic university.[6]\nIn the United States, the term parochial school is commonly used to refer to Catholic schools, to distinguish it from private school (which can refer to either a nonsectarian school or other church-based school).[7]\nMost elementary schools are owned by a particular parish while high schools are often owned by a group of parishes (more common in the South), a religious institute (more common in Northeast), or a diocese. In the West, a mixture of schools operated by dioceses and religious institutes is common, with the older schools generally run by such institutes. Except in the case of independent schools, local priests are invariably members of the school board, and often at secondary schools are found among the teaching staff as well. In some dioceses the bishop holds the title of superintendent, while others have delegated this responsibility to the head of the Office of Catholic Schools. In terms of practicality, it is often the local priests who fulfill this function.\nMater Dei High School, a small Catholic high school in New Jersey\nMost Catholic elementary schools tend to be smaller than their public counterparts, and it is not unusual for such schools to have only one teacher and classroom per grade level. Additionally, grade levels often separated between grammar and middle schools (in the public schools) are generally not separated in Catholic schools; thus a student may attend the same school from kindergarten or first grade through eighth grade. One other major difference is that in most parts of the country, public schools provide bus service to their students, while Catholic schools rarely do.\nCatholic schools in the United States accept students of all religions, ethnic backgrounds, and ability. More competitive Catholic secondary schools tend to have tighter academic requirements and/or an entrance exam. It is a common expectation that non-Catholic students take religion classes and attend the spiritual exercises of the school. Many schools have a policy (sometimes written) banning proselytizing in any form.[8]\nThe United States had 7,498 Catholic schools in 2006-07, including 6,288 elementary schools and 1,210 secondary schools. In total there were 2,320,651 students, including 1,682,412 students in the elementary/middle schools and 638,239 in high schools.[9] Enrollment in the nation’s Catholic schools has steadily dropped to less than half of its peak at five million students 40 years ago, The New York Times reported in early 2009. At its peak in 1965, the number of U.S. parochial schools was more than 12,000, and roughly half of all Catholic children in America attended Catholic elementary schools, according to the National Catholic Educational Association. The same share in 2009 is about 15 percent. Among Latinos, the fastest-growing church group — soon to comprise a majority of Catholics in the United States — it is three percent. The article also reported on \"dozens of local efforts\" to turn the tide, including by the Archdiocese of Chicago and Washington, and dioceses in Memphis and Wichita, Kansas, as well as in the New York metro area.[10]\nPublic funding debate\nHeavily Protestant in the 19th century, most states passed a state constitutional amendment, referred to as the Blaine Amendment, forbidding tax money be used to fund parochial schools, a possible outcome of heavy immigration from Catholic Ireland after the 1840s. In 2002, the United States Supreme Court partially vitiated these amendments, in theory, when they ruled that vouchers were constitutional if tax dollars followed a child to a school, even if it were religious. However, no state had, by 2009, changed its laws to allow this.[11]\nSince 2000, 1,942 Catholic schools around the country have shut their doors, and enrollment has dropped by 621,583 students, to just over 2 million in 2012, according to the National Catholic Educational Association. Many Catholic schools were being squeezed out of the education market by publicly funded Charter schools.[12]\n^ Timothy Walch, Parish School: American Catholic Parochial Education from Colonial Times to the Present (New York: Crossroad Publishing, 1996).\n^ Thomas E. Buckley, \"A Mandate for Anti-Catholicism: The Blaine Amendment,\" America 27 September 2004, 18–21.\n^ Jay P. Dolan, The American Catholic Experience (1985) pp 262-74\n^ Dolan, The American Catholic Experience (1985) pp 286-91\n^ James W. Sanders, The Education of an urban Minority: Catholics in Chicago, 1833–1965 (Oxford University Press, 1977).\n^ Timothy Walch, Parish School (1996).\n^ Dolan, The American Catholic Experience (1985) ch 14\n^ James A. Banks (2012). Encyclopedia of Diversity in Education. SAGE Publications. pp. 303–6.\n^ Annual Data Report - National Catholic Educational Association\n^ \"For Catholic Schools, Crisis and Catharsis\" by Paul Vitello and Winnie Hu The New York Times January 18, 2009 p. A29 NY edition. Retrieved 1-17-09.\n^ Bush, Jeb (March 4, 2009). NO:Choice forces educators to improve. The Atlanta Constitution-Journal.\n^ Sean Cavanagh, \"Catholic Schools Feeling Squeeze From Charters.\" Education Week, 29 August 2012.\nCassidy, Francis P. \"Catholic Education in the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore. I.\" Catholic Historical Review (1948): 257-305. in JSTOR\nCoburn, Carol K. and Martha Smith. Spirited Lives: How Nuns Shaped Catholic Culture and American Life, 1836-1920 (1999) pp 129–58 excerpt and text search\nDolan, Jay P. The American Catholic Experience (1985) ch 10, 14\nGleason, Philip, et al. \"Baltimore III and education.\" US Catholic Historian (1985): 273-313. in JSTOR\nMcGuinness Margaret M. Called to Serve: A History of Nuns in America (New York University Press, 2013)\nSanders, James W. The Education of an urban Minority: Catholics in Chicago, 1833–1965 (Oxford University Press, 1977).\nWalch, Timothy. Parish School: American Catholic Parochial Education from Colonial Times to the Present (New York: Crossroad Publishing, 1996)\nRoman Catholic schools in the United States\nRoman Catholic elementary schools in the United States\nRoman Catholic secondary schools in the United States","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line118796"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9877926707267761,"wiki_prob":0.9877926707267761,"text":"The deputy was out of radio range, so the airplane was dispatched to help find the car and suspects from the air and to make sure the deputy was safe, sheriff’s spokeswoman Teresa Douglas said.\nThe airplane was already in the air in the area of Highway 198 and Road 182 and sent to the area, she said.\nThe man and woman were arrested at the end of a road west of Lake Success, Douglas said.\nJoshua Williford, 34, was arrested on suspicion of brandishing a weapon and criminal threats.\nSage Emerson, 18, was arrested on charges of evading an officer and resisting arrest.\nNoon: Gov. Jerry Brown sent his condolences to the relatives of the two men killed in the plane crash.\nBrown said he and his wife Anne “extend our deepest condolences to the Tulare County Sheriff’s Department and the friends and family members of Deputy Ballantyne and pilot Chavez during this difficult time. We are grateful for these men, who made the ultimate sacrifice doing what they did everyday – serving and protecting their community.”\nFlags at the State Capitol are being flown at half staff Thursday in their honor.\n11:50 a.m.: Sheriff Mike Boudreaux said at a news conference Wednesday night that the airplane came equipped with a parachute that was not deployed, nor was a distress call made.\n“It happened so quickly – there was no distress call, no Mayday, or the deployment of that safety device,” he said.\nThe sheriff’s department air unit operates an “Eyes in the Sky” program that uses a light sport aircraft based at the Visalia airport. It’s flown five or six days a week, Boudreaux said.\n11 a.m. Thursday: Staff from the National Transportation Safety Board have arrived at the crash scene and have started their investigation into what caused the aircraft to go down.\nTeresa Douglass, spokeswoman for the Tulare County Sheriff’s Department, said Boudreaux and his staff are also investigating the mishap. He is also meeting with relatives of the men who were killed and is assisting with making funeral arrangements.\nBoudreaux told reporters Wednesday night that the aerial crew was helping deputies on the ground respond to a report of someone brandishing a weapon.\n9 p.m. Wednesday: A veteran Tulare County sheriff’s deputy and a civilian pilot were killed Wednesday afternoon when their single-engine plane crashed near Springville in Tulare County.\nSheriff Mike Boudreaux, looking visibly shaken at an evening news conference in Visalia, identified the men as Deputy Scott Ballantyne, 52, of Visalia, and pilot James Chavez, 45, of Hanford.\nThe crash on a mountainside happened with no warning, Boudreaux said. “There was no distress call, no mayday,” he said.\nThe department first learned of the crash, which occurred about 4 p.m. east of the Eagle Feather Trading Post, from eyewitnesses who said they saw the wreckage ablaze, Boudreaux said. Caltrans closed Highway 190 in the area of the crash about 4:45 p.m. and reopened the highway by 7:09 p.m.\nBrian Duke, who lives near the crash site, said one of his friends watched the plane pitching from side to side before it crashed.\nShawn Winter, a resident of Springville, was driving down the hill to pick up his daughter from school when he saw something on the hillside.\n“I saw the black color of smoke. There was a big old ball of flame,” he said.\n3,000The number of flight hours logged by the Tulare County Sheriff’s Office aircraft before the crash\nLester Lawton, who lives on Success Valley Drive, said the plane crashed just off the highway on the hill behind Eagle Feather Trading Post.\n“I couldn’t even see an airplane. I could see a black spot on the ground on the hill,” he said. “It didn’t look like there was remains left.”\nBallantyne and Chavez had just completed assisting deputies on the ground with the arrest of a suspect brandishing a weapon when the crash occurred, Boudreaux said.\nHe said Chavez was a veteran military pilot who had flown Black Hawk helicopters and served with the California National Air Guard. Chavez, who was hired in 2014, “was a fantastic pilot,” the sheriff said. Ballantyne, who began working for the sheriff’s office in 1989, had become a full-time observer in the plane a year and a half ago, Boudreaux said.\nDavid Williams, a reserve sergeant and retired captain who oversees the air unit, said the aircraft that crashed was a two-seater Flight Design CTLS light sport aircraft that the sheriff’s office obtained in August 2011 and had more than 3,000 flight hours. The aircraft was selected because of its reliability and number of safety features, Williams said.\nThe safety features included a parachute, Boudreaux said. The plane was based at the Visalia airport and typically was in the air five to six days a week, he said.\nThe FAA and NTSB have launched an investigation of the crash, Boudreaux said. Duke said the hillside behind his home was bathed in light Wednesday night as investigators worked at the crash site.\nThe sheriff’s office as well as the community are hit hard by the loss of the two employees, Boudreaux said. He asked for prayers for the victims’ families as well as the department.\n“Our community is a strong one, and we will come through this, and our department is a strong one, and we will come through this,” he said.\nMarc Benjamin: 559-441-6166, @beebenjamin\nLewis Griswold: lgriswold@fresnobee.com, 559-441-6104, @fb_LewGriswold\nDebris from a crashed plane can be seen on a hillside near Lake Success in Tulare County on Wednesday, Feb. 10. Photos courtesy of Lester Lawton Special to The Bee\nTwo people were killed Wednesday when a single-engine plane crashed near Springville. BRIAN DUKE Special to The Bee\nDeputy Scott Ballantyne TULARE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE\nPilot James Chavez TULARE COUNTY SHERIFF’S OFFICE\nFresno, Bee Staff\nComplimentary death notice listings are provided by funeral homes and include name, age, residence, date of passing and funeral home in charge of arrangements.\nYosemite will get historic names back, including Ahwahnee Hotel, lawsuit settlement says","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1468402"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7728672623634338,"wiki_prob":0.7728672623634338,"text":"Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil\nQuick. Name the very first things that come to mind when you think of Brazil. Carnival? The girl from Ipanema? Carmen Miranda? Cowboys?\nWhat? Cowboys! It may be the Old West in the U.S. but it’s the Old South in Brazil.\nIn fact Rio Grande do Sul (sounds Texan already) is the southernmost state in Brazil and, in many ways, more like its neighbors Uruguay and Argentina than Brazil. It boasts Brazil’s highest standard of living, is the center of the country’s wine region, features great Italian restaurants, and claims the world’s longest beach. Called Cassino Beach, it measures something like 130 miles long, give or take a dune or two. How did it get that way?\nGauchos, Grapes and Gastronomy\nBefore Brazil was Brazil, Spain and Portugal vied for dominance in this part of South America. Spanish Jesuits were the first Europeans to arrive. In 1627, they began establishing missions to convert local Guarani Indians to Catholicism, a tale we’ve heard before. The original missions were destroyed by bandeirantes who wanted these indigenous people as slaves and didn’t care whether they were Catholic or not. But the Jesuits bounced back and, within fifty years or so, reestablished the missions.\nBy this time merchants, military adventurers, and settlers had begun arriving in the region and the focus was on consolidating territorial claims.\nThe Guarani Wars\nIn 1680, Portugal founded Colonia do Sacramento across the Rio de la Plata, also known as the Plate River, from modern Buenos Aires. The area around Colonia is in what is today Uruguay. The Portuguese planned to contain the Spanish on the south side of the river. Therefore a search ensued to find a suitable port east of Colonia in order to form a line of defense. This search resulted in the establishment of a fortified village, now the city of Rio Grande, as the companion bulwark to Colonia. The Spanish, of course, weren’t about to take this lying down. However, they were also busy plundering the rest of their possessions so a half-hearted war “raged” for about a century.\nThe Cisplatine War\nMeanwhile, the Portuguese were busy populating the region between the two bastions. In 1816, they captured Uruguay and declared it the province Cisplatina, which literally means the province this side of the Rio de la Plata. This then would become part of the Empire of Brazil. But, Brazil declared its independence from Portugal in 1822. Then Uruguay declared its independence from Brazil in 1825, lead by Juan Antonio Lavalleja, and in 1828 succeeded in formally breaking from Brazil.\nFrom that point on, disputes between the Portuguese and the Spanish morphed from territorial to commercial.\nThe Jerky War\nIn order to populate the Rio Grande do Sul region, enormous tracts of land were distributed to settlers. In these latifundia, raising cattle became the dominant activity. The Jesuits had brought cattle a century before, but they’d escaped and gone feral when the missions were destroyed. Enterprising settlers, seeing the potential for profit, captured and redomesticated them to create immense herds. Unfortunately the limitations of transportation meant that beef was most efficiently distributed only in a dried form called charqueadas.\nHowever jerky producers in Argentina and Uruguay were blessed with greener pastures and superior seaports. They soon began producing and distributing a better grade of jerky that became preferred. The gauchos of Rio Grande do Sul asked for trade protection from the central government and, when denied, declared independence from Brazil. That resulted in a ten-year war that ended with the defeat of the rebels but also with the institution of the trade protections originally requested.\nThe Port of Rio Grande\nArchitects of the port city’s original site at the mouth of a river could never have contemplated the growing size of commercial vessels that would call there. So, in 1855, a military engineer was sent to make a plan for increasing the depth of the channel and port area from the current two-meters. He concluded that the task was “unviable”. But in 1875, Sir John Hawkshaw was commissioned to have another go at it. He proposed a pair of two-mile long breakwaters extending out into the sea. His plan was undertaken in 1906 and the resulting Porto Novo, with its ten-meter draft, is where ships enter today.\nThe port city still displays touches of Portugal’s colonial past in its architecture and streets. But signs are also visible of the other cultures that have joined the region’s population. People of German, Italian, Polish, Ukrainian, and African descent have all added to this mélange.\nTo celebrate this destination, do as the locals do. Sample a cup of maté (called chimarrão here), the traditional gaucho tea. Also enjoy churrasco, the typical barbecue. And be sure to take home a pair of bombachas, those baggy gaucho trousers. You’ll be pleased at how skillfully they cover a wide variety of personal flaws.\ncategories South America\ntags Rio Grande do Sul Brazil\nPuerto Chacabuco, Chile","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1484803"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6929558515548706,"wiki_prob":0.6929558515548706,"text":"By: Earnie Wright | 04-25-2017 | News\nPhoto credit: Savageultralight | Dreamstime.com\nFailure To Maintain Eye Contact = Racism: Oxford University\nOxford University has unleashed the latest guidance which contains perplexing provisions that advocate for eye contact amongst students. Those not doing so may be accused racism.\nOxford’s University’s Equality and Diversity Unit has insinuated that students who don’t speak directly to people could be deemed as racial microaggression which can lead to ill mental health. Students were also told to desist from asking people where they are originally from.\nFortunately, the Oxford University's Equality and Diversity Unit understands the fact that some people who engage in such things may be entirely well-meaning, and would be horrified to realize that they had caused offense.\nThe University also emphasized that if words or actions of an individual suggest that they intend to fulfill a negative stereotype, the consequence may be of a different nature.\nThis comes amidst the accusations that Universities are pandering to the snowflake generation of students, who are seen as over-sensitive and quick to take offense.\nOne lecturer in higher education at the University of Kent, Dr Joanna Williams, revealed that the guidance was completely ridiculous and will make students hyper-sensitive on matters concerning their interactions with their acquaintances.\nDr. Williams made a statement to The Telegraph saying that people are being accused of a thought crime, adding that they are being accused of thinking incorrect thoughts based on an assumption of where they may or may not be looking.\nSome people feel differently concerning the controversial issue. Such include Dr. Williams who is the author of Academic Freedom in an Age of Conformity. Williams pointed out that Oxford University’s guidance was overstepping the mark by telling students how they should feel and think.\nDr. Joanna revealed that instead of people seeing each other as potential friends, equals, the recent guidance re-racializes academia. This is especially true if they force people to see each other as a person of color. The new policy will force people to be put into boxes.\nThe controversial issue will be very problematic since people can’t relate to each other naturally. Instead, they have rules in the back of their mind and they can’t be spontaneous as their interactions are all overlaid with the desire to follow all these rules.\nCardiff Metropolitan University banned phrases such as right-hand man and gentleman’s agreement under its code of practice on inclusive language. The move took place earlier this year.\nGender-neutral terms, as dictated by the university guidance should be used where possible. Students should not allow their cultural background to affect their choice of words.\nTrigger warnings have started being issued by the University of Glasgow for theology students studying the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Students are told they may see distressing images and are given the opportunity to leave.\nThe Oxford University spokesman made a statement saying that the Equality and Diversity Unit works with University bodies to ensure that the University's pursuit of excellence goes hand in hand with freedom from discrimination and equality of opportunity. The move is commendable, despite the few considerations that were not taken into account.\nSOURCE: http://www.telegraph.co.uk.fxsc.ru/education/2017/04/22/students-avoid-making-eye-contact-could-guiltyof-racism-oxford/\nEverything Is Problematic: Charcoal Face Masks","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1027975"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5662022233009338,"wiki_prob":0.43379777669906616,"text":"India Successfully Lifted 27.1 Crore People Out Of Poverty In 10 Years, Fastest Reduction Among Fellow Nations: UN\nPoverty Representational Image. (Kalpak Pathak/Hindustan Times via Getty Images)\nAs per a global Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI) 2019 report released on Thursday (11 July), India lifted 27.1 million people out of poverty between 2005-06 and 2015-16, reports Indian Express.\nAs per the report released by Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHI) and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), India showed marked improvements in areas like assets, cooking fuel, sanitation and nutrition.\nThe report states that India has registered the fastest absolute reduction in the MPI value among ten developing countries with a combined population is two billion people.\nAs per the report, out of the four Indian states with the most acute MPI - Bihar, Jharkhand, Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, Jharkhand has made the most progress.\nThe global MPI tracks 101 countries on deprivations across ten indicators in health, education, and standard of living. This MPI was developed in 2010 by OPHI and UNDP.\nOverall, India was among three countries where poverty reduction in rural areas outpaced that in urban areas, which as per the report, is an indicator of pro-poor development.\nUNDP India Resident Representative Shoko Noda, said, “The MPI captures the huge progress India has made in reducing multidimensional poverty across the country, while also providing a more complete picture of who is deprived, how they are deprived, and where they live”.\nPoverty,\nMultidimensional Poverty Index (MPI),","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line326019"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5648944973945618,"wiki_prob":0.43510550260543823,"text":"Final report on 2017-18 spending shows $19B federal deficit last year [UPDATED]\nThe deficit is slightly smaller than Finance Minister Bill Morneau's prediction of $19.4 billion in last winter's budget\nby CP Staff\nOTTAWA—The federal government ran a shortfall of $19 billion in the last fiscal year, virtually unchanged from the previous year, Ottawa’s annual financial report card shows.\nThe deficit for 2017-18 was slightly smaller than the federal government predicted in February’s budget.\nHowever, the Finance Department’s fiscal monitor estimated in May the federal books would post a deficit of just $16.2 billion for last year.\nTo confuse matters, the government says it has changed the way it calculates its pension liability—a fix officials say has been at the top of the list for auditors for years. And that led to revisions of 10 years’ worth of budget numbers.\nAs a result, the slim surplus Conservatives left with much fanfare in 2014-15 is now noted as a small deficit.\nTax revenues rose year-over-year, but it was less a windfall than what officials described as a “new normal” after the Liberals created a new tax bracket for high-income earners. The Finance Department says there was a $9.9-billion increase in personal tax revenue from the previous year.\nBeyond 2017-18, Morneau’s February budget predicted an $18.1-billion shortfall for this fiscal year—a number that’s expected to gradually shrink to $12.3 billion in 2022-23, including annual $3-billion cushions to offset risks.\nFollowing the 2015 election, the Liberal government abandoned campaign pledges to run annual deficits of no more than $10 billion and to balance the books in four years—by 2019.\nInstead, Morneau has been focused on reducing the net debt-to-GDP ratio—also known as the debt burden—each year. After the pension-related revisions were taken into account, the debt ratio dropped to 31.3 per cent of GDP in 2017-18, from 32.0 per cent a year earlier.\nThe latest numbers for 2017-18 pushed the overall national debt to $671.3 billion.\nThe document didn’t provide a long-term outlook for the debt burden, but officials say internal projections still show the measure on a downward track, even if the numbers have shifted slightly due to accounting changes.\nMorneau has cited a weaker-than-expected economy for the bigger shortfalls as well as a need to make investments to lift Canada’s long-term growth.\nBut the economy has delivered a strong performance for more than a year and the lack of a road map to return to balance has drawn criticism, particularly from the opposition Conservatives.\nThere are concerns over the Liberals’ deficit-spending plan at a time of economic expansion and warnings it could find itself far deeper down the deficit hole in the event of a recession.\nPBO says 2017 federal deficit will be $2B higher than forecast, but it’s on the decline\nFederal deficit through first eight months of fiscal year totals $9.1B\nFederal budget deficit significantly less than expected\nOttawa reports $5.9B deficit over first half of 2017\nChina’s growth slows as officials try to reassure investors [UPDATED]\nCannabis retailers, governments warn of lingering supply shortage","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1197782"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5880650281906128,"wiki_prob":0.5880650281906128,"text":"Ecuador Weather\nEcuador Average Temperatures\nCity Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec\nPapallacta Low 50 50 50 50 50 49 49 49 49 49 49 50\nHigh 66 66 66 66 67 67 67 68 69 68 67 66\nGuayaquil Low 70 72 72 72 68 68 67 65 67 68 68 70\nPatate Low 52 54 55 53 54 54 52 53 53 53 54 52\nQuito Low 50 50 50 50 50 49 49 49 49 49 49 50\nAmazon/ Punta Ahuano Low 75 75 75 75 75 75 75 75 75 75 75 75\nThe climate varies widely according to geographical area. The highlands are cold and dry. Along the coast it is warm and sunny year round. Bring comfortable walking shoes, clothes you can layer and an all-weather jacket. At times, the temperature s and a warm jacket is necessary. Some religious sites may require modest dress to enter (no shorts, short skirts, or sleeveless tops).","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line115862"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8536508083343506,"wiki_prob":0.8536508083343506,"text":"From the \"The Rainey Chronicles\" series, volume 1\nby B.G. Cousins\nA debut novel offers political intrigue set within the perilous complexity of the Russian Revolution.\nJeremy Clarke has just returned from France, where he fought as an American soldier in World War I. The son of a wealthy steel magnate, Jeremy now plans to join the family business under the tutelage of his formidable sister, Elizabeth. His plans are temporarily thwarted, however, when a representative from the State Department, Charles Appleton, suddenly arrives unannounced and reveals that Jeremy and Elizabeth’s father, who had vanished in Russia, is still alive. He asks Jeremy to lead a military team—really a small army—into Russia to rescue him and to secure a “package,” the contents of which remain, for the moment, mysterious. Appleton himself is a nebulous fellow, described as a “ghost” with virtually no government file. Jeremy accepts the assignment, and Elizabeth is put in charge of its logistics, which include procuring firearms. While crossing through Romania, Jeremy is taken prisoner and shot while escaping, forcing Elizabeth to take over as commander of the mission. All the while, Russian intelligence tracks the team’s every move, as interested in the package as it is in Elizabeth’s father. Cousins masterfully keeps the story moving at a fast clip, interspersing action at every turn. The inner machinations of the Russian Revolution are numbingly convoluted, and Cousins does a credible job navigating its infinite nuances. The story is driven by the relentless force of Elizabeth’s character, whose motto is: “Observe. Learn. Dominate.” In fact, her bravery—she is only 26 years old— in combat strains credulity: “The rat-tat-tat of the machine gun continued to ring in her ears as she became aware of what was happening around her. She had a job to do and she couldn’t do it lying on her back. She pulled herself up and got back to the gun belt.” But Cousins artfully presents the implausible as easy to digest, a skill that is the hallmark of this relentless thriller. Strictly speaking, this is almost too fantastic a tale to carry the label historical novel, but the author’s research of the period, and of Russia in particular, remains impressive.\nAn exciting and unpredictable tale of espionage and adventure in the early 20th century.\nPub Date: Feb. 22nd, 2016\nPublisher: Corrxan Inc.\nProgram: Kirkus Indie\nReview Posted Online: May 23rd, 2016\nby Alan Furst\nCRITICAL COMPANION TO THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, 1914-1921\nby Edward Acton\nRUSSIA’S FATE THROUGH RUSSIAN EYES\nby Heyward Isham","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line882047"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5783743858337402,"wiki_prob":0.42162561416625977,"text":"Evaluate the effectiveness of your service\nIt is important to establish the criteria for assessing the effectiveness of the services.\nWhen assessing the effectiveness of the services provided to young people who are homeless or at risk of homelessness, there are three criteria to consider:\nIs the joint protocol clear, legally accurate and geared to the best possible outcomes for young people, including a focus on joint preventative work?\nIs the assessment and options process performing within the timescales and information-sharing criteria established by the protocol?\nAre the outcomes for young people the best that can reasonably be achieved?\nThere are considerable challenges in each of these areas which need to be addressed, including:\nestablishing a shared vision, and commitment, to young people and their needs, and a shared (correct) interpretation of the law\nsharing data and/or establishing systems which can be interrogated\nrecording outcomes for young people from the point of first contact onwards, in a consistent and longitudinal way\nThe process of preparing a joint protocol is likely to indicate the extent of each of these challenges in each locality. Experience so far has shown that in some areas these challenges have proved impossible to overcome. The government is monitoring the position.\nShelter has published a benchmarking guide to joint working between services. It provides a useful model, examples and assessment criteria for achieving good outcomes for children and young people in housing need, including governance, strategy, processes and delivery. Further sources of information and guidance are listed in the bibliography.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line715571"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.512082040309906,"wiki_prob":0.487917959690094,"text":"91 MiG-21 Fishbed\nBritish Secret Projects 3.Fighters 1935-1950\nContinues the process of revising and expanding the hugely successful British Secret Projects series New materials and illustrations found since the original publication means a separate volume on fighters has now been produced\nIllustrations Black/White and Colour photos,line drawings\nPublisher Crecy\nThe British Secret Projects series covers the design and development of UK military aircraft since the mid-1930s with strong emphasis on designs that were never built, particularly those types generated by various design competitions. The original Volume Three (Fighters and Bombers 1935 to 1950) has now been split into separate volumes with this book covering fighters and a new Volume Four in preparation solely devoted to bomber designs. This split has allowed space for the inclusion of much new information and many new photographs. This book describes the design and development of the British fighter from the end of the biplane fighter to the start of the jet era. The projects and programmes which feature in its pages begin with those prepared in the mid-1930s in the knowledge that war was coming and go through to some which appeared after the war had ended. During this period the art of fighter design took some big and important steps forward and here can be found fixed-gun fighters and turret fighters, in both single and twin-engine form, plus the first generation of jet fighters. Types designed to meet the requirements of both the Royal Air Force and the Fleet Air Arm are included. Drawings new to this volume include the Folland Fo.118 and the Westland P.13. As with the companion volumes, the author has undertaken extensive research and made full use of primary source material. Three-view drawings plus photographs of models or original artist’s impressions combine to show how these unbuilt designs would have appeared. Data and appendices summarise the projects, contracts and specifications and provide a detailed insight into many fascinating aircraft.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1637463"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9155846238136292,"wiki_prob":0.9155846238136292,"text":"RETRO: Flying Scotsman saved and restored by Doncaster businessman\nThe iconic locomotive, The Flying Scotsman, did its last run for British Rail in January 1963, before the engine became the property of Doncaster businessman and railway enthusiast Alan Pegler for a sum of £3,000.\nSaturday, 27 January, 2018, 08:10\nSelby, Great Heck 1st May 1968 The Flying Scotsman on her way, non stop, from King's Cross, London, to Edinburgh. This was its last run to Edinburgh.\nMr Pegler effectively ‘saved’ the A3 class locomotive from becoming scrap and subsequently managed to secure an agreement for it to still run on the main line for a set number of years.\nThe engine was restored to its former glory at great cost, and re-acquired the LNER (London and North Eastern Railway) green livery.\nFor several years The Flying Scotsman was celebrated as it pulled a variety of trains across the country.\nIt was then launched in the States by Pegler in 1970 on a promotional tour of Buy British and covered 15,400 miles in all, many of which were travelled with Pegler himself in the driving seat. The railroad charges were steep and he was payng the bills.\nBy 1972 the locomotive’s owner had spent up and was bankrupt. Later, in 1973, Pegler persuaded another strong steam enthusiast, William McAlpine, to buy and ship the engine back to Britain.\nThe Flying Scotsman had been the first locomotive of the new London and North Eastern Railway when it was completed early in 1923.\nThe Flying Scotsman crossing the Ribblehead Viaduct, on its journey from Oxenhope to Carlisle to celebrate the re-opening of the Settle Carlisle Railway line. 31 March 2017. Picture Bruce Rollinson\nIt later became famous in the British Empire Exhibition, and was also known as the first locomotive in the UK to clock up 100mph in 1934, and the only steam train to run the 393 miles from London to Edinburgh without stopping.\nIt was back in 1952 that Alan Pegler had journeyed to Wales to view the crumbling Ffestiniog Mountain Railway, with a friend. He ended up buying the railway that is now seen as one of Britain’s most successful tourist attractions.\nThe late Mr Pegler was made an OBE in 2006, at the age of 86.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1484208"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5430534482002258,"wiki_prob":0.45694655179977417,"text":"Health, Environment, Safety And Security Manager\nLocation: From Ngcareers a month ago\nCGC Nigeria Limited (China Geo-engineering Company), a Chinese company with its headquarter in Abuja is a subsidiary of CGCOC GROUP CO., LTD. in mainland China. Our company CGC Nigeria Limited is a re...\nSales Executive Job at African Alliance Insurance Plc\nAfrican Alliance Insurance Plc\nAfrican Alliance Insurance PLC. is one of the leading and reputable Life Insurance Company with networks of Branches/Agency offices across Nigeria and Investment in some West African Countries. The company…\nResearch Doctor at Medecins Sans Frontieres - Belgium\nResearch Doctor at Medecins Sans Frontieres - Belgium Medecins Sans Frontieres is a private, international organisation. The organisation is made up mainly of doctors and health sector workers and is also open to all other professions which might help[..\nMental Health Supervisor\nMedecins Sans Frontieres is a private, international organisation. The organisation is made up mainly of doctors and health sector workers and is also open to all other professions which might help in...\nResearch Doctor at Médecins Sans Frontières\nResearch Doctor at Médecins Sans Frontières Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) is an international, independent, medical humanitarian organisation that delivers emergency aid to people affected by armed conflict, epidemics, natural disaster[...]\nResearch Doctor at Medecins Sans Frontieres\nLocation: Abakaliki, Ebonyi Main Duties and Responsibilities Provide medical care to patients/beneficiaries suspected / confirmed for Lassa Fever in observation bays (OBs) and virology unit (VU) according to adapted and updated medical knowledge, Contribu\nExperienced Marketing Manager at Pickmeup International Company\nExperienced Marketing Manager at Pickmeup International Company Pickmeup International Company - The transportation industry is antiquated and has remained relatively unchanged, with minimal use of technology, sub-par service levels, and no national\nData Analyst at Jhpiego - John Hopkins University\nLocations: Niger and Ebonyi Supervisor: TBD Reports to: Monitoring and Evaluation Specialist Slot: 2 Background Intermittent preventive treatment of malaria during pregnancy (IPTp) with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine is one of the key interventions recommended\nExperienced Marketing Manager at Pickmeup\nJob Description Responsible for promoting and publicizing the company’s brand and services. Carrying out the daily tasks that keep department functioning. Overseeing and developing marketing campaigns. Devising and developing ideas and strategies. W\nData Analyst at Jhpiego\nData Analyst at Jhpiego Jhpiego, an Affiliate of Johns Hopkins University is a global leader in improving healthcare services for women and their families. In collaboration with some its partners: Jhpiego, mDoc and the He[...]\nMental Health Supervisor at Médecins Sans Frontières\nMental Health Supervisor at Médecins Sans Frontières Medecins Sans Frontieres is a private, international organisation. The organisation is made up mainly of doctors and health sector workers and is also open to all other professions which might[.\nMental Health Supervisor at Medecins Sans Frontieres\nLocation: Abakaliki, Ebonyi Contract Period: Indefinite Main Duties and Responsibilities Participate in the planning, supervision and coordination of mental health / psycho-social related services in the Ebonyi Lassa Fever programme in accordance with MSF\nCashier/Bursar at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST)\nCashier/Bursar at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST) The Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST), in partnership with North American Training Center for Clinical Embryologist, a world class h\nAdmission Officer at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST)\nAdmission Officer at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST) The Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST), in partnership with North American Training Center for Clinical Embryologist, a world clas\nAcademic Coordinator at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST)\nAcademic Coordinator at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST) The Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST), in partnership with North American Training Center for Clinical Embryologist, a world c\nTechnologist at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST)\nTechnologist at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST) The Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST), in partnership with North American Training Center for Clinical Embryologist, a world class hea\nInstructor - Public / Community Health at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST)\nInstructor - Public / Community Health at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST) The Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST), in partnership with North American Training Center for Clinical Embry\nInstructor - Anatomy / Physiology at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST)\nInstructor - Anatomy / Physiology at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST) The Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST), in partnership with North American Training Center for Clinical Embryologi\nInstructor - Social Works / Psychology at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST)\nInstructor - Social Works / Psychology at the Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST) The Nigerian College of Advanced Health Science and Technology (CAHST), in partnership with North American Training Center for Clinical Embr\nTerritory Sales Assistant at Proten International (21 Openings)\nTerritory Sales Assistant at Proten International (21 Openings) Proten International - Our client, a renewable Energy Company is in need of vibrant and energetic candidates to fill the vacant position below: Territory Sales Assistant Locations: B[..","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line481324"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5366101264953613,"wiki_prob":0.46338987350463867,"text":"You are here: Home / Connecticut - Military / South Windsor, CT. – February 23, 1919\nSouth Windsor, CT. – February 23, 1919\nOn February 23, 1919, two U.S. Army lieutenants took off from Hartford, Connecticut, bound for Boston, Massachusetts, to photograph the arrival of President Woodrow Wilson’s aircraft landing at Boston.\nThe pilot was identified as Lt. S. W. Torney, and the photographer was identified as Lt. Cundiff.\nAs the plane was en-route to Boston it developed engine trouble, and Lt. Torney was forced to make an emergency landing in a field on private property in South Windsor. After inspecting the engine, it was decided that trying to reach Boston would be too risky, so Lt. Cundiff was told to stay behind and return to Hartford via trolley while Torney would fly alone back to Hartford with the airplane.\nAfter making some minor adjustments to the motor, Lieutenant Torney took off and was approximately fifty feet in the air when his airplane suddenly lost power and crashed in another field about a quarter of a mile away. The airplane suffered significant damage, but Lieutenant Torney was relatively unhurt.\nLieutenant Torney stayed with his airplane to protect it from the gathering crowds until a local constable arrived.\nLt. Torney’s airplane had begun its trip from Mineola, Long Island, New York, the previous day with two others, all bound for Boston. One of the three developed an overheated engine and was forced to return to Mineola shortly after taking off. The other two made it to Hartford where they spent the night. After receiving word of Lt. Torney’s accident, the third was sent to Boston to complete the assignment. It was reported that it flew over the spot where Lt. Torney had crashed before proceeding to Boston.\nHartford Courant, (Conn.) “Army Airplane Wrecked In Fifty Foot Fall In So. Windsor Pasture”, February 24, 1919\nFiled Under: Connecticut - Military Tagged With: Connecticut Aircraft Accident, Connecticut Aviation Accident, Connecticut Aviation History, Lieutenant S. W. Torney Aviator, South Windsor Connecticut History, South Windsor Connecticut Plane Crash","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1151605"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9578083157539368,"wiki_prob":0.9578083157539368,"text":"Bob Buckley\nBob Buckley (credited as Robert Buckley) is the Composer of ReBoot, responsible for all featured episode music.\nBob Buckley was born in Brighton, England (UK). Spending part of the year in England, and the rest of his time in Vancouver, Canada, As he holds both British and Canadian passports.\nBob took up the piano at the age of ten and put it back down again when he realized it was too heavy. He began composing almost immediately. At the age of twelve he started playing the clarinet inspired by the opening solo in \"Rhapsody In Blue\". Soon after that he began playing the saxophone and flute. He formed various bands in high school for which he wrote music; he also wrote for the school orchestra, concert band and jazz band. He studied with California composer Hubert Klyne Headley who exposed him to the twentieth century music of Stravinsky, Bartok, Ravel, Shostakovitch. He studied composition, conducting and arranging at the University of Washington with American composer William Bergsma and studied electronic music at the University of British Columbia.\nUpon leaving university Bob started working professionally and appeared weekly on the television series \"Let's Go\" as keyboardist, saxophonist and arranger. In his quest to combine rock, jazz and symphonic music he formed the band Spring and performed the original work \"Song Cycle\" with the Vancouver and Edmonton Symphonies. Also with the band Spring he had his first top ten single. Then, as a member the rock bands Straight Lines (CBS Records) and Body Electric (A&M Records) his keyboard and songwriting talents contributed to five albums containing several top-ten singles and a gold record with the number one single \"Letting Go\". Bob has recorded and worked with many artists throughout his career in the music industry.\nDuring this time Bob worked professionally as a composer, arranger, performer, producer and conductor for records, theme music for television series and specials, commercials, audio-visuals, dance, musicals, symphonic works and films. The diverse nature or his background has given him the opportunity to write every conceivable kind of music, including orchestral, rock, jazz, country, techno, experimental, Broadway and contemporary. He composed the music for the opening and closing ceremonies of the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria, B.C. In 1986 he composed \"This Is My Home\" for the Canada Pavilion at Expo '86, a song which has been performed at every Canada Day since and has become like a second National Anthem. He did string arrangements for Bryan Adams' latest two albums, Celine Dion's Christmas album and Our Lady Peace's latest album. He composed two musicals for the Charlottetown Festival, one of which has been running for nine years.\nHe has scored hundreds of television programs including the award-winning computer-animated series \"ReBoot\", \"Transformers\" and \"Shadow Raiders\" and most recently the computer-animated movies \"Casper's Haunted Christmas\" and \"Scary Godmother\". Bob is currently writing a musical in England called Tinsel with novelist Michelle Magorian and a physical theatre show in Vancouver called 'The Bridge' with Axis Theatre. He has a state-of-the-art digital music studio with a huge template of instruments and sounds and is equally at home in front of a rack of synthesizers, a symphony orchestra or playing jazz saxophone.\nBob has received much recognition for his outstanding work including Gold Records for 'Letting Go' and 'Association for Multi-image International'; Leo Award for Best Musical Score; Caras Music Awards for Artist of the Year, Producer of the Year and Album of the Year; BMI Award for Best Symphonic Composition; PRO Awards for Outstanding Success in Canadian Music and Excellence in Canadian Music; Juno Nomination for Composer of the year and Song of the year; ALFIE award for U.S. radio commercial music, and I.B.A. awards in U.S. radio and television commercial music.\nBob is a member of 'SOCAN' and the 'Guild of Canadian Film Composers', currently working from his company in Vancouver B.C, Canada, called 'Bob Buckley Productions, Ltd'.\nBob Buckley is now currently providing musical score for Nerd Corps' CGI animated series \"Storm Hawks\" (2007).\nBob Buckley Productions, Ltd.\nRetrieved from \"https://reboot.fandom.com/wiki/Bob_Buckley?oldid=17563\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line941614"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5911736488342285,"wiki_prob":0.4088263511657715,"text":"Truly driverless cars\nby Tyler Cowen February 28, 2018 at 2:24 am in\nCalifornia regulators have given the green light to truly driverless cars.\nThe state’s Department of Motor Vehicles said Monday that it was eliminating a requirement for autonomous vehicles to have a person in the driver’s seat to take over in the event of an emergency. The new rule goes into effect on April 2.\nCalifornia has given 50 companies a license to test self-driving vehicles in the state. The new rules also require companies to be able to operate the vehicle remotely — a bit like a flying military drone — and communicate with law enforcement and other drivers when something goes wrong.\nThat is from Daisuke Wakabayashi at the NYT, via Michelle Dawson.\nFebruary 28, 2018 at 3:01 am Hide Replies 1\nAs a Tesla bear I enjoyed this: 0 (zero) miles of vehicle test on public roads in California in autonomous mode. They babble about billons of miles of driving data around the world, but data is not accessible. Thus, trust the \"engineers\".\nAlso, I love the passive-aggresive tone of this Tesla report.\nhttps://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/wcm/connect/f965670d-6c03-46a9-9109-0c187adebbf2/Tesla.pdf?MOD=AJPERES\nI don't think Tesla has any cars ready to go driverless yet. This is more likely to apply to mobs such as Google.\nThat Tesla does not have such vehicles was his point. When the rubber hits the road, Tesla's reputation appears to be just a tiny bit inflated - sort of like its stock price, hence his bear reference.\nI'm also a Tesla bear, but I notice people hated Amazon.com about a decade ago, or more, and said they would fail, but they did not. Having said that, I'm long Walmart and I would bet that Amazon will not match Walmart, and further 'drone deliveries' are overrated due to the high cost of energy (flying is energy inefficient).\nGood point. I was quite skeptical of Amazon, particular Bezos's lack of concern with turning a profit for years, but he has been vindicated.\nI'm not sure drone delivery will be more than a gimmick, but I doubt it really is less efficient compared to a human driver operating a vehicle that weighs thousands of pounds to deliver small packages.\nAs for Tesla, I'm still somewhat of a skeptic, but they have forced me to shift my position. I used to think that electric cars would not be a viable product at all, and I think their success so far disproves this. However, I continue to doubt whether they can transition to a moderately-priced mass market product.\nFebruary 28, 2018 at 12:46 pm Hide Replies 6\nFirst they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.\nTesla not having a full autonomous car ready is the point. Google, Bosch and others have developed and tested full autonomous driving while collaborating with California's DMV. Performance statistics are public information.\nThis post from Mr. Tabarrok brings context. What if a company brings the technology to the market first while following burdensome regulations. http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2016/07/robot-car-safety-the-case-for-laissez-faire.html\nHow is the laissez-faire approach going?\nCallan\n(\"full autonomous car\" ???)\nWhat is that ?\nHow does it compare with a \"Driverless Car\", a \"Truly Driverless Car\", \"self-driving vehicles\", an \"autonomous vehicle\", etc ??\nThe terminology is so sloppy on this topic that very few people know what they are talking about.\nThe Federal government (NHTSA) has 5 official categories of automated road vehicles based upon the degree of automation. You are just bullshi__ing if you don't specify which automation category you are addressing in any discussion of 'driverless vehicles'.\n\"Level 5\" is what most people have in mind with the concept/reality of 'driverless vehicles'.\nLevel 5 is what Google’s aiming for -- a car that can handle all driving tasks and go anywhere. No human, no steering wheel, no pedals. Climb in, tell it where you want to go.\nNobody yet has even marketed a Category 3 vehicle. Dream on.\nIt's really puzzling how any time driverless cars make a step forward, this army of gnomes comes out of the woodwork to announce that driverless cars are impossible and will never happen. I'm sure this will continue right up until driverless cars are ubiquitous, and perhaps beyond.\nMulp\nSo, the only thing required for a car or truck is a driver, and a driver is just a computer with hands?\nIe, drivers never open and close doors and assist passengers, or put in oor take out things of the vehicle, or diagnose and get flats fixed, or clean windows, refuel, ...\nNot to mention dealing with confusing construction workers, or accident detour directions.\nI don't understand the point of the driverless pizza delivery vehicle recently featured. I don't want to dress to go outside and drive 5 minutes to pick up a pizza, so i call for delivery and then need to dress to go outside to get my pizza, and if I wait 3 minutes to finish my game, the truck sits in the street and all the other pizzas get delayed 3 minutes? If I wait to leave to pick up the pizza, no one else is delayed in picking up their pizza. A driver will keep ringing the door bell or start pounding on the door, plus I can have the 6 year old open the door and give him the money if not already paid for, and take the pizza.\nIf UPS had set a standard for UPS package delivery boxes at curbside decades ago, maybe installed them like news delivery drivers installed tubes for new customers, I can see a vehicle that is designed to open, deposit, and close that standard delivery box, even pickup packages first. But when packages go inside lobbies or business or get placed on porches, inside garages, or stuck in the storm door or put in the grill or hidden behind the bush, the UPS truck will always have a human in it. He might not need to drive most of the time and be doing package handling between stops, saving a minute per stop.\ncarlospln\nFebruary 28, 2018 at 3:33 pm Hide Replies 8\nTroll Me\nIt's possible to know what you're talking about at the same time as not using the same terminology or categorization as that used in the regulating federal agency.\nHowever, knowing one or more approaches to categorization on a particular matter may be instructive ...\nMarch 1, 2018 at 2:04 am Hide Replies 10\n\"Truly driverless cars\" simply means cars that literally do not have a driver in them. This is blatantly obvious, given that the post is about a law change to no longer require drivers.\nAnd yeah, who cares about the federal government's categorization? When I was a kid, I thought there were actually four food groups, as in this is a property of reality. Then I grew up and learned better.\nFebruary 28, 2018 at 3:25 am Hide Replies 14\n'The new rules also require companies to be able to operate the vehicle remotely — a bit like a flying military drone — and communicate with law enforcement and other drivers when something goes wrong.'\nConsidering how famously secure so many data connections to commercial products are, this is not exactly encouraging. Swatting a car seems just like the sort of thing a certain demographic would jump on, for example.\n'A feud between two Call of Duty players led to the death of a 28-year-old Kansas man, who was shot and killed by police after a fraudulent 911 call sent a SWAT team to the man’s private home. The news was first reported by local newspaper The Wichita Eagle, which cites numerous now-deleted tweets in which Call of Duty players take responsibility for participating in or observing the intended prank, which came after an argument about an online wagered match reportedly worth just $1.50. One player allegedly provided a fake address to someone with a history of calling in fake threats. That person, later identified and arrested by the LAPD, proceeded to embroil the innocent stranger in the feud, according to independent cybersecurity journalist Brian Krebs.'\nNotice that the procedure leading to that shooting death involved a third party making the actual threat - the buzzword at this website is MIE.\nAnd taking over a vehicle means that one does not need to trust law enforcement to use their weapons to uphold law and order - 'In this case, Wichita local Andrew Finch, whose family members say did not play video games and was a father of two young boys, answered his door only to face down a SWAT team-level response. Allegedly, one officer immediately fired upon Finch, who later died at a hospital. It’s unclear why Finch, who is said not to have had a weapon on him, was fired upon. The Wichita Eagle reports that the police department is investigating the issue, which occurred late Thursday night.' https://www.theverge.com/2017/12/29/16830626/call-of-duty-swatting-prank-kansas-man-dead-police-shooting\nFebruary 28, 2018 at 4:48 pm Hide Replies 15\nLying to the police is far easier than hacking a car, even an insecure one. I assure you that random gamers don't have the technical chops or motivation needed to hack a company. The risk is a real hacker creating and distributing scripts that do it for others, but this is still harder than lying to the police - there's no well-known route to becoming a script kiddie.\nSo Much For Subtlety\nhe new rules also require companies to be able to operate the vehicle remotely — a bit like a flying military drone — and communicate with law enforcement and other drivers when something goes wrong.\nSkynet approves.\nWho in their right mind would want such a thing? Presumably it is so you get your pizza in 20 minutes or less. But what else is it good for?\nI can't access the article, but I assumed it was solely related to the vehicles used for testing. In that context, it seems logical. For example, it would enable moving a test vehicle so it isn't blocking traffic, if something goes wrong.\nSuch a requirement for production vehicles would raise lots of questions, I agree.\n'it was solely related to the vehicles used for testing. In that context, it seems logical.'\nYes, because there is no way one operator could oversee several thousand vehicles. Even in this scenario, though, it is a bit of a fig leaf. A certain number of failures are going to occur inside of any possible reaction time from a remote operator. Still much better than nothing, of course. (If reporting is to be trusted, the first fatal Tesla Autopilot crash was in part due to the software incorrectly classifying the side of a trailer as a street sign - the only way a remote operator could have prevented that crash was by being actively engaged with how the vehicle was travelling - which in that particular case, the driver was not - https://www.recode.net/2017/9/12/16294510/fatal-tesla-crash-self-driving-elon-musk-autopilot )\n'For example, it would enable moving a test vehicle so it isn’t blocking traffic, if something goes wrong.'\nOr in a less benign scenario, opening a still travelling vehicle that is burning, so as to allow the occupants to escape. There will be a number of interesting trade-offs to be made in the future regarding such decision making, but a test vehicle is more likely to have a variety of problems than a production vehicle.\nThe feature would not be to prevent accidents (it's clearly infeasible to have a human operator take over quickly enough, as you note) but to enable the car to be moved if the software is unable to operate in a given scenario.\nPrevent accidents is a broad concept. Obviously there are lots of variables, but there will likely be situations where the problem might be something like a panic button being pushed by an occupant. Assuming that the test vehicle allows for such user feedback, of course.\nThat first fatal Tesla crash is instructive in that regard. Autopilot was not designed to handle cross traffic apparently, and failed to properly identify that the vehicle was about to smash into a truck at over 70mph. If one were merely a passenger, without any chance to push a panic button in a situation that was comparable (for the sake of discussion, because the vehicle was unable to properly identify a hazard - say a fire after a tanker spill that an occupant would recognize instantly). And that does happen - I have driven by one such accident on the A5 (going the other direction and as fast as possible), and a friend actually (moronically) drove through a tanker accident on the Beltway in the late 80s.\nIt's plausible.....But the human still needs to recognise the incident, AND recognise that the autopilot HASN'T recognised the incident, and hit the button, and have the car react.\nHow many accident/incident timelines is this feasible in? Quite a few, certainly, but not many.\nAgreed,\nThe notion that a human operator could successfully \"take over\" in the event of machine error in these driving modes is slight. The fall-back wetware is redundant.\nAylok\nUnfortunately I have been reading articles about driverless cars for long enough that I no longer consider them impressive.\nWhat is unfortunate about that?\nI'm not sure if unrealistic expectations for autonomous cars is a good thing or a bad thing. It's a good thing if it accelerates the development and use of them, but a bad thing if unrealized expectations cause most to abandon or never use them. Realistically, autonomous cars will be a safe and efficient alternative if but only if we replace all non-autonomous cars or build a separate right of way for them (which is the same as replacing non-autonomous cars since there won't be any on the separate right of way). In any case, I'm surprised that economists would be so enthusiastic about autonomous cars because they are not an efficient way to move people from place to place as compared to the alternatives. https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/02/27/opinion/automated-vehicles-cant-save-cities.html I suspect those economists are so impressed with \"tech\" and the billionaires \"tech\" has produced that they have convinced themselves that \"tech\" can perform miracles. I would remind them that not even all \"tech\" billionaires are happy with \"tech\" anymore, at least one having moved on in search of Galt's Gulch.\nchuck martel\nThe obvious plan is to structure the use of autonomous vehicles in a configuration similar to cable television. Passenger/subscribers will pay a monthly fee for the service with an additional fee for each use to the owner of the vehicles. Passengers won't have any control over the vehicle except for its destination. A similar, and easier to operate, system could have been established years ago for air traffic in the far-less congested skies but no, there are still pilots. The only way autonomous vehicles will be common is if a national bureaucracy like the FAA takes over surface transportation, which is easy to imagine.\nIn other words, autonomous vehicles is a euphemism for \"transit\".\nAre rental cars \"transit\"? This seems closer to that.\nButler T. Reynolds\nLike the FAA? Jesus.\nCowen's irony never disappoints. This time he follows a post about nudge theory with a post about autonomous cars and California's \"nudge\" to make them truly autonomous. Other nudges for autonomous cars include exempting the participants (i.e., the makers of the autonomous cars and the software that makes them autonomous) from liability for the likely mayhem. I fear that this nudge will be a reverse nudge since photos of the casualties will discourage the use of autonomous cars.\nApparently any law or policy is now a \"nudge\"?\nThere's a difference between mandating one option instead of another, as opposed to allowing both options but making one of them the default option and/or cheaper.\nIn direct contradiction to the whole 'tacocopter' claim. Innovation doesn't come from removing regulations, innovation drives regulation. Regulation is accumulative because there's often no value in actually pruning regulations that innovation has made moot.\nInnovation flourishes where regulatory constraints are relaxed.\nAhh, the Greek Chorus of MR sings!\nFebruary 28, 2018 at 12:44 pm Hide Replies 35\nExcept that's not the case here. No one relaxed laws about self-driving cars. There was no laws about them until recently and probably 20 years from now there will be a huge amount of self-driving car law. Innovation demands and drives the regulation.\nsine causa\nThis has been done before. It was called a horseless carriage.\nYep. They didn't have the internet in 1900 but plenty of people wrote letters to their newspapers abut the menace of switching from horses to cars. Safety, practicality, cost. All the same arguments.\nIn 1900, they did not switch from horses to self-driving horses which are potentially remotely operated by their owners and/or the government and/or criminals.\nFor example, the reins of horses and the steering wheel of a horseless carriage are both firmly in the hands of the person who is taking themselves from one place to another.\nIf things go well, for practical purposes it won't matter. But in the meantime, history has long shown that there are those who would exploit basically any possibility toward exercising political and/or economic control that may be exploited, were they permitted to get away with directing things toward being set up in a manner that facilitated it.\nFor example, would you tolerate a regulation which allows an an autonomous car company to refuse to make a pit stop for \"Starbucks coffee\" out of preference for a stop 5 minutes later, due to some predicted efficiency? Without thinking about how the same technology could be hacked and/or repurposed for subtle-yet-in-fact-extreme draconian control over people's movement and activities?\nHopaulius\nIf an operating company or manufacturer can operate an \"autonomous\" vehicle remotely, so can a determined hacker. Presumably the processors used in AVs have the same Spectre and Meltdown flaws we have been told are in all processing chips heretofore manufactured, so they must be in these vehicles as well.\nDallas Weaver Ph.D.\nLeave it to the Calif DMV to do something stupid and make testing of truly self-driving cars near impossible. It is like they want to appear not to be the blockers of new technology evolution while blocking it.\nThe requirement: \"The new rules also require companies to be able to operate the vehicle remotely — a bit like a flying military drone \" would require full data streams to a remote location or operator and that assumes that the vehicles data streams are valid and it didn't shut down because its software didn't detect an error or inconsistency.\nStep 1) require companies to be able to pilot \"autonomous\" vehicles remotely (by definition, then, not in fact being autonomous).\nStep 2) mandate that faux-autonomous vehicles may only transport people with identity verified at the beginning, middle and end of every trip.\nStep 3) enable to turn off or otherwise mess with the operations of any vehicle transporting a person with politically inconvenient views, ideally at the maximally troublesome time and/or location.\nStep 4) equip vehicles with some means of verifying sufficient progress toward ideological reform before the problem may be rectified on the basis of some faux premise.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line881507"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.626103937625885,"wiki_prob":0.626103937625885,"text":"I go for a middle-of-the-road approach—I enable alerts for most of my installed apps, save for ones that are niche (mostly shopping apps that alert me to coupons) or ones I don't use regularly. All alerts make the Charge 3 vibrate and show the message on its screen, and all past alerts live in the notification drawer that you can access by swiping down from the top of the Charge 3's display.\nApple is back with the Apple Watch Series 4, the latest in the smartwatch game that's focused on helping wearers live a healthier lifestyle. Running on Apple’s S4 64-bit dual-core processor and the new WatchOS 5 operating system, it’s twice as fast as its predecessor. Available in two sizes — 40 mm and 44mm — it has a 30 percent larger display than the Series 3 and comes in six different aluminum and stainless steel finishes. New improvements include Walkie Talkie mode and a speaker that is 50% louder than in the Series 3. The microphone has been moved to the watch’s opposite side to reduce noise and create clearer phone calls. The bottom, now made from black ceramic and sapphire crystal for better radio wave transmission, is intended to help with cellular reception and call quality.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1295433"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6911086440086365,"wiki_prob":0.3088913559913635,"text":"Group of Experts on Climate Change Impacts and\nAdaptation for Transport Networks and Nodes\nSixteenth session (Geneva)\nRegistration form or online registration\nECE/TRANS/WP.5/GE.3/31 - Annotated provisional agenda for the sixteenth session (29-30 January 2019)\nECE/TRANS/WP.5/GE.3/32 - Report of the sixteenth session (29-30 January 2019)\nInformal document (2019) No. 1 - Implications for Transport from climate variability and change (submitted by Prof. Adonis Velegrakis, University of Aegean)\nInformal document (2019) No. 2 - Climate Change: Trends and Projections (submitted by Prof. Adonis Velegrakis, University of Aegean)\nInformal document (2019) No. 4 - Main transport networks and nodes (Note by the secretariat)\nInformal document (2019) No. 7 - Input into the National Policies and Good Practices Section of the UNECE Group of Experts Report (submitted by the Government of Canada)\nDocument shared at the session\nInformal document (2019) No. 8 - Case study: Polish practice in carrying sensitivity and vulnerability analysis for the identification of hotspots on transport infrastructure due to climatic factors (submitted by the Government of Poland)\nInformal document (2019) No. 9 - The French National Climate Change Adaption Plan (submitted by the Government of France)\nInformal document (2019) No. 10 - Case study: A methodology to assess the risks due to climate change on transport networks – the case study “DIR Med” (submitted by the Government of France)\nInformal document (2019) No. 11 - Case study: Winter Roads in Canada and the implications of climate change (submitted by the Government of Canada)\nInformal document (2019) No. 12 - New Guidelines for Winter Maintenance of Roads in Finland (submitted by the Government of Finland)\nInformal document (2019) No. 13 - Case study: Low flow extremes on the River Rhine – Causes, Impacts, Adaptation of the most important inland waterway in Europe (submitted by the Government of Germany)\nInformal document (2019) No. 14 - Adapting the infrastructure network to a changing climate - a case-study of the Netherlands (submitted by the Government of the Netherlands)\nInformal document (2019) No. 15 - Development of a Climate Adaptation Strategy for the InnovA58 highway in the Netherlands (submitted by the Government of the Netherlands)\nInformal document (2019) No. 16 - Analysis of responses to the climate change adaptation questionnaire 2016 (submitted by Prof. Adonis Velegrakis, University of Aegean)\nInformal document (2019) No. 17 - Case study: Influences of weather and climate extremes on traffic flows – stress test scenario Middle Rhine (submitted by the Government of Germany)\nInformal document (2019) No. 18 - Case study: Impact on Kiel Canal (submitted by the Government of Germany)","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1166332"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8871294856071472,"wiki_prob":0.8871294856071472,"text":"Some Dreams Come True\nPhoto from Bangles website.\nHard Rock Cafes and Hotels around the globe will celebrate the 10th Anniversary of Pinktober by holding concerts and parties throughout October. Their goal is to raise money for The Caron Keating Foundation, The Breast Cancer Research Foundation, and other breast cancer awareness organizations. You can also help the cause by purchasing selected items at www.hardrock.com/promo/pinktober09. The website provides an extensive rundown of the upcoming Pinktober events.\nThe Bangles got things off to an early start with a September 24th concert at the Hard Rock Hotel at Universal Orlando. Band members Susanna Hoffs, Vicki Peterson, and Debbi Peterson can also be seen online modeling comfy-looking Pinktober robes, which, along with a guitar-shaped Pinktober pin, are part of the extensive line of merchandise for sale.\nPhoto from Vedera MySpace page.\nThe Chicago Hard Rock Cafe will present Vedera, an indie rock quartet fronted by vocalist-guitarist Kristen May, on October 6th, and sell raffle tickets for a pink Vespa throughout the month. The raffle takes place on the 31st. Vedera (check www.myspace.com/vedera for details) also has Pinktober gigs scheduled at Hard Rock Cafes in Indianapolis, St. Louis, and Minneapolis.\nPinktober will have a regal finale in London’s Royal Albert Hall on November 1st with a Women Of Rock concert that includes Joss Stone, Melanie C, and Bananarama.\nIndex: Bangles, Hard Rock Cafe, Pinktober\nI’ve Got My Foot On The Accelerator\nPhotos by Pam Minch (Click to see larger image.)\nThe 2nd Annual Zimmer Classic Cup Car Show, sponsored by Zimmer’s Hardware in honor of its 125 years of being in business, was held recently in Palatine. Since promoting special events is a lost art in this sleepy northwest suburb, residents could be forgiven for not knowing there had been a 1st Annual Zimmer Classic Cup Car Show. Nevertheless, the competition drew a good sized crowd to marvel at antique and muscle cars with their hoods open to display powerful, gleaming engines.\nThe DJ played 1960s music from The Byrds, The Beatles, The Monkees, The Hollies, Paul Revere & The Raiders, and Jimi Hendrix, but the most appropriate songs came from earlier acts like The Beach Boys and Jan & Dean. That was the era when rock songs were almost as likely to be about cruising in a Stingray, Jaguar, or GTO as finding the perfect romance. The fun and freedom that comes with driving would continue to be celebrated over the decades, via artists like Bruce Springsteen, ZZ Top, Commander Cody, and Tracy Chapman. Even the one-hit new wave band Pearl Harbour & The Explosions got in on the act, joyously singing, “I’ve got my foot on the accelerator” on “Drivin’.”\nThis year’s Zimmer Classic featured Mustangs, Camaros, Galaxie 500s, and Fairlanes sporting vibrant colors, which caused my wife Pam to lament the unimaginative palette used for today’s mainstream cars. (Our white Neon literally pales by comparison.) I was drawn to a 1968 VW Camper infused with flower power by owners Bill and Jenni Casale, and a 1971 VW Karmann Ghia that owner David Howard said once belonged to actor Ricky Schroeder. “I kind of manned it up a bit,” Howard explained, describing the new two-tone color scheme. He also plans to replace the headlights. But the really cool thing is the way he imaginatively decked out the car with rock and roll decals of Pink Floyd, The Who, and The Beatles, and other bands. And check out that Beach Boys license plate.\nI might have voted for the Karmann Ghia as the best car in the Zimmer Classic Cup, but an official explained that only the car owners are eligible to cast a ballot. For me, David Howard has found a great way to commemorate the long-time, loving relationship between cars and rock and roll.\nIndex: David Howard, Karmann Ghia, Zimmer Classic Cup Car Show\nCD Review: Tomorrow The Moon - He Saw Red\nPhoto from Tomorrow The Moon’s MySpace page.\nWhen Bad Examples guitarist Steve Gerlach decided to embark on a side project, he chose a rocket ship as his mode of transportation. He Saw Red, the five song debut from Tomorrow The Moon, offers a futuristic sound forged from Gerlach’s ringing guitar and Jim Dinou’s adventurous synthesizers. Bassist Ryan Nelson and drummer John Carpender add to the fun. The band was impressive in a live performance at this year’s International Pop Overthrow in Chicago.\nAt times, the music on He Saw Red has a 1980s feel that sounds like an updated, slightly rougher version of The Cars. Gerlach, who mainly sings harmonies behind Ralph Covert in the Bad Examples, proves he can be a strong lead vocalist, whether it’s on the dramatic “French Goodbye” or on the lighter, melodic pop of “Paperweight.” The catchy “Accounts Deceivable” has the feel of classic rock, and the driving beat of the title track twists through rapid tempo changes as Tomorrow The Moon tosses in voice samples and assorted sci fi effects. The epic “Sane?” gets He Saw Red off to a low key start, but its spacey atmosphere sets the stage for the songs that follow.\nTomorrow The Moon will perform an entire set of music by the Psychedelic Furs as part of an intriguing Halloween weekend at the end of October. Several local acts will impersonate famous rock bands at The Abbey Pub on Chicago’s northwest side. Stay tuned for details. Check out Tomorrow The Moon’s MySpace page at www.myspace.com/tomorrowthemoon\nIndex: Psychedelic Furs, Steve Gerlach, Tomorrow The Moon\nIt's A Long, Long Road ...\nHollies illustration by Pam Minch\nFinally! The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame has taken the first step toward honoring The Hollies. The British Invasion group was among 12 nominees recently announced for induction in 2010. It’s not a done deal; only five of the dozen acts will actually make the cut, and The Hollies will have to overcome the misconception that they were strictly a Top 40 singles band.\nA lot of solid material could be found on The Hollies’ albums throughout their career, including tracks like the exotic “Tell Me To My Face,” the delicately beautiful “Butterfly,” the ambitious mini rock opera “Confessions Of A Mind,” the melodic pop of “To Do With Love,” and the harder-edged “Won’t You Feel Good That Morning.” The band’s three-part harmonies and infectious melodies continue to set the standard for power pop bands to this day. The Hollies were second only to The Beatles in terms of hit songs in the U.K.\nThe Hollies gave us one third of Crosby, Stills, & Nash, who have already taken their place in The Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. When I interviewed Graham Nash for the Illinois Entertainer last January, he agreed The Hollies should be there as well. “It infuriates me when I think of the lack of respect for The Hollies,” he said. “They were very influential in the ‘60s and part of the British Invasion. It would be great to induct them.”\nIf The Hollies are inducted, there may be a logistics problem in terms of getting all the past and current members on stage. Of course, Graham Nash should be there, as well as former lead vocalist Allan Clarke, and Terry Sylvester, who replaced Nash back in 1969. Mikael Rikfors, who filled in for Clarke for a few years in the early 1970s, should also be considered. Some mention should be made of the late Carl Wayne, who replaced Clarke in 2000. Wayne, who got his start with The Move, was a kind-hearted performer who strived to bring The Hollies closer to their fans. (And I have an autographed program to prove it.) But should they reach all the way back to the earliest days for bassist Eric Haydock and drummer Don Rathbone? The Hollies continue to record and tour to this day, although guitarist Tony Hicks and drummer Bobby Elliott are the only original members. Still, some of the current band members have been in The Hollies for a longer period than Nash. Who knows? Let’s just hope that come next year, there’ll be a huge Hollies reunion going on at the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame.\nIndex: Allan Clarke, Graham Nash, Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame, Terry Sylvester, The Hollies\nCD Review: The Valley Downs - Behemoth E.P.\nPhoto from The Valley Downs website.\nAside from their annual performance each April when International Pop Overthrow touches down in the Windy City, we just don’t see or hear enough from The Valley Downs. Led by vocalist/guitarist Marianne Shimkus and her husband vocalist/bassist Mike Galassini, the Chicago-based quartet’s catchy power pop is certainly worthy of wider exposure. It’s been a while since The Valley Downs’ debut, the Behemoth E.P. was released, but it’s worth revisiting while we wait for a follow-up.\n“Better” is an optimistic mid-tempo number that sounds remarkably like The Bangles as Shimkus sings of the power of love and support. She uses a tougher vocal approach for the social satire of “Drama Queen,” declaring, “I’m gonna rule the world just for you” and “Everything I do, you’re gonna do too.” The more energetic “Sorry” deals with leaving a relationship, and Shimkus channels Deborah Harry on the hard-edged and sexy “Twister.” Galassini, who got his start with the power pop trio 92 Degrees and still performs with them on occasion, brings his bass playing to the forefront throughout the E.P., and joins Shimkus on harmonies.\nHopefully, the band will release a full-length effort in the near future. Their MySpace page, at www.myspace.com/thevalleydowns, offers a professional video of a new song, “Play For You” as well as live performance videos, and a photo montage of the The Valley Downs’ visit to Liverpool (for an IPO performance) set to their version of The Beatles’ “For No One.”\nIndex: Marianne Shimkus, Mike Galassini, The Valley Downs\nWhen WXRT morning disk jockey Lin Brehmer announced that Little Steven Van Zandt, guitarist for Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band and host of the syndicated Underground Garage radio show, would be dropping by the station Monday morning, most listeners probably expected a five minute interview. Surprisingly, Van Zandt and Brehmer chatted, joked, and played classic garage rock songs, including ones by Paul Revere and The Raiders and Tinted Windows, for an hour. If Van Zandt was tired from being onstage for a three hour, high energy performance at the United Center the night before, he showed no signs. He talked about watching Dick Clark’s Where The Action Is TV show as a kid, as well as the troubled state of current rock’n’roll.\nVan Zandt, whose Underground Garage show airs on WXRT each Sunday night, recalled the days when rock music was meant to make people dance and bands honed their skills by performing cover songs before moving on to original material. Even The Beatles worked that way, he insisted. On their current tour, which showcases Born To Run in its entirety, Bruce Springsteen and The E Street Band go back to their bar band roots by taking audience requests to perform other groups’ material. Van Zandt confessed it can be a challenge to whip up those songs on the spot.\nA self-proclaimed keeper of the flame, Van Zandt feels too many bands today lack the necessary fire. Still, he’s no crabby elder statesman lost in the past. Through his radio show, he promotes new acts like The Urges and The Cocktail Slippers alongside classic artists like The Rolling Stones and The Ronnettes. He champions female bands from any era. He’s also launched the ambitious interactive website Fuzztopia where fans as well as bands can promote and present music. Van Zandt explained the site is still a work in progress.\nHis philosophy meshes well with WXRT’s \"Past, Present, Future\" ad campaign. Years ago, the station took a huge risk by including punk and new wave songs on its playlist, along with the progressive rock favorites listeners had grown to love. That gamble has made WXRT stronger. Today, Van Zandt and Brehmer came across as kindred souls who love rock music and are determined to keep its fire burning.\nIndex: Lin Brehmer, Little Steven Van Zandt, Underground Garage, WXRT\nPhotos from the Doctor Who website\nThe cover of a recent issue of the U.K. publication Doctor Who Magazine proclaimed exciting news for Anglophiles and sci-fi fans: Tom Baker will once again play the time and space traveling, universe-saving alien known as the Doctor. Alas, his performance won’t be one we’ll see on TV or in a movie. Baker is reprising his most famous role for a BBC Audio Series called The Hornets’ Nest.\nStill, the interview (the first he’s granted the mag in 12 years) is funny and informative, and should delight anyone who loved the actor’s charismatic work on the cult series back in the 1970s. Baker’s was the fourth, and for many, the best incarnation of the Doctor; a character a friend of mine once described as “the coolest guy in the universe.” Flashing a toothy grin in the faces of terrifying villains, the Doctor used his wits to thwart their diabolical plots. Doctor Who could be a violent show, but its hero always sought peaceful solutions. Describing his take on the Doctor, Baker tells Doctor Who Magazine, “I prefer a kind of benevolent lunacy . . . because I’m an alien.”\nNow 75, Baker seems to dismiss the specter of old age with the same irreverence he used on Daleks and Cybermen. He gets a kick out of fans who approach him with photos they took with him when they were children. “Well, it amuses me no end, when I’m looking at a bald, middle-aged man who’s worn out with domesticity, then there he is in the picture, sitting on my knee. But it’s all about the happy memories, isn’t it?”\nBaker is well aware of the current buzz surrounding actor David Tennant ‘s work as the tenth incarnation of the Doctor. Tennant seems to be having a blast, and his winning mix of strength, compassion, and youthful looks have placed him in several publications’ most popular or sexiest male entertainer polls. (To me, he looks like a cross between John Lennon and Elvis Costello, but that might be because I always thought Lennon would have been a great choice to play the Doctor.) In a 2006 Doctor Who Magazine reader survey, Tennant replaced the usually unbeatable Baker in the Best Doctor category. But Baker is not about to be mastered by the green monster of envy. “We all owe David Tennant a great debt,” he says in the recent DWM, “because, with his style and brio, he has revitalised the whole thing!”\nThere are similarities in the way Baker and Tennant handle the role, but one major difference is that Tennant’s Doctor had a romantic connection with his female companion, Rose Tyler while Baker worked in a more innocent era. “We didn’t think of that,” Baker recalls, looking back on companions like Leela and Sarah Jane Smith. “So, for my part, I played the Doctor without any sexuality at all.”\nJust as Tom Baker eventually left Doctor Who, Tennant will wrap up his tenure this year. Each actor will always be remembered as the coolest guy in the universe.\nIndex: David Tennant, Doctor Who, Tom Baker\nCeltic Fest Chicago\nPhoto from Navan Website\nEven if you don’t have tickets to see U2 at Soldier Field, you can still experience a blast of great Irish music on the weekend of September 12-13 by checking out Celtic Fest Chicago, which will be celebrating its13th anniversary in Grant Park. This year’s event offers big names like Gaelic Storm and Leahy at the Petrillo Music Shell; lesser known but entertaining acts from around the world on the smaller stages; roaming bagpipe bands; and a variety of dance troupes. Visitors will also find plenty of food and beverage options, as well as vendors selling art, jewelry, and clothing.\nThe best thing about Celtic Fest Chicago for any music fan is the opportunity to discover a new favorite band, and the Next Generation Tent is a great place to do that. It’s an inspirational showcase of talented young musicians, many of whom are students from the Shine School, Irish Music School, Murphy Roche Music School, or Academy of Irish Music. Baal Tinne, a mixed group of younger and older musicians, can always be counted on for a lively, and sometimes majestic performance. Baal Tinne, as well as many of the younger musicians, have CDs for sale.\nNavan, a Wisconsin based a cappella group comprised of three women and one man, is another prime example of what Celtic Fest has to offer. Acting as a sort of coed, Gaelic Crosby Stills, Nash, and Young, the quartet uses beautiful harmonies to spin ancient tales from Scotland, Ireland, and England. Even though singer Paul Gorman once joked that it’s probably better that Navan’s songs aren’t sung in modern English because some of the lyrics are pretty gruesome, the band’s music is always entertaining.\nLast year, much of Celtic Fest Chicago was canceled due to heavy rainfall, so the perfect weather forecast for this weekend should bring out an especially appreciative crowd.\nIndex: Celtic Fest Chicago\nCD Review: Cheap Trick - The Latest\nThe first time I saw Cheap Trick was at Harlow’s rock club (or was it Haywires or Pip’s at that point?) on Chicago’s southwest side. Rick Nielsen used his guitar to poke out the ceiling tiles above the stage, and Robin Zander so effectively conveyed the raw emotions of “Oh, Candy” I could've sworn he was crying. That was prior to the release of Cheap Trick’s self-titled debut, and decades later, it’s inspiring to see the band releasing solid albums at a fast enough pace to make a long-time fan’s headphones spin. The Latest followed on the heels of Rockford, and preceded Sgt. Pepper Live.\nPrimarily written by the band, The Latest finds Cheap Trick concentrating on what it does best; creating irresistibly catchy power pop. Several references to The Beatles foreshadow the decision to take on the entire Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band for performances in Las Vegas. “Miracle” sounds like it could have been one of the better ballads from John Lennon’s solo days. The enticing “Miss Tomorrow” sets guitar-driven rock amidst symphonic swirls while the lyrics mash The Beatles with The Rolling Stones: “Love, you said that love is all you need./Cold, you taught The Beatles “Let It Bleed.” The high-speed “California Girl” sounds like a gender reversal of The Beatles’ early cover of Larry Williams’s “Bad Boy,” and describes the title character as a Sexy Sadie.\nA rousing take on Slade’s “When The Lights Are Out” kicks off with Bun E. Carlos’s signature drumming, and Cheap Trick also roars through “Everyday You Make Me Crazy,” “Sick Man Of Europe,” and “Alive.” Even the romantic ballads “These Days” and “Times Of Our Lives” sport a full-bodied sound, while the lush psychedelia of “ Closer, The Ballad Of Burt And Linda” once again taps into those Beatles influences. Luckily, this was the latest from Cheap Trick, and not the last.\nIndex: Cheap Trick, The Beatles\nYes Virginia, There Is A Santa Bash\n(photo from David Bash Facebook page)\nSince September 2nd is David Bash’s birthday, now would be the perfect time to pay tribute to him. As the founder of International Pop Overthrow, David brings the gift of power pop music to boys and girls around the globe. He doesn’t do it all in one night, and wears a cowboy hat instead of a red cap, but for many of us, he works magic.\nNamed after a song by the Chicago band, Material Issue, International Pop Overthrow made its debut in L.A. back in 1998. The festival has since become a world-wide affair, making stops in numerous cities, including Liverpool, Vancouver, Boston, and San Francisco.\nChicago power pop fans eagerly anticipate David’s annual arrival around the middle of April, with visions of settling into a club like the Abbey Pub where they can catch an eight-band showcase for a mere $10. IPO Chicago usually offers a mix of local bands like The Valley Downs, The Bad Examples, and The Handcuffs; visitors from neighboring cities, like Milwaukee’s The Lackloves; as well as an overseas act like Anison, who are based in England.\nA tireless supporter of the power pop genre, Bash enthusiastically introduces all the acts with a brief bio and explanation of why he chose them for the fest. Musicians interested in being part of International Pop Overthrow can contact David via SonicBids. See http://www.internationalpopoverthrow.com for details.\nSo let’s raise a glass and wish David a Happy Birthday!\nIndex: David Bash, International Pop Overthrow, The Bad Examples, The Handcuffs, The Valley Downs","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1093710"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9695464968681335,"wiki_prob":0.9695464968681335,"text":"Apollo 11 Podcasts: How the Apollo 11 mission still inspires\nTom Steyer launches 2020 campaign after saying he wouldn’t\nby: JUANA SUMMERS, Associated Press\nPosted: Jul 9, 2019 / 06:02 AM PDT / Updated: Jul 9, 2019 / 09:28 PM PDT\nFILE – In this Jan. 9, 2019 file photo, billionaire investor and Democratic activist Tom Steyer speaks during a news conference where he announced his decision not to seek the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination at the Statehouse in Des Moines, Iowa. Steyer is now joining the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, reversing course after deciding earlier this year that he would forgo a run. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)\nWASHINGTON (AP) — Tom Steyer, the billionaire investor and activist, said Tuesday he’s joining the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, reversing course after deciding earlier this year that he would forgo a run.\nSteyer, 62, is one of the most visible and deep-pocketed liberals advocating for President Donald Trump’s impeachment. He surprised many Democrats in January when he traveled to Iowa, home to the nation’s first presidential caucus, to declare that he would focus entirely on the impeachment effort instead of seeking the White House.\nSince then, Steyer, of California, has said he’s grown frustrated at the pace at which the Democratic-controlled House is approaching Trump. Roughly half of the Democratic presidential contenders, seeking to appeal to the party’s progressive base, have called on House Democrats to start an impeachment inquiry. But Speaker Nancy Pelosi has resisted, warning that Democrats need to collect the facts and that a rush to impeachment could ultimately help Trump politically.\nDespite becoming a national voice on the impeachment issue, Steyer made no mention of it in his campaign announcement. Instead, he said his campaign will focus on reducing the influence of corporations in politics. He also plans to target climate change, which is the focus of the Steyer-backed advocacy group NextGen America.\n“The other Democratic candidates for President have many great ideas that will absolutely move our country forward, but we won’t be able to get any of those done until we end the hostile corporate takeover of our democracy,” Steyer said in a statement.\nSteyer confirmed to The Associated Press on Tuesday that he would spend at least $100 million on his campaign, a figure that was first reported by The New York Times.\nSens. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and Bernie Sanders of Vermont, who are competing for the support of liberal voters in the Democratic presidential primary, decried the influence of billionaires in the 2020 race.\nWarren, who didn’t mention Steyer by name, tweeted after his announcement: “The Democratic primary should not be decided by billionaires, whether they’re funding Super PACs or funding themselves. The strongest Democratic nominee in the general will have a coalition that’s powered by a grassroots movement.”\nSanders said that while he may “like Tom personally,” he is “a bit tired of seeing billionaires trying to buy political power.”\nAsked about Warren’s and Sanders’ criticism of his plan to invest so heavily in his own campaign, Steyer said the common goal among all candidates is to present a vision that connects with voters.\n“That’s what Americans are waiting for, that’s what’s missing, and that’s something that every single candidate, including Sen. Warren and Sen. Sanders, have to address,” he said. “And so, if I can’t do that, all the money in the world isn’t going to help me.”\nAs he seeks the presidency, Steyer is resigning his leadership positions in both NextGen America and Need to Impeach. He says he has committed more than $50 million through 2020 to the two organizations.\nSteyer joins the race three weeks before the next presidential debates , and he could struggle to get a spot on the stage. He told the AP that he does not expect to qualify for the second Democratic presidential debates, which will be held July 30-31 in Detroit.\n“We’re serious about making the debates in September and October, but I think we’re too late to make the July one,” he said.\nThere are 20 spots at the debate for a field that includes two dozen candidates . If more than 20 people qualify, the Democratic National Committee will hold a tiebreaker to determine who gets on stage.\nSteyer also could potentially face challenges hiring staff. Several of his former NextGen America staffers have joined Washington Gov. Jay Inslee’s presidential campaign. A former Steyer spokeswoman, Aleigha Cavalier, recently joined Beto O’Rourke’s 2020 campaign.\nThe sprawling Democratic field is in flux as Steyer becomes the newest contender. Some lower-tier candidates are facing increasingly dire prospects if they don’t secure spots on the debate stage this fall.\nCalifornia Rep. Eric Swalwell exited the race on Monday , and former Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper’s campaign has undergone a shake-up after his debate performance last month, with some staffers encouraging him to consider a Senate campaign instead.\nThis is not the first time Steyer has considered running for office. He eyed bids for governor of California in 2018 and the Senate in 2016. His net worth, according to Forbes, is estimated at $1.6 billion.\nPORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - The chairman of the Oregon Republican Party has filed paperwork to launch a recall against Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, citing some of the laws passed in the 2019 legislative session.\nThe Oregonian/OregonLive reports Chairman Bill Currier in the Monday filing also pointed to Brown's announcement the day after lawmakers went home last month that if necessary, she would use executive powers to implement climate change policies similar to the plan defeated at the Capitol this year.\nOregon / 1 hour ago","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1585648"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8257562518119812,"wiki_prob":0.8257562518119812,"text":"Daily Archives: April 15th, 2014\nWhich franchise has had the best trio of running backs in NFL history?\nBy Jerry Tapp on April 15, 2014 | 2 Comments\nThink back to your childhood. Do you remember…\n* My dad can beat up your dad\n* Hank Aaron is better than Willie Mays\n* Superman could beat up Batman\nArguments or debates as a child were always fun. So, let’s turn back the clock a little. It’s the offseason for the NFL. There’s a few weeks until the NFL draft. We’ve got some time to debate this issue…\nWhich NFL franchise has had the best trio of running backs in NFL history?\nTo get the ball rolling, here’s my top 10. I looked at a few stats, looked up a few numbers, and tried to recall the careers of some of these running backs. I’m not willing to go to war with these picks, but it should be a good start for some debate. What’s your choice?\nBest running back trios in NFL history\n1. Dallas Cowboys (Emmitt Smith, Tony Dorsett, Don Perkins). Smith and Dorsett are both in the Hall of Fame and are one of only three pairs of running backs to have over 10,000 yards rushing for one team. Perkins had 6217 yards in his Cowboys career. Smith is the league’s all-time leading rusher and led the league twice for most yards in a season. Smith had 11 1,000-yard seasons, Dorsett had eight. Smith was a league and Super Bowl MVP.\n2. Cleveland Browns (Jim Brown, Leroy Kelly, Marion Motley). Each of these RBs is in the Hall of Fame, although Brown is the only one of the group to gain over 10,000 yards with the team. Kelly had 7274 yards, while Motley had 4712. Brown led the league in rushing a record eight times.\n3. Buffalo Bills (Thurman Thomas, O.J. Simpson, Fred Jackson). Thomas and Simpson both gained over 10,000 yards with the Bills. Jackson had 5121. Simpson led the league in rushing on four seasons. Both Thomas and Simpson are in the Hall of Fame.\n4. Pittsburgh Steelers (Franco Harris, Jerome Bettis, John Henry Johnson). Another pair of 10,000-yard rushers in Harris and Bettis. Harris and Johnson are in the Hall, and Bettis will likely make it three. Johnson had only 4381 yards rushing in his Pittsburgh career. Harris had a Super Bowl MVP Award on his resume.\n5. St. Louis Rams/L.A Rams (Steven Jackson, Eric Dickerson, Marshall Faulk). Dickerson and Faulk are Hall of Famers, although neither gained over 8,000 yards in their career with the Rams. Jackson had 10135 yards in his St. Louis career with eight 1,000-yard seasons. Faulk was a league MVP recipient.\n6. Tennessee Titans/Houston Oilers (Eddie George, Earl Campbell, Chris Johnson). One of only two teams to have three runners with more than 7500 career rushing yards. Campbell is in the Hall of Fame and was a league MVP in 1980 with the Oilers.\n7. Chicago Bears (Walter Payton, Gale Sayers, Matt Forte). Payton is second on the all-time career list for yards and had 10 1,000-yard rushing seasons. Sayers and Payton are both in the Hall of Fame, although Sayers had under 5000 yards rushing in his career. Forte has 6666 rushing yards in his career with the Bears.\n8. Green Bay Packers (Ahman Green, Jim Taylor, Paul Hornung). Hornung and Taylor both have Hall of Fame and league MVPs on their resumes. Hornung had only 3711 yards rushing in his career. Green holds the team career rushing record with 8322 yards gained.\n9. San Francisco 49ers (Frank Gore, Joe Perry, Roger Craig). This trio each had over 7000 yards rushing with the 49ers. Perry is a Hall of Famer, while Craig made his mark as not only a runner, but as a receiver out of the backfield.\n10. New York Jets (Curtis Martin, Freeman McNeil, Emerson Boozer). Martin is in the Hall after gaining 10302 yards for the Jets in his career. McNeil gained over 8000, while Boozer had 5135. Martin also had 10 1000-yard seasons, including seven with the Jets.\nSo which team is your choice for the best trio of running backs? Let the debate begin.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1019344"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7723192572593689,"wiki_prob":0.7723192572593689,"text":"Concert ReportsUncategorizedFebruary 11, 2017\nLive Report: Code Orange & Youth Code in Los Angeles\nJanuary 28, 2017 | Los Angeles, CA | UNION\nWritten & photographed by Ben Manzella (More Than Flashing Lights & Sound)\nI think it’s fair to say that chaos or misunderstanding has been in the air as of late; while I was looking forward to the Code Orange show at Union this last week, I didn’t plan to have the anxiety attack that ended up making the night a challenging but interesting experience. While I don’t know if it was sold out: there was already a decent-sized crowd when the music started around 8pm with the local hardcore act, Momentum.\nHaving been a musician for most of my life, I immediately have respect for anyone who will put the work and time into playing live for what can sometimes be a crowd of ungrateful people. Luckily for Momentum, it seems like their following is growing while they’ve seemingly been active for only a few months. Unfortunately, on both accounts, my camera was having technical difficulties and I can’t say their music was anything I hadn’t heard from countless other bands before them. While working on my camera, Disgrace officially kicked off the night for me. Led on vocals by Taylor Young (known for playing drums in Nails among other acts), Disgrace are a group I would associate with Arizona’s Gatecreeper as band with clear death metal roots which also fits very well in a hardcore/crossover metal setting, enabling them to fit alongside a band like Code Orange just as easily as they could have played with Entombed.\nYouth Code | Credit: Ben Manzella\nWith my camera finally working properly, Youth Code was next and I was very much excited to see them again. 2016 was a year where my interest in the vast world that comes under the umbrella term of “industrial” grew exponentially, through exploring artists/groups both old and new, and Youth Code was a discovery that I was very grateful to make. Having seen them this past August, I had an idea of what to expect but because they were the more ‘unique’ band on the bill, it made me curious as to what the crowd reaction was going to be. One of Youth Code’s greatest strengths is their chameleon-like nature in that they seem like they can adapt to nearly any crowd, and they certainly took control of the room at Union without any struggle.\nIt may have been a challenging or unfamiliar sound for some that night, but I have a feeling that Youth Code caught the attention of plenty of people that night just as much as their fans welcomed them for this hometown stop on their current tour. The incensed energy of both Sara and Ryan makes for an explosive performance from beginning to end; I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a focused yet unhinged approach to manipulating sounds and samples while doing vocals as what I’ve seen twice now from Ryan George. Being that he was vocalist in the hardcore band, Carry On, I’m sure this influences his way of interacting with music; and while Sara hasn’t been in a band previous to Youth Code, she has certainly come into her own and made a home at whichever venue is next on the itinerary. Reminded of the “Industrial Music is Protest Music” shirt designed by ANNIHILVS POWER ELECTRONIX (made with the proceeds being donated to Earthjustice), Sara touched on the travel ban imposed by President Donald Trump; while I won’t act as though I remember everything that was said, it was a poignant moment of unity and encouragement to seek to understand in the face of fear mongering and to avoid the very obvious fact that we as individuals are not all-knowing. While we all have the ability to see things change, the closing lyrics of Youth Code’s “Anagnorisis” seem very fitting at this time; “This is a trigger. This is despair. These eyes are poison, a sad state of affairs. (Nothing ends well with a start like this.)”\nWith the almost capacity room clearly anxious, a very ominous sample began playing. Launching into the title track of their latest release, Forever, Code Orange made the room erupt into a frenzy. For an effectively audio equivalent to a “1-2” punch combination, “Kill the Creator” was immediately started with no break between songs as would be a consistent rhythm for the remainder of night; but the crowd wasn’t worried, if anything they were clearly grateful and didn’t hesitate in releasing every bit of energy on the floor and stage as there were many stage dives. With textured keyboards and synths included in their sound even more on Forever than they were on 2014’s I Am King, Code Orange could very well have a future touring with industrial acts with a heavier sound just as easily they’re sure to continue their presence in the hardcore music scene. I really believe this is just the beginning for Code Orange; with this already being their third full-length release in nine years, they’re firmly establishing themselves as a band to watch for in the current heavy music scene.\nCode Orange | Credit: Ben Manzella\nBen Manzella Code Orange Disgrace More Than Flashing Lights and Sound Youth Code","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1055409"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7533384561538696,"wiki_prob":0.7533384561538696,"text":"Mission Society of Boronyavo\nLinks/Acknowledgements\nWelcome to Mission Society of Boronyavo\nThe Mission Society of Our Lady of Boronyavo\nThe Mission Society works to provide support for the Byzantine Catholic Church in Slovakia and the Transcarpathia Oblast in western Ukraine. We are all volunteers who belong to the Byzantine Catholic Metropolia of Pittsburgh.\nWhat We Do/Where We Work\nFirst of all, we PRAY to God for healing of the division of the Churches, for the spiritual growth of the American Byzantine Catholic Chruch; for the renewal of the Greek Catholic Church in Trans-Carpathia and Slovakia; for the canonization of Bishop-Martyr Theodore Romzha of the Ruthenian Byzantine Catholic Church; and for the building up of the Kingdom of God in justice and charity among all people.\nWe assist the (Ruthenian) Greek Catholic Church in the Trans-Carpathian Oblast of the Republic of Ukraine, which is the territory of the ancient Eparchy of Mukachevo; the Exarchate of Kosice in southeastern Slovakia; the Eparchy of Presov and Blessed Paul Gojdich Seminary in eastern Slovakia; priests in those dioceses and the Eparchy of Hajdudorogh, Hungary, with Liturgy intentions.\nOur Office in America\nThe Mission Society Office is in the Blanchette House at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Parish in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Our chaplain is Father Christopher L. Zugger, former pastor of the parish (1985-2008). Our office workers and board members are all volunteers who give of their time freely. You can Email us at admin@missionboronyavo.org . At this time we can only take donations by postal mail.\nThe Shrine of Boronyavo\nBoronyavo is a small town in the eastern part of Trans-Carpathia, not far from the junction of the Hungarian and Romanian borders with Ukraine. It is in a mountainous area known as the Hutsul Region or Hutsylchyna, a district of rugged mountaineers with a distinct culture and dialect. The small church was surrounded by fields in a valley of these mountains, and was defended against Communist destruction by devout Greek Catholic faithful of the area.\nThe church and monastery date back for centuries, and a small community of monks has lived here since the 1400s at least. After the Union of Uzhorod in 1646, whereby the local Orthodox Church entered into union with the Roman Catholic Church, the monks came under the Rule of Saint Basil. The Austrian Emperor Joseph II saw no need for small, contemplative communities in his empire, and the monks of Boronyavo were forcibly dispersed by imperial decree in 1771. However they kept their vows, and were able to reestablish their monastery.\nThe icon is based on a vision of Our Lady that one of the monks had. It was enshrined in the chapel. During the closure, the shrine was protected through the intervention of townspeople who loved the monks. Immediately God began to work miracles in the church, including the dramatic conversion of an atheist and many healings. Huge pilgrimages began to the shrine, particularly on the feast of the Annunciation (March 25), Saint Elias (July 20), and the Dormition/ Assumption of the Virgin (August 15), which is the largest of all the pilgrimages.\nAfter the Soviet conquest of 1944-1945, and Czechoslovakia’s forced cession of the entire province to the USSR, the native Greek Catholic Church was bitterly persecuted by the Soviets. The monastery was closed, the monks arrested, and plans set to destroy the entire site. But the icon of Our Lady was taken away to the city of Khust and hidden in an apartment there, and the local peasants regularly defended the buildings against destruction, even when bulldozers were brought in. Many people were arrested, but the church was never given over to Orthodox use, and it survived Soviet rule. Barbed wire was wrapped around the site of the shrine, and people would tie rags as a sign of their prayers onto the wire in defiance of the guards.\nIn 1991, after three years work of restoration, the church was re-dedicated. Bishop Ivan Semedi of the Greek Catholic Eparchy of Mukachevo stepped aside at the altar to allow the former superior, arrested in 1946 and sent to the Arctic prisons, to come forward and offer the first public Divine Liturgy. The icon was enthroned above the Royal Doors of the iconostas in 1992, back where it belonged at last.\nBasilian monks from Galicia were brought in by Bishop Semedi, and they ultimately replaced the humble church with a Ukrainian Baroque church that now serves as the shrine. The icon travels around Transcarpathia to visit parishes so that people have the chance to honor the Mother of God and ask her Divine Son's blessings through her prayers.\nAbout Father Chris Zugger\nFather Chris Zugger is an ordained priest of the Byzantine Catholic Church (1981). He hears confessions, assists at Divine Liturgies, services and classes in the parish, under the direction of the pastor. He provides spiritual direction for laity and clergy.\nFather Chris’ health problems give him a good perspective on the redemptive value of suffering, and his research over the years provides information for talks on topics as diverse as Contemplative Prayer in the East; Carmelite Saints; Righteous Gentiles in the Holocaust; Scottish Catholics; Irish Catholics in Penal Times; Catholic resistance to the Nazis and Communists; the Church in China; Eastern Church Fathers; Syriac Spirituality; Liturgical Life of Eastern Churches.\nFather helps where he can in the Eparchy of the Holy Protection of Mary of Phoenix and in the Archdiocese of Santa Fe. He is very thankful to God for the opportunity to continue to serve Him in new ways, and for the fact that Bishop Gerald Dino created this arrangement whereby he can continue to live where he has spent most of his priesthood.\nFinding a Hidden Church\nHis new book is the result of eight years of interviews and research covering the history of the Ruthenian Greek Catholic church in the USSR and independent Ukraine. Here you will find not only background history of the Church before 1945, but the heroic witness of Blessed Theodore Romzha (killed in 1947), Bishop Petro Oros (executed 1953), Bishop Alexander Khira who died in Kazakhstan, and scores of priests, their wives, their children, and other people who fought to keep their beloved Church alive in a hostile society.\nRead about the anti-religious attitudes of the Soviet Union, the imposition of harsh legislation, and the rupture of a 1,000 year old culture and Church. Also discover the determination of people to keep their faith in Jesus Christ and Catholicism alive by worshipping secretly at night, in forests, in barns, and how the Church survived with not one legal building and constant harrassment by the feared secret police. Discover the new ways Bishop Khira and underground priests came up with training new priests, establishing forbidden parishes, and nurturing the faith in an incredibly hostile atmosphere.\nIncluded are short histories of what happened to the other Byzantine Catholic Churches in the Soviet bloc, five maps, over 70 photographs including some from the dreaded Gulag camps. Be inspired to renew your own faith in God and your own dedication to His Church and to realize that the impossible can be achieved, but only when relying on God's grace.\nThe book available through the Our Lady of Perpetual Help website, or through Eastern Christian Publications, or through Amazon.\nFather Chris' Blog\nVisit Father Chris' Blog\nThis work traces the history of Soviet Catholicism from its rich life in 1914 through its tentative fate in the first sixty years of the USSR. It tells of the faithful men and women shackled by dictatorship, doomed to deportation, and abandoned by their own church in the west.\nThe book is available through the Our Lady of Perpetual Help website, through Eastern Christian Publications, or through Amazon.\nYour Donations Make it Possible\nPlease mail your tax-deductible donations to: The Mission Society\n1838 Palomas Drive NE\nAlbuquerque NM 87110\nEmail: admin@missionboronyavo.org AT THIS TIME PLEASE SEND CHECKS TO THE POSTAL ADDRESS. WE ARE WORKING WITH PAY PAL TO ACTIVATE ACCOUNT. THANK YOU!\n1838 Palomas Drive NE :: Albuquerque, New Mexico 87110 :: Fax: (505) 256-1278\nCopyright © 2018 Mission Society of Boronyavo -ARR","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line497806"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5363189578056335,"wiki_prob":0.46368104219436646,"text":"War With Iran Depends on a Battle Between John Bolton and Tucker Carlson\nby David Atkins\nThis moment in history would read as an absurd farce if the consequences weren’t deadly serious.\nAs we speak, the United States teeters on an armed conflict with Iran. The consequences of yet another forever war in the Middle East—this time with one of the proudest and most powerful nations in the region—would be ruinous in ways that dwarf even the monumental catastrophes of Iraq and Afghanistan. Yet only 10 minutes separated the president of the United States from calling off an airstrike that would have reportedly killed roughly 150 Iranians. President Trump was egged on to launch the strike by most of his foreign policy advisers, including and especially National Security Advisor John Bolton, a warmonger so obscene that even the Bush-Cheney administration was forced to jettison him.\nWhy did he stop it? Apparently, because he saw Tucker Carlson argue against it on his Fox News show. During the broadcast, Carlson called Bolton a “bureaucratic tapeworm.”\nSo here we are: the fate of the world depends on a battle for the whimsical favor of an incurious commander-in-chief–waged between Fox News’s favorite racist, protectionist buffoon and the neoconservative Republican old guard’s favorite blood-soaked imperialist hawk.\nHow did we get here? The story almost defies belief. A bigoted real estate tycoon with a reality TV show and a flailing brand who needed a visibility boost successfully tapped into a surging torrent of white male resentment. A revanchist swell of prejudiced anger against pluralistic modernity swept through certain parts of the country alongside a generic anti-establishment backlash, accentuated at a time of middle-class economic decline. That created the conditions for Trump to actually become president, even against all his own expectations. And since ascending the White House, he’s proved that he hates America’s first African-American president so much, that he’ll do just about anything, no matter how irrational, to undo all of Obama’s accomplishments and destroy everything he had built.\nOne of those things was a hard-fought nuclear deal with Iran, which he scuttled for no other reason than that his predecessor had achieved it.\nTrump always acts first, worries about the consequences later or not at all, and wrongly believes that every act of aggression on his part leads inevitably to capitulation by his opponents. (Apparently, no one in the New York social or real estate scene ever had the guts or means to put him in his place over the course of his decades of malfeasance, a fact that says much more about the well-heeled New York social scene and the world of real estate investors generally than it does about Trump’s supposed talents.)\nSo not once did it apparently occur to Trump that Iran might escalate his provocations to the point of armed conflict. It surely occurred to his neoconservative advisers, however, who were only too happy to steer the Mad King into a war he never saw coming. He apparently would have initiated that confrontation, until the intervention of one of his favorite TV hosts.\nIt’s a farce, all right. But a deadly and depressing one in which we are not the audience but unwilling background actors looking on as the lead actors set fire to the stage.\nDavid Atkins\nDavid Atkins is a writer, activist and research professional living in Santa Barbara. He is a contributor to the Washington Monthly's Political Animal and president of The Pollux Group, a qualitative research firm.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line720378"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8246526718139648,"wiki_prob":0.8246526718139648,"text":"OnStage Collection Home\nBrowse and Search Productions\nHome OnStage on Campus Funny Girl\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre's\npresented in sponsorship with\n1998 American Classics\nSummer Theatre V\n\"HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING\"\nThis is a simple story of a young man who climbs\nto a position of great power and of the girl who\nloyally hangs on during his climb and\neventually wins him. In this wonderful musical\nsatire on the Organization Man, his success is\ndue neither to hard work nor any other ancient\nprescriptions for success. He gets ahead by following\nthe simple rules in a book called How To Succeed in\nBusiness Without Really Trying.\nOur hero, J. Pierrepont Finch, runs into many\nobstacles and overcomes them like a modern, comic\nSeigfried: there's his rival, the boss's nephew, the\nmailroom trap, the office wolf, the office party, the\ndangerous secretary, the board meeting, jealous\nexecutives and, of course, the big boss himself.\nFrom the first coffee break to the last elevator\nload on Friday night, office life is never the same once\n\"Ponty'' Finch settles in for the trip to the top.\nBook by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock, and Willie Gilbert\nBased on the novel by Shepherd Mead\nMusic and lyrics by Frank Loesser\n\"Crafty, conniving, sneaky, cynical, irreverent, impertinent,\nsly, malicious, and lovely, just lovely\"\n-New York Herald Tribune\n\"Stings mischievously and laughs uproariously ...\nIt belongs to the blue chips among modem musicals.\"\n-New York Times\n\"A big, beautiful, smart, tuneful, and shining musical comedy\"\n- United Press International\nJune 26, 27, July 2, 3, 9, 10, 11 at 8 p.m.\nJune 28, July 5, 12 at 2:30 p.m.\nOn behalf of Indiana University-Purdue University Fort\nWayne and the School of Fine and Performing Arts, I\nwould like to warmly welcome you and your family to the\n1997 summer professional theatre program. We are\nespecially pleased to be hosting the American Classics\nSummer Theatre Series IV with its outstanding\nperformances of both music and drama.\nUnder the artistic leadership of Larry L. Life, professor\nand chair of our theatre department, this program offers\ntalented campus and community performers an opportunity\nto enhance their relationship with the community and to\nhelp reinforce IPFW's role as a center of artistic influence\nin northeastern Indiana. We appreciate your support of the\nfine and performing arts and look forward to an exciting\nand rewarding cultural partnership in the years ahead.\nMichael A. Wartell\nBringing the Best of Broadway to Fort Wayne\nWelcome to the fourth year of the American Classics\nSummer Theatre series. We in the IPFW Department of\nTheatre are very proud of our annual summer presentations\nof the best of the Broadway theatre. Broadway, after all, is\nthe heart of the American theatre and as such, has given us\ncountless memorable musicals and plays.\nOur production this summer is an example of one of the\nmany classic Broadway musicals. It is musical theatre\ntelling the story of itself in its early and formative years.\nFunny Girl is as much a musical history lesson as it is the\nstory of one of the theatre's greatest stars. In this production\nyou will see numbers that are recreations of various musical\ntheatre styles. The early Music Hall-Burlesque offerings of\nthe early 1900s (\"Comet Man\") are followed by the lavish\nZiegfeld showgirl number (\"His Love Makes Me\nBeautiful\"). Of course, no show that chronicles the early\nhistory of musical theatre would be complete without the\ntraditional patriotic comedy-tap number (\"Rat-Tat-Tat-Tat\"),\nand similarly, no show that attempts to tell the story of\nFanny Brice's early career would be complete without the\nsecond-act song that suggests Fanny's closely identified\ntheme song from the later Follies, My Man (\"The Music\nThat Makes Me Dance\").\nIntertwined with all of this theatre history is the story of\nthe immigrants who came to this country at the tum-of-thecentury\nand settled in New York's lower east side. The rich\ntradition of the mingling of the cultures is depicted in Rose\nBrice and her poker buddies and in the ensemble number\n(\"Henry Street\").\nAt the center of the show is the story of one of the\ngreatest stars of the American theatre, the celebrated\ncomedienne, Fanny Brice. Many will remember Brice for\nher later success on radio in the 40s and 50s as Baby\nSnooks. Funny Girl was produced on Broadway in the early\n1960s. This was the time that produced such blockbuster\nhits as Fiddler on the Roof; Hello, Dolly!; How to Succeed\nin Business Without Really Trying; Camelot; A Funny Thing\nHappened on the Way to the Forum; and Bye Bye Birdie. All\nof these well-remembered shows made their debut on\nBroadway between 1960 and 1964.\nFunny Girl was announced variously under such titles\nas a Very Special Person, My Man, and The Luckiest People\nbefore David Merrick (who was to have been the show's\ncoproducer) suggested Funny Girl. Numerous script\nalterations-including 40 rewrites of the final scene\nalone-and five opening-night postponements were\nrequired before the show was considered ready for its\nofficial premiere. Film producer Ray Stark, Brice's son-inlaw,\nhad long wanted to make a movie based on the Fanny\nBrice story, but he became convinced that it first should be\ndone on the stage. Mary Martin, Anne Bancroft, and Carol\nBurnett had all turned down the leading role before it was\nwon by Barbra Streisand, whose only other' Broadway\nexperience had been in a supporting role in I Can Get It for\nYou Wholesale. During the Broadway run, Streisand was\nfollowed by Mimi Hines.\nIn addition to our bringing you Broadway's biggest and\nbest hits, The American Classics Summer Theatre\nproductions over the past four years have brought some of\nthe most outstanding talents in the area onto the IPFW\ncampus. A large part of our mission is to join students from\nall area schools with community and university members in\nthe presentation of top-quality American theatre. This crossculturalization\nbenefits all of us and provides memorable\nexperiences for actors, technicians, designers, and audience\nWe are happy to welcome all of our newcomers and\nreturnees. Most of all, we are appreciative of your\nattendance. If this is your first visit to our campus and the\nWilliams Theatre, please come back again and again. Our\nhome is your home, and you are our favorite guest. We love\nyour applause and enthusiastic response to all of our\nperformances. Thank you for choosing American Classics\nSummer Theatre, and we sincerely hope you will enjoy your\nexperience with us.\nLarry L. Life\nChair/ Artistic Director\nIPFW Department of Theatre\n1997 American Classics Summer Theatre Company\nDanielle Andersen-Cathy, Mrs.\nWinston, Female Chorus\nAndersen is a recent graduate of\nSouth Side High School and will be\na theatre major at IPFW in the fall.\nShe is employed at a tanning salon\nand is also a dance instructor and a\ndance coach. She also enjoys\nballroom dancing. Andersen makes\nher PIT debut with Funny Girl.\nEric Brown-Male Chorus\nBrown is an eighth-grader at St.\nJude's School and enjoys swimming,\nplaying the piano, acting, singing,\nand dancing. He has received the\nPiano Guild Award two years in a\nrow and has been involved in dance\nfor five years. He recently made a\nmusic video for McMillen Health\nCenter. This is Brown's third\nappearance on PIT's stage,\npreviously performing in Hello,\nDolly! and Gypsy. He has also been\nwith the Fort Wayne Youtheatre\nperforming in the Best Christmas\nPageant Ever for two years, Alice in\nWonderland, and Laura lngells\nWilder.\nBelinda R. Buckler-Milliner\nBuckler will graduate from IPFW's\ntheatre program this fall with an\nemphasis in costume design. She has\ndesigned for numerous shows here at\nPIT, most recently Waiting For\nGodot. She is employed at PIT's\ncostume shop and received the 1997\nKenworthy Scholarship.\nChad W. Burnworth-Paul, Dance\nBurnworth returns to the PIT stage\nafter performing as Baby John in\nWest Side Story with the Fort Wayne\nPhilharmonic. He is a graduate of\nWest Noble High School and is\nemployed at Frank's Nursery and\nCrafts. He hopes to make landscape\ndesign and horticulture his career.\nTimothy Byers-Technical Director\nByers is the resident technical\ndirector for Purdue-Indiana Theatre\nand has been an invaluable asset to\nthe Mainstage and Studio series\nduring the academic year. This\nsummer marks his third association\nwith the American Classics Summer\nTheatre. Byers has a degree in\ntheatre from Ball State University,\nwhere he worked in numerous\ntechnical capacities for their summer\ntheatre. He is a native of Logansport\nand considers his active involvement\nwith his five children to be one of his\nmost prized possessions.\nBrandon Conley-Dance Ensemble\nConley, an eighth-grader at\nMemorial Park Middle School, is\ninvolved in the Show Choir 78\nEdition, which received a second\nplace at the Opryland Show Choir\nContest in April. He makes his PIT\ndebut with Funny Girl and is very\nexcited about being here. \"I would\nlike to thank my parents and my\nmusic teachers, Jeanette Snyder and\nKirby Volz. Without them I wouldn't\nbe where I am today. Thanks!\"\nColette Cress-Female Chorus\nCress will be a freshman this fall at\nSouth Side High School, where she\nwill keep busy with cheerleading, the\nspeech team, show choir, and\nperforming in shows. Cress was last\nseen at PIT in the chorus of Hello,\nDolly! and was Baby June in Gypsy.\nShe has also been in Oklahoma!,\nHans Christian Anderson, To Kill a\nMockingbird, and Charlottes Web.\nHer credits at Memorial Park Middle\nSchool include Bye Bye Birdie,\nDavid and Lisa, Music Man, On The\nRazzle, Damn Yankees, and Anything\nGoes.\nTommy D' Annunzio-Scene Shop\nD' Annunzio graduated from IPFW\nwith B.A. in theatre and an emphasis\nin acting. Some of his credits include\nThe World Goes 'Round, Burn This,\nWest Side Story, A Chorus Line, An\nEvening of Fractured Shakespeare,\nThe Fantasticks, A Flea In Her Ear,\nThe Rainmaker, and Damn Yankees.\nHe is hoping to move to New York\nlater this year to pursue his\nprofessional career.\nNoelle E. Davis-Box Office Staff\nDavis is an IPFW senior theatre\nmajor. Among her many\nperformances are Minnie Fay in\nHello, Dolly!, Connie in A Chorus\nLine, Whitney in A Piece of My\nHeart, and Juliet in Romeo and\nJuliet. She received the Withers\nScholarship for 1996 and spent the\npast two semesters studying in New\nYork and North Carolina. This next\nyear she will be back at PIT to\nportray Little Red Riding Hood in\nthe spring production of Into The\nWoods for her senior performance\nAudra Eberly-Dance Ensemble\nEberly makes her PIT debut in\nFunny Girl, but has been in two\nproductions at the Fort Wayne Civic\nTheatre: The King and/, and\nBrigadoon. She has had 11 years of\ntap, jazz, and ballet from Karen Ehle\nNewman and is currently an assistant\nteacher. A junior at Whitko High\nSchool, Eberly has studied with the\nFort Wayne Ballet and plans to\ncontinue in dance.\nPatrick Foster-Box Office Staff\nFoster comes to IPFW after spending\n1994-95 studying musical theatre at\nRoosevelt University in Chicago. He\nis currently pursuing a liberal arts\ndegree. Foster has appeared in Arena\nDinner Theatre's production of\nYou're A Good Man Charlie Brown\nas Schroeder, and in Fort Wayne\nYoutheatre's production of The\nOutsiders as Johnny.\nJane Rebekah Frazier-Mrs.\nStrakosh\nFrazier is a sophomore in the\ntheatre department at IPFW and a\npart-time assistant manager at\nThings Remembered. She was last\nseen in The World Goes 'Round at\nPIT and has performed in\nEleemosynary, Damn Yankees, and\nGypsy. Her Civic Theatre credits\ninclude The King and I, Man of\nLamancha, Joseph 94, Oklahoma!,\nEvita, and Hans Christian\nAnderson. She also has helped out\nbackstage at PIT and the Civic\nTheatre. The Snider High School\ngraduate has recently returned from\nthe American Music and Dance\nAcademy in New York.\nLuke Hancock-Tom Keeney\nHancock has been seen in numerous\nproductions throughout the Fort\nWayne area. His last appearance with\nPIT was as Officer Krupke in West\nSide Story. He is a senior at South\nSide High School and is on the\nspeech team. He has received the\nSpectrum Spotlight Award for\nexcellence in drama, the \"B izzie\"\nBromley Award for excellence in\nspeech, and a Rising Star in\nPerforming Arts Award. This past\nyear Hancock went to nationals and\nCatholic nationals for speech. He\nhopes to continue to be active in the\nperforming arts and to possibly teach\nwhen he is older.\nHeath Hays-Properties Supervisor,\nScene Sh~p Staff\nHays is an IPFW theatre major with\nan emphasis in scenic design. Some\nof his credits include Burn This,\nEleemosynary, and James Dean: The\nBoy From Fairmount. He has\nperformed in An Evening of\nFractured Shakespeare, Equus,\nA Flea In Her Ear, Tent Meeting, The\nRainmaker, Damn Yankees, and\nRomeo and Juliet. His next project\nwill be this fall as scenic designer for\nUncle Vanya.\nJohn C. Hermes-Musical Director,\nCostume Shop Staff\nHermes is an IPFW sophomore\nmajoring in theatre with an emphasis\nin acting and directing. He has been\nthe musical director at PIT for Hair,\nGypsy, Oh, Dad ... , Pippin, The\nF antastics, and The World Goes\n'Round; at Arena Dinner Theatre for\nOnce Upon A Mattress, Chicago, and\nDames at Sea; and at the Civic\nTheatre for Pump Boys and Dinettes,\nTaffetas, and Prelude To A Kiss. He\nhas performed in The World Goes\n'Round, Dracula, A Chorus Line, A\nFlea In Her Ear, Romeo and Juliet,\nPump Boys and Dinettes, and Oh,\nDad .... His next directing project\nwill be Daddy's Dyin ', Who s Got\nThe Will? this fall in the Studio\nTheatre. He will also be musical\ndirector for PIT's 1998 spring\nproduction of Into The Woods.\nMelissa Hershberger-Emma\nHershberger makes her PIT debut\nthis summer. She is a senior at South\nSide High School, where she has\nreceived various awards including\nthe Drama Scholarship two years in a\nrow. She has spoken at school board\nmeetings and competed at Catholic\nnationals for speech. She has also\nbeen in the Honors Choir for three\nyears at the Fort Wayne Choral\nFestival. Hershberger wants to major\nin criminal justice and minor in\ntheatre when she goes to college.\nCassandra C. Holst-Mrs. Meeker\nHolst, a Canterbury High School\njunior, makes her PIT debut this\nsummer as Mrs. Meeker. A fan of\ndancing, singing, theatre, and\nspeech, she has performed as Miss\nJohnson in Manley, Mother in 0 Je\nJigs and Juleps, Lynette in 1940s\nRadio Hour, and Kate Gardner in\nSmile at Canterbury. She has\nreceived the most-promising speaker\naward in 0.1. Speaking and received\na first at state JCL in English oratory.\nCraig A. Humphrey-Costume\nHumphrey has worked off-Broadway\nas assistant to Laura Crow on the\nCircle Repertory Theatre production\nof Lanford Wilson's Burn This. He\nhas designed costumes in\nMassachusetts, Wisconsin,\nMississippi, and Pennsylvania. His\nexperience includes The Normal\nHeart for the Pittsburgh Public\nTheatre and six seasons with\nTheatre-By-The-Grove. He is an\nIPFW associate professor of theatre,\nresident costume designer for\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre, associate\nchair of the department, and head of\nthe design program. Locally,\nHumphrey has designed for Red,\nHot, and Cole at First Presbyterian\nTheatre and for L'Histore Du Soldat\nfor the Fort Wayne Philharmonic. He\nhas also designed Bedroom Farce for\nthe Touchstone Theatre in Chicago.\nHis most recent works at IPFW\ninclude The World Goes 'Round;\nWest Side Story; Dracula; Hello,\nDolly!; A Chorus Line; A Flea In\nHer Ear; and The Glass Menagerie.\nHe has directed The F antastics, Once\nUpon A Mattress, Forum, and will be\ndirecting Into The Woods this spring.\nHumphrey has an M.F.A. in costume\ndesign from the University of\nMassachusetts and a B.F.A. in\ntheatre performance from Indiana\nUniversity of Pennsylvania.\nNatalie Y. Jones-Mrs. Brice\nJones returns to the PIT stage after\nappearing in The World Goes\n'Round. Some of her other numerous\ntheatre credits include Glad Hand in\nWest Side Story with PIT and the\nFort Wayne Philharmonic, and\nQueen Aggravain in Once upon a\nMattress at Arena Dinner Theatre. At\nArena, she has received awards for\noutstanding supporting actress for\nQueen Aggravain and outstanding\nlead actress for Mildred in\nSquabbles. Jones is a theatre student\nat IPFW, pursuing a B.A. She hopes\nher degree and experience will lead\nher to Broadway, but in the\nmeantime, she enjoys collecting\nAngela Lansbury paraphernalia.\nJ. Tom Keel-Adolph, Mr. Vance\nKeel is employed at the Indiana Auto\nAuction and enjoys tools and\nreading. In his spare time, he\nvolunteers for the Fort Wayne Civic\nTheatre and would like to someday\nbecome an accomplished amateur\nactor.\n~GEORGE D. I,\n& ASSOCJ'f';f!sll~\nP.O. Box 234, Suite A 526 State St., New Haven, IN 46774\n219-486-WINE\nBill Kerchevai-Florenz Ziegfeld Jr.\nKercheval ~as worn many hats for\nthe IPFW theatre department over\nthe years. With the opening of Hair\nand the new Williams Theatre in\n1993, he served as resident house\nmanager and production\nphotographer for both Studio and\nWilliams theatres until the end of the\nsummer of 1996. He has continued\nthe photography duties, and during\nthe 1994 Classics Season, was\nevening scene shop foreman for\nGypsy and Picnic set construction.\nPrior to Hair, Kercheval was house\nmanager and photographer for Six\nCharacters in Search of an Author,\nand photographer and member of the\nrunning crew for A Streetcar Named\nDesire. Recently, he wore yet\nanother hat as follow-spot operator\nfor The World Goes 'Round. \"Being\ncast as Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. in Funny\nGirl represents my Fort Wayne\nacting debut. I am thrilled to be a\npart of this fine cast and hope that I\nhave performed to everyone's\nexpectations. Enjoy!\"\nMarty Kercheval-Stage Manager\nKercheval has worked in a technical\ncapacity for The World Goes 'Round;\nDolly!; Damn Yankees; Who s Afraid\nof Virginia Wotf?; and other plays at\nArena Dinner Theatre, the Civic\nTheatre, Open Door Theatre, and\nFirst Presbyterian Theatre.\nRobert M. Koharchik-Guest\nKoharchik has spent the past few\nyears designing for the Indianapolis\nCivic Theatre as well as the Red Bam\nPlayhouse in Saugutuck, Mich. His\ndesign credits include Show Boat,\nThe Glass Menagerie, The Pajama\nGame, The All Nite Strut, Rumors,\nPump Boys and Dinettes, Steel\nMagnolias, Nunsense, A Funny Thing\nHappened on the Way to the Forum,\nI'm Not Rappaport, A Midsummer\nNights Dream, Cabaret, and The\nCrucible. Some of Koharchik's\ndesigns have been exhibited at New\nYork's Lincoln Center.\nRyan M. Koharchik-Guest\nAfter receiving his Master of Fine\nArts in lighting design from Boston\nUniversity, Koharchik returned to the\nMidwest in the spring of 1993 as a\nguest faculty artist for Ball State\nUniversity's summer season. Since\nthat time, he has worked as a lighting\ndesigner in Chicago, Indianapolis,\nColumbus (Ohio), and Michigan.\nSome of his many credits include\ndesigning Tom Leopold's world\npremiere of Henry and the Second\nGunman at the Griffin Theatre in\nChicago, the New World Theatre's\nproduction of Death and the Maiden,\nthe Red Bam Playhouse's 1994\nsummer season, and The Glass\nMenagerie at the Indianapolis Civic\nTheatre. Koharchik has also worked\nat the Goodman Theatre and with\nDance Kaleidoscope.\nSarah N. Lankenau-Costume\nLankenau is an IPFW junior\nin costume design. She has\nperformed in many of PIT's shows,\nincluding West Side Story, Dracula,\nA Chorus Line, The F antasticks, and\nA Flea In Her Ear. She has designed\nfor Indiana Voices and has helped\nout backstage for many shows. She\nis very excited about her next\nproject, Uncle Vanya, which she will\ndesign this fall at PIT.\nLarry L. Life-Artistic\nLife is professor and chair of the\nIPFW Department of Theatre, where\nhe has been a member of the faculty\nsince 1 971. In 1992 he was given the\nIndiana Theatre Association's\nOutstanding Artist-Educator Award\nfor his 23 years of service as a\ndirector/choreographer, actor, and\ntheatre educator in Indiana. Life\nworked professionally in New York\nin the 1 960s, appearing in the revival\nof Harold Rome's Pins and Needles\nat the Round-a-Bout Theatre and offBroadway\nwith Fran and Barry\nWeissler's National Theatre\nCompany. He has appeared in the\nfilms The Detective with Frank\nSinatra and Me Natalie with Patty\nDuke and has worked with Madeline\nKahn and Roberta Flack. He has\nbeen director/choreographer for\nmusical theatre productions at Black\nHills Playhouse, Louisiana State\nUniversity, Wabash College,\nUniversity of Nevada at Las Vegas,\nTulane University, and Miami\nUniversity at Oxford-Ohio, and has\nstudied musical theatre with Lehman\nEngel at the Goodspeed Opera\nHouse in East Haddam, Cpnn. He\nhas studied acting with Utah Hagen\nand Charles Nelson Riley and dance\nwith Matt Mattox, J aimie Rogers,\nCharles Weidman, and Robert\nLunnon. He is listed with Who's\nWho in Entertainment. His\nproductions of Dames At Sea and\nHair were granted the Amoco Award\nof Excellence and selected for\npresentation at the Kennedy Center\nin Washington, D.C., for the\nAmerican College Theatre Festival.\nLife has acted, directed, and\nchoreographed for the Fort Wayne\nCivic Theatre, the Fort Wayne\nPhilharmonic, Arena Dinner Theatre,\nand First Presbyterian Theatre. He\nhas conceived, directed, and\nchoreographed nine original musical\nreviews for the Fort Wayne Civic\nTheatre Guild, and one in 1994 for\nthe Fort Wayne Bicentennial\nAnnaL. Mossburg-Jenny, Dance\nEnsemble, Set Construction\nMossburg has been seen recently in\nThe World Goes 'Round at PIT. Her\nother musicals roles at PIT include\nGraziella in West Side Story and Judy\nin A Chorus Line, as well as parts in\nDamn Yankees and Hair. In addition,\nshe has been seen at Arena Dinner\nTheatre in Once upon a Mattress and\nwas in the original play, In The\nCompany of Men at the Studio\nTheatre. This fall Mossburg will be a\nsenior in the IPFW theatre\ndepartment and will portray\nCharlotte Corday in Marat-Sade as\nher senior performance project. She\nhas been involved backstage with the\nbuilding of the sets, as floor crew\nand light crew for numerous shows,\nand as a member of the Funny Girl\nset construction crew.\nSandy McNeil-Costume Shop\nMcNeil has worked in the PurdueIndiana\nTheatre costume shop for the\npast four years on shows such as\nDamn Yankees; The Rainmaker; A\nChorus Line; Hello, Dolly!;\nDracula; and West Side Story. She is\nretired from GTE Data Services, and\nher hobbies include sewing, crafts,\nand cross-stitch.\nGavino C. Olvera-Scene Shop\nOlvera is an IPFW senior majoring\nin theatre. He has performed in West\nSide Story, A Chorus Line, An\nThe Fantastics, A Flea In Her Ear,\nOlvera hopes to pursue a career in\nacting after graduation.\nSara Pauley-Maude, Mimsey, Mrs.\nVance, Dance Ensemble\nPauley, a sophomore at Indiana\nUniversity Bloomington pursuing a\nB.A. in drama, makes her debut with\nIPFW in Funny Girl. She has\nappeared in The Boy Who Ate the\nMoon at IUB, and has been seen in\nFunny Girl, Pippin, The Pajama\nGame, West Side Story, Dark of the\nMoon, and The Night of January\n16th at Northrop High School. She\nhas appeared in the films of In The\nCompany of Men, Ninth Day, and\nSave the Bones for Henry Jones. She\nwas also a Sterling Sentinel nominee\nin drama. Pauley would like to\npursue acting on a professional level\nin New York and Chicago.\nChristina Pentsos-Mrs. Nadler,\nPentsos returns to the PIT stage after\nbeing in Damn Yankees. She was also\nHunyek in Chicago at Arena Dinner\nTheatre. An IPFW junior pursuing a\nB.S. in health science, she enjoys\nsoccer and dance, and wishes to\ncontinue performing. Pentsos hopes to\nwork in the medical field after college.\nBrenda Porter-Mrs. O'Malley\nPorter returns to PIT after appearing in\nThe World Goes 'Round. She is\ncurrently pursuing a doctorate at the\nAdler Institute of Psychology and is\nemployed at Lutheran College. She has\nappeared in many shows throughout\nFort Wayne, including favorite roles as\nthe Mexican woman in Human\nComedy, and the soprano soloist in\nSweeney Todd at the Civic Theatre,\nPeggy in Godspell at First\nPresbyterian, Christine Donovan in\nFollies, and a soloist in On Broadway\nat PIT. Porter has worked\nprofessionally at the Circle Theatre in\nIndianapolis in Yuletide Celebration as\na singer/dancer.\nBrian Porter-Snub Taylor, Ziegfeld\nTenor, Dance Ensemble\nAlthough Porter makes his PIT debut\nin Funny Girl, he is not new to the\ntheatre. His credits include Dickon in\nSecret Garden both at Civic Theatre\nand at Grey Lite, and Closer Than Ever\nat Grey Lite. At South Side High\nSchool he has perfonned in West Side\nStory as Big Deal, Kiss Me Kate as Bill\nCalhoun/Lucentio, and Fame as Nick\nPiazza. He has also done backstage\nwork for Civic Theatre. He is a 1997\ngraduate of South Side High School\nwhere he was involved in the Vocal\nEnsemble, the Vocal Jazz Ensemble,\nand the Show Choir. Porter will be\nentering IPFW in the fall to pursue a\nB.A. in theatre. After that, he hopes to\nbecome a professional actor.\nGary L. Reed-John, Stage Manager\nReed is a senior at the IPFW\nDepartment of Theatre and will\ngraduate this December. His PIT\ncredits include director of lnsence for\nShiva, one of the three one-act plays\nproduced for Indiana Voices in the\nStudio Theatre, Baptistin in A Flea in\nHer Ear, and Balthasaar and Friar John\nin Romeo and Juliet. He is selfemployed\nand enjoys rock climbing\nand golf. Reed hopes to find work in\nprofessional acting when he is finished\nwith school.\nKathy Robertson-Polly, Georgia,\nRobertson makes her PIT debut in\nFunny Girl. This will be her second\nyear at IPFW, but her first year as a\ntheatre major. Robertson is in her\nsecond year on the IPFW dance team\nand this year will serve as cocaptain.\nThis summer she will be\nchoreographing for the Rochester\nHigher School Dance Team. This 1996\ngraduate of Carroll High School is\nemployed at Bowtique Gallery and\nGifts. She hopes to become a\nprofessional actress and a dancer.\nLynne L. Steiner-Assistant Stage\nSteiner, an English teacher at Carroll\nHigh School, has a B.S. in English\neducation and a minor in theatre and is\nworking on her master's in secondary\neducation. Steiner has performed in\nplays and musicals throughout high\nschool and college and is in the process\nof learning more about directing and\nstage managing so she can finalize her\ntheatre teaching license and\nprofessionalize her master's degree.\nJohn S. Strachan-Nick Arnstein\nStrachan is a theatre major pursuing a\ndegree in theatre education at IPFW\nand is employed at Kittles Home\nFurniture. He was last seen at PIT in\nthe World Goes 'Round, and his other\nPIT credits include Riff in West Side\nStory with the Fort Wayne\nPhilharmonic, and Burton in Bum This\nin the Studio Theatre.\nElizabeth A. Wagar-Bubbles, Vera,\nDance Ensemble, Set Construction\nWagar is a junior at IPFW's theatre\ndepartment and was last seen in The\nWorld Goes 'Round. Her many theatre\ncredits at PIT include Minnie in West\nSide Story, Lucy in Dracula, I Hope I\nGet It Chorus in a Chorus Line,\nTrooper in Equus. Her credits at Civic\nTheatre include Brigadoon, Joseph 94,\nOklahoma!, Oliver, and at Arena, Once\nupon a Mattress. Having worked\nbackstage for numerous shows, Wagar\ndiscovered that she enjoys stage\nmanagement and hopes to make it her\nprofession.\nSynopsis of Scenes\nTime: Shortly before and after World War I\nFanny's dressing room-the New Amsterdam Theatre\nBackstage-Keeney's Music Hall\nIn front of Keeney's Music Hall\nBackyard-Fanny's neighborhood\nOn stage-Keeney's Music Hall\nBackstage and chorus dressing room\nMrs. Brice's kitchen\nBackstage-the New York Theatre\nOn stage-the New York Theatre\nIn front of Follies curtain\nHenry Street\nInterior of Mrs. Brice's Saloon\nA Private dining room-Baltimore\nBaltimore railroad terminal\nThere will be a fifteen-minute intermission.\nThe Arnstein Long Island mansion\nMrs .. Brice's saloon\nBackstage-the New Amsterdam Theatre\nOnstage-the New Amsterdam Theatre\nFanny's dressing room\nStudy-the Arnstein house\nKlaehn, Fahl & Melton\n420 W. Wayne St.\n6424 Winchester Road\nThe cast of Funny Girl\nFanny Brice ................................................................... Leslie Beauchamp\nJohn, Stage Manager ................................................................. Gary Reed\nEmma ......................................................................... Melissa Hershberger\nMrs. Brice ......................................................................... Natalie Y. Jones\nMrs. Strakosh .......................................................... .Jane Rebekah Frazier\nMrs. Meeker ..................................................................... Cassandra Holst\nMrs. O'Malley ...................................................................... Brenda Porter\n·Tom Keeney ........................................................................ Luke Hancock\nEddie Ryan .............................................................................. Gary Lanier\nSnub Taylor ............................................................................. Brian Porter\nBubbles ............................................................ ............ Elizabeth A. Wagar\nPolly ................................................................................. Kathy Robertson\nMaude .................................................................................... Sarah Pauley\nNick Arnstein ...................................................................... .John Strachan\nFlorenz Ziegfield Jr ............................................................. Bill Kercheval\nMimsey .................................................................................. Sarah Pauley\nZiegfield Tenor ........................................................................ Brian Porter\nAdolph ................................................................................... Thomas Keel\nMrs. Nadler ..................................................................... Christina Pentsos\nPaul, Waiter ...................................................................... Chad Burnworth\nCathy ............................................................................. Danielle Andersen\nVera .............................................................................. Elizabeth A. Wagar\nJenny ..................................................................... , ....... AnnaL. Mossburg\nGeorgia ............................................................................ Kathy Robertson\nMr. Renaldi ........................................................................... Brian Wagner\nMrs. Winston ................................................................. Danielle Andersen\nMrs. Vance ............................................................................... Sara Pauley\nMr. Vance .............................................................................. Thomas Keel\nChorus ................................................................................... Colette Cress\nJohn C. Hermes, conductor\nJodi Hakes, piano\nSue Devito, clarinet and saxophone\nNancy Drew, flute and piccolo\nKevin Drew, trumpet\nEd King, trombone\nJody Smith, bass\nSean McBryde, percussion\nEric Brown\nBrandon Conley\nAudra Eberly\nFunny Girl produced through special arrangement with Tams-Witmark,\n560 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10022-6828.\nMusical Numbers fl\nAct One Act Two\nOverture .. ..... ......................................................... Orchestra Entr'acte ............................................................... Orchestra\nPoker Chant .......................... Mrs. Brice and Mrs. Strakosh Sadie, Sadie ............................................ Fanny and Chorus\nIf A Girl Isn't Pretty .................. Mrs. Strakosh, Mrs. Brice, Find Yourself a Man ....................... ........ Eddie, Mrs. Brice,\nMrs. Meeker, Mrs. O'Malley, ................................................................ and Mrs. Strakosh\nEddie, and Chorus Rat-Tat-Tat-Tat ............................ Eddie, Jenny, and Chorus\nI'm The Greatest Star ................................................. Fanny Who Are You Now? ................................................... Fanny\nReprise: I'm The Greatest Star ............ ......... ............. Fanny Don't Rain On My Parade ............................................ Nick\nComet Man ............................................. Fanny and Chorus The Music That Makes Me Dance ............................. Fanny\nWho Taught Her Everything .............. Eddie and Mrs. Brice Finale Act Two ........................ ................................... Fanny\nHis Love Makes Me Beautiful ................. ......... Tenor Solo,\nChorus, and Fanny\nI Want To Be Seen With You Tonight ........ Nick and Fanny\nHenry Street .................................. -........................ .... Chorus\nPeople ......................................................................... Fanny\nYou Are Woman, I Am Man ...................... Nick and Fanny\nDon't Rain On My Parade ............... .............. .... ........ Fanny\n© /997 Norwest Bank Indiana, N.A.\nFor a great theatrical performance, you couldn't be in a better\nplace than at Purdue-Indiana Theatre.\nFor an outstanding banking performance, you couldn't do better\nthan to head toward Norwest Bank, where you'll find the full range\nof financial products and personal attentive service you'll need to\ntake you where you want to go.\n•·•·•~•·•· NOIIItiWSf •••••\n··~··® To The Nth Degree®\nAmerican Classics Summer Theatre Production Staff\nArtistic Staff:\nDirector/Choreographer .......................... ..... ................ ..... .... ....................... .... Larry L. Life\nMusical Director .......................................................................................... John C. Hermes\nTap Choreographer ................................................................................. Anna L. Mossburg\nScenic Designer ................. ........ .. .. .. ............................................................. Rob Koharchik\nCostume Designer .................................................. ...... ......................... Craig A. Humphrey\nLighting Designer ....................................................................................... Ryan Koharchik\nSound Designer .......................................................... ....................................... Tom Temple\nTechnical Director ......................... ................................................................ Timothy Byers\nStage Manager ........................................................................................... Marty Kercheval\nAssistant Stage Manager. ..................................... ..... .. .. ................... Lynn L. Kinzer-Steiner\nRehearsal Pianist ................................... ............. ....... ... ....................................... Jodi Hakes\nDance Captain ............... .............................................................................. Anna Mossburg\nProperties Supervisor .............. · ............................................................................ Heath Hays\nProperties ........................................... Tommy D' Annunzio, Heath Hayes, Anna Mossburg\nMaster Carpenter .... ....................................................................................... Gavino Olvera\nScenic Construction ........................................................ ..................... Tommy D' Annunzio\nCostume Shop Supervisor .................. ............... .... ................................... Sandra L. McNeil\nCostume Construction ............................................... .John C. Hermes, Sarah R. Lankenau\nMilliner ................................................................................................... Belinda R. Buckler\nWardrobe Supervisor .............................................................................. Sarah R. Lankenau\nMaster Electrician .............................................................................. ....... .... .. .. Ryan Berkes\nLight Board Operator .............................................. ......................................... Ryan Berkes\nSound Technician ............................................................................................. Tom Temple\nBox Office Manager .......................... ............... ................................................. Gary Lanier\nBox Office Staff ................................. Noelle E. Davis, Elizabeth A. Wagar, Patrick Foster\nPhotographer ·······························································.:: ······························· ·Bill Kercheval\nDepartment of Theatre Secretary .................................................................... Nancy Blasch\nPoster Design .......................................................................................... IPFW Publications\nBowtique Gallery and Gifts, Bill Carlton, The News-Sentinel; Steve Penhollow, The Journal Gazette;\nand Charles Rogers, Rogers Formal Wear; Bowtique Gallery and Gifts\nThe photographing or sound recording of any performance or the possession of any\ndevice for such photographing or sound recording inside this theatre, without the written\npermission of the management, is prohibited by law. Violators may be punished by\nejection, and violations may render the offender liable for money damages.\nLet your castaway items be part of the cast. As you clean your attics, closets, and garages, remember that\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre is always in need of used furniture, clothing, and housewares. All such donations\nare eagerly accepted and tax deductible. Call 219-481-6551 for additional information.\nThe Real Fannie Brice\nFannie Brice, born Fannie Borach on New York's Lower\nEast Side in 1891, made her stage debut at age 14 in Brooklyn\nduring amateur night at Keeney's Theatre. She worked in\nburlesque halls until 1910 when producer Florenz Ziegfeld\nasked to see her. Brice claimed she was 17 when she signed\nher exclusive eight-year contract with Ziegfeld. Technically\nBrice's contract was thus illegal, so Ziegfeld signed her for\n$7 5 a week the first year and $100 the next year. Brice was so\nexcited about her contract that she showed it to everyone.\nAfter she wore out eight contracts showing it around, Ziegfeld\nrefused to give her another one.\nBrice performed in seven Follies between 1910 and 1923\nand in several Midnight Frolic editions (1915 to 1921). Brice\nwas then in the Music Box Revue (1924) and toured in\nvaudeville ( 1925-26). She was also in a few Broadway shows and in movies, including The\nGreat Ziegfeld (1936) and The Ziegfeld Follies (1946). Following Ziegfe1d's death, Brice starred\nin the Shubert-produced Ziegeld Follies (1934 and 1936). She first appeared as Baby Snooks in\nthe 1934 Follies.\nBrice's radio career started in 1932 but really took off in 1936, after she appeared as Baby\nSnooks. Her Baby Snooks character was on the radio almost continuously until 1948. In 1944\nBrice got her own half-hour show on CBS and earned $6,000 a week.\nBrice had her brief first marriage to Frank White annulled. Then, from 1918 to 1927, she was\nmarried to Nicky Arnstein and had two children. In 1929 she married showman Billy Rose,\nwhom she divorced nine years later .. According to Billy Rose, Fannie told him \"she married\nFrank White, the barber, because he smelled so good; she married Nicky Arnstein because he\nlooked so good; ·and she married me because I thought so good.\" In the 1920s, Brice had her\nname changed from \"Fannie\" to \"Fanny.\" She eventually gave up performing for art collecting,\ndress designing, and interior decorating. She was 59 when she died in 1951, five days after\nsuffering a stroke. The films Funny Girl ( 1968) and Funny Lady ( 1975), both starring Barbra\nStreisand, were based on Brice's life.\n1997-98 Purdue-Indiana Theatre Season\nMainstage in Williams Theatre\nThe Persecution\nand Assassination\nof Jean Paul Marat\nas Performed by\nthe Inmates of the\nAsylum of Charenton Under the\nDirection of the Marquis De Sade\n(Marat-Sade)\nby Peter Weiss\nEnglish version by Geoffrey Skelton\nverse adaptation by Adrian Mitchell\ndirected by Larry L. Life\n''Total theatre\" is the expression critics\nhave used to describe this unique\ntheatrical event. The Marquis De Sade,\nwhen an inmate of the asylum of\nCharenton, staged plays that were\nperformed by fellow inmates. With this\npoint of departure, Peter Weiss has\ncreated one of the most powerful and\nexciting plays of the century, which\nreceived the Tony Award and New York\nCritics Award for best play.\nOct. 10, 11, 17, 18 at 8 p.m.\nby Anton Chekhov\nguest director to be\nA striking, indelible\npicture of Chekhov's\nRussia, and the memory\nof his rich, bittersweet, and deeply\nhuman characters. An uncle has a\nfrustrating passion for a lovely young\nlady, who is married to an old and ill\nman. She, in turn, is attracted to a doctor\nwho attends her husband. And the\nyoung miss of the house, in her turn, is -\nirrevocably and hopelessly in love with\nthe same doctor. A tender and\noftentimes funny story of the foibles of\nlove and the intrigues of passion.\nNov. 21, 22, 28, 29 at 8 p.m.\nby Mart Crowley\nRecently on broadway\nin a new and major revival, this candid\nand shocking depiction of gay life in the\n1960s still creates controversy and\nheated discussion in the '90s. A group of\ngay men gather to celebrate their friend\nHarold's birthday. The celebration turns\ninto an evening of high camp and human\nexperience. The play has riveting power\nthat remorselessly peels away the\npretensions of its characters and is\nuncompromising in its honesty.\nFeb. 20, 21, 27, 28 at 8 p.m.\nmusic and lyrics by\nbook by James Lapine\ndirected by Craig A.\nmusical direction by John C. Hermes\nchoreography by Larry L. Life\nInterweaving an intriguing mix of\nCinderella, Little Red Ridinghood, The\nBaker's Wife, Jack and the Beanstalk,\nand Rapunzel (with cameo appearances\nby Sleeping Beauty and Snow White) is\na multilayered plot that ends happily in\nact one. The musical then explores\n\"happily ever after'' in act two as previous\nactions come home to roost-with a\nvengeance as well as wit, melody,\nsentiment, and a musical company of\nspecial characters.\nApril 17, 18, 24, 25, May 1, 2 at 8 p.m.\nHigh school matinees: April 20, 23 at\nIPFW School of Fine and Performing Arts\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre\nMusic by Jule Styne,\nLyrics by Bob Merrill\nBook by Isobel Lennart\nfrom an original story by Miss Lennart\nProduced for the Broadway stage by Ray Stark\nNew York production supervised by Jerome Robbins\nOriginal production directed by Garson Kanin\nDirected and choreographed by Larry L. Life\nin the Williams Theatre\nMusical Direction ......................................................... John C. Hermes\nScenic Design ............................................................ Robert Koharchik\nCostume Design ..................................................... Craig A. Humphrey\nLighting Design ........................................................... Ryan Koharchik\nSound Design ..................................................................... Tom Temple\nFunny Girl is produced by arrangement with, and the music and dialogue material furnished by\nTams-Witmark Music Library Inc., 560 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10022\nThe photographing or sound recording of any performance or the possession of any device\nfor such photographing or sound recording inside this theatre, without the written\npermission of the management, is prohibited by law. Violators may be punished by ejection,\nand violations may render the offender liable for money damages.\nOrder form for season tickets or season passes to\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre Mainstage Series\nName (please print) ___________________ _\nAddress __________________________________ __\nZip _______________ _ Phone{ __ ) ____ _\nSeason ticket orders fill in the following information:\npreferred dates\n(circle one for each production)\nThe Persecution and Assassination of Jean The Boys in the Band\nPaul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of Feb. 20, 21, 27, 28 at 8 p.m.\nthe Asylum of Charenton Under the\nOct.1 0, 11 , 17, 18 at 8 p.m.\nApril17, 18, 24, 25, May 1, 2 at 8 p.m.\nPrice: Adult $36-a $4 savings over individual tickets.\nSenior Citizen $28-an $8 sav1ngs over individual tickets.\nSeating: (indicate first and second preferred seating location)\nHouse right center, rows A through F\nHouse left center, rows A through F\nHouse right, rows A through G\nHouse left, rows A through G\nTickets will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis, and specific seat\nnumbers will be assigned at the discretion of the management.\nNote: A Studio Theatre voucher will be issued to each Mainstage Season ticket/pass\nholder. The voucher can be exchanged for a ticket to any of the productions of the Studio\nTheatre Season. Reservations to Studio Theatre productions must be made in advance of\nopening. Seating in the Studio Theatre is festival seating; no specific seats are assigned.\nGift certificates are now available at $12 each for Mainstage shows.\nCall the box office at 219-481-6555 for more information.\nI enclose my check (payable to Purdue-Indiana Theatre) in the\namount of $ for season tickets/season passes.\n(Please, no cash or credit card orders.)\nMail order form and check to:\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre, Williams Theatre Box Office, IPFW,\n2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN 46805-1499\nIf you would like your tickets mailed, please include a self-addressed,\nstamped envelope. Other_wise, tickets can be picked up at the box office.\nStudio Theatre in Kettler Hall\nby Jean Anouilh\nA modern adaptation of\nthe classic Greek\ntragedy. The play's\nparallels to modern\ntimes are exciting and\nprovocative. What is\nmoral order? Does the\nindividual have an obligation to pursue\nthat which is righteous and good even\nwhen doing so defies the social and\npolitical mores of the time? Does\npower corrupt, forcing those in power\nto destroy anyone that gets in their\nway? The dimensions of the play are\nnoble and its intentions uncompromising.\nSept. 25, 26, 27 at 8 p.m.\nHigh school matinees: Sept. 25, 26\nat 1 0:30 a.m.\nThis masterful comedy,\nconcerning the reunion\n~ of a family gathered to\n~ await the imminent\ndeath of their patriarch,\nis the story of the rebirth of the spirit of\nthe family unit. Set in a small Texas\ntown, the hilarious action is fast paced\nand filled with tense moments, funny\nmoments, and characters you care\nOct. 30, 31, Nov. 1 at 8 p.m.\nThe Effects of Gamma\nRays on Man-1 n-TheMoon-\nby Paul Zindel\nWinner of the Pulitzer\nPrize, the .Obie Award,\nand the New York Drama Critics Circle\nAward as best American play of the\nseason, this play is a powerful and\nmoving study of an embittered,\nvindictive widow and her two young\ndaughters. It is a testament to the\nhuman spirit and proves that\nsomething beautiful and full of promise\ncan emerge from even the most\nbarren, afflicted soil. A play that\nteaches a timeless lesson, the root of\nits moving power and truth.\nFeb. 5, 6, 7 at 8 p.m.\nDurang-Durang\nDurang\nIf you need a break\nfrom the heaviness\nof the world, then Christopher\nDurang's silly, funny, over-the-top\nsketches are for you. This series of\none-act plays are bitingly irreverent\nand aim their barbs at everything from\norganized religion to Hollywood and\nTennessee Williams. With the help of\nDurang, the fine art of parody has\nreturned to the theatre in a production\nyou can sink your teeth and mind into\nwhile laughing like an idiot. Parody of\nthis comic verve is as much fun as the\n\"marvelous party\" Noel Coward once\nsang about.\nMarch 19, 20, 21 at 8 p.m.\nCall to advertise in Purdue-Indiana Theatre programs: 219-481-6551\nOrder form for a season pass to\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre Studio Theatre Series\nName (please print) __________________ _\nAddress ______________________ _\nCity and State ____________________ _\nZip ___________ _ Phone{ __ }\nPrice: Adult $16-an $8 savings over individual tickets.\nSenior Citizen $13-a $7 savings over individual tickets.\nA season pass guarantees a seat at a performance of each play, with\nthe performance date chosen at a future time.\nAntigone-sept. 25, 26, 27 at 8 p.m.\nDaddy's Dyin' (Who's Got The Wi/1?}-0ct. 30, 31, Nov. 1 at 8 p.m.\nThe Effects of Gamma Rays on Man-In-The-Moon MarigoldsFeb.\n5, 6, 7 at 8 p.m.\nDurang Durang-March 19, 20, 21 at 8 p.m.\nReservations to Studio Theatre productions must be made in advance of\nopening. Seating in the Studio Theatre is festival seating; no specific\nseats are assigned.\namount of $ for season passes.\nFor more information, call the box office at 219-481-6555.\nstamped envelope. Otherwise, tickets can be picked up at the box office.\nTheatre Department Donations\nPlease make a tax-deductible contribution for the IPFW Department of Theatre. Your\ncontribution works this year and will continue to work, helping us to upgrade our\nacademic program, enhance our productions, and attract talented theatre students.\nFRIEND: $25\nPATRON: $50\nDIRECTOR: $100\nPRODUCER: $150\nIndiana-Purdue Foundation at Fort Wayne-note theatre fund on your memo line\nSchool of Fine and Performing Arts\nIndiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne\nName (please print)\nCity _____________ State ____ Zip\nDay telephone ( _ } _____ Evening telephone { _ }, _____ _\nName as it should appear in program\nD My company will match my gift. J INDIANA UNIVERSITY\n------------------------------------------------------ Would you like to receive The ArtScene? Just fill out your name and address below\nand drop in basket at door as you leave.\nand the generosity of thousands on and off stage ...\nThis is Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS today:\nYou can help by generously responding to the audience appeals and fundraising sales\ntaking place at this performance.\nFor more information on how you can make\na further contribution to help people with AIDS, write:\n165 W. 46th St., #1300, New York, NV 10036\nRodger McFarlane/executive director • Tom Viola/managing director\nTRAVEL WITH THE\nIPFW SCHOOL OF FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS TO THE\nFESI'IVAL\nFOR CLASSICAL THEATRE IN STRATFORD, ONTARIO\nSEPT. 11-14, 1997\nAgain this year, those with a passion for classical theatre can get their fill\nby joining the School ofFine and Performing Arts for a trip to the Stratford\nFestival, Sept. 11-14, in Stratford, Ontario. The largest classical repertory theatre\nin North America, the Stratford Festival draws hundreds of thousands of visitors\nevery season from all around the world.\nTravel package includes round-trip luxury motorcoach transportation, three\nnights lodging at the Queen's Inn-the finest accommodations in Stratford, three\nevening theatre performances, and a day trip for shopping in the nearby town of\nSt. Jacobs. Performances will include Romeo and juliet (Thursday night), and\nchoices between Death of a Salesman and Richard III (Friday night), and between\nCamelot and Little WOmen (Saturday night). The price is $489 per person, double\noccupancy (price varies slightly based on room type; please inquire). Spaces are\nlimited and are expected to sell quickly.\nReservations should be made as soon as possible; deposits are required,\nwith final balance due Aug. 1. To receive a registration form, or if you have\nquestions, please call Fine and Performing Arts, 219-481-6977.\nYTravel with the Professionals to See\nThe IPFW School of Fine and Performing Arts and the IPFW Department of Theatre annually sponsor a\nwide variety of Theatre Excursions to various theatre centers. All trips are open to the public and are\naccompanied by a theatre professional from the Department of Theatre to provide critique and\ncommentary on the productions seen.\nThese trips have proved to be very popular in the past and the ease of arranged travel and\naccommodations plus the educational experience of the critiques and commentary have drawn high\npraise from the many theatre-lovers who have traveled with us.\nThe following are future trips being planned. For further information and to be placed on a mailing list.\ncontact the IPFW School of Fine and Performing Arts at 219-481-6977.\nCall now to become a part of one of these exciting theatre travel adventures!\nA one-day round-trip on a luxury motor coach to Chicago to see the exciting, new Broadway revival of\nthe fabulous Bob Fosse/Kander and Ebb musical Chicago. Your host for this trip will be Larry L. Life, chair\nand artistic director, Department of Theatre.\nA four-day trip to Stratford, Ontario, home of the largest classical repertory theatre in North\nAmerica. Travel package includes round-trip luxury motor-coach transportation, three nights, lodging at\nthe Queens Inn-the finest accommodations in Stratford- and evening performances of Romeo and\nJuliet, Richard Ill, and Camelot Your hosts for this trip will be Craig A. Humphrey, associate professor of\ntheatre and PIT costume designer, and Larry L. Life, chair and artistic director, Department of Theatre.\nA five-day trip to London, England. Experience theatre in Shakespeare,s London. See the best of the\nWest End Theatre, as well as productions at the Royal Shakespeare and Stratford-Upon-Avon. Travel\npackage includes round-trip airfare from Fort Wayne, hotel accommodations, guided tours of London\nand surrounding locales, tickets to five shows, and optional guided activities. Your host for this trip will be\nLarry L. Life, chair and artistic director, Department of Theatre, and another faculty member from the\nDepartment of Theatre.\nA one-day trip on a luxury motor coach to Chicago to see the hottest new Broadway Dance Musical,\nBring in Da Noise, Bring in Da Funk. Your host for this trip will be Larry L. Life, chair and artistic director,\nDepartment of Theatre, and Gary Lanier, associate faculty and instructor of dance, Department of\nTheatre.\nMake reservations now for this very special holiday experience. Spend the weekend in New York City,\nsee two Broadway hits, and welcome in the Millenium in Times Square. Reservations are now being\naccepted. Round-trip airfare from Fort Wayne to LaGuardia, hotel transfers, hotel accommodations, and\ntheatre tickets are all included in this package. Your host for this trip will be Larry L. Life, chair and\nartistic director, Department of Theatre.\n95.1tm\nrahdes\n----' '--- ~lJRDlJE-INDI.A.N.A. JHEATRE\nT~ Best Varie:ty} T~ But Musil/\nNUESTRA CASA ES SU CASA\nThe gold standard for Mexican food in\nFort Wayne for 22 years.\n535 E. State Blvd.\nCJfJhen the occasion calls for\nsomething special, call ...\nBuy I Sell I Tr~e\n1428 Wells Street\nFort Wayne, IN '6808\nMond11y - Std urd11y\nSundlly\nSam Joel\ni!\\®~i!\\~\nMen's Formalwear Specialists\nPhone 744-5100\nLocally Owned .. .\nIn-Stock Service .. .\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre uses Rogers Forma/wear exclusively for all productions needing forma/wear.\nclassical music,\nNPR news and\nall at one spot on the dial.\nNortheast Indiana Public Radto\nFor a free program guide,\ncall (Z19) 45Z-1189\nFor the use of the rifles in Rat-Tat-Tat-Tat,\nwe thank:\n\"Your Statement in Images.\"\nWe specialize in commercial, camps, schools, and\norganizations. For quality screen printing and embroidery on\nT-shirts, jackets, hats, sweatshirts, and more, call toll free at:\n1-888-220-77 68\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre gratefully acknowledges the special contributions of the following\nindividuals whose continued support ensures our ability to provide quality theatrical\nexperiences. They make it possible for us to encourage the cultivation of awareness,\nimagination, wisdom, and delight. Purdue-Indiana Theatre acknowledges the continued\ngenerosity and support of Indiana-Purdue Student Government Association.\n1996-97 Benefactors\nSamuel S. and Bronnica W.\nTheatre for Ideas\nDavid and Janice Fairchild\nDr. and Mrs. Jack Dahl\nJ. Randolph Kirby\nBruce Abbott\nJack and Jan Baker\nPhil and Nancy Grote\nFort Wayne Civic Theatre Guild\nJohn Stauffer\nGloria Huxoll\nLinda Arnold\nPhil Grote\nArlene O'Connell\nJanet Mitcheii-Dix\nShirley Rickert\nLarry Griffin\nGeorge and Doris Mather\nJeanne Burger\nChristina Pentsos\nNBD Bank\nMs. Patrice Hunsburger\nJoan Kelham\nMs. Barbara Gibbens\nDuane Romines\nBarbara Romines\nDavid J. Cox\nGTE Data Services, Inc.\nRobert C. Smith\nNEWS YOU NEED\nFrom Fort Wayne's\nFirst Television Station\nWKJG-NBC 33 • Fort Wayne\nBudg&ellnns.\n1 005 W. Washington Center Road\n219-489-2220 • 1-800-4-BUDGET\nWHr- r E·~t;R: -~ Er\" Vtjl ~', Ll ,UI r l. r.· Sr.· .\n'I • . .• ·~··' ~·· \" ·-'<\" _, ' .n.-· ..t -\nGUARANTEE !\n• Free In-Room Mr. Coffee Makers\n• Free Room-Delivered Continental Breakfast\n• Fax Service\n• Corporate Rates\n• Showtime, pay-per-view movies, Nintendo\n• Free USA Today newspaper\n• Computer-modem hookup\n• Iron and ironing boards\n• Roadrunner Club\nGROUP RATES AVAILABLE FOR:\n•WEDDINGS\n• REUNIONS\n• CHURCH GROUPS\n• SCHOOL FUNCTIONS\n$44.95 rate with this ad! Call Today!\nCLEAN • COMFORTABLE • SECURE\nI SALOON I\n_______ j\nTitle Funny Girl\nCreator Life, Larry L.\nDate of Performance June 27, 1997\nPlay Title Funny Girl\nPlaywright Styne, Jule, 1905-1994\nMerrill, Bob\nLennart, Isobel\nSubject Musicals\nGenre Musical\nDescription This summer show featured two community guest artists.\nRights Copyright Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne Archives, 2007 -. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced without permission. For information regarding reproduction and use see: http://cdm16776.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/about/collection/p16776coll1\nmDON ID / Accession Number PIT199697I\nDate digital 07-28-2016\nSubject Theater programs\nDescription Program with bios of the performers and production staff, lists of scenes and musical numbers, notes, and information on upcoming performances\nContent Type Text\nOriginal Format Seven sheets and insert, half fold, printed on both sides, black on white (pages), blue and red on white (cover), 17 x 11 and 8 1/2 x 11 inches\nmDON ID / Accession Number PIT199697I001\nCollection OnStage at IPFW\nTranscript Purdue-Indiana Theatre's American Classics SUMMER THEATRE presented in sponsorship with Purdue-Indiana Theatre's 1998 American Classics Summer Theatre V \"HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS WITHOUT REALLY TRYING\" This is a simple story of a young man who climbs to a position of great power and of the girl who loyally hangs on during his climb and eventually wins him. In this wonderful musical satire on the Organization Man, his success is due neither to hard work nor any other ancient prescriptions for success. He gets ahead by following the simple rules in a book called How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. Our hero, J. Pierrepont Finch, runs into many obstacles and overcomes them like a modern, comic Seigfried: there's his rival, the boss's nephew, the mailroom trap, the office wolf, the office party, the dangerous secretary, the board meeting, jealous executives and, of course, the big boss himself. From the first coffee break to the last elevator load on Friday night, office life is never the same once \"Ponty'' Finch settles in for the trip to the top. Book by Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock, and Willie Gilbert Based on the novel by Shepherd Mead Music and lyrics by Frank Loesser \"Crafty, conniving, sneaky, cynical, irreverent, impertinent, sly, malicious, and lovely, just lovely\" -New York Herald Tribune \"Stings mischievously and laughs uproariously ... It belongs to the blue chips among modem musicals.\" -New York Times \"A big, beautiful, smart, tuneful, and shining musical comedy\" - United Press International Performance Dates: June 26, 27, July 2, 3, 9, 10, 11 at 8 p.m. June 28, July 5, 12 at 2:30 p.m. Welcome On behalf of Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne and the School of Fine and Performing Arts, I would like to warmly welcome you and your family to the 1997 summer professional theatre program. We are especially pleased to be hosting the American Classics Summer Theatre Series IV with its outstanding performances of both music and drama. Under the artistic leadership of Larry L. Life, professor and chair of our theatre department, this program offers talented campus and community performers an opportunity to enhance their relationship with the community and to help reinforce IPFW's role as a center of artistic influence in northeastern Indiana. We appreciate your support of the fine and performing arts and look forward to an exciting and rewarding cultural partnership in the years ahead. Michael A. Wartell Chancellor Bringing the Best of Broadway to Fort Wayne Welcome to the fourth year of the American Classics Summer Theatre series. We in the IPFW Department of Theatre are very proud of our annual summer presentations of the best of the Broadway theatre. Broadway, after all, is the heart of the American theatre and as such, has given us countless memorable musicals and plays. Our production this summer is an example of one of the many classic Broadway musicals. It is musical theatre telling the story of itself in its early and formative years. Funny Girl is as much a musical history lesson as it is the story of one of the theatre's greatest stars. In this production you will see numbers that are recreations of various musical theatre styles. The early Music Hall-Burlesque offerings of the early 1900s (\"Comet Man\") are followed by the lavish Ziegfeld showgirl number (\"His Love Makes Me Beautiful\"). Of course, no show that chronicles the early history of musical theatre would be complete without the traditional patriotic comedy-tap number (\"Rat-Tat-Tat-Tat\"), and similarly, no show that attempts to tell the story of Fanny Brice's early career would be complete without the second-act song that suggests Fanny's closely identified theme song from the later Follies, My Man (\"The Music That Makes Me Dance\"). Intertwined with all of this theatre history is the story of the immigrants who came to this country at the tum-of-thecentury and settled in New York's lower east side. The rich tradition of the mingling of the cultures is depicted in Rose Brice and her poker buddies and in the ensemble number (\"Henry Street\"). At the center of the show is the story of one of the greatest stars of the American theatre, the celebrated comedienne, Fanny Brice. Many will remember Brice for her later success on radio in the 40s and 50s as Baby Snooks. Funny Girl was produced on Broadway in the early 1960s. This was the time that produced such blockbuster hits as Fiddler on the Roof; Hello, Dolly!; How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; Camelot; A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum; and Bye Bye Birdie. All of these well-remembered shows made their debut on Broadway between 1960 and 1964. Funny Girl was announced variously under such titles as a Very Special Person, My Man, and The Luckiest People before David Merrick (who was to have been the show's coproducer) suggested Funny Girl. Numerous script alterations-including 40 rewrites of the final scene alone-and five opening-night postponements were required before the show was considered ready for its official premiere. Film producer Ray Stark, Brice's son-inlaw, had long wanted to make a movie based on the Fanny Brice story, but he became convinced that it first should be done on the stage. Mary Martin, Anne Bancroft, and Carol Burnett had all turned down the leading role before it was won by Barbra Streisand, whose only other' Broadway experience had been in a supporting role in I Can Get It for You Wholesale. During the Broadway run, Streisand was followed by Mimi Hines. In addition to our bringing you Broadway's biggest and best hits, The American Classics Summer Theatre productions over the past four years have brought some of the most outstanding talents in the area onto the IPFW campus. A large part of our mission is to join students from all area schools with community and university members in the presentation of top-quality American theatre. This crossculturalization benefits all of us and provides memorable experiences for actors, technicians, designers, and audience members. We are happy to welcome all of our newcomers and returnees. Most of all, we are appreciative of your attendance. If this is your first visit to our campus and the Williams Theatre, please come back again and again. Our home is your home, and you are our favorite guest. We love your applause and enthusiastic response to all of our performances. Thank you for choosing American Classics Summer Theatre, and we sincerely hope you will enjoy your experience with us. Larry L. Life Chair/ Artistic Director IPFW Department of Theatre 1997 American Classics Summer Theatre Company Danielle Andersen-Cathy, Mrs. Winston, Female Chorus Andersen is a recent graduate of South Side High School and will be a theatre major at IPFW in the fall. She is employed at a tanning salon and is also a dance instructor and a dance coach. She also enjoys ballroom dancing. Andersen makes her PIT debut with Funny Girl. Eric Brown-Male Chorus Brown is an eighth-grader at St. Jude's School and enjoys swimming, playing the piano, acting, singing, and dancing. He has received the Piano Guild Award two years in a row and has been involved in dance for five years. He recently made a music video for McMillen Health Center. This is Brown's third appearance on PIT's stage, previously performing in Hello, Dolly! and Gypsy. He has also been with the Fort Wayne Youtheatre performing in the Best Christmas Pageant Ever for two years, Alice in Wonderland, and Laura lngells Wilder. Belinda R. Buckler-Milliner Buckler will graduate from IPFW's theatre program this fall with an emphasis in costume design. She has designed for numerous shows here at PIT, most recently Waiting For Godot. She is employed at PIT's costume shop and received the 1997 Kenworthy Scholarship. Chad W. Burnworth-Paul, Dance Ensemble Burnworth returns to the PIT stage after performing as Baby John in West Side Story with the Fort Wayne Philharmonic. He is a graduate of West Noble High School and is employed at Frank's Nursery and Crafts. He hopes to make landscape design and horticulture his career. Timothy Byers-Technical Director Byers is the resident technical director for Purdue-Indiana Theatre and has been an invaluable asset to the Mainstage and Studio series during the academic year. This summer marks his third association with the American Classics Summer Theatre. Byers has a degree in theatre from Ball State University, where he worked in numerous technical capacities for their summer theatre. He is a native of Logansport and considers his active involvement with his five children to be one of his most prized possessions. Brandon Conley-Dance Ensemble Conley, an eighth-grader at Memorial Park Middle School, is involved in the Show Choir 78 Edition, which received a second place at the Opryland Show Choir Contest in April. He makes his PIT debut with Funny Girl and is very excited about being here. \"I would like to thank my parents and my music teachers, Jeanette Snyder and Kirby Volz. Without them I wouldn't be where I am today. Thanks!\" Colette Cress-Female Chorus Cress will be a freshman this fall at South Side High School, where she will keep busy with cheerleading, the speech team, show choir, and performing in shows. Cress was last seen at PIT in the chorus of Hello, Dolly! and was Baby June in Gypsy. She has also been in Oklahoma!, Hans Christian Anderson, To Kill a Mockingbird, and Charlottes Web. Her credits at Memorial Park Middle School include Bye Bye Birdie, David and Lisa, Music Man, On The Razzle, Damn Yankees, and Anything Goes. Tommy D' Annunzio-Scene Shop Staff D' Annunzio graduated from IPFW with B.A. in theatre and an emphasis in acting. Some of his credits include The World Goes 'Round, Burn This, West Side Story, A Chorus Line, An Evening of Fractured Shakespeare, The Fantasticks, A Flea In Her Ear, The Rainmaker, and Damn Yankees. He is hoping to move to New York later this year to pursue his professional career. Noelle E. Davis-Box Office Staff Davis is an IPFW senior theatre major. Among her many performances are Minnie Fay in Hello, Dolly!, Connie in A Chorus Line, Whitney in A Piece of My Heart, and Juliet in Romeo and Juliet. She received the Withers Scholarship for 1996 and spent the past two semesters studying in New York and North Carolina. This next year she will be back at PIT to portray Little Red Riding Hood in the spring production of Into The Woods for her senior performance project. Audra Eberly-Dance Ensemble Eberly makes her PIT debut in Funny Girl, but has been in two productions at the Fort Wayne Civic Theatre: The King and/, and Brigadoon. She has had 11 years of tap, jazz, and ballet from Karen Ehle Newman and is currently an assistant teacher. A junior at Whitko High School, Eberly has studied with the Fort Wayne Ballet and plans to continue in dance. Patrick Foster-Box Office Staff Foster comes to IPFW after spending 1994-95 studying musical theatre at Roosevelt University in Chicago. He is currently pursuing a liberal arts degree. Foster has appeared in Arena Dinner Theatre's production of You're A Good Man Charlie Brown as Schroeder, and in Fort Wayne Youtheatre's production of The Outsiders as Johnny. Jane Rebekah Frazier-Mrs. Strakosh Frazier is a sophomore in the theatre department at IPFW and a part-time assistant manager at Things Remembered. She was last seen in The World Goes 'Round at PIT and has performed in Eleemosynary, Damn Yankees, and Gypsy. Her Civic Theatre credits include The King and I, Man of Lamancha, Joseph 94, Oklahoma!, Evita, and Hans Christian Anderson. She also has helped out backstage at PIT and the Civic Theatre. The Snider High School graduate has recently returned from the American Music and Dance Academy in New York. Luke Hancock-Tom Keeney Hancock has been seen in numerous productions throughout the Fort Wayne area. His last appearance with PIT was as Officer Krupke in West Side Story. He is a senior at South Side High School and is on the speech team. He has received the Spectrum Spotlight Award for excellence in drama, the \"B izzie\" Bromley Award for excellence in speech, and a Rising Star in Performing Arts Award. This past year Hancock went to nationals and Catholic nationals for speech. He hopes to continue to be active in the performing arts and to possibly teach when he is older. Heath Hays-Properties Supervisor, Scene Sh~p Staff Hays is an IPFW theatre major with an emphasis in scenic design. Some of his credits include Burn This, Eleemosynary, and James Dean: The Boy From Fairmount. He has performed in An Evening of Fractured Shakespeare, Equus, A Flea In Her Ear, Tent Meeting, The Rainmaker, Damn Yankees, and Romeo and Juliet. His next project will be this fall as scenic designer for Uncle Vanya. John C. Hermes-Musical Director, Costume Shop Staff Hermes is an IPFW sophomore majoring in theatre with an emphasis in acting and directing. He has been the musical director at PIT for Hair, Gypsy, Oh, Dad ... , Pippin, The F antastics, and The World Goes 'Round; at Arena Dinner Theatre for Once Upon A Mattress, Chicago, and Dames at Sea; and at the Civic Theatre for Pump Boys and Dinettes, Taffetas, and Prelude To A Kiss. He has performed in The World Goes 'Round, Dracula, A Chorus Line, A Flea In Her Ear, Romeo and Juliet, Pump Boys and Dinettes, and Oh, Dad .... His next directing project will be Daddy's Dyin ', Who s Got The Will? this fall in the Studio Theatre. He will also be musical director for PIT's 1998 spring production of Into The Woods. Melissa Hershberger-Emma Hershberger makes her PIT debut this summer. She is a senior at South Side High School, where she has received various awards including the Drama Scholarship two years in a row. She has spoken at school board meetings and competed at Catholic nationals for speech. She has also been in the Honors Choir for three years at the Fort Wayne Choral Festival. Hershberger wants to major in criminal justice and minor in theatre when she goes to college. Cassandra C. Holst-Mrs. Meeker Holst, a Canterbury High School junior, makes her PIT debut this summer as Mrs. Meeker. A fan of dancing, singing, theatre, and speech, she has performed as Miss Johnson in Manley, Mother in 0 Je Jigs and Juleps, Lynette in 1940s Radio Hour, and Kate Gardner in Smile at Canterbury. She has received the most-promising speaker award in 0.1. Speaking and received a first at state JCL in English oratory. Craig A. Humphrey-Costume Designer Humphrey has worked off-Broadway as assistant to Laura Crow on the Circle Repertory Theatre production of Lanford Wilson's Burn This. He has designed costumes in Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Mississippi, and Pennsylvania. His experience includes The Normal Heart for the Pittsburgh Public Theatre and six seasons with Theatre-By-The-Grove. He is an IPFW associate professor of theatre, resident costume designer for Purdue-Indiana Theatre, associate chair of the department, and head of the design program. Locally, Humphrey has designed for Red, Hot, and Cole at First Presbyterian Theatre and for L'Histore Du Soldat for the Fort Wayne Philharmonic. He has also designed Bedroom Farce for the Touchstone Theatre in Chicago. His most recent works at IPFW include The World Goes 'Round; West Side Story; Dracula; Hello, Dolly!; A Chorus Line; A Flea In Her Ear; and The Glass Menagerie. He has directed The F antastics, Once Upon A Mattress, Forum, and will be directing Into The Woods this spring. Humphrey has an M.F.A. in costume design from the University of Massachusetts and a B.F.A. in theatre performance from Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Natalie Y. Jones-Mrs. Brice Jones returns to the PIT stage after appearing in The World Goes 'Round. Some of her other numerous theatre credits include Glad Hand in West Side Story with PIT and the Fort Wayne Philharmonic, and Queen Aggravain in Once upon a Mattress at Arena Dinner Theatre. At Arena, she has received awards for outstanding supporting actress for Queen Aggravain and outstanding lead actress for Mildred in Squabbles. Jones is a theatre student at IPFW, pursuing a B.A. She hopes her degree and experience will lead her to Broadway, but in the meantime, she enjoys collecting Angela Lansbury paraphernalia. J. Tom Keel-Adolph, Mr. Vance Keel is employed at the Indiana Auto Auction and enjoys tools and reading. In his spare time, he volunteers for the Fort Wayne Civic Theatre and would like to someday become an accomplished amateur actor. ~GEORGE D. I, & ASSOCJ'f';f!sll~ P.O. Box 234, Suite A 526 State St., New Haven, IN 46774 219-486-WINE Bill Kerchevai-Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. Kercheval ~as worn many hats for the IPFW theatre department over the years. With the opening of Hair and the new Williams Theatre in 1993, he served as resident house manager and production photographer for both Studio and Williams theatres until the end of the summer of 1996. He has continued the photography duties, and during the 1994 Classics Season, was evening scene shop foreman for Gypsy and Picnic set construction. Prior to Hair, Kercheval was house manager and photographer for Six Characters in Search of an Author, and photographer and member of the running crew for A Streetcar Named Desire. Recently, he wore yet another hat as follow-spot operator for The World Goes 'Round. \"Being cast as Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. in Funny Girl represents my Fort Wayne acting debut. I am thrilled to be a part of this fine cast and hope that I have performed to everyone's expectations. Enjoy!\" Marty Kercheval-Stage Manager Kercheval has worked in a technical capacity for The World Goes 'Round; West Side Story; Dracula; Hello, Dolly!; Damn Yankees; Who s Afraid of Virginia Wotf?; and other plays at Arena Dinner Theatre, the Civic Theatre, Open Door Theatre, and First Presbyterian Theatre. Robert M. Koharchik-Guest Scenic Designer Koharchik has spent the past few years designing for the Indianapolis Civic Theatre as well as the Red Bam Playhouse in Saugutuck, Mich. His design credits include Show Boat, The Glass Menagerie, The Pajama Game, The All Nite Strut, Rumors, Pump Boys and Dinettes, Steel Magnolias, Nunsense, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, I'm Not Rappaport, A Midsummer Nights Dream, Cabaret, and The Crucible. Some of Koharchik's designs have been exhibited at New York's Lincoln Center. Ryan M. Koharchik-Guest Lighting Designer After receiving his Master of Fine Arts in lighting design from Boston University, Koharchik returned to the Midwest in the spring of 1993 as a guest faculty artist for Ball State University's summer season. Since that time, he has worked as a lighting designer in Chicago, Indianapolis, Columbus (Ohio), and Michigan. Some of his many credits include designing Tom Leopold's world premiere of Henry and the Second Gunman at the Griffin Theatre in Chicago, the New World Theatre's production of Death and the Maiden, the Red Bam Playhouse's 1994 summer season, and The Glass Menagerie at the Indianapolis Civic Theatre. Koharchik has also worked at the Goodman Theatre and with Dance Kaleidoscope. Sarah N. Lankenau-Costume Shop Staff Lankenau is an IPFW junior majoring in theatre with an emphasis in costume design. She has performed in many of PIT's shows, including West Side Story, Dracula, A Chorus Line, The F antasticks, and A Flea In Her Ear. She has designed for Indiana Voices and has helped out backstage for many shows. She is very excited about her next project, Uncle Vanya, which she will design this fall at PIT. Larry L. Life-Artistic Director/Choreographer Life is professor and chair of the IPFW Department of Theatre, where he has been a member of the faculty since 1 971. In 1992 he was given the Indiana Theatre Association's Outstanding Artist-Educator Award for his 23 years of service as a director/choreographer, actor, and theatre educator in Indiana. Life worked professionally in New York in the 1 960s, appearing in the revival of Harold Rome's Pins and Needles at the Round-a-Bout Theatre and offBroadway with Fran and Barry Weissler's National Theatre Company. He has appeared in the films The Detective with Frank Sinatra and Me Natalie with Patty Duke and has worked with Madeline Kahn and Roberta Flack. He has been director/choreographer for musical theatre productions at Black Hills Playhouse, Louisiana State University, Wabash College, University of Nevada at Las Vegas, Tulane University, and Miami University at Oxford-Ohio, and has studied musical theatre with Lehman Engel at the Goodspeed Opera House in East Haddam, Cpnn. He has studied acting with Utah Hagen and Charles Nelson Riley and dance with Matt Mattox, J aimie Rogers, Charles Weidman, and Robert Lunnon. He is listed with Who's Who in Entertainment. His productions of Dames At Sea and Hair were granted the Amoco Award of Excellence and selected for presentation at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., for the American College Theatre Festival. Life has acted, directed, and choreographed for the Fort Wayne Civic Theatre, the Fort Wayne Philharmonic, Arena Dinner Theatre, and First Presbyterian Theatre. He has conceived, directed, and choreographed nine original musical reviews for the Fort Wayne Civic Theatre Guild, and one in 1994 for the Fort Wayne Bicentennial Commission. AnnaL. Mossburg-Jenny, Dance Ensemble, Set Construction Mossburg has been seen recently in The World Goes 'Round at PIT. Her other musicals roles at PIT include Graziella in West Side Story and Judy in A Chorus Line, as well as parts in Damn Yankees and Hair. In addition, she has been seen at Arena Dinner Theatre in Once upon a Mattress and was in the original play, In The Company of Men at the Studio Theatre. This fall Mossburg will be a senior in the IPFW theatre department and will portray Charlotte Corday in Marat-Sade as her senior performance project. She has been involved backstage with the building of the sets, as floor crew and light crew for numerous shows, and as a member of the Funny Girl set construction crew. Sandy McNeil-Costume Shop Supervisor McNeil has worked in the PurdueIndiana Theatre costume shop for the past four years on shows such as Damn Yankees; The Rainmaker; A Chorus Line; Hello, Dolly!; Dracula; and West Side Story. She is retired from GTE Data Services, and her hobbies include sewing, crafts, and cross-stitch. Gavino C. Olvera-Scene Shop Staff Olvera is an IPFW senior majoring in theatre. He has performed in West Side Story, A Chorus Line, An Evening of Fractured Shakespeare, The Fantastics, A Flea In Her Ear, The Rainmaker, and Damn Yankees. Olvera hopes to pursue a career in acting after graduation. Sara Pauley-Maude, Mimsey, Mrs. Vance, Dance Ensemble Pauley, a sophomore at Indiana University Bloomington pursuing a B.A. in drama, makes her debut with IPFW in Funny Girl. She has appeared in The Boy Who Ate the Moon at IUB, and has been seen in Funny Girl, Pippin, The Pajama Game, West Side Story, Dark of the Moon, and The Night of January 16th at Northrop High School. She has appeared in the films of In The Company of Men, Ninth Day, and Save the Bones for Henry Jones. She was also a Sterling Sentinel nominee in drama. Pauley would like to pursue acting on a professional level in New York and Chicago. Christina Pentsos-Mrs. Nadler, Dance Ensemble Pentsos returns to the PIT stage after being in Damn Yankees. She was also Hunyek in Chicago at Arena Dinner Theatre. An IPFW junior pursuing a B.S. in health science, she enjoys soccer and dance, and wishes to continue performing. Pentsos hopes to work in the medical field after college. Brenda Porter-Mrs. O'Malley Porter returns to PIT after appearing in The World Goes 'Round. She is currently pursuing a doctorate at the Adler Institute of Psychology and is employed at Lutheran College. She has appeared in many shows throughout Fort Wayne, including favorite roles as the Mexican woman in Human Comedy, and the soprano soloist in Sweeney Todd at the Civic Theatre, Peggy in Godspell at First Presbyterian, Christine Donovan in Follies, and a soloist in On Broadway at PIT. Porter has worked professionally at the Circle Theatre in Indianapolis in Yuletide Celebration as a singer/dancer. Brian Porter-Snub Taylor, Ziegfeld Tenor, Dance Ensemble Although Porter makes his PIT debut in Funny Girl, he is not new to the theatre. His credits include Dickon in Secret Garden both at Civic Theatre and at Grey Lite, and Closer Than Ever at Grey Lite. At South Side High School he has perfonned in West Side Story as Big Deal, Kiss Me Kate as Bill Calhoun/Lucentio, and Fame as Nick Piazza. He has also done backstage work for Civic Theatre. He is a 1997 graduate of South Side High School where he was involved in the Vocal Ensemble, the Vocal Jazz Ensemble, and the Show Choir. Porter will be entering IPFW in the fall to pursue a B.A. in theatre. After that, he hopes to become a professional actor. Gary L. Reed-John, Stage Manager Reed is a senior at the IPFW Department of Theatre and will graduate this December. His PIT credits include director of lnsence for Shiva, one of the three one-act plays produced for Indiana Voices in the Studio Theatre, Baptistin in A Flea in Her Ear, and Balthasaar and Friar John in Romeo and Juliet. He is selfemployed and enjoys rock climbing and golf. Reed hopes to find work in professional acting when he is finished with school. Kathy Robertson-Polly, Georgia, Dance Ensemble Robertson makes her PIT debut in Funny Girl. This will be her second year at IPFW, but her first year as a theatre major. Robertson is in her second year on the IPFW dance team and this year will serve as cocaptain. This summer she will be choreographing for the Rochester Higher School Dance Team. This 1996 graduate of Carroll High School is employed at Bowtique Gallery and Gifts. She hopes to become a professional actress and a dancer. Lynne L. Steiner-Assistant Stage Manager Steiner, an English teacher at Carroll High School, has a B.S. in English education and a minor in theatre and is working on her master's in secondary education. Steiner has performed in plays and musicals throughout high school and college and is in the process of learning more about directing and stage managing so she can finalize her theatre teaching license and professionalize her master's degree. John S. Strachan-Nick Arnstein Strachan is a theatre major pursuing a degree in theatre education at IPFW and is employed at Kittles Home Furniture. He was last seen at PIT in the World Goes 'Round, and his other PIT credits include Riff in West Side Story with the Fort Wayne Philharmonic, and Burton in Bum This in the Studio Theatre. Elizabeth A. Wagar-Bubbles, Vera, Dance Ensemble, Set Construction Wagar is a junior at IPFW's theatre department and was last seen in The World Goes 'Round. Her many theatre credits at PIT include Minnie in West Side Story, Lucy in Dracula, I Hope I Get It Chorus in a Chorus Line, Trooper in Equus. Her credits at Civic Theatre include Brigadoon, Joseph 94, Oklahoma!, Oliver, and at Arena, Once upon a Mattress. Having worked backstage for numerous shows, Wagar discovered that she enjoys stage management and hopes to make it her profession. jl Scene 1: Scene 2: Scene 3: Scene 4: Scene 5: Scene 6: Scene 7: Scene 8: Scene 9: Scene 10: Scene 11: Scene 12: Scene 13: Scene 14: Scene 1: Scene 2: Scene 3: Scene 4: Scene 5: Scene 6: Scene 7: Scene 8: Scene 9: Synopsis of Scenes Time: Shortly before and after World War I Act One Fanny's dressing room-the New Amsterdam Theatre Backstage-Keeney's Music Hall In front of Keeney's Music Hall Backyard-Fanny's neighborhood On stage-Keeney's Music Hall Backstage and chorus dressing room Mrs. Brice's kitchen Backstage-the New York Theatre On stage-the New York Theatre In front of Follies curtain Henry Street Interior of Mrs. Brice's Saloon A Private dining room-Baltimore Baltimore railroad terminal There will be a fifteen-minute intermission. Act Two The Arnstein Long Island mansion Mrs .. Brice's saloon Backstage-the New Amsterdam Theatre Onstage-the New Amsterdam Theatre Fanny's dressing room Study-the Arnstein house Backstage-the New Amsterdam Theatre Onstage-the New Amsterdam Theatre Fanny's dressing room-the New Amsterdam Theatre Klaehn, Fahl & Melton Funeral Homes 420 W. Wayne St. 6424 Winchester Road Fort Wayne, IN The cast of Funny Girl Fanny Brice ................................................................... Leslie Beauchamp John, Stage Manager ................................................................. Gary Reed Emma ......................................................................... Melissa Hershberger Mrs. Brice ......................................................................... Natalie Y. Jones Mrs. Strakosh .......................................................... .Jane Rebekah Frazier Mrs. Meeker ..................................................................... Cassandra Holst Mrs. O'Malley ...................................................................... Brenda Porter ·Tom Keeney ........................................................................ Luke Hancock Eddie Ryan .............................................................................. Gary Lanier Snub Taylor ............................................................................. Brian Porter Bubbles ............................................................ ............ Elizabeth A. Wagar Polly ................................................................................. Kathy Robertson Maude .................................................................................... Sarah Pauley Nick Arnstein ...................................................................... .John Strachan Florenz Ziegfield Jr ............................................................. Bill Kercheval Mimsey .................................................................................. Sarah Pauley Ziegfield Tenor ........................................................................ Brian Porter Adolph ................................................................................... Thomas Keel Mrs. Nadler ..................................................................... Christina Pentsos Paul, Waiter ...................................................................... Chad Burnworth Cathy ............................................................................. Danielle Andersen Vera .............................................................................. Elizabeth A. Wagar Jenny ..................................................................... , ....... AnnaL. Mossburg Georgia ............................................................................ Kathy Robertson Mr. Renaldi ........................................................................... Brian Wagner Mrs. Winston ................................................................. Danielle Andersen Mrs. Vance ............................................................................... Sara Pauley Mr. Vance .............................................................................. Thomas Keel Chorus ................................................................................... Colette Cress The Orchestra John C. Hermes, conductor Jodi Hakes, piano Sue Devito, clarinet and saxophone Nancy Drew, flute and piccolo Kevin Drew, trumpet Ed King, trombone Jody Smith, bass Sean McBryde, percussion Eric Brown Brandon Conley Audra Eberly Funny Girl produced through special arrangement with Tams-Witmark, 560 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10022-6828. Musical Numbers fl Act One Act Two Overture .. ..... ......................................................... Orchestra Entr'acte ............................................................... Orchestra Poker Chant .......................... Mrs. Brice and Mrs. Strakosh Sadie, Sadie ............................................ Fanny and Chorus If A Girl Isn't Pretty .................. Mrs. Strakosh, Mrs. Brice, Find Yourself a Man ....................... ........ Eddie, Mrs. Brice, Mrs. Meeker, Mrs. O'Malley, ................................................................ and Mrs. Strakosh Eddie, and Chorus Rat-Tat-Tat-Tat ............................ Eddie, Jenny, and Chorus I'm The Greatest Star ................................................. Fanny Who Are You Now? ................................................... Fanny Reprise: I'm The Greatest Star ............ ......... ............. Fanny Don't Rain On My Parade ............................................ Nick Comet Man ............................................. Fanny and Chorus The Music That Makes Me Dance ............................. Fanny Who Taught Her Everything .............. Eddie and Mrs. Brice Finale Act Two ........................ ................................... Fanny His Love Makes Me Beautiful ................. ......... Tenor Solo, Chorus, and Fanny I Want To Be Seen With You Tonight ........ Nick and Fanny Henry Street .................................. -........................ .... Chorus People ......................................................................... Fanny You Are Woman, I Am Man ...................... Nick and Fanny Don't Rain On My Parade ............... .............. .... ........ Fanny Just The Ticket © /997 Norwest Bank Indiana, N.A. For a great theatrical performance, you couldn't be in a better place than at Purdue-Indiana Theatre. For an outstanding banking performance, you couldn't do better than to head toward Norwest Bank, where you'll find the full range of financial products and personal attentive service you'll need to take you where you want to go. •·•·•~•·•· NOIIItiWSf ••••• ··~··® To The Nth Degree® Fort Wayne 219-478-6904 • 800-688-8510 Member FDIC American Classics Summer Theatre Production Staff Artistic Staff: Director/Choreographer .......................... ..... ................ ..... .... ....................... .... Larry L. Life Musical Director .......................................................................................... John C. Hermes Tap Choreographer ................................................................................. Anna L. Mossburg Scenic Designer ................. ........ .. .. .. ............................................................. Rob Koharchik Costume Designer .................................................. ...... ......................... Craig A. Humphrey Lighting Designer ....................................................................................... Ryan Koharchik Sound Designer .......................................................... ....................................... Tom Temple Production Staff: Technical Director ......................... ................................................................ Timothy Byers Stage Manager ........................................................................................... Marty Kercheval Assistant Stage Manager. ..................................... ..... .. .. ................... Lynn L. Kinzer-Steiner Rehearsal Pianist ................................... ............. ....... ... ....................................... Jodi Hakes Dance Captain ............... .............................................................................. Anna Mossburg Properties Supervisor .............. · ............................................................................ Heath Hays Properties ........................................... Tommy D' Annunzio, Heath Hayes, Anna Mossburg Master Carpenter .... ....................................................................................... Gavino Olvera Scenic Construction ........................................................ ..................... Tommy D' Annunzio Costume Shop Supervisor .................. ............... .... ................................... Sandra L. McNeil Costume Construction ............................................... .John C. Hermes, Sarah R. Lankenau Milliner ................................................................................................... Belinda R. Buckler Wardrobe Supervisor .............................................................................. Sarah R. Lankenau Master Electrician .............................................................................. ....... .... .. .. Ryan Berkes Light Board Operator .............................................. ......................................... Ryan Berkes Sound Technician ............................................................................................. Tom Temple Box Office Manager .......................... ............... ................................................. Gary Lanier Box Office Staff ................................. Noelle E. Davis, Elizabeth A. Wagar, Patrick Foster Photographer ·······························································.:: ······························· ·Bill Kercheval Department of Theatre Secretary .................................................................... Nancy Blasch Poster Design .......................................................................................... IPFW Publications Acknowledgments Bowtique Gallery and Gifts, Bill Carlton, The News-Sentinel; Steve Penhollow, The Journal Gazette; and Charles Rogers, Rogers Formal Wear; Bowtique Gallery and Gifts Warning The photographing or sound recording of any performance or the possession of any device for such photographing or sound recording inside this theatre, without the written permission of the management, is prohibited by law. Violators may be punished by ejection, and violations may render the offender liable for money damages. Recycle Let your castaway items be part of the cast. As you clean your attics, closets, and garages, remember that Purdue-Indiana Theatre is always in need of used furniture, clothing, and housewares. All such donations are eagerly accepted and tax deductible. Call 219-481-6551 for additional information. The Real Fannie Brice Fannie Brice, born Fannie Borach on New York's Lower East Side in 1891, made her stage debut at age 14 in Brooklyn during amateur night at Keeney's Theatre. She worked in burlesque halls until 1910 when producer Florenz Ziegfeld asked to see her. Brice claimed she was 17 when she signed her exclusive eight-year contract with Ziegfeld. Technically Brice's contract was thus illegal, so Ziegfeld signed her for $7 5 a week the first year and $100 the next year. Brice was so excited about her contract that she showed it to everyone. After she wore out eight contracts showing it around, Ziegfeld refused to give her another one. Brice performed in seven Follies between 1910 and 1923 and in several Midnight Frolic editions (1915 to 1921). Brice was then in the Music Box Revue (1924) and toured in vaudeville ( 1925-26). She was also in a few Broadway shows and in movies, including The Great Ziegfeld (1936) and The Ziegfeld Follies (1946). Following Ziegfe1d's death, Brice starred in the Shubert-produced Ziegeld Follies (1934 and 1936). She first appeared as Baby Snooks in the 1934 Follies. Brice's radio career started in 1932 but really took off in 1936, after she appeared as Baby Snooks. Her Baby Snooks character was on the radio almost continuously until 1948. In 1944 Brice got her own half-hour show on CBS and earned $6,000 a week. Brice had her brief first marriage to Frank White annulled. Then, from 1918 to 1927, she was married to Nicky Arnstein and had two children. In 1929 she married showman Billy Rose, whom she divorced nine years later .. According to Billy Rose, Fannie told him \"she married Frank White, the barber, because he smelled so good; she married Nicky Arnstein because he looked so good; ·and she married me because I thought so good.\" In the 1920s, Brice had her name changed from \"Fannie\" to \"Fanny.\" She eventually gave up performing for art collecting, dress designing, and interior decorating. She was 59 when she died in 1951, five days after suffering a stroke. The films Funny Girl ( 1968) and Funny Lady ( 1975), both starring Barbra Streisand, were based on Brice's life. 1997-98 Purdue-Indiana Theatre Season Mainstage in Williams Theatre The Persecution and Assassination of Jean Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis De Sade (Marat-Sade) by Peter Weiss English version by Geoffrey Skelton verse adaptation by Adrian Mitchell directed by Larry L. Life ''Total theatre\" is the expression critics have used to describe this unique theatrical event. The Marquis De Sade, when an inmate of the asylum of Charenton, staged plays that were performed by fellow inmates. With this point of departure, Peter Weiss has created one of the most powerful and exciting plays of the century, which received the Tony Award and New York Critics Award for best play. Oct. 10, 11, 17, 18 at 8 p.m. Uncle Vanya by Anton Chekhov guest director to be announced A striking, indelible picture of Chekhov's Russia, and the memory of his rich, bittersweet, and deeply human characters. An uncle has a frustrating passion for a lovely young lady, who is married to an old and ill man. She, in turn, is attracted to a doctor who attends her husband. And the young miss of the house, in her turn, is - irrevocably and hopelessly in love with the same doctor. A tender and oftentimes funny story of the foibles of love and the intrigues of passion. Nov. 21, 22, 28, 29 at 8 p.m. The Boys in the Band by Mart Crowley directed by Larry L. Life Recently on broadway in a new and major revival, this candid and shocking depiction of gay life in the 1960s still creates controversy and heated discussion in the '90s. A group of gay men gather to celebrate their friend Harold's birthday. The celebration turns into an evening of high camp and human experience. The play has riveting power that remorselessly peels away the pretensions of its characters and is uncompromising in its honesty. Feb. 20, 21, 27, 28 at 8 p.m. Into the Woods music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim book by James Lapine directed by Craig A. Humphrey musical direction by John C. Hermes choreography by Larry L. Life Interweaving an intriguing mix of Cinderella, Little Red Ridinghood, The Baker's Wife, Jack and the Beanstalk, and Rapunzel (with cameo appearances by Sleeping Beauty and Snow White) is a multilayered plot that ends happily in act one. The musical then explores \"happily ever after'' in act two as previous actions come home to roost-with a vengeance as well as wit, melody, sentiment, and a musical company of special characters. April 17, 18, 24, 25, May 1, 2 at 8 p.m. High school matinees: April 20, 23 at 10:30 a.m. IPFW School of Fine and Performing Arts Department of Theatre Purdue-Indiana Theatre presents Music by Jule Styne, Lyrics by Bob Merrill Book by Isobel Lennart from an original story by Miss Lennart Produced for the Broadway stage by Ray Stark New York production supervised by Jerome Robbins Original production directed by Garson Kanin Directed and choreographed by Larry L. Life in the Williams Theatre Musical Direction ......................................................... John C. Hermes Scenic Design ............................................................ Robert Koharchik Costume Design ..................................................... Craig A. Humphrey Lighting Design ........................................................... Ryan Koharchik Sound Design ..................................................................... Tom Temple June 27-July 12 Funny Girl is produced by arrangement with, and the music and dialogue material furnished by Tams-Witmark Music Library Inc., 560 Lexington Ave., New York, NY 10022 Warning The photographing or sound recording of any performance or the possession of any device for such photographing or sound recording inside this theatre, without the written permission of the management, is prohibited by law. Violators may be punished by ejection, and violations may render the offender liable for money damages. Order form for season tickets or season passes to Purdue-Indiana Theatre Mainstage Series Season Tickets Name (please print) ___________________ _ Address __________________________________ __ City and State Zip _______________ _ Phone{ __ ) ____ _ Season ticket orders fill in the following information: preferred dates (circle one for each production) The Persecution and Assassination of Jean The Boys in the Band Paul Marat as Performed by the Inmates of Feb. 20, 21, 27, 28 at 8 p.m. the Asylum of Charenton Under the Direction of the Marquis De Sade Oct.1 0, 11 , 17, 18 at 8 p.m. Uncle Vanya Nov. 21, 22, 28, 29 at 8 p.m. Into the Woods April17, 18, 24, 25, May 1, 2 at 8 p.m. Price: Adult $36-a $4 savings over individual tickets. Senior Citizen $28-an $8 sav1ngs over individual tickets. Seating: (indicate first and second preferred seating location) House right center, rows A through F House left center, rows A through F House right, rows A through G House left, rows A through G Tickets will be filled on a first-come, first-served basis, and specific seat numbers will be assigned at the discretion of the management. Note: A Studio Theatre voucher will be issued to each Mainstage Season ticket/pass holder. The voucher can be exchanged for a ticket to any of the productions of the Studio Theatre Season. Reservations to Studio Theatre productions must be made in advance of opening. Seating in the Studio Theatre is festival seating; no specific seats are assigned. Gift certificates are now available at $12 each for Mainstage shows. Call the box office at 219-481-6555 for more information. I enclose my check (payable to Purdue-Indiana Theatre) in the amount of $ for season tickets/season passes. (Please, no cash or credit card orders.) Mail order form and check to: Purdue-Indiana Theatre, Williams Theatre Box Office, IPFW, 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN 46805-1499 If you would like your tickets mailed, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Other_wise, tickets can be picked up at the box office. 1997-98 Purdue-Indiana Theatre Season Studio Theatre in Kettler Hall Antigone by Jean Anouilh A modern adaptation of the classic Greek tragedy. The play's parallels to modern times are exciting and provocative. What is moral order? Does the individual have an obligation to pursue that which is righteous and good even when doing so defies the social and political mores of the time? Does power corrupt, forcing those in power to destroy anyone that gets in their way? The dimensions of the play are noble and its intentions uncompromising. Sept. 25, 26, 27 at 8 p.m. High school matinees: Sept. 25, 26 at 1 0:30 a.m. This masterful comedy, concerning the reunion ~ of a family gathered to ~ await the imminent death of their patriarch, is the story of the rebirth of the spirit of the family unit. Set in a small Texas town, the hilarious action is fast paced and filled with tense moments, funny moments, and characters you care about. Oct. 30, 31, Nov. 1 at 8 p.m. The Effects of Gamma Rays on Man-1 n-TheMoon- Marigolds by Paul Zindel Winner of the Pulitzer Prize, the .Obie Award, and the New York Drama Critics Circle Award as best American play of the season, this play is a powerful and moving study of an embittered, vindictive widow and her two young daughters. It is a testament to the human spirit and proves that something beautiful and full of promise can emerge from even the most barren, afflicted soil. A play that teaches a timeless lesson, the root of its moving power and truth. Feb. 5, 6, 7 at 8 p.m. Durang-Durang by Christopher Durang If you need a break from the heaviness of the world, then Christopher Durang's silly, funny, over-the-top sketches are for you. This series of one-act plays are bitingly irreverent and aim their barbs at everything from organized religion to Hollywood and Tennessee Williams. With the help of Durang, the fine art of parody has returned to the theatre in a production you can sink your teeth and mind into while laughing like an idiot. Parody of this comic verve is as much fun as the \"marvelous party\" Noel Coward once sang about. March 19, 20, 21 at 8 p.m. Call to advertise in Purdue-Indiana Theatre programs: 219-481-6551 Order form for a season pass to Purdue-Indiana Theatre Studio Theatre Series Name (please print) __________________ _ Address ______________________ _ City and State ____________________ _ Zip ___________ _ Phone{ __ } Price: Adult $16-an $8 savings over individual tickets. Senior Citizen $13-a $7 savings over individual tickets. A season pass guarantees a seat at a performance of each play, with the performance date chosen at a future time. Antigone-sept. 25, 26, 27 at 8 p.m. Daddy's Dyin' (Who's Got The Wi/1?}-0ct. 30, 31, Nov. 1 at 8 p.m. The Effects of Gamma Rays on Man-In-The-Moon MarigoldsFeb. 5, 6, 7 at 8 p.m. Durang Durang-March 19, 20, 21 at 8 p.m. Reservations to Studio Theatre productions must be made in advance of opening. Seating in the Studio Theatre is festival seating; no specific seats are assigned. I enclose my check (payable to Purdue-Indiana Theatre) in the amount of $ for season passes. (Please, no cash or credit card orders.) Mail order form and check to: Purdue-Indiana Theatre, Williams Theatre Box Office, IPFW, 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd., Fort Wayne, IN 46805-1499 For more information, call the box office at 219-481-6555. If you would like your tickets mailed, please include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Otherwise, tickets can be picked up at the box office. Theatre Department Donations Please make a tax-deductible contribution for the IPFW Department of Theatre. Your contribution works this year and will continue to work, helping us to upgrade our academic program, enhance our productions, and attract talented theatre students. FRIEND: $25 PATRON: $50 DIRECTOR: $100 PRODUCER: $150 Please make check payable to: Indiana-Purdue Foundation at Fort Wayne-note theatre fund on your memo line ------------------------------------------------------ Purdue-Indiana Theatre School of Fine and Performing Arts Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne 2101 E. Coliseum Blvd. Fort Wayne, IN 46805-1499 Name (please print) Address City _____________ State ____ Zip Day telephone ( _ } _____ Evening telephone { _ }, _____ _ Name as it should appear in program Employer D My company will match my gift. J INDIANA UNIVERSITY PURDUE UNIVERSITY FORT WAYNE ------------------------------------------------------ Would you like to receive The ArtScene? Just fill out your name and address below and drop in basket at door as you leave. Name (please print) Address City _____________ State ____ Zip y and the generosity of thousands on and off stage ... This is Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS today: You can help by generously responding to the audience appeals and fundraising sales taking place at this performance. For more information on how you can make a further contribution to help people with AIDS, write: Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS 165 W. 46th St., #1300, New York, NV 10036 Rodger McFarlane/executive director • Tom Viola/managing director TRAVEL WITH THE IPFW SCHOOL OF FINE AND PERFORMING ARTS TO THE ORD FESI'IVAL FOR CLASSICAL THEATRE IN STRATFORD, ONTARIO SEPT. 11-14, 1997 Again this year, those with a passion for classical theatre can get their fill by joining the School ofFine and Performing Arts for a trip to the Stratford Festival, Sept. 11-14, in Stratford, Ontario. The largest classical repertory theatre in North America, the Stratford Festival draws hundreds of thousands of visitors every season from all around the world. Travel package includes round-trip luxury motorcoach transportation, three nights lodging at the Queen's Inn-the finest accommodations in Stratford, three evening theatre performances, and a day trip for shopping in the nearby town of St. Jacobs. Performances will include Romeo and juliet (Thursday night), and choices between Death of a Salesman and Richard III (Friday night), and between Camelot and Little WOmen (Saturday night). The price is $489 per person, double occupancy (price varies slightly based on room type; please inquire). Spaces are limited and are expected to sell quickly. Reservations should be made as soon as possible; deposits are required, with final balance due Aug. 1. To receive a registration form, or if you have questions, please call Fine and Performing Arts, 219-481-6977. YTravel with the Professionals to See Professional Theatre The IPFW School of Fine and Performing Arts and the IPFW Department of Theatre annually sponsor a wide variety of Theatre Excursions to various theatre centers. All trips are open to the public and are accompanied by a theatre professional from the Department of Theatre to provide critique and commentary on the productions seen. These trips have proved to be very popular in the past and the ease of arranged travel and accommodations plus the educational experience of the critiques and commentary have drawn high praise from the many theatre-lovers who have traveled with us. The following are future trips being planned. For further information and to be placed on a mailing list. contact the IPFW School of Fine and Performing Arts at 219-481-6977. Call now to become a part of one of these exciting theatre travel adventures! September 1997 A one-day round-trip on a luxury motor coach to Chicago to see the exciting, new Broadway revival of the fabulous Bob Fosse/Kander and Ebb musical Chicago. Your host for this trip will be Larry L. Life, chair and artistic director, Department of Theatre. A four-day trip to Stratford, Ontario, home of the largest classical repertory theatre in North America. Travel package includes round-trip luxury motor-coach transportation, three nights, lodging at the Queens Inn-the finest accommodations in Stratford- and evening performances of Romeo and Juliet, Richard Ill, and Camelot Your hosts for this trip will be Craig A. Humphrey, associate professor of theatre and PIT costume designer, and Larry L. Life, chair and artistic director, Department of Theatre. January 1998 A five-day trip to London, England. Experience theatre in Shakespeare,s London. See the best of the West End Theatre, as well as productions at the Royal Shakespeare and Stratford-Upon-Avon. Travel package includes round-trip airfare from Fort Wayne, hotel accommodations, guided tours of London and surrounding locales, tickets to five shows, and optional guided activities. Your host for this trip will be Larry L. Life, chair and artistic director, Department of Theatre, and another faculty member from the Department of Theatre. August 1998 A one-day trip on a luxury motor coach to Chicago to see the hottest new Broadway Dance Musical, Bring in Da Noise, Bring in Da Funk. Your host for this trip will be Larry L. Life, chair and artistic director, Department of Theatre, and Gary Lanier, associate faculty and instructor of dance, Department of Theatre. December 1999 Make reservations now for this very special holiday experience. Spend the weekend in New York City, see two Broadway hits, and welcome in the Millenium in Times Square. Reservations are now being accepted. Round-trip airfare from Fort Wayne to LaGuardia, hotel transfers, hotel accommodations, and theatre tickets are all included in this package. Your host for this trip will be Larry L. Life, chair and artistic director, Department of Theatre. * 95.1tm rahdes ----' '--- ~lJRDlJE-INDI.A.N.A. JHEATRE T~ Best Varie:ty} T~ But Musil/ .( BIENVENIDOS NUESTRA CASA ES SU CASA The gold standard for Mexican food in Fort Wayne for 22 years. 535 E. State Blvd. 219-482-2172 CJfJhen the occasion calls for something special, call ... (219) 424-0197 Buy I Sell I Tr~e 1428 Wells Street Fort Wayne, IN '6808 Mond11y - Std urd11y 11:00- 6:00 Sundlly 1:00- 5:00 Sam Joel i!\\®~i!\\~ FORMALWEAR Men's Formalwear Specialists 3518 S. Broadway Fort Wayne, IN 46807 Phone 744-5100 Locally Owned .. . In-Stock Service .. . Rental & Sales Purdue-Indiana Theatre uses Rogers Forma/wear exclusively for all productions needing forma/wear. Find classical music, jazz, NPR news and local information all at one spot on the dial. Northeast Indiana Public Radto For a free program guide, call (Z19) 45Z-1189 For the use of the rifles in Rat-Tat-Tat-Tat, we thank: \"Your Statement in Images.\" We specialize in commercial, camps, schools, and organizations. For quality screen printing and embroidery on T-shirts, jackets, hats, sweatshirts, and more, call toll free at: 1-888-220-77 68 PURDUE-INDIANA THEATRE Purdue-Indiana Theatre gratefully acknowledges the special contributions of the following individuals whose continued support ensures our ability to provide quality theatrical experiences. They make it possible for us to encourage the cultivation of awareness, imagination, wisdom, and delight. Purdue-Indiana Theatre acknowledges the continued generosity and support of Indiana-Purdue Student Government Association. 1996-97 Benefactors Samuel S. and Bronnica W. Weinberg Theatre for Ideas David and Janice Fairchild Dr. and Mrs. Jack Dahl J. Randolph Kirby Bruce Abbott Jack and Jan Baker Phil and Nancy Grote Fort Wayne Civic Theatre Guild John Stauffer Gloria Huxoll Larry L. Life Linda Arnold Phil Grote Arlene O'Connell Janet Mitcheii-Dix Shirley Rickert Larry Griffin George and Doris Mather Jeanne Burger Christina Pentsos NBD Bank Ms. Patrice Hunsburger Joan Kelham Ms. Barbara Gibbens Duane Romines Barbara Romines David J. Cox GTE Data Services, Inc. Robert C. Smith John Morris NEWS YOU NEED From Fort Wayne's First Television Station WKJG-NBC 33 • Fort Wayne Budg&ellnns. 1 005 W. Washington Center Road Fort Wayne, IN 46825 219-489-2220 • 1-800-4-BUDGET WHr- r E·~t;R: -~ Er\" Vtjl ~', Ll ,UI r l. r.· Sr.· . 'I • . .• ·~··' ~·· \" ·-'<\" _, ' .n.-· ..t - GUARANTEE ! • Free In-Room Mr. Coffee Makers • Free Room-Delivered Continental Breakfast • Fax Service • Corporate Rates • Showtime, pay-per-view movies, Nintendo • Free USA Today newspaper • Computer-modem hookup • Iron and ironing boards • Roadrunner Club GROUP RATES AVAILABLE FOR: •WEDDINGS • REUNIONS • CHURCH GROUPS • SCHOOL FUNCTIONS $44.95 rate with this ad! Call Today! CLEAN • COMFORTABLE • SECURE I I I I I I I SALOON I I _______ j\nWould you like to become a patron...\nThe IPFW School of Fine and...\nPurdue-Indiana Theatre's American...\n- Funny Girl\n- Would you like to become a patron of the arts?\n- The IPFW School of Fine and Performing Arts is going places... Care to join us?\n- Purdue-Indiana Theatre's American Classics Summer Theatre Series IV: Funny Girl\nCollege of Visual and Performing Arts","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1267883"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.507168173789978,"wiki_prob":0.492831826210022,"text":"Cuba offers 3G mobile internet access to citizens\nImage caption Cubans will be invited to join the 3G network between Thursday and Saturday\nCuba’s population is to be offered internet access via a 3G mobile network from later this week.\nTelecom provider Etecsa said citizens would be able to start subscribing to the service from Thursday.\nUntil now, locals have mostly relied on wi-fi hotspots and internet cafes and the 3G service has been restricted to state-employed journalists and foreign businesses among others.\nThis will change – but many will still be unable to afford the new contracts.\nEtecsa’s packages range from a month’s use of 600MB of data for 7CUC ($7; £5.50) to 4GB for 30CUC.\nUsers get a bonus 300MB use of local .cu domain websites.\nBut the average state wage for the island’s 11.2 million residents is the equivalent of about $30 per month.\nLooser limits\nThe launch marks a further relaxation of the government’s restrictions on online activity.\nUntil five years ago, access was largely limited to tourist hotels and state-operated clubs.\nImage caption Many Cubans have relied on wi-fi hotspots to get online\nBut in 2013, the authorities began opening internet cafes.\nIn 2014, they began allowing mobile phone owners access to the state’s Nauta email service at a charge of 1CUC per megabyte – the price has since fallen to the same charge for 50MB.\nIn 2015, the first wi-fi hotspot opened at a cultural centre. Hundreds of other public spaces then followed.\nAnd then in 2017, Etecsa began offering a limited number of home connections.\nAccess to the new 3G service will be rolled out over a three-day period in order to reduce the risk of it being overwhelmed with demand.\nThe order in which existing subscribers will be invited to join will be determined by the first two digits of their mobile phone number.\nImage caption Cuba’s president began tweeting in October\nHowever, Etecsa has not ruled out the possibility of glitches.\n“Incidents could be experienced in certain areas,” it has warned.\n“If customers experience any problems, they should inform the company.”\nNearly half of Cuba’s population own a mobile phone although not all are compatible with the radio frequency the service will use.\nAnalysis: Will Grant, Cuba correspondent\nImage copyrightReuters\nCubans have long wanted to catch up with the rest of the world when it comes to internet access.\nSince Raul Castro stood down and was replaced as president by Miguel Diaz-Canel, that has looked increasingly likely – at least on their mobile phones.\nThe new president has an active Twitter account and several members of the Council of State followed his lead recently.\nStill, based on their experience, most Cubans are distrustful of major announcements and unveilings until they can see real change for themselves.\nThe last time a 24-hour pilot for 3G was run, for example, other mobile services such as SMS messaging went down.\nThey will want to see that mobile internet works well and is dependable before deciding whether they can afford the packages.\nStill the desire is there, especially among young people who never considered it fair that they lagged so far behind their cousins elsewhere in the world.\nOne electrical engineer told me he was exhausted with having to sit in hot public squares to get online.\n“Why did we have to be the offline island?” he said.\nTo date, Cuba has generally allowed users to interact with most of the internet if they could gain access.\nA report by the US think tank Freedom House last year noted that the US government-backed news site Marti Noticias and local blog 14ymedio were blocked.\nHowever, it added that foreign news sites – including the BBC and Spain’s El Pais – were available, as were social networks including Facebook and Twitter.\nCitizens can also use video chat services that allow them to keep in touch with family members who have emigrated abroad.\nGame-on for UK’s Team Tao in ocean XPRIZE final\nDeliveroo wins latest court battle over rider rights","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line604346"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6504992246627808,"wiki_prob":0.6504992246627808,"text":"Cachão da Valeira\nUntil the end of the 18th century the Cachão da Valeira, or Valeira Gorge, was the easternmost limit of navigation on the Douro River. The gorge was blocked by massive outcrops of rock which formed a waterfall and prevented boats from travelling upstream into the eastern reaches of the Douro. The work of demolishing the rock and opening the gorge to navigation began in 1780. The first vessels were able to pass through the gorge in 1789 and the work was finally completed in 1791. The opening of the Cachão da Valeira to river traffic allowed viticulture to develop in the eastern reaches of the Douro, which became known as the Douro Novo or 'New Douro'. It is now known as the Douro Superior, or 'Upper Douro' and is the location of some of the finest Port estates including Taylor's Quinta de Vargellas. Until the building of the Valeira dam in 1976 just downstream from the gorge, the Cachão da Valeira was one of the most dangerous points on the Douro River. It is infamous as the place where Baron Forrester, a prominent figure in the history of Port, was drowned in 1862 when his boat was wrecked as it travelled downstream through the treacherous fast running rapids of the gorge.\nSee Traditional measures.\nA cask is a barrel used to age Port wine. Casks usually hold around 630 litres of wine but this can vary. Today all casks are made of oak. They are seasoned before being used to age the Port so that the wood does not impart too strong a flavour to the wine. See also 'Traditional measures'.\nChalk mark\nThe chalk mark, sometimes known as the splash mark, is a dash of white chalk or paint placed on the side of a bottle of Vintage Port to show in which position it was stored in the Port house's cellar. Bottles of Vintage Port should be stored lying down to keep the cork moist. The chalk mark is placed on the upper side of the bottle. Any sediment which forms in the bottle will therefore settle on the side opposite to the chalk mark. This is useful information when decanting a bottle of Vintage Port. If the bottle is held with the white mark uppermost, there is less likelihood of the sediment being disturbed. If there is no white mark, as is often now the case, the bottle should be held with the label uppermost.\nCima Corgo\nSee 'Sub Regions'\nColheita is the Portuguese word for a harvest. It is also the name given to a small category of Ports which are aged in wood and bear the date of the harvest on the label. These dated wood Ports should not be confused with Vintage Ports.\nA cooper is a person skilled in the making and repair of wooden casks and vats. The workshop in which the coopers build and maintain these wooden vessels is known as a cooperage. The skill of cooperage is often passed down from father to son within the same family.\nSee 'Treading'.\nSee 'Sediment'.\nCrusted\nCrusted Port is a full bodied red Port which has formed a sediment or 'crust' in the bottle. Like a Vintage Port, Crusted Port will improve in bottle. Unlike Vintage, however, it is usually blended from wines of more than one year and does not bear the vintage on the label. Crusted Port is a very small category of Port and not many houses produce it. In the past Crusted was also sometimes referred to as Crusting Port but this name is no longer used.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line452959"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6282196044921875,"wiki_prob":0.6282196044921875,"text":"B.I.R. Reminds USVI Residents Not To File Tax Returns With IRS\nCommunity Center / News / Virgin Islands / February 8, 2019\nIn a release issued Thursday, Bureau of Internal Revenue Director nominee Joel Lee said bona fide U.S. Virgin Islands residents should file their tax returns in the U.S. Virgin Islands and not with the IRS on the mainland.\n“Bona fide residents of the Virgin Islands must not file their individual income tax returns, electronically or by mail, with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS),” Mr. Lee said. “This is a violation of the law. The income tax return is only considered filed on the date that it is received by the Bureau, not the date received by the IRS. Taxpayers who receive erroneous refunds from the IRS will have to repay the erroneous refund issued by the IRS, and will be subject to penalties and interest. The due date for tax returns this year is Monday, April 15, 2019.\nThe reminder, which has been issued before, comes as Dept. of Finance Commissioner nominee Kirk Callwood said he could not say when tax refunds would be issued.\nB.I.R. also reminded taxpayers that the 2018 tax return has been revised. The format has changed significantly, it said, so taxpayers are asked to review the tax return and ensure that the information being provided is accurate.\nTaxpayers must use Form 1040 to file their 2018 taxes. Forms 1040A and 1040EZ are no longer available for use by taxpayers. Self-employed taxpayers are required to file two tax returns. The individual income tax return (Form 1040) and the self-employment tax return (Form 1040SS). The Form 1040 is filed with the Bureau. The self-employment tax return must be mailed to the IRS. B.IR. said taxpayers should not include payment of self employment taxes on Form 1040.\nMr. Lee reiterated that there is no electronic filing in the Virgin Islands. Taxpayers must submit or mail the returns to the Bureau for processing.\nFor more information about filing requirements for bona fide residents, please call the Office of Chief Counsel at 715-1040, ext. 2249 or 714-9312.\nRuling On Fate Of Excise Taxes Could Come 'Any Day Now,' New B.I.R. Director Says\nNeed Help With Filing Taxes, Let U.V.I., B.I.R., Help","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line513597"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7983453273773193,"wiki_prob":0.7983453273773193,"text":"Administration moves to ease drive-time rules for truckers\nby: RICHARD LARDNER, Associated Press\nPosted: Jul 1, 2019 / 04:02 AM PDT / Updated: Jul 1, 2019 / 09:38 AM PDT\nTruck driver Terry Button drives his truck near Opal, Va., Thursday, June 13, 2019. The Transportation Department is poised to relax the federal regulations that govern how many hours a day truckers can be behind the wheel, a long sought goal of the trucking industry. (AP Photo/Tom Sampson)\nOPAL, Va. (AP) — Truck driver Lucson Francois was forced to hit the brakes just five minutes from his home in Pennsylvania.\nHe’d reached the maximum number of hours in a day he’s allowed to be on duty. Francois couldn’t leave the truck unattended. So he parked and climbed into the sleeper berth in the back of the cab. Ten hours would have to pass before he could start driving again.\n“You don’t want even a one-minute violation,” said Francois, a 39-year-old Haitian immigrant, recalling his dilemma during a break at a truck stop in this small crossroads town southwest of Washington.\nThe Transportation Department is moving to relax the federal regulations that required Francois to pull over, a long sought goal of the trucking industry and a move that would highlight its influence with the Trump administration. Interest groups that represent motor carriers and truck drivers have lobbied for revisions they say would make the rigid “hours of service” rules more flexible.\nBut highway safety advocates are warning the contemplated changes would dangerously weaken the regulations, resulting in truckers putting in even longer days at a time when they say driver fatigue is such a serious problem. They point to new government data that shows fatal crashes involving trucks weighing as much as 80,000 pounds have increased.\n“I think flexibility is a code word for deregulation,” said Cathy Chase, president of Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety, an alliance of insurance companies and consumer, public health and safety groups. She said the hours of service requirements, which permit truckers to drive up to 11 hours each day, are already “exceedingly liberal in our estimation.”\nThere were 4,657 large trucks involved in fatal crashes in 2017, a 10% increase from the year before, according to a May report issued by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, an agency of the Transportation Department. Sixty of the truckers in these accidents were identified as “asleep or fatigued,” although the National Transportation Safety Board has said this type of driver impairment is likely underreported on police crash forms.\nThe NTSB has declared fatigue a “pervasive problem” in all forms of transportation and added reducing fatigue-related accidents to its 2019-2020 “most wanted list ” of safety improvements. A groundbreaking study by the Transportation Department more than a decade ago reported 13% of truck drivers involved in crashes that resulted in fatalities or injuries were fatigued at the time of the accidents.\nThe trucking industry has developed a strong relationship with President Donald Trump, who has made rolling back layers of regulatory oversight a top priority. At least a dozen transportation safety rules under development or already adopted were repealed, withdrawn, delayed or put on the back burner during Trump’s first year in office.\n“First of all, this administration is not as aggressive as the prior,” said Bill Sullivan, the top lobbyist for the powerful American Trucking Associations, whose members include the nation’s largest motor carriers and truck manufacturing companies. “Most importantly, the partnership with them has not been as suspicious of industry as in the past.”\nTrucking interests had pressed the administration and Congress for the rule changes and last year secured support from 30 senators, mostly Republicans. The lawmakers wrote in a May 2018 letter to Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration chief Ray Martinez that the rules “do not provide the appropriate level of flexibility” and asked him to explore improvements.\nIndependent truckers in particular have chafed at what they see as a one-size-fits-all directive written by Washington bureaucrats who don’t understand what they face on the highways.\n“How can you judge me and what I do by sitting in a cubicle in an office?” said Terry Button, a burly hay farmer from upstate New York who owns his truck. Button estimates he’s logged about 4 million miles since he started driving a truck in 1976. He said he’s never caused an accident, although he’s been hit twice by passenger vehicles.\nThe regulations have existed since the 1930s and are enforced by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration. The proposed revisions are being reviewed by the White House’s Office of Management and Budget and have not yet been released, according to a spokesman for the motor carrier safety office.\nThe regulations limit long-haul truckers to 11 hours of driving time within a 14-hour on-duty window. They must have had 10 consecutive hours off duty before the on-duty clock starts anew. And a driver who is going to be driving for more than eight hours must take a 30-minute break before hitting the eight-hour mark.\nBreaking the rules can be costly. A trucker might be declared “out of service” for a day or longer for going beyond the time limits. Many are paid by the mile, so if they’re not driving they’re not making money. Francois, who was hauling 45,000 pounds of drinking water to a Walmart warehouse in Woodland, Pennsylvania, said he gets 50 cents a mile and earns, after taxes, around $900 a week.\nOff-duty and on-duty time for most truckers is recorded automatically and precisely by electronic logging devices, or ELDs. Responding to a congressional directive, the Obama administration set in motion the mandated use of ELDs as of December 2017 — a regulatory requirement that Trump has not overturned.\nPaper logs could be fudged pretty easily, but not the ELD, which is wired to the truck’s engine and has a display screen visible to the driver. Chase’s organization says an accurate accounting of a trucker’s hours is one of the most effective ways to help prevent drowsy driving. But for many truckers, the logging devices have only highlighted the inflexibility and complexity of the regulations.\n“If you run out of time in the middle of the George Washington Bridge, are you just going to pull over and park?” said Button, referring to the world’s busiest span connecting New Jersey and New York.\nThe Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, which represents small business truckers like Button, said the schedule dictated by the rules is out of step with the daily realties confronting most of their members. Heavy traffic, foul weather and long waits for cargo to be loaded or unloaded keep them idle. All the while, the 14-hour clock keeps on ticking, pushing them to go faster to make up lost time.\nEspecially vexing is the mandatory break requirement, according to organization president, Todd Spencer. The pause forces drivers to pull over when they don’t really need to rest, he said. And parking for a big rig is often hard to find and they may end up stopping in unsafe places, such as highway shoulders.\nSpencer’s organization, which says it has more than 160,000 members, has been pushing for the 30-minute break to be eliminated. In comments filed with the Transportation Department, the group recommended that truckers instead be allowed to effectively stop the 14-hour clock for up to three consecutive hours. During this off-duty period, drivers could rest or simply wait out heavy traffic.\n“This is not rocket science stuff,” Spencer said. “Rest when it makes sense to rest. Drive when it makes sense to drive.”\nBut critics of the stop-the-clock idea said that would result in a 17-hour work window, heightening the risk of drowsy driving and accidents. There’s no guarantee a trucker can or will sleep during that three-hour stop and a number of them would be driving at the end of a long period of being awake, according to the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, a professional society of doctors and scientists.\nHarry Adler, executive director of the Truck Safety Coalition, criticized the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration for “appeasing industry.” He said the agency has made the potential rule changes a higher priority than pushing forward with safety technologies such as software that electronically limits a truck’s speed. Bipartisan legislation was introduced in the Senate last week that, if passed, would circumvent the Trump administration’s indefinite delay of a proposed rule requiring new trucks to be outfitted with speed limiters.\n“None of this should be up for consideration,” he said. “There is no reason for any of this.”\nFollow Richard Lardner on Twitter at http://twitter.com/rplardner\nOregon GOP launches effort to recall Gov. Brown\nPORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - The chairman of the Oregon Republican Party has filed paperwork to launch a recall against Democratic Gov. Kate Brown, citing some of the laws passed in the 2019 legislative session.\nThe Oregonian/OregonLive reports Chairman Bill Currier in the Monday filing also pointed to Brown's announcement the day after lawmakers went home last month that if necessary, she would use executive powers to implement climate change policies similar to the plan defeated at the Capitol this year.\nBooker’s Iowa senior adviser leaves, citing personal reasons\nby ALEXANDRA JAFFE, Associated Press / Jul 15, 2019\nDES MOINES, Iowa (AP) — New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker's Iowa senior adviser is departing his 2020 presidential campaign, leaving Booker without a top staffer in a key early voting state.\nIowa senior adviser Joe O'Hern confirmed to The Associated Press on Monday that he departed the campaign last week for personal reasons. O'Hern was Martin O'Malley's caucus director in 2016, managed a Democratic gubernatorial primary campaign in 2018 and is widely known among Iowa's political class as a seasoned organizer with a deep understanding of the caucus process.\nUS, Russian delegations to discuss arms control in Geneva\nby DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press / Jul 15, 2019\nWASHINGTON (AP) — Delegations from the U.S. and Russia are expected to meet this week to discuss arms control and the possibility of coaxing China into negotiating a new, three-way nuclear weapons pact, two senior administration officials said Monday.\nThe New START treaty, the last major arms-control treaty remaining between the U.S. and Russia, expires in 2021. There has been talk of negotiating an extension to the existing treaty, but the White House thinks the next generation of arms control must include China.\nPolitics / 1 min ago","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line297179"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7310900092124939,"wiki_prob":0.2689099907875061,"text":"← Exit: SEC’s Dan Gallagher – Enter: The Crowdfunders!\nJOBS ACT CROWDFUNDING IN 2016 – IT’S TIME TO CONNECT THE DOTS IN THIS NEW ERA →\nFinal Title III SEC Crowdfunding Rules – Done (almost)!!! Next Act: The Missing Title VIII (a/k/a H.R. 3784)\nPosted on October 28, 2015 by Samuel Guzik\n[As published on October 28, 2015 in Crowdfund Insider]\nI will not be discouraged by failure; I will not be elated by success.”\nJoseph B. Lightfoot\nThe bigger than life headline yesterday? The long-awaited news that the SEC’s five Commissioners would be convening this coming Friday to vote on, and presumably approve final Title III rules. Yet as we wait with great anticipation to see what the final rules will actually say, I wanted to throw out some thoughts to the crowd – thoughts which I and a growing number of others believe are important.\nFirst, a heartfelt thanks, along with my sympathies, to the Staff at the SEC who despite the media headlines to the contrary have worked tirelessly on the Title III rules to get to this day. Not an easy task to build out an entirely new capital formation ecosystem which brings together the riskiest of companies and the most financially vulnerable investors. And to make the task that much more difficult, Congress left much, if not most, of the important details to the SEC. And if that were not enough, the Staff at the SEC was saddled with a statutory structure which was not a product of rational legislative deliberation, but instead the final work product of some very ugly and partisan sausage making on the Senate side of Capitol Hill before Congressman Patrick McHenry’s original House bill would make it to the legislative finish line in April 2012\nAnd I would be remiss in not giving a special thanks to Sebastian Gomez Abero, Chief of the SEC Office of Small Business Policy, who had the herculean task of wrestling with all of the fine details, and assimilating the many views of those inside the walls of the SEC, not to mention the hundreds of persons who took the time to provide the SEC with their brain share in the form of written comments on the proposed rules and meeting personally with the Staff.\nBut alas, let us not lose perspective – Friday will come and go, like any other day. And regardless of what the final rules say, there will be much important work left to be done. So the question du jour is how will this work will get done? And how quickly?\nTo answer this question properly, one needs, as their starting point, not the 270-day deadline for Title III rules, set by Congress back in April 2012. Actually, I go back a lot further – 1980 to be exact – to remind everyone that long before the bipartisan JOBS Act of 2012 became part of the legislative landscape, Democrats and Republicans alike came together back in 1980 to forge important legislation with a singular purpose – to strengthen the interests of small and emerging businesses in the legislative and regulatory process. These were to be important reforms for SME’s, some of which included:\nProtection of the interests of small business from unduly burdensome requirements in the federal regulatory process (the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980)\nCreation of an annual SEC Government Small Business Forum, to provide a sharper focus on issues directly impacting small business at the SEC and to facilitate communication and cooperation between the SEC, state regulatory agencies, and the other stakeholders in the SME ecosystem.\nThough these were important steps, the promise of these measures and measures of similar ilk over the past few decades have not really moved the needle very much – given the amount of time elapsed. In fact, I believe it is fair to say that since 1980 it has pretty much-been business as usual for small business interests in Washington – still lacking strong, effective advocates, both at the SEC and in the halls of Congress.\nThat is not my opinion alone. Indeed, it would be challenging to find well-grounded opinions to the contrary.\nSo What is Needed? The Missing Title VIII of the JOBS Act: Creation of a Strong Independent Voice at the SEC – Small Business Advocate.\nWell, when it comes to my views on how to ease legislative and regulatory burdens on small business, I first spoke to this issue back in February 2014, in an article first published in Crowdfund Insider: an independent office at the SEC – one whose sole mission was to advocate for the interests of small business capital formation – and with the gravitas to actually have a chance to make a difference. Something more was needed than simply an office in the SEC, dedicated to small business, which has a line of authority on the SEC organizational chart which ends with the Director of the Division of Corporation Finance. What was needed was a strong and independent voice, one that reported directly to not only the full Commission but also to Congress.\nTo me, the need for this new office at the SEC was obvious. Yet I could find nothing in the public literature discussing this idea before I first advocated for it in February 2014. So in the absence of any prior authority on the subject I questioned: was this was really a good idea; would it really make a difference for small business? Or would such a new office perhaps do more harm than good, as some might postulate. Who would know better the answer to this question than now former SEC Commissioner Daniel M. Gallagher, I thought. After all, he was not only a sitting SEC Commissioner who was a staunch supporter of small business but one who had headed up the SEC’s Division of Trading and Markets, amongst other SEC Staff positions, in a former life.\nWell, I heard Commissioner Gallagher’s answer to my questions in a private meeting with him back in June of 2014. And the public heard his answer in the affirmative in a major address he delivered at The Heritage Foundation in September 2014, aptly titled “What Ever Happened to Promoting Small Business Capital Formation, complete with a shout out to me in a footnote.” You see, from the perspective of Commissioner Gallagher, one of the line items in his personal “to do list” of necessary reforms to enhance the ability of small business to raise capital and to otherwise comply with SEC rules, was to create an entirely new office at the SEC, an Office of Small Business Advocate.\nHis words proved to be an inspiration for many, including those within the Beltway who are better positioned than most to make things happen. It started with an organization known as the Small Business Investor Alliance. A stone’s throw from the Hill they took the initiative to garner enough support to have legislation introduced into Congress on October 21, 2015. They started out by finding a friend in the offices of Representative John Carney (D-Del) and Representative Sean Duffy (R– Wisc). Also lending support as co-sponsors of the bill – Ander Crenshaw (R-FL), and Mike Quigley (D-IL).\nWhat started with what seemed like one lone voice with what seemed like a good idea soon became a bill, introduced into the House of Representatives on October 21, 2015, with bi-partisan backing of four members of the House of Representatives, and introduced with a letter of support signed onto by major national trade associations:\nSmall Business Investor Alliance\nBiotechnology Industry Organization (BIO)\nSmall Business & Entrepreneurship Council (SBEC)\nAssociation for Corporate Growth National Small Business Association\nCrowdfunding Professional Association (CfPA)\nNational Venture Capital Association, and\nThe bill, now officially designated as H.R. 3784, entitled “The SEC Small Business Advocate Act of 2015,” is chocked with details. But suffice it to say that this legislation, which empowers a single individual, the SEC Small Business Advocate, and an office dedicated to the single mission of advocating for promoting capital formation for small business, while also protecting the interests of small business investors, contains the key ingredients. This bill envisions, by legislative fiat, the insertion at the SEC of an individual and an office with a singular focus on small business advocacy, and with the organizational gravitas to get the job done – reporting to the full SEC Commission and to both houses of Congress.\nAnd for those who may think that this legislation is not necessary, all one needs to do is to look at the relatively short shrift that small business has received over the past decades, not to mention the (very) long waits to accomplish tangible reform for small business capital formation. Indeed, the long wait for final Title III rules – long not by my watch, but by Congress’s watch – a 270 day rulemaking deadline mandated by the 2012 JOBS Act itself, pales in comparison when one looks at the small business regulatory landscape going back to the then highly touted small business reforms instituted back in 1980.\nSo yes, when the jubilation of the crowd in many corners of the U.S. over the long-awaited final Title III crowdfunding rules subsides, let’s pause and take a brief moment to look back a few decades – to learn from history – and then, look not down, but forward. There is much work left to be done to facilitate smarter, right sized regulation of small business capital formation – consistent with necessary investor protections. But we need to work at a more efficient pace then we have over at least the past 35 years.\nSo after the elation from having final Title III rules subsides, please read this new legislative bill – think about how things might be much different – and better – for small business capital formation if this bill were to become law. Perhaps, the final Title III rules might have been even better than the best efforts of the Staff and the Commission could make them, given that they were already hamstrung by defective legislation passed without the involvement of the Commission. And, perhaps they might have arrived just a tad sooner.\nFor a link to the text of H.R. 3784 and the Letter of Support accompanying the bills introduction, it is available for viewing and download here: bit.ly/1P4Jj00 ]\nThis entry was posted in Business Formation, Capital Raising, Corporate Governance, Corporate Law, Crowdfunding, General, Regulation A+ Resource Center. Bookmark the permalink.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line478147"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6729415655136108,"wiki_prob":0.32705843448638916,"text":"VAN DIEST: 5 takeaways from Women's World Cup: United States keep raising bar\nWORLD CUP NOTES: Success attracts criticism in the Netherlands\nAfter a U.S. player's controversial tea-drinking celebration, here are some of the most notorious goal celebrations in World Cup history\nVAN DIEST: United States should be commended for continuing to raise bar of women's soccer\nUnited States gets past England and move on to Women's World Cup final\nWORLD CUP NOTES: United States show up at rivals' hotel\nDEREK VAN DIEST: A trip to World Cup final would put semifinal heartbreak in Canada to rest for England\nDEREK VAN DIEST: Rapinoe gets last laugh for U.S. against France at World Cup\nUpdated Jun 28, 2019 at 8:22 p.m.\nU.S. soccer captain Megan Rapinoe embodies all it is to be American\nDEREK VAN DIEST: French consider themselves underdogs against United States\nWORLD CUP NOTES: Canadian referee Carol Anne Chenard missed in France\nDerek Van Diest\nPARIS — Canadian Carol Anne Chenard was considered an early candidate to referee the final at the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup had she not been forced to miss the tournament after being diagnosed with breast cancer. Italian ...\nTAKE 3: Janine Beckie still destined for stardom despite loss at Women's World Cup\nPARIS — You could not help but feel bad for Canada’s women’s national soccer team as they filed past the media mix zone at the Parc des Princes on Monday with tears in their eyes following a painful defeat at the 2019 FIFA ...\nGALLERY: Canada gutted with loss to Sweden at Women's World Cup\nPARIS — They had been together so long and worked so hard, it was tough for Canada to hide the disappointment of being knocked out in the second round of the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup. Canada’s tournament came to an abrupt end, ...\nChristine Sinclair offers crucial penalty kick to Janine Beckie at Women's World Cup\nPARIS — It brought flashbacks of Wayne Gretzky being left on the bench during the shootout at the 1998 Nagano Olympics. This time it was Canada captain and second-leading scorer of all time Christine Sinclair not stepping up to take a ...\nTAKE 3: Canada still in the fight at Women's World Cup\nPARIS — Canada is not accustomed to losing, at least not the current make-up of the national women’s soccer team. The 2-1 defeat to Netherlands on Thursday at the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup was the first time Canada lost since ...\nWORLD CUP NOTES: Canada on the wrong side of video reviews against Netherlands\nREIMS — The way things were going, it was inevitable Canada would eventually have a run-in with the Video Assistant Referee at the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup. It took just over a minute for the controversial VAR system, used for ...\nANDREW POTTER: Women's World Cup fiascos show video review has no place in soccer\nBefore they’d even made it into the Round of 16, video review was wreaking havoc with the Women’s World Cup. It has completely ruined at least two key matches while disrupting many others. The video assistant referee, or VAR, is being ...\nVAN DIEST: Canadian defence ready for dangerous Dutch trio\nREIMS — Canada is in unchartered territory having qualified for the second round of the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup with a game to spare. On the two occasions Canada advanced past the group stage in previous World Cups, they ...\nWORLD CUP NOTES: Dutch expected to attack back against Canada\nREIMS — Group E at the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup saved the best for last when Canada and the Netherlands face each other here at the Stade Auguste Delaune on Thursday. With both teams having already qualified for the second ...\nDEREK VAN DIEST: American women's soccer machine keeps rolling at Women's World Cup\nPARIS, France — They’re loud, they’re proud, they’re well supported, and for the moment, the United States are taking it to opponents at the 2019 FIFA Women’s World Cup. The United States defeated World Cup ...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1646764"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9562139511108398,"wiki_prob":0.9562139511108398,"text":"Headlines > Forest: plain pack review \"premature\"\nSat 23rd November, 2013\nCampaigners opposed to plain packaging of tobacco have accused the government of ignoring the views of hundreds of thousands of people who opposed the policy in a public consultation.\nThey also describe as \"premature\" the government's decision to commission a further review of the evidence.\nThe review, announced this morning in a written statement by public health minister Jane Ellison, follows a public consultation in 2012 that attracted over 700,000 responses, almost half a million of them opposed to standardised packaging.\nAngela Harbutt, campaigns manager at the smokers' group Forest which runs the Hands Off Our Packs campaign, said:\n\"Over 700,000 people took part in the public consultation and a huge majority opposed plain packaging.\n\"Fifteen months later the government seems to be ignoring the outcome of that consultation despite the fact that very little has changed in the intervening period.\n\"Although Australia introduced plain packaging twelve months ago it's far too early to say what the long-term impact will be.\n\"Recent reports however suggest that smoking prevalence has remained the same while illicit trade has gone up.\n\"In contrast, there is no evidence that plain packaging has had any impact on youth smoking rates.\"\nShe added:\n\"Although we think it's premature, we welcome a further review as long as it considers all the available evidence and is genuinely independent and impartial.\"","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1464050"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.6032845377922058,"wiki_prob":0.6032845377922058,"text":"University’s Stafford base opens its doors\nUniversity gears up for Clearing\nStudent satisfaction remains high\nInspirational people to be honoured\nOn-the-spot offers at Open Day\nSuzi Perry to star at University business event\nClearing calls to University increase\nName of new Science Centre revealed\nNew professors help boost University research profile\n£500,000 investment in engineering facilities\nCapital FM visit University Campuses\nStudent’s delight at silver medal\nBusiness project to be extended\nStudents elect new president\nUniversity to support Music Festival\nThe University of Wolverhampton is leading a consortium of universities in delivering a support programme designed to help small to medium sized enterprises (SMEs) in the region that are in the early stages of developing new products.\nThe £1m Innovative Product Support Service (IPSS) project, part-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), has been granted an extension and will now run until December 2015.\nSince the project started in early 2013, over 100 companies have signed up to access the wide range of support.\nThe programme is particularly interested in businesses developing environmental, digital, electronic or medical technologies.\nProfessor Andrew Pollard, Director of the IPSS programme, said: “Through the IPSS project businesses within the West Midlands area will have access to the expertise offered by four universities from across the region. It is a great opportunity for West Midlands SMEs to get a helping hand in getting their new products to market and will make a real difference to the growth of their businesses.”\nIPSS offers eligible businesses up to six days of funded support in areas such as product design, market research, electronics development and intellectual property rights protection. In some cases, SMEs can also access grant support for businesses to continue the development of their innovative products.\nAs part of the IPSS programme each beneficiary will receive an objective review of their product. For those businesses with a viable proposition, the programme aims to offer assistance regardless of whether it is a concept design model, a review of the IP status of a product or the development of an electronics based prototype\nProject Manager, Abi Hopkins said: “The demand for support has been fantastic and new applications are received almost daily. We have established strong referral links with other University projects and external agencies to highlight the support available which has been effective. Regional SMEs are able to access a wide range of new product development support not only through the IPSS project but also through other funded programmes, therefore offering added value.”\nThe programme has attracted high profile keynote speakers and manufacturing enthusiasts such as TV presenter and historian Adam Hart-Davis, TV star and innovation enthusiast Robert Llewellyn and Martin McCourt, ex CEO of Dyson and additional events are being planned for later in 2014.\nThe project will continue to run until December 2015. For more information about the project and events, please contact Abi Hopkins on 01902 321105 or visit IPSS.\nDate Issued: Tuesday, 26 August 2014","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1422129"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.8024459481239319,"wiki_prob":0.8024459481239319,"text":"Martin Mor\nSnapper -\nMartin Mor!\n\"Martin is the act who has influenced me the most.\" - Frankie Boyle\nOne of the world's funniest and most respected comedians comes to Stagetime Comedy Club!\nMartin comes from Northern Ireland, and after a successful career as a circus performer, he turned his attention on the unsuspecting comedy circuit.\nWith over 30 years experience as a professional performer, Martin has established himself as one of the UK’s most popular and in-demand comedians.\nMartin has performed successfully at events of all description; from the Hammersmith Apollo to a show for the inmates of an Italian prison, from comedy clubs to performing in some of the most unique, and unusual locations.\nIn April 2016 Martin was part of a team that set the world record for the highest altitude comedy show by performing at 5,300m/17,600ft at Mount Everest basecamp.\nVery much the comedian’s comedian, Martin has been the support act of choice for; Frankie Boyle, Jack Dee, Lee Evans, Jasper Carrot, Patrick Kielty, Johnny Vegas, Steve Coogan, and once Tina Turner. Most recently Martin was part of legendary Doug Stanhope's podcast!\nMartin has made numerous appearances on radio and television.As well as devising and performing his own BBC television show, he has written jokes for some of the biggest names in British comedy.\nMartin is a specialist MC, and a regular headline act at most of the UK’s major comedy clubs, and also performs at comedy, music, and arts festivals around the world.\nA truly global performer, Martin has worked throughout the known world performing his shows in Britain, Ireland, Australia, USA, Canada, Croatia, Belgium, Slovenia, Romania, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, Norway, Germany, Cyprus, Crete, Falkland Islands, South Africa, United Arab Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand, Vietnam, Philippines, Cambodia, Nepal, Myanmar, Hong Kong, and Mainland China.\nMartin’s photograph is featured on the popular board game Trivial Pursuits, (The Genus Edition). On an arts entertainments square, he is seen wearing a leotard.\nExperience World Class comedy where comedy is supposed to be enjoyed in an intimate up close environment of Thailand's favorite comedy club!\n\"Explosive, visual comedian who should carry a government health warning!\" - City Life\n\"The comic least likely to be heckled.\" - The Irish Post\n\"Off beat , unusual, outrageous!\" - Time Out\nSpecial Early Bird Price ฿350!\nAdvanced ฿500/ Door ฿700\nThursday 11 October 2018 at 8:00 PM\n4/8 Sukhumvit Soi 8, Sukhumvit Rd., Khlong Toei Nuea, Khet Khlong Toei, Krung Thep Maha Nakhon 10110","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line526964"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.916323184967041,"wiki_prob":0.916323184967041,"text":"Surprise! Chance The Rapper Is In The 'Lion King'\nChance the Rapper can keep a secret!\nOn Wednesday (July 10), the 26-year-old surprised fans when he revealed that he managed to make a lifelong dream come true by snagging a role in the forthcoming Lion King. Chance shared the news on Instagram, detailing how his infatuation with the film led to him voicing the character Bush Baby.\n\"I grew up my whole life obsessed with all things related to #TheLionKing; like all three films, the Timon and Pumbaa tv show, the broadway play and especially the broadway soundtrack. Needless to say the original film was immensely impactful on my music and overall life,\" he shared. \"So when my big bro Donald [Glover] got casted as Simba, he did the coolest thing ever and told director Jon Favreau to call me in as a consultant to keep the original flavor.\"\nChance continued, \"So for about a year I would go to the LK studio and see early animations, scenes, music direction or assemblies and they’d always be out of this world amazing. One day I’m there Jon asked me to do some singing stuff, another day he asks me to do some lines. Its all a blur, but I’ll tell u its one of the best blurs of my whole life. I am so blessed to know people like Donald and Jon man. AMAZING FILM, AMAZING CAST AND AN AMAZING NIGGHT LAST NIGHT. GOD BLESS AND LONG LIVE THE KING.\"\nNews of Chance's Lion King role comes ahead of the release of his debut album. As fans know, the \"Groceries\" rapper is set to release the project this month.\nLion King hits theaters on July 19.\nChance is also performing at this year's iHeartRadio Music Festival in Las Vegas in September alongside a lineup of superstar artists. Fans across the country can tune in and watch an exclusive live stream of the show via The CW App and CWTV.com. Then, on October 2nd and 3rd, relive all of the epic performances from the weekend during a televised special on The CW Network at 8pm ET/PT. And leading up to the official television special, The CW will also air an hour-long Best Of Special on Sunday, September 29th at 8 p.m. ET/PT.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line986892"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5042361617088318,"wiki_prob":0.5042361617088318,"text":"Oecd better existence index\nFebruary 15, 2018Education in Spain\nHow’s Existence?\nThe country performs well in couple of measures of well-finding yourself in the greater Existence Index. The country ranks over the average in work-existence balance, housing, health status, social connections, and private security but substandard in earnings and wealth, social engagement, ecological quality, education and skills, and jobs and earnings.\nMoney, although it cannot buy happiness, is a vital way to achieving greater living standards. In The country, the typical household internet-adjusted disposable earnings per person is USD 22 007 annually, under the OECD average of USD 29 016 annually. There’s a substantial gap between your wealthiest and poorest – the very best 20% of people earn near to seven occasions around the underside 20%.\nWhen it comes to employment, around 57% of individuals aged 15 to 64 in The country possess a compensated job, underneath the OECD employment average of 66%. Some 62% of males have been in compensated work, in contrast to 52% of ladies. In The country, nearly 6% of employees work very lengthy hrs, under the OECD average of 13%, with 8% of males working very lengthy hrs in contrast to just 3% of ladies.\nGood education and skills are essential requisites for locating employment. In The country, 57% of adults aged 25-64 have finished upper secondary education, reduced compared to OECD average of 76%. This really is truer of ladies than men, as 55% of males have effectively completed high-school in contrast to 58% of ladies. With regards to the excellence of the educational system, the typical student scored 490 in studying literacy, maths and science within the OECD’s Programme for Worldwide Student Assessment (PISA), less than the OECD average of 497. Typically in The country, women outperformed boys by 1 point, reduced compared to average OECD gap of 8 points.\nWhen it comes to health, existence expectancy at birth in The country is 83 years, 3 years greater compared to OECD average of eighty years, and among the greatest within the OECD. Existence expectancy for ladies is 86 years, in contrast to 80 for males. The amount of atmospheric PM2.5 – small air pollutant particles sufficiently small to go in and damage the lung area – is 11.6 micrograms per cubic meter, less than the OECD average of 14.05 micrograms per cubic meter. The country performs underneath the OECD average when it comes to water quality, as 71% of individuals appear at first sight pleased with the caliber of their water, underneath the OECD average of 81%.\nIn regards to the public sphere, there’s a powerful communal feeling and moderate amounts of social participation in The country, where 96% of individuals think that they are fully aware someone they might depend on over time of need, greater compared to OECD average of 88%, and among the greatest figures within the OECD. Voter turnout, a stride of citizens’ participation within the political process, was 73% during recent elections this figure is greater compared to OECD average of 68%. Social and economic status can impact voting rates voter turnout for that top 20% of people is definitely an believed 81% but for the bottom 20% it’s an believed 70%, a rather narrower gap compared to OECD average gap of 13 percentage points.\nGenerally, Spanish are slightly less satisfied with their former lifestyle compared to OECD average. When requested to rate their general satisfaction with existence on the scale from to 10, the Spanish gave it a 6.4 grade, less than the OECD average of 6.5.\nFor additional info on estimates and many years of reference, see FAQ section and BLI database.\nResourse: http://oecdbetterlifeindex.org/countries/the country/\nThe Visual Du Jour – OECD Better Life Index\nBuying property in the country like a foreigner –…\nProperty for purchase the country – houses purchase in\nThe country – history background – education,…\nThe training system in the country\nCheap hotels in barcelona, the country from $76\nTags: better, existence, oecd","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line176382"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5698199272155762,"wiki_prob":0.43018007278442383,"text":"How to Make Clean Versions of Songs\nHave you ever had the problem of playing songs with explicit lyrics in public? Well, software such as Audacity and Adobe Audition could be used to censor these lyrics, so that a song with explicit content can be transformed into a clean version like a radio edit.\nInstall and open Audacity.\nGo to File > Import > Audio and after selecting the audio file that has explicit content, click on “Open”.\nClick on the “Zoom In” tool and select the area of the track that has to be censored.\nFigure 1 : Audio track to be censored\nFor the next step, there are two options :\nGo to “Effect” and click on “Reverse”. This is will flip the selected section vertically, so that the explicit word becomes meaningless.\nThe other option is go to Effect and click on “Vocal Remover” and then click on “OK”.\nFigure 2 : Vocal Remover window\nHowever, it should be noted that sometimes the instrumental part of the selected section could get removed as well by using the second method.\nFinally, click on “File” and then on “Export” to save the censored version. After checking the details (info) of the track are correct, click on “OK”.\nThese are the ways that could be used to remove or alter the f-bombs and s-bombs in tracks. Hope this helps.\n2015/05/24 Audacity, censor, clean, lyrics, radio edit, reverse, songs, track, version, vocal removerLeave a comment\nFeel Those Beats\nRecently, I have been listening to more hip-hop songs, especially the ones produced by Timbaland. According to what I feel, he is the best producer of hip-hop music. Timbaland has worked with so many pop artists such as Justin Timberlake, Rihanna, JAY Z and Nelly Furtado.\nI thought of producing my own hip-hop, R&B and dance tracks and the results were satisfactory. These have been shared in my Soundcloud page and on Twitter but I will share them at the end of this post. Various instruments such as piano, drums, koto and violin have been used in the production stage. I use Apple Logic Pro X for music production. A bit of Photoshop was also learnt to create cover art.\nWell, check the tracks out. I hope you’ll love them. If you like my tracks, please “like” and “share” them on Soundcloud and other social media.\n2015/02/01 2015/02/01 Apple, dance, hip-hop, instruments, JAY Z, Justin Timberlake, Logic Pro X, Nelly Furtado, R&B, Soundcloud, Timbaland, tracksLeave a comment\nProducing Music\nI have been using Apple loops found in Logic Pro X software for my tracks (except for the first one). After sharing eight tracks on Soundcloud and being satisfied with eight likes, two comments and 82 plays (which I never expected), I thought, “Enough with loops. Why not create my own melodies and beats?”\nThen, I had to think of a suitable melody and a beat for my next track, which was not easy because it should be made unique and grooving, so I placed some notes on the piano roll of Logic Pro X software and did a playback. The starting and the middle sections were great but the end was not that good. After fiddling around with the notes, I finally managed to get a fine melody. For the beat, I listened to some sequences in the “Boom” plug-in found in Pro Tools to get an idea and drew the notes on the piano roll again.\nMy next step was to figure out how to get the “whoosh” sound found in electronic tracks, which can be created from white noise. After watching some tutorials, I was able to do this using the “ES P” and “Autofilter” plug-ins. A screenshot showing the two plug-ins can be found below:\nCurrently, I am investigating on filter sweeping and time compressing, so that I could get the “weew” sound found in electronic tracks (for example, in Vicetone’s remix of “We Come Running” by Youngblood Hawke).\nHere are the tracks that I created after the three tracks found in my previous post. Hope you would enjoy them. One of them is R&B.\n2014/02/21 2014/02/28 beats, electronic, filter sweeping, Logic Pro X, melodies, plug-in, Pro ToolsLeave a comment\nMy Electronic Tracks\nSince childhood, I have been interested in music. In the good old days, I liked listening to pop and rap songs. My favourite groups were Backstreet Boys, *NSYNC and Five. As time passed by, I started listening to R&B, rap and hip-hop. Eminem is one of my favourite rappers and Timbaland, who can create amazing beats, is my favoured producer of all time.\nIn the year 2007, one of my friends introduced me to the flavour of house music. At first, I thought it was just noise (as most people in the older generations think) but then after listening to that genre for several times, I got the hang of it. Since then I’ve been listening to artists such as David Guetta, Avicii, NERVO, Nicky Romero, Fedde le Grand, Vicetone…..and the list goes on. House music has several genres, a common one found these days is Progressive House. I don’t really mind about the genre sometimes : If a particular song puts me in the mood, I listen to it.\nRecently, after being inspired by some of my friends who produce music, I too started creating my own tracks in my free time using a software called Logic Pro X. Getting used to a different type of software was difficult in the beginning but I continue to learn and master it. After checking out some YouTube videos on producing music, I created three electronic tracks. Hope people will enjoy them. So far, I’ve got some positive feedback on one of my tracks and I wish to increase my fan base as time goes by. Some people will say that it is very easy to produce music using a laptop, but there is a series of stages involved in producing. The major step involved in the production process is coming up with a great idea. I think that is what matters the most, not the techniques or tricks used to release a great track.\nHere are the tracks that I have created so far :\n2014/02/13 2015/01/10 audio production, hip-hop, house, music, Progressive house, R&B, softwareLeave a comment","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1571278"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5604046583175659,"wiki_prob":0.5604046583175659,"text":"Posted by Ricky Zeller on December 29, 2011 – 5:22 pm\nSome numbers worth noting as the Packers prepare for the Lions:\n18.6 – Average points Green Bay has allowed this season at home. The Packers have scored an average of 39.4 points per game at Lambeau Field in 2011, which ranks No. 2 in the NFL. The club’s record for scoring average at home is 38.0, set in 1942.\n6 – The Packers can become only the sixth team in NFL history to finish a season 15-1.\n17 – Passing attempts by Aaron Rodgers the last time the Lions visited Lambeau Field, Oct. 3, 2010. It was the fewest attempts by the QB in a game he finished since he took over as a starter in ’08. The Packers prevailed, 28-26, with Rodgers’ 16-yard scramble helping the club run out the final 6:32 of the contest.\nIn the ’10 victory over Detroit, he recorded a passer rating of 105.3. Rodgers completed 12 passes vs. the Lions, tied for the fewest in his career (vs. Seattle, 12/27/09). The only game where Rodgers has thrown or completed fewer passes was last year at Detroit (7 of 11, 46 yards), when he departed in the first half with an injury.\n2002 – The last year Green Bay went undefeated at home. The Packers enter the finale with a 7-0 record at Lambeau Field. Green Bay is one of three teams unbeaten at home this season, joining the Ravens and Saints.\n3 – Charles Woodson has returned an interception for a touchdown vs. the Lions each of the last three years. Woodson picked off a pass in the Thanksgiving game at Detroit, no touchdown. The cornerback’s feat of three-straight seasons is an NFL record.\n1,089 – Rushing yards combined between running backs James Starks (578) and Ryan Grant (511).\n5 – Both the Packers and Lions have lost only five fumbles in 2011.\n385 – Completions by Matthew Stafford this season. Rodgers has completed 343 passes. The Detroit QB has 604 attempts, Rodgers has 502. Stafford has set team records with 4,518 yards and 36 TDs.\nTags: aaron rodgers, charles woodson, lambeau field, Lions Thanksgiving, Packers history, Packers interceptions, Packers preview, Packers-Lions","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1503312"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.7624176144599915,"wiki_prob":0.7624176144599915,"text":"DOJ to sue Texas under Voting Rights Act 'bail-in' provision\nBy Brentin Mock\nJuly 26, 2013 - The U.S. Supreme Court may have struck down one provision of the Voting Rights Act, but the Department of Justice is turning to another to sue Texas over its discriminatory redistricting law.\nZombie voter fraud attack proved false, again\nJuly 12, 2013 - South Carolina is the latest state where politicians' tales of dead voters casting ballots have been proven false, but restrictive voting laws are still being passed in response to these myths. Perhaps it's time for a law to ban such false claims as a form of voter fraud?\nWater pollution a problem for Southern beaches\nJuly 5, 2013 - The NRDC's annual report on bacterial contamination at U.S. beaches finds serious problems at popular swimming spots across the South. The group is calling on the federal government to take action to better protect beachgoers from serious health risks.\nSouth remains the epicenter of U.S. child poverty crisis\nJune 24, 2013 - An annual report that measures the well-being of U.S. children finds improvements among some Southern states -- and slippage among others. Where does your state stand?\nWhat happens if the Supreme Court cuts out the heart of the Voting Rights Act?\nJune 12, 2013 - With the high court expected to hand down a ruling soon on the constitutionality of the key section of the landmark civil rights law, a new report warns of what could come to pass if Section 5 is weakened or eliminated altogether.\nRape and other sexual violence prevalent in juvenile justice system\nBy ProPublica\nJune 11, 2013 - Georgia and South Carolina are among the states with the highest rates of sexual assault of juvenile detainees, and most of the abuse involves the very staff members charged with supervising and counseling the troubled youngsters.\nReversal of fortune: A prosecutor on trial\nMay 2, 2013 - In the world of abusive prosecutors, Ken Anderson stands out: Anderson, a Texas prosecutor who abused his authority to help send an innocent man to prison for decades, now faces 10 years behind bars for his misconduct.\nThe South, still ruled by 'the handful'\nBy Joe Atkins\nApril 22, 2013 - As the South's hard-right pols block expanding Medicaid to a population in need, they show that civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer's description of the region's government as \"with the handful, for the handful, by the handful\" remains true today.\nCoal, poor water management endanger Southern rivers\nApril 17, 2013 - The Flint in Georgia, the San Saba in Texas, the Catawba in the Carolinas, and the Black Warrior in Alabama are among the nation's 10 most threatened rivers, according to the latest tally from American Rivers.\nThe strange politics of TVA privatization\nApril 16, 2013 - President Obama's latest budget proposes privatizing the Tennessee Valley Authority, which has been criticized as a socialist enterprise, yet Southern Republicans are opposing the plan. What's going on here?","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line178899"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9590380787849426,"wiki_prob":0.9590380787849426,"text":"Success is relative for Bill Haas\nJeff Siner / McClatchy-Tribune\nBill Haas, the clubhouse leader with a four-under-par 68 on Thursday in the first round of the Masters, eyes his put on the 17th green at Augusta National Golf Club.\nBill Haas, the clubhouse leader with a four-under-par 68 on Thursday in the first round of the Masters, eyes his put on the 17th green at Augusta National Golf Club. (Jeff Siner / McClatchy-Tribune)\nTeddy Greenstein and Dan Wiederer\nAUGUSTA, Ga. — Craig and Kevin Stadler (\"Walrus\" and \"Smallrus\") became the first father-son combo to play in the same Masters, but perhaps they're not the first family of this week's festivities.\nCheck out the Haas household.\nBill Haas overcome a first-hole bogey Thursday to shoot a four-under-par 68, good for the first-round lead. Father Jay Haas played in 22 Masters, making 19 cuts. Uncle Jerry Haas participated in 1985. An uncle from his mother's side, Dillard Pruitt, teed it up here in 1992 and '93.\nOh, and great-uncle Bob Goalby won the 1968 event, avoiding a playoff after Argentina's Roberto De Vicenzo signed for the wrong Sunday score.\nBill Haas, 31, said Goalby encourages him by saying, \"You're a better player than the scores you shoot.\"\nJay got Bill on Augusta National when he was in high school, and Bill remembers getting a \"full day's worth\" — 27 holes plus the par-three course. He caddied in the 1999 Masters for his father, who finished tied for third in 1995.\n\"He's the person I idolized golf-wise,\" Bill said. \"I wasn't interested in the Masters. I was interested in my dad's score at the Masters.\"\nJay won nine times on the PGA Tour. At 60, he is still cashing large checks on the Champions Tour.\n\"I don't beat him much, honestly,\" Bill said. \"Even now.\"\nJay never won a major, tying for third in the 1999 PGA Championship and fourth in the 1995 U.S. Open.\n\"I think he deserved a major,\" Bill said. \"But as a family, we all know that he left it out there.\"\nBill dominated at Wake Forest and was viewed as cocky when he reached the tour in 2006. His fine career includes a heavyweight champion's payday of $11.44 million at the 2011 Tour Championship.\nHis only flaws are a suspect short-iron game and a fiery temperament that sometimes costs him. That's where Scott Gneiser hopes to help. Gneiser carried David Toms' bag for 16 years, but he just joined Haas.\n\"We're still in our honeymoon phase,\" the caddie said. \"If something goes wrong, we shake it off and get to the next hole instead of going nuts on each other.\"\nThere goes that\nJason Dufner's bid to win a second consecutive major derailed on the par-five 13th. Dufner sent a well-hit second shot rolling just off the back of the green. But he blew his eagle chip past the hole and down a hill toward Rae's Creek. His subsequent chip hit the slope above him and rolled back into the water.\nHe chunked another chip and eventually made a quadruple-bogey 9, the highest score on any hole Thursday.\nWith a back-nine 44 that gave him an eight-over 80, the reigning PGA Champion will start Friday tied for 90th in the 97-player field.\nOldies and goodies\nIn a tournament packed with a bunch of young newcomers, the 50-and-over crowd made a bit of a stand in the first round.\nMiguel Angel Jimenez was leading the tournament for a time before stumbling on the back nine. 1992 champion Fred Couples was on the leaderboard himself before tying the 50-year-old Jimenez with a 71 that left both players three shots off the lead.\nAnd two-time Bernard Langer managed to shoot even par in his 31st Masters.\n\"A 72 is not that shabby,\" the 56-year-old Langer said.\nPower still counts, but sometimes the older players can make up for it by knowing where to put the ball and being crafty.\n\"Can a 50-year-old win here?\" the 54-year-old Couples asked. \"I think so. I'm one of them.\"\nLuke Donald got hit with a two-stroke penalty after his round. He failed to exit a greenside bunker on No. 9 and touched the sand with his club before his second attempt. The penalty pushed Donald's score to an ugly 79. \"Pretty dumb mistake,\" Donald tweeted. … Brandt Snedeker assessed himself a one-shot penalty on No. 13 when his ball moved after he took a practice swing. There was no wind, he said, so he could not invoke a new rule that permits players to replace their ball if wind is the culprit. Snedeker still shot a two-under 70.\nDodgers’ Chris Taylor on injured list with a fractured left forearm\nBoxing legend Pernell ‘Sweet Pea’ Whitaker dies after being struck by a car\nOn the matter of the USWNT and equal pay, it’s complicated\nBill Haas\nJason Dufner\nBrandt Snedeker","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1414827"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.5531267523765564,"wiki_prob":0.4468732476234436,"text":"The Birth of a Climate Commons for Theatre and Performance\nJanuary 21, 2019 Artists and Climate Change\nby Lanxing Fu\nOn a weekend in June, I sat in a blackbox theatre for three days with a group of mostly strangers.\nWe talked. We ate. We laughed. We challenged. We listened.\nI heard the same refrain over and over again those three days. Wow, I’m so happy to be with others for once. It’s nice to be… un-lonely.\nThe Theatre in the Age of Climate Change Convening, hosted in Boston on 8-10 June 2018 gathered people together around a common purpose: to galvanize the community around making theatre and live performance in the age of climate change, to dissect and challenge the present ideas in this emerging field, and to distill all this talk into concrete, positive actions. Our earnest surprise at feeling seen and the joy of solidarity in people who felt they had spent years, decades, their entire lives talking into a void about the intersection of performance and climate are testament to how needed this convening was.\nAfter we took some time to understand the landscape of this intersection of climate and performance, we broke off into groups to develop ideas for action. There were hard questions to ask and attempt to answer. Whose voices were not represented in the room that needed to be there? How can we use our collective power, and the many twisting, interconnected arms of this work to nourish our communities and our non-human brethren? What kinds of shifts in thought do we need to undertake ourselves as we work to shift larger consciousness? How can our collective action outrun the changing atmosphere? It was rich. It was inspiring as hell. The breadth of skills and knowledge expanded my mind like crazy. The voices in the room were beautifully articulate at calling in others who were not. It was far from smooth and sometimes contentious. We all fought the urge to perform when the microphone was in our hand and the cameras were on our faces. Some got lost in the language. Others struggled to be heard. We were as human as can be, as human as any group of humans trying to do something together— the weight of our own egos held in taut balance with strong, strong passion for our collective goal.\nThe weekend had started off with a cold splash of water to the face. We learned in our opening conversation that The Guardian’s Carbon Countdown Clock gives us just over eighteen years until we exceed the IPCC’s 2C carbon budget, if our emissions stay as they are now. Eighteen years to figure this mess out. Eighteen years to put systems in place to take care of people as the effects of climate change get worse and worse, to shift radically the way we relate to each other, our economy, and the land. In the same span of time as it takes the average American kid to journey from infanthood to adulthood, we need to “fucking save the planet.”\nLanxing Fu and other convening participants. Photo by Blair Nodelman.\nFrom this urgency, this joy of togetherness, this friction of brains and bodies meeting, grew an idea like a sprig of bamboo racing towards the sun. One working group, though I cannot separate this group from the work of the group at large, seeded the idea of a Climate Commons for Theatre and Performance. An expression of our desire for horizontal connectivity, the Climate Commons takes its shape from mycelia, the underground, branching, threadlike fungal colonies that can grow to the size of 1600 football fields. We imagine that this is a network of interconnected nodes of activity at the intersection of performance and ecology, sharing knowledge, strategies, resources like mycelia share sustenance, across vast distances and through all forms of terrain. These nodes could potentially consist of geographic clusters of people already present at the conference; Miami, Boston, New York City, New Orleans, DC, Los Angeles, Standing Rock, Amherst, São João del Rei, London, Abu Dhabi. And it should necessarily expand to include people and geographies not present in the conference, in the Global South, in rural communities, in the Arctic, in the East. You can visit the HowlRound Theatre in the Age of Climate Change Convening page for updates on our progress with Climate Commons, and to learn how to get involved as it grows.\nConvening participants. Photo by Carolina Gonzalez.\nOne big statement of intent that came forward is that we want to foster the kinds of imaginations that are needed in the future. We want to specifically examine what live performance can bring to the table in service of that pursuit. How do we tackle such a huge endeavor? Step one, understand what we have to work with. Because we were together for a short, intensive period of time, we left Boston having only scratched the surface of the wealth of knowledge and experience in the room. A few members of this group are leading an interview series, in which we who attended the convening interview each other, to dive deeper into the work we do in our home communities in order to gain a holistic understanding of where we are beginning. We want to uplift each other by tapping into and amplifying the abundance of energy, artistry, resilience, and skill that has been driving these kinds of revolutions for centuries.\nWithout knowing exactly where we are going, or what our ultimate goal is, we are moving forward with the knowledge that we want to keep connecting. We want to keep connecting because it’s easy to not. It’s easy to silo ourselves off into the narrowness of day-to-day life and keep putting on the lenses that already fit. Because the challenge of a global crisis demands that we be more expansive than we are individually built to be, we hope to establish a body that acts as a broker across distances and differences, bringing people together around the shared goal of using performance to change the story around climate and build a more equitable world.\n(Top image: Convening participants having a small group discussion. Photo by Blair Nodelman.)\nThis article was originally published on HowlRound, a knowledge commons by and for the theatre community, on September 18, 2018.\nFor more on the convening, read MJ Halberstadt’s Art on a Damaged Planet: The Theatre in the Age of Climate Change Convening.\nLanxing Fu is a Chinese-American writer, director, and performer. She is the co-director of Superhero Clubhouse, for which she is program director of The Living Stage NYC and a co-creator of Pluto (no longer a play) and Jupiter (a play about power). She has collaborated on and led interdisciplinary projects on globalization and the environment through research in Sri Lanka, Morocco, Turkey, and the United States through The Center for 21st Century Studies, as previous associate director of Critical Point Theatre, and as an ensemble member of Building Home, working in the New River Valley. She participated in JACK’s “Creating Dangerously” series, led by Virginia Grise and Kyla Searle, has trained with SITI Company for two years, and is an alumnus of Orchard Project’s Core Company. She holds a B.A. in Humanities, Science, and Environment and a B.A. in Theatre Arts from Virginia Tech.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line31245"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9768247008323669,"wiki_prob":0.9768247008323669,"text":"Tom Steyer Building ‘Political Death Star’ to Run for President\nJeff Chiu / Associated Press\nAdelle Nazarian\nBillionaire left-wing environmental activist Tom Steyer has reportedly built what some have described as a “political death star” through his multi-million dollar campaign to have President Donald Trump impeached — laying the groundwork for a potential presidential run by Steyer himself.\n“If I were a rich person and I wanted to run for president,” one top Democratic strategist told the Daily Beast, “I would be doing exactly what he’s doing.”\nHe could run for president as early as 2020.\nSteyer has so far spent nearly $40 million on his campaign to impeach Trump and take on Republicans through NextGen Rising, his 2018 campaign to increase millennial voter turnout.\nThe Daily Beast noted:\nWhat Steyer is doing is acquiring the equivalent of prime political real estate. Through his self-funded Need to Impeach campaign, he has now built an email list of more than 5.1 million members, a total that one former presidential campaign manager called “staggering” and a top digital adviser called “one of the biggest Democratic lists out there.”\nThe first million people reportedly signed up to be on Steyer’s mailing list in the first six days.\nRepublicans are reportedly also impressed.\nImpeachment, however, remains Steyer’s main focus for the time being. He has even started holding town halls on the subject.\nIn October, Steyer spent $10 million on a TV ad calling for Trump’s impeachment. He soon followed with another.\nHis efforts are said to be focused on Orange County, where Hillary Clinton won the presidential vote in 2016 and where there are several vulnerable Republican incumbents.\nHe is also active in contests throughout the country. In 2014, Steyer’s efforts could not help Democrats hold the Senate. This year, however, he is more optimistic about his chances to help House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) regain the Speaker’s gavel.\nAdelle Nazarian is a politics and national security reporter for Breitbart News. Follow her on Facebook and Twitter.\nLocalMidterm ElectionPolitics2020 Democratic candidates2020 presidential candidatesimpeachmenttom steyer","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1616394"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.7451077103614807,"wiki_prob":0.2548922896385193,"text":"Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Market- SWOT Analysis, Top Key Players, Trends, Drivers, Strategies, Size, Applications and Competitive Landscape to 2025\nSeamus — July 14, 2019 comments off\nGlobal “Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Market” report provides useful information about the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market along with the price forecast for the forecast period of 2019-2025. The report presents a detailed analysis of the parent market based on leading players, present, past & futuristic data which will serve as a profitable guide for all the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Market competitors. The Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Market data like market drivers, challenges, latest trends & technological developments are also discussed in this report.\nManufacturers in the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Market Report:\nCDNetworks\nEdgeCast\nInisoft\nVerivue\nRequest a Sample Copy of the Report – http://www.industryresearch.co/enquiry/request-sample/13757635\nGeographically, the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market report provides segment analysis and import and export status, demand status, production volume, of Content Delivery Networks (CDN) including regions such as North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, South America & Middle East, and Africa.\nAbout Content Delivery Networks (CDN):\nContent Delivery Networks is a geographically distributed network of proxy servers and their data centers.\nCDN is an umbrella term spanning different types of content delivery services: video streaming, software downloads, web and mobile content acceleration, licensed/managed CDN, transparent caching and services to measure CDN performance, load balancing, multi-CDN switching and analytics and cloud intelligence.\nIn 2018, the global Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market size was xx million US$ and it is expected to reach xx million US$ by the end of 2025, with a CAGR of xx% during 2019-2025.\nContent Delivery Networks (CDN) Market by Applications:\nContent Delivery Networks (CDN) Market by Types:\nVideo Content Delivery Network\nStandard/Non-Video Content Delivery Network\nFor More Information or Query or Customization Before Buying, Visit at http://www.industryresearch.co/enquiry/pre-order-enquiry/13757635\nQuestions Answered in the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Market Report:\nWhat will the market growth rate of the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market in 2025?\nWhat are the key factors driving the global Content Delivery Networks (CDN)?\nWho are the key manufacturers in the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) space?\nWhat are the market opportunities, market risk and market overview of the Content Delivery Networks (CDN)?\nWhat are sales, revenue, and price analysis of top manufacturers of the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market?\nWho are the distributors, traders, and dealers of the market?\nWhat are the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) opportunities and threats faced by the vendors in the global market?\nWhat are sales, revenue, and price analysis by types and applications of the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market?\nWhat are sales, revenue, and price analysis by regions of the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market?\nPurchase this Report (Price 3900 USD for a Single-User License) – http://www.industryresearch.co/purchase/13757635\nIn the end, the report focusses on Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Market major leading market players in Content Delivery Networks (CDN) industry area with information such as company profile of the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) market, sales volume, price, gross margin of the Content Delivery Networks (CDN) industry and contact information. Global Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Industry report also includes Content Delivery Networks (CDN) Upstream raw materials and Content Delivery Networks (CDN) downstream consumer’s analysis.\nPhone: US +1424 253 0807/ UK +44 203 239 8187\nOur Other Report Here: Sealants Market 2019 Global Industry Analysis, Key Players, Market Share, Revenue, Trends, Growth, Opportunities, And Regional Forecast to 2023\nOur Other Report Here: Elliptical Machines Market 2019 Top Key Players, CAGR Status, Dynamics, Growth, Opportunities and Industry Segments Poised for Rapid Growth by 2022","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1115354"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6586846709251404,"wiki_prob":0.3413153290748596,"text":"The rise of European SaaS: apply now to be included in the Accel Euroscape 2019\nEditor’s note: This is a sponsored article, written by Philippe Botteri, a partner at VC firm Accel, as a follow-up to earlier guest posts on their annual list of the top 100 cloud companieson the EuropeanSaaS startup industry, with significant contribution from his colleague Maxim Filippov. If you would like to learn more about sponsored […]\n4 days ago by Philippe Botteri\nParis-founded HR and payroll startup PayFit secures €70 million\nFrench HR tech startup PayFit has landed €70 million in a funding round led by Eurazeo and Bpifrance, with participation from prior investors Accel, Frst, and Xavier Niel. This capital injection brings the total amount raised by the company to €83 million. PayFit has developed a SaaS payroll and HR platform that’s focussed on the […]\nUK-based data privacy startup Privitar raises $40 million\nLondon-based data privacy software startup Privitar has secured a funding round of $40 million led by Accel, with participation from existing investors Partech, Salesforce Ventures, 24Haymarket, and IQ Capital. Seth Pierrepont, partner at Accel, will join Privitar’s board of directors. Founded in 2014, Privitar provides data protection software for large organisations, including the NHS, HSBC, […]\n1 month ago by Andrii Degeler\nAccel raises a sixth fund to the tune of $575 million, now has a total of $3 billion under management\nVenture capital firm Accel has raised a $575 million fund, its sixth to be invested in early-stage companies across Europe and Israel, and its biggest to date. Accel, which set up shop in London back in 2000, has backed the likes of Spotify, BlaBlaCar, Monzo, UiPath, Deliveroo, Prezi, Supercell, Funding Circle and Rovio, so it’s […]\nUK-based derivative analytics startup OpenGamma raises $10 million\nLondon-founded derivative analytics startup OpenGamma has landed a $10 million funding round led by Dawn, with participation from Accel, CME Ventures, and ex-SunGuard CEO Cristóbal Conde. OpenGamma claims that its solution allows “the world’s banks, hedge funds and asset managers to dramatically reduce the cost of trading derivatives.” The startup stated that it’s seen a […]\nBritish email security startup Tessian raises $42 million from Sequoia\nThe US-based VC firm Sequoia Capital has led a $42 million funding round in Tessian, a cybersecurity startup headquartered in London; Latitude, Balderton Capital, and Accel also participated in the round. The deal was first reported by TechCrunch in January and confirmed by the company today. Founded in 2013 and formerly known as CheckRecipient, Tessian […]\nDanish-founded log analysis startup Humio raises $9 million\nAarhus-based real-time log analysis startup Humio has raised $9 million in a funding round led by Accel. The company claims to have seen 13-fold revenue growth in 2018 and lists companies including Bloomberg, Microsoft, Netlify, Lunar Way, SpareBank 1, On the Dot, and Logibec. Founded in 2016, Humio currently has offices in Aarhus, London, and […]","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line525683"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9758455157279968,"wiki_prob":0.9758455157279968,"text":"Mental illness and threatening messages often come before mass-casualty attacks, Secret Service finds\nSecret Service: Mental illness stalks mass casualty attackers; nearly all made prior threats\nMental illness and threatening messages often come before mass-casualty attacks, Secret Service finds Secret Service: Mental illness stalks mass casualty attackers; nearly all made prior threats Check out this story on USATODAY.com: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/07/09/mental-illness-and-threats-came-before-mass-attacks/1684609001/\nKevin Johnson, USA TODAY Published 3:08 p.m. ET July 9, 2019 | Updated 5:26 p.m. ET July 9, 2019\nLaw enforcement personnel gather near the scene where an active shooter was reported in Aurora, Ill., Friday, Feb. 15, 2019. (Photo: Antonio Perez, Chicago Tribune via AP)\nALEXANDRIA, Va. — Two-thirds of suspects in mass casualty attacks in the United States suffered from some form of mental illness, and nearly all of them engaged in threatening or suspicious communications beforehand, the Secret Service concluded in an analysis Tuesday.\nThe analysis covered 27 attacks in 2018 that left 91 people dead and 107 injured at office buildings, schools, a synagogue and other prominent public spaces, scattered from a sidewalk in Portland, Oregon to a high school Parkland, Florida.\nThe Secret Service identified 28 such attacks in 2017.\nFederal investigators found that 67% of suspects displayed symptoms of mental illness or emotional disturbance, up slightly from last year's 64%. In at least 93% of last year's incidents, authorities found that the suspects had a history of threats or other troubling communications, up from 86% in 2017.\nAnd in more than three-quarters of all cases – 78% – suspicious communications elicited concerns for the safety the attackers or others.\n\"Because these acts are usually planned over a period of time, and the attackers often elicit concern from the people around them, there exists an opportunity to stop these incidents before they occur,\" the report concluded.\nMore: Pittsburgh synagogue rampage spotlights rising anti-Semitism in America\nMore: 5 dead, several 'gravely injured' in Capital Gazette newspaper shooting\nRobert Bowers, 46, was allegedly armed with one assault rifle and three handguns during his shooting spree inside the Tree of Life synagogue as innocents were worshipping, the FBI said. USA TODAY\nCiting numerous cases in which the attackers engaged in threatening communications before their strikes, Secret Service Director James Murray and Lina Alathari, chief of the agency's National Threat Assessment Center, appealed for the public's help to thwart future assaults.\n\"We need to let people know who they can reach out to,\" Alathari said Tuesday.\nThe 2018 Parkland high school attack, which reinvigorated a national debate on gun safety, stands as perhaps the most chilling of the cases in which others called attention to the troubled gunman before he struck.\nSocial workers, mental health counselors, school administrators and law enforcement all had been warned about Nikolas Cruz's deteriorating mental state and risk of violence before he launched the attack that killed 17 and injured 17 others.\nAbout a month before the attack, the FBI received a tip about Cruz and his \"desire to kill people,\" but the information was never forwarded for investigation, the bureau later confirmed.\nSince Parkland, Alathari said Secret Service threat analysts were dispatched to provide training at FBI call centers to assist operators in assessing tip information.\n\"Prevention is everyone's responsibility,\" she said, adding that the FBI invited the additional training.\nAt least 17 dead in school shooting in Parkland, Fla.\nA police officer helps direct traffic as Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students begin arriving for their first day of school since the shooting on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. ANDREA MELENDEZ/USA TODAY NETWORK\nA crossing guard hugs a student as he walks to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School for the first day of school since the shooting on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2018. ANDREA MELENDEZ/USA TODAY NETWORK\nPolice officers line up outside of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School to welcome the students back to on Wednesday, Feb. 28, 2018. This is the official first day of school since the shooting on Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2018, in Parkland, Fla. ANDREA MELENDEZ/ USA TODAY NETWORK\nReturning faculty and administration at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland Fla., are taken on a walk around the fenced-off freshman building where the Feb. 16, shooting took place, Monday, Feb. 26, 2018. Today marked the first day back for teachers at the school. JOE CAVARETTA, AP\nA small group of parents and neighbors welcome returning faculty and administrators at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland Fla., Monday, Feb. 26, 2018. Today marked the first day back for teachers at the school. JOE CAVARETTA, AP\nPeople visit a makeshift memorial in front of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in, Parkland, Fla. on Feb. 20, 2018. CRISTOBAL HERRERA, EPA-EFE\nJulia Salomone, 18, front row left, Lindsey Salomone, 15, front row right, Jose Iglesias, 17, second row left, and Isabelle Robinson, 17, second row right, student survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 students and faculty were killed in a mass shooting on Wednesday, talk on their bus between Parkland, Fla., and Tallahassee, Fla., Feb. 20, 2018, to rally outside the state capitol and talk to legislators about gun control reform. Gerald Herbert, AP\nMourners leave the funeral of Peter Wang, 15, who was a JROTC cadet, at Kraeer Funeral home on Feb. 20, 2018 in Coral Springs, Florida. Wang was killed in the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School along with 16 other people. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nAlex Wang holds a picture of his brother, Peter Wang, a victim in the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, after his brother's funeral on Feb. 20, 2018, at Kraeer Funeral Home in Coral Springs, Fla. Taimy Alvarez, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, via AP\nTom Carmo, father of survivor Ethan Rocha, hugs student Joey Cordova, as students from Stoneman Douglas High School board buses in Parkland, Fla., Feb. 20, 2018. Gerald Herbert, AP\nTyra Hemans, 19, who survived the shooting at Stoneman Douglas High School, waits to board a bus in Parkland, Fla., Feb. 20, 2018. The students plan to hold a rally Wednesday in hopes that it will put pressure on the state's Republican-controlled Legislature to consider a sweeping package of gun-control laws, something some GOP lawmakers said Monday they would consider. Gerald Herbert, AP\nMadyson Kravitz, 16, right, and Melanie Weber, 16, students who survived the shooting at Stoneman Douglas High School, wait to board buses in Parkland, Fla., Feb. 20, 2018. Gerald Herbert, AP\nStudents who survived the shooting at Stoneman Douglas High School,along with survivors of the Pulse nightclub shooting, cheer before the students board a bus in Parkland, Fla. on Feb. 20, 2018, to rally outside the state capitol and talk to legislators about gun control reform. Gerald Herbert, AP\nSheryl Acquarola, a 16-year-old junior from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School is overcome with emotion in the east gallery of the House of Representatives after the representatives voted not to hear a bill banning assault rifles and large capacity magazines. Acquarola was one of the survivors of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting that left 17 dead, who were in Tallahassee on Feb. 20, 2018 to meet with Florida lawmakers. Mark Wallheiser, AP\nSurvivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and other students from Broward County, Fla. high schools listen to Sen. Bobby Powell in his office at the Florida Capital in Tallahassee, Fla., Feb 20, 2018. Mark Wallheiser, AP\nRep. Bobby DuBose thanks the survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School and other students from Broward County, Fla. high schools for coming to see him at the Florida Capital in Tallahassee, Fla., Feb 20, 2018. Mark Wallheiser, AP\nMourners react as they leave the funeral services for slain Marjory Stoneman Douglas student Carmen Schentrup on Feb. 20, 2018, at St. Andrews Catholic Church in Coral Springs, Fla. Joe Cavaretta, South Florida Sun-Sentinel, via AP\nCinthia Rios helps Jasmine Battifora, 6, light her candle during a candlelight vigil at Betti Stradling Park in Coral Springs, Fla. The Florida PTA organized a statewide candlelight vigil to remember and honor the 17 victims of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting. Nicole Raucheisen, Naples Daily News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nCommunity members hold hands and surround a memorial outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Dorothy Edwards, Naples Daily News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nAlice Simon, right, helps Nancy Brodzki light her candle during a candlelight vigil at Betti Stradling Park in Coral Springs, Fla. The Florida PTA organized a statewide candlelight vigil to remember and honor the 17 victims of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting. Nicole Raucheisen, Naples Daily News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nPeople visit a makeshift memorial in front of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 19, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Police arrested and charged 19 year old former student Nikolas Cruz for the February 14 shooting that killed 17 people. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nAshley Boul, right, and Joel Robinson, who is an alumni of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, visit a makeshift memorial in front of the school on Feb. 19, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nMax Bromberg hugs his brother Samuel Bromberg, both of whom graduated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, as they visit a makeshift memorial in front of the school on Feb. 19, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nCindy Sotelo, right, cries with her daughter, Jessica Malone, an alumna of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, as they visit a makeshift memorial in front of the school on Feb. 19, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nNekhi Charlemagne writes a message on a cross in a makeshift memorial in front of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 19, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nThomas Mirisola and his mother Michele Mirisola visit a makeshift memorial in front of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 19, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nPeople visit a makeshift memorial setup in front of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 19, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nMourners hug as they leave the funeral of Alaina Petty, in Coral Springs, Fla. on Feb. 19, 2018. Petty was a victim of Wednesday's mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Gerald Herbert, AP\nSara Smith, left, and her daughter Karina Smith visit a makeshift memorial on Feb. 19, 2018 outside the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 students and faculty were killed in a mass shooting on Wednesday, in Parkland, Fla. Gerald Herbert, AP\nAn investigator climbs to the roof of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Fla. on Feb. 19, 2018. Gerald Herbert, AP\nThe flag draped coffin of Alaina Petty is taken out after her funeral at The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on Feb. 19, 2018 in Coral Springs, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nCamila Valladares, 9, and brother Miguel Piacquadio, 25, light a candle at a memorial outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018, in response to a shooting at the high school Wednesday that took 17 lives. Dorothy Edwards, Naples Daily News, via USA TODAY NETWORK\nPeople visit a makeshift memorial outside Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 18, 2108, where 17 students and faculty were killed in Wednesday's mass shooting in Parkland, Fla. Gerald Herbert, AP\nPall bearers carry the casket of Scott Beigel after his funeral in Boca Raton, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018. Beigel, a teacher at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, was killed along with 16 others in a mass shooting at the school on Wednesday. Nikolas Cruz, a former student, was charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder. Gerald Herbert, AP\nCommunity members hold hands at a memorial outside of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018. Dorothy Edwards, Naples Daily News, via USA TODAY NETWORK\nBryan and Amber Gruzenksy place flowers on crosses with their son Joshua, 14, outside the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018, where 17 people were killed in a mass shooting on Wednesday. Gerald Herbert, AP\nHadley Sorensen, 16, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, is comforted by her mother Stacy Sorensen at a makeshift memorial outside the school in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018. Gerald Herbert, AP\nIsabella Vanderlaat, 15, and Gabriella Benzeken 15, both students of Scott Beigel, the 35-year-old geography teacher who was killed during the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shootings, attend the funeral service at Temple Beth El in Boca Raton, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018. Charles Trainor Jr, Miami Herald, via AP\nA memorial outside of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., is seen on Feb. 18, 2018. Dorothy Edwards, Naples Daily News, via USA TODAY NETWORK\nEmma Gonzalez, 18, a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, cries as she hugs a supporter of the #NeverAgain movement at North Community Park on Feb. 18, 2018. Gonzalez became a viral sensation after videos of her impassioned speech at an anti-gun rally in Fort Lauderdale flooded social media. Nicole Raucheisen, Naples Daily News, via USA TODAY NETWORK\nPeople hug outside the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 18, 2018, in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nFlowers are placed near unretrieved bicycles outside the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018, where 17 people were killed in a mass shooting. Authorities opened the streets around the school, which had been closed since the shootings. Nikolas Cruz, a former student, was charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder. Gerald Herbert, AP\nMourners arrive at the Fort Lauderdale Marriott Coral Springs at Heron Bay in Parkland, Fla., on Feb. 18, 2018, for the funeral service of Alex Schachter, 14, who was one of the 17 victims of the Parkland mass shooting. Matias J. Ocner, Miami Herald, via AP\nMimi Milton receives a hug after a church service dedicated to the victims of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School mass shooting, at the First Church of Coral Springs, on Feb. 18, 2018, in Coral Springs, Fla. Mark Wilson, Getty Images\nNoelia Negreira carries heart shaped balloons as she walks past the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb. 18, 2018, in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nMaria Cristina and Vincent Collazo pray at the fence near Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Feb.18, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nA student retrieves his bicycle that was left behind after mass shooting at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, on Feb. 18, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Mark Wilson, Getty Images\nDonna Biederman, bottom right, gets emotional while listening to speeches during a gun control rally in front of the federal courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. on Feb. 17, 2018. Students, community members, elected officials and gun control advocates gathered together to call for common sense gun laws and firearm safety legislation in the wake of the school shooting that left 17 people dead and 15 others injured this past Wednesday in Parkland, Fla. Nicole Raucheisen, Naples Daily News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nMarjory Stoneman Douglas High School student Emma Gonzalez reacts during her speech at a rally for gun control at the Broward County Federal Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. on February 17, 2018. A student survivor of the Parkland school shooting called out President Donald Trump on Saturday over his ties to the powerful National Rifle Association, in a poignant address to an anti-gun rally in Florida. \"To every politician taking donations from the NRA, shame on you!\" said Emma Gonzalez, assailing Trump over the multi-million-dollar support his campaign received from the gun lobby -- and prompting the crowd to chant in turn: 'Shame on you!' Rhona Wise, AFP/Getty Images\nTaylor Green, 19, from right, Victoria Mejia, 15, Ashley Laurent, 20, and Ashley Hernandez, 16, get emotional while listening to speeches during a gun control rally in front of the federal courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. on Feb. 17, 2018. Nicole Raucheisen, Naples Daily News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nAlessandra Mondolfi wears statement jewelry, which she designed and created herself, during a gun control rally in front of the federal courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. on Feb. 17, 2018. Nicole Raucheisen, Naples Daily News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nProtesters hold signs at a rally for gun control at the Broward County Federal Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. on February 17, 2018. Rhona Wise, AFP/Getty Images\nMarjory Stoneman Douglas High School student Cameron Kasky speaks at a rally for gun control at the Broward County Federal Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on Feb. 17, 2018. Rhona Wise, AFP/Getty Images\nThe soccer teammates of Alyssa Alhadeff listen to the live stream of her mother as she speaks about her daughter and gun violence. Alyssa Alhadeff, 15, was one of the 17 victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland,Fla. The practice at Pines Trail Park offers an outlet for the team, said Laurie Thomas, coach of the Parkland Soccer Club. Andrew West, The News-Press via USA TODAY Network\nSad scenes of remembrances are still playing out at the Parkland amphitheater on Feb. 17, 2018. Crosses have been set up to honor those killed in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting. Andrew West, The News-Press via USA TODAY Network\nAna Paula Lopez (L) is hugged by Cathy Kuhns during a protest against guns on Feb. 17, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nA woman becomes emotional while visiting a temporary memorial at Pine Trails Park on Feb. 17, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Mark Wilson, Getty Images\nThilaka Sritharan (L) whose daughter was in the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School when 17 people were killed is hugged by Lauren Duck during a protest against guns on Feb. 17, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Joe Raedle, Getty Images\nMiami Hurricanes players wears wear 'Praying for Stoneman Douglas' T-shirts before an NCAA college basketball game against Syracuse Orange. Steve Mitchell, USA TODAY Sports\nCandles glow at a memorial site to honor 17 people who were killed in the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, on Feb. 17, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Mark Wilson, Getty Images\nFour young children approach a vigil post at Park Trails Park in Parkland, Fla. on Feb. 16, 2018. C.M. Guerrero, The Miami Herald via AP\nLisa McCrary-Tokes, a resident of Parkland says a prayer at each of the crosses that were erected at the Parkland, Fl, Amphitheatre on Friday. McCrary-Tokes lost a daughter to gun violence in Ohio last year and another daughter graduated from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School last year. \"You can't feel safe anywhere in this country,\" she said. ANDREW WEST, The News-Press via USA TODAY Network\nSouth Broward High School senior Sophia Villiers-Furze, center, protests with her classmates in front of their school on Friday, Feb. 16, 2018 in response to a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. DOROTHY EDWARDS, Naples Daily News via USA TODAY Network\nA candlelight vigil draws thousands to the Pine Trails Park amphitheater to mourn a day after a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. Mandatory XAVIER MASCARENAS, TCPalm via USA TODAY NETWORK\nZachary Valdes, 13, attends a candlelight vigil with his family at the Pine Trails Park amphitheater to mourn a day after a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. Valdes was at neighboring Westglades Middle School when the two campuses went on lockdown. XAVIER MASCARENAS, TCPalm via USA TODAY NETWORK\nA candlelight vigil draws thousands to the Pine Trails Park amphitheater to mourn a day after a mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland. XAVIER MASCARENAS, TCPalm via USA TODAY NETWORK\nPeople attending a candlelight vigil at Parkland Amphitheater mourn the victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. ANDREW WEST, The News-Press, via USA TODAY NET\nBrayden Meddaugh, 7, and his mother, Stefanie Mion, both of Deerfield Beach, pay their respects at a small makeshift memorial under the Sawgrass Expressway across from the entrance to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. XAVIER MASCARENAS, Treasure Coast News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nA small makeshift memorial is seen under the Sawgrass Expressway across from the entrance to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. XAVIER MASCARENAS, Treasure Coast News via USA TODAY NETWORK\nFreshman Nyallah Penn cries during a prayer circle after a vigil at Pine Trails Park in Parkland, Fla. on Feb. 15, 2018. The vigil was held after a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Wednesday in Parkland, Fla., that took 17 lives. Dorothy Edwards, Naples Daily News, via USA TODAY NETWORK\nDustin Singh, left, and Jason Price hang flowers alongside a makeshift memorial where 17 crosses hang on a fence outside of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. Singh and Price both graduated from the high school. Nicole Raucheisen, Naples Daily News, via USA TODAY NETW\nJuniors Staci Esterman, right, and Jaclyn Corin hug after a vigil at Pine Trails Park in Parkland, Fla. on Feb. 15, 2018. Dorothy Edwards, Naples Daily News, via USA TODAY NETWORK\nKevin Siegelbaum, a special education teacher at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, leans in to pray on Feb. 15, 2018, in Parkland, Fla., during a community vigil at Pine Trails Park for the victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Brynn Anderson, AP\nMarla Eveillard, 14, cries as she hugs friends before the start of a vigil at the Parkland Baptist Church, for the victims of Wednesday's shooting at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. on Feb. 15, 2018. Gerald Herbert, AP\nAustin Burden, 17, cries on the shoulder of a friend after a vigil at the Parkland Baptist Church, for the victims of the Wednesday shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Fla. Gerald Herbert, AP\nMilan Hamm, right, 17, joins hundreds of community members at a prayer vigil in Parkland, Florida on Feb. 5, 2018. Members of the community gathered for a vigil for the victims of the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. GIORGIO VIERA, EPA-EFE\nFriends embrace in tears at the Parkridge Church in Coral Springs before the start of a community prayer vigil for Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School shooting victims, Feb. 15, 2018. ERIC HASERT, USA TODAY NETWORK\nAttendees react at a prayer vigil for the victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School at the Parkland Baptist Church, Feb. 15, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nAttendees comfort each other at a prayer vigil for the victims of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School at the Parkland Baptist Church, Feb. 15, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nEmmy Halulko, 13, (left) and her sister Evie, 5, both of Coral Springs stopped to pet Jacob, a Lutheran Church Charities comfort dog while at the Parkridge Church in Coral Springs for a community prayer vigil for all the shooting victims at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School. \"Awful\" Emmy said about the shooting before breaking down in tears, acknowledging she knew several people at the school, Feb. 15, 2018 Eric Hasert, USA TODAY NETWORK\nKristi Gilroy hugs a young woman at a police check point near the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where 17 people were killed by a gunman yesterday, Feb. 15, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES\nSheree Spaulding stands with her 15-year-old son, Justin who is a 9th grader at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where 17 people were killed by a gunman yesterday, Feb. 15, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Police arrested the suspect after a short manhunt, and have identified him as 19-year-old former student Nikolas Cruz. MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES\nSheree Spaulding walks with her 15-year-old son, Justin Spauling, who is a 9th grader at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where 17 people were killed by a gunman yesterday, Feb. 15, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES\nPolice control a road near the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where 17 people were killed by a gunman yesterday, Feb. 15, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. Police arrested the suspect after a short manhunt, and have identified him as 19-year-old former student Nikolas Cruz. MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES\nLaw enforcement officers block off the entrance to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, Feb. 15, 2018 in Parkland, Fla. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nKristi Gilroy hugs a young woman as a police officer tries to clear a closed road at a police checkpoint near Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where 17 people were killed by a gunman Feb. 15, 2018, in Parkland, Fla. Police arrested the suspect after a short manhunt and have identified him as 19-year-old former student Nikolas Cruz. MARK WILSON, GETTY IMAGES\nDr. Louis Yogel, chief of staff, right, address the media during a press briefing outside of Broward Health Medical Center. Dr. Benny Menendez, chief of emergency medicine, left, listens. Dorothy Edwards/Naples Daily News\nDr. Benny Menendez, chief of emergency medicine, addresses the media during a press briefing outside of Broward Health Medical Center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. after a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla, Wednesday. Dorothy Edwards/Naples Daily News\nFamilies reunite after a mass shooting at nearby Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. XAVIER MASCARENAS, Treasure Coast Newspapers via USA TODAY NETWORK\nMax Charles, second from right, 14, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., speaks to members of the media after being picked up by family members at a nearby hotel, in Coral Springs, Fla. A former student opened fire at the Florida high school Wednesday, killing more than a dozen people and sending scores of students fleeing into the streets in the nation's deadliest school shooting since a gunman attacked an elementary school in Newtown, Conn. Wilfredo Lee, AP\nPeople wait outside the main entrance of Broward Health Medical Center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. due to the hospital being on lockdown after a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, FL. Dorothy Edwards, Naples Daily News via USA Today\nSheree Spaulding hugs her son, Justin, 15, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in nearby Parkland, Fla., as she speaks to members of the media after picking up her son at a nearby hotel, Wednesday, in Coral Springs, Fla. Wilfredo Lee, AP\nJorge Zapata,16, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School hugss his mother, Lavinia Zapata, after a mass shooting earlier in the day at the school. “I was just really incredibly, indescribably happy to see him, because you never know,” Lavinia said. XAVIER MASCARENAS, Treasure Coast Newspapers via USA TODAY NETWORK\nDalila Ladero, 16, of Coral Springs, Fla. stands near friends after being reunited with her mother at University Drive and Holmberg Road in Parkland. \"When all that happened, I wasn't in my class, I just started following people...I was just seeing everyone screaming and crying and I didn't know what was happening,\" she said. \"I was calm, I just started praying.\" XAVIER MASCARENAS, Treasure Coast Newspapers via USA Today Network\nStudents wait outside the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. XAVIER MASCARENAS, Treasure Coast Newspapers via USA Today Network\nTrauma surgeon Dr. Igor Nichiporenko (C) and director for emergency medicine Dr. Evan Boyar (R) address the media outside the Broward Health Emergency facility where victims were taken following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, a city about 50 miles (80 kilometers) north of Miami, Wednesday. MICHELE EVE SANDBERG, AFP/Getty Images\nA student reacts as she talks to a television reporter following a school shooting. MICHELE EVE SANDBERG, AFP/Getty Images\nStudents react at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School following a school shooting. MICHELE EVE SANDBERG, AFP/Getty Images\nPeople react at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School following a school shooting. MICHELE EVE SANDBERG, AFP/Getty Images\nStudents run with their hands in the air following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. JOHN MCCALL, South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP\nStudents released from a lockdown walk away following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. JOHN MCCALL, South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP\nA young woman gets a hug outside of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. AMY BETH BENNETT, South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP\nMedical personnel tend to a victim following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. JOHN MCCALL, South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP\nPolice officers ride in the back of a pick up truck as they tend to a victim following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. JOHN MCCALL, South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP\nA parent talks on cellphone waiting for news after a reports of a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. JOEL AUERBACH, AP\nStudents wait to be picked up after a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nPeople hug following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nA member of the Broward County Sheriff's Office stands watch at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. JOEL AUERBACH, AP\nStudents released from a lockdown embrace following following a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. JOHN MCCALL, South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP\nFire rescue vehicles arrive at Stoneman Douglas High School. JOHN MCCALL, South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP\nPeople are brought out of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School after a shooting in Parkland, Fla. Feb 14, 2018 South Florida Sun-Sentinel via AP, Getty Images\nPeople are brought out of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School after a shooting. JOE RAEDLE, Getty Images\nThe campus of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School after a shooting that reportedly killed and injured multiple people. JOE RAEDLE, Getty Images\nParents wait for news after a report of a shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. JOEL AUERBACH, AP\nA law enforcement officer tells anxious family members to move back. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nAnxious family members wait for information on students in Parkland, Fla. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nA student shows a law enforcement officer his phone. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nA law enforcement officer talks with students outside of the school. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nFamily members embrace after a student walked out of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nAnxious family members watch a rescue vehicle pass by in Parkland, Fla. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nFamily members wait for news of students after a school shooting. WILFREDO LEE, AP\nIn this frame grab from video from WPLG-TV, students from the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., evacuate the school following a shooting. WPLG-TV via AP\nIn this frame grab from WPLG-TV, emergency personnel wheel an injured person from the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., following a shooting WPLG-TV via AP\nRead or Share this story: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2019/07/09/mental-illness-and-threats-came-before-mass-attacks/1684609001/","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line632295"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5503755211830139,"wiki_prob":0.5503755211830139,"text":"US home sales ticked up in September as Houston recovers\nThis Tuesday, Oct. 17, 2017, photo shows a \"House for Sale by Owner\" sign in a yard in Fort Washington, Pa. On Friday, Oct. 20, 2017, the National Association of Realtors reports on sales of existing homes in September. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)\nChristopher Rugaber\nWASHINGTON — U.S. home sales rose slightly last month as the Houston housing market quickly recovered from Hurricane Harvey. Still, a shortage of available homes is thwarting many would-be buyers and limiting sales.\nThe National Association of Realtors said Friday existing home sales increased 0.7 per cent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 5.39 million. That’s the first increase after three months of declines.\nYet sales have fallen 1.5 per cent from a year ago, the first year-over-year decline since July 2016. That’s because so few homes are for sale, particularly at lower prices. Buyers have bid up prices: The median home price rose to $245,100, up 4.2 per cent from a year ago. That’s faster than wage gains.\nAnd sales are likely to remain sluggish in the coming months, the Realtors said. Construction workers — and building materials such as lumber — are being diverted to repair and rebuilding work in the aftermath of the storms and the wildfires on California. That should slow new home building and limit the number of homes for sale.\nThe number of homes for sale sank 6.4 per cent from 12 months ago to 1.9 million homes, the fewest in any September since the Realtors began tracking the number in 2001.\nIn Houston, sales rose 4 per cent from a year ago after plunging 25 per cent in August. Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the Realtors’ group, said some of that gain may reflect investors purchasing damaged properties.\nIn Florida, Hurricane Irma sharply lowered sales last month, which were 22 per cent lower than a year ago, the Realtors said.\nSales fell more than 15 per cent from a year earlier in Miami, Fort Lauderdale, Jacksonville, Orlando and Tampa, according to real estate brokerage Redfin. Sales in Miami plunged 38.4 per cent.\n“The housing market is running on fumes due to low inventory,” said Redfin chief economist Nela Richardson. “The inventory shortage is most severe for affordable homes. There has not been an increase in homes priced under $260,000 in two years.”","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line730111"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.944014847278595,"wiki_prob":0.944014847278595,"text":"Vintage plane crash in Switzerland kills all 20 people on board\nAugust 5, 2018 Sexual Health\nTwenty people were killed when a vintage aircraft operating a sightseeing flight over Switzerland crashed into the Alps over the weekend. There were no survivors, Swiss police announced yesterday (SUN) as a search and rescue operation was called off. The historic Junckers Ju-52 propellor plane disppeared on Saturday afternoon after taking off from Locarno in southern Switzerland on its way to a military airfield near Zurich. On board were three crew members and 17 passengers aged between 42 and 84 who had paid for the chance to travel on the 1930s-era aircraft. Among the passengers were an Austrian couple travelling with their grown-up son. The rest were believed to be Swiss. Locator: WWII vintage plane crash The wreckage of the aircraft was found 8,330 feet above sea level near Piz Segnas in the remote and rugged mountains of eastern Switzerland. “Based on the situation at the crash site we can say that the aircraft hit the ground almost vertically at a relatively high speed,” Daniel Knecht, head of aviation at the Swiss Accident Investigation Board, told a press conference on Sunday The cause of the accident is unclear, but investigators said they could not rule out a link to the current heatwave in Europe. “What we can rule out at this point is a mid-air collision before the crash, either with another aircraft or with some other obstacle such as a cable,” Mr Knehct said. There was no indication of any external interference with the flight, he added. Wreckage of the old-time propeller plane Ju 52 Credit: AP Although the Junckers aircraft was almost 80 years old, it was serviced after every 35 hours of flying time and was believed to be in good condition after its most recent service at the end of July. Both pilots were experienced and had flown for regular civilian airlines and the Swiss air force. An investigation into the cause of the crash is likely to be complicated and take considerable time. The historic aircraft was not fitted with a black box or other modern data recording devices that could help explain what happened. The German-made Junckers Ju-52 was first produced in 1932 and was one of the earliest civilian passenger aircraft. During the 1930s it was the most widely used aircraft type in Europe. Affectionaly known in German as Tante Ju, or Auntie Ju, Ju-52s are chiefly remembered in Switzerland for providing a lifeline to parts of the country that were cut off by heavy avalances in 1952. A general view of the accident site of a Junkers Ju-52 airplane Credit: REUTERS The plane involved in the crash was being operated by Ju-Air, a Swiss company that specialises in sightseeing flights using historic aircraft. It had previously been used for tourist flights in Germany. Ju-Air said on Sunday it had suspended all operations until further notice in the wake of the crash. “The Ju-Air team is deeply saddened and our thoughts are with the passengers, the crew and families and friends of the victims,” the company said in a statement posted on its website. In a separate incident a family of four were killed when their light aircraft crashed near Lucerne, in central Switzerland, on Saturday. The family was from the local area. Two children were among the dead.\nboard, crash, kills, People, plane, Switzerland, Vintage","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1627477"} {"pred_label":"__label__cc","pred_label_prob":0.6434817910194397,"wiki_prob":0.3565182089805603,"text":"April 16 – 20\nConference Tips\nRSA Conference Awards\nRSAC onDemand\nEstablished in 1998, RSA Conference Awards acknowledge the outstanding contributions of individuals and organizations in the field of cryptography, public policy, information security and new in 2018 – security humanitarianism.\nExcellence in the Field of Mathematics\nThe RSA Conference Award for Mathematics recognizes innovation and ongoing contribution to the field of cryptography. The judging committee seeks to acknowledge those nominees who are pioneers in their field, and whose work has applied lasting value. Nominees are affiliated with universities or research labs.\nExcellence in Information Security\nThe RSA Conference Award for Excellence in Information Security recognizes outstanding achievement in the industry. The judging committee seeks to recognize a security practitioner for their security program or initiative.\nExcellence in the Field of Public Policy\nThe RSA Conference Award for Public Policy is designed to recognize significant contribution and leadership in the field of cyber security public policy. The judging committee seeks to reward nominees who hold elected or appointed office, are associated with public interest organizations or are associated with an organization that has significantly contributed to the development or application of current information security and/or privacy policy.\nNEW! Excellence in Humanitarian Service Award\nHumanitarian efforts across the globe are growing exponentially, and technology is often deployed as part of the solution. Technology used on projects to do good and positively enhance and protect lives in tangible, impactful ways, brings with it the need for effective protection. Heroes are those who have established a record of providing necessary expertise and efforts to ensure humanitarian project success, which deserves recognition. We seek your input in nominating deserving recipients to this award.\nThe winners will be announced in a tribute video during the opening keynote sessions on Tuesday, April 17th, 2018.\nSubmission Guidelines*\nTHE SUBMISSION DEADLINE HAS PASSED.\nThere are no specific criteria for selection but in order for your candidate to be seriously considered, please be as specific as possible about your nominee’s accomplishments. Here are some suggestions to include:\nHow has he or she helped to improve the security or business processes at their organization?\nHow did the achievements help the nominee’s organization? What were the results?\nWhat “best practices” mentioned as part of the nomination should be repeatable and be of use to other organizations.\nExcellence in Mathematics\nWhat is his or her contribution to the field of cryptography?\nDescribe the lasting value of his or her work\nExcellence in Humanitarian Service\nHow has the work of the nominee benefitted a specific humanitarian- focused effort or many different efforts in achieving greater security?\nWhat lasting impact has the nominee had on the humanitarian effort(s)?\nThe nomination review committee will entertain nominations of individuals who are still active in their work and will also consider posthumous recognitions.\n*Please note, we only accept nominations for the Excellence in Mathematics and Excellence in Information Security Awards and Excellence in Humanitarian Service Award.\nEntry Rules\n1. You may nominate more than one person for either award, but multiple submissions for the same person will not increase their chances of winning an award.\n2. A selection committee will be created, which will review the nominations submitted and select a winner.\n3. All submitted material will remain confidential.\n4. Descriptions of submissions may be published in connection with the awards. Entrants may mark sensitive parts of their entry clearly as 'not for publication'.\n5. Entries may be withdrawn or re-submitted at any time up to the closing date upon written request. Please send requests to rsaconferenceawards@rsaconference.com\n6. The committee reserves the right to amend category selection where appropriate.\n7. The committee will decide if there is any conflict of interest in a committee member voting or finding in favor of a specific entry. In the event that there is, that member will not be permitted to influence any decisions regarding that entry.\n8. The committee’s decision is final in all cases.\n9. Finalists will be notified approximately four to six weeks in advance of the presentation of the awards.\nIf you have any questions about the RSA Conference 2018 Awards Program, please email rsaconferenceawards@rsaconference.com.\nThis document was retrieved from http://www.rsaconference.com/events/us18/about/awards\ton Mon, 15 Jul 2019 18:38:30 -0400.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line234517"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5467847585678101,"wiki_prob":0.5467847585678101,"text":"Risking one’s life for a moment of freedom\nArt therapy: a safe haven of healing\nCulture and art bring people together\nBiH: Arts can heal past and present wounds\nWar scars are difficult to overcome, both at the psychological and societal level. Legal and Communications Officer Adisa Fišić Barukčija examines arts as a seldom-explored avenue for healing.\nIt is hard to imagine people risking their lives to attend a movie screening. Yet this is what happened during the siege of Sarajevo, even as the city was shelled on a daily basis.\nDespite the omnipresence of violence, cultural life remained vibrant throughout the war in Bosnia & Herzegovina: hundreds of concerts, theatre plays, and other cultural events flourished in improvised venues across Sarajevo. For civilians, these cultural events were a neutral space where they could, for a small amount of time, forget about their terrible situation.\nAfter the war, survivors who underwent trauma participated in creative art therapy. People who suffer from psychological wounds often find it difficult to discuss their experiences orally, even with a professional therapist. Art therapies have proven to be effective because they do not necessarily require people to speak.\nThey can also help people dealing with repressed memories. Some people do not have any recollection of the disturbing events they suffered. Art therapy can be a way to bring these memories back to the surface to help the healing process.\nDecades after the conflict, this period still inspires artists, no less because divisions are still a reality in today’s Bosnia and Herzegovina. Even children who did not live through the war grow up with destructive narratives that shape their opinion about the past, exacerbating divisions.\nWhen the Sarajevo Film Festival was created at the end of the war, one of its goals was to facilitate dialogue among communities. The organizers initiated a “Dealing with the past” program to give voice to personal stories from all sides. Understanding the suffering of others is essential to fostering empathy among communities and improving their interactions.\nPost-conflict countries generally focus on security and social welfare, at the expense of culture. But the arts should not be neglected as they can provide a space for questions, dialogue, and hopefully reconciliation.\nAdisa Fišić Barukčija, Legal and communications officer\n@AdisaFisic\nAlieu Kosiah was a commander of a faction of the United Liberation Movement of Liberia for Democracy (ULIMO) between 19...\nGuus Kouwenhoven is a Dutch businessman, born in 1942. The Second Civil War in Liberia (1999-2003) caused about 250’000...\nBorn in 1946 in Liberia, Jucontee Thomas Smith Woewiyu is a former co-founder and one of the leaders of the National Pat...\nAhmed Hamdane Mahmoud El Ayach El Aswadi\nAhmed Hamdane Mahmoud Ayach El Aswadi was born on 15 April 1984 in Samarra, Iraq. In 2014, El Aswadi was imprisoned in Tikrit for terrorist acts. It was before the Islamic State (ISIS) attacked the city. He reportedly fled the prison where he was detained and left the city towards Erbil. A...\nUnpunished international crimes: how NGOs lead the investigations\nEmmanuelle Marchand is a Senior Legal Counsel and Investigator for the NGO Civitas Maxima. Like TRIAL International, it...\nGerman and Belgian prosecutors urged to shed light on exports of dual-use goods to Syria\n(Geneva, Berlin, New York, 3 June 2019) Three groups working on accountability for atrocity crimes – the Syrian Archiv...\nBosnia and Herzegovina: Thousands of people still expecting justice\nTRIAL International and Yale Law School’s Lowenstein International Human Rights Clinic submitted a General Allegation to...\nPercy Mahendra Rajapaksa\nPercy Mahendra Rajapaksa also known as Mahinda Rajapaksa was born on 18 November 1945 in Hambantota, Sri Lanka. His fami...\nLafarge / Eric Olsen and others\nLafarge is a French company created in 1833 and considered as a global leader in construction material and as one of the major actors in cement, aggregates and concrete production. The company is present and active in 61 countries, including Syria. It merged with the Swiss Group Holcim in...\nMustafa K., Abdullah K., Sultan K., and Ahmed K.\nIn November 2012, Mustafa K., Abdullah K., Sultan K., and Ahmed K. allegedly joined Jabhat al-Nusra (rebellious terrorist group) in Syria and fought against Syrian government troops in the city of Ras al-Ayn in northern Syria. Mustafa K., Sultan K., and other Jabhat al-Nusra members report...\nIn 1974, the Communist military regime, known as the Derg, overthrown the Emperor Haile Selassie I and seized power in Ethiopia. In an attempt to consolidate power and eliminate its political opponents, the Derg subsequently launched what is now known as Qey Shibir or “Red Terror”. The fir...\nSix months after its start, an update on the Sheka trial in the DRC\nThe hearings began in November 2018, yet they are still far from over. Why? The trial of warlord Ntabo Ntaberi, known as...","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1543831"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5811857581138611,"wiki_prob":0.5811857581138611,"text":"Tag Archives: Dublin\nMarch 24, 2019 by barbara\nThe Springs of Affection, by Maeve Brennan\nMaeve Brennan was a staff writer for The New Yorker, and by all accounts a colorful character. In his Introduction, William Maxwell described some of her antics such as hanging her large framed photograph of Colette by Louise Dahl-Wolfe on the wall above his desk, removing it later when he said or did something she didn’t like. One day it was back again. It came and went “like a cloud shadow. I never knew why and thought it would be a poor idea to ask.”\nThe stories in this book, all quite stunning, are set in Dublin where Brennan grew up. The first set seem to be autobiographical. They are in first person and the characters have the names of Maeve and her family. The home is the rowhouse on a dead-end street in a Dublin suburb where Maeve grew up.\nEach recounts some incident—whether small, such as a man coming to the house to sell apples or the delivery of a new sofa, or large, such as a fire in the garage out back or raids by men looking for her father during a time of dissension between those in favor of a Republic and those supporting the Free State—but imbues it with such accuracy and character that it seems to hold a whole lifetime.\nThese stories remind me of writer and teacher Meg Rosoff advising us writers to look at the incidents that stick in our memory’s colander, those seemingly unimportant bits of the past. Yet there is a reason we remember them, and if we dig deeper we may be surprised by what emerges.\nThe second section is a series of stories exploring the particulars of Hubert and Rose Derdon’s unhappy marriage. Their only son John has become a priest, leaving Rose bereft. Over the course of the stories, details emerge about the family dynamics and the psychological burdens borne by the couple.\nThe stories in the third section are also about a marriage, not quite so fraught as the Derdons’ but held in a precarious balance. Martin and Delia Bagot lead mostly independent lives, he working late while she is responsible for the house, garden and two girls. However, the eponymous final story, told through Martin’s twin sister Min after the couples’ deaths, gives us a different slant on their relationship, though not perhaps the one Min intended.\nWhat especially fascinates me about the Derdon and Bagot stories are the narrative scenes. As writers we usually balance narrative, also known as exposition, with dramatic scenes. These scenes usually have action and dialogue and conflict between characters. However, it is possible to write scenes that are all narrative. Usually writers are advised not to include long narrative passages, as they can be boring and slow the story to the point where momentum is completely lost.\nHowever, a narrative scene is different, containing all the drama and emotion of an action scene. C.S. Lakin says, “What makes for great narrative scenes is the character voice.” I agree, but Brennan in these stories also shows the value of burrowing deep into her characters’ hearts and minds. Her astute understanding of their psychology, their fears and dreams, their upbringing and social context makes for stirring reading.\nFor example, 87-year-old Min is still furious about Martin having married Delia, even though both of them are now dead. She believes that his doing so broke up their family, saying of their mother:\n. . . who had sacrificed everything for them and asked in return only that they stick together as a family, and build themselves up, and make a wall around themselves that nobody could see through, let alone climb. What she had in mind was a fort, a fortress, where they could build themselves up in private and strengthen their hold on the earth, because in the long run that is what matters—a firm foothold and a roof over your head. But all that hope ended and all their hard work was mocked when Delia Kelly walked into their lives.\nThis is telling about something that happened instead of showing it in a scene with action and dialogue. Yet it works, because of the vivid language, the voice—can’t you just hear Min?—and the accuracy and precision of the author’s insight into this character.\nAs I closed the book, moved by Min’s unconscious revelations about herself and by the two couples and Maeve herself as a child, I found myself thinking about my own childhood. Like Brennan, like all of us I suspect, those early years of family and the house that contained us have almost mythic status in my imagination. I can understand how she wanted to return again and again to that well of inspiration.\nHave you read a collection of short stories that you’d recommend? Perhaps they carried you away to a faraway place or gave you a new understanding of human nature? Perhaps they introduced characters whom you can’t seem to forget?\nTagged Dublin, short stories","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line1415425"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.5449764132499695,"wiki_prob":0.5449764132499695,"text":"Adam Tihany\nAdam D. Tihany is widely regarded as one of the world’s preeminent hospitality designers and an early pioneer of the restaurant design profession. After attending the Politecnico di Milano, Tihany apprenticed in renowned design firms in Italy. In 1978, he established his own multidisciplinary New York studio. The practice began specializing in restaurant design with the creation of La Coupole, the first grand café in New York City in 1981. In 1987, Tihany became a co-owner in Remi restaurants, which together with his partners, he continued to own and operate for the following 25 years.\nTihany was one of the first designers to collaborate with celebrity chefs creating signature restaurants for culinary stars such as Thomas Keller, Daniel Boulud, Jean Georges Vongerichten, Charlie Palmer, Heston Blumenthal, Paul Bocuse, and Wolfgang Puck. His work in the hospitality field can be experienced at many luxury hotels and iconic properties around the globe: One&Only Cape Town resort in South Africa, Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas, Westin Chosun in Seoul, Korea and The Joule in Dallas, The King David Hotel in Jerusalem, The Beverly Hills Hotel in Beverly Hills, Hotel Cipriani in Venice, The Four Seasons Hotel DIFC in Dubai, The Breakers in Palm Beach and The Broadmoor in Colorado Springs to name a few. His studio perpetuates the philosophy that every project should be a living, relevant, and unique entity. Each project is custom-tailored to fit the vision of the client and stay true to its location.\nIn addition to restaurants and hotels, Tihany’s renowned work includes his creation of innovative design concepts for the next wave of cruise ships for Holland America Line and Seabourn brands. As appointed Creative Director for Costa Cruises, Tihany is overseeing the design development of the next generation of ships as well as the overall rebranding efforts of the iconic Italian travel brand.\nTihany frequently lectures at universities and conferences around the world and currently sits on the advisory board of Israel's Design Museum Holon. His contribution to design has been recognized with numerous honors and awards including an Honorary Doctorate from the New York School of Interior Design and induction into the Interior Design Hall of Fame. He served as Art Director of the Culinary Institute of America and is a former member of Pratt's Board of Trustees. Tihany was recognized by Who’s Who in Food and Beverage in the United States by The James Beard Foundation in 1997, named Bon Appetit’s Designer of the Year in 2001, and awarded the prestigious Lawrence Israel Prize from the Fashion Institute of Technology in 2005. Monacelli Press published his first monograph, Tihany Design, in 1999 and his second book, Tihany Style, was published by Mondadori Electa in May 2004. Tihany’s third book, Tihany: Iconic Hotel and Restaurant Interiors was published spring of 2014 by Rizzoli.\nProdukte von Adam Tihany\nTHEA Sessel\nTHEA Sofa\nTHEA Tische","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line819800"} {"pred_label":"__label__wiki","pred_label_prob":0.9343627095222473,"wiki_prob":0.9343627095222473,"text":"A timeline of 10 pulsating Oracle-era Warriors…\nNewsNews Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.\nA timeline of 10 pulsating Oracle-era Warriors memories\nOracle Arena was home to multiple Warriors championship teams, an All-Star game and several Hall of Famers\n(Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group)\nConfetti drops from the ceiling as Warriors fans celebrate their win over the Los Angeles Clippers in Game 6 of their Western Conference NBA playoff series at Oracle Arena on Thursday, May 1, 2014.\nBy Gary Peterson | gpeterson@bayareanewsgroup.com and Mark DuFrene | mdufrene@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group\nPUBLISHED: June 5, 2019 at 6:00 am | UPDATED: June 5, 2019 at 10:31 am\nTime is running out in the Golden State Warriors’ Oracle Arena era, which has borne witness to four NBA championships (and counting?) an All-Star game, 12 Oracle-era Warriors elevated to Hall of Fame status, thrills, chills and dozens of favorite sons. Here are 10 memories that will linger long after Stephen Curry packs up his tunnel shot and moves it to the Chase Center.\n1. Franklin Mieuli plants his flag in Oakland\nGolden State Warriors owner Franklin Mieuli watches the Warrios from courtside at the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum in 1978. (Ron Riesterer/Bay Area News Group)\nRobert T. Nahas leads supervisors on an inspection of the Coliseum Arena under construction in 1966. (Roy H. Williams/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nGuard Jeff Mullins shows off the new uniform of the Golden State Warriors during team workouts at San Jose City College. (Leo Cohen/Bay Area News Group)\nUndated aerial view of the OaklandÐAlameda County Coliseum complex under construction. (Bay Area News Group Archives)\nMilwaukee Bucks and San Francisco Warriors big men Lew Alcindor and Nate Thurmond (42) push and shove as Thurmond tries to work his way to the basket during the National Basketball Association playoffs on March 31, 1971 at Madison, Wis. (AP Photo)\nJerry Lucas, playing for the San Francisco Warriors in 1971, grabs a rebound against the Atlanta Hawks. (Bay Area News Group Archives)\nAl Attles, #16, makes the jump during a San Francisco Warriors versus Los Angeles Lakers game. From left are Jeff Mullins, #23, and Happy Hairston, #52. (Bay Area News Group Archives)\nFranklin Mieuli, owner of the Golden State Warriors, in 1974, the year before he brought Oakland their first NBA Championship. (Ron Riesterer/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nFormer Golden State Warriors forward Rick Barry and former owner Franklin Mieuli. (Roy H. Williams/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nIn the first decade after they arrived from Philadelphia, the Warriors called four venues home. They played in the Cow Palace in Daly City from 1962-64 and 1966-71. It was a no-frills barn with a certain olfactory charm inside which team owner Franklin Mieuli installed an ornate chandelier he bought on a European vacation.\nThe Warriors also played home games at the San Francisco Civic Auditorium and USF’s War Memorial Gym from 1964-66.\nIn 1966 and ’67 they tried out a new venue in the East Bay. The Oakland Coliseum Arena was clean, spacious and still had that new building smell. Mieuli was impressed. On Aug. 2, 1971, he announced his team’s move to the Coliseum Arena. He also announced the team’s rebranding. San Francisco was out; Golden State was in.\n2. We beat the Bucks!\nCenter Nate Thurmond gives a locker room interview following the Golden State Warriors' defeat of the Milwaukee Bucks for the 1973 NBA Western Conference Semifinals title at the Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum Arena. (Kenneth Green/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nJim Barnett (lower right) had an 11-year NBA career including three years with the Golden State Warriors (1971-74). A starting five photo includes Cazzie Russell, Nate Thurmond, Clyde Lee, Jeff Mullin. (Golden State Warriors photo)\nThe Warriors were weary of seeing the Milwaukee Bucks, and their superstar center Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, in the postseason. The Bucks bounced the Warriors from the playoffs in 1971. It happened again in 1972. They met yet again in 1973, with the Bucks winning two of the first three games.\nThen, incredibly, the Warriors fought back. Leading the charge was unassuming power forward Clyde Lee, a 6-foot-10 nose-to-the-grindstone worker bee. He was everywhere, doing everything as the Warriors charged to a 3-2 lead in the series. Game 6 was in Oakland. Before tipoff, Warriors fans gave Lee a wild two-minute standing ovation. After the game, a 100-86 victory that clinched the series, fans joyously chanted, “We beat the Bucks! We beat the Bucks!”\nThe Roaracle vibe that has been the wind at the back of generations of Warriors? They say it was born that night.\n3. Sleepy Floyd is Superman!\nEric \"Sleepy\" Floyd gets congratulations from coach George Karl and other Warriors during the fourth quarter in Game 4 of the playoffs against the Los Angeles Lakers in Oakland on May 10, 1987. Floyd scored 51 points in the game. (By Gary Reyes/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nGolden State Warriors' Eric \"Sleepy\" Floyd drives to the basket past Los Angeles Lakers' James Worthy during their playoff game at Oakland Arena in Oakland, Calif., on May 10, 1987. Floyd scored an NBA playoff record-setting 29 points in the fourth quarter, 12 field goals in the same quarter and 39 points in a half, to lead the Warriors to a 129-121 victory over the Lakers. (Gary Reyes/Bay Area News Group Archives))\nGolden State Warriors' Eric \"Sleepy\" Floyd (21) drives to the basket during their playoff game against the Lakers at the Oakland Arena in Oakland, Calif., on May 10, 1987. Floyd scored an NBA playoff record-setting 29 points in the fourth quarter, 12 field goals in the same quarter and 39 points in the half, to lead the Warriors to a 129-121 victory over the Lakers. (Reginald Pearman/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nSleepy Floyd wasn’t ready for summer vacation. But early on May 10, 1987, it appeared he had no choice in the matter. The Showtime Lakers were running Floyd’s Warriors out of the gym in their conference semifinal playoff series.\nGame 4 figured to be another sad story for Golden State, which trailed 102-88 after three quarters. That’s when Floyd went to work.\nPlaying with a tender hamstring, Floyd soared to the rim, getting to the line, scoring on jumpers, flips and soft banks. He went wild, scoring 29 points in the quarter, 39 in the half, and 51 in the game, inspiring Warriors broadcaster Greg Papa to blurt, “Sleepy Floyd is Superman!” The Warriors lived to fight another day.\n4. An unexpected title\nGolden State Warriors Steve Bracey jumps into the arms of teammate Clifford Ray after the Warriors won the fourth and final game of the NBA championship playoff games at Capital Center in Landover, Md., May 25, 1975. Washington Bullets' Phil Chenier walks off the court with bowed head after the Bullets lost four straight. The Warriors won, 96-95. (AP Photo)\nGolden State Warriors' Phil Smith (20) drives by Washington Bullets Phil Chenier for two points in the fourth period of NBA Championship game at Capital Centre in Landover, Md., May 19, 1975. The Warriors' won the first game of a seven game series 101-95. (AP Photo)\nThree Golden State Warrior defenders surround Washington Bullets center Wes Unseld but he grabbed this rebound and scored a basket in the final minutes of the Warriors 92-91 victory over the Washingtonians in San Francisco, May 21, 1975. Warriors, left to right: Bill Bridges, George Johnson and Keith Wilkes. (AP Photo/RB)\nGolden State Warrior George Johnson steals this rebound from Washington Bullets center Wes Unseld during the fourth quarter of Golden State's 92-91 win over the Bullets in San Francisco, May 21, 1975. The Golden Staters now hold a 2-0 lead in the best-of-seven NBA Championship playoff. (AP Photo/RB)\nPhil Chenier (45) of the Washington Bullets is chased by Butch Beard of the Golden State Warriors in the first half of third game of the best of seven NBA championship series in San Francisco, May 23, 1975. The game was played at the Cow Palace in San Francisco. (AP Photo)\nCharles Johnson (10), Clifford Ray (44) and Keith Wilkes (41) of the Golden State Warriors go after a loose ball in the first half of NBA championship game against the Washington Bullets at the Cow Palace in San Francisco, May 23, 1975. Bullets in the background are Elvin Hayes right, Kevin Porter. (AP Photo)\nWashington Bullets' Elvin Hayes, center, appears to be pleading for a little room as he tries for a two pointer in the first game of the NBA Championship series at Capital Centre, Landover, Md., May 19, 1975. Golden State Warriors' George Johnson (52) and Rick Barry (24) double teamed Hayes and stopped him from making the shot. The Warriors won 101-95. (AP Photo)\nMore than 3,000 fans were on hand to greet the Golden State Warriors as they returned to San Francisco, May 26, 1975, after handing the Washington Bullets a 96-95 loss to take four straight games and the NBA championship title. The Warriors landed in Oakland and engine problems forced them to take cabs to San Francisco where the waiting crowds mobbed the procession. (AP Photo/RB)\nIt didn’t seem to augur well for the Warriors when they parted ways with stalwarts Jim Barnett, Joe Ellis, Clyde Lee, Cazzie Russell and Nate Thurmond after the 1973-74 season. But the new-look Warriors — Rick Barry surrounded by role players and promising youngsters — started fast and never slowed down.\nBarry was a virtuoso, averaging 30.6 points, 6.2 assists and 2.9 steals. The Warriors gutted out a Game 7 win over the Chicago Bulls in the conference finals, then swept the 60-win Washington Bullets in the NBA Finals to earn the franchise’s third championship.\nThe Warriors hosted their two Finals home games in the Cow Palace, because the Coliseum had booked the Ice Follies; no one dreamed the Warriors would still be playing in late May.\n5. We believe\nBaron Davis #5 of the Golden State Warriors celebrates against the Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nJason Richardson #23 of the Golden State Warriors dunks the ball against the Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nDirk Nowitizki #41 of the Dallas Mavericks passes the ball against Stephen Jackson #1 of the Golden State Warriors in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nStephen Jackson #1 of the Golden State Warriors celebrates against the Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nMatt Barnes #22 of the Golden State Warriors argues a call in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals against the Dallas Mavericks during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nDirk Nowitizki #41 picks himself off the floor against the Golden State Warriors in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nStephen Jackson #1 of the Golden State Warriors shoots over Jerry Stackhouse #42 of the Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at Oracle Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nBaron Davis #5 of the Golden State Warriors hugs Dirk Nowitizki #41 of the Dallas Mavericks after Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nBaron Davis #5 of the Golden State Warriors talks to his teammates against the Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nBaron Davis #5 of the Golden State Warriors celebrates after defeating the Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 of the Western Conference Quarterfinals during the 2007 NBA Playoffs on May 3, 2007 at the Arena in Oakland, California. (Photo by Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images)\nIn the 32 seasons after the Warriors’ stunning championship in 1975, the team won just five postseason series. So expectations were modest for coach Don Nelson’s 2006-07 squad that finished a mere two games above .500 and whose first-round opponent, the Dallas Mavericks, had won an NBA best 67 games.\nBut Nellie had spent eight seasons as the Mavs head coach, and his insider knowledge had the Mavericks — especially league MVP Dirk Nowitzki — on their heels all series long. Edgy, sassy Warriors such as Baron Davis, Stephen Jackson, Monta Ellis and Al Harrington brought Nelson’s game plans to life. Not only did the “We Believe” Warriors become the first 8 seed to win an NBA postseason series, they did it in six games.\n6. “Oh, you’re kidding me!”\nThe Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson (11) is congratulated by teammmate David Lee during their NBA game against the Sacramento Kings on Friday, Jan. 23, 2015. On this night, Thompson scored a career high 52 points and an NBA record 37 points in the third quarter. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson (11) is congratulated by Andrew Bogut (12) at the end of the third quarter against Sacramento Kings in their NBA game at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Jan. 23, 2015. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson (11) drives to the basket against the Sacramento Kings' Darren Collison (7) in the second half of their NBA game at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Jan. 23, 2015. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson (11) reacts after scoring at will against the Sacramento Kings in the third quarter of their NBA game at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Jan. 23, 2015. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson (11) splits the Sacramento Kings' Nik Stauskas (10) and Rudy Gay (8) in the first half of their NBA game at the Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Friday, Jan. 23, 2015. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson (11) plays in an NBA game against the Sacramento Kings on Friday, Jan. 23, 2015. On this night, Thompson scored a career high 52 points and an NBA record 37 points in the third quarter. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe Golden State Warriors' Klay Thompson (11) turns toward the celebrating bench in an NBA game against the Sacramento Kings on Friday, Jan. 23, 2015. On this night, Thompson scored a career high 52 points and an NBA record 37 points in the third quarter. (Dan Honda/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nIn January of 2015 the Warriors and their fans were starting to realize there was something special about Klay Thompson. In his first three seasons he had inched his scoring average from 12.5, to 16.6, to 18.4. He had shot better than 40 percent from distance. As a bonus, he could go from zero to five alarms at any time.\nWhich he did one night against the Sacramento Kings. In a single quarter, he binge-scored 37 points on nine 3-pointers, three 2-pointers (including a slam off a lob pass by Stephen Curry) and two free throws. When he hit a right-side 3 to get to 29 points in the quarter, the crowd was on its feet. He followed with a foul line jumper. “Oh!” exclaimed broadcaster Bob Fitzgerald. “You’re kidding me!” No kidding, just an NBA record for points in a quarter.\nSaid coach Steve Kerr, a onetime teammate of Michael Jordan, “As many spectacular things as Michael did, which he did nightly, I never saw him do that.”\n7. The night of nights\nFan celebrate the Golden State Warriors 73rd win and single season record after defeating the Memphis Grizzlies at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, April 13, 2016. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors fans hold up signs after the Warriors' 73rd win and single season record after defeating the Memphis Grizzlies in an NBA game at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, April 13, 2016. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) takes a shot against the Memphis Grizzlies in the second half of an NBA game at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, April 13, 2016. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group Archives\nStephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors gestures in the first half against the Memphis Grizzlies during the game at Oracle Arena on April 13, 2016 in Oakland, California. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)\nFans hold up signs and cutouts of Draymond Green (23) and Stephen Curry (30) during the Golden State Warriors' 73rd win and single season record in the second half of an NBA game at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Wednesday, April 13, 2016. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group Archives\nStephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors greets Leandro Barbosa #19 after the Warriors defeated the Grizzlies 125-104 at Oracle Arena on April 13, 2016 in Oakland, California. By defeating the Memphis Grizzlies, the Golden State Warriors win their 73rd game this season, setting the record for the most games won during the NBA regular season. The Warriors finished the 2015-16 NBA regular season with a 73-9 record. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)\nStephen Curry #30 of the Golden State Warriors reacts during the game against the Memphis Grizzlies at Oracle Arena on April 13, 2016 in Oakland, California. By defeating the Memphis Grizzlies, the Golden State Warriors win their 73rd game this season, setting the record for the most games won during the NBA regular season. The Warriors finished the 2015-16 NBA regular season with a 73-9 record. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)\nSome day, when the current Golden State Warriors and their dynasty are just a warm, happy memory, the night of April 13, 2016 may be regarded as its zenith. The 2015-16 season started with Kerr out on medical leave and assistant Luke Walton guiding the team to a 24-0 start. They were 36-2, 48-4, 62-6. Come the final game of the season, they were sitting on the NBA record of 72 victories in a season.\nThey beat the Memphis Grizzlies, setting the record. Not only that, but Curry canned 10 3-pointers to become the first to hit more than 400 treys in a season. His 46-point fireworks display was the cherry on top of his second consecutive MVP season.\n8. Vindication\nThe NBA championship Golden State Warriors pose for a photograph defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 6 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Tuesday, June 16, 2015. Golden State defeated Cleveland 105-97. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe Golden State Warriors celebrate after winning the NBA Championship after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 6 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Tuesday, June 16, 2015. Golden State defeated Cleveland 105-97. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nGolden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr reacts to winning the NBA championship after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 6 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Tuesday, June 16, 2015. Golden State defeated Cleveland 105-97. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nSuch were the fruitless seasons, the ineffectual coaches, the ridiculous drama, and a soul-sapping tradition of losing in the most grotesque manner possible, that many Warriors fans made peace with the fact they would never see their favorite team win another championship. On June 16, 2015 they were rewarded.\nThe playoff run included Curry heaving a corner 3-pointer to help slay the Pelicans, Curry and Thompson stifling James Harden in the final seconds of a victory over Houston, and a six-game takedown of LeBron James and the Cavaliers.\n“It’s been kind of a surreal feeling,” forward David Lee said after the clincher in Cleveland. “It’s one of those things where you’re continuing to look at the box scores and you’re saying, ‘Man, is that our record?’ It’s amazing to see what we’ve accomplished. As a team.” He got no argument from the team’s fan base.\n9. Redemption\nThe Golden State Warriors celebrate as they hold the championship trophy after defeating the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 5 of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, June 12, 2017. The Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 129-120 to win the NBA Championship. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nGolden State Warriors' Draymond Green (23) celebrates with teammate Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) in the final minute of the fourth quarter of Game 5 of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, June 12, 2017. The Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 129-120 to win the NBA Championship. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nCleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James (23) hugs Golden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr as Golden State Warriors' Kevin Durant (35) celebrates with teammate Stephen Curry (30) after winning Game 5 of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, June 12, 2017. The Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 129-120 to win the NBA Championship. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nGolden State Warriors' Kevin Durant (35) holds the MVP trophy on stage after Game 5 of the NBA Finals at Oracle Arena in Oakland, Calif., on Monday, June 12, 2017. The Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 129-120 to win the NBA Championship. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nThe NBA Finals loss of 2016 remained stuck in the Warriors’ craw in 2017. So it was a focused bunch, with their new pal Kevin Durant, that lay siege to the Western Conference brackets. The Warriors swept Portland, Utah, San Antonio and ran their win streak to 15 before losing to Cleveland.\nThe one loss was fortuitous — it allowed the Warriors to win a championship in their beloved Oracle Arena.\n“For us to be able to do it in front of our home crowd, it’s something I’ll remember for a very long time,” Curry said. “For the whole Bay Area that supported us since I’ve been here my rookie year, the depths of the NBA to here as world champs again, crazy. Enjoy every minute of it.”\n10. Trilogy\nGolden State Warriors' Kevin Durant (35) holds the NBA trophy following their 108-85 win against the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday, June 8, 2018. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) celebrates following their 108-85 win against the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday, June 8, 2018. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors head coach Steve Kerr gets hugs following their 108-85 win against the Cleveland Cavaliers in Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday, June 8, 2018. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors' Kevin Durant (35) celebrates with Golden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) late in the fourth quarter of their game against the Cleveland Cavaliers for Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday, June 8, 2018. (Nhat V. Meyer/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors' Kevin Durant (35) kisses the Larry O'Brien trophy as he celebrates with teammates after winning Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday, June 8, 2018. The Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 108-85. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nGolden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) shoots while being guarded by Cleveland Cavaliers' JR Smith (5) during the first quarter of Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday, June 8, 2018. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nGolden State Warriors' Stephen Curry (30) celebrates with teammate Kevin Durant (35) during the fourth quarter of Game 4 of the NBA Finals at Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, Ohio, on Friday, June 8, 2018. The Golden State Warriors defeated the Cleveland Cavaliers 108-85. (Jose Carlos Fajardo/Bay Area News Group Archives)\nAfter completing a four-game sweep of the Cleveland Cavaliers to win the 2018 NBA Championship, Golden State Warriors' Kevin Durant, Draymond Green and Stephen Curry exit their plane as they arrive back in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, June 9, 2018. (Anda Chu/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors' Draymond Green rides a double-decker bus as confetti flies during their championship parade in downtown Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, June 12, 2018. The Warriors swept the Cleveland Cavaliers to win back-to-back NBA championships. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group Archives\nGolden State Warriors' Stephen Curry greets fans during their championship parade in downtown Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, June 12, 2018. The Warriors swept the Cleveland Cavaliers to win back-to-back NBA championships. (Jane Tyska/Bay Area News Group Archives\nA Golden State Warriors fan makes a face as he holds up a t-shirt featuring Cleveland Cavaliers' LeBron James during the Warriors championship parade in downtown Oakland, Calif., on Tuesday, June 12, 2018. (Ray Chavez/Bay Area News Group Archives\nThe 2018 postseason held more danger than the previous three successful title runs combined. Curry missed the first six games of the playoffs. Andre Iguodala also missed six games. The bigger concern was the 3-2 series lead the Rockets forged in the conference finals. Huge second-half rallies carried the Warriors through two potential elimination games — though it remains an open debate whether or not the result would have been different had Houston guard Chris Paul been able to play the final two games.\nVideo: Bob Myers on Warriors’ 2019 roster, Kevin Durant’s departure, D’Angelo Russell and more\nBob Myers explains Kevin Durant’s decision to leave Warriors\nWarriors coach Steve Kerr to members of Congress: ‘Call out the president’\nThe Warriors polished off the Cavaliers 4-0. “We had more talent than they did,” Kerr said. “And talent wins in this league.”\nThat talent claimed in four seasons as many championships, three, than were won in the franchise’s first 67 seasons of existence.\nAs we speak.\nGary Peterson is a sports writer for the Bay Area News Group. His prior assignments included 31 years as a sports columnist, serving as a general assignment news reporter, covering courts and writing a metro column before finding his way back to sports.\nFollow Gary Peterson\t@garyscribe\nMark DuFrene\nMark DuFrene is the deputy photo editor for Bay Area News Group.\nFollow Mark DuFrene\t@mmduf\nMore in Golden State Warriors\nWarriors general manager Bob Myers highlighted D'Angelo Russell's 'upside.'\nMyers noted the team's transition from NBA's second or third oldest to youngest.\nWarriors general manager Bob Myers spoke to reporters on Monday about Kevin Durant's departure.\nBetOnline says Warriors will lose 18 more games in 2019-20 than last year.","source":"cc/2019-30/en_head_0001.json.gz/line427129"}